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+Project Gutenberg's Peculiarities of American Cities, by Willard Glazier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Peculiarities of American Cities
+
+Author: Willard Glazier
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2011 [EBook #35575]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PECULIARITIES OF AMERICAN CITIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Louise Hope and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Willard Glazier]
+
+
+
+
+ PECULIARITIES
+ OF
+ AMERICAN CITIES.
+
+ BY
+
+ CAPTAIN WILLARD GLAZIER,
+
+ AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF THE SADDLE," "CAPTURE, PRISON-PEN AND
+ ESCAPE," "BATTLES FOR THE UNION," "HEROES OF THREE WARS,"
+ "DOWN THE GREAT RIVER," ETC., ETC.
+
+
+ Illustrated.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ HUBBARD BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
+ No. 723 CHESTNUT STREET.
+ 1886.
+
+
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by
+ WILLARD GLAZIER,
+ In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
+
+
+
+
+ To her
+
+ WHO IS NEAREST AND DEAREST;
+ WHOSE HEART HAS ENCOURAGED;
+ WHOSE HAND HAS CONTRIBUTED TO THE
+ ILLUSTRATION AND EMBELLISHMENT
+ OF ALL MY LITERARY WORK,
+
+ This Volume
+ IS LOVINGLY INSCRIBED
+
+ BY
+
+ _THE AUTHOR_.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+It has occurred to the author very often that a volume presenting the
+peculiar features, favorite resorts and distinguishing characteristics,
+of the leading cities of America, would prove of interest to thousands
+who could, at best, see them only in imagination, and to others, who,
+having visited them, would like to compare notes with one who has made
+their PECULIARITIES a study for many years.
+
+A residence in more than a hundred cities, including nearly all that
+are introduced in this work, leads me to feel that I shall succeed in
+my purpose of giving to the public a book, without the necessity of
+marching in slow and solemn procession before my readers a monumental
+array of time-honored statistics; on the contrary, it will be my aim, in
+the following pages, to talk of cities as I have seen and found them in
+my walks, from day to day, with but slight reference to their origin and
+past history.
+
+ WILLARD GLAZIER.
+
+ 22 Jay Street,
+ ALBANY, _September 24, 1883_.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ Portrait of the Author (Steel) FRONTISPIECE.
+ PAGE
+ State Street and Capitol, Albany, N. Y. 34
+ Boston, as Viewed from the Bay 38
+ Soldiers' Monument at Buffalo, N. Y. 62
+ View of Baltimore, from Federal Hill 92
+ View of the Battery, Charleston, South Carolina 108
+ Garden at Mount Pleasant, opposite Charleston, S. C. 112
+ Custom House, Charleston, South Carolina 116
+ Magnolia Cemetery, Charleston, South Carolina 120
+ Public Square and Perry Monument, Cleveland, Ohio 150
+ Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 156
+ Bird's-eye View of Chicago, from the Lake Side 160
+ Burning of Chicago, the World's Greatest Conflagration 164
+ Grand Pacific Hotel, Chicago 170
+ Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 192
+ Harrisburg and Bridges over the Susquehanna 200
+ Jackson Square and Old Cathedral, New Orleans 274
+ Mardi Gras Festival, New Orleans 278
+ Bird's-eye View of New York 296
+ New York and Brooklyn Bridge 318
+ Pittsburg and its Rivers 336
+ Night Scene in Market Square, Portland, Maine 360
+ Old Independence Hall, Philadelphia 370
+ Masonic Temple, Philadelphia 378
+ Girard Avenue Bridge, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia 394
+ View of Providence, Rhode Island, from Prospect Terrace 400
+ Tabernacle and Temple, Salt Lake City 440
+ Seal Rocks from the Cliff House, near San Francisco 462
+ Levee and Great Bridge at St. Louis 492
+ Shaw's Garden at St. Louis, Missouri 502
+ University of Toronto, Canada 524
+ East Front of Capitol at Washington 538
+ State, War and Navy Departments, Washington, D. C. 546
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.--ALBANY.
+
+ From Boston to Albany.--Worcester and Pittsfield.--The Empire
+ State and its Capital.--Old Associations.--State Street.--
+ Sketch of Early History.--Killian Van Rensselaer.--Dutch
+ Emigration.--Old Fort Orange.--City Heights.--The Lumber
+ District.--Van Rensselaer Homestead.--The New Capitol.--
+ Military Bureau.--War Relics.--Letter of General Dix.--
+ Ellsworth and Lincoln Memorials.--Geological Rooms.--The
+ Cathedral.--Dudley Observatory.--Street Marketing.--Troy and
+ Cohoes.--Stove Works.--Paper Boats.--Grand Army Rooms.--Down
+ the Hudson. 25-37
+
+
+CHAPTER II.--BOSTON.
+
+ Geographical Location of Boston.--Ancient Names.--Etymology
+ of the Word Massachusetts.--Changes in the Peninsula.--Noted
+ Points of Interest.--Boston Common.--Old Elm.--Duel Under
+ its Branches.--Soldiers' Monument.--Fragmentary History.--
+ Courtship on the Common.--Faneuil Hall and Market.--Old State
+ House.--King's Chapel.--Brattle Square Church.--New State
+ House.--New Post Office.--Old South Church.--Birthplace of
+ Franklin.--"News Letter."--City Hall.--Custom House.--
+ Providence Railroad Station.--Places of General Interest. 38-56
+
+
+CHAPTER III.--BUFFALO.
+
+ The Niagara Frontier.--Unfortunate Fate of the Eries.--The
+ Battle of Doom.--Times of 1812.--Burning of Buffalo.--Early
+ Names.--Origin of Present Name.--Growth and Population.--
+ Railway Lines.--Queen of the Great Lakes.--Fort Porter and
+ Fort Erie.--International Bridge.--Iron Manufacture.--Danger
+ of the Niagara.--Forest Lawn Cemetery.--Decoration Day.--
+ The Spaulding Monument.--Parks and Boulevard.--Delaware
+ Avenue.--On the Terrace.--Elevator District.--Church and
+ Schools.--Grosvenor Library.--Historical Rooms.--Journalism.--
+ Public Buildings.--City Hall.--Dog-carts and their Attendants. 57-71
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.--BROOKLYN.
+
+ Brooklyn a Suburb of New York.--A City of Homes.--Public
+ Buildings.--Churches.--Henry Ward Beecher.--Thomas De
+ Witt Talmage.--Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D.--Justin D. Fulton,
+ D.D.--R. S. Storrs, D.D.--Navy Yard.--Atlantic Dock.--
+ Washington Park.--Prospect Park.--Greenwood Cemetery.--
+ Evergreen and Cyprus Hills Cemeteries.--Coney Island.--
+ Rockaway.--Staten Island.--Glen Island.--Future of Brooklyn. 72-84
+
+
+CHAPTER V.--BALTIMORE.
+
+ Position of Baltimore.--Streets.--Cathedral and Churches.--
+ Public Buildings.--Educational Institutions.--Art
+ Collections.--Charitable Institutions.--Monuments.--Railway
+ Tunnels.--Parks and Cemeteries.--Druid Hill Park.--Commerce
+ and Manufactures.--Foundation of the City.--Early History.--
+ Bonaparte-Patterson Marriage.--Storming of Baltimore in
+ 1814.--Maryland at the Breaking-out of the Rebellion.--Assault
+ on Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, in April, 1861.--Subsequent
+ Events during the War.--Baltimore Proves Herself Loyal.--
+ Re-union of Grand Army of the Republic in Baltimore,
+ September, 1882.--Old Differences Forgotten and Fraternal
+ Relations Established. 85-106
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.--CHARLESTON.
+
+ First Visit to Charleston.--Jail Yard.--Bombardment of the
+ City.--Roper Hospital.--Charleston During the War.--Secession
+ of South Carolina.--Attack and Surrender of Fort Sumter.--
+ Blockade of the Harbor.--Great Fire of 1861.--Capitulation
+ in 1865.--First Settlement of the City.--Battles of the
+ Revolution.--Nullification Act.--John C. Calhoun.--Population
+ of the City.--Commerce and Manufactures.--Charleston Harbor.--
+ "American Venice."--Battery.--Streets, Public Buildings and
+ Churches.--Scenery about Charleston.--Railways and Steamship
+ Lines.--An Ancient Church.--Magnolia Cemetery.--Drives near
+ the City.--Charleston Purified by Fire. 107-120
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.--CINCINNATI.
+
+ Founding of Cincinnati.--Rapid Increase of Population.--
+ Character of its Early Settlers.--Pro-slavery Sympathies.--
+ During the Rebellion.--Description of the City.--Smoke and
+ Soot--Suburbs.--"Fifth Avenue" of Cincinnati.--Streets,
+ Public Buildings, Private Art Galleries, Hotels, Churches
+ and Educational Institutions.--"Over the Rhine."--Hebrew
+ Population.--Liberal Religious Sentiment.--Commerce and
+ Manufacturing Interests.--Stock Yards and Pork-packing
+ Establishments.--Wine Making.--Covington and Newport
+ Suspension Bridge.--High Water.--Spring Grove Cemetery. 121-139
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.--CLEVELAND.
+
+ The "Western Reserve."--Character of Early Settlers.--
+ Fairport.--Richmond.--Early History of Cleveland.--Indians.--
+ Opening of Ohio and Portsmouth Canal.--Commerce in 1845.--
+ Cleveland in 1850.--First Railroad.--Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Cuyahoga "Flats" at Night.--The "Forest City."--
+ Streets and Avenues.--Monumental Park.--Public Buildings
+ and Churches.--Union Depot.--Water Rents.--Educational
+ Institutions.--Rocky River.--Approach to the City.--Freshet of
+ 1883.--Funeral of President Garfield.--Lake Side Cemetery.--
+ Site of the Garfield Monument. 140-156
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.--CHICAGO.
+
+ Topographical Situation of Chicago.--Meaning of the Name.--
+ Early History.--Massacre at Fort Dearborn.--Last of the Red
+ Men.--The Great Land Bubble.--Rapid Increase in Population
+ and Business.--The Canal.--First Railroad.--Status of
+ the City in 1871.--The Great Fire.--Its Origin, Progress and
+ Extent.--Heartrending Scenes.--Estimated Total Loss.--Help
+ from all Quarters.--Work of Reconstruction.--Second Fire.--
+ Its Public Buildings, Educational and Charitable Institutions,
+ Streets and Parks.--Its Waterworks.--Its Stock Yards.--Its
+ Suburbs.--Future of the City. 157-175
+
+
+CHAPTER X.--CHEYENNE.
+
+ Location of Cheyenne.--Founding of the City.--Lawlessness.--
+ Vigilance Committee.--Woman Suffrage.--Rapid Increase of
+ Population and Business.--A Reaction.--Stock Raising.--
+ Irrigation.--Mineral Resources.--Present Prospects. 176-181
+
+
+CHAPTER XI--DETROIT.
+
+ Detroit and Her Avenues of Approach.--Competing Lines.--
+ London in Canada.--The Strait and the Ferry.--Music on the
+ Waters.--The Home of the Algonquins.--Teusha-grondie.--
+ Wa-we-aw-to-nong.--Fort Ponchartrain and the Early French
+ Settlers.--The Red Cross of St. George.--Conspiracy of
+ Pontiac.--Battle of Bloody Run.--The Long Siege.--Detroit's
+ First American Flag.--Old Landmarks.--The Pontiac Tree.--
+ Devastation by Fire.--Site of the Modern City.--New City
+ Hall.--Public Library.--Mexican Antiquities. 182-193
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.--ERIE.
+
+ Decoration Day in Pennsylvania.--Lake Erie.--Natural
+ Advantages of Erie.--Her Harbor, Commerce and Manufactures.--
+ Streets and Public Buildings.--Soldiers' Monument.--Erie
+ Cemetery.--East and West Parks.--Perry's Victory. 194-198
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.--HARRISBURG.
+
+ A Historic Tree.--John Harris' Wild Adventure with the
+ Indians.--Harris Park.--History of Harrisburg.--Situation
+ and Surroundings.--State House.--State Library.--A Historic
+ Flag.--View from State House Dome.--Capitol Park.--Monument
+ to Soldiers of Mexican War.--Monument to Soldiers of Late
+ War.--Public Buildings.--Front Street.--Bridges over the
+ Susquehanna.--Mt. Kalmia Cemetery.--Present Advantages and
+ Future Prospects of Harrisburg. 199-206
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.--HARTFORD.
+
+ The City of Publishers.--Its Geographical Location.--The New
+ State House.--Mark Twain and the "None Such."--The "Heathen
+ Chinee."--Wadsworth Atheneum.--Charter Oak.--George H. Clark's
+ Poem.--Putnam's Hotel.--Asylum for Deaf Mutes.--The Sign
+ Language.--A Fragment of Witchcraftism.--Hartford
+ _Courant_.--The Connecticut. 207-215
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.--LANCASTER.
+
+ First Visit to Lancaster.--Eastern Pennsylvania.--Conestoga
+ River.--Early History of Lancaster.--Early Dutch Settlers.--
+ Manufactures.--Public Buildings.--Whit-Monday.--Home of
+ three Noted Persons.--James Buchanan, his Life and Death.--
+ Thaddeus Stevens and his Burial Place.--General Reynolds
+ and his Death.--"Cemetery City." 216-221
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.--MILWAUKEE.
+
+ Rapid Development of the Northwest.--The "West" Forty
+ Years Ago.--Milwaukee and its Commerce and Manufactures.--
+ Grain Elevators.--Harbor.--Divisions of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Northwestern National Asylum for Disabled
+ Soldiers.--German Population.--Influence and Results of German
+ Immigration.--Bank Riot in 1862.--Ancient Tumuli.--Mound
+ Builders.--Mounds Near Milwaukee.--Significance of Same.--
+ Early Traders.--Foundation of the City in 1835.--Excelling
+ Chicago in 1870.--Population and Commerce in 1880. 222-235
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII--MONTREAL.
+
+ Thousand Islands.--Long Sault Rapids.--Lachine Rapids.--
+ Victoria Bridge--Mont Rčal.--Early History of Montreal.--
+ Its Shipping Interests.--Quays.--Manufactures.--Population.--
+ Roman Catholic Supremacy.--Churches.--Nunneries.--Hospitals,
+ Colleges.--Streets.--Public Buildings.--Victoria Skating
+ Rink.--Sleighing.--Early Disasters.--Points of Interest.--
+ The "Canucks." 236-247
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.--NEWARK.
+
+ From New York to Newark.--Two Hundred Years Ago.--The
+ Pioneers.--Public Parks.--City of Churches.--The Canal.--
+ Sailing Up-Hill.--An Old Graveyard.--New Amsterdam and New
+ Netherlands.--The Dutch and English.--Adventurers from New
+ England.--The Indians.--Rate of Population.--Manufactures.--
+ Rank as a City. 248-255
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.--NEW HAVEN.
+
+ The City of Elms.--First Impressions.--A New England Sunday.--
+ A Sail on the Harbor.--Oyster Beds.--East Rock.--The Lonely
+ Denizen of the Bluff.--Romance of John Turner.--West Rock.--
+ The Judges' Cave.--Its Historical Association.--Escape of
+ the Judges.--Monument on the City Green.--Yale College.--Its
+ Stormy Infancy.--Battle on the Weathersfield Road.--Harvard,
+ the Fruit of the Struggle. 256-263
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.--NEW ORLEANS.
+
+ Locality of New Orleans.--The Mississippi.--The Old and the
+ New.--Ceded to Spain.--Creole Part in the American Revolution.
+ Retransferred to France.--Purchased by the United States.--
+ Creole Discontent.--Battle of New Orleans.--Increase of
+ Population.--The Levee.--Shipping.--Public Buildings,
+ Churches, Hospitals, Hotels and Places of Amusement.--
+ Streets.--Suburbs.--Public Squares and Parks.--Places
+ of Historic Interest.--Cemeteries.--French Market.--
+ Mardi-gras.--Climate and Productions.--New Orleans during
+ the Rebellion.--Chief Cotton Mart of the World.--Exports.--
+ Imports.--Future Prosperity of the City. 264-280
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.--NEW YORK.
+
+ Early History of New York.--During the Revolution.--Evacuation
+ Day.--Bowling Green.--Wall Street.--Stock Exchange.--
+ Jacob Little.--Daniel Drew.--Jay Cooke.--Rufus Hatch.--
+ The Vanderbilts.--Jay Gould.--Trinity Church.--John Jacob
+ Astor.--Post-Office.--City Hall and Court House.--James Gordon
+ Bennett.--Printing House Square.--Horace Greeley.--Broadway.--
+ Union Square.--Washington Square.--Fifth Avenue.--Madison
+ Square.--Cathedral.--Murray Hill.--Second Avenue.--Booth's
+ Theatre and Grand Opera House.--The Bowery.--Peter Cooper.--
+ Fourth Avenue.--Park Avenue.--Five Points and its Vicinity.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Tombs.--Central Park.--Water Front.--
+ Blackwell's Island.--Hell Gate.--Suspension Bridge.--Opening
+ Day.--Tragedy of Decoration Day.--New York of the Present and
+ Future. 281-318
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.--OMAHA.
+
+ Arrival in Omaha.--The Missouri River.--Position and
+ Appearance of the City.--Public Buildings.--History.--Land
+ Speculation.--Panic of 1857.--Discovery of Gold in Colorado.--
+ "Pike's Peak or Bust."--Sudden Revival of Business.--First
+ Railroad.--Union Pacific Railroad.--Population.--Commercial
+ and Manufacturing Interests.--Bridge over the Missouri.--
+ Union Pacific Depot--Prospects for the Future. 319-325
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.--OTTAWA.
+
+ Ottawa, the Seat of the Canadian Government.--History.--
+ Population.--Geographical Position.--Scenery.--Chaudičre
+ Falls.--Rideau Falls.--Ottawa River.--Lumber Business.--
+ Manufactures.--Steamboat and Railway Communications.--Moore's
+ Canadian Boat Song.--Description of the City.--Churches,
+ Nunneries, and Charitable Institutions.--Government
+ Buildings.--Rideau Hall.--Princess Louise and Marquis
+ of Lorne.--Ottawa's Proud Boast. 326-331
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.--PITTSBURG.
+
+ Pittsburg at Night.--A Pittsburg Fog.--Smoke.--Description of
+ the City.--The Oil Business.--Ohio River.--Public Buildings,
+ Educational and Charitable Institutions.--Glass Industry.--
+ Iron Foundries.--Fort Pitt Works--Casting a Monster Gun.--
+ American Iron Works.--Nail Works.--A City of Workers.--
+ A True Democracy.--Wages.--Character of Workmen.--Value of
+ Organization.--Knights of Labor.--Opposed to Strikes.--True
+ Relations of Capital and Labor.--Railroad Strike of 1877.--
+ Allegheny City.--Population of Pittsburg.--Early History.--
+ Braddock's Defeat.--Old Battle Ground.--Historic Relics.--
+ The Past and the Present. 332-347
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.--PORTLAND.
+
+ The Coast of Maine.--Early Settlements in Portland.--Troubles
+ with the Indians.--Destruction of the Town in 1690.--Destroyed
+ Again in 1703.--Subsequent Settlement and Growth.--During the
+ Revolution.--First Newspaper.--Portland Harbor.--Commercial
+ Facilities and Progress.--During the Rebellion.--Great Fire
+ of 1866.--Reconstruction.--Position of the City.--Streets.--
+ Munjoy Hill.--Maine General Hospital.--Eastern and Western
+ Promenades.--Longfellow's House.--Birthplace of the Poet.--
+ Market Square and Hall.--First Unitarian Church.--Lincoln
+ Park.--Eastern Cemetery.--Deering's Woods.--Commercial
+ Street.--Old-time Mansion.--Case's Bay and Islands.--
+ Cushing's Island.--Peak's Island.--Ling Island.--Little
+ Chebague Island.--Harpswell. 348-365
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.--PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ Early History.--William Penn.--The Revolution.--Declaration
+ of Independence.--First Railroad.--Riots.--Streets and
+ Houses.--Relics of the Past.--Independence Hall.--Carpenters'
+ Hall.--Blue Anchor.--Letitia Court.--Christ Church.--Old
+ Swedes' Church.--Benjamin Franklin.--Libraries.--Old Quaker
+ Almshouse.--Old Houses in Germantown.--Manufactures.--
+ Theatres.--Churches--Scientific Institutions.--Newspapers.--
+ Medical Colleges.--Schools.--Public Buildings.--
+ Penitentiary.--River Front.--Fairmount Park.--Zoölogical
+ Gardens.--Cemeteries.--Centennial Exhibition.--
+ Bi-Centennial.--Past, Present and Future of the City. 366-398
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.--PROVIDENCE.
+
+ Origin of the City.--Roger Williams.--Geographical Location
+ and Importance.--Topography of Providence.--The Cove.--
+ Railroad Connections.--Brown University.--Patriotism of Rhode
+ Island.--Soldiers' Monument.--The Roger Williams Park.--
+ Narragansett Bay.--Suburban Villages.--Points of Interest.--
+ Butter Exchange.--Lamplighting on a New Plan.--Jewelry
+ Manufactories. 399-404
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.--QUEBEC.
+
+ Appearance of Quebec.--Gibraltar of America.--Fortifications
+ and Walls.--The Walled City.--Churches, Nunneries and
+ Hospitals.--Views from the Cliff.--Upper Town.--Lower Town.--
+ Manufactures.--Public Buildings.--Plains of Abraham.--Falls of
+ Montmorenci.--Sledding on the "Cone."--History of Quebec.--
+ Capture of the City by the British.--Death of Generals Wolfe
+ and Montcalm.--Disaster under General Murray.--Ceding of
+ Canada, by France, to England.--Attack by American Forces
+ under Montgomery and Arnold.--Death of Montgomery.--Capital
+ of Lower Canada and of the Province of Quebec. 405-414
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.--READING.
+
+ Geographical Position and History of Reading.--Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Population, Streets, Churches and Public
+ Buildings.--Boating on the Schuylkill.--White Spot and the
+ View from its Summit.--Other Pleasure Resorts.--Decoration
+ Day.--Wealth Created by Industry. 415-420
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.--RICHMOND.
+
+ Arrival in Richmond.--Libby Prison.--Situation of the City.--
+ Historical Associations.--Early Settlement.--Attacked by
+ British Forces in the Revolution.--Monumental Church.--
+ St. John's Church.--State Capital.--Passage of the Ordinance
+ of Secession.--Richmond the Capital of the Confederate
+ States.--Military Expeditions against the City.--Evacuation
+ of Petersburg.--Surrender of the City.--Visit of President
+ Lincoln.--Historical Places.--Statues.--Rapid Recuperation
+ After the War.--Manufacturing and Commercial Interests.--
+ Streets and Public Buildings.--Population and Future
+ Prospects. 421-432
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.--SAINT PAUL.
+
+ Early History of Saint Paul.--Founding of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Roman Catholics.--Places of Resort.--Falls of
+ Minnehaha.--Carver's Cave.--Fountain Cave.--Commercial
+ Interests.--Present and Future Prospects. 433-487
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.--SALT LAKE CITY.
+
+ The Mormons.--Pilgrimage Across the Continent.--Site of Salt
+ Lake City.--A People of Workers.--Spread of Mormons through
+ other Territories.--City of the Saints.--Streets.--Fruit and
+ Shade Trees.--Irrigation.--The Tabernacle.--Residences of
+ the late Brigham Young.--Museum.--Public Buildings.--Warm
+ and Hot Springs.--Number and Character of Population.--
+ Barter System before Completion of Railroad.--Mormons and
+ Gentiles.--Present Advantages and Future Prospects of Salt
+ Lake City. 438-447
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.--SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ San Francisco.--The Golden State.--San Francisco Bay.--Golden
+ Gate.--Conquest of California by Fremont, 1848.--Discovery of
+ Gold.--Rush to the Mines, 1849.--"Forty-niners."--Great Rise
+ in Provisions and Wages.--Miners Homeward Bound.--Dissipation
+ and Vice in the City.--Vigilance Committee.--Great Influx of
+ Miners in 1850.--Immense Gold Yield.--Climate.--Earthquakes.--
+ Productions.--Irrigation.--Streets and Buildings.--Churches.--
+ Lone Mountain Cemetery.--Cliff House.--Seal Rock.--Theatres.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Chinese Theatres.--Joss Houses.--Emigration
+ Companies.--The Chinese Question.--Cheap Labor.--"The Chinese
+ Must Go."--Present Population and Commerce of San Francisco.--
+ Exports.--Manufactures.--Cosmopolitan Nature of Inhabitants. 448-472
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.--SAVANNAH.
+
+ First Visit to Savannah.--Camp Davidson.--The City During
+ the War.--An Escaped Prisoner.--Recapture and Final
+ Escape.--A "City of Refuge."--Savannah by Night.--Position
+ of the City.--Streets and Public Squares.--Forsyth Park.--
+ Monuments.--Commerce.--View from the Wharves.--Railroads.--
+ Founding of the City.--Revolutionary History.--Death of
+ Pulaski.--Secession.--Approach of Sherman.--Investment of
+ the City by Union Troops.--Recuperation After the War.--
+ Climate.--Colored Population.--Bonaventure, Thunderbolt,
+ and Other Suburban Resorts. 473-486
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.--SPRINGFIELD.
+
+ Valley of the Connecticut.--Location of Springfield.--
+ The United States Armory.--Springfield Library.--Origin
+ of the Present Library System.--The Wayland Celebration.--
+ Settlement of Springfield.--Indian Hostilities.--Days of
+ Witchcraft.--Trial of Hugh Parsons.--Hope Daggett.--
+ Springfield "Republican." 487-491
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.--ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Approach to St. Louis.--Bridge Over the Mississippi.--View
+ of the City.--Material Resources of Missouri.--Early History
+ of St. Louis.--Increase of Population.--Manufacturing and
+ Commercial Interests.--Locality.--Description of St. Louis
+ in 1842.--Resemblance to Philadelphia.--Public Buildings.--
+ Streets.--Parks.--Fair Week.--Educational and Charitable
+ Institutions.--Hotels.--Mississippi River.--St. Louis During
+ the Rebellion.--Peculiar Characteristics.--The Future of the
+ City. 492-510
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII--SYRACUSE.
+
+ Glimpses on the Rail.--Schenectady.--Valley of the Mohawk.--
+ "Lover's Leap."--Rome and its Doctor.--Oneida Stone.--The
+ Lo Race.--Oneida Community.--The City of Salt.--The Six
+ Nations.--The Onondagas.--Traditions of Red Americans.--
+ Hiawatha.--Sacrifice of White Dogs.--Ceremonies.--The Lost
+ Tribes of Israel.--Witches and Wizards.--A Jules Verne
+ Story.--The Salt Wells of Salina.--Lake Onondaga.--Indian
+ Knowledge of Salt Wells.--"Over the Hills and Far Away."--
+ A Castle.--Steam Canal Boats.--Adieux.--Westward Ho! 511-521
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII--TORONTO.
+
+ Situation of Toronto.--The Bay.--History.--Rebellion of
+ 1837.--Fenian Invasion of 1866.--Population.--General
+ Appearance.--Sleighing.--Streets.--Railways.--Commerce.--
+ Manufactures.--Schools and Colleges.--Queen Park.--
+ Churches.--Benevolent Institutions.--Halls and Other
+ Public Buildings.--Hotels.--Newspapers.--General
+ Characteristics and Progress. 522-527
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.--WASHINGTON.
+
+ Situation of the National Capital.--Site Selected by
+ Washington.--Statues of General Andrew Jackson, Scott,
+ McPherson, Rawlins.--Lincoln Emancipation Group.--Navy Yard
+ Bridge.--Capitol Building.--The White House.--Department
+ of State, War and Navy.--The Treasury Department.--Patent
+ Office.--Post Office Department.--Agricultural Building.--
+ Army Medical Museum.--Government Printing Office.--United
+ States Barracks.--Smithsonian Institute.--National Museum.--
+ The Washington Monument.--Corcoran Art Gallery.--National
+ Medical College.--Deaf and Dumb Asylum.--Increase of
+ Population.--Washington's Future Greatness. 528-558
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ALBANY.
+
+ From Boston to Albany.--Worcester and Pittsfield.--The Empire
+ State and its Capital.--Old Associations.--State Street.--Sketch
+ of Early History.--Killian Van Rensselaer.--Dutch Emigration.--
+ Old Fort Orange.--City Heights.--The Lumber District.--Van
+ Rensselaer Homestead.--The New Capitol.--Military Bureau.--
+ War Relics.--Letter of General Dix.--Ellsworth and Lincoln
+ Memorials.--Geological Rooms.--The Cathedral.--Dudley
+ Observatory.--Street Marketing.--Troy and Cohoes.--Stove
+ Works.--Paper Boats.--Grand Army Rooms.--Down the Hudson.
+
+
+An exceedingly cold day was February fourth, 1875, the day which marked
+our journey from Boston to Albany. My inclination to step outside our
+car and tip my hat to the various familiar places along the route was
+suddenly checked by a gust of cutting, freezing, zero-stinging air. A
+ride of between one and two hours brought us to Worcester, a stirring
+town of about forty thousand inhabitants. Worcester is noted principally
+for its cotton factories, and as a political center in Eastern
+Massachusetts.
+
+Springfield, Westfield and Pittsfield follow in succession along the
+route, in central and Western Massachusetts, the first of which has been
+made the subject of a special chapter in this book. The last I remember
+chiefly as the place where, in the summer of 1866, I took my first steps
+in a new enterprise. Pittsfield has large cotton mills, is a summer
+resort, and is the nearest point, by rail, to the Shaker community at
+Lebanon, five miles distant. At Westfield the Mount Holyoke Railroad
+joins the main line, and semi-annually conveys the daughters of the land
+to the famous _Holyoke Female Seminary_.
+
+Leaving Pittsfield we soon reached the State line between New York and
+Massachusetts. I sometimes think that after a residence in almost every
+State of the Union, I ought to feel no greater attraction for my native
+State than any other, yet I cannot repress a sentiment of stronger
+affection for good, grand old New York than any other in the united
+sisterhood. The Empire State has indeed a charm for me, and a congenial
+breeze, I imagine, always awaits me at its boundary.
+
+A ride of another hour brings to view the church spires of Albany, and
+with them a long line of thrilling memories come rushing, like many
+waters, to my mind. Here, in 1859, I entered the State Normal School;
+here I resolved to enter the army; and here the first edition of my
+first book was published, in the autumn of 1865. The work, therefore, of
+presenting this chapter upon the peculiar features of the Capital City
+of New York, may be regarded as one of the most agreeable duties I have
+to perform in the preparation of these pages.
+
+The traveler now entering Albany from the east crosses the Hudson on a
+beautiful iron railroad bridge, which, in the steady march of
+improvements, has succeeded the old-time ferry boat. He is landed at the
+commodious stone building of the New York Central and Hudson River
+Railroad, which is conveniently sandwiched between the Delavan House and
+Stanwix Hall, two large, well known and well conducted hotels.
+
+My first night in a city and a hotel was spent here, at the old Adams
+House, located at that time on Broadway just opposite the Delavan. I was
+awakened in the morning by the roll and rattle of vehicles, and the
+usual din and confusion of a city street. The contrast to my quiet home
+in the Valley of the St. Lawrence was so marked, I can never forget the
+impression I then received, and as I walked up State street toward the
+old Capitol, I almost fancied that such a street might be a fit road to
+Paradise. Albany was the gate through which I entered the world, and to
+my boyish vision the view it disclosed was very wide, and the grand
+possibilities that lay in the dim distance seemed manifold. It is the
+oldest city, save Jamestown, Va., in the Union, having been settled in
+the very babyhood of the seventeenth century, somewhere about 1612 or
+1614. It was originally, until the year 1661, only a trading post on the
+frontier, the entire region of country to the westward being unexplored
+and unknown, except as the "far west." The red warriors of the Mohegans,
+Senecas, Mohawks and the remaining bands of the "Six Nations" held
+undisputed possession of the soil, and kindled their council fires and
+danced their "corn dances" in peace, unmolested as yet by the aggressive
+pale-faces.
+
+The baptismal name of the embryo city of Albany was Scho-negh-ta-da, an
+Indian word meaning "over the plains." The name was afterwards
+transferred to the outlying suburban town now known as Schenectady. An
+immense tract of land bordering the Hudson for twenty-four miles, and
+reaching back from the river three times that distance, included Albany
+within its jurisdiction, and was originally owned by a rich Dutch
+merchant, one Killian Van Rensselaer, from Amsterdam. The land was
+purchased from the Indians for the merest trifle, after the usual
+fashion of white cupidity when dealing with Indian generosity and
+ignorance. Emigrants were sent over from the old country to people this
+wide domain, and thus the first white colony was established, which
+subsequently grew into sufficient importance to become the Capital city
+of the Empire State.
+
+Before the purchase of Killian Van Rensselaer, a fort was built
+somewhere on what is now known as Broadway, and was named Fort Orange,
+in honor of the Prince of Orange, who was at that time patroon of New
+Netherlands, as New York was at first called. Old Fort Orange afterwards
+went by various names, among which were Rensselaerwyck, Beaverwyck and
+Williamstadt. In 1664 the sovereignty of the tract passed into the hands
+of the English, and was named Albany, in compliment to the Duke of
+Albany. In 1686 the young city aspired to a city charter, and its first
+mayor, Peter Schuyler, was then elected. In 1807 it became the Capital
+of the State. As an item of interest, it may be mentioned that the first
+vessel which ascended the river as far as Albany was the yacht Half
+Moon, Captain Hendrick Hudson commanding.
+
+Albany, like ancient Rome, sits upon her many hills, and the views
+obtained from the city heights are beautiful in the extreme. The
+Helderbergs and the Catskill ranges loom blue and beautiful towards the
+south, Troy and the Green Mountains of Vermont can be seen from the
+north, while beyond the river, Bath-on-the-Hudson and the misty hill
+tops further away, rim the horizon's distant verge. The city has a
+large trade in lumber, and that portion of it which is known as the
+"lumber district" is devoted almost exclusively to this branch. One may
+walk, of a summer's day, along the smooth and winding road between the
+river and the canal, for two miles or more, and encounter nothing save
+the tasteful cottage-like offices, done in Gothic architecture, of the
+merchant princes in this trade, sandwiched between huge piles of lumber,
+rising white and high in the sun, and giving out resinous, piney odors.
+Not far from this vicinity stands the old Van Rensselaer homestead,
+guarded by a few primeval forest trees that have survived the wreck of
+time and still keep their ancient watch and ward. The old house, I have
+been told, is now deserted of all save an elderly lady, one of the last
+of the descendants of the long and ancient line of Van Rensselaer.
+Numerous points of interest dot the city in all directions, from limit
+to limit, and claim the attention of the stranger. Among the most
+prominent of these is, of course, the new Capitol building now in
+process of construction at the head of State street. A very pretty model
+of the structure is on exhibition in a small wooden building standing at
+the entrance to the grounds, which gives, I should judge, a clever idea
+of what the future monumental pile is to be like. Its height is very
+imposing, and the tall towers and minarets which rise from its roof will
+give it an appearance of still greater grandeur. It is built of granite
+quarried from Maine and New Hampshire, and is in the form of a
+parallelogram, enclosing an open court. Had I a sufficient knowledge of
+architecture to enable me to talk of orders, of pilasters, columns,
+entablatures and façades, I might perhaps give my readers a clearer
+idea of the magnificence of this new structure, which will stand without
+a rival, in this country at least, and may even dare to compete with
+some of the marvellous splendors of the old world.
+
+The Old Capitol and the State Library stand just in front of the new
+building, and obscure the view from the foot of State street. The Senate
+and Assembly chambers in the old building have an antiquated air, with
+their straight-backed chairs upholstered in green and red, and the rough
+stairways leading to the cupola, through an unfurnished attic, are
+suggestive of accident. In this cupola, once upon a time, in the year
+1832, a certain Mr. Weaver, tired of life and its turmoil, swung himself
+out of it on a rope. So the cupola has its bit of romance. In this
+neighborhood, on State street, above the Library, is located the Bureau
+of Military Statistics, which is well worth a visit from every New
+Yorker who takes a pride in the military glory of his native State. One
+is greeted at the entrance with a host of mementos of our recent civil
+war, which bring back a flood of patriotic memories. Here is a
+collection of nine hundred battle flags, all belonging to the State,
+most of them torn and tattered in hard service, and inscribed with the
+names of historic fields into which they went fresh and bright, and out
+of which they came smoked and begrimed, and torn with the conflict of
+battle. Here are old canteens which have furnished solace to true
+comrades on many occasions of mutual hardship. Here, too, is the Lincoln
+collection, with its sad reminders of the nation's loved and murdered
+President; and in a corner of the same room the Ellsworth collection is
+displayed from a glass case. His gun and the Zouave suit worn by him at
+the time of his death hang side by side, and there, too, is the flag
+which, with impetuous bravery, he tore down from the top of the Marshall
+House at Alexandria, Virginia. In the same case hangs the picture of his
+avenger, Captain Brownell, and the rifle with which he shot Jackson. In
+another part of the room may be seen the original letter of Governor,
+then Secretary, Dix, which afterwards became so famous, and which
+created, in a great measure, the wave of popularity that carried him
+into the gubernatorial chair.
+
+The letter reads as follows:--
+
+ "TREASURY DEPARTMENT,
+ January, 29th, 1861.
+
+"Tell Lieutenant Caldwell to arrest Captain Breshwood, assume command of
+the cutter, and obey the order I gave through you. If Captain Breshwood,
+after arrest, undertakes to interfere with the command of the cutter,
+tell Lieutenant Caldwell to consider him as a mutineer and treat him
+accordingly. If any one attempts to haul down the American flag, shoot
+him on the spot.
+
+ "JOHN A. DIX, _Secretary of the Treasury_."
+
+The captured office chairs used by Jeff. Davis, in Richmond, the lock
+from John Brown's prison door at Harper's Ferry, pieces of plate from
+the monitors off Charleston, torpedoes from James River, the bell of the
+old guard-house at Fort Fisher, captured slave chains, miniature pontoon
+bridges, draft boxes and captured Rebel shoes, may be mentioned as a few
+among the many curiosities of this military bureau. Here, too, may be
+seen the pardon, from Lincoln, for Roswell Mclntire, taken from his dead
+body at the battle of Five Forks; and near by hangs the picture of
+Sergeant Amos Humiston, of the 154th New York Regiment, who was
+identified by means of the picture of his three children, found clasped
+in his hand as he lay dead on the field of Gettysburg. In this room,
+also, is the Jamestown, New York, flag, made by the ladies of that place
+in six hours after the attack on Sumter, and which was displayed from
+the office of the Jamestown _Journal_. Mr. Daly, the polite janitor of
+the building, is always happy to receive visitors, and will show them
+every courtesy.
+
+The Geological Rooms, on State street, are also well worthy the time and
+attention of the visitor. Large collections of the various kinds of rock
+which underlie the soil of our country are here on exhibition, as, also,
+the coral formations and geological curiosities of all ages. In an upper
+room towers the mammoth Cohoes mastodon, whose skeleton reaches from
+floor to ceiling. This monster of a former age was accidentally
+discovered at that place by parties who were excavating for a building.
+In these rooms, also, there are huge jaws of whales, which enable one to
+better understand the disposition of the Bible whales, and how easy it
+must have been for them to gulp down two or three Jonahs, if one little
+Jonah should fail to appease the delicate appetite of such sportive
+fishes. I couldn't help thinking of the lost races that must have
+peopled the earth when this old world was young--when these fossils were
+undergoing formation, and these mastodons made the ground tremble
+beneath their tread.
+
+Where are these peoples now, and where their unrevealed histories? Shall
+we never know more of them than Runic stones and mysterious mounds can
+unfold? These reminders of the things that once had an existence but
+have now vanished from the face of the earth, and well nigh from the
+memory of men--these things are full of suggestion, to say the least,
+and are quite apt to correct any undue vanity which may take possession
+of us, or any large idea of future fame. We may, perhaps, create a
+ripple in the surface of remembrance which marks the place where our
+human existence went out, and which, at the furthest, may last a few
+hundred years. But who can hope for more than that, or hoping, can
+reasonably expect to find the wish realized? "There are more things in
+heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in our philosophy."
+
+The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, on Eagle street, is one of
+the finest church structures in Albany. It is built of brown freestone,
+in the Gothic style of architecture, and its two towers are each two
+hundred-and-eighty feet in height. Its cost was six hundred thousand
+dollars. The interior decorations are beautiful, and the rich stained
+glass windows are the gifts of sister societies. On Easter mornings the
+Cathedral is sure to be crowded by people of all sects and creeds,
+brought there to witness the joyous Easter services which terminate the
+long fast of Lent.
+
+About a mile and a half from the city, on Patroon's Hill, is situated
+the Dudley Observatory, where on clear summer nights Albanians come to
+gaze at the stars and the moon, through the large Observatory
+refractor. The structure is built in the form of a cross, eighty-six
+feet long and seventy feet deep.
+
+One of the first peculiarities which attracts the attention of the
+non-resident of Albany is the appearance of the business portion of
+State street, in the forenoon, from eight o'clock until twelve. Any time
+between these hours the street, from the lower end of Capitol Park down
+to Pearl street, is transformed into a vast market-place. Meat-wagons,
+vegetable carts, restaurants on wheels, and all sorts of huckstering
+establishments, are backed up to the sidewalk, on either side, blocking
+the way and so filling the wide avenue that there is barely room for the
+street-car in its passage up and down the hill. The descendants of
+Killian Van Rensselaer and the aristocratic Ten Eycks and Van Woerts, of
+Albany, should exhibit enterprise enough, I think, to erect a city
+market and spare State street this spectacle.
+
+ [Illustration: STATE STREET AND CAPITOL, ALBANY, NEW YORK.]
+
+The manufacturing interest of Albany consists largely of stove works, in
+which department it competes with its near neighbor, Troy. This
+flourishing city, of about forty-eight thousand souls, is seven miles
+distant from Albany, up the river, and is in manifold communication with
+it by railroads on both sides of the Hudson, as well as by street
+railway. Steam cars run between Albany and Troy half hourly, during the
+day and far into the night, and one always encounters a stream of people
+between these two places, whose current sets both ways, at all times and
+seasons. Troy is at the head of navigation on the Hudson and
+communicates by street car with Cohoes, Lansingburg and Waterford.
+Cohoes is a place of great natural beauty, and the Cataract Falls of
+the Mohawk River at that place add an element of wild grandeur to the
+scenery. One of the large, rocky islands in the river, known as Simmons'
+Island, is a popular resort for picnic excursions, and is a delightful
+place in summer, with its groves of forest trees, and the pleasant noise
+of waters around its base. The place seems haunted by an atmosphere of
+Indian legend, and one could well imagine the departed warriors of the
+lost tribes of the Mohawk treading these wild forest paths, and making
+eloquent "talks" before their red brothers gathered around the council
+fire.
+
+The Mohawk and Hudson rivers unite at Troy, and seek a common passage to
+the sea. Mrs. Willard's Seminary for young ladies is located in this
+city, and is a standard institution of learning. Many of the streets of
+Troy are remarkably clean and finely shaded, and handsome residences and
+business blocks adorn them. The city is also a headquarters for
+Spiritualism in this section of the country. The Spiritualistic Society
+has, I am told, a flourishing, progressive Lyceum, which supersedes,
+with them, the orthodox Sunday school, and the exercises, consisting in
+part of marches and recitations, are conducted in a spirited and
+interesting manner.
+
+Foundries for hollow-ware and stoves constitute the leading branch of
+manufacture in the city of Troy. To one not familiar with the process by
+which iron is shaped into the various articles of common use among us, a
+visit to the foundries of Troy or Albany would be full of interest and
+instruction. Piles of yellow sand are lying in the long buildings used
+as foundries, while on either side the room workmen are busily engaged
+fashioning the wet sand into moulds for the reception of the melted
+iron. Originally the sand is of a bright yellow color, but it soon
+becomes a dingy brown, by repeated use in cooling the liquid metal.
+
+Each moulder has his "floor," or special amount of room allotted him for
+work, and here, during the forenoon, and up to three or four o'clock in
+the afternoon, he is very busy indeed, preparing for the "pouring"
+operation. Pig iron, thrown into a huge cauldron or boiler, and melted
+to a white heat, is then poured, from a kettle lined with clay, into the
+sand-moulds, and in a remarkably short space of time the greenish-white
+liquid which you saw flowing into a tiny, black aperture is shaken out
+of the sand by the workmen, having been transformed into portions of
+stoves. These go to the polishing room, and thence to the finishing
+apartment, where the detached pieces are hammered together, with
+deafening noise.
+
+Troy rejoices also in a paper boat manufactory--the boats being made
+especially for racing and feats of skill. They find sale principally in
+foreign markets, and at stated seasons divide the attention of the
+English with the "Derby." The boats are made of layers of brown paper
+put together with shellac.
+
+There is a large society of Grand Army men in Albany, one Post numbering
+five or six hundred members. Their rooms are tastefully decorated, and
+hung with patriotic pictures, which make the blood thrill anew, as in
+the days of '61. A miniature fort occupies the centre of the room, and
+emblematic cannon and crossed swords are to be seen in conspicuous
+places.
+
+A trip down the Hudson, in summer, from Albany to New York, is said to
+afford some of the finest scenery in the world, not excepting the
+famous sail on the castled Rhine; and the large river boats which leave
+Albany wharf daily, for our American London, are, indeed, floating
+palaces. The capital city of the Empire State is not, therefore, without
+its attractions, despite the fact that it was settled by the Dutch, and
+that a sort of Rip Van Winkle sleep seems, at times, to have fastened
+itself upon the drowsy spirit of Albanian enterprise.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BOSTON.
+
+ Geographical Location of Boston.--Ancient Names.--Etymology
+ of the Word Massachusetts.--Changes in the Peninsula.--Noted
+ Points of Interest.--Boston Common.--Old Elm.--Duel Under its
+ Branches.--Soldiers' Monument.--Fragmentary History.--Courtship
+ on the Common.--Faneuil Hall and Market.--Old State House.--
+ King's Chapel.--Brattle Square Church.--New State House.--
+ New Post Office.--Old South Church.--Birthplace of Franklin.--
+ "News Letter."--City Hall.--Custom House.--Providence Railroad
+ Station.--Places of General Interest.
+
+
+Boston sits like a queen at the head of her harbor on the Massachusetts
+coast, and wears her crown of past and present glory with an easy and
+self-satisfied grace. Her commercial importance is large; her ships
+float on many seas; and she rejoices now in the same uncompromising
+spirit of independence which controlled the actions of the celebrated
+"Tea Party" in the pioneer days of '76. Her safe harbor is one of the
+best on the Atlantic seaboard, and is dotted with over a hundred
+islands. On some of these, garrisoned forts look grimly seaward.
+
+Boston is built on a peninsula about four miles in circumference, and to
+this fact may be attributed the origin of her first name, Shawmutt, that
+word signifying in the Indian vocabulary a peninsula. Its second name,
+Tremount, took its rise from the three peaks of Beacon Hill, prominently
+seen from Charlestown by the first settlers there. Many of the colonists
+were from old Boston, in Lincolnshire, England, and on the seventh of
+September, 1630, this name supplanted the first two.
+
+ [Illustration: BOSTON, AS VIEWED FROM THE BAY.]
+
+In this connection may be given the etymology of the word Massachusetts,
+which is somewhat curious. It is said that the red Sachem who governed
+in this part of the country had his seat on a hill about two leagues
+south of Boston. It lay in the shape of an Indian arrow's head, which in
+their language was called Mos. Wetuset, pronounced _Wechuset_, was also
+their name for a hill, and the Sachem's seat was therefore named
+Mosentuset, which a slight variation changed into the name afterwards
+received by the colony. Boston, as the centre of this colony, began from
+the first to assume the importance of the first city of New England. Its
+history belongs not only to itself, but to the country at large, as the
+pioneer city in the grand struggle for constitutional and political
+liberty. A large majority of the old landmarks which connected it with
+the stormy days of the past, and stood as monuments of its primeval
+history, are now obliterated by time and the steady march of
+improvements. The face of the country is changed. The three peaks of
+Beacon Hill, which once lifted themselves to the height of a hundred and
+thirty feet above the sea, are now cut down into insignificant knolls.
+The waters of the "black bay" which swelled around its base have receded
+to give place to the encroachments of the city. Made lands, laid out in
+streets and set thick with dwellings, supplant the mud flats formerly
+covered by the tide. Thousands of acres which were once the bed of the
+harbor are now densely populated.
+
+The house on Harrison avenue where the writer is at present domiciled is
+located on the spot which once was occupied by one of the best wharves
+in the city. The largest ocean craft moored to this wharf, on account of
+the great depth of water flowing around it. The land has steadily
+encroached on the water, until the peninsula that was is a peninsula no
+longer, and its former geographical outlines have dropped out of sight
+in the whirl and rush of the populous and growing city. A few old
+landmarks of the past, however, still remain, linking the _now_ and the
+_then_, and among the most prominent of these are Faneuil Hall, the Old
+South Church, which was founded in 1660, King's Chapel, the Old Granary
+Burying-ground, Brattle Square Church, quite recently demolished, the
+old State House, and Boston Common. The Common antedates nearly all
+other special features of the city, and is the pride of Bostonians. Here
+juvenile Boston comes in winter to enjoy the exciting exercise of
+"coasting," and woe to the unwary foot passenger who may chance to
+collide with the long sleds full of noisy boys which shoot like black
+streaks from the head of Beacon street Mall, down the diagonal length of
+the Common, to the junction of Boylston and Tremont streets. This winter
+(1874-5), owing to several unfortunate accidents to passers-by across
+the snowy roads of the coasters, elevated bridges have been erected, to
+meet the wants of the people without interfering with the rights of the
+boys. The Common was originally a fifty-acre lot belonging to a Mr.
+Blackstone. This was in 1633. It was designed as a cow pasture and
+training ground, and was sold to the people of Boston the next year,
+1634, for thirty pounds. The city was taxed for this purpose to the
+amount of not less than five shillings for each inhabitant. Mr.
+Blackstone afterwards removed to Cumberland, Rhode Island, where he
+died, in the spring of 1675. It is said that John Hancock's cows were
+pastured on the Common in the days of the Revolution. On the tenth of
+May, 1830, the city authorities forbade the use of the Common for cows,
+at which time it was inclosed by a two-rail fence. The handsome iron
+paling which now surrounds the historic area has long since taken the
+place of the ancient fence.
+
+Perhaps the most noticeable, certainly the most famous object on Boston
+Common, is the Great Tree, or Old Elm, which stands in a hollow of rich
+soil near a permanent pond of water, not far from the centre of the
+enclosure. It is of unknown age. It was probably over a hundred years
+old in 1722. Governor Winthrop came to Boston in 1630, but before that
+period the tree probably had its existence. It antedates the arrival of
+the first settlers, and it seems not unlikely that the Indian Shawmutt
+smoked the pipe of peace under its pendent branches. In 1844 its height
+was given at seventy-two and a half feet--girth, one foot above the
+ground, twenty-two and a half feet. The storms of over two centuries
+have vented their fury upon it and destroyed its graceful outlines. But
+in its age and decrepitude it has been tenderly nursed and partially
+rejuvenated. Broken limbs, torn off by violent gales, have been replaced
+by means of iron clamps, and such skill as tree doctors may use. In the
+last century a hollow orifice in its trunk was covered with canvas and
+its edges protected by a mixture of clay and other substances. Later, in
+1854, Mr. J. V. C. Smith, Mayor of the city, placed around it an iron
+fence bearing the following inscription:--
+
+ "THE OLD ELM."
+
+ "This tree has been standing here for an unknown period. It is
+ believed to have existed before the settlement of Boston, being
+ full-grown in 1722. Exhibited marks of old age in 1792, and was
+ nearly destroyed by a storm in 1832. Protected by an iron
+ inclosure in 1854."
+
+What a long array of exciting events has this tree witnessed! In the
+stirring days of the Revolution the British army was encamped around it.
+In 1812 the patriot army occupied the same place, in protecting the town
+against the invasion of a foreign foe. Tumultuous crowds have here
+assembled on election and Independence days, and its sturdy branches
+have faced alike the anger of the elements and the wrath of man. Public
+executions have taken place under its shadow, and witches have dangled
+from its branches in death's last agonies. Here, in 1740, Rev. George
+Whitfield preached his farewell sermon to an audience of thirty thousand
+people; and here, also, at an earlier date, old Matoonas, of the Nipmuck
+tribe, was shot to death by the dusky warriors of Sagamore John, on a
+charge of committing the first murder in Massachusetts Colony. An
+incident of still more romantic interest belongs to the history of the
+Old Elm. On July third, 1728, this spot was the scene of a mortal combat
+between two young men belonging to the upper circle of Boston society.
+The cause of dispute was the possession of an unknown fair one. The
+names of the young men were Benjamin Woodbridge and Henry Phillips, both
+about twenty years old. The time was evening, the weapons rapiers, and
+Woodbridge was fatally dispatched by a thrust from the rapier of his
+antagonist. Phillips fled to a British ship of war lying in the harbor,
+and was borne by fair breezes to English shores. He did not long survive
+his opponent, however, dying, it is said, of despair, shortly after his
+arrival in England.
+
+Frog Pond, or Fountain Pond, near the Old Elm, has been transformed from
+a low, marshy spot of stagnant water, to the clear sheet which is now
+the delight of the boys. October twenty-fifth, 1848, the water from
+Cochituate Lake was introduced through this pond, and in honor of the
+occasion a large procession marched through the principal streets of the
+city to the Common. Addresses, hymns, prayers, and songs, were the order
+of the day, and when the pure water of the lake leaped through the
+fountain gate, the ringing of bells and boom of cannon attested the joy
+of the people.
+
+Near the Old Elm and the Frog Pond, on Flagstaff Hill, the corner-stone
+of a Soldiers' Monument was laid, September eighteenth, 1871. Some idea
+of the style of the monument may be gathered from the following
+description:--"Upon a granite platform will rest the plinth, in the form
+of a Greek cross, with four panels, in which will be inserted
+bas-reliefs representing the Sanitary Commission, the Navy, the
+Departure for the War and the Return. At each of the four corners will
+be a statue, of heroic size, representing Peace, History, the Army, and
+the Navy. The die upon the plinth will also be richly sculptured, and
+upon it, surrounding the shaft in alto-relievo, will be four allegorical
+figures representing the North, South, East and West. The shaft is to be
+an elegant Doric column, the whole to be surmounted by a colossal statue
+of America resting on a hemisphere, guarded by four figures of the
+American eagle, with outspread wings. 'America' will hold in her left
+hand the national standard, and in her right she will support a sheathed
+sword, and wreaths for the victors. The extreme height of the monument
+will be ninety feet. The artist is Martin Millmore, of Boston."
+
+In the year 1668, a certain Mr. Dunton visited Boston, and wrote the
+following letter to his friends in England. It will serve to show the
+custom of Bostonians on training day, and recall some of the scenes
+which transpired over two hundred years ago on the historic Common. "It
+is a custom here," he says, "for all that can bear arms to go out on a
+training day. I thought a pike was best for a young soldier, so I
+carried a pike; 'twas the first time I ever was in arms. Having come
+into the field, the Captain called us into line to go to prayer, and
+then prayed himself, and when the exercise was done the Captain likewise
+concluded with a prayer. Solemn prayer upon a field, on training day, I
+never knew but in New England, where it seems it is a common custom.
+About three o'clock, our exercises and prayers being over, we had a very
+noble dinner, to which all the clergymen were invited."
+
+In 1640, Arthur Perry was Town Drummer for all public purposes. There
+being no meeting-house bell in town, he called the congregation together
+with his drum. "He joined the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company in
+that capacity, for which yearly service he received five pounds. The
+second additional musical instrument was a clarionet, performed on by a
+tall, strapping fellow with but one eye, who headed the Ancient and
+Honorable a few strides." The first band of music used in Boston was in
+1790, at the funeral of Colonel Joseph Jackson. Yearly, for a period of
+between two and three hundred years, this military company has appeared
+on the Common, to be received by the Governor of the State, with his
+aides, who appointed the new commissions for the year to come and
+received those for the year just past. Their anniversary occurs on the
+first Monday in June.
+
+The Brewer Fountain, the Deer Park and the Tremont and Beacon Street
+Malls complete the list of conspicuous attractions on the Common. The
+Beacon Street Mall is perhaps the finest, being heavily shaded by
+thickly-set rows of American elms. A particular portion of this mall is
+described as the scene of at least _one_ courtship, and how many more
+may have transpired in the neighborhood history or tradition tells us
+not!
+
+The "Autocrat of the Breakfast-table" loved the schoolmistress who
+partook of her daily food at the same board with himself and listened
+quietly to his wise morning talks, with only an occasional sensible
+reply. The schoolmistress returned his passion, but the young Autocrat,
+uncertain of his fate, rashly determined that if she said him "nay" to
+this most important question of his life, he would take passage in the
+next steamer bound for Liverpool, and never look upon her face again.
+The fateful hour which was to decide his fate approached, and the
+Autocrat proposed a walk. They took the direction of the Beacon Street
+Mall, and what happened next his own charming pen-picture best
+describes:
+
+"It was on the Common that we were walking. The _mall_ or boulevard of
+our Common, you know, has various branches leading from it in different
+directions. One of these runs down from opposite Joy street, southward,
+across the length of the whole Common, to Boylston street. We called it
+the long path, and were fond of it.
+
+"I felt very weak indeed (though of a tolerably robust habit) as we came
+opposite the head of this path on that morning. I think I tried to speak
+twice without making myself distinctly audible. At last I got out the
+question:--'Will you take the long path with me?'
+
+"'Certainly,' said the schoolmistress, 'with much pleasure.'
+
+"'Think,' I said, 'before you answer; if you take the long path with me
+now, I shall interpret it that we are to part no more!' The
+schoolmistress stepped back with a sudden movement, as if an arrow had
+struck her.
+
+"One of the long, granite blocks used as seats was hard by, the one you
+may still see close by the Ginko tree. 'Pray, sit down,' I said.
+
+"'No, no,' she answered softly, 'I will walk the _long path_ with you.'"
+
+Propositions to convert the Common into public thoroughfares have ever
+met with stout resistance from "we the people"--the Commoners of
+Boston--and only this winter a meeting was held in Faneuil Hall for the
+purpose of protesting against this causeless desecration. The occasion
+of the meeting was a clique movement to have a street-car track run
+through the sacred ground. One of the speakers--a workingman--waxed
+eloquent on the theme of the "poor man's park, where in summer a soiled
+son of labor might buy a cent apple and lounge at his ease under the
+shady trees."
+
+In 1734, by vote of the town, a South End and North End Market were
+established. Before this the people were supplied with meats and
+vegetables at their own doors. In 1740, Peter Faneuil offered to build a
+market-house at his own expense, and present it to the town. His
+proposition was carried by seven majority. Faneuil Hall, the "Cradle of
+Liberty," was first built two stories high, forty feet wide, and one
+hundred feet in length. It was nearly destroyed by fire in 1761, and in
+1805 it was enlarged to eighty feet in width and twenty feet greater
+elevation. "The Hall is never let for money," but is at the disposal of
+the people whenever a sufficient number of persons, complying with
+certain regulations, ask to have it opened. The city charter of Boston
+contains a provision forbidding the sale or lease of this Hall. For a
+period of over eighty years--from the time of its erection until
+1822--all town meetings were held within its walls. It is "peculiarly
+fitted for popular assemblies, possessing admirable acoustic
+properties."
+
+The capacity of the Hall is increased by the absence of all seats on the
+floor--the gallery only being provided with these conveniences.
+Portraits cover the walls. Healy's picture of Webster replying to Hayne
+hangs in heavy gilt, back of the rostrum. Paintings of the two Adamses,
+of General Warren and Commodore Preble, of Edward Everett and Governor
+Andrew, adorn other portions of the Hall. Nor are Washington and Lincoln
+forgotten. The pictured faces of these noble patriots of the past seem
+to shed a mysterious influence around, and silently plead the cause of
+right and of justice. The words which echoed from this rostrum in the
+days before the Revolution still ring down from the past, touching the
+present with a living power whenever liberty needs a champion or the
+people an advocate.
+
+Faneuil Hall Market, or Quincy Market, as it is popularly called, grew
+out of a recommendation by Mayor Quincy, in 1823. Two years later the
+corner-stone was laid, and in 1827 the building was completed. It is
+five hundred and thirty-five feet long, fifty feet wide, and two stories
+high. Its site was reclaimed from the tide waters, and one hundred and
+fifty thousand dollars were expended in its erection.
+
+The capital for its construction was managed in such a judicious way
+that not only the market was built, but six new streets were opened and
+a seventh enlarged, without a cent of city tax or a dollar's increase of
+the city's debt.
+
+The Old State House was located on the site of the first public market,
+at the head or western end of State street. It was commenced with a
+bequest of five hundred pounds from Robert Keayne, the first commander
+of the "Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company." It was known as the
+Town House, and was erected about the year 1670. The present Old State
+House was built in 1748, on the same site. Its vicinity is historic. The
+square in State street below the Old State House, was the scene of the
+Boston massacre, March fifth, 1770. "The funeral of the victims of the
+massacre was attended by an immense concourse of people from all parts
+of New England." About the same year also, in front of this Town House,
+occurred the famous battle of the broom, between a fencing master just
+arrived from England and Goff, the regicide. This English fencer erected
+an elevated platform in front of the Town House and paraded, sword in
+hand, for three days, challenging all America for a trial of his skill.
+At this time three of the judges who signed the death warrant for
+beheading Charles the First, of England, had escaped to Boston, and were
+concealed by the people of Massachusetts and Connecticut. Their names
+were Goff, Whalley and Dixwell, for whom, dead or alive, Parliament
+offered one hundred pounds each. The fencing master made such a stir
+about his skill that Goff, hearing of it at his place of concealment in
+the woods of Hadley, came to Boston and confronted the wordy hero. His
+sword was a birch broom, his shield a white oak cheese slung from his
+arm in a napkin. After he had soaked his broom in a mud-puddle he
+mounted the platform for battle. The fencing master ordered him off, but
+Goff stood his ground and neatly parried the first thrust of the
+braggart. The battle then commenced in earnest, and the cheese three
+times received the sword of the fencing master. Before it could be
+withdrawn, Goff each time daubed the face of his antagonist with the
+muddy broom, amid the huzzas of the crowd which had gathered from all
+quarters to witness the contest. At the third lunge into the huge cheese
+the swordsman threw aside his small blade, and, unsheathing a
+broadsword, rushed furiously upon Goff.
+
+"Stop, sir!" exclaimed Goff; "hitherto, you see, I have only played with
+you, and have not attempted to hurt you, but if you come at me with the
+broadsword, know that I will certainly take your life!"
+
+"Who can you be?" replied the other; "you are either Goff, Whalley or
+the devil, for there was no other man in England could beat me!"
+
+Goff immediately retired, amid the plaudits of the crowd, and the
+subdued fencing master slunk away with chagrin.
+
+The interior arrangement of the Old State House has been entirely
+remodeled, and is now used exclusively for business.
+
+King's Chapel, at the corner of Tremont and School streets, is another
+noteworthy point of interest. The corner-stone was laid in 1750, and
+four years were occupied in its construction, the stone for the building
+material being imported. Its church-yard was Boston's first
+burial-ground, and some of the tombstones date back as far as 1658. Mr.
+Isaac Johnson, one of the founders of Boston, is said to have here found
+his last resting place. John Winthrop, his son and grandson--all
+governors of Connecticut, lay in the same family tomb in this yard. Four
+pastors of the "First Church of Christ in Boston" are also buried here.
+The body of General Joseph Warren was placed in King's Chapel before it
+was re-interred at Cambridge, and "dust to dust" has been pronounced
+over many other distinguished men at this stone church. The edifice is
+constructed in a peculiar way, with Doric columns of gray stone, and is
+sure to attract the attention of the stranger. It was the first
+Episcopal, as well as the first Unitarian church in Boston, and its
+pulpit is now the exponent of Unitarian doctrine, added to the Church of
+England service.
+
+Going down Washington street towards Charlestown, we come to the famous
+Brattle Square, and its church, which once consecrated the spot. Here
+Edward Everett preached to his listening flock, and here, on July
+thirtieth, 1871, Dr. S. K. Lothrop pronounced the last sermon within its
+walls. Its ancient bell has ceased to ring, and the old-fashioned pulpit
+echoes no more to the tread of distinguished men.
+
+The first Brattle Square Church was built in 1699. It was torn down in
+1772, and the next year rebuilt on the same site, the dedication taking
+place July twenty-fifth.
+
+On the night of March sixteenth, 1776, the British under Lord Howe were
+encamped in this neighborhood, some of the regiments using Brattle
+Square Church as a barrack. A cannon ball, fired from Cambridge, where
+the American army was then stationed, struck the church, and was
+afterwards built into the wall of the historic edifice, above the porch.
+On the next night ten thousand of Lord Howe's troops embarked from
+Boston. In 1871 the building was sold by the society, and a handsome
+granite block now takes its place.
+
+The new State House on Beacon street is one of the most prominent
+geographical points in all Boston, and the view from its cupola is
+second only to that obtained from the glorious height of Bunker Hill
+monument. Its gilded dome is a conspicuous object far and near, and
+glitters in the sunlight like veritable gold. The land on which the
+State House stands was bought by the town from Governor Hancock's heirs,
+and given to the State. The corner-stone was laid July fourth, 1793, the
+ceremony being conducted by the Freemasons, Paul Revere, as Grand
+Master, at their head. The massive stone was drawn to its place by
+fifteen white horses, that being the number then of the States in the
+Union. Ex-Governor Samuel Adams delivered the address. The Legislature
+first convened in the new State House in January, 1798. In 1852 it was
+greatly enlarged, and in 1867 the interior was entirely remodeled.
+Chantry's statue of Washington, the statues of Webster and Mann, busts
+of Adams, Lincoln and Sumner, and that beautiful piece of art in marble,
+the full-length statue of Governor Andrew, in the Doric Hall--all
+attract the attention of the visitor. In this rotunda there are also
+copies of the tombstones of the Washington family of Brington Parish,
+England, presented by Charles Sumner, and the torn and soiled
+battle-flags of Massachusetts regiments, hanging in glass cases. In the
+Hall of Representatives and the Senate Chamber, relics of the past are
+scattered about, and the walls are adorned with portraits of
+distinguished men. The eastern wing of the State House is occupied with
+the State Library Large numbers of visitors yearly throng the building
+and climb the circular stairways for the fine view of Boston to be
+obtained from the cupola.
+
+The new Post Office is accounted one of the finest public buildings in
+New England. It has a frontage on Devonshire street, of over two hundred
+feet and occupies the entire square between Milk and Water streets. It
+was several years in building, being occupied this winter for the first
+time since the great fire. Its cost was something like three millions of
+dollars. Its style of architecture is grand in the extreme. Groups of
+statuary ornament the central projections of the building, and orders of
+pilasters, columns, entablatures and balustrades add to it their elegant
+finish. Its roof is an elaboration of the Louvre and Mansard styles, and
+the interior arrangement cannot be surpassed for beauty or convenience.
+It has three street façades, from one of which a broad staircase leads
+to the four upper stories. On these floors are located important public
+offices. The Post Office corridor is twelve feet in height and extends
+across two sides of the immense building. At the time of the great fire
+of 1872 this structure was receiving its roof, and became a barrier
+against the onward sweep of the flames. The massive granite walls were
+cracked and split, but they effectually stopped the work of the fire
+fiend.
+
+In the heart of the city, at the corner of Milk and Washington streets,
+stands one of the most famous buildings in Boston, and perhaps the most
+celebrated house of religious worship in the United States. It was
+founded in 1669, and received the name of the Old South Church. The
+first building was made of cedar, and stood for sixty years. In 1729 it
+was taken down, and the present building erected on the same spot. The
+interior arrangement is described as having been exceedingly quaint,
+with its pulpit sounding board, its high, square pews, and double tier
+of galleries. During the Revolution it was frequently used for public
+meetings, and Faneuil Hall assemblies adjourned to the Old South
+whenever the size of the crowd demanded it. Here the celebrated "Tea
+Party" held their meetings, and discussed the measures which resulted in
+consigning the British tea, together with the hated tax, to the bottom
+of Boston Harbor. Here Joseph Warren delivered his famous oration on the
+Boston Massacre, drawing tears from the eyes of even the British
+soldiery, sent there to intimidate him. In 1775 the edifice was occupied
+by the British as a place for cavalry drill, and a grog-shop was
+established in one of the galleries. In 1782 the building was put in
+repair, and has stood without further change until the present time,
+nearly a hundred years. In 1872 it was occupied as a Post Office, and
+has only been vacated this winter. Its day of religious service is
+doubtless over. It will probably be used for business purposes, but
+never again as a society sanctuary.
+
+Opposite the south front of the Old South Church, on Milk street, stood
+the house in which Benjamin Franklin was born. Here, on the seventeenth
+of January, 1706, the great philosopher was ushered into existence, and
+on the same day was christened at the Old South. When he was ten years
+old, he worked with his father in a candle manufactory, on the corner of
+Union and Hanover streets, at the sign of the Blue Bell. He was
+afterwards printer's devil for his brother James, and at eighteen
+established the fourth newspaper printed in this country. It was
+entitled "The New England Courant."
+
+The first newspaper of Boston was also the first in the colonies, and
+was printed on a half sheet of Pot paper, in small pica. It was entitled
+"The Boston News Letter. Published, by authority, from Monday, April
+seventeenth, to Monday, April twenty-fourth, 1704." John Campbell, a
+Scotchman and bookseller, was proprietor.
+
+Now the Boston press stands in the front rank of the world's journalism,
+and is commodiously accommodated; as the elegant buildings of the
+_Transcript_, _Globe_, _Journal_, _Herald_ and other papers, testify.
+The _Advertiser_ is the oldest daily paper in the city.
+
+It is impossible to properly describe Boston within the limits of so
+short a chapter, and only a glance at a few other points of interest
+will therefore be given.
+
+The City Hall, on School street, is on the site of the house of Isaac
+Johnson, who lived here in 1630, and who has been styled the founder of
+Boston. The corner-stone of the new building was laid December
+twenty-second, 1672. It is of Concord granite, and is in the finest
+style of modern architecture. Here, under the arching roof of the French
+dome, the fire-alarm telegraph centres, and the sentinel who stands
+guard at this important point never leaves his post, night or day. The
+mysterious signal, though touched in the city's remotest rim, is
+instantly obeyed, and in less time than it takes to tell it the brave
+firemen are rushing to the rescue. A fine bronze statue of Benjamin
+Franklin stands in the inclosure in front of the building.
+
+The Custom House, on State street, is built of granite, even to the
+roof. It is constructed in the form of a Greek cross, and is surrounded
+by thirty-two granite columns, a little over five feet in diameter. The
+site was reclaimed from the tide waters, and the massive building rests
+upon about three thousand piles. Over a million dollars were expended in
+its erection.
+
+The Old Granary Burying-ground, once a part of the Common, received its
+name from a public granary which formerly stood within its limits. Some
+of the most distinguished dust in history is consigned to its keeping.
+Paul Revere, Peter Faneuil, Samuel Adams, John Hancock, the victims of
+the Boston Massacre, the parents of Franklin, the first Mayor of Boston,
+and a long list of other names famed in their day and ours, lie buried
+within this ancient ground. Near by, between the Common and the Granary
+Cemetery, stands the celebrated Park Street Church, of which W. H. H.
+Murray, the brilliant writer and preacher, was, until lately, the
+pastor. It used to be known as "brimstone corner." This winter we
+attended Park Street Church on the same day with the _brunette_ monarch,
+Kalakaua and suite.
+
+One of the most commodious and elegant stations in New England, or this
+country, is that of the Boston and Providence Railroad. It is about
+eight hundred feet in length, and is built of brick, with two shades of
+sandstone. The track house is seven hundred feet long, covering five
+tracks, and has a span of one hundred and twenty-five feet. Its cost is
+somewhere in the neighborhood of six hundred thousand dollars. The
+interior arrangement is quite novel in style. The waiting-rooms open out
+of an immense central apartment with a balcony reaching around the
+entire inner circumference. Theatre tickets, flower and cigar stands, a
+billiard room and a barber shop, are some of the special features of the
+station. Refreshment rooms and dressing rooms, in oak and crimson, are
+also an integral part of the building.
+
+Hundreds of interesting places in this singular and devious city of
+Boston must go unnoticed in these pages. The beautiful Tremont Temple
+and its Sunday temperance lectures; Music Hall, with its big organ of
+six thousand pipes, through one of which Henry Ward Beecher is said to
+have crawled, before its erection; the Parker House, one of the crack
+hotels of the city; the Revere House, where all the distinguished people
+stop, with its special suite of rooms upholstered in blue satin, where
+King Kalakaua smoked his cigars in peace; the beneficent Public Library;
+the Boston Athenćum, home of art; the Boston Theatre, the new and
+elegant Globe Theatre, and the suburban limits, including Charlestown
+and famous Bunker Hill, Cambridge and Harvard University, Mt. Auburn,
+Dorchester Heights, Roxbury and East Boston, which was formerly known as
+Noddle's Island, and where now the Cunard line of steamers arrive and
+depart--all these tempt my pen to linger within their charmed
+localities. But it is a temptation to be resisted. When, after many
+weeks' sojourn in the intellectual "Hub," I was at last seated in the
+outward bound train, ticketed for the west, a regret, born of pleasant
+associations and a taste of Boston atmosphere, took possession of me.
+The farewells I uttered held an undertone of pain. But the train sped
+onward, unheeding, and the city of the harbor seemed to dissolve and
+disappear in the smoke of her thousand chimneys, like a dream of the
+night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+BUFFALO.
+
+ The Niagara Frontier.--Unfortunate Fate of the Eries.--The
+ Battle of Doom.--Times of 1812.--Burning of Buffalo.--Early
+ Names.--Origin of Present Name.--Growth and Population.--
+ Railway Lines.--Queen of the Great Lakes.--Fort Porter and Fort
+ Erie.--International Bridge.--Iron Manufacture.--Danger of the
+ Niagara.--Forest Lawn Cemetery.--Decoration Day.--The Spaulding
+ Monument.--Parks and Boulevard.--Delaware Avenue.--On the
+ Terrace.--Elevator District.--Church and Schools.--Grosvenor
+ Library.--Historical Rooms.--Journalism.--Public Buildings.--
+ City Hall.--Dog-carts and their Attendants.
+
+
+Buffalo is a kind of half-way house between the East and the West--if
+anything may be called west this side of the Mississippi River--and it
+partakes of the characteristics of both sections. It was once the chief
+trading post on the Niagara frontier, and its vicinity has been the
+scene of many a hotly contested battle between dusky races now forever
+lost to this part of the world, and almost forgotten of history. Long
+ago, the Eries, or the Cat Nation, lived on the southern shores of the
+same lake whose waters now lap the wharves of Buffalo. They left it the
+heritage of their name, and that is all.
+
+The race, in its lack of calculation, did not greatly differ from many
+isolated instances of the paler race of mankind around us now; for it
+died of a too o'erreaching ambition. Jealous of the distant fame of the
+Five Nations, the Eries set out to surprise and conquer them in deadly
+battle, and themselves met the fate they had meant for the Iroquois.
+They were exterminated; and few returned to the squaws in their lonely
+wigwams, to tell the tale of doom.
+
+The noble race of Senecas succeeded the Cat Nation on the shores of Lake
+Erie, and after them, from across the great seas, came the dominant,
+pushing, civilizing Anglo-Saxons.
+
+When the war of 1812 broke out, Buffalo was an exceedingly infant city,
+and did not promise well at all. Nobody would have then predicted her
+importance of to-day. Later, in 1813, the battle of Black Rock was
+fought, and while a few old soldiers made a determined stand against the
+onset of the solid British phalanx, most of the raw recruits fled down
+Niagara street in a regular Bull Run panic, chased by the pursuing foe.
+The village was then fired by the enemy, and every building except one
+was burned to the ground. The description of the suffering and flight of
+women and children, during that harrowing time, draws largely on the
+sympathies of the reader, and sounds strangely similar to the newspaper
+accounts of the burning of Western and Pennsylvania towns, of more
+recent occurrence.
+
+But, though Buffalo was destroyed by fire, it shortly evinced all the
+power of the fabled phoenix, and rose from its ashes to a grander
+future than its early settlers ever dreamed of prophesying for it. The
+young city, however, suffered in its first days from a multiplicity of
+names, struggling under no less than three. The Indians named it
+Te-osah-wa, or "Place of Basswood;" the Holland Land Company dragged the
+Dutch name of New Amsterdam across the ocean and endeavored to drop it
+at the foot of Lake Erie; and finally, it took its present name of
+Buffalo, from the frequent visits of the American Bison to a salt
+spring which welled up about three miles out of the village, on Buffalo
+creek.
+
+I think Buffalonians have reason to be grateful that the last name
+proved more tenacious than the other two. Think of the "Queen City" of
+the most Eastern West being overshadowed by the tiled-roof name of New
+Amsterdam!
+
+It was not until 1822, on the completion of the Erie Canal, that Buffalo
+began the rapid advance towards prosperity that now marks its growth,
+the muster-roll of its population, at this writing, numbering the round
+figures of one hundred and sixty-one thousand. It now rejoices in
+business streets three and four miles long--full-fledged two-thirds of
+the distance, and the remainder embryonic. The harbor-front, facing the
+ship canal and the Lake, bristles with the tall tops of huge grain
+elevators--a whole village of them. A network of railroad lines, and the
+commerce of the great Lakes, have combined to build up and carry on a
+vast business at this point, and to make it a station of much importance
+between the East and the West. The rails of the New York Central, the
+Great Western, the Lake Shore, and the Buffalo and Philadelphia roads,
+besides many other lines, all centre here, carrying their tide of human
+freight, mainly westward, and transporting the cereals of the great
+grain regions in exchange for the manufactured products of less favored
+localities. When the representative of New York or New England wishes to
+go west, he finds his most direct route by rail, via Buffalo; or, if he
+desires a most charming water trip, he embarks, also via Buffalo, on one
+of the handsome propellers which ply the Lakes between this city and
+Chicago, and steaming down the length of Lake Erie, up through the
+narrower St. Clair and the broad Huron, he passes the wooded shores of
+Mackinac's beautiful island, surmounted by its old fort, and entering
+Lake Michigan, in due time is landed on the breezy Milwaukee banks, or
+is set down within that maelstrom of business, named Chicago. Indeed,
+after Chicago, Buffalo is the ranking city of the Lakes, and is said to
+cover more territory than almost any city in the country outside the
+great metropolis--the distance, from limit to limit, averaging seven and
+eight miles. Its suburban drives and places of summer resort, owing to
+the superior water localities of this region, are much out of the usual
+line. Niagara River, famous the world over, allures the daring boatman
+from Fort Porter onward, and the wonderful Falls themselves are only
+eighteen miles beyond that. Fort Porter, about two miles out from the
+heart of the city, is located just at the point where Niagara River
+leaves the lake in its mad race to the Falls. Here the banks are high
+and command a wide water prospect. Away to the westward the blue lake
+and the blue sky seem to meet and blend together as one; and in the
+opposite direction the rushing river spreads out like another lake,
+towards Squaw Island and Black Rock. One or more companies of United
+States Regulars are stationed here, and the barracks and officers'
+quarters surround a square inclosure, which is used as a parade ground.
+Graveled walks are laid out around it, and a grassy foot-path leads from
+the soldiers' quarters to the site of the old Fort on the brow of a
+gentle elevation just beyond. The Fort was built for frontier defence,
+in 1812, and the interior, now grass-grown and unused, is so deep that
+the roof of the stone structure, once appropriated as a magazine, is
+nearly on a level with the high ground at your feet. During our last
+war the building was occupied as a place of confinement for Rebel
+prisoners. It is now in a state of advanced collapse, and the battered
+walls and open windows expose to view the ruin within. A small, square
+outhouse, near one of the embrasures higher up, which was used for
+firing hot shot, is still intact. Field pieces, pointing grimly towards
+the Lake, and little heaps of cannon balls lying near, bring freshly to
+mind the nation's last war days, when "the winding rivers ran red" with
+the mingled blood of comrade and foe. The sunset gun boomed over the
+waters while we lingered at the old Fort, and the fading glow of day
+bridged the river with arches of crimson and gold.
+
+Diagonally opposite from this point, one looks across into the Queen's
+dominions, where lies the little village of Fort Erie, historic as the
+place from which the British crossed to our shores on the night
+preceding the burning of Buffalo.
+
+At Black Rock, about two miles below Fort Porter, the great
+International Railroad Bridge, a mile in length, spans the mighty river,
+having superseded the old-time ferry. This bridge is the connecting link
+on the Grand Trunk Road, between Canada and the States.
+
+Near its terminus, on the American side, are located the immense
+malleable iron works of Pratt & Letchworth, said to be the largest
+manufactory of the kind in the world. Their goods certainly find a
+world-wide market, taking in New England and the Pacific coast, Mexico,
+England and Australia. A pretty picture of the country seat of Mr.
+Letchworth, at Portage, New York, may be seen at the Historical Rooms.
+It is named Glen Iris, and is surrounded by handsome grounds, groves
+and fountains.
+
+Boating on the Niagara is much in vogue here, notwithstanding the rapid
+current and the dreadful certainty of the Falls in case of accident. The
+keeper of a boat house at Black Rock, opposite Squaw Island, told me
+that the proportion of accidents on the river was frightfully large--far
+greater than ever got into the public prints.
+
+ [Illustration: SOLDIERS' MONUMENT AT BUFFALO, NEW YORK.]
+
+Forest Lawn Cemetery--Buffalo's city of the dead--is one of the
+loveliest burial places between Brooklyn and Chicago. It is picturesque
+with hill and dale and grove, not to mention a large artificial lake
+lapped in one of its grassy hollows, and a winding, wide and
+rocky-bedded creek running through it. The name of the creek is spelled
+S-c-a-j-a-q-u-a-d-a and pronounced Kon-joc'-e-ta. The Pratt monument, in
+a remote portion of the grounds, is perhaps the handsomest in the
+cemetery. It looks like a gothic gateway with fluted pillars of Italian
+marbles. A sculptured image of a child of one of the Fargos--of the
+famous Wells, Fargo & Co.--rests under a glass case on the lap of earth
+which marks her grave. The head is peculiarly noble, reminding one of
+that of the Belvidere Apollo. It is said to be a truthful likeness.
+Decoration Day at Forest Lawn was a picture long to be remembered. On a
+little knoll under the trees at the entrance to the grounds the military
+and civic processions assembled to listen to the eloquent words of Rev.
+Mr. Barrett, of Rochester. When the brief address was concluded, and the
+band music and singing were over, we followed the committees of
+decoration to the scattered graves of the patriot dead, and witnessed
+the strewing of flowers upon their sacred dust. A hushed circle above
+the mound of earth, a few fitly-spoken words from one of their number
+who knew the soldier-hero, and the floral tributes were tenderly placed
+above the sleeper's head. Thus, oh heroes, shall your memory be kept
+forever green! The flowers were wrought into every symbolic shape by
+which the language of affection could be translated. Crowns, and
+crosses, and stars, and anchors of hope, spoke their love and solace.
+The graves of the Confederate dead were also decorated, and side by
+side, under a common mantle of flowers, the Blue and the Gray received
+alike the benediction of the hour.
+
+ "Then beautiful flowers strew,
+ This sweet memorial day,
+ With tears and love for the Blue,
+ And pity for the fallen Gray."
+
+At Forest Lawn, also, on the historic seventeenth of June--the Bunker
+Hill Centennial--a monument was dedicated to the memory of nine
+Spauldings who fought at that battle, one hundred years before. The
+granite cenotaph was erected by E. G. Spaulding, of Buffalo, descended
+from the same blood with the heroic nine. The names of the list
+inscribed on the Western front of the monument were headed by that of
+his grandfather, Levi Spaulding, who was captain of the ninth company,
+third regiment, under Colonel Reed, of the New Hampshire troops, engaged
+on that day.
+
+ "For bright and green the memory still
+ Of those who stood on Bunker Hill,
+ And nobly met the battle shock,
+ Firm as their native granite rock."
+
+Speeches reviving Revolutionary memories, and fresh descriptions of the
+Bunker Hill contest, were in order. There was a semi-military
+procession, and the interest felt in the occasion was general. A grand
+reception at Mr. Spaulding's residence in the evening, concluded the
+patriotic anniversary.
+
+The large park adjoining Forest Lawn is plentiful in attractions,
+including the delights of boating on the Konjoceta and loitering in the
+shadowy coolness of the primeval woods. In addition to these, Buffalo is
+completing a grand boulevard system which encircles half the City,
+beginning at what is called the Front, in the neighborhood of Fort
+Porter, and making the circuit of the outskirts through Bidwell and
+Lincoln and Humboldt parkways to the intersection of Genesee street with
+the Parade, on the opposite arc of the circle. One is sure to find cool
+breezes along this drive, though the day be the hottest of the season.
+Indeed, the summer heats are, at all times, shorn of their fervor in
+this Queen City of the Lakes, and its climatic advantages are,
+therefore, superior.
+
+Delaware Avenue is the leading street of Buffalo for private residences,
+and here much of the aristocracy do congregate. It is about three miles
+long, and double rows of shade trees line either side. Fast driving on
+this avenue is licensed by city authority, and racing down its gentle
+incline is much in vogue. In winter, when sleighing is good, this is
+carried to greater excess, and the snowy road is black with flying
+vehicles. Main street, the principal business thoroughfare of the city,
+at least for retail trade, is wide, well paved and straight, and is
+built up with substantial business blocks. Its sister thoroughfare on
+the east, Washington street, towards the lower end as it approaches the
+lake, degenerates into manufacturing, and the buzz of machinery and
+incessant din of hammers break in on the maiden meditations of the
+passive sight-seer.
+
+As one approaches the Terrace, which is an elbow of blocks at one end
+and a diagonal at the other, one is confronted by a confusion of cross
+streets, which look as if they had been gotten up expressly to
+demoralize one's points of compass. They all look out on Buffalo harbor
+and the sea-wall beyond. Ohio street, following the bend of the harbor,
+is the great elevator district of the greatest grain mart in the world.
+Here, when business is at high tide, between two and three million
+bushels of grain per day are transferred by these giant monsters with
+high heads. The business places of this department of Buffalo enterprise
+are located principally on Central Wharf, in this vicinity, which fronts
+the harbor and which is crowded with offices two tiers deep.
+
+Along the wharf the very air is charged with bustle and activity.
+Vessels of all descriptions are arriving and departing at all hours, and
+the commerce of the great lakes pours its flood tide into Buffalo
+through this gateway.
+
+As for churches and schools, the city overflows with them. It is
+sprinkled in all directions with handsome religious edifices, like
+interrogation points, in stone and brick, asking the questions of a
+higher life. And there are thirty-six public schools, besides the State
+Normal, the Central, and the Buffalo Female Academy. This last is under
+the able guidance of Dr. Chester. But even these do not complete the
+list, as I understand there are numerous other private institutions of
+learning.
+
+In one of the triangular pieces of ground where the three streets of
+Niagara, Erie and Church make their entrance into Main street, stands
+the picturesque structure of St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral. It is
+built of brown stone, and the creeping ivy nearly covers one end of it,
+from the crosses and minarets at the pinnacle to the trailing vines on
+the ground. The gray, gothic edifice of St. Joseph's Romish Cathedral,
+fronting on Franklin street, is also very large, and the interior is
+rich in architectural design.
+
+As for the immeasurable realm of books, Buffalo furnishes her children
+access to this, through her libraries. Chiefest among them is the
+Grosvenor, which has a bit of history all by itself. It was founded by a
+retired merchant of New York, who had lived in Buffalo during the
+earliest infancy of the city, and whose property had been destroyed when
+the then frontier village was fired by the British and Indians, in
+retaliation for the burning of Newark. This generous gentleman also left
+thirty thousand dollars to found a reference library for the High School
+of New York City. His will provided a legacy of ten thousand for
+Buffalo, to be applied towards a fire-proof building for a library, and
+the sum of thirty thousand, the interest of which was to be used for the
+purchase of books. The building fund having been on interest ever since,
+now amounts to twenty-eight thousand, and in addition the city has
+donated what is known as the Mohawk street property, used at present for
+police purposes, which will sell for an amount sufficiently large,
+together with the deposit already on hand, to erect a handsome building.
+The library is now located over the Buffalo Savings Bank, facing a
+pleasant little park between Washington and Main streets.
+
+In 1870 the interest had more than doubled the donation, and the
+Trustees then commenced the work of making the library a living
+institution. After a great deal of trouble, they at last secured the
+services of Alexander J. Sheldon, who was willing, without any certain
+compensation, to undertake the task of organizing and superintending the
+library. Mr. Sheldon, who is an expert in books, is native to the city,
+and from boyhood has been connected with this line of business. The
+first year of his hard labor at the Grosvenor was rewarded by the large
+sum of five hundred dollars! It was well for the institution, however,
+that Mr. Sheldon was not dependent on his salary for support. He entered
+into the work with an enthusiasm which surmounted all difficulties, and
+which has brought the library to its present state of progress, making
+it a credit to the city of Buffalo.
+
+The large reading room is neatly fitted up with black walnut cases, nine
+feet in length, and eight feet high, opening on both sides, and capable
+of holding eight or nine hundred average volumes. There are about thirty
+of these cases in the room, with reading tables and easy chairs
+interspersed between them. The style of alcove and arrangement, which
+was also Mr. Sheldon's suggestion, produces a very handsome effect. The
+cases stand on black walnut platforms six inches in height, and are
+surmounted by a pretty cornice. The shelves are interchangeable, and are
+of such moderate height that the necessity for step-ladders is entirely
+avoided. There are also dummy volumes, made to resemble books and
+properly titled, which, if their mission is to deceive the uninitiated,
+certainly accomplish that task. The number of volumes has now
+accumulated to about eighteen thousand, and includes the choicest works
+in art, science, literature and the professions. The fiction department
+comprehends all the recognized standard works, but the mass of worthless
+novels, which pass current in some of our circulating libraries, is
+unhesitatingly excluded. The bindings are nearly all morocco, with gilt
+or marbled tops, and the back of each book, as it is added to the
+library, is given a coat of white shellac varnish, which prevents it, in
+a great degree, from fading, and renders it easy of renovation.
+
+The small ante-room which is used by the librarian and committeemen
+contains several hundred volumes on bibliography, which is a very
+important feature of such an institution. The rooms in summer are
+breezy, from the lake winds, and in winter are heated by steam
+radiators. A heavy cocoa matting deadens all sound on the floors, and
+absolute quiet is thus secured. Thanks to the efforts of Mr. Sheldon,
+the Grosvenor is undoubtedly the best library for a student west of the
+Hudson.
+
+The Historical Rooms deserve notice as one of the salient points of
+Buffalo, and though the Society is young and not by any means wealthy,
+yet it is fairly started on its road to distinction. It was founded in
+1862, and subsists principally by donations, as it is yet too poor to
+make purchases of books or relics. The Rooms are located at the corner
+of Main and Court streets, nearly opposite the ancient site of the old
+Eagle Tavern. A picture of this hotel as it looked fifty years ago may
+be seen among their collection. A huge gilt eagle surmounted the main
+entrance, and an enclosed porch, or what looks like it, at one end of
+the building, bore the inscription "_Coach Office_," in large letters
+over the doorway. Here also is the noble looking portrait of Red Jacket,
+the great Seneca Chief, together with the grand-daughter of Red Jacket's
+second wife--Nancy Stevenson--taken at sixteen. This bright-eyed, brown
+maiden married an Indian named Hiram Dennis, and was still living in
+1872. Belts of wampum, war hatchets and pipes of peace, besides numerous
+pictures, in oil, of celebrated red warriors, are among the Indian
+mementoes connected with Buffalo's early history. The war of 1812 also
+contributes its scattered waifs to keep alive the memory of that time.
+The sword of Major-General Brown, worn at the battle of Sackett's
+Harbor, and a piece of timber from Perry's ship, on which is traced the
+legend "We have met the enemy and they are ours," are among the
+heirlooms of history. Here, too, is a Mexican lance from the field of
+Monterey, and the clarionette used in Buffalo's first band of music,
+whose strains helped swell the chorus during the triumphal march of
+Lafayette through her streets in 1824. A representation of the first
+boat on the Erie Canal, named "Chief Engineer of Rome," looks quaint
+enough. The walls of the large apartment devoted to historical
+collections are covered with pictures of Buffalo's prominent men, and at
+one end of the room hangs a handsome portrait of Millard Fillmore, set
+in heavy gilt. Their list of books and directories is also quite large.
+The story of a city's growth is always one of deep interest, and the
+generations of future years will, no doubt, be grateful for these
+landmarks of their early history.
+
+Journalism in Buffalo rides on the top wave, and her leading papers have
+achieved an enviable fame. Eight dailies swell the list, four of which
+are German, besides ten weeklies and seven monthly papers. The history
+of the _Commercial Advertiser_ dates back to October, 1811. It was
+issued at that time, under the name of the _Buffalo Gazette_, by the
+Salisbury brothers, from Canandaigua. With the exception of a paper at
+Batavia, begun in 1807, the _Gazette_ was the only paper published at
+that time in Western New York. It afterwards changed its name to the
+_Buffalo Patriot_, and since 1836 it has been issued as the _Daily
+Commercial Advertiser_. The _Courier_ and _Commercial_ are the ranking
+papers of the city, in point of influence.
+
+Buffalo doesn't seem to be ambitious of display in her public buildings,
+judging from the quality of those already on hand. The new City Hall,
+however, is a noble exception to the general rule. It is built of Maine
+granite, in the form of a double Roman cross, and the tower, which is
+two hundred and forty-five feet high, is surmounted by four pieces of
+statuary. Its estimated cost is over two millions of dollars.
+
+St. James' Hall and the Academy of Music are the chief places of
+amusement in the city, the latter place being conducted by the Meech
+brothers, two young gentlemen of acknowledged ability. Many noted stars
+of the stage whose names have blazed forth in histrionic glory have here
+made their first conquests, before applauding audiences. The stock
+company is unusually good, Ben Rogers, stage manager and first comedian,
+being a host in himself.
+
+The fire department of the city is said to be exceedingly efficient, and
+the police system has gained a reputation for thorough work which ought
+to be the terror of the criminal class. It embraces a body of mounted
+police, a corps of detectives and of patrolmen, besides the regular
+force stationed at the harbor.
+
+Among the minor peculiarities of Buffalo may be mentioned the
+superabundance of dog carts to be seen in her streets; not the
+conventional kind that goes rolling down Fifth Avenue, among the
+bewildering array of splendid equipages--coupes, landaus, landaulets,
+drags and what not--that daily make their way to Central Park; not any
+of these; but the original dog cart, with the dog attached. He is to be
+seen in all the varieties of the species, from a muddy yellow to the
+fierce-looking mastiff. He is usually harnessed in company with a
+collapsed old woman or a cadaverous looking little boy, and he carries
+all kinds of mixed freight, from an ash barrel to a load of sticks. The
+undercurrent of Buffalo society does not seem to look upon the dog in a
+purely ornamental light.
+
+This chapter on a place so fertile in suggestion might be prolonged
+indefinitely; but we are gazing westward, along a line of cities whose
+terminus does not end until it reaches the Golden Gate and the most
+famous centre of population on the Pacific coast. Our steps are bent
+toward that far-off goal, and we must say good-bye to the ancient land
+of the Eries and the former haunts of the buffalo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+BROOKLYN.
+
+ Brooklyn a Suburb of New York.--A City of Homes.--Public
+ Buildings.--Churches.--Henry Ward Beecher.--Thomas De Witt
+ Talmage.--Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D.--Justin D. Fulton, D.D.--
+ R. S. Storrs, D.D.--Navy Yard.--Atlantic Dock.--Washington
+ Park.--Prospect Park.--Greenwood Cemetery.--Evergreen and
+ Cyprus Hills Cemeteries.--Coney Island.--Rockaway.--Staten
+ Island.--Glen Island.--Future of Brooklyn.
+
+
+New York holds such supremacy over the other cities of the United States
+that she almost overshadows Brooklyn, which lies so near her as to be
+separated only by the narrow channel of the East River. Yet Brooklyn in
+any other locality would be a city of the first importance, ranking, as
+she does, the third in the Union as to size and population, and
+numbering not less than six hundred thousand inhabitants. Practically
+New York and Brooklyn are but one city, with identical commercial
+interests, and a great deal else in common. Many of the most prominent
+business men of the former city find their homes in the latter; and by
+means of the numerous ferries and the great Suspension Bridge there is a
+constant interchange of people between them. The time may come when they
+will be united under one municipal government; though, no doubt, many of
+the older residents of Brooklyn, who have helped to build her up to her
+present extent and prosperity, would object to losing her name and
+identity. But should such a union ever take place, there will be at once
+created, next to London, the largest city of the world, with a
+population of not less than two millions of people.
+
+Brooklyn is situated on the west end of Long Island, and overlooks both
+the East River and the Bay. It extends nearly eight miles from north to
+south, and is about four miles from east to west. Its business is not so
+extended or so important as that of New York, nor, as a rule, are its
+business edifices so imposing, though some of them present a very fine
+appearance. It is, in fact, a great suburb of the metropolitan city,
+composed more largely of dwellings than of commercial houses. Its
+business men, each morning, make an exodus across the East River to Wall
+street, or Broadway, or other streets of New York, and then return at
+night. It is, in fact, a great city of homes, all of them comfortable
+and many of them elegant. There is no squalor, such as is found in Mott
+or Baxter streets and the Five Points and their neighborhood, in its
+sister city. Handsome mansions, tasteful cottages and plain but neat
+rows of dwellings are found everywhere, and the streets are beautifully
+shaded by avenues of trees.
+
+The public buildings of Brooklyn worthy of notice are few, compared to
+those of New York. Fulton street is its principal thoroughfare, and
+contains occasional handsome edifices. The City Hall, on an open square
+at the junction of Fulton court and Joraleman street, is a fine, white
+marble building, in Ionic style, with six columns supporting the roof of
+the portico. It is surmounted by a tower one hundred and fifty-three
+feet in height. Just back of this, to the southeast, and facing toward
+Fulton street, is the County Court House, with a white marble front, a
+Corinthian portico, and an iron dome one hundred and four feet high.
+Beside the Court House, to the westward, stands the Municipal Building,
+also of marble, four stories in height, with a mansard roof, and a tower
+at each corner. The Post Office is in Washington street, north of the
+City Hall. The Long Island Historical Society has a fine edifice at the
+corner of Clinton and Pierrepont streets, and possesses a large library
+and collection of curiosities. The Academy of Design, on Montague
+street, has a handsome exterior; opposite is the Mercantile Library, a
+striking Gothic structure, containing two reading rooms and a library of
+forty-eight thousand volumes. The building of the Young Men's Christian
+Association is on Fulton street, at the corner of Gallatin Place, and
+contains a library and free reading room. The Penitentiary is an immense
+stone structure on Nostrand avenue, near the city limits. The County
+Jail, in Raymond street, is constructed of red sandstone, in castellated
+Gothic style. The Long Island College Hospital is an imposing building,
+surrounded by extensive grounds, on Henry street near Pacific.
+
+Brooklyn is, preëminently, the City of Churches, of which she is said to
+contain not less than one hundred. She has secured the services of the
+most eminent clergymen in the country, and thousands of people each year
+make a pilgrimage thither, for the sole purpose of listening to some one
+or other of those whom they have long admired and appreciated at a
+distance. Most prominent among all these clergymen is Henry Ward
+Beecher, who has been the pastor of Plymouth Church ever since its
+organization in 1847. Mr. Beecher came of a noted family, his father,
+Rev. Lyman Beecher, being one of the theological lights of his day and
+generation, while his brothers and sisters have all distinguished
+themselves in some way. The author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was his
+sister, Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, while all of his brothers are, like
+himself, in the ministry.
+
+Mr. Beecher's popularity has been unparalleled. Besides the hundreds who
+listen to him every Sunday, each sermon is reported in full and read by
+thousands of people throughout the country. He has been a leader of
+liberal thought in the Protestant churches; and it is largely due to his
+bold and advanced utterances that the church in which he holds communion
+has taken a long step ahead of the position which it occupied early in
+the present century.
+
+Plymouth Church is a plain edifice, in Orange street, near Hicks. It has
+a large seating capacity, yet every Sunday it is filled. A goodly
+proportion of the audience is composed of strangers, who are not
+permitted to take seats until the pewholders are provided for. These
+visitors stand in long rows at each of the doors, the rows sometimes
+extending out upon the sidewalk, waiting their turns to be seated. Ten
+minutes before the hour of service they are conducted to seats, and the
+pewholders who come after that time must take their chances with the
+rest. On pleasant Sundays every seat is occupied, and the aisles and
+vestibules are crowded.
+
+Mr. Beecher occupies no pulpit, in the strict sense of the word. In
+front of the organ and choir is a platform, upon which are three chairs
+and three small tables, or stands. On one of the latter is a Bible, and
+on the others a profusion of flowers. One realizes in this church the
+grandeur of congregational singing, which is led here by a choir of one
+hundred voices, and accompanied by a magnificent organ. When the entire
+congregation join in some familiar hymn, the singing is exceedingly
+impressive. Mr. Beecher, albeit his reputation is that of a sensational
+preacher, makes little attempt at sensationalism in his manner of
+delivery. He reads well and speaks well, with a clear, distinct
+enunciation, which is heard in every part of his church. He talks
+directly to his point, using plain but forcible language, his sermons
+sparkling with original thought and brilliant language, all based upon a
+foundation of plain, practical common sense. He has great dramatic
+power, yet manifests it in so unstudied a manner that it is never
+offensive. He imitates the voice and manner of the man of whom he is
+speaking; the maudlin condition of the drunkard, the whine of the
+beggar, the sanctimoniousness of the hypocrite; and keeps his audience
+interested and on the alert. The Friday evening lectures are also
+features of this church, and are conducted without formality, yet in a
+decorous manner.
+
+The Brooklyn preacher who is a rival of Beecher, in the popular
+estimation, is Thomas De Witt Talmage, whose church is in Schermerhorn
+street, and known as the Tabernacle. It is built in Gothic style,
+semi-circular in form, like an opera house, and is capable of seating
+5,000 persons. It is the largest Protestant place of worship in the
+United States, yet every Sunday it is filled nearly, if not quite, to
+its utmost capacity.
+
+Talmage was born at Bound Brook, New Jersey, in 1832. After graduating
+at the Theological Seminary, at New Brunswick, he preached in
+Belleville, New Jersey; Syracuse, New York; and Philadelphia, until
+1869, when he came to Brooklyn to be pastor of the Central Presbyterian
+Church. Within a year he had become the acknowledged rival of Beecher.
+His church was crowded, and in 1870 a large amphitheatre, called the
+Brooklyn Tabernacle, capable of seating four thousand persons, was
+built. This building was destroyed by fire in 1872, and while it was
+being rebuilt in its present size and form, Talmage preached in the
+Academy of Music, to immense crowds. The great organ used in the Boston
+Coliseum, during the Musical Peace Jubilee, accompanies the singing at
+the Tabernacle, which is principally congregational, though a choir of
+four male singers give one or more voluntaries. The singing was led by
+Arbuckle, the celebrated cornetist, but he died in May, 1883, and was
+buried on the day of the opening of the Suspension Bridge.
+
+In 1879, Talmage visited Great Britain, and made a most successful
+lecture tour, receiving from five to six hundred dollars for each
+lecture, and netting about fifty thousand dollars for the tour. In this
+country he has not been so popular as a lecturer as Beecher. He is a
+tall, angular man, with dark hair, red whiskers, light complexion, large
+mouth and blue eyes. His pulpit is merely a platform, about thirty feet
+in length, built in front of the organ, between the pipes and the
+performer; and back and forth on this he paces while delivering his
+sermon, frequently making forcible gestures, which have caused him to be
+caricatured as a contortionist or gymnast. He is fluent in his style,
+with much originality of expression, yet with a certain drawl in the
+middle of his sentences, and snarl at their end, which renders his
+elocution not entirely pleasing. He carries his audience with him
+through the heights and depths of his oratory, now provoking to smiles,
+again affecting to tears.
+
+Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D., has been pastor of the Lafayette Avenue
+Presbyterian Church since 1860. He was born at Aurora, New York, on
+January tenth, 1822, and preached in Market street church, in New York
+City, from 1853 to 1860. The church edifice where he now ministers is
+one of the most spacious and complete, in all its arrangements, in
+either New York or Brooklyn, having seats for two thousand people, while
+the Sabbath-school hall will accommodate one thousand.
+
+Dr. Cuyler, during the thirty-seven years of his ministry, has delivered
+five thousand three hundred and forty discourses, and a multitude of
+platform addresses. He has received four thousand and forty-one persons
+into church membership, of whom about one-half have been on confession
+of faith. He has published several volumes and over two thousand
+articles in the leading religious newspapers. The present membership of
+the Lafayette Avenue Church is nineteen hundred and twenty persons. His
+congregations are very large on every Sunday, and he is an untiring
+pastor, especially zealous for temperance. He preaches the old orthodox
+gospel, with no "modern improvements." His discourses are able and
+eloquent, while his chief aim in the pulpit is to reach the heart.
+
+Justin D. Fulton, D.D., is still another eminent clergyman of Brooklyn.
+He was born in 1828, in Sherburne, Madison County, New York, and
+literally worked his way through college and to the ministry. He began
+his public life in St. Louis, where he was engaged as editor of the
+_Gospel Banner_. Preaching in the Tabernacle Baptist Church of that
+city, he delivered the first Free-state sermon ever heard in St. Louis.
+He also put his anti-slavery sentiments into his paper, and was shortly
+deposed from his position as editor because he would not believe
+slavery to be right and defend it. From St. Louis he went to Sandusky,
+Ohio, preaching there a short period; and from thence, in 1859, to
+Albany, New York, where he became pastor of the Tabernacle Church. In
+1863 he received a call from the Tremont Temple Church of Boston, and
+labored with that church for ten years, increasing its membership from
+fifty to one thousand. In 1873, he became pastor of the Hanson Place
+Church, of Brooklyn, leaving it, however, in 1875, to organize the
+Centennial Baptist Church, in the same city. His popularity as a
+preacher became so great that it was presently found necessary to seek a
+larger place of worship. Therefore, in 1879, the Rink was purchased, for
+much less than its original cost, and was consecrated as a People's
+Church. The Rink is an immense edifice, capable of seating nearly six
+thousand persons.
+
+Dr. Fulton is an able writer, having published a number of volumes, the
+most prominent among which is "The Roman Catholic Element in America."
+In the old days of slavery he was a most able and eloquent anti-slavery
+advocate, and as such created strong prejudice against himself in
+certain quarters. He preached the funeral sermon of Colonel Ellsworth,
+in Tweddle Hall, Albany, in which he said that the war must go on until
+the musket should be put in the hands of the black man, and he was
+permitted to prove his manhood on the battle field. This drew down upon
+him the denunciation of the conservative press; but he was appointed
+Chaplain of Governor Morgan's staff, and served in hospital and camp. He
+is no less famous as an advocate of temperance, and devotes much of his
+energies to work in this field.
+
+In person, Dr. Fulton is tall, stout, finely formed, with black whiskers
+and moustache, and a somewhat bald forehead. His manner in the pulpit is
+full of earnestness and impetuosity. He sometimes overwhelms his
+audience with a whirlwind of words. He has strong magnetic and nervous
+power, while he impresses his listeners with his sincerity and candor.
+He makes frequent and expressive gestures, and combines in his oratory
+the carefulness of art with the fire of genius. In belief he is
+thoroughly orthodox, having no leanings toward the so-called
+"liberality" of many popular clergymen.
+
+R. S. Storrs, D.D., is pastor of the Church of the Pilgrims, at the
+corner of Remsen and Henry streets. He is one of the most noted
+clergymen of the city, and was selected to assist in the opening of the
+New York and Brooklyn Suspension Bridge, making one of the addresses of
+the occasion.
+
+The Unitarian Church of the Saviour, at the corner of Pierrepont street
+and Monroe Place, is an elaborate Gothic edifice, as is also St. Ann's
+Episcopal Church, at the corner of Clinton and Livingston streets. The
+Roman Catholic Church of St. Charles Borromeo, in Sidney Place, is
+famous for its music. The Dutch Reformed Church, in Pierrepont street,
+is of brown stone, in the richest Corinthian style, and the interior
+elaborately finished.
+
+The United States Navy Yard is one of the features of Brooklyn, and is
+the chief naval station of the country. It is on the south shore of
+Wallabout Bay, and contains forty-five acres. The yard is inclosed by a
+high brick wall, and contains numerous foundries, workshops and
+storehouses. Vessels of every kind used by the navy may be seen at
+almost any time at the yard, and it has also a large and varied
+collection of trophies taken in war and relics of earlier times, which
+prove of interest to the visitor.
+
+At the other extremity of Brooklyn, a mile below South Ferry, is the
+Atlantic Dock, which covers an area of forty-two and one-half acres, and
+deserves special attention. It is surrounded by piers of solid granite,
+upon which are spacious warehouses.
+
+In the heart of the city, a little south of the Navy Yard, between
+Myrtle and DeKalb avenues, is Washington Park, or old Fort Greene. It is
+on an elevated plateau, contains thirty acres, and commands extensive
+views. Its name of Fort Greene dates back to the time of the Revolution,
+when it was the seat of extensive fortifications.
+
+The special pride of Brooklyn is Prospect Park, one of the finest in
+America, where art and the landscape gardener have assisted rather than
+thwarted nature in her efforts to produce beauty. It is situated on an
+elevated ridge on the southeastern borders of the city, and from certain
+localities commands broad views of Brooklyn, New York, the inner and
+outer harbor, and the Jersey shore. It contains five hundred and fifty
+acres, which embrace broad, green lawns, grassy slopes, groves, wooded
+hills, beautiful with ferns and wild flowers, lakes and rocky dells. It
+contains eight miles of drives, four miles of bridle paths, and eleven
+miles of walks. At the main entrance, on Flatbush avenue, is a large,
+circular open place known as the Plaza, paved with stone and bordered by
+grassy mounds. A fountain of novel design furnishes the welcome sound of
+splashing, trickling water, and not far distant from it is a bronze
+statue of President Lincoln. Within the Park, on an eminence overlooking
+the cottages and dell, is a monument, erected in 1877, to the memory of
+John Howard Payne, author of "Home, Sweet Home."
+
+On Gowanus Heights, overlooking Gowanus Bay, in the southern portion of
+Brooklyn, is situated Greenwood Cemetery, one of the most beautiful
+"cities of the dead" in the world. It was laid out in 1842, and contains
+over five hundred acres. At least two hundred thousand interments have
+been made in it. It is a perfect wilderness of beauty. The surface of
+the ground is uneven, and hills and valleys, grassy slopes, beautiful
+little lakes with fountains playing in their midst, overshadowing trees,
+a profusion of brilliant flowers, and the white or gray gleam of a
+thousand monuments, varied and beautiful in design, all unite in forming
+an exquisite spot for the resting place of the dead, which is a fitting
+embodiment and expression of the loving remembrance in which they
+continue to be held by the living. Among the many elegant and expensive
+monuments which this cemetery contains, not one will attract more
+attention for its beauty and elaborateness than that erected to
+Charlotte Canda, a young French girl, whose fortune was expended in the
+marble pile above her grave. The main entrance to Greenwood, near Fifth
+Avenue and Twenty-third street, has a magnificent gateway in the pointed
+Gothic style, and opens upon a most enchanting landscape. On an
+elevation to the right of this entrance, within this cemetery, is
+obtained an extensive view of Brooklyn and the bay. The cemetery
+contains nineteen miles of carriage roads, and seventeen miles of
+footpaths.
+
+Four miles to the eastward of Greenwood are the cemeteries of the
+Evergreen and Cypress Hills, both beautiful spots, and the latter
+especially celebrated as containing the grave of a large number of
+soldiers of the late war.
+
+Radiating from Brooklyn, in almost every direction, are routes leading
+to some of the most frequented pleasure resorts of the country. On the
+southern coast of Long Island, just east of the Narrows, is Coney
+Island, four and a half miles long, with a firm, gently-sloping beach.
+The island is divided into four distinct places of resort: Coney Island
+Point, or Morton's, at the west end, the oldest of the four; West
+Brighton Beach, or Cable's, where there is an iron pier one thousand
+feet long, extending out into the ocean, and an observatory three
+hundred feet high; Brighton Beach, connecting with West Brighton by a
+wide drive and promenade, known as the Concourse; and Manhattan Beach,
+the most fashionable resort on the island. At the latter place are two
+vast hotels, and an amphitheatre, with three thousand five hundred
+seats, upon the beach, for the accommodation of those who wish to watch
+the bathers.
+
+Rockaway Beach is to the westward of Coney Island, and is about four
+miles long, with surf bathing on one side and still bathing on the
+other. A colossal tubular iron pier, twelve hundred feet long, extends
+out into the ocean, affording a landing for steamboats.
+
+Staten Island, the western boundary of the Narrows, is a sort of earthly
+paradise, which separates the Lower Bay from the Upper. It is a
+beautiful island, having an area of nearly sixty square miles, and
+rising boldly from the waters of the bays. It commands extensive views
+over harbor and ocean, and is a favorite summer home or place of
+temporary resort.
+
+Along the shores of the Sound are many places for summer rest and
+recreation. Glen Island, lying in the East River, is a famous and
+attractive picnicing spot for both New Yorkers and Brooklynites.
+
+Brooklyn is a beautiful and an extensive city, a fitting suburb of the
+metropolis. The additional facilities for transit between the two cities
+afforded by the completion of the Suspension Bridge will tend to her
+material advantage, drawing thither a still larger class of people to
+make their homes in its quiet suburban streets and avenues, out of the
+noise and whirl of the great city. Her prosperity must keep pace with
+that of her elder sister, and so close is the bond of common interest
+between them, that whatever benefits one must benefit the other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+BALTIMORE.
+
+ Position of Baltimore.--Streets.--Cathedral and Churches.--
+ Public Buildings.--Educational Institutions.--Art Collections.--
+ Charitable Institutions.--Monuments.--Railway Tunnels.--Parks
+ and Cemeteries.--Druid Hill Park.--Commerce and Manufactures.--
+ Foundation of the City.--Early History.--Bonaparte-Patterson
+ Marriage.--Storming of Baltimore in 1814.--Maryland at the
+ Breaking-out of the Rebellion.--Assault on Sixth Massachusetts
+ Regiment, in April, 1861.--Subsequent Events during the War.--
+ Baltimore Proves Herself Loyal.--Re-union of Grand Army of
+ the Republic in Baltimore, September, 1882.--Old Differences
+ Forgotten and Fraternal Relations Established.
+
+
+The first in commercial and manufacturing importance of all southern
+cities is Baltimore, situated on the north branch of the Patapsco River,
+fourteen miles from its entrance into the Chesapeake Bay, and one
+hundred and ninety-eight miles from the Atlantic. It embraces an area of
+nearly twelve square miles, about one-half of which is built up solidly
+with residences and business houses. The city is divided into East and
+West Baltimore, by Jones' Falls, a small stream running nearly north and
+south, and spanned by numerous bridges. The northwest branch of the
+Patapsco also runs up into the heart of the city, forming a basin, into
+which small vessels can enter. The outer harbor, or main branch of the
+Patapsco, is accessible to the largest ships. The harbor is a safe and
+capacious one, capable of furnishing anchorage to a thousand vessels. At
+the point of the peninsula separating the two branches of the river is
+situated Fort McHenry, which defends the entrance, and which was
+unsuccessfully bombarded by the British fleet in the War of 1812.
+
+The general appearance of the city is striking and picturesque. It is
+regularly laid out, the streets for the most part crossing one another
+at right angles, but there is sufficient diversity to prevent sameness.
+Thus while the main part of the city is laid out with streets running
+north and south, crossed by others running east and west, large sections
+show streets running diagonally to the points of the compass. The
+surface of the ground upon which the city is built is undulating, and
+its streets are moderately wide. Baltimore street, running east and
+west, is the main business thoroughfare, containing the principal retail
+stores and hotels. North Charles street is the most fashionable
+promenade, while Mount Vernon Place, and the vicinity of the Monument
+and Broadway are favorite resorts.
+
+The city abounds in handsome edifices. A generation ago, the Catholic
+Cathedral, at the corner of Mulberry and Cathedral streets--a large
+granite edifice in the form of a cross, one hundred and ninety feet
+long, one hundred and seventy-seven feet at the arms of the cross, and
+surmounted by a dome one hundred and twenty-seven feet high--was the
+especial pride and boast of Baltimoreans. At its west end are two tall
+towers with Saracenic cupolas, resembling the minarets of a Mohammedan
+mosque. It contains one of the largest organs in America, and two
+valuable paintings, "The Descent from the Cross," the gift of Louis XVI,
+and "St. Louis burying his officers and soldiers slain before Tunis,"
+presented by Charles X, of France. Now other buildings are found equally
+as magnificent. The Roman Catholic churches of St. Alphonsus, at the
+corner of Saratoga and Park Streets, and of St. Vincent de Paul, in
+North Front Street, are fine in architectural design and interior
+decorations. The Unitarian Church, at the corner of North Charles and
+Franklin streets, is a handsome edifice, faced by a colonnade composed
+of four Tuscan columns and two pilasters, which form arcades, and
+containing five bronze entrance doors. Grace Church, Episcopal, at the
+corner of Monument and Park streets, and Emmanuel Church, also
+Episcopal, at the corner of Reed and Cathedral streets, are handsome
+gothic structures, the former of red and the latter of gray sandstone.
+Christ's and St. Peter's Episcopal churches, the one at the corner of
+St. Paul and Chase streets, and the other at the corner of Druid Hill
+avenue and Lanvale street, are both of marble. The Eutaw Place Baptist
+Church, at the corner of Eutaw and Dolphin streets, has a beautiful
+marble spire one hundred and eighty-six feet high. The First
+Presbyterian Church, at the corner of Park and Madison streets, has a
+spire two hundred and sixty-eight feet high, with side towers,
+respectively seventy-eight and one hundred and twenty-eight feet in
+height, and is the most elaborate specimen of Lancet-Gothic architecture
+in the country. The Westminster, at the corner of Green and Fayette
+streets, contains the grave and monument of Edgar Allan Poe. Mount
+Vernon Church, which fronts Washington Monument, at the corner of
+Charles and Monument streets, and is in the most aristocratic residence
+quarter of Baltimore, is built of green serpentine stone, with buff Ohio
+and red Connecticut sandstone, and has eighteen polished columns of
+Aberdeen granite. The Hebrew Synagogue, in Lloyd street near Baltimore
+street, is a large and handsome edifice.
+
+The City Hall, filling the entire square bounded by Holliday, Lexington,
+North and Fayette streets, built of marble, in the Renaissance style,
+was completed in 1875, and is one of the finest municipal edifices in
+the United States. It is four stories in height, with a French roof, and
+an iron dome two hundred and sixty feet high, with a balcony elevated
+two hundred and fifty feet above the sidewalk, from which a magnificent
+view of the city may be obtained. The Masonic Temple, in Charles street,
+near Saratoga, is a handsome building, completed in 1870, at a cost of
+$200,000. The Exchange, in Gay street, between Second and Lombard
+streets, is an extensive structure, surmounted by an immense dome, one
+hundred and fifteen feet high, and fifty-three feet in diameter, which
+overarches a spacious and brilliantly frescoed rotunda. Six Ionic
+columns, the shafts of which are single blocks of Italian marble, form
+colonnades on the east and west sides. It contains the United States
+Custom House, Post Office, Merchants' Bank, and a fine, large
+reading-room. The Corn and Flour Exchange, the Rialto Building, Odd
+Fellows' Hall, Y. M. C. A. Building, are all modern and elegant
+structures. The Merchant's Shot Tower, which stands at the corner of
+Front and Fayette streets, is two hundred and sixteen feet high, and
+from sixty to twenty feet in diameter, and is one of the landmarks of
+the city. One million, one hundred thousand bricks were used in its
+construction.
+
+Peabody Institute faces Washington monument, on the south, and was
+founded and endowed by George Peabody, the eminent American-born London
+banker, for the diffusion of knowledge among the people. It contains a
+free library of fifty-eight thousand volumes, a conservatory of music,
+lecture hall, and a Department of Art, which includes art collections
+and an art school. The Athenćum, at the corner of Saratoga and St. Paul
+streets, contains the Merchants' Library, with twenty-six thousand
+volumes, the Baltimore Library, with fifteen thousand volumes, and the
+collections of the Maryland Historical Society, comprising a library of
+ten thousand volumes, numerous historical relics, and fine pictures and
+statuary. The Johns Hopkins University, which was endowed with over
+three millions of dollars, by Johns Hopkins, a wealthy citizen of
+Baltimore, who died in 1873, has a temporary location at the corner of
+Howard street and Druid Hill avenue, but will probably be permanently
+located at Clifton, two miles from the city on the Harford road. The
+Johns Hopkins Hospital, to be connected with the Medical Department of
+the Johns Hopkins University, and endowed with over two millions of
+dollars by the same generous testator, is in process of construction at
+the corner of Broadway and Monument street, and will be the finest
+building of its kind in America. The Maryland Institute is a vast
+structure at the corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets, and is
+designed for the promotion of the mechanical arts. The main hall is two
+hundred and fifty feet long, and in it is held an annual exhibition of
+the products of American mechanical industry. It contains a library of
+fourteen thousand volumes, a lecture room, and a school of design. The
+first floor is used as a market. The Academy of Science, in Mulberry
+street, opposite Cathedral street, has a fine museum of natural history,
+embracing a rich collection of birds and minerals, and including a
+complete representation of the flora and fauna of Maryland.
+
+Not only is Baltimore noted for free educational institutions, but for
+her art collections as well. Annual exhibitions of American paintings
+are held in the Athenćum, and the Academy of Art and Science contains a
+fine collection of paintings, engravings and casts. The private art
+gallery of William T. Walters, of No. 65 Mount Vernon Place, is one of
+the finest in America.
+
+There are numerous charitable institutions in the city, prominent among
+which are the Hospital for the Insane, in East Monument street;
+Institution for the Instruction of the Blind, in North avenue near
+Charles street; State Insane Asylum, a massive pile of granite
+buildings, near Catonsville, six miles from the city; Bay View Asylum,
+an almshouse, on a commanding eminence near the outskirts of the city,
+on the Philadelphia road; Mount Hope Hospital, conducted by the Sisters
+of Charity, on North avenue, corner of Bolton street; Episcopal Church
+Home, in Broadway near Baltimore street; Sheppard Asylum for the Insane,
+founded by Moses Sheppard, a wealthy Quaker, situated on a commanding
+site near Towsontown, seven miles from the city, and Mount Hope Retreat
+for the insane and sick, four miles from the city, on the Reistertown
+road.
+
+But her monuments are the special pride of Baltimore, and from them she
+derives her name of "The Monumental City." Chief among them is
+Washington Monument, whose construction was authorized by the
+Legislature in 1809, the land being donated for the purpose by Colonel
+John Eager Howard. The site is one hundred feet above tide-water, in
+Mount Vernon Place, at the intersection of Monument and Washington
+streets. It is a Doric shaft rising one hundred and seventy-six and
+one-half feet, from a base fifty feet square by thirty-five feet in
+height, and is surmounted by a colossal figure of Washington, fifteen
+feet high, the whole rising more than three hundred feet above the level
+of the river. It is built of brick, cased with white marble, and cost
+$200,000. From the balcony at the head of the shaft, reached by a
+winding stairs within, a most extensive view of the city, harbor and
+surrounding country may be obtained. Battle Monument stands in Battle
+Square, at the intersection of Calvert and Fayette streets, and is
+commemorative of those who fell defending the city when it was attacked
+by the British in 1814. A square base, twenty feet high, with a pedestal
+ornamented at four corners by a sculptured griffin, has on each front an
+Egyptian door, on which are appropriate inscriptions and basso relievo
+decorations illustrating certain incidents in the battle. A fascial
+column eighteen feet in height rises above the base, surrounded by bands
+on which are inscribed the names of those who fell. The column is
+surmounted by a female figure in marble, emblematic of the city of
+Baltimore. The Poe Monument, raised in memory of Baltimore's poet, Edgar
+Allan Poe, stands in the churchyard of Westminster Presbyterian Church,
+at the corner of Green and Fayette streets. The Wildey Monument has a
+plain marble pediment and shaft, surmounted by a group representing
+Charity protecting orphans, and has been raised in honor of Thomas
+Wildey, the founder of the order of Odd Fellows in the United States. It
+is on Broadway near Baltimore street. The Wells and McComas Monument, at
+the corner of Gay and Monument streets, perpetuates the memory of two
+boys bearing those names, who shot General Ross, the British Commander,
+on September twelfth, 1814.
+
+The railway tunnels, by which the railroads on the north side of the
+city are connected with tide water at Canton, are among the wonders of
+Baltimore. That of the Baltimore and Potomac Road is second in length
+only to the Hoosac Tunnel, in America, it being 6969 feet long, while
+the Union tunnel is half the length. They were completed in 1873, at a
+cost of four million, five hundred thousand dollars. Previous to their
+construction, passengers and freight were transferred through the city
+by means of horses and mules attached to the cars.
+
+Federal Hill is a commanding eminence on the south side of the river
+basin, and from it extensive views are obtained of the city and harbor.
+It was occupied by Union troops during the civil war, and now contains a
+United States Signal Station. It has been purchased by the city for a
+park. Greenmount Cemetery, in the northern part of the city, and Loudon
+Park Cemetery, both have imposing entrances and contain handsome
+monuments. Patterson Park, at the east end of Baltimore street, contains
+seventy acres handsomely laid out, and commanding extensive views.
+
+ [Illustration: VIEW OF BALTIMORE FROM FEDERAL HILL.]
+
+The people of the present day can scarcely comprehend the grand scale on
+which landscape gardening was attempted a hundred or more years ago. The
+landed gentry, themselves or their fathers immigrants from England,
+considered a well-kept park, like those of the immense English estates,
+an essential to an American one. To this day may be seen traces of their
+efforts in this direction, in stately avenues of venerable trees, which
+the iconoclastic hand of modern progress has considerately spared. In
+some rare instances whole estates have remained untouched, and have
+become public property, and their beauties thus perpetuated. Bonaventure
+Cemetery, near Savannah, is a notable instance of this, where a
+magnificently planned Southern plantation has been transferred from
+private to public hands, and its valuable trees remain, though the hand
+of art, in attempting to improve, has rather marred the majestic beauty
+of the place. Lemon Hill, the nucleus of Fairmount Park, in
+Philadelphia, was, in revolutionary times, the estate of Robert Morris,
+and though the landscape gardener has been almost ruthless in his
+improvements (?), he has been considerate enough to spare some of the
+century-old trees. To the same private enterprise, love of the
+picturesque and appreciation of beauty, Baltimore is indebted for Druid
+Hill Park, in the northern suburbs of the city. Colonel Nicholas Rogers,
+a soldier of the Revolution and a gentleman of taste and leisure, when
+the war was over, retired to his country residence, a little distance
+from Baltimore, then a city of some ten thousand inhabitants, and
+devoted the remainder of his life to improving and adorning its
+extensive grounds. He seemed a thorough master of landscape gardening,
+and all his plans were most carefully matured, so that the trees are
+most artistically grouped and alternated with lawns; dense masses of
+foliage are broken into by bays and avenues, and beautiful vistas
+secured in various directions. Also in the selection of his trees a
+careful consideration was had of their autumn foliage, so that fine
+contrasts of color should be produced at that season of the year. The
+result of all this care and labor was one of the most charming and
+enchanting private parks which the country afforded. It contained an
+area of nearly five hundred acres.
+
+When Colonel Rogers died, his son, Lloyd N. Rogers, who seemed to have
+inherited only in part the tastes of his father, devoted himself solely
+to the cultivation of fruit, doing nothing to add to or preserve the
+beauty of his domain, but, on the other hand, allowing it to fall into
+neglect and decay. However, the harm that he wrought was only negative,
+for he did nothing to mar it, and preserved, with jealous care, the
+grand old trees which his father had planted, and with unremitting
+vigilance warded off interlopers and depredators. The estate was
+secluded from the outside world by fringes of woodland, and though the
+city had gradually crept to within a quarter of a mile, few people knew
+anything of its beauties. When, therefore, the Commission appointed to
+select the site for a new park decided upon Druid Hill as the most
+available for that purpose, it was absolutely necessary to detail its
+advantages. Mr. Rogers reluctantly consented to accept one thousand
+dollars an acre for his estate, and it became city property.
+Subsequently, other small pieces of adjoining property were bought, and
+Druid Lake and grounds were finally added, and the people of Baltimore
+found themselves in the possession of a park embracing an area of six
+hundred and eighty acres, which needed not to be created, but only to be
+improved, to be one of the most beautiful in the country.
+
+There has been but little attempt at architectural decoration. A costly
+and imposing gateway, a Moorish music stand, bright with many colors, a
+boat-house crowning a little island in a miniature lake, a pretty bridge
+and a Moorish arch thrown across a ravine, a few handsome fountains,
+and, finally, the old mansion, renovated and enlarged, standing out
+against the densely-wooded hill from which the park takes its
+name--these are about all which have been attempted in that line. The
+surface of the Park is gently undulating, with occasional bold
+eminences from which fine views may be obtained of the city and
+surrounding country. Its special attractions are its secluded walks,
+well-kept drives and tree-arched bridle-paths, its smooth, velvety turf,
+and the venerable beauty of its trees, which are the oldest of those of
+any park in the country. Its glades and dells have been left as nature
+made them, having been spared the artificial touches of the landscape
+gardener; and its little trickling springs and cool, secluded brooks,
+have a sylvan, rustic beauty which is surpassingly delightful.
+
+The future care and improvement of the Park are well provided for. About
+the time that it became a matter of public interest, the charter for the
+first line of street passenger railways was granted, and this charter
+stipulated that one-fifth of the gross receipts of the road, or one cent
+for each passenger carried, should be paid to the city, to constitute a
+Park Fund. This amount, small at first, but gradually increasing until
+it now amounts to more than a hundred thousand dollars annually, was
+devoted first to paying the interest on the Park bonds, and finally to
+the preservation and improvement of the Park. The Park Commissioners,
+who receive no pay for their services, have most judiciously
+administered the fund entrusted to their care.
+
+The foreign and coasting trade of Baltimore are both extensive. Two
+lines of steamships leave the port weekly for Europe, and she commands a
+large share of the trade of the West and Northwest. Her shipments to
+Europe are principally grain, tobacco, cotton, petroleum and provisions.
+The city contains rolling mills, iron works, nail factories, locomotive
+works, cotton factories and other industrial establishments, numbering
+more than two thousand in all. The rich copper ores of Lake Superior are
+chiefly worked here, and nearly four thousand tons of refined copper are
+produced annually. The smelting works in Canton, a southern suburb of
+the city, employ one thousand men. There are also extensive flouring
+mills, while oysters, fruit and vegetables, to the value of five million
+dollars, are canned annually. Five hundred thousand hides are also
+annually made into leather and sent to New England. Baltimore oysters
+are renowned as being among the best the Atlantic seaboard produces, and
+no one should think of visiting the city without testing them. The
+Chesapeake oyster beds are apparently exhaustless, and supply plants for
+beds all along the coast.
+
+Although the first settlements in Maryland were made early in the
+seventeenth century, the present site of Baltimore was not chosen until
+1729, and in 1745 the town was named Baltimore, in honor of Lord
+Baltimore, a Catholic, to whom the patent of the province of Maryland
+had been originally made out. In 1782 the first regular communication
+with Philadelphia, by means of a line of stage coaches, was established,
+and Baltimore was chartered as a city in 1787, having at that time a
+population of twenty thousand, which, by 1850, had increased to nearly
+two hundred thousand; and, according to the census of 1880, the
+population was 332,190 inhabitants. In 1780 the city became a port of
+entry, and in 1782 the first pavement was laid in Baltimore street.
+
+In 1803 Baltimore became the scene of a romance which is even yet
+remembered with interest. Jerome Bonaparte, the youngest brother of
+Napoleon, born in Ajaccio, November fifteenth, 1784, found himself, in
+the year just mentioned, while cruising off the West Indies, on account
+of the war between France and England, compelled to take refuge in New
+York. Being introduced into the best society of that and neighboring
+cities, he made the acquaintance of Miss Elizabeth Patterson, daughter
+of a merchant of Baltimore. The manner of their introduction was
+peculiar. In a crowded saloon the button of young Bonaparte's coat
+caught in the dress of a young lady, and as it took a little time to
+disengage it, the future King of Westphalia had opportunity to see that
+the lady was young, surpassingly beautiful and charming. This interview,
+by some who knew the lady and who were acquainted with her ambition,
+thought to be not entirely accidental, resulted, on the twenty-seventh
+of December of the same year, in a marriage between the two, the
+bridegroom being but nineteen years of age. Being summoned back to
+France by his Imperial brother, he was quickly followed by his young
+wife, who, however, was not permitted to land in France, and retired to
+England, where she shortly afterwards gave birth to a son, whom she
+named Jerome, after his father. Napoleon annulled the marriage, on the
+ground that it had been made contrary to French law, which stipulates
+that the consent of parents must be gained in order to legalize a
+marriage. Jerome was compelled, after he succeeded to the Westphalian
+crown, to marry Sophia Dorothea, daughter of King Frederick I, of
+Wurtemburg. Madame Patterson, as she was called to the day of her death,
+though she maintained her title to the name of Bonaparte, having an
+utter scorn for America and its democratic institutions, spent much of
+her life in Europe, where at first her beauty, and to the last her wit
+and charming manners, secured her admission to the most exclusive
+salons, and a sort of acknowledgment of her claims. She never saw her
+husband again, save on one occasion, when she came face to face with him
+in a European picture-gallery.
+
+Madame Patterson's aristocratic prejudices were greatly shocked when her
+son married a most estimable American lady, the mother's ambition
+seeking for him an alliance among the royal or at least noble families
+of the Old World. During the reign of Napoleon III, the Pope recognized
+the first marriage of Jerome Bonaparte, and the Emperor, who had taken
+offence at his cousin, the son of Jerome by his princess wife, also
+legitimatized the son, and took him into his service. Madame Patterson
+lived to be nearly a hundred years old, having spent her last days in
+her native city, and dying but a few years ago. Her son Jerome survived
+her not many years, leaving two sons, who are known as the
+Patterson-Bonapartes.
+
+In December, 1814, Baltimore was made the object of attack by the
+British forces, then at war with the United States. On the eleventh of
+that month the fleet reached the mouth of the Patapsco, and on the next
+day six thousand men landed at North Point, and proceeded, under command
+of General Ross, toward the city. An army of over three thousand men met
+them and kept them in check, in order to gain time to put the forts and
+batteries of Baltimore in proper condition for defence. A battle was
+fought, and the Americans defeated, with considerable loss. Among the
+killed and wounded, which numbered one hundred and three, were many of
+the most prominent citizens of Baltimore. The next morning the British
+advanced to the entrenchments about two miles from the city, and at the
+same time a vigorous attack was made by the fleet, upon Fort McHenry, at
+the entrance of the harbor. The fort was vigorously bombarded during the
+next twenty-four hours, but without visible effect. The troops which had
+landed, after hovering at a respectful distance from the city, until the
+evening of the thirtieth, then retired to their shipping, and set sail
+down the river, leaving behind them their commander, General Ross, who
+had been killed in the battle of the twelfth. It was during the siege of
+Baltimore, while the British fleet lay off Fort McHenry, and the bombs
+were raining upon it, that Philip Barton Key wrote the "Star Spangled
+Banner."
+
+From 1814 to 1861, nearly half a century, Baltimore had nothing to do
+but develop her resources and extend her commerce, which she did so well
+and so thoroughly, that in 1860 her inhabitants numbered more than
+212,000, and she stood in the front rank as a manufacturing and
+commercial town.
+
+At the inauguration of President Lincoln, in 1861, the sentiments of the
+people assimilated rather with those of Virginia and the South, than
+with those of Pennsylvania and the North. Had it not, by its
+geographical position, been so completely in the power of the Federal
+government, Maryland would probably have seceded with Virginia. Great
+excitement was aroused by the attack on Fort Sumter, and the State was
+with difficulty made to retain her old position in the Union. The only
+line of railway from the north and east to Washington passed through
+Baltimore, and when, on the fifteenth of April, the President made his
+call for seventy-five thousand men, it was necessary that, in reaching
+the seat of war, they should pass through that city. Apprehensions were
+felt that they might be disturbed, but the Marshal of Police, on the
+eighteenth of April, maintained perfect order in the city, and summarily
+quieted all attempts at riot. He also received from the State Rights
+Association a most solemn pledge that the Federal troops should not be
+interfered with. The Mayor issued a proclamation invoking all good
+citizens to uphold and maintain the peace and good order of the city.
+
+On the nineteenth, the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, the first to
+respond to the President's call, arrived, by the Philadelphia and
+Baltimore Railroad. A crowd of two or three thousand persons had
+gathered at the depot early in the day, to witness their arrival. Soon
+after eleven o'clock in the morning twenty-nine cars arrived from
+Philadelphia, filled with soldiers. Horses were attached to the cars,
+which were driven along Pratt street to the Camden station. The
+multitude hooted and yelled after the first six cars, but did not
+otherwise molest them. The horses becoming frightened by the uproar,
+were detached from the seventh car, which moved without their aid nearly
+to Gay street, where a body of laborers were removing the cobblestones
+from the bed of the street, in order to repair it. Some thirty or forty
+men had followed the car to this point, cheering for President Davis and
+the Southern Confederacy, and applying contemptuous and insulting
+epithets to the troops. The latter received these taunts in perfect
+silence; and when the horses were again attached, and the car commenced
+moving off, a proposition was made to stone it. Almost instantly, acting
+on the suggestion, nearly every window was smashed by projectiles
+snatched from the street. The eighth car was treated in a like manner.
+The ninth car was suffered to pass unmolested, as it was apparently
+empty. When the tenth car approached, after an ineffectual attempt to
+tear up the track, it was heaped with paving stones, and a cartload of
+sand dumped upon them, and four or five large anchors, dragged from the
+sidewalk, completed the barricade. Progress was impossible, and the car
+returned to the President Street Depot.
+
+Two-thirds of the cars still remained, filled with troops, besides
+others loaded with ammunition and baggage. Mayor Brown hastened to the
+depot, in order to prevent any disturbance. The troops were ordered to
+leave the cars and form into line. While forming they were surrounded by
+a dense mass of people, who impeded their march, threw great quantities
+of stones, and knocked down and severely injured two soldiers.
+
+Marching through the city, from the President Street Depot to the Pratt
+Street Bridge, they were pursued by the excited crowd, who continued to
+throw stones, and even fired muskets at them. When they reached Gay
+street, where the track had been torn up, they were again violently
+assaulted by a fresh mob, and a number knocked down and wounded. At the
+corner of South and Pratt streets a man fired a pistol into the ranks of
+the military, when those in the rear ranks immediately wheeled and fired
+upon their assailants, wounding several. The guns of the wounded
+soldiers were seized, and fired upon the ranks, killing two soldiers.
+Reaching Calvert street, the troops succeeded in checking their pursuers
+by a rapid fire, and were not again seriously molested until they
+reached Howard street, where still another mob had assembled.
+
+The police did their utmost to protect the troops from assault, but
+were pressed back by the excited crowd. The soldiers left the Camden
+station about half-past twelve o'clock, and a body of infantry, about
+one hundred and fifty strong, from one of the Northern States, which had
+arrived meantime, next attracted the malevolence of the crowd. The
+excitement was now intense. A man displayed the flag of the Confederate
+States, and a general panic ensued. As many as twenty shots were fired,
+happily without injury to any one, and cobblestones fell like hail. At
+last the soldiers gained refuge in the cars. Other troops, by order of
+Governor Hicks, were sent back to the borders of the State, and the
+military was called out and quiet restored, by evening. Nine citizens of
+Baltimore had been killed, and many wounded; while twenty-five wounded
+Massachusetts troops were sent to the Washington Hospital, and their
+dead numbered two.
+
+Thus Baltimore shares with Charleston the doubtful honor of being first
+in the great civil war which devastated the country and sent desolation
+to many thousand homes, both north and south. Charleston fired the first
+gun, and Baltimore shed the first blood.
+
+During the succeeding night, a report reaching the city that more
+Northern troops were on their way southward, the bridge at Canton, the
+two bridges between Cockeysville and Ashland, also the bridges over
+Little Gunpowder and Bush rivers were destroyed, by order of the
+authorities of Baltimore. Upon a representation of the matter to
+President Lincoln, he ordered that "no more troops should be brought
+through Baltimore, if, in a military point of view, and without
+interruption or opposition, they can be marched around Baltimore." The
+transmission of mails, and removal of provisions from the city, were
+suspended, by the order of the Mayor and Board of Police. Four car-loads
+of military stores and equipments, sufficient to furnish a thousand men,
+belonging to the Government, were thus detained. On the twenty-fourth of
+the month the city had the appearance of a military camp. Twenty-five
+thousand volunteers had enlisted, and four hundred picked men left the
+city for the Relay House, on the Baltimore and Ohio Road, for the
+purpose of seizing and protecting that point, in order to cut off
+communications with Washington by that route.
+
+For a week an unparalleled excitement prevailed in Baltimore, which was
+succeeded by a counter-revolution, when the volunteer militia were
+dismissed, and a large number of troops landed at Fort McHenry and
+shipped for Washington, from Locust Point. On the fifth of May General
+Butler removed a portion of his troops to Baltimore, and they were
+permitted to enter and remain in the city without disturbance. As they
+proceeded on their way to Federal Hill, they were even greeted with
+cheers, while ladies at windows and doors waved their handkerchiefs and
+applauded. On the sixteenth of May the passenger trains between
+Baltimore and Washington resumed their regular trips. On the
+twenty-seventh of June, Marshal of Police Kane was arrested and escorted
+to Fort McHenry, on the charge of being at the head of an unlawful
+combination of men organized for resistance to the laws of the United
+States and the State of Maryland. On the first of July the Commissioners
+of Police were arrested, for having acted unlawfully. On the sixteenth
+of July General Dix was put in command of the troops stationed at
+Baltimore, and the city thenceforth remained tranquil. At the fall
+elections a full vote was cast, which resulted in the Union candidates
+receiving a very large majority. At the meeting of the Legislature, it
+appropriated seven thousand dollars for the relief of the families of
+the Massachusetts troops killed and wounded at Baltimore on April
+nineteenth.
+
+On June thirtieth, 1863, Major General Schenck, in command at Baltimore,
+put that city and Maryland under martial law. The value of merchandise
+exported that year from Baltimore was $8,054,112, and her imports during
+the same time were $4,098,189, showing that although on the borderland
+of strife, her commerce was in an exceedingly healthy condition. During
+July a number of her citizens were arrested, on a charge of being
+disloyal to the government. On the Fourth of July all citizens were
+required by the Commander to show their colors, from ten o'clock A.M.
+to six o'clock, P.M.; an absence of the national flag being considered
+tantamount to a confession of disloyalty. In 1864 the State adopted a
+new Constitution, which conferred freedom upon the slaves within her
+borders, and in November a Freedman's Bureau was established by Major
+General Wallace, having its headquarters at Baltimore.
+
+The following year saw the close of the war, and Baltimore, which had
+not suffered like her sister cities at the South, her port being free
+from blockade, but had rather witnessed increased prosperity arising
+from the demands of the war, continued her prosperous career. Although
+many violent disunionists had found their homes within the city, the
+popular sentiment had grown strongly in favor of the North, and
+Baltimore had come to see that she had little to lose and much to gain
+by the reestablishment of the Union.
+
+The bitterness of the old war times has passed away, and, as if to
+emphasize this fact, the Grand Army of the Republic was invited to hold
+a reunion in Baltimore in September, 1882. Accepting the invitation, her
+citizens vied with each other in honoring the veterans of the war, and
+made their visit a regular ovation. Of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment,
+who had passed through Baltimore on that fateful day in April,
+twenty-one years before, and who suffered from the fury of an ungoverned
+mob, only one member attended the reunion, Captain C. P. Lord, a
+resident of Vineland, New Jersey. He was lionized on every hand.
+
+This Grand Army reunion had many pleasant and amusing features. Here men
+met each other again who had last parted on the battlefield or in a
+Southern prison. Here the dead seemed to come to life, and the lost were
+found. Many officers and soldiers of the Confederate army were also
+present, and it was as satisfactory as curious, as more than once
+happened during this occasion, to have two men meet and clasp hands in a
+cordial greeting, as one of them said to the other, "The last time we
+met I tried to put a bullet hole through you on a battlefield;" or, "I
+took you prisoner when I saw you last;" or, "This empty sleeve, or these
+crutches, I must thank you for."
+
+The gathering was one which will long be remembered by Union and
+Confederate soldiers, and by the citizens of Baltimore as well. It was
+the inauguration of an era of good feeling between the North and the
+South. All personal and sectional enmity had died out, and this
+gathering joined those who had represented, on one side the North and on
+the other the South, in that great intestine struggle which is now so
+long past, and the terror of which, thank God, is being gradually
+obliterated by time from our memories, in new fraternal bonds, which are
+a good augury for the preservation of our Union. When soldiers who
+suffered so much at each other's hands, who were stirred by all the evil
+passions which war develops, and who bore the brunt of the conflict,
+offering all, if need be, as a sacrifice on the altar of the cause they
+had espoused, can so forget the past, and shaking hands over the chasm
+which divided them, look forward to a happy and concordant future,
+surely civilians should be willing to bury the hatred and prejudice
+which has so embittered the past, and live only for a common country,
+made of many parts whose interests are identical.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHARLESTON.
+
+ First Visit to Charleston.--Jail Yard.--Bombardment of the
+ City.--Roper Hospital.--Charleston During the War.--Secession of
+ South Carolina.--Attack and Surrender of Fort Sumter.--Blockade
+ of the Harbor.--Great Fire of 1861.--Capitulation in 1865.--
+ First Settlement of the City.--Battles of the Revolution.--
+ Nullification Act.--John C. Calhoun.--Population of the City.--
+ Commerce and Manufactures.--Charleston Harbor.--"American
+ Venice."--Battery.--Streets, Public Buildings and Churches.--
+ Scenery about Charleston.--Railways and Steamship Lines.--An
+ Ancient Church.--Magnolia Cemetery.--Drives near the City.--
+ Charleston Purified by Fire.
+
+
+My first introduction to the city of Charleston can scarcely be said to
+have been under propitious circumstances. True, a retinue of troops
+conducted my companions and myself, with military pomp, to our quarters
+in the city. But these quarters, instead of being any one of its fine
+hotels, were none other than the Charleston Jail Yard, for the year was
+1864, and we were prisoners of war.
+
+After a varied experience of prison life at Richmond, Danville, Macon
+and Savannah, I had been sent, with a number of others, to Charleston,
+South Carolina, to be placed under the fire of our batteries, which were
+then bombarding the city. We had received more humane treatment at
+Savannah than at any previous place of detention; therefore it was with
+a sinking of the heart that we found ourselves, when we arrived at our
+destination, thrown into the jail yard at Charleston, which was the
+grand receptacle of all Union prisoners in that city. The jail was a
+large octagonal building, four stories high, surmounted by a lofty
+tower. A workhouse and a gallows also occupied the yard. The jail
+building was for the accommodation of criminals, military prisoners, and
+Federal and Rebel deserters, all of whom at least had the advantage of
+shelter from sun and storm. The war prisoners were permitted the use of
+the yard only, which was in the most filthy condition conceivable,
+having been long used as a prison-pen, without receiving any cleaning or
+purification whatever. The only shelter afforded us were the remnants of
+a few tents, which had been cut to pieces, more or less, by former
+prisoners, to make themselves clothing.
+
+This jail yard was in the southeastern portion of the city, and
+apparently directly under the fire of our batteries on Morris Island.
+But though the shells came screaming over our heads, and proved a
+subject of interest, discussion, and even mathematical calculation among
+the prisoners, who were thankful for anything which should take their
+minds, even momentarily, from the misery which they endured, so
+carefully were they aimed, not to do us mischief, that though they
+exploded all about us--in front, behind, and on either side--not one of
+them fell within the prison enclosure. The scene at night was of
+peculiar beauty. These messengers of death presented the spectacle of
+magnificent fireworks, and every explosion sounded as the voice of a
+friend to us, assuring us that the great Northern army was still
+exerting itself to crush out the rebellion and open our prison doors and
+set us free.
+
+ [Illustration: VIEW ON THE BATTERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.]
+
+Reaching Charleston and its jail yard September twelfth, 1864, on the
+twenty-ninth I was transferred to the Roper Hospital, having given my
+parole that I would not attempt to escape. The quarters here were so
+much more comfortable that it was almost like a transition from hell to
+heaven. Leaving behind me the filthiness of the jail yard, and my bed
+there on the chill, bare ground, where I had protection against neither
+heat nor cold, storm nor sunshine, to be permitted the freedom of the
+beautiful garden of the hospital, and to sleep even upon the hard floor
+of the piazza, were luxuries before unenjoyed in my experience of
+southern prisons. And here the Sisters of Charity, those angels among
+women, did what they could to alleviate the sufferings of the sick, and
+to add to the comfort of us all. Their ministrations were bestowed
+indiscriminately on Rebels and Federals, with a charity as broad and
+boundless as true religion.
+
+On October fifth we were ordered to leave Charleston, and were sent, in
+the foulest of cattle cars, to Columbia, the Capital of the State. We
+left Charleston without a regret. It was the breeding place of the
+rankest treason, the cradle of the Rebellion, and the scene of untold
+cruelties to Union prisoners. At the time of our brief visit to the
+city, it was undergoing all the horrors of an actual siege. About
+one-third of its territory had been destroyed by fire during the early
+part of the war, caused by shells thrown from the Union batteries on
+Morris Island. This portion of the city was deserted by all its
+inhabitants save the negroes, who, during every brief cessation in the
+bombardment, flocked in and took possession, rent free, to scatter as
+quickly when one or more of them had been killed by the sudden
+appearance and explosion of shells in this quarter. The balance of the
+city was forsaken by non-combatants, and the blockade had put an end to
+all her commerce. The quiet industries of peace had given place to all
+the turmoil of war. Her streets were filled with military, while the
+boom of the distant batteries, the whiz of the flying shells, and the
+noise of their explosion, were daily and familiar sounds.
+
+During the four years of the war, Charleston was one of the chief points
+of Federal attack, though it remained in possession of the Confederate
+forces until the beginning of 1865. These were four terrible years to
+the city. Yet her sufferings she had brought upon herself. The first
+open and public movement in favor of the dissolution of the Union was
+made in that city. South Carolina was the first to call a State
+convention, and to secede from the Union. This convention was held at
+Columbia, the Capital of the State, but was adjourned to Charleston,
+where the Ordinance of Secession was unanimously passed on the twentieth
+of December, 1860. Fort Sumter, which was one of the largest forts in
+Charleston, a massive fortress of solid masonry, standing on an island
+commanding the principal entrance, at the mouth of Charleston Harbor,
+was in command of Major Robert Anderson, with a garrison of eighty men.
+On the twenty-seventh of December he ran up the stars and stripes.
+Governor Pickens immediately demanded a surrender of the fort, which was
+promptly refused. Early on Friday morning, April twelfth, 1861, the
+initial gun of the terrible four years' war was fired by the Rebel
+forces from the howitzer battery on James Island, west of Sumter. Fort
+Moultrie, on Sullivan Island, on the northeast, the gun battery at
+Cumming's Point, the northwest extremity of Morris Island, and other
+batteries and fortifications which the Confederates had seized and
+appropriated to their own use, all followed in a deadly rain of shells
+upon Sumter. The firing was kept up for thirty-five hours, and Sumter
+made a vigorous defence, until the quarters were entirely burned, the
+main gates destroyed by fire, the supplies exhausted, and the magazine
+surrounded by flames, when Major Anderson accepted the terms of
+capitulation offered by General Beauregard.
+
+Upon the surrender of the Fort, which was received as a good omen by the
+South, troops began to pour into the city, so that by the sixteenth of
+the same month as many as ten thousand had arrived. The blockade of the
+port was commenced on the tenth of May, and continued until the close of
+the war. In the latter part of 1861 an attempt was made by the Federal
+government to seal up the channel of the harbor with sunken ships, to
+prevent the egress of privateers. On the twenty-first of December
+seventeen vessels were sunk, in three or four rows, across the channel.
+But this attempt at blockade proved a failure. The current washed some
+of them away, and many passages in a water front of six miles were left
+unobserved, and more vessels ran the blockade and reached the city, than
+at any other southern port.
+
+On the tenth of December, 1861, a fire broke out in the city, which
+destroyed nearly all its public buildings, banks and insurance offices,
+and several churches, besides many dwellings, reducing thousands to
+homelessness and the extremity of want. The loss occasioned by this
+conflagration was estimated at ten millions of dollars.
+
+In 1863, the women, children and other non-combatants were ordered out
+of the city, and free transportation, food and lodgings were furnished
+those unable to pay for them. Morris Island had been captured by the
+Federal Army, who used it as a point of attack against Sumter and the
+city. Its shells had wrought destruction in all parts of the city,
+especially in its lower portions. On February seventeenth, 1865,
+Charleston, which had withstood all attacks from the seaward,
+capitulated to the Union forces, Columbia having been captured by
+Sherman.
+
+The history of Charleston goes back to earliest colonial times. In 1671
+a few persons located themselves on Ashley River, at Old Charleston. But
+in 1680 this settlement was abandoned, and the foundations of the
+present city laid, several miles nearer the sea. The whole country, up
+to 1671, between the thirtieth and thirty-sixth parallel of latitude,
+was called Carolina, having received the name in honor of Charles IX, of
+France. In that year the division was made between the Northern and
+Southern provinces. In 1685 the young settlement received a considerable
+influx of French Huguenot refugees.
+
+During the early part of the eighteenth century the war of Queen Anne
+against France and Spain greatly disturbed the young colony; and a
+little later the Indians threatened its existence. All the inhabitants
+of the region took refuge at Charleston, which was vigorously defended.
+
+In 1700, the same year that Kidd was captured and taken to England, no
+less then seven pirates were secured, and executed at Charleston.
+Subsequently others shared the same fate.
+
+ [Illustration: GARDEN AT MOUNT PLEASANT, OPPOSITE CHARLESTON, SOUTH
+ CAROLINA.]
+
+South Carolina was among the foremost of the American colonies to strike
+for independence. On the twenty-eighth of June, 1776, Charleston was
+attacked by the British, an attempt being made to destroy the
+military works on Sullivan's Island. But Colonel Moultrie, in honor of
+whom the fort was subsequently named, made a gallant defence and
+repulsed them. In 1779 they made a second attack upon the city, this
+time approaching it by land, but were again compelled to retreat. Sir
+Henry Clinton, with seven or eight thousand men, opened his batteries
+upon Charleston on the second of April, 1780. Fort Moultrie, on
+Sullivan's Island, was compelled to surrender on the fourteenth, and the
+city yielded on May eleventh. The British retained possession of the
+city until the close of the war.
+
+Charleston took a prominent part in the passage of the nullification act
+by the State, which maintained that any one of the States might set
+aside or nullify any act of Congress which it deemed unconstitutional or
+oppressive. The occasion of this nullification act was the Tariff Laws
+of 1828, which were not considered favorable to the Southern States. A
+convention of the State declared them null and void, and made
+preparations to resist their execution. John C. Calhoun, who was at that
+time Vice-President under Andrew Jackson, resigned his office, became a
+leader in the nullification movement, and was the father of the doctrine
+of State Sovereignty, the legitimate outcome of the principles of which
+was the late attempt to dissolve the Union.
+
+The population of Charleston in 1800 was 18,711; in 1850, 42,985
+inhabitants; in 1860, 40,519; in 1870, 48,956; and in 1880, 50,000
+inhabitants. It has not made so rapid a growth as other cities, even in
+the South, but is, nevertheless, a prosperous town, with large
+commercial, and since the war, large manufacturing interests. It is one
+of the chief shipping ports for cotton, and also exports rice, lumber,
+naval stores and fertilizers. Immense beds of marl were discovered in
+the vicinity of the city in 1868, and now the manufacture of fertilizers
+from marl and phosphate is one of its principal industries. There are
+also flour and rice mills, carriage and wagon factories and machine
+shops. The city is learning that the surest foundation stone for its
+future prosperity is its manufacturing interests; and, probably, the
+political battle of 1861, could it be fought over again to-day, in that
+city, would find the nullifiers largely in the minority. The city which
+was so marred and blemished during its long state of siege, has been
+rebuilt, and all traces of the fratricidal conflict removed; and though
+Charleston would not be true to her traditions if she did not still
+cherish a strong Southern sentiment, the years which have passed since
+the cessation of hostilities have done much toward softening the
+asperities of feeling on both sides.
+
+As a seaboard city, Charleston is most favorably situated. It has an
+excellent harbor, seven miles in length, with an average width of two
+miles, landlocked on all sides, except an entrance about a mile in
+width. This entrance is blocked by a bar, which, however, serves both as
+a bulwark and a breakwater. Of its two passages, its best gives
+twenty-two feet in depth at flood tide, and sixteen feet at ebb.
+
+The harbor of Charleston is impregnable, as the Union troops learned to
+their cost during the late war. Standing directly in the channel are
+forts Ripley and Sumter. On a point extending out into the strait,
+between the two, is Fort Johnson. Directly in front of the city, one
+mile distant from it, is Castle Pinckney, covering the crest of a mud
+shoal, and facing the entrance. Sullivan's Island, a long, low, gray
+stretch of an island, dotted here and there by clumps of palmettoes,
+lies on the north of the entrance of the harbor, with Fort Moultrie on
+its extreme southern point, as a doorkeeper to the harbor. On the
+southern side is Morris Island, long, low and gray also, with tufts of
+pines instead of palmettoes, and with batteries at intervals along its
+whole sea front, Fort Wagner standing near its northern end. Sullivan's
+Island, the scene of fierce conflict during the Revolution, and later,
+during the Rebellion, is to-day the Long Branch or Coney Island of South
+Carolina, containing many beautiful cottages and fine drives, and
+furnishing good sea bathing. The village occupies the point extending
+into the harbor.
+
+As one approaches Charleston from the sea, the name which has been
+applied to it, of the "American Venice," seems not inappropriate. The
+shores are low, and the city seems to rise out of the water. It is built
+something after the manner of New York, on a long and narrow peninsula,
+formed by the Cooper and Ashley rivers, which unite in front of the
+city. It has, like New York, its Battery, occupying the extreme point of
+the peninsula, its outlook commanding the entire harbor, bristling with
+fortifications, so harmless in time of peace, so terrible in war. The
+Battery contains plots of thin clover, neatly fenced and shelled
+promenades, a long, solid stone quay, which forms the finest sea-walk in
+the United States, and has a background of the finest residences in the
+city, three storied, and faced with verandahs. The dwelling-houses
+throughout the city are mostly of brick or wood, and have large open
+grounds around them, ornamented with trees, shrubbery, vines and
+flowers. The city is laid out with tolerable regularity, the streets
+generally crossing each other at right angles. King street, running
+north and south, is the fashionable promenade, containing the leading
+retail stores. Meeting street, nearly parallel with King, contains the
+jobbing and wholesale stores. Broad street, the banks, brokers' and
+insurance offices. Meeting street, below Broad, Rutledge street, and the
+west end of Wentworth street, contain fine private residences.
+
+The City Hall, an imposing building, standing in an open square, the
+Court House, the Police Headquarters, and the venerable St. Michael's
+Church (Episcopal), all stand at the intersection of Broad and Meeting
+streets. St. Michael's was built in 1752, after designs by a pupil of
+Sir Christopher Wren. The view from the belfry is very fine, embracing
+the far stretch of sea and shore, the shipping, fortresses of the
+harbor, and near at hand buildings as ancient as the church itself. It
+is the church of the poem--a favorite with elocutionists--"How he saved
+St. Michael." Says the poem, in one of its stanzas, its spire rose
+
+ "High over the lesser steeples, tipped with a golden ball
+ That hung like a radiant planet caught in its earthward fall,
+ First glimpse of home to the sailor who made the harbor round,
+ And last slow fading vision, dear, to the outward bound."
+
+Next in interest among the churches of Charleston is St. Philip's
+Episcopal Church, in Church street, near Queen. The building itself is
+not so venerable as St. Michael's, though its church establishment is
+older. The view from the steeple is fine; but its chief interest centres
+in the churchyard, where lie some of South Carolina's most illustrious
+dead. In one portion of the churchyard is the tomb of John C. Calhoun,
+consisting of a plain granite slab, supported by brick walls, and
+bearing the simple inscription "Calhoun." The ruins of St. Finbar's
+Cathedral (Roman Catholic) stand at the corner of Broad and Friend
+streets. The building, which was one of the costliest edifices of
+Charleston, was destroyed by the great fire of 1861, and the walls,
+turrets and niches still standing are exceedingly picturesque. Other
+handsome church edifices abound. The old Huguenot Church, at the corner
+of Church and Queen streets has its walls lined with quaint and elegant
+mural entablatures.
+
+ [Illustration: CUSTOM HOUSE, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.]
+
+The Post Office, at the foot of Broad street, is a venerable structure,
+dating back to the colonial period, the original material for its
+construction having being brought from England in 1761. It received
+considerable damage during the war, but has since been renovated.
+
+The new United States Custom House, which, when completed, will be the
+finest edifice in the city, is of white marble, in very elegant
+Corinthian style, and is situated south of the market wharf, on Cooper
+River.
+
+The old Orphan House of Charleston is one of the most famous
+institutions in the country. It stands in spacious grounds between
+Calhoun and Vanderbuist streets, and a statue of William Pitt, erected
+during the Revolution, stands in the centre of the grounds. John Charles
+Fremont, the conqueror of California, and once a candidate for the
+Presidency, and C.C. Memminger, Secretary of the Treasury of the
+Confederate States, were both educated here. The Charleston Library, at
+the corner of Broad and Church streets, founded in 1748, and the College
+of Charleston, located in the square bounded by George, Green, College
+and St. Philip streets, and founded in 1788, are both spacious and
+commodious buildings.
+
+One of the most characteristic sights of Charleston is to be seen
+between six and nine o'clock in the morning, in and about market Hall,
+in Meeting street, near the Bay. The Hall is a fine building in temple
+form, with a lofty portico in front, and a row of long, low sheds in the
+rear.
+
+There is nothing picturesque in the country around about Charleston. On
+the contrary, it is low, flat and uninteresting. Looking across the
+Ashley River, which is more than a quarter of a mile wide here, there is
+on the opposite side a long, low line of nearly dead level, with
+occasional sparse pine forests, interspersed with fields of open sand.
+There are no palmettoes, but here and there are gigantic oaks, hung with
+pendants of gray Spanish moss, and occasional green spikes of the
+Spanish bayonet. The view across the Cooper is very similar. Large
+extents of country in the neighborhood of Charleston, especially that
+lying along the streams, and stretching for many miles inland, are low
+and swampy. The region is sparsely settled, and furnishes no thriving
+agricultural or manufacturing population, which, seeking a market or a
+port for its productions, and wanting supplies in return, helps to build
+up the city. Several railways connecting with the North, West and South
+centre here; and she is also connected, by means of steamship lines,
+with the principal Atlantic seaports and some European ones. She is also
+the centre of a great lumber region, and annually exports many million
+feet of lumber.
+
+There are few points of interest about the city. Besides Sullivan's
+Island, Mount Pleasant, on the northern shore of the harbor, so named,
+probably, because the land is sufficiently high to escape being a swamp,
+is a favorite picnic resort. The antiquarian will find interest in the
+old Church of St. James, about fifteen miles from Charleston, on Goose
+Creek. It is secluded in the very heart of the pine forest, entirely
+isolated from habitations, and is approached by a road scarcely more
+than a bridle-path. The church was built in 1711, and the royal arms of
+England, which are emblazoned over the pulpit, saved it from destruction
+during the Revolutionary War. On the walls and altars are tablets in
+memory of the early members of the organization, one dated 1711, and
+another 1717. The pews are square and high, the pulpit or reading desk
+exceedingly small, and the floor is of stone. On the other side of the
+road, a short distance from this church, is a farm known as The Oaks,
+approached by a magnificent avenue, a quarter of a mile in length, of
+those trees, believed to be nearly two hundred years old. They are
+exceedingly large, and form a continuous archway over the road, their
+branches festooned with long fringes of gray moss, which soften and
+conceal the ravages of age.
+
+Magnolia Cemetery lies just outside the city, on its northern boundary.
+It is beautified by live oaks and magnolias, and contains, among other
+fine monuments, those of Colonel William Washington, of Revolutionary
+fame, Hugh Legaré and Dr. Gilmore Simms, the novelist. The roads leading
+out of the city by the Cooper and Ashley rivers afford attractive
+drives. What the scenery lacks in grandeur and picturesqueness is made
+up in beauty by the abundance of lovely foliage, composed of pines,
+oaks, magnolias, myrtles and jasmines, exhibiting a tropical
+luxuriance.
+
+On the twenty-seventh of April, 1838, Charleston was visited by a fire
+which proved exceedingly disastrous. Nearly one-half the city was swept
+by the flames, which raged for twenty-eight hours, and were finally
+averted only by the blowing up of buildings in their path. There were
+1158 buildings destroyed, involving a loss of three millions of dollars.
+The most shocking feature of the catastrophe was that, in the
+carelessness of handling the gunpowder in blowing up these buildings,
+four of the most prominent citizens were killed, and several others
+injured. The fire of 1861 exceeded this in destructiveness, and to it
+were added the terrific effects of a four years' besiegement. So that it
+can be truly said that Charleston has been purified by fire. She is
+to-day fully recovered from the effects, and as prosperous as her
+geographical position will permit.
+
+ [Illustration: MAGNOLIA CEMETERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+CINCINNATI.
+
+ Founding of Cincinnati.--Rapid Increase of Population.--
+ Character of its Early Settlers.--Pro-slavery Sympathies.--
+ During the Rebellion.--Description of the City.--Smoke and
+ Soot.--Suburbs.--"Fifth Avenue" of Cincinnati.--Streets,
+ Public Buildings, Private Art Galleries, Hotels, Churches
+ and Educational Institutions.--"Over the Rhine."--Hebrew
+ Population.--Liberal Religious Sentiment.--Commerce and
+ Manufacturing Interests.--Stock Yards and Pork-packing
+ Establishments.--Wine Making.--Covington and Newport
+ Suspension Bridge.--High Water.--Spring Grove Cemetery.
+
+
+Cincinnati, whether we consider what its past history has been, or
+whether we regard it as it is to-day, is probably the most
+matter-of-fact and prosaic of all our western cities. A generation ago
+it derived its chief importance from the pork-packing business, in
+which, though it once stood at the head, it is now completely distanced
+by Chicago. Its extensive factories and foundries give it material
+wealth, while its geographical situation guarantees its commercial
+importance. Unlike most of the towns and cities of this western world,
+no interesting historical associations cling around its site. The
+Indians seem to have been troublesome and treacherous here, as
+elsewhere; but the records tell no stories of famous wars, terrible
+massacres, or hairbreadth escapes. In all the uninteresting accumulation
+of dry facts and statistics regarding the founding and subsequent growth
+of the city, there is just one exceptional romance.
+
+In early times three settlements were made along the banks of the Ohio
+River, on what is now the southern boundary of the State of Ohio. The
+first was at Columbia, at the mouth of the Little Miami River, in
+November, 1788, on ten thousand acres, purchased by Major Benjamin
+Stites, from Judge Symmes. The second settlement was commenced but a
+month later, on the north bank of the Ohio River, opposite the mouth of
+the Licking River, Matthias Denman, of New Jersey, being the leading
+spirit in the new undertaking, he having purchased about eight hundred
+acres, also from Judge Symmes, for an equivalent of fifteen pence an
+acre. Judge Symmes himself directed the third settlement, which was
+founded in February, 1789, and gave it the name of North Bend, from the
+fact that it was the most northern bend of the Ohio River, below the
+mouth of the great Kanawha.
+
+A spirit of rivalry existed between these three settlements, which lay
+but a few miles apart. Each one regarded itself as the future great city
+of the west. In the beginning, Columbia took the lead; but North Bend
+presently gained the advantage, as the troops detailed by General Harmer
+for the protection of the settlers in the Miami Valley landed there,
+through the influence of Judge Symmes. This detachment soon took its
+departure for Louisville, and was succeeded by another, under Ensign
+Luce, who was at liberty to select the spot, for the erection of a
+substantial block-house, which seemed to him best calculated to afford
+protection to the Miami settlers. He put up temporary quarters at North
+Bend, sufficient for the security of his troops, and began to look for a
+suitable site on which to build the block-house. While he was leisurely
+pursuing this occupation, he was attracted by a pair of beautiful black
+eyes, whose owner was apparently not indifferent to his attentions. This
+woman was the wife of one of the settlers at the Bend, who, when he
+perceived the condition of affairs, thought best to remove her out of
+danger, and at once proceeded to take up his residence at Cincinnati.
+The gallant commander, still ostensibly engaged in locating his
+block-house, felt immediately impelled to go to Cincinnati, on a tour of
+inspection. He was forcibly struck by the superior advantages offered by
+that town, over all other points on the river, for a military station.
+In spite of remonstrance from the Judge, the troops were, accordingly,
+removed, and the erection of a block-house commenced at once. The
+settlers at the Bend, who at that time outnumbered those of the more
+favored place, finding their protection gone, gave up their land and
+followed the soldiers, and ere long the town was almost deserted. In the
+course of the ensuing summer, Major Doughty arrived at Cincinnati, with
+troops from Fort Harmer, and established Fort Washington, which was made
+the most important and extensive military station in the northwest
+territory. North Bend still continued its existence as a town, and was
+finally honored by becoming the home of General Wm. H. Harrison, ninth
+President of the United States, and there still rest his mortal remains.
+Farms now occupy the place where Columbia once stood.
+
+The unsettled condition of the frontier prevented Cincinnati from making
+a rapid growth in its early years. In 1800, twelve years after the first
+colonist landed on the shore of the Ohio opposite the Licking River,
+there were but 750 inhabitants. In 1814 the town was incorporated as a
+city. In 1820 its inhabitants numbered 9,602, and in 1830, 16,230. About
+this time the Miami Canal was built, running through the western portion
+of the State of Ohio, and connecting Cincinnati with Lake Erie at
+Toledo. This gave an impetus to trade, and during the next ten years the
+population increased nearly three hundred per cent., numbering in 1840,
+46,382 inhabitants. In 1850 it had again more than doubled, amounting to
+115,436. In 1860 the number was 161,044; in 1870, 216,239; while
+according to the United States census returns of 1880 the population in
+that year was 255,708.
+
+The career of Cincinnati will not compare in brilliancy with that of
+Chicago. It has not displayed the same energy and activity. Outwardly,
+it has not made the most of its superior natural advantages, and
+intellectually, although it boasts some of the most readable and
+successful newspapers in the country, it has fallen behind other cities.
+Settled originally by emigrants from Pennsylvania and New Jersey,
+descendants of Germans, Swedes and Danes, its inhabitants were plodders
+rather than pushers. They lacked the practical and mental activity of
+New Englanders and New Yorkers. By habits of industry and economy they
+were sure to accumulate wealth; but they cared little for outward
+display, and less for educational and intellectual advancement. The
+churches met better support than the schools, "book learning" being held
+in small estimation by this stolid yet thrifty race. They patterned
+their city after Philadelphia, the most magnificent city their eyes had
+ever beheld, and anything more splendid than which their imaginations
+were powerless to depict; called their streets Walnut, Spruce and Vine,
+and felt that they should be commended for having built them up with a
+view to substantiality rather than to display.
+
+Yankee capital and enterprise, in the course of time, found their way to
+Cincinnati, to build up its factories and stimulate public improvements.
+But, on the line between freedom and slavery, its population largely
+southern by immigration or descent, and by sympathy, Cincinnati up to
+the time of the war was more a southern than a northern city. Her
+leading families were connected by marriage with Kentucky, Virginia and
+Maryland; many of her leading men had immigrated from those States; and
+her aristocracy scorned the northern element which had helped to build
+up the city, and repudiated all its tendencies.
+
+Public sentiment had been, from its earliest history, intensely
+pro-slavery. In 1836 a mob broke into and destroyed the office of the
+_Philanthropist_, an anti-slavery paper, published by James G. Birney,
+scattered the type, and threw the press into the river, having
+previously resolved that no "abolition paper" should be either
+"published or distributed" in the town. In 1841 the office of the same
+paper was again raided and destroyed, and a frenzied mob, numbering at
+one time as many as fifteen hundred men, engaged in a riot against the
+negro residents in the city, until, to secure their safety, it was found
+necessary to incarcerate the latter, to the number of 250 to 300, in the
+county jail. Houses were broken into and furniture destroyed, several
+persons killed, and twenty or thirty more or less seriously wounded. Yet
+at this very period, Salmon Portland Chase, the future statesman and
+financier, but then an obscure young lawyer, was living in Cincinnati,
+and was already planning the beginnings of that Liberty party which,
+after many vicissitudes, and under a different name, finally
+accomplished the abolition of slavery; and in this same city, but ten
+years later, Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
+
+When the war began, Cincinnati found itself in an anomalous position.
+Geographically it was on the side of the north, while to a large extent
+its social and business relations allied it with the south. Many of the
+leading families furnished adherents to the southern cause; but the
+masses of the people, notably the Germans, who had already become an
+important factor in its population, were stirred by the spirit of
+patriotism, and casting aside once for all their conservatism, they
+identified themselves with the cause of the Union. Trade was greatly
+disturbed. The old profitable relations with the south were broken up
+for the time being, but Cincinnati did not find herself a loser. Army
+contractors made fortunes, and the business of supplying gunboats,
+military stores and provisions to the army gave employment to immense
+numbers, and stimulated all branches of trade. From this period
+Cincinnati dates her new life. Heretofore she had stagnated in all but a
+business sense. With the steady increase of her population came a new
+element. Southern supineness and Middle State stolidity were aroused and
+shaken out of themselves, when slavery no longer exerted its baleful
+influence over the country and the city. Fresh life was infused into her
+people, and the war marked the dawn of a new era for the city, an era in
+which public spirit took a prominent place.
+
+The name, Cincinnati, was bestowed upon the city at its foundation, as
+tradition has it, by General St. Clair, who called it after the society
+of that name, of which himself and General Hamilton were both members.
+The county was subsequently named in honor of General Hamilton. The
+young town barely escaped the name of Losantiville, a word of original
+etymology, compounded by a pedantic schoolmaster, who, wishing to
+indicate the position of the future city as opposite the mouth of the
+Licking River, united _os_, mouth, _anti_, against or opposite to, and
+_ville_, as meaning city, prefacing the whole with L, the initial letter
+of Licking; hence "Losantiville." But the name, although accepted for
+several months, was not permanently adopted.
+
+Cincinnati is nearly in the centre of the great valley of the Ohio,
+being only fifty-eight miles nearer Cairo, at its junction with the
+Mississippi, than to its head waters at Pittsburg. It occupies the half
+circle formed by an outward curve of the river, which bends continually
+in one direction or another. The plateau upon which the business part of
+the city is built is sixty feet above the low-water mark of the river.
+Back of this is a terrace some fifty feet higher yet, graded to an easy
+slope, the whole shut in by an amphitheatre of what appears to be hills,
+though when one mounts to their summits he finds himself on an
+undulating table-land, four or five hundred feet above the river, which
+extends backward into the country. The river flows through a wide and
+deep ravine, which the raging floods have, in the long ages since they
+began their course, cut for themselves, through an elevated region of
+country. In the remote west these ravines, chiseled through the solid
+rocks, are bordered by steep precipices; on the Ohio the yielding soil
+has been washed away in a gradual slope, leaving the graceful outlines
+of hills.
+
+The city proper is occupied by stores, offices, public buildings,
+factories, foundries, and the dwelling houses of the poorer and middle
+classes, over all which hangs a pall of smoke, caused by the bituminous
+coal used as fuel in the city. Cleanliness in either person or in dress
+is almost an impossibility. Hands and faces become grimy, and clean
+collars and light-hued garments are perceptibly coated with a thin layer
+of soot. Clothes hung out in the weekly wash acquire a permanent yellow
+hue which no bleaching can remove. The smoke of hundreds of factories,
+locomotives and steamboats arises and unites to form this dismal pall,
+which obscures the sunlight, and gives a sickly cast to the moonbeams.
+
+But beyond the city, on the magnificent amphitheatre of hills which
+encircle it, are half a dozen beautiful suburbs, where the homes of
+Cincinnati's merchant princes and millionaires are found, as elegant as
+wealth combined with art can make them, surrounded by enchanting
+scenery, and commanding extensive views over the city and surrounding
+country. Cincinnati has no Fifth Avenue like New York, but it has its
+Mount Auburn, its Walnut Hills, its Price's Hill, its Clifton and its
+Avondale, which are as much superior to Fifth Avenue as the country is
+superior to the city, and as space is preferable to narrowness. As far
+as the eye can reach, on these billowed outlines of hills and valleys,
+elegant cottages, tasteful villas, and substantial mansions, surrounded
+by a paradise of grass, gardens, lawns, and tree-shaded roads, are
+clustered. Each little suburb has its own corporation, and its own
+municipal government, while even its mayor and aldermen may do daily
+business in the large city below it.
+
+In the city itself Pearl street is noted for its wholesale trade, and
+for the uniform elegance of its buildings. Third street, between Main
+and Vine, contains the banking, brokering, and insurance offices. Fourth
+street is the fashionable promenade and business street. Freeman street,
+in the neighborhood of Lincoln Park, is also a favorite promenade. Both
+the East and West Ends contain many fine residences. Along Front street,
+at the foot of Main, is the public landing, an open space one thousand
+feet long and four hundred and twenty-five feet wide. The city has a
+frontage of ten miles on the river, and extends back three miles.
+
+The United States Government building, occupying the square bounded by
+Main and Walnut, and Fifth and Sixth streets, and accommodating the
+Custom House, Post Office, and United States Courts; the County Court
+House, in Main street, near Canal street; the City buildings occupying
+an entire square on Plum street, between Eighth and Ninth; the Chamber
+of Commerce, on Fourth street between Main and Walnut; and the Masonic
+Temple, at the corner of Third and Walnut streets, are among the most
+imposing buildings of the city. The Exposition buildings, in Elm street,
+fronting Washington Park, cover three and one-half acres of ground, and
+have seven acres of space for exhibiting. The Exhibition opens annually,
+during the first week in September, and closes the first week in
+October. The Springer Music Hall will seat 5,000 persons, and contains
+one of the largest organs in the world, having more pipes, but fewer
+speaking stops, than the famous Boston organ. Pike's Opera House, in
+Fourth street, between Vine and Walnut, is a very handsome building.
+Cincinnati is noted for its appreciation and encouragement of fine
+music. The Emery Arcade, said to be the largest in America, extends
+from Vine to Race street, between Fourth and Fifth. The roof is of
+glass, and in it are shops of various kinds, and the Hotel Emery.
+
+The late Henry Probasco, on Clifton Heights, and Joseph Longworth, on
+Walnut Hills, each had very fine private art galleries, to which
+visitors were courteously admitted, and the city itself occupies a high
+standard in art matters. The Tyler-Davidson fountain, in Fifth street,
+between Vine and Walnut, the gift of Mr. Probasco, exhibits a series of
+basins, one above another, the shaft ornamented by figures, and the
+whole surmounted by a gigantic female figure, from whose outstretched
+hands the water rains down in fine spray. The fountain was cast in
+Munich, and cost nearly $200,000.
+
+The Burnet House has been, for more than a quarter of a century, the
+principal hotel in Cincinnati. The Grand Hotel is newer and more
+elegant. The Gibson House is large and centrally located. There are
+various opera houses, theatres, variety and concert halls, a gymnasium,
+a Floating Bath, and Zoölogical Gardens, with a collection of birds and
+animals, among the best in the country.
+
+St. Peter's Cathedral (Roman Catholic), in Plum street, between Seventh
+and Eighth, is the finest religious edifice in the city. Its altar of
+Carrara marble was carved in Genoa, and its altar-piece, "St. Peter
+Delivered," by Murillo, a work of art of world-wide reputation. Many of
+the Protestant churches are elegant, and some of them actually
+magnificent. The Hebrew Synagogue on Plum street, opposite the
+Cathedral, and the Hebrew Temple, at the corner of Eighth and Mound
+streets, both handsome edifices, one in Moorish and the other in Gothic
+style, have each of them brilliant interiors.
+
+Among the educational institutions of Cincinnati are the University of
+Cincinnati, having in connection with it a School of Design and a Law
+School, St. Xavier's College (Jesuit); Wesleyan Female College; Seminary
+of Mount St. Mary's, a famous Roman Catholic College; Lane Theological
+Seminary, of which Dr. Lyman Beecher was once president, and where Henry
+Ward Beecher once studied theology for three years; several medical
+colleges, and scientific, classical and mechanical institutes.
+
+A number of parks surround the city, furnishing fine pleasure grounds,
+and containing magnificent views of the river and its shores.
+
+More than a third of the residents of Cincinnati are of German birth or
+descent. Besides being scattered all through the city, they also occupy
+a quarter exclusively their own, on the north of the Miami Canal, which
+they have named "the Rhine." "Over the Rhine," one seems to have left
+America entirely, and to have entered, as by magic, the Fatherland. The
+German tongue is the only one spoken, and all signs and placards are in
+German. There are German schools, churches and places of amusement. The
+beer gardens will especially recall Germany to the mind of the tourist.
+The Grand Arbeiter and Turner Halls are distinctive features of this
+quarter of the city, and specially worthy of a visit.
+
+The Jews also constitute a proportion of the inhabitants, respectable
+both as to numbers and character; and, what is worthy of remark, there
+is an unwonted harmony between Christians and Hebrews, so that an
+exchange of pulpits between them has been among the actual facts of the
+past. Dr. Max Lilienthal, one of the most eloquent and learned rabbis of
+the country, presides over one of the Jewish congregations, and has
+preached to Christian audiences; and Mr. Mayo, the Unitarian clergyman,
+has spoken by invitation in the synagogues. The Jews of the city are
+noted for their intelligence, public spirit and liberality, and are
+represented in the municipal government, and on the boards of public and
+charitable institutions. Quite as worthy of note is the fact that the
+Young Men's Christian Association of Cincinnati is not influenced by
+that spirit of narrow bigotry which in certain other cities of the Union
+excludes Unitarians from fellowship.
+
+The venerable Archbishop Purcell, who for half a century had been at the
+head of the Roman Catholic Church in this diocese, was a man of genial
+manners, sincerely beloved by all. But the closing days of his life were
+sadly clouded by a gigantic financial failure, amounting to several
+millions of dollars, with which he was connected. As heavily as the blow
+has fallen upon many of his flock, the only blame they impute to the
+dead prelate is that of most faulty judgment and general incapacity in
+financial affairs. The most singular part of it all was that the
+difficulties should have remained so long undiscovered, until such an
+immense amount of property was involved.
+
+Cincinnati's commerce is very extended, and so are her manufacturing
+interests. Steamboats from all points on the Mississippi and the Ohio
+lay up at her levee, which extends five or six miles around the bank of
+the river in front of the city. The traveler may take his ticket for St.
+Paul, New Orleans, Pittsburg, high up the Red River, or any intervening
+point. The staple article of trade is pork, though she exports wine,
+flour, iron, machinery, whisky, paper and books. In addition to the
+water ways, a large number of railways, connecting the city with every
+section of the country, centres here.
+
+The stock yards of Cincinnati are on an extended scale, though not
+equaling those of Chicago. The Union Railroad's Stock Yards, comprising
+fifty acres on Spring Grove avenue, have accommodations for 25,000 hogs,
+10,000 sheep, and 5,000 cattle. In the pork packing establishments,
+thousands of hogs from the farms of Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, are
+slaughtered daily. In a single establishment fifty men will slaughter
+and dispose of 1,500 hogs a day. Each man has his own special line of
+work, the labor being divided among pen-men, knockers-down, stickers,
+scalders, bristle-snatchers, scrapers, shavers, hangers or "gamble-men,"
+gutters, hose-boys, slide-boys, splitters, cutters with their
+attendants, weighers, cleavers, knife-men, ham-trimmers,
+shoulder-trimmers, packers, salters, weighers and branders, lard-men,
+bookkeepers, porters and laborers, of whom fifty will unitedly dispose
+of a hog once in every twenty seconds. The old saying is that it takes
+nine tailors to make a man, but it takes fifty men, belonging to all the
+professions named above, to make one complete butcher. The work is
+accomplished so rapidly that the creature has no time to realize what
+has happened to him, before the different portions of his dissected body
+are slipping down wooden pipes, each to its appropriate apartment below,
+to be finally disposed of.
+
+Nowhere east of the Rocky Mountains are grapes cultivated to such an
+extent, and such quantities of wine manufactured, as on the southern
+slopes of the hills which hem in the city of Cincinnati. This business
+is mostly engaged in by Germans, who make excellent wine, which has
+acquired a world-wide celebrity. But the grape-rot, which has especially
+affected the Catawbas, from which the best wine is produced, has of late
+years rather checked the industry. Some of the wine cellars of
+Cincinnati are famous, not only for the quantity of native wine which
+they contain, but for its quality as well.
+
+Looking across the river, which at low water is, perhaps, a third of a
+mile wide, to the Kentucky side, one sees, on the right bank of the
+Licking River, the city of Covington, a mass of black factories and tall
+chimneys, from which dense smoke is always ascending, and spreading out
+over the valley. On the left or opposite bank of the Licking is Newport,
+the two towns connected by a suspension bridge. Covington is also
+connected with Cincinnati by a suspension bridge, 1,057 feet long from
+tower to tower, its entire length 2,252 feet, and elevated by two iron
+cables above the river, at low water, one hundred feet. Its weight is
+600 tons, but it is estimated that it will sustain a weight of 16,000
+tons, and is one of the finest structures of its kind in the world. This
+bridge was nine years in construction, and cost nearly two millions of
+dollars. There are also two pier railroad bridges across the Ohio at
+Cincinnati.
+
+Along the summit of the steep levee, close to the line of stores, there
+is a row of massive posts, three feet thick and twenty feet high, and
+forty or fifty feet above the usual low water mark. The stranger will be
+puzzled to imagine their use. But let him visit the city during the
+spring freshet, and he will speedily discover their purpose. The
+swelling of the river at that period brings the steamboats face to face
+with the warehouses on the levee, and they are secured to these huge
+posts by means of strong cables, to prevent them being swept down the
+stream by the mighty rush of waters. The usual difference between the
+high and low water mark of the Ohio River at Cincinnati is about forty
+feet, though a flood has been known to mark a much higher figure than
+that. When this occurs, which it does once or twice in a generation, the
+overflowing water carries desolation to all the lower parts of the city.
+The ground floors of houses are submerged, cellars filled, merchandise
+damaged or destroyed. People betake themselves to the upper stories, and
+make their way about the streets in boats.
+
+The latest and most disastrous flood on record was that of 1883, when,
+on February fifteenth, the river indicated sixty-six feet and four
+inches above low water mark. Furious rain storms throughout the Ohio
+Valley had swollen all the streams to an unprecedented height, and
+caused terrible disaster to all the towns and cities on the shores of
+the Ohio River. For seven miles along the water front of Cincinnati the
+water overflowed valuable property, reaching from two to eight blocks
+into the city, so that the great suspension bridge, entrance to which is
+from the top of the decline, could not be reached except in boats. A
+thousand firms were washed out. In Mill Creek Valley are the large
+manufacturing establishments, which employ over thirty thousand men,
+women, and children, and these were all cut off by water. Twelve wards
+in the city, and seven townships in the country, were more or less
+affected by the flood. The entire population of the flooded city
+districts is nearly 130,000, and one quarter of these, exclusive of
+business interests, were sufferers by the flood, their houses being
+either under water or totally destroyed. The waterworks were stopped,
+and the city was left in darkness by the submergence of the gasworks.
+
+On Tuesday, February thirteenth, although the flood had not yet reached
+its height, the freight depot of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad was
+undermined by the bursting of a culvert under it, and fell into the
+surrounding water, carrying with it, to certain death, several people.
+More than twenty railroad tracks were submerged, some of them to a depth
+of twelve feet, so that nearly all communication was cut off. Policemen
+patrolled the streets in boats. The churches were thrown open to receive
+the homeless, and nearly every organization in the city, from the
+Chamber of Commerce to the ladies' sewing societies, entered upon the
+work of relieving the sufferers. Contributions poured in most liberally
+from abroad, the Free Masons of Cleveland alone shipping twelve large
+boats, with a generous supply of stores. Before relief could come to
+them, many persons suffered severely, from both cold and hunger. They
+were rescued from their flooded homes by the aid of skiffs, some of them
+with barely enough clothing to conceal their nakedness.
+
+It is estimated that eight square miles of Cincinnati were under water,
+five of which were in the Mill Creek Valley. Provisions became scarce,
+and commanded high prices. Newport, on the Kentucky shore, was in even a
+more deplorable condition than Cincinnati. Supplies became entirely
+exhausted, and on the night of the fourteenth, fifteen thousand people
+there were without fuel or provisions.
+
+On the sixteenth of February the waters had begun to subside, and
+gradually regained their normal level, making more apparent, as the
+flood decreased, the ruin and desolation which had attended it. A vast
+deposit of mud was left upon the streets, many premises had been
+undermined by the sucking currents, malaria haunted the wet cellars, the
+destruction of merchandise was found to be very heavy indeed, while
+thousands of men were compelled to remain out of employment until the
+factories and mills could be put in working condition. The great flood
+of 1883 will long be remembered by the citizens of Cincinnati.
+
+The breaking up of the ice in the river, in the spring, is also a time
+of great peril to property. There is usually more or less rise in the
+river at that period, with a swifter current, and the floating blocks
+sometimes drag boats away from their moorings, and crush them to either
+partial or utter destruction. The Ohio River, known to the French as _La
+Belle Riviere_, so called because of its high and picturesque banks, is,
+like the Mississippi, a capricious stream, and neither life nor property
+is always safe upon its bosom or along its shores.
+
+The pride of Cincinnati is Spring Grove Cemetery, five miles northwest
+of the city, which is one of the most beautiful in the West. It is in
+the valley of Mill Creek, and is approached by a handsome avenue, one
+hundred feet wide. It contains six hundred acres, well wooded, and so
+laid out as to present the appearance of a park. The boundaries of the
+lots are indicated by sunken stone posts at each corner, there being
+neither railing, fence, nor hedge within the cemetery, to define these
+lots. The graves are leveled off, even with the ground, and the
+monuments are remarkable, for their variety and good taste. The Dexter
+mausoleum, which represents a Gothic chapel, will attract special
+attention; while one of the principal objects in the cemetery is the
+bronze statue of a soldier, cast in Munich, and erected in 1864, to the
+memory of the Ohio volunteer soldiers who died during the War.
+
+In spite of many changes for the better since the war, Cincinnati still
+retains her distinctive character. She has taken long strides in the
+direction of intellectual development, and has now numerous and
+extensive public libraries, of which any city might be proud. The
+theatres and other places of amusement, which, not long since, were
+represented by shaky buildings, third-rate talent and a general dearth
+of attractions, and patronized more largely by the river men than by any
+other single class, have risen to take rank among the best in the
+country. But she is still a city noted for her wealth; for her solid
+business enterprises and scrupulous honesty, rather than for that spirit
+of speculation in which, in other cities, fortunes are quickly made, and
+even more quickly lost. Her prosperity has a solid foundation in her
+factories, her foundries, her mills and engine shops. A man, to be
+successful in Cincinnati, must know how to _make_ and to _do_, as well
+as how to buy and sell. Men have risen from the humblest ranks by dint
+of industry and energy alone, while they were yet young, to be the
+masters of princely fortunes. Even a newspaper publisher in that city, a
+few years since, estimated his property at five millions of dollars, an
+instance which, probably, has not a parallel in the civilized world.
+Nicholas Longworth died worth twelve millions of dollars, and her
+living millionaires are to be counted by hundreds.
+
+Cincinnati stands in the front rank of the manufacturing cities of
+America, and the secret of her financial success is that she has made
+what the people of Ohio and other States needed and were sure to buy.
+Receiving their products in return, and turning these to account, her
+merchants have made a double profit. As long as the Ohio River sweeps by
+the city's front, and as long as the smoke of her factories and her
+foundries ascends to heaven and obscures the fair face thereof, and
+corn, transformed into pork, is sent away in such quantities to the
+Eastern cities and to Europe; so long as the cotton of the South, the
+hay of the blue grass region, and the grain of the North and West, find
+a market on her shores, her prosperity is secure; and the Queen City of
+the West, as she proudly styles herself, will go on increasing in
+population and in prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CLEVELAND.
+
+ The "Western Reserve."--Character of Early Settlers.--
+ Fairport.--Richmond.--Early History of Cleveland.--Indians.--
+ Opening of Ohio and Portsmouth Canal.--Commerce in 1845.--
+ Cleveland in 1850--First Railroad.--Manufacturing Interests.--
+ Cuyahoga "Flats" at Night.--The "Forest City."--Streets and
+ Avenues.--Monumental Park.--Public Buildings and Churches.--
+ Union Depot.--Water Rents.--Educational Institutions.--Rocky
+ River.--Approach to the City.--Freshet of 1883.--Funeral of
+ President Garfield.--Lake Side Cemetery.--Site of the Garfield
+ Monument.
+
+
+In early colonial times, out of utter ignorance of the boundless
+territory extending westward, the first American Colonies were chartered
+by the Kings of England with permission to extend westward indefinitely.
+After the close of the Revolutionary War, while negotiations were in
+progress in regard to the final treaty of peace with the United States,
+which was ultimately signed at Paris on November thirtieth, 1782, Mr.
+Oswald, the British Commissioner, proposed the Ohio River as the western
+boundary of the young nation, and had it not been for the firmness and
+persistence of John Adams, one of the American Commissioners, who
+insisted upon the right of the United Colonies to the territory as far
+westward as the Mississippi, it is probable that the rich section of
+country between these two rivers would still have formed a portion of
+the British dominions, or have been the source of subsequent contention
+and expense. When the Colonies had become independent States, many of
+them claimed the right of soil and jurisdiction over large portions of
+western unappropriated land originally embraced in their charters.
+Congress urged upon these States to cede these lands to the general
+government, for the benefit of all. They all yielded to this request,
+except Connecticut, who retained a small tract of land in the
+northeastern portion of the present State of Ohio, which was
+subsequently divided up five counties in length along the lake, with an
+average width of two counties. The lower boundary of this tract of land
+was 40° 22´ north latitude, and it extended from the Pennsylvania line
+on the east, one hundred and twenty miles westward, to a line running
+north and south, a little west of the present location of Sandusky City.
+This tract of land was called the "Western Reserve of Connecticut."
+
+In 1801 Connecticut ceded all her jurisdictional claims over the
+territory, but it continues to be known, to this day, as the
+"Connecticut Reserve," the "Western Reserve," or simply as the
+"Reserve." This "Western Reserve" is like a little piece of New England
+in a mosaic, representing many sections and many peoples. It is a
+peculiarity of the Anglo-Saxon race, that in emigrating it usually moves
+along parallels of latitude, and rarely diverges much either northward
+or southward. We find to the eastward of Ohio, Connecticut, and Rhode
+Island, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and
+Virginia, and all of these States have contributed to her population.
+Thus, below the Reserve, the people are largely from Pennsylvania; still
+further south, from Maryland and Virginia; and the lower section of the
+State is allied more by kindred and sympathy with the South than with
+the North. But on the Western Reserve, the cosmopolitan character of the
+inhabitants is at once lost. It is New England in descent and ideas. The
+little white meeting house, and the little red school house not far off,
+both as bare and homely as a stern Puritan race could conceive of, were
+everywhere met in the early days of its settlement, after the log cabin
+epoch had passed away. Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont furnished
+the principal immigrants, and they built their neat and thrifty little
+New England towns over again, and maintained their New England
+sturdiness and simplicity.
+
+The inhabitants of the Reserve have been, and are still, noted for their
+thrift, their intelligence and their superior culture. That section has
+furnished many distinguished public men, and one President, to the
+country. It was, in the old slavery days, spoken of contemptuously as
+"the hotbed of abolitionism," and gave both Giddings and Wade to fight
+the battle against Southern dominion in the United States Congress. Here
+Garfield was born, and here he is buried. Howells, the novelist, was a
+native of the Reserve, and passed his life until early manhood in its
+northeasternmost county.
+
+The northern shores of the Reserve are washed by Lake Erie, one of the
+shallowest, most treacherous and least picturesque of the chain of lakes
+which form our northern boundary. It embraces the "Great Divide" between
+the north and the south, its waters flowing to the sea by both the St.
+Lawrence and the Mississippi. Summit and Portage counties, by their
+names, indicate the locality of this Divide.
+
+Very early in the present century, the sturdy New England pioneers,
+looking for a suitable harbor upon the lake, discovered the mouth of
+Grand River, about thirty-five miles northeast of the Cuyahoga River;
+and in 1803, two miles up this river, the first warehouse on the lake
+was built.
+
+In 1812 the town of Fairport, at the mouth of this river, was laid out,
+and was destined by its founders to be the future great lake city of
+Ohio. It had one of the best harbors on the lake, if not the best, well
+defended from storms, and easy of access, so that vessels entered it
+without difficulty when they could not make other ports. The water was
+deep enough for any large craft, and in the course of time the
+government expended a considerable sum of money in improving the harbor.
+A line of boats was speedily established between Fairport and Buffalo,
+which in those railroadless days were liberally patronized. Nearly all
+the lake steamers bound for other ports stopped there, and its business
+constantly increased. A lighthouse was built, and its future prosperity
+seemed assured.
+
+During the great period of land speculation, between 1830 and 1840, the
+town of Richmond was laid out on the opposite bank of the Grand River,
+by wealthy eastern capitalists, who established their homes there, and
+transported to the infant city the wealth, magnificence and luxurious
+social customs of the east. During their brief reign, they gave
+entertainments such as were not equaled in that section of the country
+for many long years afterwards. A large village was built and a
+steamboat was owned there.
+
+Meantime, a little town had been growing up on the banks of the
+Cuyahoga. The first permanent settlement had been made as early as
+1796, and named Cleveland, in honor of General Moses Cleveland, of
+Canterbury, Connecticut. At that period the nearest white settlement was
+Conneaut, on the east, and another at the mouth of the River Raisin, to
+the west. Immigration at that period did not march steadily westward,
+each new settlement being in close proximity to an older one, but it
+took sudden jumps over wide extents of territory, so that for many years
+isolated families or small neighborhoods were far apart. Each little
+settlement had to be sufficient unto itself, since, to reach any other
+involved a long, difficult and often dangerous journey. Up to nearly
+1800 each house in Cleveland had its own hand grist-mill standing in the
+chimney-corner, in which the flour or meal for the family consumption
+was slowly and laboriously ground each day. In the spring of 1799
+Wheeler W. Williams and Major Wyatt erected the first grist and saw mill
+on the Reserve, at Newburg, a few miles above the mouth of the Cuyahoga.
+
+The first ball ever given in Cleveland was on the Fourth of July, 1801,
+in a log cabin, the company numbering thirty, of both sexes. The first
+militia muster was held at Doane's Corners, on the sixteenth of June,
+1806. The spot is now incorporated in the city of Cleveland. Never
+before had been so many whites collected together in this region as on
+this occasion, which was one of general excitement. The militia
+consisted of about fifty privates, with the usual complement of
+officers, but a surveying party and a number of strangers were present
+and added to the spectators.
+
+In the beginning of the century the Indians were in the habit of meeting
+every autumn, at Cleveland, piling their canoes up at the mouth of the
+Cuyahoga, and scattering into the interior of the country, which
+constituted their great winter hunting ground. In the spring they
+returned, disposed of their furs, and entering their canoes, departed up
+the lake for their villages, in the region of Sandusky and Maumee, where
+they raised their crops of corn and potatoes. Many local names are of
+Indian origin; Cuyahoga means "crooked river." Geauga, the name of an
+adjoining county, signifies "raccoon." Their encampment on going and
+returning was usually on the west bank of the river, and in their
+drinking bouts, in which they occasionally indulged, they were sometimes
+quarrelsome and dangerous, but do not seem, on the whole, to have given
+the settlers much trouble. On the twenty-sixth of June, 1812, an Indian
+named McMic was hanged for murder, on the public square of Cleveland.
+There were fears that the Indians would rally to his rescue, and a large
+number of citizens from Cuyahoga and adjoining counties, armed
+themselves and attended the execution, prepared for any outbreak. The
+Indians remained peaceable, but the prisoner, at the last moment,
+refused to ascend the scaffold. Finally, his scruples were overcome by a
+pint of whisky, which he swallowed with satisfaction before yielding to
+the inevitable.
+
+In 1813 Cleveland became a depot for supplies and troops during the war,
+and a permanent garrison was established here, a small stockade having
+been erected on the lake bank, at the foot of Ontario street. The return
+of peace was celebrated in true American style. The cannon which was
+fired in honor of the occasion was supplied with powder by one Uncle
+Abram, who carried an open pail of the explosive material on his arm.
+Another citizen bore a lighted stick with which to touch off the gun.
+In the excitement, the latter swung his stick in the air; a spark fell
+into Uncle Abram's powder, and that worthy, whether from astonishment or
+some other cause, suddenly sprang twenty feet into the air, his ascent
+being accompanied by a deafening report. When he came down again, his
+clothing was singed off, and he vociferously protested that he was dead.
+But the multitude refused to take his word for it, and it was not a
+great while before he had completely recovered from the accident.
+
+The Ohio Canal, which connects Lake Erie at this point with the Ohio
+River at Portsmouth, was completed in 1834, and from that date her
+prosperity seems to have been established. She was incorporated a city
+in 1836. About this time the great western land bubble burst, and with
+it the hopes of Fairport and Richmond. The latter city speedily
+disappeared from the face of the earth, and its name from the map. Its
+houses were taken up bodily and removed to adjacent towns. Boats still
+continued to stop at Fairport, but they began to stop more frequently at
+Cleveland, and while the business of the former point was at a
+standstill, that of the latter continued to increase. In 1840 its
+population was over 6,000, and its supremacy fairly established. In 1850
+Fairport was still a little hamlet, the boats passing her far out in the
+lake without giving her so much as a nod of recognition; while the
+wharves of Cleveland were lined with shipping, and her population did
+not fall far short of 20,000.
+
+Besides the Cleveland and Portsmouth Canal, which opened up a line of
+traffic with the south and southwest, communication was also had with
+the East, by means of canal to Pittsburg and to New York, and the lakes
+were a highway, not only to the East but to the North and West.
+Cleveland became the great mart of the grain-growing country. Its harbor
+was extended and improved by the erection of piers each side of the
+mouth of the river, two hundred feet apart, and extending out several
+hundred feet into the lake, furnishing effective break-waters, and ample
+room for the loading and unloading of vessels. A lighthouse was erected
+at the end of each pier, and one already stood upon the cliff.
+
+In 1845 the number of vessels which arrived by lake was 2,136; and of
+these 927 were steamers. The tonnage then owned at that port amounted to
+13,493, and the number of vessels of all kinds eighty-five. The total
+value of exports and imports by the lake for that year was over
+$9,000,000. Cleveland occupied a small region on the cliff at the mouth
+of the Cuyahoga. Ontario street was filled with boarding-houses and
+private residences. Euclid avenue and Prospect street extended for a few
+squares, and were then lost in the country. The flats through which the
+river wound its devious way were occupied as pastures for the cows of
+persons living in the heart of the city. The business portion of the
+town was contained, for the most part, in the two squares on Superior
+street, west of Ontario. Ohio City was a separate corporation, a
+straggling, dilapidated town, looking like a country village, on the
+western bank of the Cuyahoga, connected with Cleveland by means of
+drawbridges.
+
+In the fall of 1852 the first whistle of the locomotive was heard down
+by the river side, in the city of Cleveland. It started the city into
+new life, and woke all the farmers within the sound of its hoarse
+screech into renewed energy. That fall and winter there was a butter
+famine in all that region. The market being opened to New York, butter
+went suddenly up from eight and ten cents a pound, to twelve, sixteen,
+and then to twenty cents. Buyers could afford to pay no such fancy price
+for an article which might be dispensed with; and producers were equally
+unwilling to put upon their own tables anything which would yield them
+such a handsome profit on selling. And so many families, not only of
+mechanics, but of farmers as well, went without butter that winter; the
+latter happy in receiving, first twenty, then twenty-two, and finally
+twenty-five cents per pound for the products of their dairies.
+
+This first railroad gave the city a fresh start, and presently others
+found their terminus here. Population and business have both steadily
+increased since then, until in 1880 the former was 160,142, and its
+commerce immense, especially with Canada and the mining regions of Lake
+Superior. Since 1860 the city has rapidly developed in the direction of
+manufacturing industries. The headquarters of the giant monopoly, known
+as the Standard Oil Company, Cleveland is the first city of the world in
+the production of refined petroleum. The old pasture grounds of the cows
+of 1850 are now completely occupied by oil refineries and manufacturing
+establishments; and the river, which but a generation ago flowed
+peaceful and placid through green fields, is now almost choked with
+barges, tugs and immense rafts. Looking down upon the Cuyahoga Flats,
+from the heights of what was once Ohio City, but is now known as the
+West Side of Cleveland itself, the view, though far from beautiful, is a
+very interesting one. There are copper smelting, iron rolling, and iron
+manufacturing works, lumber yards, paper mills, breweries, flour mills,
+nail works, pork-packing establishments, and the multitudinous
+industries of a great manufacturing city, which depends upon these
+industries largely for its prosperity. The scene at night, from this
+same elevated position, is picturesque in the extreme. The whole valley
+shows a black background, lit up with a thousand points of light from
+factories, foundries and steamboats, which are multiplied into two
+thousand as they are reflected in the waters of the Cuyahoga, which
+looks like a silver ribbon flowing through the blackness.
+
+Cleveland is acknowledged to be the most beautiful city of the many
+which are found upon the shores of the great lakes. It stands on a high
+bluff overlooking Lake Erie. It is laid out, for the most part, with
+parallel streets, crossed by others at right angles; and even in the
+heart of the city nearly every house has its little side and front yard
+filled with shrubbery and shaded by trees, a large majority of the
+latter being elms. The great number of these trees fairly entitle
+Cleveland to be known as the "Forest City." The streets are very wide,
+and the principal ones are paved.
+
+The main business thoroughfare and fashionable promenade is Superior
+street, which is one hundred and thirty-two feet wide, and lined with
+handsome hotels and retail stores. From the foot of this street, and on
+a level with it, was completed, in 1878, a great stone viaduct,
+connecting the East Side with the West Side, reaching the latter at the
+junction of Pearl and Detroit streets. This roadway is 3,211 feet long,
+and cost $2,200,000. Some years before a bridge had been constructed in
+the same locality, at a sufficient elevation to permit the passage
+under it of various craft; but even at this height there was quite a
+descent to reach it, and an equal ascent on leaving it on the other
+side. The drawbridge near the mouth of the river was totally inadequate
+to meet the needs of business, and was often open for long periods of
+time while vessels were passing through.
+
+Ontario, Bank, Water, Mervin and River streets and Euclid avenue are
+other important business streets on the East Side. Detroit, Pearl and
+Lorain are the principal thoroughfares on the West Side.
+
+Monument Park is a square ten acres in extent, in the centre of the
+city, crossed by Superior and Ontario streets. It is divided by these
+streets into four sections and is shaded by fine trees. In the southeast
+section stands a monument to Commodore Perry, the hero of the battle of
+Lake Erie, erected in 1860, at a cost of $8,000. It contains a colossal
+statue of the Commodore, in Italian marble, standing on a pedestal of
+Rhode Island granite, the entire monument being about twenty feet in
+height. In front of the pedestal is a marble medallion, representing
+Perry in a small boat passing from the Lawrence to the Niagara, in the
+heat of battle. In the southwest corner of the Park is a pool and
+cascade, and in the northwest a handsome fountain. In this park was
+erected the large catafalque under which the casket containing the
+remains of the late President Garfield was laid in state until and
+during the grand public funeral, after which it was taken to the
+cemetery. This park is surrounded by very handsome churches and public
+buildings, among which latter are the Custom House, Post Office, Federal
+Courts, County Court House and City Hall, all magnificent edifices.
+Case Hall, near the park, contains a concert hall capable of seating
+fifteen hundred persons, a library, reading room, and the rooms of the
+Cleveland Library Association. The Opera House, a new and handsome
+building, is on Euclid avenue. There are, besides, an Academy of Music
+and the Globe Theatre and several minor theatres.
+
+ [Illustration: PUBLIC SQUARE AND PERRY MONUMENT, CLEVELAND, OHIO.]
+
+The business portion of Euclid avenue extends from the Park to Erie
+street, beyond which it is lined with handsome residences, elegant
+cottages and superb villas, the grounds around each being more and more
+extensive as it approaches the country. It is one of the finest avenues
+in the world, and is not less than ten miles in length, embracing during
+its course several suburbs which a generation since were remote from the
+city, and are now considerably surprised to find themselves brought so
+near it. Euclid avenue crosses the other streets diagonally, and was
+evidently one of the original roads leading into the city before it
+attained its present dimensions. The majority of the streets are
+parallel with the lake front, which pursues a course from the northeast
+to the southwest. But Euclid avenue runs directly eastward for about
+three miles, to Doane's Corners, one of the historic spots in the
+neighborhood of Cleveland, and then turns to the northeast, following
+nearly parallel to the course of the lake. Prospect street runs parallel
+to Euclid avenue, and is only second to it in the beauty and elegance of
+its residences. St. Clair street is also a favorite suburban avenue,
+extending parallel to the lake, a little distance from it, far out into
+the country, and containing many handsome residences.
+
+Newburg, once three miles from the city, and the site of the first saw
+and grist mill on the Reserve, is now included as a suburb of
+Cleveland, and contains extensive iron manufactories.
+
+The Union Depot, erected in 1866, is one of the finest and largest in
+the country. It is built on the shore of the lake, below the bluff, and
+near the mouth of the Cuyahoga. Streets more or less steeply graded
+furnish access to it for carriages and vehicles of all descriptions,
+while a long flight of massive stone steps conduct the pedestrian
+directly to the summit of the cliff, where horse-cars, leading by
+various routes to all quarters of the city, are waiting for him. All the
+railroads leading out of the city centre here. In the keystone over the
+main entrance of the depot is a bas relief portrait of Mr. Amasa Stone,
+under whose supervision it was built. Similar portraits of Grant and
+Lincoln are found upon keystones at either end of the building.
+
+The waterworks stand near the lake, west of the river, and by means of a
+tunnel extending some six thousand feet out under the lake, pure water,
+forced by two powerful engines into a large reservoir upon the cliff, is
+supplied to the entire city. This reservoir is a popular resort for
+pleasure seekers, and furnishes a fine view of the city, lake and
+surrounding country.
+
+Cleveland enjoys superior educational facilities. Her schools are not
+excelled by any in the country, and she has, besides, several large
+libraries. The Western Reserve College, until recently located at
+Hudson, a small village about twenty miles to the southeast, has been,
+within the last few years, removed to this city. The Medical College, a
+branch of the Western Reserve College, founded in 1843, occupies an
+imposing building at the corner of Erie and St. Clair streets. Near this
+college, on the shore of the lake, stands the extensive United States
+Marine Hospital, surrounded by grounds nine acres in extent, beautifully
+laid out and well kept.
+
+There are a number of parks and gardens in the suburbs of Cleveland, one
+of the most extensive having been a donation to the city by Mr. Wade,
+one of her millionaires. The favorite drive, however, next to the
+avenue, is across the Cuyahoga and seven miles westward to Rocky River,
+which flows into the lake through a narrow gorge between perpendicular
+cliffs which project themselves boldly into the lake. Here a park has
+been laid out, and all that art can do has been done to add to the
+natural beauties of the place. From this point a distant view of the
+city may be obtained, its spires pointing to the sky out of a billow of
+green. To the west is Black River Point, with its rocky promontories,
+and on the north stretches out an unbroken expanse of water, with here
+and there the long black trail of a steamer floating in the air, its
+wake like a white line upon the water; or white specks of sails dotting
+the horizon. The coast between Cleveland and Rocky River is high and
+precipitous, the emerging streams rushing into the lake by means of
+rapids and waterfalls. On this inhospitable coast, which affords no
+landing for even a small boat, more than one frail bark came to grief in
+the early days of the white man's possession of the land, and nearly all
+its living freight found a watery grave. In 1806 a man by the name of
+Hunter, his wife and child, a colored man named Ben, and a small colored
+boy, were driven by a squall upon these rocks. They climbed up as far as
+possible, the surge constantly beating over them, and finally they died,
+one after the other, from exposure and hunger, and after five days only
+the man Ben was rescued alive. A similar occurrence transpired the
+following spring. Of the eighteen deaths which took place at Cleveland
+during the first twelve years after its settlement, eleven were caused
+by drowning.
+
+Twenty or thirty years ago nothing more desolate or devoid of beauty can
+be imagined than was the lake and river approach to Cleveland. The cars
+ran along the foot of the cliff, while the space between the tracks and
+the table land upon which the city is built was given up to rubbish and
+neglect. Little huts, the size of organ boxes, were perched here and
+there, swarming with dirty, half-clad children and untidy women, and
+festooned with clothes-lines, from which dangled a motley array of
+garments. Blackness, dirt and decay were visible everywhere; and the
+vestibule of the most beautiful city in America presented to the visitor
+the opposite extreme of repulsiveness. But now all this is changed; one
+enters the Forest City through a continuous park. Coming from the east,
+the waves of the beautiful inland sea almost wash the tracks. On the
+left the steep slope is covered by green grass, shrubbery and trees, the
+line broken here and there, perhaps, by private grounds no less
+beautiful, while the United States Marine Hospital crowns the cliff, at
+Erie street, with its ample and well-kept grounds. Reaching the depot
+the traveler at once ascends the cliff, and avoids the necessary
+ugliness of the immense railroad yard, with its gridiron of tracks. Even
+the river, once so unsightly, presents to view the ceaseless movements
+of multifarious business, all of which indicate the prosperity and
+thriving industry of the city.
+
+It is a peculiarity of western cities that they give so much thought and
+spend so much money in public improvements, and especially those which
+are merely decorative. Cleveland is in no wise behind the rest. No city
+in the east, though many of them boast extensive and expensive public
+parks, bestows so much thought, labor and money, to make her general
+appearance beautiful and attractive to the stranger. If first
+impressions count for much, as it is said they do, then Cleveland has
+proved herself wise. She possesses many natural advantages of position.
+She is not in a slough, like Chicago, being built on a gravelly plain
+about one hundred feet above the lake. Nor is she subject to inundation,
+like Cincinnati, most of her business sites and residences being far
+above the water. The Cuyahoga River sometimes, however, does damage to
+the manufacturing establishments along its shores. In February, 1883, a
+freshet occurred, which raised the river ten feet above its ordinary
+level, and flooded all its valley. Enormous quantities of lumber and
+shingles were washed from the lumber yards. The Valley Railroad was
+several feet under water; paper mills, furnaces and other property
+submerged nearly to the top of the first story. The Infirmary Farm,
+further up the river, was under water, and the damage of the flood was
+estimated at not less than a million dollars. The water was higher than
+at any period since 1859, when a similar disaster occurred.
+
+All eyes were turned towards Cleveland, when, in September, 1881, a
+mournful cortege proceeded thither, accompanying the remains of the
+murdered Chief Magistrate. A mighty concourse of people assembled in the
+park to assist at the last sad rites, and then the funeral procession
+passed out the beautiful Euclid avenue to Lake View Cemetery, where the
+casket was deposited in a vault prepared for it, and was guarded by
+soldiers night and day; and there, on a spot overlooking the lake, and
+surrounded by a lovely country, varied by hill and dale, cultivated
+farms and elegant suburban residences, all that is mortal of James Abram
+Garfield has found its last resting-place, while his memory lives in
+fifty millions of hearts, and his fame is immortal. The youngest son of
+his mother, and she a widow, reared in poverty and obscurity, by dint of
+his unswerving integrity and overmastering intellect, he rose to occupy
+the highest position which man can accord to his fellow man, that of
+being the chosen head of a free, intelligent and powerful people. Cut
+off as he was, in the prime of his life, a nation mourned her dead, and
+Lake View Cemetery is to-day a spot of national interest. It is five
+miles from the city, contains three hundred acres, and lies two hundred
+and fifty feet above the level of the lake. It commands extensive views,
+and though opened as late as 1870, is already very beautiful. It was
+here that Garfield expressed his desire to be buried. Here, on a knoll
+commanding one of the finest views the cemetery affords, his tomb will
+be eventually constructed, and a monument reared to him, as a mark of
+the nation's appreciation of his character and sorrow at his untimely
+death.
+
+ [Illustration: EUCLID AVENUE, CLEVELAND, OHIO.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+CHICAGO.
+
+ Topographical Situation of Chicago.--Meaning of the Name.--Early
+ History.--Massacre at Fort Dearborn.--Last of the Red Men.--The
+ Great Land Bubble.--Rapid Increase in Population and Business.--
+ The Canal.--First Railroad.--Status of the City in 1871.--The
+ Great Fire.--Its Origin, Progress and Extent.--Heartrending
+ Scenes.--Estimated Total Loss.--Help from all Quarters.--
+ Work of Reconstruction.--Second Fire.--Its Public Buildings,
+ Educational and Charitable Institutions, Streets and Parks.--Its
+ Waterworks.--Its Stock Yards.--Its Suburbs.--Future of the City.
+
+
+"See two things in the United States, if nothing else--see Niagara and
+Chicago," said Richard Cobden, the English statesman, to Goldwin Smith,
+on the eve of the departure of the latter to America. And truly, if one
+would obtain a proper sense of America's wonders and achievements, then
+Niagara and Chicago may be accepted as respectively the highest types of
+each. Niagara remains the same yesterday, to-day and forever. But if it
+were a desirable thing to see Chicago at the time of the visit referred
+to, how much more so is it to-day, when, Phoenix-like, she has arisen
+from her own ashes, turning that which seemed an overwhelming disaster
+into positive blessing; drawing her fire-singed robes proudly about her,
+crowning herself with the diadem of her own matchless achievements, and
+sitting beside her inland sea, the queenliest city of them all.
+
+Situated upon a flat and relatively low tract of country, Chicago is yet
+upon one of the highest plane elevations of our continent. Lake
+Michigan represents the headwaters of the great chain of American lakes,
+through which, in connection with the St. Lawrence, much of the rainfall
+of that city finds its way to the Atlantic; while through the canal to
+the Illinois River, its sewage is borne to the Gulf of Mexico. Perhaps
+no more hopeless site could have been selected for a city than that
+seemed half a century ago. A bayou or arm of the lake penetrated the
+land for half a mile or more, but a sand-bar across its mouth prevented
+the ingress of all but the smallest craft. This bayou, called by
+courtesy the Chicago River, separated into two branches, the course of
+one of which was in a northerly direction, and of the other in a
+southerly one. The land was barely on a level with the lake, and at
+portions of the year was a vast morass, some parts of it being entirely
+under water. Teams struggled helplessly through the black ooze of its
+prairies, and a carriage would sink three or four feet in mud and mire
+within two miles of where the court house now stands. Sometimes in this
+slough a board would be set up, with a rude inscription: "No bottom
+here." But American enterprise has found a bottom and reared a city, the
+history of whose seemingly magical building almost rivals the tales of
+the Arabian Nights.
+
+Chicago is an Indian word, signifying the widely-varying titles of a
+king or deity, and a skunk or wild onion. In its early history, while
+drainage it had none, and its water supply was mere surface water, foul
+with all the accumulated impurities of the soil, and while from the
+lagoon, which lay stagnant for twelve or fifteen miles, a horrible,
+sickening stench constantly arose, the latter appellations seemed
+singularly appropriate, and no doubt originated in these conditions.
+But since the city has been purified by fire, and its sanitary
+conditions made such as they should be, it has earned its right to the
+nobler titles.
+
+The first white visitors to the site of Chicago were Joliet and
+Marquette, who arrived in August, 1673. The year following his first
+visit Pere Marquette returned and erected a rude church. Later the
+French seem to have built a fort on the spot, but no traces of it now
+remain. Very early in the nineteenth century John Kinzie, an Indian
+trader, and agent of the American Fur Company, having traded with the
+Indians at this point for some time, probably influenced the government
+to build a fort here. Accordingly, in 1804, Fort Dearborn was built and
+garrisoned with about fifty men and three pieces of artillery. Mr.
+Kinzie removed his family to the place the same year.
+
+In 1812, Fort Dearborn was the scene of a bloody Indian massacre.
+Captain Hull, then in command of the fort, having placed too great
+confidence in the professions of fidelity of the Pottawatomie tribe, and
+trusting to an escort of that tribe to convey the soldiers and
+inhabitants of the fort to Fort Wayne, saw his entire party either
+killed or taken prisoners, and found himself a prisoner. The fort stood
+at the head of Michigan avenue, below its intersection with Lake street.
+Abandoned and destroyed at this period, it was rebuilt in 1816, and
+finally demolished in 1856.
+
+For four years the place was deserted by the whites, and even the fur
+traders did not care to visit it. In 1818 two families had established
+themselves upon the spot. In 1820 some dozen houses represented the
+future city, and in 1827 a government agent reported the place as a
+collection of pens and kennels, inhabited by squatters, "a miserable
+race of men, hardly equal to the Indians." The population numbered
+seventy in 1830. In 1832 there were six hundred people in the miserable
+little town. In September, 1833, the United States purchased of the
+Indians 20,000,000 acres of land in the northwest, the latter pledging
+themselves to remove twenty days' journey west of the Mississippi. Seven
+thousand redskins attended the making of this treaty, which was ratified
+by the chiefs in a large tent on the bank of the river. A year later
+four thousand Indians returned to receive an annuity of $30,000 worth of
+goods. The distribution of these goods was the occasion of, first, a
+fierce scramble, followed by a bloody fight, in which several Indians
+were killed and others wounded; the scene closing by a wild debauch, so
+that on the following morning few of the recipients were any better off
+for the property which had been given them. Similar scenes, with similar
+results, were enacted in 1835. But that was the last Chicago saw of the
+red men. In September, a train of forty wagons, each drawn by four oxen,
+conveyed away on their far westward march the children and effects of
+the Pottawatomies, while the squaws and braves walked beside them. It
+took them twenty days to reach the Mississippi, and twenty days longer
+it took them to attain a point which can now be reached from Chicago in
+fifteen hours.
+
+ [Illustration: BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF CHICAGO, FROM THE LAKE SIDE.]
+
+In 1827, Major Long, a government agent sent to visit the place, spoke
+of the site as "affording no inducements to the settler, the whole
+amount of trade on the lake not exceeding the cargoes of five or six
+schooners, even at the time when the garrison received its supplies from
+the Mackinac." In 1833 the tide of immigration began. At the end of
+that year there were fifty families floundering in the Chicago mud. In
+1834 there were nearly two thousand inhabitants of the town, and at the
+close of 1835 more than three thousand. In 1835-6 Chicago became the
+headquarters of a great land speculation. Multitudes of towns sprang up
+in every direction, on paper. The country was wild with excitement. Even
+eastern capitalists were seized with the mania, and fortunes were made
+and lost in this wild gambling in prospective cities. The bubble shortly
+burst, resulting in great business depression. The State was bankrupt,
+and Chicago languished. But not for long. Turning from the frenzy of
+speculation, its inhabitants wisely gave their attention to developing
+legitimate business interests. The United States had, in 1833, spent
+$30,000 in dredging out the Chicago River, and in the spring of 1834 a
+most timely freshet had swept away the bar at the mouth of the river,
+making it accessible for the largest craft. In 1838 a venturesome trader
+shipped from that port seventy-eight bushels of wheat. In 1839 four
+thousand bushels were sent. In 1842 the amount of wheat exported arose
+all at once from forty thousand bushels to nearly six hundred thousand
+bushels. In 1839 three thousand cattle were driven across the prairies,
+and sent to the eastern market; and every year thereafter showed a
+surprising increase. Yet with all this accumulating commerce, the
+streets of the city were still quagmires, and many a farmer came to
+grief with his load of grain within what is now city limits. Before
+there was a railroad begun or a canal finished, Chicago exported two and
+a quarter millions of bushels of grain in a year, and sent back on the
+wagons which brought it loads of merchandise.
+
+The Illinois River is connected with the Chicago River, and through that
+to Lake Michigan, by a canal which enters it at La Salle, ninety-six
+miles from Chicago. This canal was begun in 1836 and completed in 1848.
+It gave a fresh impetus to the youthful western town, and established
+its future prosperity. Connected as it already was with the east by the
+magnificent lake and river system of our northern borders, this canal
+opened up communication with the south and west, and made Chicago the
+portal, so to speak, between the different sections of our country.
+
+In 1849 the first railroad had approached within ten miles of the city.
+In 1852 direct communication with the east was gained by the completion
+of the Michigan Central and Michigan Southern railroads, while more than
+one western railroad was projected, and some of them were in actual
+progress of construction. To-day, Illinois and its adjoining States are
+literally gridironed with iron roads, nearly all of which centre at
+Chicago. In 1857 there were living beside the still stagnant waters of
+the Chicago River one hundred thousand people.
+
+In 1871 Chicago was the fourth city of the country, claiming a
+population of 334,000 persons. By a _chef d'ouvre_ of engineering, the
+waters of the river had been turned backward, and made to carry away its
+sewage to fertilize the shores of the Illinois and the Mississippi. The
+streets had been drained, hollow places filled up, and their grade had
+been gradually raised, until it stood twelve feet higher than at first.
+Some of the buildings were raised at once to the latest established
+grade, and others remained as they had been built. The consequence was
+that the plank sidewalks became a series of stairs, adapting themselves
+to the buildings which they fronted. The principal streets were paved
+with stone or with the Nicholson pavement. The triple river was spanned
+by no less than seventeen drawbridges, while two tunnels afforded
+uninterrupted travel between the opposite sides. Efficient waterworks
+had been constructed to provide pure water for the use of the city. The
+total trade for the year previous to the great fire was estimated at
+$400,000,000. Its grain trade had reached such enormous proportions that
+seventeen large elevators, with an aggregate capacity of 11,580,000
+bushels were required for its accommodation. Eighteen banks were in
+operation, with an aggregate capital of $10,000,000 and with nearly
+$17,000,000 of deposits. The city was beginning to give its attention
+largely to manufactures, and its lumber trade had grown into something
+almost fabulous. Miles of lumber yards extended along one of the forks
+of the river, and its harbor was sometimes choked with arriving lumber
+vessels. In a single day, three or four years before the fire, a
+favorable wind blew into port no less than two hundred and eighteen
+vessels loaded with lumber. One hundred passenger and one hundred and
+twenty freight trains arrived and departed daily; and seventy-five
+vessels unloaded and loaded at her wharves every twenty-four hours.
+
+Chicago _Redivivus_ should bear upon her shield a cow rampant. On the
+evening of the eighth of October, 1871, Mrs. Scully's cow kicked herself
+into history, and Chicago into ruin and desolation. Chicago is divided
+by the river and its branches into three different sections, known as
+the north, south and west sides. The principal business portion of the
+city is on the south side, and along the margins of the lake and
+streams. The "burnt district," which even yet the Chicagoan will outline
+to the visitor with peculiar pride, was confined almost wholly to the
+south and north sides.
+
+On the evening of October seventh a planing mill had caught fire on the
+west side, and the conflagration had spread over a territory embracing
+about twenty acres, destroying a million dollars' worth of property.
+This fire, terrible as it seemed, probably saved the west side from
+destruction on that fatal night of the eighth, imposing as it did a
+broad banner of desolation, when the flames essayed to leap across the
+river.
+
+At about nine o'clock in the evening of Sunday, October eighth, 1871, a
+cow kicked over a lantern among loose, dry hay, in a stable at or near
+the corner of Jefferson and DeKoven streets, on the west side. There had
+been no rain of any consequence for fourteen weeks, and roofs and wooden
+buildings were as dry as tinder. There was a strong wind blowing from
+the southwest, and before the engines could reach the spot, half a dozen
+adjoining buildings were wrapped in flames. The buildings of that
+quarter were mostly of wood, and there were several lumber yards along
+the margin of the river. The flames swept through these with resistless
+fury, and then made a bold and sudden leap across the river into the
+very heart of the business portion of the south side. Many of the
+buildings here also were of wood, while the wooden sidewalks, and wooden
+block pavements, the latter filled with an inflammable composition,
+seemed constructed especially to aid and hasten the work of the flames.
+The fire marched steadily toward the north and east, destroying
+everything in its course. Even fireproof buildings seemed to melt down
+as it touched them.
+
+ [Illustration: BURNING OF CHICAGO. THE WORLD'S GREATEST
+ CONFLAGRATION.]
+
+The wind increased to a gale, and all night long the fire wrought its
+terrible will, like a devouring demon; and at sunrise it had already
+leaped the narrow barrier of the river, and was devastating the northern
+side, sweeping away block after block of the wooden structures which
+occupied to a large extent that quarter of the city. The flames seized
+upon the shipping in the river, and when it left it only blackened hulls
+remained. The water supply, upon which the city had founded hopes in
+case of such extremity, failed. The walls of the buildings, weakened by
+the overpowering heat, had fallen in upon the engines, and hope was
+quenched in that quarter.
+
+The flames spread southward as far as Taylor street, and to the
+northward they only paused when, at Fullerton avenue, the broad prairie
+lay before them, and there was nothing more to burn. The track of the
+fire was nearly five miles in length, running north and south, and
+averaged a mile in width. It continued from nine o'clock on Sunday night
+until daybreak Tuesday morning, and then nothing was left of all the
+business portion of Chicago, save a vast blackened field on which the
+flames still smouldered, with piles of rubbish, formed by fallen
+buildings, and here and there portions of walls still standing. Every
+bank, insurance office, hotel, theatre, railroad depot, law office,
+newspaper office, most of the churches, all but one of the wholesale
+stores, and many of the warehouses and retail stores, six elevators,
+fifty vessels, and sixteen thousand dwellings, including many elegant
+mansions, besides numberless humble homes, were destroyed; two hundred
+persons killed, and a hundred thousand people suddenly found themselves
+homeless and penniless, without food to eat or clothes to wear.
+
+The scenes accompanying the fire were terrible and heart-rending. They
+were a mingling of the horrible and grotesque, the tragic and the
+ridiculous, such as was probably never witnessed before on so grand a
+scale, and we trust will never be repeated; and over it all the smoke
+hung like a pall, stifling and blinding, and the flames cast a baleful
+glare, which lit up the scene and made it seem like a literal inferno.
+
+The fire spread with a rapidity which baffled all attempts to check it.
+Many made a feeble effort to save their household goods, an effort which
+was too often futile, while others barely escaped with their lives, clad
+only in their scant night garments. The streets were filled with a
+frantic multitude; vehicles of every description, laden with movable
+property; men, women and children, some of them burdened with their
+belongings, and others nearly naked, forgetful of all but the terrible
+danger of the hour, all wild with the insanity born of fear, and all
+fleeing from the pursuing demon which pressed on behind them, and whose
+hot breath scorched their garments and singed their hair. Many took
+refuge in the river or the lake; but the hissing flames stooped down and
+licked the water, and the poor victims were made to feel the tortures of
+a double death. Very few of these escaped with their lives.
+
+The progress of the flames was so swift that many were overwhelmed by
+the crumbling walls of their houses or workshops before they had time to
+escape, and found in them a fiery tomb. Others were suffocated by the
+smoke. Children were separated from parents, and young and old sought
+safety wherever they could find it, and a mad panic reigned everywhere.
+Many saloons were thrown open, and whisky flowed freely, and the
+turbulent riot of drunkenness was added, to increase the confusion and
+despair of the dreadful night. Sneak thieves and larger depredators
+found spoil on every hand. In this terrible calamity each one seemed to
+throw off his mask, and become what he really was--the brave man, the
+noble gentleman, the selfish coward, the bully or the thief.
+
+A single leaf of a quarto Bible, charred around its edges, was all that
+was left of the immense stock of the Western News Company. It contained
+the first chapter of the Lamentations of Jeremiah, which begins with the
+following words: "How doth the city sit solitary that was full of
+people! how is she become as a widow! she that was great among the
+nations, and princess among the provinces, how is she become tributary!
+She weepeth sore in the night, and her tears are on her cheeks: among
+all her lovers she hath none to comfort her."
+
+The amount lost by the insurance companies, American and foreign, by the
+Chicago fire, was $88,634,133. More than 2,200 acres were swept by the
+flames in the space of thirty hours. The value of buildings alone
+consumed was estimated at $75,000,000, while their contents were at
+least as much more. The total loss probably was not much less than
+$200,000,000.
+
+No sooner had the news of the dreadful calamity gone abroad to the
+world, than the spirit of generosity prompted efficient aid from all
+quarters. St. Louis, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Cleveland, New York, Boston,
+Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Montreal, cities and towns in the north,
+south, east and west, sent generous, and some of them princely,
+donations. Even China forwarded $1,290. By December first the public
+cash donations had reached $2,508,000. The naked were clothed, the
+hungry fed, the homeless housed in at least temporary quarters, and
+Chicago set herself to the task of reconstruction.
+
+The smouldering ruins were yet glowing with heat, and the smoke was
+still ascending here and there, when, on Wednesday morning, the work of
+regeneration began. Within a month, five or six thousand temporary
+tenements had been erected. Meantime the foundations for the permanent
+structures were being laid, on a scale far surpassing those of the past.
+In a year not a trace of the fire remained.
+
+Nearly three years later, on July fourteenth, 1874, another great fire
+swept over the devoted city, destroying eighteen blocks, or sixty acres,
+in the heart of the city, and about $4,000,000 worth of property. Over
+six hundred houses were consumed, but by far the larger number were mere
+wooden shanties.
+
+To-day Chicago counts her great fire as one of her chief blessings. The
+city is entirely rebuilt, but not with rickety wooden structures, the
+previous plenitude of which had rendered her so easy a prey to the
+devouring element. Solid, substantial, handsome, and in many instances
+magnificent, the stranger can scarcely realize that these blocks of
+buildings are not the growth of a century, or of a generation even, but
+have sprung from the ground almost in a night. The new Chicago is
+surpassingly beautiful and grand. The visitor will walk through squares
+and squares of streets, each teeming with life and commercial activity,
+and bearing no trace, save in increased elegance, of the disaster of
+little more than a decade ago; and is forced to the conclusion that, for
+courage and enterprise, Chicago has proved herself unsurpassed by any
+city in the world.
+
+Chicago has a water frontage of thirty-eight miles, of which twenty-four
+are improved, without including the lake front, where an outer harbor is
+in process of construction. The rivers are now spanned by thirty-five
+drawbridges, while a tunnel, 1,608 feet long, with a descent of
+forty-five feet, connects the south and west sides of Washington street,
+and another tunnel, with a total length of 1,854 feet, connects the
+north and south sides on the line of La Salle street.
+
+State street, on the south side, is the Broadway of Chicago. Randolph
+street is famous for its magnificent buildings, among which are the city
+and the county halls. Washington street is one of the fashionable
+promenades, lined with retail stores, though Dearborn street closely
+rivals it. The United States Custom House and Post Office, a magnificent
+structure, costing upward of $5,000,000, occupies the square bounded by
+Clark, Adams, Jackson and Dearborn streets. The Chamber of Commerce, a
+spacious and imposing building, with elaborate interior decorations, is
+at the corner of Washington and La Salle streets, opposite City Hall
+Square. Its ceiling is frescoed with allegorical pictures representing
+the trade of the city, the great fire and the rebuilding. The Union
+Depot, in Van Buren street, at the head of La Salle, is among the finest
+buildings of the city. The Exposition Building is a vast ornate
+structure of iron and glass, occupying the lake front, extending from
+Monroe to Jackson street, and with a front of eight hundred feet on
+Michigan avenue. The centre of the edifice is surmounted by a dome one
+hundred and sixty feet high and sixty feet in diameter. Annual
+expositions of the art and industry of the city are held here every
+autumn.
+
+Among the hotels of Chicago the Palmer House takes the lead. This house
+was destroyed by the fire, but has been rebuilt with a magnitude and
+elaborateness far exceeding its former self, and constituting it one of
+the finest, if not the finest, in the world. It is entirely fireproof,
+being constructed only of incombustible materials, brick, stone, iron,
+marble and cement. It has three fronts, on State and Monroe streets and
+Wabash avenue, and the building and furnishing cost $3,500,000. It is
+kept on both the American and European plans, and continually
+accommodates from six hundred to one thousand guests. The Grand Pacific
+Hotel is but little inferior to the Palmer House. It occupies half the
+block bounded by Jackson, Clark, Adams and La Salle streets. The Sherman
+and Tremont Houses are fine hotels and centrally located.
+
+There are about three hundred churches in Chicago, including those
+untouched by fire and those which have been since rebuilt. The great
+Tabernacle, on Monroe street, where Messrs. Moody and Sankey held their
+meetings, is used for sacred concerts and other religious gatherings,
+and will seat ten thousand persons.
+
+In literary and educational institutions Chicago holds a foremost place.
+Its common schools are among the best in the country, with large,
+handsome, convenient and well-ventilated buildings. The University of
+Chicago, founded by the late Stephen A. Douglas, occupies a beautiful
+site overlooking the lake, and boasts the largest telescope in America.
+It has a Public Library containing 60,000 volumes. The Academy of
+Sciences lost a valuable collection of 38,000 specimens in the fire, but
+has erected a new building and is slowly gathering a new museum and
+library. There are three Theological Seminaries, and three Medical
+Colleges, three hospitals, and a large number of charitable institutions
+within the city. The fire department is most efficiently organized, and
+its annual expenses are scarcely less than $1,000,000.
+
+ [Illustration: GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL, CHICAGO.]
+
+Chicago has the most extensive system of parks and boulevards of any
+city in the United States. Lincoln Park, lying upon the lake to the
+northward, contains 310 acres, and served, during the great fire, as a
+place of refuge for thousands of people driven thither by the raging
+element. The Lake Shore Drive, the great north side boulevard, extends
+from Pine street to Lake View, and is one of the finest drives in the
+world. Humboldt Park, Central Park and Douglas Park extend along the
+western boundaries of the city, are large, contain lakes, ponds, walks,
+drives, fountains and statuary, and are connected with each other by
+wide and elaborately ornamented boulevards. The great South Parks are
+approached on the north by Drexel and Grant Boulevards. Drexel Boulevard
+is devoted exclusively to pleasure, all traffic over it being forbidden.
+The most southerly of the two south parks extends upwards of a mile and
+a half along the shore of the lake. Union Park is located in the very
+centre of the residence portion of the west side.
+
+Whatever Chicago accomplishes is on so gigantic a scale that strangers
+almost hold their breath in astonishment. Among the titanic achievements
+of this youthful giant are the waterworks, which supply pure drinking
+water to its six hundred thousand population. The water supply is by
+means of a tunnel sent out under Lake Michigan for a distance of two
+miles, the water being forced by numerous engines into an immense
+standpipe, 154 feet high. The works are situated at the foot of Chicago
+avenue. In tunneling under the lake, excavations went on simultaneously
+at the land end and two miles out in the lake; and so accurate were the
+calculations that when the two tunnels met in the centre, they were
+found to be but seven and one-half inches out of the line, and there was
+a variation of but three inches in the horizontal measurements. This
+tunnel, which is made of iron, protected by heavy masonry, is large
+enough for a canoe to pass through it when it is but partially filled
+with water, it being nine feet in diameter. The exit at the lake end of
+the tunnel is protected by a breakwater, and securely anchored to its
+place by means of heavy stones. Storms never affect it, save sometimes
+to produce a light tremor; and even large fields of ice, which grate by
+it with a fearful, crunching noise, have thus far failed to shake its
+foundations.
+
+Chicago ships a considerable portion of her grain in the shape of flour,
+there being extensive flouring mills in the city. The present annual
+export of flour is probably not less than 3,000,000 barrels. Chicagoans
+have also found it possible to pack fifteen or twenty bushels of corn in
+a single barrel. "The corn crop," remarks Mr. Ruggles, "is condensed and
+reduced in bulk by feeding it into an animal form, more portable. The
+hog eats the corn, and Europe eats the hog. Corn thus becomes incarnate,
+for what is a hog but fifteen or twenty bushels of corn on four legs?"
+The business of pork-packing has attained enormous proportions in
+Chicago. It has entirely superseded Cincinnati, the former "Porkopolis,"
+in this branch of trade. Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Indianapolis
+and Milwaukee do not together furnish a total number of head slaughtered
+equal to that of Chicago.
+
+The stock yards, just outside the city limits on the southwest, are the
+largest in the world. They cover hundreds of acres, and constitute what
+has been styled "The Great Bovine City of the World." This bovine city
+is regularly laid out in streets and alleys crossing each other at right
+angles. The principal street is called Broadway, and it is a mile long
+and seventy-five feet wide. On either side are the cattle pens, and it
+is divided by a light fence into three paths, so that herds of cattle
+can pass one another without wrangling, and leave an unobstructed road
+for the drovers. These yards are connected with all the railroads in the
+west centering in Chicago. The company have twenty-five miles of track.
+A cattle train stops along the street of pens; the side of each car is
+removed, and the living freight pass over a declining bridge into clean,
+planked inclosures, where food and water is quickly furnished them. A
+large and comfortable hotel furnishes accommodation for their owners;
+there is a Cattle Exchange, a spacious and elegant edifice; a bank
+solely for the cattle-men's use; and a telegraph office, which reports
+the price of beef, pork and mutton from all parts of the world. The
+present capacity of the yards is 25,000 head of cattle, 100,000 hogs,
+22,000 sheep, and 1,200 horses. A town of five thousand inhabitants has
+grown up in the immediate vicinity of these stock yards.
+
+In some of the yards not less than five hundred beeves are slaughtered
+daily. Much of this beef is sent in refrigerator cars to the Atlantic
+cities, while enormous quantities are cooked and packed in cans and sent
+all over the world.
+
+Suburban towns have spread out from Chicago, in every direction, over
+the prairie. South Chicago, one of the principal of these, is twelve
+miles to the southward, at the mouth of the Calumet river, and has a
+large amount of capital invested in iron and steel works. The sloughy
+morasses which still exist between the parent city and its thrifty
+offshoots are fast being filled up, and bridged over with pavements, so
+that the mud, which a generation ago was the chief distinguishing
+feature of Chicago and its vicinity, but which is now confined to
+outlying sections, will soon be a thing of the past. Chicago is itself
+extending rapidly in all directions, and numberless suburban streets are
+lined with pretty cottages, whose rural surroundings have given to the
+city its appropriate name of "The Garden City."
+
+Taking its past as a criterion, who shall dare to predict the future of
+Chicago? It has by no means come to a stand-still, but is to-day
+increasing its population, developing its resources, and extending its
+commercial enterprises to a degree that is scarcely credible, save as
+one is faced by actual facts and figures. These miles of streets, filled
+with the incessant roar of business; these lofty temples, magnificent
+warehouses and elegant residences; these public institutions of
+learning; this gigantic commerce, this high degree of civilization; all
+of which have been attained by older cities after a prolonged struggle
+with adversity, are here the creations and accumulations of less than
+two generations. Up the Chicago River, where considerably less than a
+century ago the Indian paddled his solitary canoe, and John Jacob Astor
+annually sent his single small schooner to bring provisions to the
+garrison and to take away his furs, there swarms a fleet of vessels of
+all descriptions, bringing goods from, and sending them to, every
+quarter of the world. Where, no later than 1834, a grand wolf hunt was
+held, and one bear and forty wolf scalps were the trophies of the day,
+the bears of the Stock Exchange alone rage and howl, and the only wolves
+are human ones. Chicago is a great and a magnificent city, embodying
+more perfectly than any other in the world the possibilities of
+accomplishment of the Anglo-Saxon race, given its best conditions of
+freedom, independence and intelligence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+CHEYENNE.
+
+ Location of Cheyenne.--Founding of the City.--Lawlessness.--
+ Vigilance Committee.--Woman Suffrage.--Rapid Increase of
+ Population and Business.--A Reaction.--Stock Raising.--
+ Irrigation.--Mineral Resources.--Present Prospects.
+
+
+Cheyenne is the half-way house, on the Union Pacific Railroad, between
+the civilization of the East and that of the West. It is situated on
+Crow Creek, a branch of the South Platte River, just at the foot of the
+Rocky Mountains. A few miles away to the westward the ascent of the
+Black Hills begins, the road ascending over the rugged granite hills,
+and winding in and out of miles of snow sheds. It is five hundred and
+sixteen miles from Omaha, and has an elevation of more than six thousand
+feet above the sea, being one thousand more than Denver, and with an
+atmosphere proportionately rarer and dryer.
+
+The city is a child of the Pacific Railroad, being, during the building
+of that road, its winter terminus. When it was found that Cheyenne was
+probably to become an important railroad point, there was a grand influx
+of roughs, of all classes and of both sexes, to the spot. Habitations
+sprang up as if by magic, and were of the rudest construction, some of
+them being mere dug-outs in the sand hills. Town lots ran up to fabulous
+prices. The first city government was organized in August, 1867, and the
+first newspaper, the _Cheyenne Leader_, published on the nineteenth day
+of the following month. On the thirtieth of November, 1867, the track
+layers reached the city limits, and were greeted by music and a grand
+demonstration on the part of the people. The first passenger train
+arrived the next day.
+
+In the winter of 1868 Cheyenne contained not less than six thousand
+inhabitants. Lawlessness was the order of the day, and gambling,
+drinking and shooting were the favorite recreations. Knock-downs and
+robberies were matters of course, and murders of too frequent occurrence
+to cause special excitement. During these early days of its history the
+young city acquired two names, both of which were exceedingly
+suggestive, not to say appropriate. Its rapid growth fastened upon it
+the name of "Magic City of the Plains;" the desperate character of its
+inhabitants, that of "Hell on Wheels."
+
+When the city was but six months old, the patience of the order-loving
+people was tried beyond endurance. A Vigilance Committee was formed, and
+justice came swift and sure, without the intervening and delaying
+processes of the law. Its first public demonstration occurred in the
+following manner. Three men had been arrested on January tenth, 1868,
+charged with stealing $900, and put under bonds to appear at court. On
+the morning of the day after their arrest they were found on Eddy
+street, walking abreast and tied together, with a placard attached to
+them, bearing the following inscription, in conspicuous lettering: "$900
+stole; $500 returned; thieves, F. S. Clair, W. Grier, E. D. Brownville.
+City authorities, please not interfere until 10 o'clock A. M. Next case
+goes up a tree. Beware of Vigilance Committee." During that year no less
+than twelve desperadoes were hung and shot, and five sent to the
+penitentiary, through the agency of the Vigilance Committee. The
+condition of affairs was at once materially improved.
+
+In 1871 the Territorial Legislature passed a bill giving universal
+suffrage, without distinction of sex. The ladies at once made use of
+their newly-acquired political right, with an earnestness and
+universality entirely unexpected by those who had conferred its exercise
+upon them. In their capacity as grand jurors, they closed every gambling
+saloon and brothel in the city, put restrictions upon the liquor
+traffic, brought criminals to justice who had heretofore defied the law,
+and, in brief, made a clean sweep of the city, raising its social and
+moral standard. Women of all classes voted, and, strange to say, even
+the worst women voted for law and order. Political parties found it
+necessary to put up men with a good moral record, as well as those
+politically sound, for the women would not vote for a bad man. All
+classes recognized the good results of woman suffrage, and all
+opposition to it was speedily overcome.
+
+Cheyenne is now one of the best governed and most orderly cities in the
+country; and every Governor of the Territory, whatever his political
+complexion, has given his unqualified testimony in favor of women at the
+polls. Women not only deposit their ballots unmolested, but are treated
+with the utmost courtesy, and the polling places are made comfortable,
+and even elegant, for their reception. It is no uncommon thing for
+husband and wife to vote opposing tickets, but no divisions or even
+disturbances in families have resulted, thus far.
+
+On the first of July, 1867, there was but one house in Cheyenne,
+standing on what is now Eddy street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth
+streets, built of logs, smoothly plastered outside and in, and owned by
+Judge J. R. Whitehead. Six months thereafter there were no less than
+three thousand houses in the city. The first lots were offered for sale
+in July, 1867, at one hundred and fifty dollars. Thirty days afterward
+they sold at one thousand dollars each, and in two or three months later
+for two thousand five hundred and three thousand dollars. Stores were
+erected with marvelous rapidity, in its early history, a good-sized and
+comparatively substantial warehouse being put up in forty-eight hours.
+The business of the first six months was enormous, single houses making
+sales of from ten thousand to thirty thousand dollars per month. In two
+months after the Post-Office was established, it averaged twenty-six
+hundred letters a day.
+
+As the railroad progressed westward across the mountains, and finally
+reached the Pacific, Cheyenne suffered a reaction from its sudden and
+wonderful prosperity. The road took much of its business with it, and
+the town fell dead. But the discovery of gold in the Black Hills gave a
+fresh impetus to its business interests. It is also located in the midst
+of a great stock-raising region, and is surrounded by ranches of
+stock-men engaged in raising cattle, horses and sheep for market. The
+cattle and horses find sustenance the year round in the native grasses,
+and Cheyenne is the natural centre and trading post of these ranch-men.
+Each year the business increases, and the shipments from the city become
+larger. Wool is becoming an important export, being produced in great
+quantities on the large sheep farms.
+
+The railroad has constructed extensive machine and repair shops at
+Cheyenne, which furnish employment for a large number of workmen. The
+rickety structures of its early days are fast giving place to
+substantial brick buildings. There is a fine Court House and Jail, a
+City Hall, Opera House, and several Public School buildings. In
+proportion to its population, Cheyenne has now more substantial and
+handsome business houses than any other western city.
+
+Stock raising is the only agricultural pursuit for which Wyoming is
+adapted. The soil about Cheyenne is barren, and in no way suited for
+farming purposes. The rainfall during the year is very slight, and it
+has been found necessary to resort to irrigation. Therefore, ditches run
+through the streets, supplying water for the gardens throughout the
+city, and, by means of this irrigation, what was once a desert is
+becoming green with trees and shrubbery.
+
+The mineral resources of Wyoming are very rich. Silver and gold are both
+found in the ranges of hills and mountains to the north and west. Moss
+agates, opals, topaz, garnets, amethysts, onyx and jasper have all been
+found in the immediate neighborhood of Cheyenne, and some of the
+specimens are exceedingly beautiful.
+
+The high elevation of the city gives it a delightful climate. The
+winters are mild, and the summers free from excessive heat.
+
+Cheyenne has a special niche in my memory, since, in making my horseback
+journey from the Atlantic to the Pacific, in 1876, it was the last place
+at which I dined before entering the Black Hills and falling into the
+hands of the treacherous Arrapahoes.
+
+The rapid growth which Cheyenne made at the beginning of her existence,
+and the feverish activity of her business enterprises, have given place
+long since to a slower but more healthy life and development. Her trade
+interests are being placed on a firmer foundation, and when the
+resources of the surrounding country are utilized to the fullest
+advantage of the city, its prosperity will be assured.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+DETROIT.
+
+ Detroit and Her Avenues of Approach.--Competing Lines.--London
+ in Canada.--The Strait and the Ferry.--Music on the Waters.--The
+ Home of the Algonquins.--Teusha-grondie.--Wa-we-aw-to-nong.--
+ Fort Ponchartrain and the Early French Settlers.--The Red
+ Cross of St. George.--Conspiracy of Pontiac.--Battle of Bloody
+ Run.--The Long Siege.--Detroit's First American Flag.--Old
+ Landmarks.--The Pontiac Tree.--Devastation by Fire.--Site of
+ the Modern City.--New City Hall.--Public Library.--Mexican
+ Antiquities.
+
+
+Four lines of railway leading westward from Niagara, place Buffalo and
+Detroit _en rapport_ with each other, through their connecting steel
+rails, and compete for the patronage of the traveler. In addition to
+this, there are not less than two lines by water, thus affording the
+tourist--if he develops a desire to tempt the waves of Old Erie--ample
+scope for his choice. The Lake Shore route takes one through a
+continuous succession of ever-changing landscapes on the southern shore
+of Lake Erie, and skirts the two great States of Ohio and Pennsylvania
+before reaching Michigan. It is, perhaps, the preferable route by rail,
+looking at it from a purely ćsthetic standpoint. The Great Western Road
+crosses, at Suspension Bridge, the famous chasm cut by Niagara, in its
+recession from Ontario, and gives a faint conception, as seen in the
+distance, of the glorious Falls themselves. The roar and rush of
+water--at the rate of twenty-five million tons per minute--is borne
+down the deeply-cut channel, and clouds of spray are visible from the
+car windows. Below the bridge the swift drifts and eddies can be seen
+foaming on their way to the whirlpool, a mile and a half further down.
+This route also takes the traveler through London, Canada, a quaint old
+English town of twenty thousand inhabitants, on the Thames River. The
+place is brimming over with localities the names of which, carried in
+the affections of her settlers across the ocean, serve as reminders of
+the old London left forever behind them on Britannia's Isle.
+Blackfriar's Bridge and Westminster Bridge both cross the new Thames,
+and Kensington and Covent Garden market belong also to the transplanted
+nomenclature. On Saturdays the great square in the heart of the town is
+filled with marketers and hucksters of all descriptions, and every kind
+of merchandise, from a feather bed to a table knife, is there bought and
+sold. Squaws and Indians and quaintly dressed women commingle with the
+crowd and sell their various wares. The scene is very picturesque, and
+wears an atmosphere of being a hundred years old.
+
+The Grand Trunk Road--the most northerly of the three routes leading
+through Canada--has nothing except its easy-going time to recommend it
+to favor. The traveler on this road stands a fair chance of missing his
+connecting links in the great railway chain which interthreads the
+continent east and west, or of being delayed for hours at a time by
+running off the rails. The Canada Southern is a newly completed road,
+and is said to be the most direct and shortest of all the competing
+lines. This route follows the windings of the northern shore of Lake
+Erie, just opposite from the Lake Shore Road on the southern side, and
+the shifting landscapes are perhaps quite as full of natural beauty.
+
+Detroit, the fair "City of the Strait," spreads itself along the river
+front for miles, and the approach from Windsor, on the opposite shore,
+is suggestive of the pictured lagoons of Venice, Queen of the Adriatic.
+The Detroit River, or strait, is one of the most beautiful water avenues
+west of the Hudson. It is from half a mile to a mile wide, is always of
+a clear green color, and is never troubled by sand bars or anything
+which might affect its navigation. It has an average depth of
+twenty-five feet at the wharves and perhaps forty or fifty feet in the
+centre of the river bed. No floods disturb its calm flow or change the
+pervading green of its waters. It is, with reason, the pride of the
+city, and the ferry boats of the several lines plying between Detroit
+and Windsor are of the most attractive type. In summer a corps of
+musicians are engaged for the regular trips, and are considered as
+indispensable to the boat's outfit as the captain or pilot. Their syren
+strains entice the lounger at the wharf, and he may ride all day, if he
+chooses, for the sum of ten cents. Whole families spend the day on the
+river, in this way, taking their dinner in baskets, as they would go to
+a picnic. The people of Detroit, perhaps, inherit the pleasure-loving
+characteristics of their French ancestors, or at least they do not seem
+to have their minds exclusively concentrated on the struggle after the
+almighty dollar.
+
+Detroit, as the principal mart of the Peninsular State--the nucleus
+which gradually crystallized into the heart of Michigan--has an early
+history of thrilling interest; the site of the present populous city of
+a hundred and twenty thousand souls was long ago, in the shadowy years
+of its Indian lore, the home of a dusky tribe of the Algonquin family--a
+race which was once as populous and widespread as the waves of the
+ocean.
+
+In 1610 the first white man who set foot on these wild and unexplored
+shores found it occupied by the clustered wigwams of a peaceful Indian
+village named _Teushagrondie_.
+
+ "Beside that broad but gentle tide
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Whose waters creep along the shore
+ Ere long to swell Niagara's roar,
+ Here, quiet, stood an Indian village;
+ Unknown its origin or date;
+ Algonquin huts and rustic tillage,
+ Where stands the City of the Strait.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ From dark antiquity it came,
+ In myths and dreamy ages cast."
+
+Another of its ancient names was "Wa-we-aw-to-nong," meaning _round by_,
+in allusion to its circuitous way of approach.
+
+ "No savage home, however rare,
+ If told in legend or in song,
+ Could with that charming spot compare,
+ The lovely Wa-we-aw-to-nong."
+
+In 1679, the _Griffin_, under La Salle--the first vessel that ever
+sailed these inland seas--anchored off the group of islands at the
+entrance to Detroit River. Peaceful Indian tribes were scattered along
+the banks, and the white man was received with friendly overtures.
+
+In 1701, La Motte Cadillac founded Detroit. He erected a military fort
+on the site of the future city, which he named after his French patron,
+_Pontchartrain_. It was surrounded by a strong stockade of wooden
+pickets, with bastions at each angle. A few log huts with thatched
+roofs of straw and grass were built within the enclosure, and as the
+number of settlers increased the stockade was enlarged, until it
+included about a hundred houses closely crowded together. The streets
+were very narrow, with the exception of a wide carriage road or
+boulevard which encircled the town just within the palisades. The object
+of the establishment of this military post was to aid in securing to the
+French the large fur trade of the northwest, and it was also a point
+from whence the early Jesuit fathers extended their missionary labors.
+
+The little military colony was the centre of the settlement, and the
+Canadian dwellings were scattered up and down the banks above and below
+the fort for miles. The river almost washed the foot of the
+stockade--Woodbridge street being at that time the margin of the
+water--and three large Indian villages were within the limits of the
+settlement. Below the fort were the lodges of the Pottawattomies, on the
+eastern shore dwelt the Wyandots, and higher up Pontiac and the Ottawas
+had pitched their wigwams.
+
+Fort Pontchartrain remained in the possession of the French until 1760,
+when, by the fall of Quebec, it fell into the hands of the British, and
+was surrendered to Major Robert Rogers on the twelfth of September. The
+Red Cross of St. George now supplanted the _Fleur-de-lis_ of France, and
+the change to British rule was ill relished by the surrounding Indian
+tribes, who had been the firm friends and allies of the French. The well
+known Pontiac conspiracy grew out of this change of administration, and
+a general massacre of the whites was determined upon. Pontiac, chief of
+the Ottawas, was the leading spirit of the bloody plot, and so well
+laid were his plans that ten out of the thirteen posts which were
+simultaneously attacked fell before their savage onsets. The post at
+Detroit, at that time under command of Major Gladwyn, was only saved
+through the timely betrayal of Pontiac's plot, by Catherine, a beautiful
+Ojibway girl, who dwelt in the village of the Pottawattomies, and who
+had become much attached to Major Gladwyn, of the Fort. The day before
+the intended massacre she brought him a pair of moccasins which she had
+made for him, and then revealed the intended surprise of Pontiac. The
+garrison and occupants of the fort were supported by two small vessels,
+the Beaver and the Gladwyn, which lay anchored in the river.
+
+On the morning of May sixth, 1763, a large flotilla of birch canoes,
+filled with warriors lying flat on their faces, crossed the river above
+the Port, landing just beyond the banks of Bloody Run, or Parent's
+Creek, as it was then called. About ten o'clock, sixty chiefs, with
+Pontiac at their head, marched to the Port and demanded admittance. It
+was granted, but all preparation was made on the part of Gladwyn to
+repel the first sign of treachery. Every soldier was armed to the teeth,
+and the eagle eye of Gladwyn watched every movement of Pontiac, as that
+brave made a speech of mock friendship. When the savages discovered the
+failure of their plans, their disappointed rage knew no bounds, and
+after passing out of the gates of the Fort, their mad thirst for blood
+was only glutted by massacres of isolated families, and the tomahawk and
+scalping knife sealed the doom of many an unhappy victim who that day
+crossed the path of Pontiac's warriors.
+
+From this hour Detroit was in a state of siege, and for eleven long
+months the siege continued. Bravely the little band at the Fort held out
+until reinforcements arrived--Captain Dalzell, with a force of three
+hundred regulars, coming to their aid. A few days afterwards--at two
+o'clock on the morning of July thirty-first--an attack was made on the
+Indians, who were stationed along the banks of Parent's Creek, about a
+mile and a half from the Fort. The troops neared the narrow, wooden
+bridge which spanned the creek, when suddenly, in the gloom of night,
+the Indian war-whoop burst on their ears, and a blaze of leaden death
+followed. Captain Dalzell rushed to the front across the bridge, leading
+his men forward, but their foes were not to be seen.
+
+Bewildered in the gloom, the English troops were obliged to fall back to
+the fort and wait for daylight before renewing the attack. Hundreds of
+Indians lay in ambuscade along the river, whither the soldiers were
+obliged to pass on their way to the Fort, and the creek ran red with
+their blood. The waters of the little stream, after this crimson
+baptism, were re-christened with the name of Bloody Run. The survivors
+entered the Fort next morning with a loss of seventy killed and forty
+wounded.
+
+During the war of the Revolution, Detroit was subjected to greater
+annoyance from Indian tribes than before, but this was the only way in
+which the war affected it. Through the treaty of Greenville, made by
+General Wayne with the red men, in August, 1795, Detroit and all the
+region of the northwest became the property of the United States, and in
+1796 Captain Porter, from General Wayne's army, took possession of the
+post, and flung to the breeze the first American banner that ever
+floated over the soil of the Peninsular State.
+
+"Pontiac's Grate" was the eastern entrance to the town, and occupies the
+site of the old United States Court House. In 1763, a rude chapel stood
+on the north side of St. Ann street--nearly in the middle of the present
+Jefferson avenue--while opposite was a large military garden, in the
+centre of which stood a block house, where all the councils with the
+Indians were held. These were the only public buildings in the town.
+
+The "Pontiac Tree," behind which many a soldier took shelter on the
+night of the bloody battle at Parent's Creek, and whose bark is fabled
+to have been thickly pierced with bullets, stood as an old landmark for
+years, on the site of the ancient field of conflict, and many a stirring
+legend is told of it.
+
+On June eleventh, 1805--just five months after Michigan was organized as
+a territory--Detroit was laid in ruins by a wholesale conflagration,
+which left only two houses unharmed. An act of Congress was passed for
+her relief, and thus, through baptisms of fire and blood, and through
+tribulation, has she arisen to her present proud estate. The stranger
+landing on these shores now is struck with the handsome general
+appearance of the city--its clean, wide streets, varying in width from
+fifty to two hundred feet--its elegant business blocks and pervading air
+of enterprise. The ground on which the city stands rises gradually from
+the river to an elevation of thirty or forty feet, thus affording both a
+commanding prospect and excellent drainage. Detroit is an authorized
+port of entry, and is about seven miles distant from Lake St. Clair and
+eighteen miles from Lake Erie. Ship and boat building has been an
+extensive branch of business here, and in 1859 there were nine steam saw
+mills located in the city, sawing forty million feet of lumber annually.
+There are also works for smelting copper ore two miles below the city,
+or rather within that suburban portion of the city known as Hamtramck.
+
+Among the first objects of interest which attract the stranger's
+attention are the new City Hall and the Soldiers' Monument. The City
+Hall, fronting on one side of the square known as the Campus Martius, is
+a structure of which any city in the land might be proud. It is built of
+Cleveland sandstone, and faces on four streets,--being two hundred feet
+long on Woodward avenue and Griswold street, with a width of ninety feet
+on Fort street and Michigan avenue.
+
+It is built in the style of the Italian renaissance, with Mansard roof
+and a tower rising from the centre of the building, adorned at its four
+corners with colossal figures fourteen feet high, representing
+"_Justice_," "_Industry_," "_Arts_," and "_Commerce_." Its height from
+the ground to the top of the tower is a hundred and eighty feet, and the
+three ample stories above the basement furnish accommodation to the city
+and county offices, in addition to the Circuit and Recorder's Courts.
+The walls are frescoed, the floors laid in mosaics of colored marbles,
+and the Council Chamber and other public rooms are furnished with black
+walnut chairs and desks, and paneled in oak. With these exceptions,
+there is no woodwork about the immense building. Everything, from
+basement to dome, is brick and iron and stone. Even the floors are built
+in delicate arches of brick and iron, and iron staircases follow the
+windings of the tower to its dizzy top. It is reckoned fireproof. The
+exterior is curiously carved, and two large fountains adorn the
+inclosing grounds. The estimated cost of the building is about six
+hundred thousand dollars.
+
+From the airy outlook of the City Hall Tower, Detroit appears like a
+vast wheel, many of whose streets diverge like spokes from this common
+centre, reaching outward until they touch, or seem to touch, the wooded
+rim of the distant horizon. The hub of this immense wheel is the
+triangular open space called the Campus Martius, and the Soldiers'
+Monument, occupying the centre of the Campus Martius, is also the centre
+of this imaginary hub. Michigan avenue--one of the long arms of the
+wheel--loses itself in the western distance, and is called the Chicago
+road. Woodward avenue leads into the interior, toward Pontiac, and
+Gratiot avenue goes in the direction of Port Huron. Fort street, in yet
+another direction, guides the eye to Fort Wayne and the steeples of
+Sandwich, four miles away. Toward the southern or river side of the
+city, the resemblance to the wheel is nearly lost, and one sees nothing
+but compact squares of blocks, cut by streets crossing each other at
+right angles and running parallel and perpendicular to the river.
+Between the Campus Martius and Grand Circus Park there are half a dozen
+or more short streets, which form a group by themselves, and break in
+somewhat on the symmetry of the larger wheel, without destroying it.
+This point gives the best view of Detroit to be obtained anywhere about
+the city.
+
+The Soldiers' Monument is a handsome granite structure, fifty-five feet
+in height, the material of which was quarried from the granite beds of
+Westerly, Rhode Island, and modeled into shape under the superintending
+genius of Randolph Rogers, of Rome, Italy. It is surmounted by a massive
+allegorical statue, in bronze, of Michigan, and figures of the soldier
+and sailor, in the same material, adorn the four projections of the
+monument; while bronze eagles with spread wings are perched on smaller
+pedestals in the intermediate spaces. Large medallions, also in bronze,
+with the busts of Grant, Lincoln, Sherman and Farragut, in low relief,
+cover the four sides of the main shaft, and higher up the following
+inscription is imprinted against the white background of granite:--
+
+ "ERECTED BY THE PEOPLE OF MICHIGAN
+ IN HONOR OF THE MARTYRS WHO FELL
+ AND THE HEROES WHO FOUGHT
+ IN DEFENCE OF LIBERTY AND UNION."
+
+The bronzes and ornaments were imported from the celebrated foundry at
+Munich, Bavaria, and the cost of the monument--donated exclusively by
+private subscription--amounted to fifty-eight thousand dollars. The
+unveiling of the statue took place April ninth, 1872.
+
+Another feature of the city is the Public Library, founded in March,
+1865, and at present occupying the old Capitol, until the new and
+elegant Library building now in process of construction is completed.
+
+ [Illustration: WOODWARD AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN.]
+
+Beginning entirely without funds, ten years ago, it can now exhibit a
+muster roll of twenty-five thousand volumes, and is fairly started on
+the high road to fortune. There is a kind of poetic justice in the fact
+that its principal source of revenue accrues from county fines and
+penalties. Here is a knotty question for the divinity doctors, for in
+this case, at least, good is born of evil. The library is under the
+control of the Board of Education, and was given an existence from the
+State constitution. Some very rare volumes of Mexican antiquities have
+recently been purchased from England by the School Board and added to
+the library, at a cost of four hundred dollars. They contain a pictorial
+and hieroglyphic history of the Aztec races occupying Mexico when Cortes
+came over from a foreign shore with his Spanish galleons. The earliest
+date goes back to 1324, and the strange figures in the centre of the
+page are surrounded by devices indicating cycles of thirteen years, four
+of which made a great cycle, or a period of fifty-two years. The deeds
+of the Aztec king, _Tenuch_, and his successors, are here recorded, and
+through the efforts of an English nobleman who devoted his life to these
+researches, we have the translation rendered for us.
+
+The city has a scientific association, two years old, and also a
+Historical Society, in which her citizens manifest considerable pride.
+
+Detroit has been called, with reason, one of the most beautiful cities
+of the West. Transformed from the ancient _Teushagrondie_ into the
+present populous "City of the Strait," she sits like a happy princess,
+serene, on the banks of her broad river, guarding the gates of St.
+Clair. Backed by a State whose resources are second to none in the
+Union, emerging from an early history of bloody struggle and battle,
+rising like the fabled Phoenix, from the ashes of an apparent ruin,
+contributing her best blood and treasure to the war for liberty and
+union, she may well be proud of her past record, her present progress,
+her advancement toward a high civilization and her assured position.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ERIE.
+
+ Decoration Day in Pennsylvania.--Lake Erie.--Natural Advantages
+ of Erie.--Her Harbor, Commerce, and Manufactures.--Streets and
+ Public Buildings.--Soldiers' Monument.--Erie Cemetery.--East and
+ West Parks.--Perry's Victory.
+
+
+I took my fourth ride from Buffalo westward, on the Lake Shore Road, on
+the afternoon of May twenty-ninth, 1875, the day set apart that year by
+the patriotic citizens of Pennsylvania, for the decoration of her
+soldiers' graves. Passing the State line or boundary between New York
+and Pennsylvania, a little beyond Dunkirk, an unusually large assemblage
+of citizens and soldiers, with bouquets and a great profusion of
+flowers, at nearly every station, betokened the earnest patriotism of
+the old Keystone State. Pennsylvania will never be behind her sister
+States in doing honor to the brave men who gave up their lives while
+fighting her battles; and the demonstrations of each Decoration Day are
+evidences that she will not soon forget their deeds, or their claim upon
+her deepest gratitude.
+
+A beautiful sight opens to the view of the tourist as he turns his eye
+toward the broad, blue expanse of the lake, which may be seen at
+intervals from the car windows, from Buffalo to Toledo. The mind is
+quite naturally occupied with grand commercial schemes, on viewing such
+wonderful facilities for the promotion of enterprise. We have here, in
+Lake Erie, the connecting link in a chain of fresh-water oceans, which
+stretch from the Atlantic, westward, almost to the Rocky Mountains. Our
+internal prosperity is largely due to this great chain of lakes, which
+secure and facilitate cheap transportation, and have made possible the
+great inland cities, the pride of our Middle States.
+
+Erie is an intermediate point between Buffalo and Cleveland, and having
+a most excellent harbor, would seem destined to take rank among the
+first cities of America. But by that inscrutable law which, seemingly
+beyond reason, governs and controls the foundation and growth of cities
+and towns, natural advantages do not always seem to count; and as a
+large fish swallows a smaller one, so has Erie been dwarfed by her older
+rivals, who, getting an earlier foothold upon the shore of the lake,
+have absorbed its trade, and continued to maintain the advantage they at
+first secured. An increase of commerce on Lake Erie will undoubtedly
+throw a share to the city of Erie, and thus she may eventually succeed
+in occupying the position to which her harbor and railroads entitle her.
+
+Erie is on the lake, about midway of the brief stretch of shore which
+the narrow section of Western Pennsylvania, jutting up between New York
+and Ohio, secures to that State. It is her only lake town of any
+importance, is a port of entry, and has a population of nearly thirty
+thousand inhabitants. The harbor is the largest and best on Lake Erie.
+It is about four miles in length, one mile in width, and in depth
+varying from nine to twenty-five feet, thus permitting access to the
+largest lake vessels. It is formed by an island four miles in length,
+which lies in front of the city, and which, from its name of Presque
+Isle, indicates that within the memory of man it has been a peninsula.
+The bay is known as Presque Isle Bay. It is protected by a breakwater,
+and three lighthouses guard the entrance. Several large docks, furnished
+with railroad tracks, permit the transfer of merchandise to take place
+directly between the vessels and the cars. The terminus of the
+Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, and connected by the Lake Shore Railroad
+with all important points in the east and west, the city is fast
+developing into a strong commercial centre. A canal connecting with
+Beaver River, a tributary of the Ohio, facilitates commerce in the
+western section of Pennsylvania, and furnishes extensive water-power, of
+which various kinds of mills avail themselves. These mills and the many
+factories and foundries of the city--for Erie is a manufacturing town of
+considerable importance--produce iron ware, cars, machinery, organs,
+furniture, brass, leather, boots and shoes, and send them, by the
+various methods of transportation, to markets in the States and Canada.
+The great forest and mining regions of Pennsylvania find, at Erie, an
+outlet for their lumber, coal and iron ore; while the numerous
+productive farms which lie in the vicinity of the lake send quantities
+of grain to be shipped at this port.
+
+The city is built upon an elevated bluff, commanding an extensive view
+of the lake. It is regularly laid out, with broad streets crossing each
+other at right angles, and its general appearance is prosperous and
+pleasing. In the centre of the city are the Parks, two finely shaded
+inclosures, intersected by State street, and surrounded by handsome
+buildings. A Soldiers' Monument stands in one of them, erected to
+commemorate the memory of the brave men who fell in the War of the
+Rebellion. It is surmounted by two bronze statues of heroic size. There
+are also two handsome fountains within the Park inclosure. Near by is
+the classic structure used as a Court House. The Custom House is erected
+in a substantial style, near the shores of the lake. A new Opera House
+is also one of the features of the city. The Union Depot is an immense
+building, nearly five hundred feet in length, in the Romanesque style,
+two stories in height and surmounted by a cupola forty feet high. State
+street is the principal business thoroughfare.
+
+The Erie Cemetery, on the south side, is one of the most beautiful in
+the country. It is on a bluff overlooking the city and the lake, and
+comprises seventy-five acres, in which tree-shaded walks, elegant
+drives, velvet turf, running water, masses of shrubbery and brilliant
+flowers, together with the plain white headstones and the elaborate
+monuments which mark the resting-places of the dead, are united in a
+harmonious effect, which is most satisfactory to the beholder. Erie is
+very proud of this cemetery, and spares no pains to perfect it, while
+every year adds to its beauty.
+
+East and West Parks lie, as their names indicate, in opposite directions
+within the city, and are beautiful breathing places where its citizens
+resort for rest and recreation. Art has joined with nature in rendering
+these places attractive, and their trees, shrubbery, lawns, walks and
+drives, and general picturesqueness, combine to make them very charming
+spots.
+
+Erie has historical associations which render her of interest to one who
+would gather facts concerning his country. Lake Erie was the scene of a
+naval engagement between the British and Americans, on September tenth,
+1813, in which the latter were victorious. Commodore Perry, in command
+of the American fleet, sailed from this port on the memorable day, and
+when the engagement was concluded, brought thither his prizes. Several
+of his ships sunk in Lawrence Bay, and in fair weather the hull of the
+Niagara is still visible.
+
+The development of Western Pennsylvania is contributing more and more,
+as the years go by, to the prosperity of Erie. Her exceptionally fine
+harbor is already beginning to be recognized by commerce, and though the
+city may never rival Cleveland or Buffalo, the time may come when Erie
+will take rank as only second to them on Lake Erie, in commercial
+importance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+HARRISBURG.
+
+ A Historic Tree.--John Harris' Wild Adventure with the
+ Indians.--Harris Park.--History of Harrisburg.--Situation
+ and Surroundings.--State House.--State Library.--A Historic
+ Flag.--View from State House Dome.--Capitol Park.--Monument
+ to Soldiers of Mexican War.--Monument to Soldiers of Late
+ War.--Public Buildings.--Front Street.--Bridges over the
+ Susquehanna.--Mt. Kalmia Cemetery.--Present Advantages and
+ Future Prospects of Harrisburg.
+
+
+A century and a half ago, John Harris, seeking traffic with the red men
+of the Susquehanna, built a rude hut, dug a well, and thereby began a
+work which, taken up by his son, led to the founding of the Capital City
+of Pennsylvania, a city destined to take rank among the first of a great
+State. The stump of an old tree, in a beautiful little park which skirts
+the Susquehanna, on a line parallel with Front street, marks the scene
+of an early adventure of Harris with the Indians, and tells the stranger
+of his birth and death. About 1718 or 1719, Harris, who had settled at
+this point on the Susquehanna, as a trader, was visited by a predatory
+band of Indians returning from the "Patowmark," who made an exchange of
+goods with him, for rum. Becoming drunken and riotous, he finally
+refused them any more liquor, when they seized him and bound him to a
+tree, dancing around their captive, until he thought his last day had
+come. His negro servant, however, summoned some friendly Shawnees from
+the opposite side of the river, who, after a slight struggle with the
+drunken Indians, rescued Harris from his bonds and probably from a death
+by torture. The stump referred to is that of the historical tree, which
+was a gigantic mulberry, eleven feet seven inches in circumference. Here
+also is the grave of Harris, which is surrounded by a strong iron fence,
+and a young mulberry tree has been planted, by one of his descendants,
+to take the place of the one whose trunk alone stands as a monument of
+the past.
+
+During the summer months this romantic spot is the favorite resort of
+the boys and girls of the neighborhood, and whenever the weather is
+favorable, a large troop of juveniles may be seen spinning their tops,
+rolling their hoops and playing at croquet on the lawn. What a contrast
+is here unfolded to the imagination, as we stand at the grave of the
+venerable pioneer, and contemplate the wonderful change that has
+characterized the progress of events during the past hundred years. But
+little more than a century ago there was a solitary trader with his
+family upon the borders of a great river in the wilderness. His goods
+were brought on a pack-horse, and his ferry was a row boat. To-day a
+thriving, beautiful city takes the place of the log cabin; children
+sport where once the treacherous Indian sought the life of the hardy
+frontiersman; the river is spanned by wonderful bridges; and a hundred
+railroad trains pass through its streets in the course of twenty-four
+hours.
+
+Harrisburg was laid out by John Harris, Jr., the son of the pioneer, in
+1785; it was incorporated as a borough in 1791; became the State Capital
+in 1812; and received a city charter in 1860. Its population in 1880
+numbered more than thirty thousand persons.
+
+ [Illustration: HARRISBURG AND BRIDGES OVER THE SUSQUEHANNA.]
+
+Harrisburg is most picturesquely situated, on the Susquehanna River,
+at the eastern gateway of the Alleghenies. The river is here a mile
+wide, shallow at most seasons of the year, but capable of becoming a
+turbulent torrent, carrying destruction along its banks. On the opposite
+side of the river to the south are the Conestoga Hills; while to the
+northward are the bold and craggy outlines of the Kittatinny or Blue
+Mountains. But five miles away is the gap in these mountains through
+which the Susquehanna forces its way, and the summits of these sentinels
+are plainly visible. Although on the very threshold of the mountainous
+region of Pennsylvania, the pastoral beauty of landscape which
+characterizes eastern Pennsylvania creeps up to meet the ruggedness
+which predominates beyond; and the two are here blended with most
+charming results; the softness of the one half veiling the ruggedness of
+the other; while the picturesqueness of each is heightened by contrast.
+
+The handsomest and most noticeable building of Harrisburg is the State
+House, which is conspicuously placed on an eminence near the centre of
+the city. It is T-shaped, having a front of one hundred and eighty feet
+by eighty in depth, and with an extension of one hundred and five feet
+by fifty-four feet. It is built of brick, and is three stories high,
+including the basement. A large circular portico, sustained by six Ionic
+columns, fronts the main entrance. The building is surmounted by a dome,
+reaching an altitude of one hundred and eight feet. A State Library,
+with accommodation for one hundred thousand volumes, and possessing at
+the present time thirty thousand volumes, is one of the features of the
+Capitol. This library contains a number of portraits, curiosities and
+art treasures, prominent among which are two small portraits of
+Columbus and Americus Vespucius, the work of a celebrated Florentine
+artist; a picture of the event already narrated in the life of John
+Harris; and a reflecting telescope, purchased by Benjamin Franklin, and
+through which was taken the first observation in the western hemisphere,
+of the transit of Venus.
+
+In the Flag Room of the State House, where are preserved the
+Pennsylvania State flags used by the different regimental organizations
+in the war for the Union, is a flag captured by the Confederates at
+Gettysburg, and afterwards recaptured in the baggage of Jefferson Davis.
+We find the following brief account of the capture of this flag in the
+"Harrisburg Visitors' Guide," prepared by Mr. J. R. Orwig, Assistant
+State Librarian, to whom we are indebted for favors in our literary
+work. "It was on the evening of the first day; all the color guard were
+killed, the last being Corporal Joseph Gutelius, of Mifflinburg, Union
+County. When surrounded, and almost alone, he was commanded to surrender
+the flag. His mute reply was to enfold it in his arms, and he was
+instantly shot dead through its silken folds." He lies buried at
+Gettysburg.
+
+The view from the State House dome is exceptionally grand. I stood on
+that eminence one bright morning, during the early part of my sojourn at
+Harrisburg, in the spring of 1877. To eastward is a picturesque, rolling
+country, varied by hill and dale, field and woodland, with villages or
+isolated farmhouses nestling here and there in their midst, the
+brilliant green tint of the foreground melting imperceptibly away into
+the soft purple haze of the far distance. In front of the city to the
+westward lies the broad river, gleaming like a ribbon of silver in the
+sunlight, dotted with emerald islands, and winding away to the
+southeast, between sloping banks and rocky crags, until it at last loses
+itself in the misty horizon. To the northward is distinctly seen the gap
+in the mountains through which the river approaches the city. The bold
+and abrupt outlines of the mountains are plainly traced, and the scenery
+in this region is exceptionally grand. Immediately surrounding the State
+House is the city, spread out with its labyrinth of streets, its
+factories and furnaces, its stately public buildings, and its elegant
+private residences, presenting a panorama fair to look upon, and
+evidencing the prosperity and industry of its people. To obtain a view
+from this dome is well worth a visit to Harrisburg.
+
+The State House is surrounded by Capitol Park, embracing thirteen acres,
+and inclosed by an iron fence. These grounds gently slope from the
+centre, and are ornamented with stately trees, beautiful shrubbery and
+flowers and closely-shorn greensward. The site was set apart for its
+present purpose before Harrisburg was a city, by John Harris, its
+public-spirited founder. Fine views are obtained from it of the suburb
+of East Harrisburg and the Reservoir, Mt. Kalmia Cemetery, the tower of
+the new State Arsenal, and the dome of the State Insane Asylum. The
+prominent feature of this park, next to the State House, is, however,
+the beautiful monument erected to the memory of the soldiers who fell in
+the Mexican War. It is one hundred and five feet high, with a sub-base
+of granite, a base proper, with buttresses at each corner surmounted by
+eagles, and a Corinthian column of Maryland marble, surmounted by a
+statue of Victory, the latter executed at Rome, of fine Italian marble.
+The sides of the base are paneled, and contain the names of the
+different battles of the Mexican War. The monument is surrounded by an
+inclosure constructed of muskets used by the United States soldiers in
+Mexico. In front of the monument are a number of guns, trophies of the
+Mexican war, and several others presented by General Lafayette.
+
+Another monument, at the intersection of State and Second streets, is in
+its design purely antique, being founded on the proportions of the pair
+of obelisks at the gate of Memphis, and of that which stands in the
+Place Vendome at Paris. It contains the following inscription: "To the
+Soldiers of Dauphin County, who gave their lives for the life of the
+Union, in the war for the suppression of the Rebellion, 1861-5. Erected
+by their fellow-citizens, 1869."
+
+In East Harrisburg, or "Allison's Hill," as it is called, will be seen
+Brant's private residence, built in the style of the Elizabethan period,
+the massive stone Catholic Convent, and St. Genevieve's Academy. On
+State street is Grace M. E. Church, one of the most costly and beautiful
+churches in the State. Not far away is St. Patrick's Pro-Cathedral. The
+State Lunatic Asylum is a vast and imposing edifice, a mile and a half
+north of the city.
+
+Front street, which overlooks the river, is the favorite promenade of
+the city. Here may be seen the broad river, with its craft and numerous
+islands, the villages on the opposite shore, and the delightful
+landscape beyond. Here the citizens often congregate on fine evenings,
+to watch the sunset views, which are especially fine from this point. On
+the ridge opposite, is Fort Washington and the line of defenses erected
+in 1863, in expectation of an invasion of the Southern army. Front
+street is by far the finest street in the city, containing the most
+imposing residences, being bordered by trees, and forming a most
+attractive drive. From State street to Paxton, it presents an almost
+unbroken range of palatial buildings of brick, stone, marble or granite.
+On this street is found the residence of the Governor, presented to the
+State by the citizens of Harrisburg, in 1864, as the Executive Mansion.
+A more desirable location for a residence can scarcely be imagined than
+that of Hon. J. D. Cameron, on the southeast corner of State and Front
+streets, overlooking the Susquehanna. Near the corner of Front street
+and Washington avenue is the old "Harris Mansion," originally erected in
+1766, by John Harris, and remaining in the Harris family until 1840, but
+now the home of Hon. Simon Cameron.
+
+The Market street bridge spans the river, resting midway on Forster's
+Island, the western end being an ancient structure, dating back to 1812,
+while the eastern end, having once been destroyed by flood, and once by
+fire, was rebuilt in modern style in 1866. The second bridge across the
+river is at the head of Mulberry street, but it is used for trains
+alone. This bridge is also divided by Forster's Island. It has once been
+destroyed by fire, and was entirely remodeled in 1856.
+
+Mt. Kalmia Cemetery is a charming resting-place of the dead, on the
+heights overlooking the city. Its natural beauties are many, and they
+have been enhanced by art. It is reached from East State street.
+
+Harrisburg has extensive iron manufactories, and is the centre of six
+important railways. More than one hundred passenger trains arrive and
+depart daily, and few cities have a greater number of transient
+visitors. It is one of the most prosperous cities of the Commonwealth;
+situated in a fertile valley, in view of some of the grandest scenery in
+America, with railroads, canals and macadamized roads, diverging in all
+directions, and connecting it with every section of the country; with
+important business interests, and an intelligent, industrious and
+prosperous population; the political centre of one of the chief States
+of the Union; it has much to congratulate itself upon in the present,
+and more to hope for from the future. Another decade will see vastly
+increased business interests, and a population nearly if not quite
+double that of to-day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HARTFORD.
+
+ The City of Publishers.--Its Geographical Location.--The New
+ State House.--Mark Twain and the "None Such."--The "Heathen
+ Chinee."--Wadsworth Atheneum.--Charter Oak.--George H. Clark's
+ Poem.--Putnam's Hotel.--Asylum for Deaf Mutes.--The Sign
+ Language.--A Fragment of Witchcraftism.--Hartford _Courant_.--
+ The Connecticut River.
+
+
+Having decided to pitch our tents in Hartford, we moved from New Haven
+by rail, on the afternoon of September eighth, 1874. A hot, dusty day it
+was, indeed, with mercury at ninety-two in the shade, and dust enough to
+enable passengers of the rollicking order to inscribe monograms on the
+backs of their unsuspecting neighbors.
+
+The distance, according to recent time tables, is one dollar, or an hour
+and fifteen minutes. The scenery encountered on this route is less
+varied than that from New York to New Haven, and yet there is much to
+interest the careful observer. The only town of any importance between
+these rival cities is Meriden, an enterprising city of twenty thousand
+souls, standing midway between them.
+
+Hartford, the capital of nutmegdom, is the second city of Connecticut,
+having, as shown by the last census, a population of thirty-seven
+thousand. Pleasantly situated on the Connecticut River, and enjoying now
+the advantage of exclusive legislation for the State, Hartford is
+destined to become one of the most important cities of New England.
+
+Authors, artists and publishers have ever found Hartford a fruitful
+field for the development of brains and enterprise. It is, perhaps, not
+exaggeration to say that in no other city of the United States of the
+same size is there so large a proportion of the population devoted to
+literature. The American and Hartford Publishing Companies, the firms of
+Burr, Scranton, Worthington, Dustin, Gilman and Company, and many others
+of less note, are located here.
+
+The new State House, now in process of erection, is destined to be one
+of the finest buildings in the country. The site commands a view of the
+city and its surroundings for many miles. Among the objects of interest
+to be found here are the residence of "Mark Twain" and the State Insane
+Asylum. "Mark's" house is at the end of Farmington avenue, on a little
+eminence, at the foot of which flows a nameless stream.
+
+Its style of construction is so unlike the average house that it has won
+for itself the characteristic title of "The None Such."
+
+It is still in the hands of the architect, and will probably not be
+ready for occupancy before November. If this building is not regarded as
+a marvel, then I will confess that, after nearly twenty years of travel,
+I have yet to learn the meaning of that term as applied to architecture.
+The plat of ground on which the house and adjacent buildings stand was
+selected and purchased by Mrs. "Twain"--so said the gentlemanly
+architect who replied to our inquiries. As the genial "Mark" desires the
+maximum quantity of light, his apartments are so arranged as to give him
+the sun all day. The bricks of the outer walls of the house are painted
+in three colors, making the general effect decidedly fantastic.
+
+Taking it all in all, I have nowhere seen a more curious study in
+architecture, and hope, for the satisfaction of its eccentric owner,
+that it will quite meet his expectations.
+
+The Celestials, or representatives from China, are now so often seen,
+from California eastward to New England, that they have ceased to be
+considered objects of special interest in any part of the United States.
+I have met them more or less in my journeyings during the last two
+years, and have often wondered if others see their strange
+characteristics from the same standpoint that I do. To me, Ah Sin is
+ingenious, enterprising, economical, and the essence of quiet good
+humor.
+
+Opposite my quarters here in Hartford are two of these odd-looking
+Chinamen, whom I will, for convenience, name Ching Wing Shing and Chang
+Boomerang.
+
+My rooms being directly opposite the store of Boomerang and Company, an
+excellent opportunity is afforded me for witnessing their varied devices
+to invite trade and entertain their customers. Although only tea and
+coffee are advertised, Chang's store will be found, on close inspection,
+to strongly resemble the "Old Curiosity Shop," described by Dickens,
+there being a small assortment of everything in their line, from tea and
+coffee to watermelons.
+
+Chang and Ching invariably wear a smile upon their "childlike and bland"
+features. School children passing that way seem to take pleasure in
+teasing these mild-mannered China merchants, and unfortunate indeed is
+the firm of Boomerang and Company, if their backs are turned on their
+youthful tormenters; for these mischievous urchins seem to think it no
+crime to pilfer anything owned or presided over by their pig-tailed
+neighbors. Should Chang or Ching discover their sportive enemies gliding
+away with the tempting fruits of their stands, it is useless to pursue,
+for a troop of juvenile confederates will rush into the store the moment
+it is vacated and help themselves to whatever may please their fancy.
+
+
+THE WADSWORTH ATHENEUM.
+
+While taking a stroll down Main street the other day my attention was
+arrested by a three-story brownstone building, standing on the east side
+and back some distance from the street. I had only to glance at the
+large, bold lettering across its front to be told that it was the
+Wadsworth Atheneum. Deciding to take a look at the interior of this
+receptacle of antiquities, I soon made the acquaintance of W. J.
+Fletcher, the gentlemanly assistant librarian of the Watkins Library,
+who seemed to take an especial pleasure in showing me everything of
+interest, and who spared no pains in explaining everything about which I
+had a question to ask.
+
+There were so many curiosities of ancient as well as modern pattern,
+that it would be impossible to notice all in a work of this magnitude,
+and hence I shall content myself with presenting a few subjects which,
+to me at least, were of striking interest. Stepping into the Historical
+Rooms my attention was first called to the stump of the famous Charter
+Oak, which will ever form an interesting chapter in Connecticut history.
+A very comfortable seat or arm-chair has been moulded from this aged
+relic, and while sitting within its venerable arms, I copied the
+following poem by George H. Clark, the manuscript of which is framed and
+hung up over the chair. I cannot endorse the sentiment of the poet, but
+will record his lines.
+
+ September 10th, 1858.
+
+DEAR SIR:--You seem to take so much interest in my lines on the
+destruction of the old oak, that I have thought you might be pleased
+with a copy in the author's handwriting, and accordingly inclose one.
+Yours,
+
+ GEO. H. CLARK.
+
+
+THE OAK.
+
+ 1. "Yes--blot the last sad vestige out--
+ Burn all the useless wood;
+ Root up the stump, that none may know
+ Where the dead monarch stood.
+ Let traffic's inauspicious din
+ Here run its daily round,
+ And break the solemn memories
+ Of this once holy ground.
+
+ 2. "Your fathers, long the hallowed spot
+ Have kept with jealous care,
+ That worshippers from many lands
+ Might pay their homage there;
+ You spurn the loved memento now,
+ Forget the tyrant's yoke,
+ And lend Oblivion aid to gorge
+ Our cherished Charter Oak.
+
+ 3. "'Tis well, when all our household gods
+ For paltry gain are sold,
+ That e'en their altars should be razed
+ And sacrificed for gold.
+ Then tear the strong, tenacious roots,
+ With vandal hands, away,
+ And pour within that sacred crypt
+ The garish light of day.
+
+ 4. "Let crowds unconscious tread the soil
+ By Wordsworth sanctified,
+ Let Mammon bring, to crown the hill,
+ Its retinue of pride,
+ Destroy the patriot pilgrim's shrine,
+ His idols overthrow,
+ Till o'er the ruin grimly stalks
+ The ghost of long ago.
+
+ 5. "So may the muse of coming time
+ Indignant speak of them
+ Who Freedom's brightest jewel rent
+ From her proud diadem,--
+ And lash with her contemptuous scorn
+ The man who gave the stroke
+ That desecrates the place where stood
+ The brave old Charter Oak."
+
+It appears to me that no more sensible thing could have been done after
+the tree fell to the ground, August twenty-first, 1859, than to preserve
+it here, where it will outlive, by centuries, its rapid decay in an open
+field, exposed to sun and storm. Thousands may now see the famous oak
+that otherwise might never know its location or history. It stood on the
+grounds formerly owned by Samuel Wordsworth, near Charter Oak Avenue,
+and its top having been blown down and broken during a violent storm, it
+was afterwards dug up and taken to the Historical Rooms of the Wadsworth
+Atheneum.
+
+After occupying two hours in looking through the Historical Department,
+we came to a corner of the room devoted to an exhibition of the relics
+identified with the history of General Israel Putnam, the Revolutionary
+patriot, who was commander-in-chief of the American forces engaged at
+the battle of Bunker Hill.
+
+Connecticut takes a lively interest in anything that pertains to her
+favorite hero, and we were engaged not less than half an hour in an
+examination of the various articles impersonating "Old Put." Most
+Americans are familiar with the story of his early life and adventures,
+but I think few are aware of the fact that at one time he was a country
+landlord. Here at the Atheneum they have the very sign-board that
+attracted the traveler to "Putnam's Hotel." A life-size portrait of the
+gallant General Wolfe, who was slain while leading his army against
+Quebec, is painted on the board, which is three feet long by two and a
+half wide. Imagine now, the hero of a hundred battles and adventures,
+performing the duties of "mine host"--at once hostler, bartender and
+perhaps table girl in the dining room.
+
+The character of the man who had the ability to rise from the position
+of an humble farmer and inn-keeper to that of Senior Major-General of
+the United States armies, is an index to the character of the American
+people. Often on the battle-field were the titled nobility of Great
+Britain compelled to fly before the crushing blows of this sturdy
+yeoman, who, leaving his plow in the furrow, rushed to the field of
+danger and glory. Casting aside the habiliments of the farmer, he
+buckled on his armor and dared to lead where the bravest dared to
+follow. Israel Putman
+
+ "Sleeps the sleep that knows not breaking,"
+
+but his glorious deeds will never be forgotten while the blessings of
+liberty are appreciated by the descendants of that galaxy of devoted
+patriots who rallied around the standard of George Washington.
+
+The Deaf and Dumb Institute, situated on Asylum Hill, is the oldest
+institution of the kind in the United States, having been established in
+1817, by Rev. F. H. Gallaudet, a noble and generous philanthropist, who
+devoted his life and fortune to the elevation and enlightenment of the
+afflicted. A monument recently erected to his memory, in front of the
+Institute, attests the regard in which he is still held by those who
+revere him as their benefactor.
+
+It was my pleasure, while in Hartford, to attend a lecture in the sign
+language, by Professor D. E. Bartlett, who is reputed to be the oldest
+teacher living, and who commenced work at this institute forty years
+ago. I shall never forget my emotions as I eagerly watched sign and
+gesture, and at the same time noted its effect upon the features of each
+face in his attentive audience. What a noble mission, to thus lead these
+children of silence from the prison darkness of ignorance into the
+beautiful light of knowledge? May those who devote their lives to such a
+cause reap the rich reward which their benevolence deserves!
+
+In 1652 Hartford had the _honor_ of executing the first witch ever heard
+of in America. Her name was Mrs. Greensmith. She was accused in the
+indictment of practicing evil things on the body of Ann Cole, which did
+not appear to be true; but a certain Rev. Mr. Stone and other ministers
+swore that Greensmith had confessed to them that the devil possessed
+her, and the righteous court hung her on their indictment.
+
+What would that court have done with the spiritual manifestations rife
+in these parts to-day? It is a bitter sarcasm on our Plymouth Rock
+progenitors that, having fled from the old country on account of
+religious persecution, they should inaugurate their freedom to worship
+God on the shores of the new world by hanging witches!
+
+The leading paper of the city is the Hartford _Courant_, which is ably
+edited by General Joseph R. Hawley, and is a powerful political organ
+throughout New England. General Hawley distinguished himself during the
+late war as a brave officer, entering the army as captain and rising to
+the rank of brigadier general. The _Courant_, like its soldier-editor,
+may always be found fighting in the van.
+
+The Connecticut River at Hartford is about a quarter of a mile wide, and
+sweeps onward in a swift current, through sinuous banks, until it
+mingles with the waters of the Sound at Saybrook. The valley through
+which this river seeks a passage to the sea is one of the loveliest to
+be found anywhere, and gazing down upon it from the surrounding heights,
+as it lies veiled in blue distance, is like looking upon a dream of
+Arcadia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+LANCASTER.
+
+ First Visit to Lancaster.--Eastern Pennsylvania.--Conestoga
+ River.--Early History of Lancaster.--Early Dutch Settlers.--
+ Manufactures.--Public Buildings.--Whit-Monday.--Home of three
+ Noted Persons.--James Buchanan, his Life and Death.--Thaddeus
+ Stevens and his Burial Place.--General Reynolds and his
+ Death.--"Cemetery City."
+
+
+My first visit to Lancaster was made on a bright morning in the early
+part of April, 1877. We rode out of the West Philadelphia Depot in the
+eight o'clock accommodation, which we were told would make sixty-five
+stops in a short journey of seventy-three miles. I did not count the
+stations, but should have no hesitancy in fully indorsing my informant.
+The frequency of the halts gave us an excellent opportunity to explore
+the surrounding country, and reminded one of street-car experiences in
+metropolitan cities, where one is brought to a stand at every crossing.
+Eastern Pennsylvania is beyond question the finest section of the State;
+and the tourist who sojourns at Bryn Mawr, Downingtown, Bird-in-Hand,
+and many of their sister villages, will see abundant evidences of the
+wealth and prosperity of an industrious people. The country is
+sufficiently rolling to be picturesque, without any of the ruggedness
+which characterizes the central and western portions of the State.
+Sometimes from the car windows the roofs and spires of several villages
+may be seen in different directions, while substantial farmhouses with
+their commodious out-buildings, are on every hand. The land is brought
+to a high state of cultivation, and the entire region seems almost like
+an extensive park.
+
+Lancaster, the county-seat of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, is
+situated on the Conestoga River, seventy-three miles from Philadelphia.
+This river, which is a tributary of the Susquehanna, is made navigable
+by nine locks and slack-water pools, from Lancaster to its mouth at Safe
+Harbor, eighteen miles distant. Considerable trade is brought to the
+city by its means; while Tidewater Canal opens up navigable
+communication to Baltimore, by way of Port Deposit. Lancaster was, from
+1799 to 1812, the seat of the State government; it was incorporated in
+1818, and was at one time the principal inland town of Pennsylvania. The
+oldest turnpike in the United States terminates at Lancaster, connecting
+that city with Philadelphia. It has now something more than twenty-five
+thousand inhabitants, largely descended from the early Dutch settlers,
+whose names are still borne, and whose language, corrupted into
+"Pennsylvania Dutch," is still a most familiar one in that region.
+
+The city is principally a manufacturing one, producing locomotives,
+axes, carriages and cotton goods, and being particularly celebrated for
+its rifles. It has many fine buildings, both public and private. The
+Court House and County Prison will both attract attention, the former
+being in the Corinthian and the latter in the Norman style of
+architecture. Fulton Hall, near the Market-place, is a large edifice
+used for public assemblies. Franklin and Marshall College, organized in
+1853 by the union of Marshall College with the old Franklin College,
+founded in 1787, is found on James street, and possesses a library of
+thirteen thousand volumes. It has a large number of both daily and
+weekly newspapers, and not less than fifteen churches.
+
+Whit-Monday is by far the greatest social holiday with the Germans of
+Lancaster city and county, and, as such, is the scene of general
+festivities among the city folk and a large influx of country visitors.
+On the return of this day in Lancaster, the venders of beer, peanuts,
+colored lemonade and pop-corn are stationed at every corner, and are
+unusually clamorous and busy. The pic-nics, shows and flying horses are
+well patronized; but I am told that the scene in the public square is
+not so animated as in former days, when soap venders and the razor strop
+man monopolized the attention of the rustic lads and lasses. Public
+ceremonies have no apparent place in the observance of this anniversary.
+
+Lancaster is noted for having been the residence of three persons who
+have played an important part in the affairs of the nation: James
+Buchanan, our fifteenth President; Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, the champion
+of the slave; and General Reynolds, the gallant soldier, who fell at
+Gettysburg. These all sleep their last sleep within the city limits.
+James Buchanan, though born in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, made his
+home at Lancaster during all the years of his statesmanship, finding at
+Wheatland, his country residence, in the vicinity of the city,
+relaxation from the cares of public life. Born in 1791, in 1814 he was
+elected a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. In 1820
+he was elected Congressman, holding that position until 1831, when he
+was appointed ambassador to Russia. In 1834 he was made Senator; in 1845
+Secretary of State under President Polk, and Ambassador to England in
+1854. In 1856 he was elected President of the United States, the close
+of his administration being signalized by the secession of South
+Carolina, and the incipient steps of the Rebellion. He died at his home
+at Wheatland, in Lancaster, on June first, 1868.
+
+The remains of Thaddeus Stevens, for so many years one of the most
+fearless champions of the anti-slavery cause in Congress, lie buried in
+"Schreiner's Cemetery," in a quiet and retired corner at the side
+furthest from its entrance on West Chestnut street. An exceedingly plain
+stone, with a simple but expressive inscription, tells the stranger the
+date of his birth and death, and the reasons which led him to request
+that his remains should be laid in this, the most unpretentious cemetery
+I have ever seen within the limits of any city. The word Stevens is
+clearly cut in large letters on the west end of the stone. On the
+opposite end I noticed a gilt star. On the north side is the following
+inscription:--
+
+ "THADDEUS STEVENS,
+ BORN AT DANVILLE, CALEDONIA CO., VERMONT,
+ APRIL 4TH, 1792.
+ DIED AT WASHINGTON, D. C,
+ AUGUST 11TH, 1868."
+
+On the south side of the monument are found these words:--
+
+ "I repose in this quiet and secluded spot,
+ Not from any natural preference for solitude,
+ But finding other cemeteries limited as to race,
+ By charter rules,
+ I have chosen this that I might illustrate in my death
+ The principles which I advocated through a long life:
+ Equality of man before his Creator."
+
+General Reynolds was among the first to fall at the battle of
+Gettysburg. On the evening of June thirtieth, 1863, while commanding the
+First, Third and Eleventh Corps of the Army of the Potomac, he encamped
+near the village of Emmetsburg, Maryland. He was ordered by General
+Meade to move early in the morning, with his First and Third Corps, in
+the direction of Gettysburg. The Third Cavalry Division, under General
+John Buford, was attacked on Wednesday morning, on the Chambersburg
+pike, about two miles west of the village, by the vanguard of the Rebel
+army, which, however, were driven back upon their reserves, but advanced
+again and, with greatly augmented numbers, drove the Union troops before
+them. General Wadsworth, hearing the sound of the conflict, came up with
+his men and seized the range of hills in the direction of Chambersburg,
+overlooking the battle ground from the northwest. While Wadsworth was
+getting into position, Reynolds rode forward, unattended, to gain an
+idea of the position and numbers of the enemy. He discovered a heavy
+force not far distant, in a grove, and, while reconnoitring through his
+field-glass, one of the enemy's sharpshooters took aim at him, with
+fatal effect. He fell to the ground, never to rise again. He was a brave
+and dauntless soldier, who had already won such distinction on the
+battlefield that few were entrusted with as heavy responsibilities as
+he. Had his life been prolonged, no doubt he would have been promoted
+still higher, and his name might have been written among those of the
+successful generals of the war. His ashes repose at Lancaster, where due
+honor is done them.
+
+Lancaster might not inappropriately be called the Cemetery City, for
+every principal street seems to lead to a cemetery. Here, in these
+cities of the dead, lie those who have passed away for many generations
+back. Numerous venerable stones record, in Dutch, the names and virtues
+of Herrs and Fraus who lived and died in the last century, while more
+modern tombstones and monuments are erected over the later dead. Few
+places are more interesting to one who would study a people and their
+history, than an old graveyard; and few cities furnish the visitor more
+numerous or better opportunities than Lancaster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MILWAUKEE.
+
+ Rapid Development of the Northwest.--The "West" Forty Years
+ Ago.--Milwaukee and its Commerce and Manufactures.--Grain
+ Elevators.--Harbor.--Divisions of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Northwestern National Asylum for Disabled
+ Soldiers.--German Population.--Influence and Results of German
+ Immigration.--Bank Riot in 1862.--Ancient Tumuli.--Mound
+ Builders.--Mounds Near Milwaukee.--Significance of Same.--Early
+ Traders.--Foundation of the City in 1835.--Excelling Chicago in
+ 1870.--Population and Commerce in 1880.
+
+
+There is no more astonishing fact connected with the history of our
+country than the rapid settlement of the Northwest, the development of
+its vast agricultural and mineral resources, and the almost magical
+growth of towns and cities along the margins of its lakes and rivers. A
+person who has not passed middle age can remember when the "West"
+indicated Indiana and Illinois, which were reached by the emigrant after
+many days of weary travel in his own rude-covered wagon, and before
+starting on his journey to which he bade kindred and friends a solemn
+adieu, scarcely hoping to meet them again in this world. Then the
+present great trade centres of the west were mere villages, with
+ambitious aspirations, it is true, but contending for a successful
+future against fearful odds. A man who has reached threescore and ten
+can remember when most of these towns and cities had no existence save
+as Indian trading posts, and when most of the country west of the
+Mississippi was as yet unexplored and regarded either as a desert waste
+or a howling wilderness. Only the brave Jesuit missionaries had at that
+period dared the perils of something even more dangerous than a frontier
+life, and established missions throughout the Northwest, on the sites of
+what are to-day thriving towns.
+
+But the genius and daring of the Anglo-Saxon race have changed all this.
+Civilization has impressed itself so deeply on our Northwestern
+territory, that were it, by any unfortunate contingency, destroyed or
+removed to-day, it would take longer time to obliterate its footprints
+than it has required to make them.
+
+Among the cities of the West remarkable for rapid growth, Milwaukee, on
+the western bank of Lake Michigan, is especially prominent. First
+settled in 1835, and not chartered as a city until 1846, she has made
+such rapid strides in both population and commerce, that in 1880 her
+inhabitants numbered 115,578, and in 1870 she claimed the rank of the
+fourth city in the Union in marine commerce, a rank which she has since
+lost, not by any backward steps on her own part, but because of the
+sudden and astonishing development of other cities.
+
+A rival of Chicago, Milwaukee shares with that city the commerce of the
+lakes, and is connected by steamboats with many points on the opposite
+side of Lake Michigan and with more distant ports. She is the lake
+terminus of a large number of railroads which drain an agricultural
+region of great extent and fertility; while her nearness to the copper
+mines of Lake Superior and the inexhaustible iron mines distant but from
+forty to fifty miles to the northward, contribute to make her a
+manufacturing centre. A single establishment for the manufacture of
+railroad iron was established, at a cost of a million of dollars. She
+has other iron works, and manufactures machinery, agricultural
+implements, car wheels and steam boilers, large quantities of tobacco
+and cigars; furnishes the Northwest with furniture, and has extensive
+pork packing establishments, while the products of her flouring mills
+and lager beer breweries find markets in every quarter of the United
+States, and have a reputation all their own. The rolling mill of the
+North Chicago Rolling Mill Company is one of the most extensive in the
+West.
+
+As a grain depot, Milwaukee takes high rank. There are six immense
+elevators within the limits of the city, with a united capacity of
+3,450,000 bushels; the largest one, the grain elevator of the Milwaukee
+and St. Paul Railroad, being one of the largest on the continent, and
+having a storage capacity of 1,500,000 bushels. The flour mills of E.
+Sanderson & Company have a daily capacity of one thousand barrels of
+flour.
+
+The harbor of Milwaukee is the best on the south or west shore of Lake
+Michigan. It is formed by the mouth of the Milwaukee River, and the
+largest lake boat can ascend it for two miles, to the heart of the city,
+at which point the Menomonee River unites with the Milwaukee. The course
+of the Milwaukee River is nearly due south, while that of the Menomonee
+is nearly due west; and by these two rivers and their united stream
+after their junction, the city is divided into three very nearly equal
+districts, which are severally known as the East, being that portion of
+the city between the Milwaukee River and Lake Michigan; the West, that
+portion included between the two rivers; and the South, or the territory
+south of them both. The city embraces an area of seventeen square miles,
+and is laid out with the regularity characteristic of western cities.
+The business quarter lies in a sort of hollow in the neighborhood of the
+two rivers, whose shores are lined with wharves. The East and West
+portions of the city are chiefly occupied by residences, the former
+being upon a high bluff, overlooking the lake, and the latter upon a
+still higher bluff west of the river.
+
+Milwaukee is known as the "Cream City of the Lakes," this name being
+derived from the cream-colored brick of which many of the buildings are
+constructed. It gives to the streets a peculiarly light and cheerful
+aspect. The whole architectural appearance of the city is one of
+primness rather than of grandeur, which might not inappropriately
+suggest for it the name of the "Quaker City of the West." The residence
+streets are shaded by avenues of trees, which add to the cheerful beauty
+of the town. The principal hotels and retail stores are found upon East
+Water street, Wisconsin street and Second avenue, which are all three
+wide and handsome thoroughfares. The United States Custom House stands
+on the corner of Wisconsin and Milwaukee streets, and is the finest
+public building in the city. It is of Athens stone, and contains the
+Post Office and United States Courts. The County Court House is also a
+striking edifice. The Opera House, used for theatrical purposes, is
+worthy of mention; while the Academy of Music, which was erected in
+1864, by the German Musical Society, at a cost of $65,000, has an
+elegant auditorium, seating two thousand three hundred persons. The
+Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. John, and the new Baptist Church, are
+fine church edifices, but the finest which the city contains is the
+Immanual Presbyterian Church. A Free Public Library possesses a
+collection of fourteen thousand volumes, and a well-supplied reading
+room. Several banking houses have imposing buildings. The most prominent
+among the educational institutions of the city is the Milwaukee Female
+College, which was finished in 1873. There are three Orphan Asylums, a
+Home for the Friendless, and two Hospitals. One of the chief points of
+interest to the visitor is the Northwestern National Asylum for disabled
+soldiers, which furnishes excellent accommodation for from seven hundred
+to eight hundred inmates. It is an immense brick edifice, located three
+miles from the city, in the midst of grounds four hundred and
+twenty-five acres in extent, more than half of which is under
+cultivation, and the remainder laid out as a park. The institution has a
+reading room, and a library of two thousand five hundred volumes, for
+the use and benefit of its patriot guests.
+
+No one who visits Milwaukee can fail to be struck with the semi-foreign
+appearance of the city. Breweries are multiplied throughout its streets,
+lager beer saloons abound, beer gardens, with their flowers and music
+and cleanly arbor-shaded tables, attract the tired and thirsty in
+various quarters. German music halls, gasthausen, and restaurants are
+found everywhere, and German signs are manifest over many doors. One
+hears German spoken upon the streets quite as often as English, and
+Teuton influence upon the political and social life of the city is
+everywhere seen and felt. Germans constitute nearly one-half the entire
+population of Milwaukee, and have impressed their character upon the
+people and the city itself in other ways than socially. Steady-going
+plodders, with their love for music and flowers, they have yet no keen
+taste for display, and every time choose the substantial rather than the
+ornamental. Milwaukee is a sort of rendezvous for the Scandinavian
+emigrants, who are pouring in like a mighty tide to fill up the States
+of Wisconsin and Minnesota. Danes and Swedes, and especially Norwegians,
+stop here, and it may be, linger for a longer or shorter period, before
+they strike out into the, to them, unknown country which is to be their
+future home. Domestic service is largely supplied by the Norwegians, who
+prove themselves honest, industrious and capable.
+
+This mighty influx of the Germanic and Scandinavian races into our
+Northwest is certain to produce a permanent impression upon the social
+condition of those States. Yet our system of government is adapted to
+the successful management of such immigration. It cannot, perhaps, do so
+much with the immigrants themselves. Many of them intelligent, but more
+of them ignorant and stupid, they remain foreign in their habits and
+ideas to the end of their lives. But it makes citizens of their sons,
+trains them up with an understanding of democratic institutions, gives
+them an education, for the most part, forces them to acquire our
+language, and instead of making them a separate class, recognizes them
+as an undivided part of the whole population. In brief, it Americanizes
+them, and though habits and traits of character and race still cling to
+them in some degree, their original nationality is soon lost in the
+great cosmopolitan tide of civilized humanity which swells and surges
+around them. Different races intermarry and blend, and form a composite
+of personnel and character which is fast becoming individualized and
+recognized as the type of the true American. After a few generations but
+little remains save the patronymic to remind the descendants of these
+immigrants of their original descent.
+
+Wherever the German race has settled it has taken substantial prosperity
+with it. The members of that race have proved themselves honest,
+industrious, and preëminently loyal. To the "Dutch" St. Louis owed her
+own modified loyalty during the late civil war. The German element of
+Cincinnati also turned the tide of popular sentiment in favor of the
+North, and secured for that city, during war times, an immunity from
+disturbance, and a prosperity unexampled during her previous history.
+They bring with them not only thrift, but an appreciation for the
+refining arts which is not found in any other class of immigrants. The
+German quarter of a city may nearly always be discovered by the
+abundance of flowers in windows and balconies, and growing thriftily in
+secluded courts. The German better appreciates his beer when sipped in
+the midst of natural beauties, and to the sound of music. To this
+music-loving characteristic of her German population Milwaukee owes her
+finest music hall, the Academy of Music already described. They are not
+quick of thought, but even their stolidity, when it is offset and
+modified by the almost supernatural sharpness and quickness of wit of
+other nationalities which also look to America as a refuge from
+oppression, produces a useful counter-balance, and the offspring of the
+two will be apt to possess stability of character with intellectual
+alertness. The Germans have their faults, undoubtedly, but they are less
+obnoxious than those of some other classes of immigrants, and when
+modified often become virtues.
+
+Milwaukee, since her existence as a city, has had a comparatively
+uneventful history. She has not been ravaged by flood, like Cincinnati,
+nor by fire, like Chicago, nor by pestilence, like Memphis, nor by
+famine, like many cities in the old world. She has moved on in the even
+tenor of her way, increasing her commerce and adding to her industries,
+perfecting her school system and enlarging her own domain. The only
+disturbance which is recorded against her in the chronicles of her
+existence, occurred in June, 1862, when there was a riot, in consequence
+of the rejection, by the bankers of Milwaukee, of the notes of most of
+the banks of the State. The banks of Wisconsin being governed, at that
+time, by a free banking law, modeled, in a great measure, after that of
+New York, had purchased largely the bonds of different Southern States,
+and deposited them with the State Comptroller as a security for their
+issues, the bonds of said States usually being lower than those of the
+Northern States. When the Southern States withdrew from the Union there
+was, in consequence, a rapid reduction of the value of these securities,
+and an equally rapid depreciation of the value of the bank notes based
+upon them. Their issues were finally curtailed, occasioning severe loss
+and great bitterness of feeling on the part of those who held them. The
+riot consequent on this state of affairs resulted in a considerable
+destruction of property, though no lives were lost. It was finally
+quelled by the State authorities.
+
+Of the original inhabitants of Wisconsin, we have no knowledge whatever.
+The only traces they have left of their existence are numerous ancient
+mounds or tumuli, which are scattered at various points all over the
+State. Their antiquity is attested by the fact that trees of four
+hundred years' growth are found standing upon them. Discoveries in the
+Lake Superior copper regions, of mines which had once been worked, over
+which trees of a like age were growing, seem to indicate that the same
+people raised the mounds and worked the mines. In all probability their
+antiquity extends further backward than this. The Indians, improperly
+called the aborigines, have no traditions concerning the construction of
+these mounds, which are evidently none of their handiwork, but belong to
+a race which has been supplanted and disappeared from the globe. The
+similarity of these mounds to those discovered in Central America leads
+to the conclusion that they were both the work of one and the same race;
+but whether they were constructed as tombs or as places for altars,
+there is a division of opinion. Those in Central America were evidently
+once surmounted by temples or places of worship and sacrifice.
+
+These mounds vary in size, shape and height. At Prairie du Chien one of
+the largest of these tumuli was leveled to furnish a site for Fort
+Crawford. It was circular in form, having a base of some two hundred
+feet, and was twenty feet high. The circular form is the most common in
+those mounds, although there are many different shapes. Some appear like
+wells, inclosing an open space; others like breastworks with angles;
+still others have a space through them, as if they formed a sort of
+gateway. On the dividing ridge between the Mississippi and Wisconsin
+rivers mounds are found in the form of birds with their wings and tails
+spread; of deer, rabbits and other animals. One even bears a marked
+resemblance to an elephant. There are also a few mounds representing a
+man lying on his face. They are three or four feet high at the highest
+points, rounding over the sides.
+
+One of the most singular characteristics of these mounds is that they
+seem invariably to be composed of earth brought from a greater or less
+distance. The surface of the surrounding ground usually comes up to the
+base of the mound in a smooth level, when it does not already possess a
+natural elevation; but there is no evidence of the ground anywhere in
+the neighborhood having been disturbed to furnish the earth for their
+construction. In some instances the soil of these tumuli is of an
+actually different character, the like of which has not been discovered
+within several miles of the mounds.
+
+These antiquities constitute the only mementos and annals transmitted to
+us, of the mysterious race which once peopled our western territory, and
+extended as far east as the shores of the Ohio, as far north as the
+great lakes, and westward and southward to Central America. It seems a
+pity that no systematic effort has been made to perpetuate them, if not
+for the benefit of future generations whose interest and curiosity
+should be excited at beholding them, at least out of a consideration for
+the unknown race whose work they are, and as enduring monuments to whose
+numbers and industry they have remained up to the present time, when all
+else has perished. The plow, the hoe and the spade, those iconoclastic
+weapons of civilization, are fast effacing them from the surface of the
+country. When the plow once breaks the sod which has covered them and
+preserved their form, the wind and rain each lend speedy assistance to
+the work of destruction, and but a few years will elapse before most of
+them will have disappeared altogether, and the places which have known
+them for untold centuries will know them no more forever.
+
+It is a fact worthy of mention that these mounds have most frequently
+been found on sites selected for modern towns and cities, as though
+ancients and moderns alike had instinctively chosen for their abiding
+places those localities most favored by nature for the uses of man.
+Numerous earthworks about Milwaukee attest the favor in which the
+locality of that city was held by this pre-historic race. These works
+extend from Kinnickinnic Creek, near the "Indian Fields," where they are
+most abundant, to a point six miles above the city. They occupy high
+grounds near but not in immediate proximity to the lake and streams, and
+are most varied in their form, while many are of large extent. They are
+chiefly from one hundred to four hundred feet in diameter, and represent
+turtles, lizards, birds, the otter and buffalo, while a number have the
+form of a war club. Occasionally, a mound is elevated so as to overlook
+or command many others, as though it was a sort of high or superior
+altar for the observance of religious or sacrificial rites. Milwaukee is
+to be commended for her failure to manifest that spirit of modern
+vandalism which, in other sections, has sacrificed the relics of a
+by-gone age and people to the fancied utility of civilization. The
+Forest Home Cemetery incloses a number of these mounds, and so they are
+preserved for the benefit of the antiquary and curiosity seeker. We
+trust she will continue to cherish sacredly these few monuments left as
+the sole legacy of the ancient inhabitants of the West.
+
+The early Indian name of the river upon which the city of Milwaukee now
+stands was Mellcoki. So says one tradition. Another gives the name as
+Man-a-wau-kee, from the name of a valuable medicinal root known as
+Man-wau; hence, the land or place of the Man-wau. Still another gives
+the Indian name as Me-ne-wau-kee---a rich or beautiful land. The Indians
+had a village on the site of the present city. The Milwaukee tribe were
+troublesome and difficult to manage. About the first trader who ventured
+to establish a post among them was Alexander Laframboise, who came from
+Mackinaw and located on the spot previous to or about 1785. This trading
+post, having been mismanaged, was discontinued about 1800, and another
+soon took its place. A succession of trading posts and fur stations
+followed, until about 1818, when Solomon Juneau, a Frenchman,
+established himself there permanently, with a little colony of
+half-breeds, who built themselves log cabins on the banks of the stream,
+two miles from the lake, near the junction of the Menomonee. Below them,
+on the river flats, where now extend the business streets of the city,
+the low marshy ground was overgrown by tall reeds and rushes, while away
+back from the river stretched the boundless prairie. The place was
+known, thenceforth, as Juneau's Settlement. This settlement gradually
+attracted, first, other traders, and finally immigrants. In 1825 it was
+still nothing more than a trading station, but ten years later it had
+become a settlement and called itself a town, taking the name of
+Milwaukee, from the river upon which it was built.
+
+Chicago had already begun her marvelous growth, and was at that very
+time extending herself to extraordinary dimensions--on paper. The little
+town of Milwaukee had then no thought of rivalry, but was content to
+plod along for eleven years more before it received its city charter. By
+1850 its growth had been remarkable, and it numbered more than twenty
+thousand inhabitants. In 1860 it had more than doubled this population,
+recording over forty-five thousand inhabitants, and in 1870 it had
+almost doubled again, the census reporting more than seventy-one
+thousand persons for that year. In the same year Milwaukee received
+18,466,167 bushels of wheat, actually exceeding Chicago by about a
+million of bushels. The shipments of wheat the same year were 16,027,780
+bushels, and of flour 1,225,340 barrels. Her exports for that year also
+included butter, hops, lumber, wool and shingles, of all which
+commodities she shipped immense quantities. From 1870 to 1880 the
+increase of population and commerce was equally astonishing, while her
+manufactures had grown in like proportion.
+
+The vast lumber regions to the northwest help to build up her business;
+new towns which spring up throughout the State become tributary to her;
+and the farms which are multiplying in that fertile region send a share
+of their products to find a gateway through her to the eastern markets
+and to Europe. She divides with Chicago the trade which, by means of the
+great lakes and the great railway trunk lines, is busy going to and fro
+in the land, from east to west and from west to east. When the Northern
+Pacific Railway furnishes a continuous route of travel and freight
+between Lake Superior and the Northern Pacific States, the business of
+Milwaukee will be naturally augmented. But her future prosperity depends
+largely upon the prosperity of the agricultural population which
+surrounds her, which fills her elevators and warehouses, and furnishes
+freight for her boats with its products, and has need of her
+manufactures in return. And thus we see illustrated the fundamental
+principle of political economy, that that which concerns one must
+concern all; that one class or section of people cannot suffer without
+affecting in some degree all classes and sections. All are
+interdependent, and all must stand or fall together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+MONTREAL.
+
+ Thousand Islands.--Long Sault Rapids.--Lachine Rapids.--Victoria
+ Bridge.--Mont Rčal.--Early History of Montreal.--Its Shipping
+ Interests.--Quays.--Manufactures.--Population.--Roman Catholic
+ Supremacy.--Churches.--Nunneries.--Hospitals.--Colleges.--
+ Streets.--Public Buildings.--Victoria Skating Rink.--
+ Sleighing.--Early Disasters.--Points of Interest.--The
+ "Canucks."
+
+
+The traveler who visits Montreal should, if possible, make his approach
+to that city by a descent of the St. Lawrence River, that he may become
+acquainted with some of the most beautiful scenery in America. Leaving
+Kingston, at the outlet of Lake Ontario, he will wind his way through
+the mazes of the Thousand Islands, which will seem to him as if
+belonging to an enchanted country. These islands, situated at the head
+of the St. Lawrence, extend down the river for a distance of thirty
+miles, and are innumerable and of every size and shape. Wolf Island,
+about fifteen miles in length, is the largest; while some of the
+smallest seem like mere flower-pots rising out of the water, with but a
+single plant. They are most picturesque in appearance, their rocky
+foundations being veiled and softened by the trees and shrubbery which
+cover them. In past ages mythology would have made these islands the
+sacred abodes of the gods, and peopled their woods and dells with nymphs
+and fauns, while the intervening channels would have been presided over
+by naiads. A little more than a generation ago, a single inhabitant, a
+freebooter, who levied toll upon the passers up and down the river, and
+who concealed his ill-gotten booty in his numerous lurking-places in the
+islands, turned this terrestrial paradise into a pirate's den. To-day
+the Thousand Islands have become famous summer resorts for the denizens
+of our northern cities; and large and small are studded with attractive
+cottages and imposing villas; while nature, already so beautiful in its
+wild state, has been trained into the tamer beauty of modern landscape
+gardening.
+
+Beyond the islands the majestic St. Lawrence rolls on until it reaches
+the rapids, celebrated in song by Thomas Moore. Here the river narrows,
+and the current rushes impetuously over and between the rocks which jut
+from its bottom; while the pilot, with watchfulness and skill, guides
+the boat through the treacherous channel, and lands her safely in the
+smoother waters beyond. These rapids are known as the Long Sault Rapids,
+and are nine miles in length. A raft will drift this whole distance in
+forty minutes. The passage of boats down these rapids was considered
+impossible until 1840, when the famous Indian pilot, Teronhiahéré, after
+watching the course of rafts down the stream, attempted it, and
+discovered a safe channel for steamboats. Many of the pilots are still
+Indians, who exhibit great skill and courage in the undertaking. There
+has never yet been a fatal accident in shooting these rapids. The
+Cornwall Canal, eleven miles long, permits vessels to go around the
+rapids in ascending the river.
+
+The Lachine Rapids, nine miles above Montreal, although the shortest,
+are the most dangerous. It is easy enough to descend these rapids, if
+one is not particular as to results; but it is difficult enough to
+descend them safely. The faint-hearted had better commit themselves to
+the more placid waters of the canal, or take to the railroad. But to the
+brave traveler there is a certain exhilaration in thus toying with and
+conquering danger. The rapids fairly passed, one can distinguish the
+long line and graceful archways of the Victoria Bridge, and the towers
+and spires of Montreal.
+
+Montreal is on an island thirty-two miles in length, and with a width at
+its widest of ten miles. It is at the junction of the St. Lawrence and
+Ottawa, both of them noble rivers, and is connected with the mainland by
+two bridges, one of them spanning the Ottawa by a series of immense
+arches; and the other, the Victoria bridge, thrown across the St.
+Lawrence. The length of the latter bridge is nearly two miles. It rests
+upon twenty-three piers and two abutments of solid masonry, the central
+span being three hundred and thirty feet long. Its total cost was about
+$6,300,000. It was formally opened to the public by the Prince of Wales,
+on the occasion of his visit to America during the summer of 1860. The
+railway track runs through an iron tube, twenty-two feet high and
+sixteen feet wide. The river rolls nearly a hundred feet below, in
+summer a sweeping flood, and in winter a sort of glacier, the ice masses
+piled and heaped upon one another, as they have been upheaved or hurled
+in the contentions between the current and the frost-king.
+
+The city of Montreal is distinctly outlined against Mount Royal or Mont
+Rčal, which rises back of it, its edifices showing dark and gray, except
+where the sun catches its numerous tin roofs, making them glitter like
+burnished steel. It takes its name from Mont Rčal, the mountain already
+referred to, which closes it in on one side, and rises seven hundred and
+fifty feet above the river. Its eastern suburb, still known as
+Hochelaga, was the site of an Indian village when it was discovered, in
+1535, by Jacques Cartier, and this explorer it was who gave the name to
+the mountain. In 1642, just one hundred and fifty years after the
+discovery of America, it was settled by the French, retaining its Indian
+name for a century later, when that appellation was replaced by the
+French one of "Ville Marie." In 1761 the city came into the possession
+of the British, and received its present name. In 1775 it was captured
+by the Americans under General Montgomery, and held by them until the
+following summer.
+
+Montreal was, under both French and British rule, an outpost of Quebec
+until 1832, when it became a separate port. The shallower parts of the
+river being deepened above Quebec, Montreal became accessible to boats
+drawing from nineteen to twenty-two feet of water. It is now the chief
+shipping port of Canada. It is five hundred miles from the sea, and
+ninety miles above tidewater; and being at the head of ship navigation
+of the St. Lawrence, and at the foot of the great chain of inland lakes,
+rivers and canals which connect it with the very centre of the American
+continent, its commerce is very important. At the confluence of the
+Ottawa with the St. Lawrence, it is also the outlet of a vast lumber
+country. It feels, however, the serious disadvantage of being, for five
+months in the year, blockaded, and made, to all intents and purposes, an
+inland city, by the closing of navigation during the winter. Then, by
+means of the Grand Trunk and other railways, it becomes tributary to
+Portland, Maine, and finds, at that city, a port for its commerce. Its
+two miles of quays, including the locks and stone-cut wharves of the
+Lachine Canal, all built of solid limestone, would do credit to any city
+in the world; while a broad wall or esplanade extends between these
+quays and the houses which overlook the river. Montreal takes a front
+rank in its manufacturing interests, which embrace all kinds of
+agricultural and mechanical implements, steam engines, printing types,
+India-rubber shoes, paper, furniture, woolens, cordage and flour. In
+1874 its exports were valued at over twenty-two millions of dollars.
+
+The population of Montreal in 1779 was only about seven thousand
+inhabitants. In 1861 it had increased to 70,323; and in 1871 the census
+returns made the population 115,926. Of these inhabitants, probably more
+than one-half are Roman Catholics, representing a great variety of
+nationalities, among which, however, French Canadians and Irish
+predominate. The Catholics were, at first, under French dominion, in
+exclusive possession of the city, and the different religious societies
+gained vast wealth. Ever since Canada has passed into the hands of
+England they still hold their own, and exercise an influence over the
+people, and display a magnificence in their edifices and appointments,
+unknown in other sections of America.
+
+No city of the same size in the United States has such splendid
+churches. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of Notre Dame, fronting on the
+Place d'Armes, is the largest on the continent. It is two hundred and
+forty-one feet in length, by one hundred and thirty-five feet in width,
+and is capable of seating more than ten thousand persons. It is a
+massive structure, built of stone, in the Gothic style with a tower at
+each corner, and one in the middle of each flank, numbering six in all.
+The towers on the main front are two hundred and twelve feet high, and
+furnish to visitors a magnificent view of the city. In one of these
+towers is a fine chime of bells, the largest of which, the "Gros
+Bourdon," weighs twenty-nine thousand four hundred pounds. But as large
+as is this cathedral, it will be surpassed in size by the Cathedral of
+St. Peter, now in process of erection at the corner of Dorchester and
+Cemetery streets, and built after the general plan of St. Peter's at
+Rome. This cathedral will be three hundred feet long by two hundred and
+twenty-five feet wide at the transepts, and will be surmounted by five
+domes, the largest of which will be two hundred and fifty feet in
+height, supported on four piers and thirty-two Corinthian columns. The
+vestibule alone will be two hundred feet long by thirty feet wide, and
+will be fronted by a portico, surmounted by colossal statues of the
+Apostles. It will, when completed, be by far the finest and largest
+church edifice in America. St Patrick's Church at the west end of
+Lagauchčre street, is noticeable for its handsome Gothic windows of
+stained glass, and will seat five thousand persons. The Church of the
+Gesü, in Blewry street, has the finest interior in the city, the vast
+nave, seventy-five feet in height, being bordered by rich composite
+columns, and the walls and ceilings beautifully frescoed.
+
+The Roman Catholic churches undoubtedly exceed in size and number those
+of the Protestants, though some of the latter are worthy of note. Christ
+Church Cathedral--Episcopal, in St. Catherine street, is the most
+perfect specimen of English Gothic architecture in America. It is built
+of rough Montreal stone, with Caen stone facings, cruciform, and
+surmounted by a spire two hundred and twenty-four feet high. St.
+Andrew's Church--Presbyterian, in Radegonde street, is a fine specimen
+of Gothic architecture, being an imitation, on a reduced scale, of
+Salisbury Cathedral. Zion Church--Independent, in Radegonde street, near
+Victoria Square, was the scene of the riot and loss of life on the
+occasion of Gavazzi's lecture in 1852.
+
+Like Quebec, Montreal is famous for its nunneries. The Gray Nunnery,
+founded in 1692, for the care of lunatics and children, is situated in
+Dorchester street. This nunnery owns Nun's Island, in Lake St. Louis,
+above Montreal, once an Indian burial ground, but now in a high state of
+cultivation. In Notre Dame street, near the Place d'Armes, is the Black
+or Congregational Nunnery, which dates from 1659, and is devoted to the
+education of girls. At Hochelaga is the Convent of the Holy Name of
+Mary. The Hôtel Dieu, founded in 1644, for the cure of the sick, and St.
+Patrick's Hospital, are both under the charge of the Sisters of St.
+Joseph. The Christian Brothers have control of numerous schools, and
+render material aid to morality and religion. The Seminary of St.
+Sulspice is a large and stately building, devoted to the education of
+Catholic priests. Nuns and priests are familiar objects upon the
+streets, and not always a welcome sight to the Protestant eye;
+nevertheless, the good works in which they engage are numerous and not
+to be undervalued.
+
+The number of hospitals, scientific institutions, libraries,
+reading-rooms, schools and universities of Montreal is remarkable. Many
+of them are under Catholic control, and all are worthy of a highly
+civilized and prosperous community. First among the educational
+institutions of the city is McGill College, founded by a bequest of the
+Hon. James McGill, in 1811, and erected into a university, by royal
+charter, in 1821. It is beautifully situated at the base of Mount Royal,
+and, besides a large corps of able professors, possesses one of the
+finest museums in the country.
+
+Montreal is a beautiful city. Its public buildings are constructed of
+solid stone, in which a handsome limestone, found in the neighborhood,
+predominates. Its churches, banks, hospitals and colleges are all
+edifices of which to be proud. Its private dwellings are, a majority of
+them, substantially built, while many of the roofs, cupolas and spires
+are covered with metal, which, seen at a distance, glitters in the sun.
+The most elegant private residences are found upon the slope of Mont
+Rčal, surrounded by ample grounds containing fine lawns, trees and
+shrubbery. From these hillside residences the scenery is most lovely,
+looking over a panorama of city, river and country, with the blue tops
+of the mountain ranges of New York, Vermont and New Hampshire plainly
+perceptible on clear days.
+
+St. Paul street is the chief commercial thoroughfare, and extends nearly
+parallel to the river, but a square or two back from it, the whole
+length of the city. Commissioner street faces the quays and monopolizes
+much of the wholesale trade. McGill, St. James and Notre Dame are also
+important business streets. Great St. James and Notre Dame streets are
+the fashionable promenades, while Catherine, Dorchester and Sherbrook
+streets contain the finest private residences. At the intersection of
+McGill and St. James streets, in a small public square, called Victoria
+Square, is a fountain and a bronze statue of Queen Victoria. A number of
+fine buildings surround this square, prominent among which are the
+Albert buildings and the beautiful Gothic structure of the Young Men's
+Christian Association.
+
+Bontecour's Market, a spacious stone edifice in the Doric style, is one
+of the handsomest buildings in the city. It fronts the river at the
+corner of St. Paul and Water streets, is three stories high, surmounted
+by a dome, from which the view is exceptionally fine. The new City Hall,
+at the head of Jacques Cartier Square, containing the offices of the
+various civil and corporate functionaries, is an elegant structure,
+spacious and perfect in all its appointments. The Court House, in Notre
+Dame street, is three hundred feet long by one hundred and twenty-five
+feet wide, in the Doric style, and erected at a cost of over three
+hundred thousand dollars. It includes a law library of six thousand
+volumes. Back of it is the Champs de Mars, a fine military parade
+ground. The Custom House is between St. Paul street and the river, on
+the site of an old market-place, and is a massive structure with a fine
+tower. The Post Office is an elegant building near the Place d'Armes, in
+great St. James street. In the Place d'Armes, is the Bank of Montreal
+and the City Bank, Masonic Hall, the headquarters of the Masons of
+Canada, and several other of the principal banks of the city. Mechanics'
+Institute, in great St. James street, though plain externally, has an
+elaborately decorated lecture room. The principal hotels are the
+Windsor, in Dorchester street, one of the finest of its kind in America;
+the St. Lawrence, in Great St. James street; the Ottawa House, corner of
+St. James and Notre Dame streets; Montreal House, in Custom House
+Square; the Richelieu Hotel, and the Albion.
+
+One of the principal points of attraction in both winter and summer is
+the Victoria Skating Rink, in Dominion Square. This extensive building
+is used during the milder months of the year for horticultural shows,
+concerts and miscellaneous gatherings. In the winter the doors of this
+place are thronged with a crowd of sleighs and sleigh drivers, while
+inside, skaters and spectators form a living, moving panorama, pleasant
+to look upon. The place is lighted by gas, and men and women, old and
+young, with a plentiful sprinkling of children, on skates, are
+practicing all sorts of gyrations. The ladies are prettily and
+appropriately dressed in skating costumes, and some of them are
+proficient in the art of skating. The spectators sit or stand on a
+raised ledge around the ice parallelogram, while the skaters dart off,
+singly or in pairs, executing quadrilles, waltzes, curves, straight
+lines, letters, labyrinths, and every conceivable figure. Now and then
+some one comes to grief in the surging, moving throng; but is quickly on
+his or her feet again, the ice and water shaken off, and the zigzag
+resumed. Children skate; boys and girls; ladies and gentlemen, and even
+dignified military officers. Some skate well, some medium, some
+shockingly ill; but all skate, or essay to do so. It is the grand
+Montrealese pastime, and though the ice is sloppy, and the air chill and
+heavy with moisture, everybody has a good time.
+
+There is one other amusement of the public, and that is sleighing. The
+winter in the latitude of Montreal is long and cold, and sometimes the
+snow falls to a depth of several feet, lying upon the ground for
+months. When winter settles down upon the city, the river freezes over,
+leaving the island an island no longer, but making it part and parcel of
+the surrounding continent. Then the people wrap themselves in furs and
+betake themselves to their sleighs, and glide swiftly along the
+well-beaten roads, between the white drifts. Vehicles of every
+description, from the most elegant appointed sleigh down to the rough
+box sled, are seen upon the road, and the jingle of bells is everywhere
+heard, as the sledges follow, pass and repass one another on the snowy
+track. Ladies closely wrapped in furs and veils, and their cavaliers in
+fur caps with flaps brought closely around ears and chin, alike bid
+defiance to the temperature, which is not infrequently in the
+neighborhood of zero; and the blood seems to course more quickly for the
+keenness of the atmosphere.
+
+During its long history, Montreal has had disasters as well as
+successes. Something over a hundred years after its founding as a French
+colony it was nearly destroyed by fire, and a little later it became a
+favorite point of attack during the two American wars. But to-day it is
+the most thriving city of the British provinces. It has pushed its
+railway communications with great energy, and so long as peace is
+maintained between Canada and the United States it will continue to
+prosper. In the event of war, the city lies in an exposed position, and
+during the winter its only outlet, by rail to Portland, would be cut
+off.
+
+The Nelson Monument in Jacques Cartier Square, and near it the old
+Government House, will prove objects of interest to the visitor, though
+the former is in somewhat of a dilapidated condition. The city is
+supplied with water by works which are situated a mile or so above it,
+in the midst of beautiful scenery. Mount Royal Cemetery is two miles
+from the city, on the northern slope of the mountain. One of the most
+beautiful views in the neighborhood of Montreal is the famous around the
+mountain drive, nine miles in length, and passing by Mount Royal Park.
+
+First settled by the French, their descendants, the French Canadians,
+form a considerable proportion of the population of Montreal. But
+whatever they may have been in the past, they have degenerated into an
+illiterate, unenterprising people. The English, Irish and Scotch, who
+during the past century have been emigrating to Canada in such numbers,
+have monopolized most of the business, and have rescued Montreal, as
+well as Lower Canada generally, from a stagnation which was sure to
+creep upon it if left in the hands of the descendants of the early
+French settlers. Arcadian innocence and simplicity have developed, or
+rather degenerated, into indolence, stolidity and ignorance. The priests
+do the thinking for these people, who, apparently have few ambitions in
+life beyond meeting its daily wants. Thus, though the streets of
+Montreal still bear the old names, and though its architecture still
+retains much of the quaintness which it early assumed, the business is
+largely in the hands of the Anglo-Saxons and Celts, who are its later
+settlers; and English pluck, Irish industry, Scotch thrift and American
+push, are all brought into marked contrast with the sluggishness and
+lethargy of the "Canucks." The names over the principal business houses
+are either English, Scotch or Irish; and the sympathies of the
+intelligent people are entirely in harmony with the government under
+which they live.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+NEWARK.
+
+ From New York to Newark.--Two Hundred Years Ago.--The
+ Pioneers.--Public Parks.--City of Churches.--The Canal.--
+ Sailing Up-Hill.--An Old Graveyard.--New Amsterdam and New
+ Netherlands.--The Dutch and English.--Adventurers from New
+ England.--The Indians.--Rate of Population.--Manufactures.--
+ Rank as a City.
+
+
+Nine miles, in a westerly direction, from New York, on a lovely morning
+in the early autumn of 1880, by the comfortable cars of that most
+perfect of all railways, the "Pennsylvania," brought our little party to
+Newark, which I had often heard spoken of as the leading commercial and
+manufacturing city of New Jersey.
+
+Situated in the northeastern corner of the State, on the west bank of
+the Passaic, three miles from its entrance into Newark Bay--the city of
+Newark occupies the most delightful spot in a State famed for its
+beauty. In our short journey from New York we passed over broad, level
+meadows, bearing some resemblance to a western prairie. The Passaic and
+the Hackensack rivers traverse these prairie-like meadows, while rising
+abruptly in the distance you behold the historic Bergen Heights.
+
+Disembarking at the conveniently located Market Street Depot, we sought
+and found a temporary home, and then lost no time in gratifying our
+native curiosity, by exploring the city and learning something of its
+origin and history.
+
+Newark is over two hundred years old, and yet is regularly laid out; its
+wide and well paved streets are adorned and shaded with grand old
+elms--some of them coeval with the founding of the city. Its chief
+business thoroughfare, Broad street, running north and south, through
+the central part of the city, has many fine business blocks, and a finer
+avenue cannot be found than the south end of Broad street, lined with
+wide-spreading elms, and extending, apparently, into infinitude. One
+peculiarity that absorbed my attention, was the vast number of
+manufacturing establishments here, located, for the most part, outside
+of the central streets, and these are doubtless the source of her
+prosperity.
+
+About two hundred years ago Newark was an obscure hamlet of some sixty
+odd settlers. Since that time it has grown into a city of one hundred
+and thirty thousand inhabitants. The handful of original settlers were,
+for the most part, upright, earnest and sturdy mechanics, of Anglo-Saxon
+blood, and they laid the foundation of what is now one of the most
+important cities of the Union, ranking, indeed, among the foremost of
+the world's industrial bee-hives--a monster workshop, whose skilled
+labor cannot well be surpassed anywhere. They called their village after
+the old English town of Newark-on-Trent; and Newark-on Passaic has now
+grown into a city ten times greater than its ancient namesake.
+
+The public parks possess a startling interest to the stranger visiting
+Newark for the first time. Seldom have I found so many, and of such
+extent, in a city that measures only five miles long, by five broad.
+Possessed of such breathing places, a town must of necessity be healthy,
+and I accordingly found this strongly indicated in the faces of all I
+met, more especially of the blooming young maidens and their mammas. We
+are told that when the first settlers purchased the site of Newark and
+its surrounding lands, of the native Indians, and laid out their embryo
+city, they wisely reserved certain tracts for public purposes, and that
+most of these still exist as ornaments of the city. Besides those set
+apart for churches and graveyards, the principal reservations were the
+"Training-place," the "Market-place," and the "Watering-place." The
+Training-place is now Military Park, on the east side of Broad street,
+near its centre; and the Market-place is now Washington Park. These and
+several others in various parts of this favored city, form delightful
+retreats from the sun's rays--shaded by majestic elms--a veritable _rus
+in urbe_. The suburbs also are passing beautiful, extending to Orange on
+the west, and to within a mile of Elizabeth on the south--both busy
+towns.
+
+Like Brooklyn, Newark may be called a city of churches, and its
+enlightened and industrious citizens are a church-going people. The
+Reformed Dutch Church dates from 1663; and the First Presbyterian from
+1667. These were the parent churches, and their progeny are manifold and
+prosperous, as noted in the exceptionally high standard of morality that
+generally characterizes the peaceful workers in this hive of industry.
+
+I was especially struck with the canal which flows under Broad street,
+and the ingenuity displayed in surmounting a hill that crosses it, by
+the barges navigating its waters. Here it may be almost said that among
+their numberless other inventions, the inhabitants of Newark have
+discovered the art of sailing up a hill! Instead of a lock, by which
+similar difficulties of inland navigation are usually overcome, the
+barges are drawn in a cradle up an inclined plane, by means of a
+stationary steam engine placed at the top of the hill, where the canal
+recommences, and the barges are re-launched to continue their course
+westward.
+
+In my rambles down Broad street, on its well-paved sidewalk, flanked by
+flourishing stores, in which every commodity, from a five hundred dollar
+chronometer down to a ten cent pair of men's socks, is presented for
+sale, I stopped at an arched gateway on my right, my attention being
+arrested by a patch of green sward behind it. The gate stood invitingly
+open, and passing through, I found myself in a venerable and disused
+graveyard.
+
+"This is the oldest of the city graveyards," said an elderly gentleman,
+to whom I addressed myself for information, "and is of the same age as
+the city itself. It is the resting-place of many of the original
+inhabitants. The first church of Newark stood here, and around, you will
+observe, are tombs, bearing dates of two centuries ago." Such, I found,
+on investigation, to be the case. These old stones--most of their
+inscriptions now undecipherable,--were erected to commemorate the dead
+colonists' names and virtues, more than one hundred years before
+Washington was born, or they had dreamed of casting off the authority of
+mother England. I reflected: what was Newark like in those far-away
+days, two hundred years ago? How did she compare with Newark in the year
+of grace 1880?
+
+In 1608 Henry Hudson descended the noble river which bears his name, and
+the settlement of _New Amsterdam_ by the Hollanders soon followed. Next,
+_New Netherlands_ was added to the territory of the Dutchmen, then a
+great maritime people. Down to the beginning of the seventeenth century
+the colonization of New Netherlands, on the western banks of the Hudson,
+had made but little progress. It was all a wilderness, peopled only by
+Indians. The white man had scarcely penetrated its fertile valleys. The
+story is told, however, that some of Hudson's hardy crew had sailed in
+their boats through the _Kill-von-Kule_, at the north of what is now
+Staten Island, and passed northward into the Passaic River. The
+enterprising Dutch traders were no doubt fully cognizant of the
+boundless possibilities of the country, whose fairest spot was destined
+to form the site of the city of Newark.
+
+But these Dutchmen were only lawless adventurers. By right of discovery,
+a priority of title to all the lands in North America was claimed by
+England, who declared war upon Holland and all her reputed possessions.
+_New Amsterdam_ and the province of _New Netherlands_ were among the
+first to succumb, and in 1664 England obtained complete command of the
+Atlantic coast. _New Amsterdam_ then became _New York_, in honor of the
+Duke of York, brother of King Charles II; and _New Netherlands_ became
+_New Jersey_, in compliment to the Countess of Jersey, a court favorite.
+To this conquest by England we owe our English tongue, for had the
+Hollanders vanquished the English, and retained possession, we should
+doubtless all be speaking "low Dutch" to-day, instead of English. But
+this is a digression.
+
+Colonization rapidly followed when the phlegmatic Dutchmen were turned
+out, and the first English governor of the province of New Jersey
+inaugurated a very liberal form of government. This induced many
+adventurers from New England to unite their fortunes with the colonists
+of New Jersey. Under the leadership of the enterprising Captain Treat,
+these New Englanders proceeded to select a site for their new town. They
+soon found a spot exactly suited to their wishes; a fertile soil,
+beautiful woodlands, and a navigable stream; while away to the eastward
+was a wide and sheltered bay.
+
+In May, 1666, about thirty families, John Treat being their captain,
+laid the foundation of Newark. A conference was held with the Indians,
+which resulted satisfactorily to all. They transferred the land to the
+white men, and received in payment for what now constitutes the county
+of Essex, "Fifty double-hands of powder, one hundred bars of lead,
+twenty axes, twenty coats, ten guns, twenty pistols, ten kettles, ten
+swords, four blankets, four barrels of beer, two pairs of breeches,
+fifty knives, twenty hoes, eight hundred and fifty fathoms of wampum,
+two ankers of liquor, or something equivalent; and three troopers'
+coats, with the ornaments thereon."
+
+A few years later a second purchase was made, by which the limits of the
+city they were building were extended westward to the top of Orange
+Hill, the equivalent being "two guns, three coats and thirteen cans of
+rum."
+
+For many years, Newark grew and prospered. In 1681 she was the "most
+compact town in the province, with a population of 500." In 1713 Queen
+Anne granted a charter of incorporation, thus making the township of
+Newark a body politic, which continued in force until the Revolution.
+With the successful close of the war, Newark entered on a new and
+prosperous era, and the population increased very largely. In 1795
+bridges were built over the Passaic and the Hackensack. In 1810 the
+population is given as 6,000, and in 1830 it had increased to 11,000.
+From this date its rate of progress has been very rapid, and at the
+present time Newark ranks as the thirteenth city of the Union in
+population.
+
+I cannot conclude this chapter without a few words on the manufactures
+of Newark. The early settlers were, as we have said, in the main,
+mechanics and artisans, and from this circumstance the growth of the
+city lay in the direction of manufactures. Newark, to-day, is among the
+foremost cities of the Union in intelligent industry. So early as 1676
+efforts were made to promote the introduction of manufactures. The
+nearness of the city to New York, the chief market in the Union, with
+shipping facilities to every quarter of the globe; with the great iron
+and coal fields easy of access, and a thrifty and industrious people,
+Newark drew to her mills and factories abundant capital and skilled
+workmen. She has contributed more useful inventions to industrial
+progress than any other American city. The Newark Industrial Exposition
+was originated in 1872, for the purpose of holding an annual exhibition
+of her local manufactures. The enterprise met with signal success. We
+have counted no less than four hundred distinct manufactories in
+operation in this extraordinary city, a list of which would occupy too
+much of our space. Hardware, tools, machinery, jewelry, leather, hats,
+and trunks seem to predominate. Of the last-named indispensable article,
+Newark has the most extensive manufactory in the world, 7,000 trunks per
+week, or about 365,000 yearly being produced here. It is said that in
+the manufacture of the best steam fire-engines, Newark ranks first. The
+number of persons finding employment in the factories is about 25,000,
+and the amount of wages paid weekly averages $250,000, or about
+$13,000,000 per year. The annual value of the productions of all her
+manufactories amounts to about $60,000,000.
+
+Thus it is seen that Newark has developed into one of the principal
+producing cities of the United States, the value of her diversified
+manufactured products making her, in this respect, the third, if not the
+second city of the Union.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+NEW HAVEN.
+
+ The City of Elms.--First Impressions.--A New England Sunday.--
+ A Sail on the Harbor.--Oyster Beds.--East Rock.--The Lonely
+ Denizen of the Bluff.--Romance of John Turner.--West Rock.--
+ The Judges' Cave.--Its Historical Association.--Escape of the
+ Judges.--Monument on the City Green.--Yale College.--Its Stormy
+ Infancy.--Battle on the Weathersfield Road.--Harvard, the Fruit
+ of the Struggle.
+
+
+Leaving New York by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, we
+found ourselves, at the end of a three hours' ride, in New Haven, the
+beautiful "City of Elms."
+
+Everything here bears the impress of New England, with the special
+peculiarities of Connecticut, land of smart sayings and of the
+proverbial wooden nutmegs and oak hams. Stepping from the cars, my ears
+were first saluted by the salutations of two genial Yankees, one of
+whom, I inferred from the conversation, had just arrived from
+Bridgeport, and the other at the depot had awaited his coming.
+Compliments were passed by the latter, who saluted his friend with--
+
+"Well, old boy, where have you been all summer? I see you have got your
+dust full of eyes."
+
+The reply to this salute was in entire harmony with the interrogation,
+and both walked away from the station, amusing each other with odd
+maxims and witty retorts.
+
+It being our intention to remain several weeks in New Haven, we decided
+to take up our abode at a private house, and with this object in view
+we started in pursuit of suitable accommodations. It was soon discovered
+that in the matter of board we were competing with "Old Yale," students
+always being preferred, owing to the prospect of permanency.
+
+A reconnoissance of several hours, during which we saw more stately elms
+than I ever expect to see again in so short a period, brought us to 66
+Chapel street, where we were pleasantly lodged, with an excellent table,
+and favored with a Yankee landlord from the classic banks of the Rhine.
+
+Universal quiet on the streets, and an inexhaustible supply of brown
+bread and beans at the breakfast table, was an unmistakable evidence
+that we had reached a New England Sunday. After breakfast, the weather
+being fine, I was invited to accompany some young gentlemen in a sail
+down the harbor. Being uncertain as to the propriety of such a
+proceeding on the seventh day, I was promptly assured that the Blue Laws
+of Connecticut would not be outraged in case I had taken a generous
+ration of brown bread and beans before starting.
+
+A ride of half an hour, with but little wind in our sails, carried us
+down through the oyster beds, to a point nearly opposite the lighthouse
+at the mouth of the harbor. A novel sight, in my judgment, is a
+multitude of oyster plantations staked out in such a manner as to show
+the proprietor of each particular section his exact limit or boundary.
+
+To those of my readers who are familiar with hop-growing regions, I
+would say that an oyster farm is not unlike a hop field which seems to
+have been suddenly inundated by water, leaving only the tops of the
+poles above the surface. Oyster raising is one of the leading features
+of New Haven enterprise, and the Fair Haven oysters, in particular, are
+regarded among the best that are cultivated on the Atlantic coast. On
+our return trip up the harbor the tide was going out, and as the water
+was extremely shallow in many places, and also very clear, we could see
+oysters and their less palatable neighbors, clams, in great abundance. I
+was strongly tempted to make substantial preparation for an oyster
+dinner, but on being informed that such a course would be equivalent to
+staking out claims in a strange water-melon patch, I concluded to
+desist, and contented myself with seeing more oysters in half an hour
+than I had seen in all my life before.
+
+
+EAST ROCK.
+
+One of the famous places of resort in the neighborhood of New Haven is
+East Rock, an abrupt pile of red-brown trap rock, lifting itself up from
+the plain to a height of four hundred feet. The summit of this
+monumental pile spreads out in a wide plateau of twenty-five or thirty
+acres, sloping gradually back towards the meadow lands which border the
+winding Quinnipiac River. It is owned and occupied by a somewhat
+eccentric individual, rejoicing in the name of Milton Stuart, who
+related to me the story of his life in this strange locality since
+taking up his abode here, some twenty years ago. On being told that I
+would commit to paper some account of my wanderings about New Haven, he
+seemed to take an especial pleasure in showing me his grounds and
+telling me everything of interest concerning them.
+
+With ready courtesy he pointed out a heap of stones on the western
+slope of the bluff, which he said was all that remained of a hut
+formerly occupied by one John Turner, who made a hermit of himself on
+this rock, years ago, all because the lady of his love refused to become
+Mrs. Turner. He met her while teaching in the South--so the story
+ran--and all his energies seemed to be paralyzed by her refusal to
+listen to his suit. He came to East Rock and built this wretched hovel
+of stone, where he lived in solitude, and where one morning in that long
+ago, he was found dead on the floor of his hovel. How many romances like
+this lie about us unseen, under the every-day occurrences of life!
+
+
+WEST ROCK
+
+is a continuation of the precipitous bluff of which East Rock is one
+extremity, and is about a mile further up the valley. It is not so high
+nor so imposing as East Rock, and the view from its wooded top fades
+into tameness beside the remote ocean distance and the flash of city
+spires to be seen from East Rock. But it makes up in historical interest
+what it may lack in other attractions; for here, about a quarter of a
+mile from its southernmost point, is located the "Judge's Cave," famous
+as the hiding-place of the regicides who tried and sentenced King
+Charles the First, in the seventeenth century.
+
+On the restoration of Charles II to the throne of his father, three of
+the high court which had condemned the first Charles wisely left England
+for the shores of the New World. Their names were Goffe, Whalley and
+Dixwell. Whalley was a lieutenant-general, Dixwell was a colonel, and
+Goffe a major-general. These noted army officers arrived at Boston, from
+England, July twenty-seventh, 1660, and first made their home in
+Cambridge. Finding that place unsafe, they afterwards went to New Haven.
+
+The next year news came from England that thirty-nine of the regicide
+judges were condemned, and ten already executed, as traitors. An order
+from the king was sent to the Colonial governors of Massachusetts and
+Connecticut, for the arrest of the judges. They were thus compelled to
+fly for their lives, and sought refuge in the cave on West Rock, which
+afterwards bore their name. Here they lived concealed for some time,
+being supplied with food by Richard Sperry, who lived about a mile west
+of the cave. The food was tied up in a cloth and laid on a stump near
+by, from which the judges could take it unobserved.
+
+One night they beheld the blazing eyes of a catamount or panther,
+peering in upon them at their cave, and were so frightened that they
+fled in haste to the house of Mr. Sperry, and could not again be induced
+to return. Several large boulders, from twenty to thirty feet in height,
+thrown together, doubtless, by some volcanic convulsions, unite to form
+the cave.
+
+Dixwell afterwards lived in New Haven, under an assumed name, and the
+graves of all three may now be seen, at one side of Centre Church, on
+the City Green.
+
+The following inscription is on a marble slab over the ashes of Dixwell,
+erected by his descendants in 1849:--
+
+ "Here rests the remains of John Dixwell, Esq., of the Priory of
+ Folkestone, in the county of Kent, England. Of a family long
+ prominent in Kent and Warwickshire, and himself possessing large
+ estates and much influence in his county, he espoused the popular
+ cause in the revolution of 1640. Between 1640 and 1660 he was
+ Colonel in the Army, an active member of four parliaments, and
+ thrice in the Council of State; and one of the High Court which
+ tried and condemned King Charles the First. At the restoration of
+ the monarchy he was compelled to leave his country, and after a
+ brief residence in Germany, came to New Haven, and here lived in
+ seclusion, but enjoying the esteem and friendship of its most
+ worthy citizens, till his death in 1688-9."
+
+The little brown headstone which first marked his resting place bore
+only his initials and the date of his death:--
+
+ "J. D. Esq.
+
+ Deceased March Y^e 18th in Y^e 82^D Year of his age 1688/9."
+
+That was all--his name being suppressed, at his request.
+
+The headstones of Goffe and Whalley are marked in the same obscure way.
+
+Yale College adds largely to the importance of New Haven, and the
+elegant new College buildings now in process of erection, built of brown
+freestone, cannot well be surpassed in style of architecture. "Old Yale"
+was originally a small school, established in Saybrook by Rev. Thomas
+Peters, who lived at that place, and who bequeathed his library to the
+school at his death. It soon acquired the title of the "Illustrious
+School," and about the year 1700 was given a charter of incorporation
+from the General Assembly, making it a college.
+
+It was named Yale, after its greatest benefactor, who was at that time
+governor of one of the West India islands. The historian, Dr. Samuel
+Peters, who wrote nearly a hundred years ago, said that Greek, Latin,
+Geography, History and Logic were well taught in this seminary, but it
+suffered for want of tutors in the Hebrew, French and Spanish languages.
+He remarks, incidentally, that "oratory, music and _politeness_ are
+equally neglected here and in the Colony." The students, numbering at
+that time one hundred and eighty, were allowed two hours' play with the
+foot ball every day, and were seated at four tables in the large dining
+room. This ancient historian says the college was built of wood, was one
+hundred and sixty feet long and three stories high, besides garrets. In
+1754 another building, of brick, one hundred feet long, with double
+rooms and a double front, was added. About 1760 a chapel and library
+were erected, which was described as being "very elegant." The "elegant"
+structure of a hundred years ago will soon be discarded for the new one
+of brown freestone.
+
+In the year 1717 the seminary was removed from Saybrook to New Haven,
+but it had a hard time in getting there. A vote was passed to remove the
+college from Saybrook, because, as the historian says, Saybrook was
+suspected of being too much in sympathy with the Church of England and
+not sufficiently alienated from the mother country. But there was a
+division in the vote, the Hartford ballot being in favor of removing the
+college to Weathersfield, while the New Haven party declared in behalf
+of their own city. A small battle grew out of this split between the
+Weathersfield and New Haven factions. Hartford, in order to carry its
+vote into execution, prepared teams, boats and a mob, and privately set
+off for Saybrook, seizing upon the college apparatus, library and
+students, which they carried to Weathersfield.
+
+This redoubled the jealousy of the "saints" at New Haven, who thereupon
+determined to fulfill their vote, and accordingly, having collected a
+mob, they set out for Weathersfield, where they seized by surprise the
+students and library. On the road to New Haven they were overtaken by
+the Hartford faction, who, after an inglorious battle, were obliged to
+retire with only part of the library and part of the students. From this
+affair sprang the two colleges, Yale and Harvard.
+
+The Massachusetts Bay people acted the part of peacemakers, and settled
+the difficulty between these two hostile factions, which resulted
+finally in placing the college at New Haven. So it seems our Puritan
+ancestors had their little disputations then, much as our Alabama and
+Arkansas brothers do now.
+
+What a flaming head-line that college battle doubtless furnished the
+bulletin boards and colonial press of 1717! Imagine a column beginning
+with this:--
+
+ _Sharp Fight on the Weathersfield Road!_
+
+ _Large Captures of Students!_
+
+ _New Haven Victorious!_
+
+But out of revenge for the victory, the sons of Hartford were not sent
+to Yale College to be educated. No, rather than go to Yale they went
+much further away, at greater expense, and where fewer educational
+advantages could be obtained. What were such disadvantages, however,
+compared to the satisfaction of standing by their party and ignoring the
+New Haven vote?
+
+But old Yale grew and flourished, despite the stormy days of its
+childhood, and has now a world-wide reputation. Many distinguished men
+of letters call her "Alma Mater," and in all their wanderings carry her
+memory green in their hearts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+NEW ORLEANS.
+
+ Locality of New Orleans.--The Mississippi.--The Old and the
+ New.--Ceded to Spain.--Creole Part in the American Revolution.--
+ Retransferred to France.--Purchased by the United States.--
+ Creole Discontent.--Battle of New Orleans.--Increase of
+ Population.--The Levee.--Shipping.--Public Buildings, Churches,
+ Hospitals, Hotels and Places of Amusement.--Streets.--Suburbs.--
+ Public Squares and Parks.--Places of Historic Interest.--
+ Cemeteries.--French Market.--Mardi-gras.--Climate and
+ Productions.--New Orleans during the Rebellion.--Chief Cotton
+ Mart of the World.--Exports.--Imports.--Future Prosperity of
+ the City.
+
+
+As the traveler proceeds down the Mississippi, from its source to its
+mouth, a unique phenomenon strikes his attention. The river seems to
+grow higher as he descends. The bluffs, which on one side or the other
+rise prominently along its banks in its upper waters, grow less bold,
+and finally disappear as he progresses southward. And if it should be
+the season of high water, he will find himself, as he nears New Orleans,
+gliding down a river which is higher than its bordering land, and which
+is restrained in its penchant for destruction, by massive dykes, or
+levees, as they are termed in this section.
+
+New Orleans, the commercial metropolis of Louisiana, known as the
+"Crescent City," is situated on the eastern, or, more correctly
+speaking, the northern bank of the Mississippi River, which here, after
+running northward several miles, takes a turn to the eastward.
+Originally built in the form of a crescent, around this bend in the
+river, it has at the present time extended itself so far up stream that
+its shore line is now more in the shape of a letter S. It is one hundred
+and twelve miles from the mouth of the Mississippi, 1,200 miles south of
+St. Louis, and 1,438 miles southwest of Washington. The city limits
+embrace an area of nearly 150 square miles, but the city proper is a
+little more than twelve miles long and three miles wide. It is built on
+alluvial soil, the ground falling off toward Lake Pontchartrain, which
+is five miles distant to the northward, so that portions of the city are
+four feet lower than the high water level of the river. The city is
+protected from inundation by a levee, twenty-six miles in length,
+fifteen feet wide and fourteen feet high. The streets are drained into
+canals, from which the water is raised by means of steam pumps, with a
+daily capacity of 42,000,000 gallons, which elevates it sufficiently to
+carry it off to Lake Pontchartrain.
+
+The geological history of this section of the country is extremely
+interesting. The whole region south of New Orleans is made land, having
+been brought down from the Rocky Mountains and the western plains, by
+that tireless builder, the Mississippi, which has heaped it up, grain by
+grain, probably changing the entire course of its lower waters in doing
+so, filling up old channels and wearing itself new ones, until it
+finally extends its delta, like an outstretched hand, far out into the
+waters of the Gulf of Mexico. The river has a history and a romance, all
+its own, beginning with the time when French and Spanish, alike, were
+searching for the "Hidden River"--that mysterious stream which,
+according to Indian tradition, "flowed to the land from which the sweet
+winds of the southwest brought them health and happiness, and where
+there was neither snow nor ice," and which was known by so many
+different names--and ending with the construction of the gigantic
+jetties, which have given depth and permanence to the channels of its
+delta.
+
+The visitor finds the city very unlike northern towns with which he has
+been familiar. To the Creole quarter especially there is a foreign look,
+which is intensified by the frequent sound of foreign speech. It is as
+if one had stepped into some old-world town, and left America, with its
+newness and its harshness of speech, far behind. But it is not so far
+away, either. It is only around the corner, or, at best, a few squares
+off. New Orleans of the nineteenth century jostles New Orleans of the
+eighteenth on every hand. It has seized upon the old streets, with their
+quaint French and Spanish names, and carried them to an extent never
+dreamed of by those who originally planned them. It has reared modern
+structures beside those hoary with age, and set down the post common
+school building and the heretical Protestant church beside the venerable
+convent and the solemn cathedral.
+
+The main streets describe a curve, running parallel to the river, and
+present an unbroken line from the upper to the lower limits of the city,
+a distance of about twelve miles. The cross streets run for the most
+part at right angles from the Mississippi River, with greater regularity
+than might be expected from the curved outline of the river banks. Many
+of the streets are well paved, and some of them are shelled; but many
+are unpaved, and, from the nature of the soil, exceedingly muddy in wet
+weather, and intolerably dusty in dry. The city is surrounded by cypress
+swamps, and its locality and environments render it very unhealthy,
+especially during the summer season. Yet, notwithstanding its
+insalubrity, it is constantly increasing in population and business
+importance. Certain sanitary precautions, adopted in later years, have
+somewhat improved its condition.
+
+New Orleans has a history extending further back than that of most
+southern towns. While others were making their first feeble struggles
+for existence with their treacherous foes, the red-skins, New Orleans
+was stirred by discontent and insurrection. In 1690, d'Iberville, in the
+name of France, founded the province of Louisiana, and Old Biloxi, at
+the mouth of the Lost River, as the Mississippi was still termed, was
+made the capital. The choice of site proved a disastrous one, and the
+seat of government was moved to New Biloxi, further up the river.
+Meantime, Bienville, his younger brother, laid out a little
+parallelogram of streets and ditches on a crescent-shaped shore of the
+river, in the midst of cypress swamps and willow jungles. A colony of
+fifty persons, many of them galley slaves, formed this new settlement.
+Houses were built, a fort added, and the little town received its
+present name, in honor of the Regent of France, the Duke of Orleans. In
+the same year John Law sent eight hundred men from La Rochelle. They had
+no sooner landed than they scattered to the four winds, a number of
+Germans among them alone remaining in or near the promised city. Amid
+many discouragements the town prospered, and when, one after another,
+three cargoes of women were sent out from the old country, to furnish
+wives for the new settlers, their content was complete. Thus many of the
+proudest aristocrats of New Orleans trace their descent from these
+"_Filles de Casette_," as they were called, each one being endowed with
+a small chest of property.
+
+Here the French Creoles were born, and lived a wild, unrestrained life,
+valorous but uneducated, and became such men and women as one would
+expect to find in a military outpost so far from the civilized world.
+For sixty-three years the little colony struggled for life, enduring
+floods and famines, and the terrors of Indian warfare, when, in 1762,
+the province of Louisiana was transferred by an unprincipled king to
+Spain. The news did not reach the remote American settlement until 1764.
+It was hardly to be expected that a colony so separated by time and
+distance from the mother country should be intensely loyal, but the
+people felt themselves to be French and French only, and they resented
+this unwitting transfer of their allegiance as an unendurable grievance.
+
+The Spanish Governor, Ulloa, did not land in New Orleans until two years
+later; and though he showed himself to be a man of great discretion, and
+inclined to adopt a conciliatory policy, the people made the little town
+so hot for him, that in two more years he was glad to return to Spain.
+They sent a memorial after him, which, being a most unique document, is
+worth recording, in substance. Says a recent historian, Mr. George W.
+Cable:--
+
+"It enumerated real wrongs, for which France and Spain, but not Ulloa,
+were to blame. Again, with these it mingled such charges against the
+banished Governor as--that he had a chapel in his own house; that he
+absented himself from the French churches; that he inclosed a fourth of
+the public common to pasture his private horses; that he sent to Havana
+for a wet nurse; that he ordered the abandonment of a brick-yard near
+the town, on account of its pools of putrid water; that he removed
+leprous children from the town to the inhospitable settlement at the
+mouth of the river; that he forbade the public whipping of slaves in the
+town; that masters had to go six miles to get a negro flogged; that he
+had landed in New Orleans during a thunder and rain storm, and under
+other ill omens; that he claimed to be king of the colony; that he
+offended the people with evidences of sordid avarice; and that he added
+to these crimes--as the text has it--'many others, equally just and
+terrible!'"
+
+In 1769 the colony was in open revolt, and was considering the project
+of forming a republic. But the arrival of a Spanish fleet of twenty-four
+sail checked their aspirations towards independence, and paralyzed their
+efforts, and they yielded without a struggle.
+
+In 1768 New Orleans was a town of 3,200 persons, a third of whom were
+black slaves. After the establishment of Spanish rule, although the
+population was thoroughly Creole, and opposed to the presence of English
+traders, the government at first winked at their appearance, and finally
+openly tolerated them, so that English boats supplied the planters with
+goods and slaves, and English warehouses moored upon the river opposite
+the town disposed of merchandise.
+
+In 1776, at the breaking out of the American Revolution, the Creole and
+Anglo-American came into active relations with each other, a relation
+which has since qualified every public question in Louisiana. The
+British traders were suddenly cut off from communication, and French
+merchants commanded the trade of the Mississippi. Americans followed
+close after the French, and the tide of immigration became Anglo-Saxon.
+France was openly supporting the American colonies in their rebellion
+against England, and in 1779 Spain declared war against Great Britain,
+so that the sympathies of the Creoles were led, by every tie, to the
+rebels. Galvez, then Governor of Louisiana, and also son of the Viceroy
+of Mexico, a young man, brave, talented and sagacious, who had adopted a
+most liberal policy in his administration, discovered that the British
+were planning the surprise of New Orleans. Making hasty but efficient
+preparations, with a little army of 1,430 men, and with a miniature gun
+fleet of but ten guns, he marched, on the twenty-second of August, 1779,
+against the British forts on the Mississippi. On the seventh of
+September, Fort Bute, on Bayou Manchac, yielded to the first assault of
+the Creole Militia. The Fort of Baton Rouge was garrisoned by five
+hundred men with thirteen heavy guns. On the twenty-first of September,
+after an engagement of ten hours, Galvez reached the fort. Its
+capitulation included the surrender of Fort Panmure, a place which, by
+its position, would have been very difficult of assault. In the
+Mississippi and Manchac, four English schooners, a brig and two cutters
+were captured. On the fourteenth of the following March, Galvez, with an
+army of two thousand men, having set sail down the Mississippi, captured
+Fort Charlotte, on the Mobile River. On the eighth of May, 1781,
+Pensacola, with a garrison of eight hundred men, and the whole of West
+Florida, surrendered to Galvez. One of the rewards bestowed upon her
+Governor for his valorous achievements was the Captain-generalship of
+Louisiana and West Florida. He never returned to New Orleans, however,
+and four years later succeeded his father as Viceroy of Mexico. Thus,
+while Andrew Jackson was yet a child, New Orleans was defended from
+British conquest by this gallant Spanish soldier.
+
+In 1803 Louisiana was transferred to France by Spain, and great was the
+rejoicing of the Creole colonists, who, during the forty years of their
+Spanish domination, had never forgotten their French origin. But their
+joy was quickly turned to bitterness by the news which speedily
+followed, that Louisiana had been sold, by Napoleon I, to the United
+States. The younger generation, and those who had a clear apprehension
+of all in the way of prosperity which this change might mean to them,
+were quickly reconciled, and set about the business of life with renewed
+interest. But to the French Creoles, as a class, who, during their long
+alienation had still at heart been thoroughly French, to become a part
+of a republic, and that republic English in its origin, was intensely
+distasteful. This was the deluge indeed, which Providence had not kindly
+stayed until after their time. They withdrew into a little community of
+their own, and refused companionship with such as sacrificed their caste
+by accepting the situation, and adapting themselves to it. But in spite
+of these disaffected persons, the prosperity of the city dated from that
+time. Its population increased, and its commerce made its first small
+beginnings.
+
+New Orleans was incorporated as a city in 1804, having then a population
+of about 8,000 inhabitants. In 1812 the first steamboat was put upon the
+Mississippi, though it was not until several years later that, after a
+period of experiment and disaster, success was attained with them. Yet
+without steamboats the development of the great Mississippi Valley, and
+the creation of the extended cities upon its banks, would have been
+well-nigh impossible. Its winding course, its swift current, its
+shifting channel, and the snags which line its bottom, make navigation
+by other craft than steamboats well-nigh impossible. Canoes, batteaux
+and flat-boats might make the voyage down the river with tolerable speed
+and safety, but to return against the current was a difficult thing to
+do; and a trip from St. Louis or Louisville to New Orleans and return
+required months. Where, then, would have been the mighty commerce of the
+West, but for the timely invention of the steam engine, and its
+application to water craft?
+
+On January eighth, 1815, New Orleans was successfully defended against
+the British by General Jackson, who threw up a strong line of defences
+around the city, protected by batteries, and who, with a force of
+scarcely six thousand men, defeated fifteen thousand British, under Sir
+Edward Packenham, the enemy sustaining a loss of seven hundred killed,
+fourteen hundred wounded, and five hundred taken prisoners, while the
+American loss was but seven men killed and six wounded. The old battle
+field is still retained as a historic spot. It is four and one-half
+miles south of Canal street, washed by the waters of the Mississippi,
+and extends backward about a mile, to the cedar swamps. A marble
+monument, seventy feet in height, and yet unfinished, commemorative of
+the victory, overlooks the ground. In the southwest corner of the field
+is a national cemetery.
+
+The old city bears the impress of the two nations to which it at
+different times belonged. Many of the streets still retain the old
+French and Spanish names, as, for instance, Tchapitoulas, Baronne,
+Perdido, Toulouse, Bourbon and Burgundy streets. There are still, here
+and there, the old houses, sandwiched in between those of a later
+generation--quaint, dilapidated, and picturesque. Sometimes they are
+rickety, wooden structures, with overhanging porticoes, and with windows
+and doors all out of perpendicular, and ready to crumble to ruin with
+age. Others are massive stone or brick structures, with great arched
+doorways, and paved floors, worn by the feet of many generations,
+dilapidated and heavy, and possessing no beauty save that which is lent
+them by time.
+
+The city is made up of strange compounds, which even yet, after the
+lapse of more than three-quarters of a century since it became an
+American city, do not perfectly assimilate. Spanish, French, Italians,
+Mexicans and Indians, Creoles, West Indians, Negroes and Mulattoes of
+every shade, from shiny black to a faint creamy hue, Southerners who
+have forgotten their foreign blood, Northerners, Westerners, Germans,
+Irish and Scandinavians, all come together here, and jostle one another
+in the busy pursuits of life. The levee at New Orleans represents all
+spoken languages; and the popular levee clerk must have a knowledge of
+multitudinous tongues, which would have secured him a high and
+authoritative position at Babel. The Romish devotee, the mild-faced
+"sister," in her ugly black habiliments and picturesque head-gear, the
+disciple of Confucius, the descendant of the New England Puritan, the
+dusky savage, who still looks to the Great Spirit as the giver of all
+life and light, the modern skeptic, and the black devotee of Voodoo, all
+meet and pass and repass each other. All nationalities, all religions,
+all civilizations, meet and mingle to make up this city, which,
+upholding the cross to indicate its religion, still, in its municipal
+character, accepts the Mohammedan symbol of the crescent. Added to the
+throng which comes and goes upon the levee, merchants, clerks, hotel
+runners, hackmen, stevedores, and river men of all grades, keep up a
+general motion and excitement, while piled upon the platforms which
+serve as a connecting link between the water-craft and the shore, are
+packages of merchandise in every conceivable shape, cotton bales seeming
+to be most numerous.
+
+Along the river front are congregated hundreds of steamers, and
+thousands of nondescript boats, among them numerous barges and
+flat-boats, thickly interspersed with ships of the largest size, from
+whose masts float the colors of every nation in the civilized world. New
+Orleans is emphatically a commercial town, depending in only a small
+degree, for her success, upon manufactures.
+
+ [Illustration: JACKSON SQUARE AND OLD CATHEDRAL, NEW ORLEANS.]
+
+New Orleans is not a handsome city, architecturally speaking, though it
+has a number of fine buildings. Its situation is such that it could
+never become imposing, under the most favorable circumstances. The
+Custom House, a magnificent structure, built of Quincy granite, is, next
+to the Capitol at Washington, the largest building in the United States.
+It occupies an entire square, its main front being on Canal street, the
+broadest and handsomest thoroughfare in the city. The Post Office
+occupies its basement, and is one of the most commodious in the country.
+The State House is located on St. Louis street, between Royal and
+Chartres streets, and was known, until 1874, as the St. Louis Hotel. The
+old dining hall is one of the most beautiful rooms in the country,
+and the great inner circle of the dome is richly frescoed, with
+allegorical scenes and busts of eminent Americans. The United States
+Branch Mint, at the corner of Esplanade and Decatur streets, is an
+imposing building, in the Ionian style. The City Hall, at the
+intersection of St. Charles and Lafayette streets, is the most artistic
+of the public buildings of the city. It is of white marble, in the Ionic
+style, with a wide and high flight of granite steps, leading to a
+beautiful portico. The old Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Louis is the
+most interesting church edifice in New Orleans. It stands in Chartres
+street, on the east side of Jackson Square. The foundations were laid in
+1793, and the building completed in 1794, by Don Andre Almonaster,
+perpetual _regidor_ of the province. It was altered and enlarged in
+1850. The paintings in the roof of the building are by Canova and Rossi.
+The old Ursuline Convent, in Conde street, a quaint and venerable
+building, erected in 1787, during the reign of Carlos III, by Don Andre
+Almonaster, is one of the most interesting relics of the early Church
+history of New Orleans. It is now occupied as a residence by the Bishop.
+
+The Charity Hospital, on Common street, was founded in 1784, has stood
+on its present site since 1832, and is one of the most famous
+institutions of the kind in the country. Roman Catholic churches,
+schools, hospitals and asylums abound, some of them dating back for
+nearly or quite a century.
+
+The St. Charles Hotel is one of the institutions of New Orleans, and one
+of the largest and finest hotels in the United States. It occupies half
+a square, and is bounded by St. Charles, Gravior and Common streets. The
+city has a French opera house, an academy of music, and several
+theatres and halls. Like those of St. Louis, its inhabitants are
+passionately fond of gayety, and places of amusement are well
+patronized. Sunday, as in all Catholic cities, is devoted to recreation,
+and the inhabitants, in their holiday garments, give themselves up to
+enjoyment. Theatres, concert rooms and beer gardens are filled with
+pleasure-seekers.
+
+Canal street, the main business thoroughfare and promenade of New
+Orleans, is nearly two hundred feet wide, and has a grass plot
+twenty-five feet wide, in the centre, bordered on each side by trees.
+Claiborne, Rampart, St. Charles and Esplanade streets are similarly
+embellished. They all contain many fine stores and handsome residences.
+Royal, Rampart and Esplanade streets are the principal promenades of the
+French quarter. The favorite drives are out the Shell Road to Lake
+Pontchartrain, and out a similar road to Carrollton. The lake is about
+five miles north of the city, forty miles long and twenty-four wide, and
+is famous for its fish and game. Cypress swamps, the trees covered with
+the long, gray Spanish moss peculiar to the latitude, lie between the
+lake and the city, and render the drive in that direction an interesting
+one.
+
+Carrollton, in the north suburbs, has many fine public gardens and
+private residences. On the opposite shore of the river is Algiers, where
+there are extensive dry docks and ship-yards. A little further up the
+river, on the same side, is Gretna, where, during Spanish rule, lay
+moored two large floating English warehouses, fitted up with counters
+and shelves, and stocked with assorted merchandise.
+
+New Orleans has a few small, tastefully laid out squares, among which
+are Jackson, Lafayette, Douglass, Annunciation and Tivoli Circle. The
+City Park, near the northeast boundary, contains one hundred and fifty
+acres, which are tastefully laid out, but which is little frequented.
+Jackson Square has a historic interest, it having been the old Place
+d'Armes of colonial times. It was here that Ulloa landed in that
+ill-omened thunder storm, and here that public meetings were held and
+the colony's small armies gathered together. The inclosure, though
+small, is adorned with beautiful trees and shrubbery, and shell-strewn
+paths, and in the centre stands Mills' equestrian statue of General
+Jackson.
+
+The city is not without other objects of historic interest. During the
+Indian wars barracks arose on either side of the Place d'Armes, and in
+1758 other barracks were added, a part of whose ruin still stands, in
+the neighborhood of Barracks street. Then there is the battle field,
+already referred to, and many buildings belonging to a past century,
+some of which have distinctive historic associations. Near Jackson
+Square is the site of the oldest Capuchin Monastery in the United
+States. Sailing down the Mississippi, the voyager will reach a portion
+of the stream which flows almost directly south. Here is a point in the
+river which bears the name, to this day, of the English Turn. Up the
+mouth of the Mississippi sailed one day, in the seventeenth century, a
+proud English vessel, bent on exploration and acquisition of territory
+to England. Threading for a hundred miles the comparatively direct
+course of the stream, it had then made two abrupt right-angled turns,
+when, coming around a third point, in advance of it, it saw a French
+ship, armed and equipped, and bearing down stream under full sail. The
+English ship was given to understand that the Mississippi was "no
+thoroughfare" for boats of its nationality, and commanded to turn and
+retrace its course, which it reluctantly, but no less surely did. Hence
+the name "English Turn."
+
+The Cemeteries of New Orleans are most peculiar in their arrangement and
+modes of interment. The ground is filled with water up to within two or
+three feet of the surface, and the tombs are all above ground. A great
+majority of them are also placed one above another. Each "oven," as it
+is called, is just large enough to admit a coffin, and is hermetically
+sealed when the funeral rites are over. A marble tablet is usually
+placed upon the brick opening. Some of the structures are, however,
+costly and beautiful, being made of marble, granite or iron. There are
+thirty-three cemeteries in and near the city, and of these the Cypress
+Grove and Greenwood are best worth visiting.
+
+The most picturesque and characteristic feature of New Orleans is the
+French Market, on the Levee, near Jackson Square. The gathering begins
+at break of day on week-days and a little later on Sunday morning, and
+comprises people of every nationality represented in the city. French is
+the prevailing language, but it will be heard in every variety, from the
+pure Parisian to the childish jargon of the negroes.
+
+Mardi-Gras, or Shrove Tuesday, is observed in New Orleans by peculiar
+rites and ceremonies. Rex, King of the Carnival, takes possession of the
+city, and passes through the streets, accompanied by a large retinue,
+his staff and courtiers robed in Oriental splendor. The city gives
+itself up to mirth and gayety, with an abandon only paralleled by that
+witnessed in Italy on the same occasion; and the day is concluded by
+receptions, tableaux and balls.
+
+ [Illustration: NIGHT PARADE OF THE MYSTIC CREW--MARDI-GRAS FESTIVAL,
+ NEW ORLEANS.]
+
+New Orleans boasts a semi-tropical climate, being situated in latitude
+29° 58´ north. The summers are oppressively hot, but the winters are
+mild and pleasant, with just sufficient frost to kill any germs of
+disease engendered by her unhealthful situation. Semi-tropical fruits,
+such as the orange, banana, fig and pine-apple, grow readily in her
+gardens, where are also cultivated many of the productions of the
+temperate zone. The neighboring country is clothed with a rich and
+luxuriant semi-tropical vegetation, and forests of perennial green, in
+which the cypress and live-oak predominate.
+
+New Orleans had a population, in 1820, of 27,000. In 1850 it had
+increased to 116,375, and in 1860 to 168,675. In common with other
+cities of the South, New Orleans suffered in her business interests
+severely during the war of the Rebellion. Louisiana having seceded from
+the Union in 1861, New Orleans was closely blockaded by the Federal
+fleet, and on April twenty-fourth, 1862, the defences near the mouth of
+the river were forced by Commodore Farragut, in command of an expedition
+of gunboats. On the surrender of the city General B. F. Butler was
+appointed its military Governor, and held possession of it until the
+close of the war. Its commerce was entirely destroyed during that
+period, its business interests crushed, and many of its leading men
+impoverished, and, in addition, the State was disturbed by intestine
+troubles, which kept affairs in an unsettled condition. New Orleans did
+not rally as quickly as St. Louis from the effects of the war.
+Nevertheless, in 1870 its population had increased to 191,418, and in
+1874 the value of its exports, including rice, flour, pork, tobacco,
+sugar, etc., but excepting cotton, were estimated at $93,715,710. Its
+imports the same year were valued at more than $14,000,000. It is the
+chief cotton mart of the world, and its wharves are lined with ships
+which bear this commodity to every quarter of the globe. In the amount
+and value of its exports, it ranks second only to New York, though its
+imports are not in the same proportion, which always speaks well for the
+business prosperity of a city. The census of 1880 gave it a population
+of 216,140, showing that its progress still continues. No longer cursed
+by the presence of the "peculiar institution," its former slave marts
+turned into commercial depots or abolished altogether, and its
+population numbering to a greater degree every year the industrious
+class, New Orleans will do more in the future than maintain her present
+prosperity; she will build up new industries, and originate new schemes
+of advancement; so that she is certain to continue her present supremacy
+over her sister cities in the South.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+NEW YORK.
+
+ Early History of New York.--During the Revolution.--
+ Evacuation Day.--Bowling Green.--Wall Street.--Stock Exchange.--
+ Jacob Little.--Daniel Drew.--Jay Cooke.--Rufus Hatch.--The
+ Vanderbilts.--Jay Gould.--Trinity Church.--John Jacob Astor.--
+ Post-Office.--City Hall and Court House.--James Gordon
+ Bennett.--Printing House Square.--Horace Greeley.--Broadway.--
+ Union Square.--Washington Square.--Fifth Avenue.--Madison
+ Square.--Cathedral.--Murray Hill.--Second Avenue.--Booth's
+ Theatre and Grand Opera House.--The Bowery.--Peter Cooper.--
+ Fourth Avenue.--Park Avenue.--Five Points and its Vicinity.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Tombs.--Central Park.--Water Front.--
+ Blackwell's Island.--Hell Gate.--Suspension Bridge.--Opening
+ Day.--Tragedy of Decoration Day.--New York of the Present and
+ Future.
+
+
+Less than three hundred years ago the narrow strip of territory now
+occupied by what its wide-awake and self-asserting citizens delight to
+term "The Metropolis of the New World," was a broken and rugged
+wilderness, which the foot of white man had never trod, not, at least,
+within the memory of its then oldest inhabitants, a few half-naked
+savages of the Manhattan tribe, from whom the island derives its name of
+Manhattan. In 1609 Henry Hudson, an English navigator in the service of
+the Dutch East India Company, landed near the present site of the
+Battery, securing, by right of discovery, the territory to the States of
+the Netherlands. Dutch traders soon followed, and in 1614 a small fort
+and four houses were erected in the neighborhood of what is now Bowling
+Green. The infant metropolis was christened New Amsterdam, and Peter
+Minuits sent out, in 1626, as its first Governor. He purchased the
+island from its native owners, for goods, about twenty-four dollars in
+value. Minuits was recalled in 1631, his successors being Wonter Von
+Twiller, 1633; William Krift, 1638; and Peter Stuyvesant, 1647. In 1644
+a fence was built nearly along the line of what is now Wall street, and
+in 1653 palisades and breastworks, protected by a ditch, were added
+along this line. These palisades remained in existence until near the
+beginning of the present century.
+
+Peter Stuyvesant was the last of the Dutch Governors. In 1664 Charles
+II, of England, gave the territory to his brother James, Duke of York,
+and an expedition was sent out under the command of Colonel Richard
+Nicholls, to take possession of it. The fort was easily captured, and
+the name of the settlement changed to New York. In 1673 the town was
+recaptured by the Dutch, who again changed its name to New Orange; but
+the following year it was restored to the English by treaty.
+
+In 1689 Jacob Leister instituted an insurrection against the unpopular
+administration of Nicholls, which he easily overthrew, and strengthened
+the fort by a battery of six guns outside its walls. This was the origin
+of the "Battery." In 1691 he was arrested and convicted on a charge of
+treason and murder, condemned to death, and executed.
+
+Negro slavery was introduced into New York at an early period, and in
+the year 1741 the alleged discovery of a plot of the slaves to burn the
+city and murder the whites resulted in twenty negroes being hanged, a
+lesser number being burned at the stake, and seventy-five being
+transported.
+
+From the very first the mass of citizens of New York took an active part
+in the struggle for independence. In 1765 the "Sons of Liberty" were
+organized to resist the Stamp Act; in 1770 a meeting of three thousand
+citizens resolved not to submit to this oppression; and in 1773 a
+Vigilance Committee was formed to resist the landing of the tea, by
+whom, in the following year, a tea-laden vessel was sent back to
+England, while eighteen chests of tea were thrown overboard from
+another. On the eighteenth of September, 1776, as a result of the
+disastrous defeat of the American troops, under General Washington, on
+Long Island, New York fell into the hands of the British, who held it
+until the twenty-sixth of November, 1783, when they evacuated it. The
+day is still annually celebrated, under the name of "Evacuation Day."
+
+From 1784 to 1797 New York was the Capital of the State, and from 1785
+to 1790 the seat of government of the United States. The adoption of the
+National Constitution was celebrated in grand style in 1788; and on
+April thirtieth, 1789, Washington was inaugurated at the City Hall, as
+the first President of the United States.
+
+In 1791 the city was visited by yellow fever. In 1795 and 1798 it
+reappeared, with added violence, over two thousand persons falling
+victims to it during the latter year. It made visits at intervals until
+1805, after which it did not reappear until 1819. It came again in 1822
+and 1823, occasioning considerable alarm, but since then its visits in
+an epidemic form have ceased.
+
+In 1820 the surveying and laying out of Manhattan Island north of
+Houston street, after ten years of labor, was completed. The opening of
+the Erie Canal, in 1825, gave the city a fresh impetus on the road to
+prosperity. The first steam ferry between New York and Jersey City was
+started in 1812. In 1825 the city was first lighted by gas; while the
+great Croton Aqueduct, through which it receives its immense water
+supply, was not completed until 1842.
+
+In December, 1835, the most disastrous fire ever known in the city
+destroyed over $18,000,000 worth of property. In July, 1845, a second
+conflagration consumed property to the amount of $5,000,000. Both these
+great fires were in the very heart of the business portion of the city.
+
+In July, 1853, an industrial exhibition was opened, with striking
+ceremonies, in a so-called Crystal Palace, on Reservoir Square. This
+building, in the form of a Greek cross, was made almost wholly of iron
+and glass, being three hundred and sixty-five feet in length each way,
+with a dome one hundred and twenty-three feet high. The flooring covered
+nearly six acres of ground. This structure was destroyed by fire in
+1858.
+
+New York has been the scene of several sanguinary riots within the past
+half century. In 1849, when Macready, the English tragedian, attempted
+to play a second engagement at the Astor Place Opera House, the friends
+of Forrest attacked the building, resulting in calling out of the
+military, the killing of thirty-two persons, and wounding of thirty-six
+others. In July, 1863, a mob, made up of the poorer classes of the
+population, rose in fierce opposition to the draft rendered necessary by
+the requisition for troops by the general government. For several days
+this mob was in practical possession of the city, and it was dispersed
+only by a free use of military force. This mob resulted in the death of
+one thousand persons, and the destruction of $1,500,000 worth of
+property. In 1871 a collision occurred between a procession of Irish
+Orangemen, who were commemorating the Battle of the Boyne, and their
+Catholic fellow-countrymen, during which sixty-two persons lost their
+lives.
+
+The summer of 1871 was made memorable by the discovery that the most
+stupendous frauds upon the public treasury had been carried on for
+several years, by certain city officials, some of whom had been
+extraordinarily popular. A mass meeting, called at Cooper Institute on
+the fourth of September, appointed a committee of seventy-six to take
+measures for securing better government for the city. The elections in
+November following resulted in a complete sweeping out of the obnoxious
+officials, many of whom were subsequently prosecuted, convicted and
+imprisoned, or obliged to fly the country.
+
+New York City, the greater portion of which lies on Manhattan Island, is
+situated at the mouth of the Hudson River, some eighteen miles from the
+Atlantic Ocean. Its extreme length north from the Battery is sixteen
+miles, while the average breadth of the island is one and three-fifths
+of a mile. The city has an area of about 27,000 acres, of which 14,000
+are on Manhattan Island, and about 12,000 on the main land; while the
+remainder is in the East River and the Bay, and includes Ward's,
+Blackwell's, Randall's, Governor's Ellis', and Bedloe's Islands. It is
+bounded on the north by the town of Yonkers; on the east by the Bronx
+and East Rivers; on the south by the Bay; and on the west by the Hudson
+River. Manhattan Island is separated on the north, from the main land,
+by Spuyten Duyvel Creek and Harlem River, both names recalling the Dutch
+origin of the city.
+
+The more ancient portion of New York, from Fourteenth street to the
+Battery, is laid out somewhat irregularly. As far north as Central Park,
+five miles from the Battery, it is quite compactly built. Various
+localities in the more northern and less densely built-up part of the
+island are known by different names; as Yorkville, near Eighty-sixth
+street; and Harlem, in the vicinity of One-hundred-and-twenty-fifth
+street, on the eastern side; and Bloomingdale and Manhattanville,
+opposite them, on the western. North of Manhattanville, near
+One-hundred-and-fiftieth street, is Carmansville, and a mile and a half
+further north are Washington Heights; while Inwood lies at the extreme
+northwestern point of the island. All these are places of interest, and
+offer numerous attractions to the visitor.
+
+That part of New York lying on the mainland, comprising the twenty-third
+and twenty-fourth wards, was added to it in 1874, and contains many
+thriving towns and villages. Prominent among them is Morrisania, with
+avenues running north and south, and streets crossing them at right
+angles, and numbered in continuation of those of Manhattan Island.
+Numerous other towns, with a host of beautiful country residences, are
+scattered over the high and rolling land of which this late addition to
+the area of the city is composed; but with the exception of Morrisania
+it has not yet been regularly laid out for building purposes. The whole
+country in this section of the city, with a romantic natural beauty, to
+which wealth and artistic taste have largely contributed, is a perfect
+paradise of picturesqueness.
+
+The foreigner who visits New York usually approaches it from the lower
+bay, through the "Narrows," a strait lying between Staten Island on the
+left and Long Island on the right. From the heights of the former, a
+beautiful island, rising green and bold from the water's edge, frown the
+massive battlements of Fort Wadsworth and Fort Tompkins; while on the
+latter is Fort Hamilton; and in the midst of the water, gloomy and
+barren, is Fort Lafayette, famous as a political prison during the late
+war. New York Bay is one of the most beautiful, if not _the_ most
+beautiful, in the world. Staten Island rises abruptly on one shore, with
+hills and valleys, green fields and trees, villages and villas; and on
+the other shore are the wood-crowned bluffs of Long Island. Within the
+bay Ellis' Island is near the Jersey shore; Bedloe's Island is not far
+from its centre, and is the selected site of the colossal statue of
+Liberty which France has presented to New York; while Governor's Island,
+the largest of the three, lies to the right, between New York and
+Brooklyn. Each island is fortified, the latter containing Castle William
+and old Fort Columbus.
+
+The bay is dotted with the shipping of every nation. Ocean steamers are
+setting out on their long journeys, or just returning from foreign
+shores. The finest steamboats and ferry boats in the world dart hither
+and thither, like water spiders on the surface of a glassy pool. Tugs,
+oyster boats, and sailing vessels of every size and description, are all
+represented. It is a moving panorama of water craft. As the city is
+approached, gradually, from the distant haze which broods over it, is
+evolved the forms of towers, spires, and roofs, and all its varied and
+picturesque outlines. The city presents a beautiful view from the bay.
+It rises gradually from the water's edge, some portions of it to a
+considerable elevation. A prominent feature in its outline is the
+graceful, tapering spire of Trinity Church, while higher still rises the
+clock-tower of the Tribune building. Other towers, spires and domes,
+break the monotony of roofs and walls. Approaching the mouth of the East
+River, the most striking objects are the massive towers of the
+Suspension Bridge, one on either shore, while between them is the
+bridge, swung upon what seem at a distance like the merest cobwebs.
+
+At the extreme southern end of Manhattan Island is the Battery, already
+referred to, a park of several acres, protected by a granite sea wall.
+It presents a beautiful stretch of green turf, fine trees and wide
+pathways. On its southwest border is Castle Garden, a circular brick
+structure, which has a history of its own. It was originally constructed
+for a fort, and was afterwards converted into a summer garden. A great
+ball, to Marquis Lafayette, was given in it in 1824; and General Jackson
+in 1832, and President Tyler in 1843, held public receptions there. Then
+it was turned into a concert hall, and is chiefly famous, as such, as
+being the place where Jenny Lind made her first appearance in America.
+It is now an emigrant depot, and on days of the arrival of emigrant
+ships, it is very entertaining to watch the troops of emigrants, with
+their quaint gait, unfamiliar language, and strange, un-American faces,
+passing out of its portals, and making their first entrance into their
+new life on the western continent.
+
+Just east of the Battery is Whitehall, the terminus of numerous omnibus
+and car lines, and the location of the Staten Island, South and Hamilton
+ferries. There, too, is the depot of the elevated railways, which extend
+in four lines, two on the eastern side and two on the western, the
+entire length of the city. The Corn Exchange, an imposing building, is
+at the upper end of Whitehall. At the junction of Whitehall with
+Broadway is a pretty, old-fashioned square, shaded with trees, and
+surrounded by an iron fence, called Bowling Green. This was the
+aristocratic quarter of the city in its early days. No. 1 Broadway,
+known as the "old Kennedy House," was built in 1760, and has been,
+successively, the residence and headquarters of Lords Conwallis and
+Howe, General Sir Henry Clinton and General Washington, while Talleyrand
+lived there during his stay in America. Benedict Arnold concocted his
+treasonable projects at No. 5 Broadway. At No. 11 General Gates had his
+headquarters. A few of the old buildings still remain, but they have
+many of them already given way to more modern and more pretentious
+structures. The posts of the iron fence around Bowling Green were once
+surmounted by balls, but they were knocked off and used for cannon balls
+during the Revolution. An equestrian statue of King George III, which
+once ornamented the Square, was melted up during the same period, and
+furnished material for forty-two thousand bullets.
+
+The stranger in New York sometimes wonders why its principal business
+street is called Broadway, since there are many others which are quite
+as broad, some of them even broader. But if he will visit the extreme
+southern portion of the city, he will quickly comprehend. The old
+streets are narrow, being scarcely more than mere alleys, with pavements
+barely broad enough for two to walk abreast, so that Broadway, when
+originally laid out, seemed a magnificent thoroughfare.
+
+As already described, Wall street formed the northern boundary of the
+young colonial city. In that early day, as now, wealth and fashion
+sought to avoid the more plebeian business streets, and so withdrew to
+the neighborhood of this northern boundary, and established, first their
+residences, and then their commercial houses. Wall street then became
+what it has since remained, the monetary centre of the city, only that
+now it is more than that; it is the great monetary centre of the entire
+country. On it and the blocks leading from it, all embraced in
+comparatively a few acres, are probably stored more gold and silver than
+in all the rest of the United States put together, while the business
+interests represented extend to every section, not only of the
+continent, but of the world.
+
+Nowhere else in America are there such and so many magnificent buildings
+as in this section of the city. The streets are narrow, and overshadowed
+as they are by edifices six or more stories in height, seem to be
+dwarfed into mere alley-ways. Nearly every building is worthy of being
+called a temple or a palace. White marble and brown stone, with every
+style of architecture, abound. The United States Sub-Treasury Building,
+at the corner of Wall and Nassau streets, is a stately white marble
+structure in the Doric style, occupying the site of the old Federal
+Hall, in which Washington delivered his first inaugural address.
+Opposite is the white marble palace, in the style of the Renaissance,
+known as the Drexel Building. A little further down the street, at the
+corner of William, is the United States Custom House, formerly the
+Merchants' Exchange, built of granite. It has a portico supported by
+twelve massive columns, and its rotunda in the interior is supported by
+eight columns of Italian marble, the Corinthian capitals of which were
+carved in Italy. Opposite this building is the handsome structure of the
+Bank of New York. Banks, and bankers' and brokers' offices fill the
+street, and are crowded into the side streets.
+
+On Broad street, a short distance below Wall, is the Stock Exchange, a
+handsome, but not large building, which in point of interest towers over
+all others in the locality. Here are daily exacted the comedies and
+tragedies of financial life, and here fortunes are made and fortunes
+lost by that system of gigantic gambling which has come to be known as
+"dealing in stocks." The operations of the Stock Exchange and Gold Room
+concern the whole country, both financially and industrially. Here is
+the true governmental centre, rather than at Washington. Wall and Broad
+streets dictate to Congress what the laws of the country concerning
+finance shall be, and Congress obeys. The Bankers' Association holds the
+menace over the government that if their interests are not consulted,
+they will bring ruin upon the country; and it is in their power to
+execute the threat. This power was illustrated on the twenty-fourth of.
+September, 1869, a day memorable as Black Friday in the history of Wall
+street. By a small but strong combination of bears, gold was made to
+fall in seventeen minutes, from 1.60 to 1.30, after a sale of
+$50,000,000 had been effected, and thousands of men, from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific, were ruined. Money was locked up, and could not be
+obtained even at a premium of one hundred per cent. This was the
+forerunner of the panic which came four years later, in 1873. Then the
+Union Trust Company failed, carrying with it Jay Cooke, Fisk and Hatch,
+Henry Clews, Howe and Macy, and other houses. For the first time during
+its existence the Stock Exchange was closed. Without its closing, not a
+merchant or banker could have survived. With its doors shut no contract
+could be completed nor stocks transferred, and it gave people time,
+which was absolutely needed, to do what they could; or else universal
+and overwhelming ruin would have swept over the country. As it was, not
+less than twenty thousand firms went under, and the stringency of the
+times was felt throughout the nation, depressing business and checking
+industry, until Congress took measures for its relief.
+
+The names of Jacob Little, Leonard W. Jerome, Daniel Drew, Jay Cooke,
+Augustus Schell, Rufus Hatch, James Fisk, Jr., Jay Gould, Commodore
+Vanderbilt, Wm. H. Vanderbilt, and others, are permanently associated
+with Wall street. Jacob Little was known as the "Great Bear of Wall
+street." He originated the daring, dashing style of business in stocks,
+and was always identified with the bears. Meeting many reverses, he died
+at last, comparatively poor, the Southern Rebellion having swept away
+his little remaining fortune.
+
+Leonard W. Jerome was at one time financially the rival of Vanderbilt
+and Drew, with a fortune estimated at from six to ten millions. He
+assumed an unequaled style of magnificence in living; but reverses came,
+and his splendid property on Madison Square, including residence, costly
+stables and private theatre, passed into the hands of the Union League
+Club, and was occupied by them until they went to their new quarters in
+Fifth Avenue. He himself is now forgotten, although a man scarcely past
+the prime of life; but his name is perpetuated in the Jerome Race
+Course.
+
+Daniel Drew came to New York a poor boy, and, by persistent industry and
+business capacity, worked his way up to the highest round of the
+commercial ladder. In 1838 Drew put an opposition boat upon the Hudson,
+with fare at one dollar to Albany; and shortly afterward established the
+People's Line, which has been so successful. The panic of 1873 affected
+him seriously, but he staved off failure until 1875. He died in 1879,
+leaving next to nothing of the millions he had made during his lifetime.
+St. Paul's Church, in Fourth avenue; the Methodist Church at Carmel,
+Putnam County, New York, his native place; and Drew Theological
+Seminary, are monuments of his munificence while money was at his
+command.
+
+Jay Cooke, having been already tolerably successful in business, amassed
+his millions by negotiating the war loan. He was regarded as one of the
+most prominent and safe financiers in the country; but in 1873 his
+failure was complete, and he has not since been heard of in financial
+circles.
+
+Rufus Hatch is one of the successful stock operators of New York.
+Beginning life with nothing, and meeting reverses as well as successes,
+he is now known as one of the boldest and most gigantic of street
+operators.
+
+The name of James Fisk, Jr., is associated with that of the Erie
+Railroad. He commenced life as a peddler. In 1868 he was appointed
+Comptroller of the Erie Road, and immediately set about building up the
+fortunes of that corporation. He appeared on Wall street as an assistant
+of Daniel Drew; made himself master of the Narragansett Steamship
+Company, and changed the condition of its affairs from disaster to
+success. He was one of the conspirators on Black Friday of 1869. He
+purchased the Opera House and the Fifth Avenue Theatre, finding them
+both good investments. He was shot by Edward S. Stokes, both himself
+and Stokes having become entangled with a woman named Helen Josephine
+Mansfield. After his death his supposed great private fortune dwindled
+into a comparatively small amount.
+
+Commodore Vanderbilt also started in life a penniless boy, and became,
+eventually, the great King of Wall street. He built up the Harlem River
+Railroad, originated gigantic enterprises; sent a line of steamships
+across the ocean; gained control of the Hudson River Railroad and other
+roads; and died in 1877, worth not far from $100,000,000, the bulk of
+which he left to his eldest son, William H. Vanderbilt. The Vanderbilt
+name has lost none of its lustre in the hands of the second generation.
+In less than ten years, after a career of unequaled brilliancy in the
+financial world, William H. Vanderbilt retired, with a fortune probably
+double that of his father.
+
+Jay Gould also achieved success from small beginnings. He was in company
+with Fisk in the control of the Erie Railroad, and an associate in
+bringing about the disasters of Black Friday. Soon after the death of
+Greeley he secured a controlling interest in the New York _Tribune_. He
+is still a power in Wall street, and a great railroad magnate.
+
+Broad street still has historical associations clinging about it. At the
+corner of Broad and Pearl streets is the famous De Lancy House, built
+early in the last century by Stephen De Lancy, a Huguenot refugee from
+Normandy. In this house, on the evening of November twenty-fifth, 1783,
+Washington and his staff, with Governor Clinton, celebrated the
+evacuation of the city by the British troops, and a few days later
+Washington bade his officers farewell, before departing for Annapolis to
+resign his commission. The house, having passed through successive
+stages of degeneration, had at one time sunk so low as to have become a
+German tenement house, with a lager beer saloon on the third floor. It
+has recently been renovated, and has again put on an air of
+respectability. It still bears upon it the words: "Washington's
+Headquarters." All about it are, here and there, the relics of the past,
+in the shape of houses which once were homes of the gentility, in
+colonial times.
+
+Pearl street is said to have been originally a cow-path, and it is
+certainly crooked enough to justify such an origin. It is the locality
+of the Cotton Exchange and the cotton brokers.
+
+On Broadway, at the head of Wall street, is Trinity Church, whose spire
+was, until a recent period, the highest in the city, being two hundred
+and eighty-four feet in height. In the early days, when the aristocracy
+were seeking the select neighborhood of Wall street, this church
+corporation established itself upon the utmost northern confines of the
+city. Its original edifice was destroyed by fire, and the present one
+was erected in 1846. It is of brown stone, in pure gothic architecture,
+and one of the most beautiful in New York. In the rich carving of the
+exterior numerous birds have built their nests. It has stained glass
+windows, and the finest chime of bells in America. Within the church is
+a costly reredos in memory of John Jacob Astor. A venerable graveyard
+lies to its north, where repose the remains of Alexander Hamilton,
+Captain Lawrence, of the Chesapeake, Robert Fulton, and the unfortunate
+Charlotte Temple. Some of the headstones, brown and crumbling with age,
+and bearing grotesque carved effigies of angels, date back for more than
+a century. In the northeast corner is a stately monument erected to the
+memory of the patriots who died in British prisons in New York during
+the Revolution. Trinity Parish is the oldest in the city, and fabulously
+wealthy, the corporation having been granted, by Queen Anne, in 1705, a
+large tract of land west of Broadway, extending as far north as
+Christopher street, known as the "Queen's Farm." The land, at that time
+remote from the city, now embraces some of its most valuable business
+portions. It is all leased of Trinity Church by the occupants, and the
+church, when the leases expire, becomes possessed of the buildings and
+improvements upon the ground, and is thus constantly augmenting its
+wealth. The claims of the Jans Anneke heirs involve this vast estate. It
+has three chapels, one of which, St. Paul's, is a few blocks above, on
+the corner of Broadway and Vesey streets, and is surrounded by a
+graveyard almost as ancient as that of Trinity.
+
+At the northwest corner of Vesey street and Broadway is the Astor House,
+which, when it was built, something more than a generation ago, was a
+marvel of size and splendor, though it is now thrown in the shade by
+more modern structures. John Jacob Astor, its builder, was born near
+Heidelberg, in Germany, in 1765, and came penniless to the new world, to
+seek his fortune. After serving as a clerk, he then engaged in a small
+way in the fur business, which eventually grew to the proportions of the
+American Fur Company, and brought to its founder a large fortune, though
+no one outside his family ever knew its exact amount. He settled most of
+his affairs before his death, selling the Astor House to his son
+William, for the consideration of one dollar. Much of his property was
+in real estate, which constantly increased in value. He died in 1848,
+and his senior son being an imbecile, William B. Astor, the younger
+brother, inherited most of his father's fortune. The son became vastly
+richer than his father, dying in 1875, leaving behind him a fortune of
+$50,000,000, which was mostly bequeathed to his eldest son, John Jacob,
+who is now the head of the house.
+
+ [Illustration: BIRDS-EYE VIEW OF NEW YORK.]
+
+The Post Office stands opposite the Astor House, on the east side of
+Broadway, at the southern extremity of City Hall Park. It is a massive
+structure, of Doric and Renaissance architecture, four stories in
+height, beside a Mansard roof, costing $7,000,000.
+
+Half a century ago the City Hall Park was the chief park of New York,
+and the elegance and aristocracy of the city gathered around it. The
+City Hall stands in the park, and back of it is the new Court House,
+still unfinished, a massive edifice in Corinthian style, which, when
+completed, will have a dome two hundred and ten feet above the sidewalk.
+
+On the western side of Broadway, opposite St. Paul's, is the splendid
+building of the New York _Herald_. The _Herald_ is the representative
+newspaper of New York, and is probably the most enterprising sheet in
+the world. James Gordon Bennett, its founder, was born in Scotland in
+1795, and came to America in 1819. After various literary ventures, he
+decided to establish a paper which should embody his ideal of a
+metropolitan journal. On the sixth of May, 1855, the first number of the
+New York _Herald_ was issued, being then a small penny sheet. Mr.
+Bennett was editor, reporter and correspondent. He was his own
+compositor and errand boy, mailed his papers and kept his accounts. His
+rule, from the very first, was never to run a dollar in debt. He
+succeeded in establishing a paper which has no parallel in history,
+while, since his death, his son's enterprise has still further increased
+its scope and popularity. Young Bennett, the present proprietor of the
+_Herald_, named after his father, was trained especially for the duties
+which were to devolve upon him. He is thoroughly at home in French,
+German, Italian and Scotch. He is a skilled engineer, and can run either
+the engines or presses of his establishment. He is a practical printer,
+and can also telegraph with skill and accuracy. He gives strict personal
+supervision to the affairs of his immense establishment, which yields
+him a yearly income equaling that of a merchant prince.
+
+Extending from the _Herald_ Building northward, on the eastern side of
+City Hall Park, is what is known as Printing House Square, including the
+offices of the principal daily and weekly papers. The magnificent
+granite structure of the _Staats Zeitung_ faces this square on the
+north. The immense _Tribune_ Building, nine stories high, with its tall
+clock tower, flanks it on the east, on Nassau street. The _Sun_ modestly
+nestles in the shadow of the _Tribune_. The _Times_ Building is found on
+Park Row, where also is the _World_ office. _Truth_ lurks in a basement
+on Nassau street. But a square or two below is the _Evening Post_
+Building, where the venerable poet Bryant labored at his editorial
+duties for so many years. A statue of Franklin occupies a small open
+triangular space in the midst of the square.
+
+Horace Greeley's name is inseparably associated with that of the
+_Tribune_, which he founded. Honest and single-minded, he wielded a
+mighty influence, and his paper was a great political power in the
+country. He often made enemies by his honesty and straight-forwardness;
+but both enemies and friends respected him. In 1872 the Liberal
+Republican and Democratic parties nominated him as their choice for
+President. Believing that he could rally around him men of all parties
+who desired to see reform in political methods, he accepted the
+nomination; and was attacked so bitterly by those whom he had supposed
+to be his friends, and met such overwhelming defeat in the contest,
+that, taken with the death of his wife within a week of the election, he
+was crushed completely, his reason left him, and before the end of a
+month he died a broken-hearted man.
+
+North of the City Hall Park, on the corner of Chambers street, is the
+old wholesale house of A. T. Stewart, now devoted to other purposes, and
+having two stories added to its top. Here, a generation ago, the belles
+of New York City came to do their shopping, it having been originally
+built for the retail trade, as a few years later they flocked to the new
+retail store on Broadway, between Ninth and Tenth. The name of A. T.
+Stewart is no longer heard in New York, save in connection with the
+past. It was a power in its day and generation. Few men had more to do
+with Wall street than Stewart, and his mercantile business was carried
+on in the Wall street style. He "cornered" goods, "sold short," "loaded
+the market," and "bought long." Having emigrated from the north of
+Ireland, he first opened business in a small way, himself and wife
+living in one room over their store. Beginning at the very lowest round
+of the ladder, he worked with the fixed resolution of becoming the first
+merchant in the land. He always lived within his income, and never
+bought a dollar's worth of merchandise that he could not pay cash for.
+In the days of his prosperity he built for himself and wife a marble
+palace, at the corner of Fifth avenue and Thirty-fourth street, the most
+finely-finished and elegantly-furnished residence in the country. He
+died in 1876, worth, probably, $50,000,000. The theft of his remains
+from the graveyard of St. Mark's Church, at Ninth street and Second
+avenue, was the nine days' wonder of the time; and the vault prepared
+for their reception, in the fine Cathedral at Garden City, Long Island,
+remains empty.
+
+Broadway, almost from the Battery, is bordered by magnificent
+structures. The lower end of this thoroughfare is devoted principally to
+insurance, bankers' and brokers', railway and other offices, and to the
+wholesale trade. Above Canal street the retail stores begin to appear at
+intervals, and as one approaches Ninth street ladies multiply on the
+western pavement. From Ninth street up, the retail trade monopolizes the
+street, and on pleasant afternoons the pavement is filled with elegantly
+dressed ladies who are out shopping. At Tenth street Broadway makes a
+bend to the westward, and on the eastern side of the way, facing
+obliquely down the thoroughfare, is Grace Church and parsonage, both
+elegant structures. Grace Church is a fashionable place of worship, and
+the scene of the most exclusive weddings and funerals of the city.
+
+Union Square is reached at Fourteenth street. It is oval in form, with
+beautiful green turf, trees and walks, and contains a fine fountain in
+the centre, a colossal bronze statue of Washington on a granite
+pedestal, and statues of Hamilton and Lafayette. Along its northern end
+is a wide plaza for military parades and popular assemblies. Union
+Square was once a fashionable residence quarter, but it is now occupied
+almost wholly by business. At Twenty-third street, Broadway runs
+diagonally across Fifth avenue, touching the southwestern corner of
+Madison Square--not so very long since the most genteel locality in New
+York, but now, like Union Square, becoming occupied by hotels and
+business houses.
+
+Fifth Avenue, the most splendid avenue in America, makes a beginning at
+Washington Square, a lovely public park embowered in trees, which was
+once Potters' Field, the pauper burying ground, and where one hundred
+thousand bodies lie buried. New York University and Dr. Hutton's Church
+face the square on the east. The southern side is given up to business,
+but the north and west are still occupied by handsome private
+residences. Fifth Avenue is a continuous line of palatial hotels,
+gorgeous club-houses, brownstone mansions and magnificent churches. No
+plebeian horse cars are permitted to disturb its well-bred quiet, and
+the rumble of elegant equipages is alone heard upon its Belgian
+pavement.
+
+Business is already invading the lower portion of the avenue, piano
+warehouses being especially prominent. On Madison Square are the Fifth
+Avenue Hotel and the Hoffman House. Opposite the latter house is a
+monument erected to General Worth, a hero of the Mexican war.
+Delmonico's and the Café Brunswick, rival restaurants, occupy opposite
+corners of Twenty-sixth street. The Stevens House is an elegant family
+hotel on Fifth Avenue and Twenty-seventh street, running to Broadway. At
+Twenty-ninth street is the Congregational Church, a stately granite
+edifice; and on the same street, just east of the Avenue, is the Church
+of the Transfiguration, popularly known as "the little church around the
+corner," a name bestowed on it by a neighboring clergyman, who, refusing
+to bury an actor from his own church, referred the applicant to this. At
+the corner of Thirty-fourth street is the Stewart marble palace already
+referred to. From Forty-first to Forty-second streets is the
+distributing reservoir of the Croton Water-works, with walls of massive
+masonry in the Egyptian style. The Crystal Palace of 1853 occupied this
+square. The Avenue has at this place ascended to a considerable
+elevation, and the locality, embracing several streets and avenues, is
+known as Murray Hill, the most wealthy and exclusive quarter of the
+city. At Forty-third street is the Jewish Temple Emanuel, the finest
+specimen of Moorish architecture in the country.
+
+Occupying the block between Fiftieth and Fifty-first streets is the
+Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Patrick, commenced in 1858, and with the
+towers still incomplete. It is of white marble, in decorated Gothic
+style; and the largest and handsomest church in the country. It is
+elaborately carved, the numerous rose windows seeming almost like lace
+work. When completed it will have two spires, ornamented with
+buttresses, niches with statues, and pinnacles, and three hundred and
+twenty-eight feet in height. The interior is as beautiful as a dream. It
+is entirely of white marble. Massive pillars with elaborately carved
+capitals support the arched roof, while the light is softened and
+subdued by beautiful stained-glass windows. The building is in such
+perfect proportion that one does not realize its immense size until he
+descries the priest at the altar, so far away as to seem a mere child.
+
+But eight squares away is Central Park, the great breathing-place of the
+city. Looking back, down the Avenue, from the entrance to the Park,
+there is seen a forest of spires rising from magnificent churches which
+we have had no space to mention, and blocks upon blocks of palatial
+residences, the homes of the millionaires of the city. The eastern side
+of Fifth Avenue, facing the Park for a number of blocks, is occupied by
+elegant private residences.
+
+Madison Avenue starts from Madison Square, running through to
+Forty-second street. It, with parallel avenues and places, shares the
+prestige of Fifth Avenue, as being the aristocratic quarter of the city.
+
+Fourteenth street, once a fashionable thoroughfare, is now fast being
+occupied by large retail stores.
+
+The avenues, commencing at First, and numbering as high as Eleventh, run
+north and south, parallel to Fifth Avenue, already described. They are
+supplemented on the eastern side, at the widest part of the island, by
+avenues A, B, C, and D. Most of these avenues commence on the eastern
+side at Houston street, the northern boundary of the city in the early
+part of the present century. On the western side, with the exception of
+Fifth and Sixth, they commence but little below Fourteenth street. They
+are mostly devoted to retail trade, and, on seeing their miles of
+stores, one wonders where, even in a great city like New York, all the
+people come from who support them.
+
+Second Avenue is almost the only exception among the avenues. Early in
+the century it was what Fifth Avenue has become to-day, the fashionable
+residence avenue; and even yet some of the old Knickerbocker families
+cling to it, living in their roomy, old-fashioned houses, and
+maintaining an exclusive society, while they look down with disdain upon
+the parvenues of Fifth avenue. Stuyvesant Square, intersected by Second
+avenue, and bounded on the east by Livingston Place, and on the west by
+Rutherford Place, is one of the quarters of the _ancient régime_. Here
+still live the Rutherfords and the Stuyvesants. Here is the residence of
+Hamilton Fish and William M. Evarts. St. George Church, with the largest
+seating capacity of any church in the city, faces this square.
+
+Booth's Theatre is on the corner of Sixth avenue and Twenty-third
+street. It is the most magnificent place of amusement in America; built
+in the Renaissance style, with a Mansard roof. Opposite is the Masonic
+Temple, in Ionic and Doric architecture. At the corner of Eighth avenue
+and Twenty-third street is the Grand Opera House, once owned by James
+Fisk, Jr.
+
+New York is at once spendthrift and parsimonious in the naming of her
+streets. Thus, she sometimes repeats a name more than once, and again,
+bestows two or three names upon the same street. There is a Broadway, an
+East Broadway, a West Broadway, and a Broad street. There is Greenwich
+avenue and Greenwich street. There are two Pearl streets. There is a
+Park avenue, a Park street, a Park row, and a Park place. On the other
+hand, Chatham becomes East Broadway east of Bowery; Dey street is
+transformed into John street east of Broadway; Cortlandt becomes Maiden
+Lane at the same dividing line; and other streets are in like manner
+metamorphosed. Fourth Avenue, beginning at the Battery as Pearl street,
+changes to the Bowery at Franklin Square. At Eighth street, without any
+change in its direction, it becomes Fourth Avenue; from Thirty-fourth to
+Forty-second streets it is Park Avenue, and then relapses into Fourth
+Avenue again. This is one of the most interesting avenues in the city;
+as Pearl street, its windings and its business occupations have been
+referred to.
+
+Bowery has a character all its own. It takes its name from Peter
+Stuyvesant's "Bowerie Farm," through which it passes. In it is probably
+represented every civilized nation on the globe. It is unqualifiedly a
+democratic street. While Fifth Avenue represents one extreme of city
+life, the Bowery represents the other. Here are the streets and shops of
+the working classes, consisting of dry and fancy goods, cigar shops,
+lager beer saloons, shoe stores, confectionery stores, pawnbrokers'
+shops, and ready-made clothing, plentifully besprinkled with variety and
+concert saloons and beer gardens. There are no elegant store fronts or
+marble stores here. The buildings are plain brick edifices, three or
+four stories in height, the upper stories occupied by the families of
+the merchants, or as tenement houses. The Germans visit the beer gardens
+with their wives and families, to listen to what is sometimes excellent
+music, and to drink beer. The concert saloons are, some of them, the
+resorts of the lowest of both sexes. Near Canal street is the site of
+the old Bowery Theatre, which, having been thrice destroyed by fire, has
+been thrice rebuilt, the last time, quite recently, and is now known as
+Thalia Theatre. A generation and a half ago the gamins of New York
+reigned supreme in the pit. Now that they have been relegated to the
+gallery, they still criticise the performance with the frankness and
+originality of expression characteristic of the "Bowery boys" of old.
+One should visit the Bowery at night, when the workmen and shop girls,
+having finished their daily labor, are out for recreation and amusement.
+Then he will gain an idea of one phase of city life and people which he
+would not obtain otherwise.
+
+At Seventh street, where Third avenue branches off, looking down the
+Bowery, and occupying the entire block to Eighth street, is Cooper
+Institute, containing a free library, free reading-room, free schools of
+art, telegraphy and science, and a hall and lecture room. Peter Cooper
+was one of the representative men of New York. Acquiring a large fortune
+by strictly honorable methods, he devoted a generous portion of it to
+charitable objects, and this Institute is one of the lasting monuments
+of his generosity. He was a true philanthropist, a man of broad thought
+and kindly impulses, whose name was honored by all classes of the
+community. He died in April, 1883, at a ripe old age.
+
+Occupying the block between Third Avenue and the Bowery, which is now
+dignified by the name of Fourth avenue, is the Bible House, the largest
+structure of its kind in the world, except that of London. Here the
+Bible is printed in almost every known language, and here are
+congregated the offices of the various religious societies of the city
+and country. The Young Men's Christian Association and Academy of Design
+occupy opposite corners at Twenty-third street, on the west side of the
+avenue. The exterior of the latter is copied from a famous palace in
+Venice, and it is peculiar as well as beautiful in its appearance. From
+Thirty-second to Thirty-third streets is the immense structure intended
+by A. T. Stewart as the crowning charitable object of his life, to be,
+perhaps, in some sort, an atonement for injustice of which he may have
+been guilty toward the working classes. It was designed as a hotel for
+working women, but in its very plan indicated how little its founder
+understood the nature or needs of that class. At its completion, after
+his death, it did not take many weeks to demonstrate that working women
+preferred a place more home-like, and fettered by less restrictions than
+this palace-prison; and so the edifice was turned into an ordinary
+hotel.
+
+Park avenue commences at Thirty-fourth street, being built over the
+track of the Fourth avenue car line. In the centre of this avenue, over
+the tunnels, are little spaces inclosed by iron fences, and containing a
+profusion of shrubbery and flowers. The avenue abounds in elegant
+churches and equally fine residences. At Forty-second street is the
+Grand Central Depot, seven hundred feet in length, its exterior
+imposing, and with corner and central towers surmounted by domes. At
+Sixty-ninth street, between Fourth and Lexington avenues, is the new
+Normal College, an ecclesiastical-looking building, the most complete of
+its kind in America.
+
+Retracing our steps to near the foot of Bowery, we come to Chatham
+street, where the Jews reign supreme, and which is the vestibule of the
+worst quarter of the city. Passing along a pavement festooned with
+cheap, ready-made clothing, one comes to Baxter street, and from thence
+to the Five Points, once the most infamous locality of New York. Here, a
+generation ago, a respectable man took his life in his hands, who
+attempted to pass through this quarter, even in broad daylight. It was
+the abode of thieves, burglars, garotters, murderers and prostitutes.
+Hundreds of families were huddled together in tumble-down tenement
+houses, living in such filth and with such an utter lack of decency as
+is scarcely to be credited. But home missionaries visited the quarter,
+established mission-schools and a house of industry, tore down the
+disgraceful tenement-houses and built better ones in their place; and
+to-day the old Bowery, Cow Bay and Murderers' Alley are known only in
+name. The Five Points is at the crossing of Baxter, Worth and Parker
+streets, and is really five points no longer, the carrying through of
+Worth street to the Bowery, forming an additional point. The locality is
+still dreadful enough, with all its improvements. Drunken men, depraved
+women, and swarms of half-clad children fill the neighborhood, and even
+the "improved tenement houses," as viewed from the outside, seem but
+sorry abodes for human beings. This is the heart of a wretched quarter,
+which extends westward to Broadway, and almost indefinitely in other
+directions. Mott, Mulberry, Baxter, Centre, Elm and Crosby streets are
+all densely populated, containing numberless tenement houses. It is
+possible to walk through some of these streets and never hear a word of
+English. Mulberry and Crosby streets are especially the homes of
+Italians, who on Sunday mornings pour out of the tenements upon the
+pavement and street below in such throngs that a stranger can scarcely
+elbow his way through. The Chinese have taken possession of the lower
+part of Mott street, and established laundries, groceries, tea-houses,
+lodging-houses, and opium-smoking dens. The latter are already
+attracting the attention of the public, and a feeble effort has been
+made by the city government to put a check upon their evil influence.
+These streets are a festering sore in the very heart of the city, and
+require attention.
+
+The Tombs, the city prison, famous in the criminal history of New York,
+is located in the midst of this quarter, on Centre street, occupying an
+entire block. It is a gloomy building, constructed of granite, in
+imitation of an Egyptian temple. Within these forbidding walls is the
+Tombs Police Court, where, early each morning, petty cases are disposed
+of by the magistrate upon the bench; and here prisoners are kept
+awaiting trial. Eleven cells of special strength and security are for
+murderers awaiting trial or punishment. There is also a special
+department for women. In the inner quadrangle of the building murderers
+are made to suffer the utmost penalty of the law, and the last act of
+many a tragedy which has excited and horrified the public has been
+performed here.
+
+It will be a relief to turn from the gloom and wretchedness of the Tombs
+to the sunshine and freedom of New York's great breathing place. Central
+Park contains eight hundred and forty-three acres, and embraces an area
+extending from Fifth to Eighth avenues, and from Fifty-ninth to
+One-hundred-and-tenth streets. Originally, it was a desolate stretch of
+country in the suburbs of the city, varied by rocks and marshes, and
+dotted by the hovels of Irish and Dutch squatters, its most picturesque
+features being their goats, which picked up a scant living among the
+rubbish with which it was covered. Its whole extent is now covered with
+a heavy sod, planted with trees and shrubbery, and furnishes many miles
+of drives and walks. Every day in the year it has numerous visitors, but
+on Sunday, one must fairly elbow one's way through the crowds. In the
+southeast corner are the Zoölogical Gardens and the old State Arsenal;
+the Metropolitan Museum of Art, recently opened, is north of Belvidere,
+on the east side of the Park. The Egyptian Obelisk stands on an eminence
+west of the museum. Winding paths conduct the visitor to the Mall, a
+stately avenue shaded by double rows of elms, and ornamented at
+intervals with bronze statues of celebrated American and European
+statesmen and poets; also a number of groups which are especially fine.
+The Terrace is at the northern terminus of the Mall, and leads by a
+flight of broad, stone stairs to Central Lake, the prettiest body of
+water in the Park, dotted by gondolas. A fountain, with immense granite
+basins, and a colossal statue of the Angel of Bethesda, stands between
+the terrace and the lake. Beyond the lake is the Ramble, consisting of
+winding, shaded paths, and covering thirty-six acres of sloping hills.
+From the tower at Belvidere, a magnificent piece of architecture, in the
+Norman style, may be obtained a fine bird's-eye view of the Park. Just
+above Belvidere are the two reservoirs of the water works, extending as
+far north as Ninety-sixth street. Beyond that the Park is less
+embellished by art, and is richer in natural beauties. From the eminence
+upon which stands the old Block House, on the northern border of the
+Park, a magnificent and extensive view may be obtained of the hills
+which bound in the landscape, and including High Bridge.
+
+One should visit the water front of New York, which circles the city on
+three sides, to gain an idea of its immense commerce. A river wall of
+solid masonry has been commenced, which, when completed, will make the
+American metropolis equal to London and Liverpool in this respect. A
+perfect forest of masts lines the wharves, representing every kind of
+craft, and almost every nation that sails the seas. Twice a week
+European steamships leave from the foot of Canal street; while from
+various points along the wharves, indicated by handsome ferry or
+shipping houses, boats go and come, to and from every port on the river
+or on the Atlantic coast. At Desbrosses and Cortlandt streets ferries
+connect with Jersey City. South, Wall and Fulton ferries give access to
+Brooklyn; while other ferries convey passengers to other points on the
+rivers and bay.
+
+Passing up the East River, with the ship-thronged wharves and docks of
+New York on one hand, and the Brooklyn Navy Yard on the other, the
+visitor soon obtains a view of Blackwell's, Ward's and Randall's
+islands. Blackwell's Island is at the foot of Forty-sixth street, and is
+one hundred and twenty acres in extent. Upon it are located the
+Almshouse, Female Lunatic Asylum, Penitentiary, Work House, Blind
+Asylum, Charity, Smallpox and Typhus Fever hospitals. These buildings
+are all constructed of granite, quarried from the island by convicts.
+They are plain but substantial in appearance.
+
+Leaving Blackwell's Island, the boat passes cautiously through the
+swirling waters of Hell Gate, once the terror of all sailors, but now
+robbed of most of its horrors. It was originally a collection of rocks
+in mid channel, which, as the tides swept in and out, caused the waters
+to rush in a succession of whirlpools and rapids. But a few years ago
+United States engineers undertook and accomplished a gigantic
+excavation, directly under these threatening rocks and reefs. When it
+was completed a grand explosion, effected by means of connecting wires,
+blew up these dangerous obstructions, and left a comparatively clear and
+safe channel for vessels. The few remaining rocks which this explosion
+failed to disturb are being removed, and with its dangers, much of the
+romantic interest which attached to Hell Gate will pass away.
+
+Ward's Island, embracing two hundred acres, and containing the Male
+Lunatic Asylum, the Emigrant Hospital, and the Inebriate Asylum, divides
+the Harlem from the East River. Randall's Island is separated from
+Ward's Island by a narrow channel, and is the last of the group. It
+contains the Idiot Asylum, the House of Refuge, the Infant Hospital,
+Nurseries, and other charities provided by the city for destitute
+children.
+
+The visitor in New York should, if possible, make an excursion to High
+Bridge, a magnificent structure by which the Croton Aqueduct is carried
+across Harlem River. It is built of granite, and spans the entire width
+of valley and river, from cliff to cliff. It is composed of eight
+arches, each with a span of eighty feet, and with an elevation of a
+hundred feet clear from the surface of the river. The water is led over
+the bridge, a distance of fourteen hundred and fifty feet, in immense
+iron pipes, six feet in diameter. Above these pipes is a pathway for
+pedestrians. At One-hundred-and-sixty-ninth street, a little below the
+High Bridge, is the site of the elegant mansion of Colonel Roger Morris,
+and the head-quarters of General Washington during active operations in
+this portion of the island. The situation is one of picturesque and
+historic interest.
+
+Rising grandly above all the shipping of the East River, on both its
+sides, are the massive towers of the Suspension Bridge, connecting the
+sister cities of New York and Brooklyn. Ponderous cables swing in a
+single grand sweep from tower to tower, supporting the bridge in its
+place. It does not seem very much elevated above the river, and you feel
+that a certain majestic sailing vessel which is bearing down upon it
+will bring the top of her masts in contact with it. But she sails
+proudly beneath the structure, never bowing her head, and there is
+plenty of room and to spare; for the bridge is one hundred and
+thirty-five feet above high water mark. The distance from tower to tower
+is one thousand five hundred and ninety-five feet, while the entire
+length of the bridge, from Park Place to its terminus, on the heights in
+Brooklyn, is six thousand feet, or a little more than a mile. Its width
+is eighty-five feet, affording space for two railways, besides two
+double carriageways, and one foot-path. It was commenced in 1871, and
+cost $15,000,000. Its formal opening took place on May twenty-fourth,
+1883. The day was a rarely beautiful one, and was observed as a general
+holiday by the people of both cities. President Arthur and his Cabinet,
+the governors of New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island, with many other
+distinguished persons, were among the guests, while the honors of the
+occasion were done by the Mayors of New York and Brooklyn. Every street
+in the neighborhood of the bridge was packed with a dense throng of
+spectators, while windows, balconies and roofs were filled with curious
+sight seers.
+
+Shortly after noon the procession moved down Broadway, and a little
+after one o'clock the President and other distinguished guests entered
+the gateway of the bridge, preceded by the Seventh Regiment, the
+procession headed by a company of mounted policemen, while Cappa's band
+played "Hail to the Chief." When the party reached the New York tower,
+they were met by President Kingsley of the bridge trustees, and there
+were introductions and welcomes, and the march was resumed. At the
+Brooklyn tower Mayor Low met the President, and the Seventy-third
+Regiment presented arms. In announcement of the fact that the bridge was
+crossed, cannons thundered forth salutes, the steam whistles of vessels
+and factories screamed, bells rang, and deafening cheers went up from
+the watching multitude. The further ceremonies of the day took place in
+a pavilion on the Brooklyn end, when Mr. William E. Kingsley, the
+President of the Bridge Association, Mayor Low, of Brooklyn, Mayor Edson
+of New York, Hon. Abram S. Hewitt and Rev. B. S. Storrs, made able
+addresses. A reception was tendered in the evening, at the Academy of
+Music, by the City of Brooklyn, to the President and the Governor of the
+State, previous to which there was a fine display of fireworks from the
+bridge.
+
+During all the excitement of the day, while cannon thundered and the
+multitude cheered, an invalid sat alone in his house on Columbia
+Heights, and regarded from afar the completion of his toil of years.
+John A. Roebling, the elder of the two Roeblings, first conceived and
+planned the bridge which connects New York and Brooklyn. He had built
+the chief suspension bridges in the country, and to him was intrusted
+the task of putting his own plans into tangible form. While testing and
+perfecting his surveys, his foot was crushed between the planking of a
+pier; lockjaw supervened, and the man who had designed the bridge lost
+his life in its service. He was succeeded by his son, Colonel Washington
+A. Roebling, who was equally qualified for the undertaking. He labored
+with zeal, giving personal superintendence to his workmen, until in the
+caissons he contracted a mysterious disease, which had proved fatal to
+several men in his employ. From that period he was confined to his home,
+a hopeless invalid, his intellect apparently quickened as his physical
+system was enfeebled. He has never seen the structure, save as it stands
+from a distance; but from his sick-room he has directed and watched over
+the progress of the enterprise, his active assistant being his wife, of
+whom Mayor Edson, in his address on the occasion, spoke in the following
+terms: "With this bridge will ever be coupled the thought of one,
+through the subtle alembic of whose brain, and by whose facile fingers,
+communication was maintained between the directing power of its
+construction and the obedient agencies of its execution. It is thus an
+everlasting monument to the self-sacrificing devotion of woman." After
+the conclusion of the address, the President and his Cabinet, the
+Governor, and hundreds of others, paid their respects to Colonel
+Roebling, and did honor to the man the completion of whose work they
+were celebrating. After it was over Roebling replied, to the suggestion
+that he must be happy, "I am satisfied."
+
+The great bridge was opened to the public at midnight, and the waiting
+throng, which even at that hour numbered about twenty thousand persons,
+were permitted to enter the gates and cross the structure. A
+representative of the New York _Herald_ was the first to pay the toll of
+one cent demanded, and the first to begin the passage across. With the
+completion of this bridge the continent is entirely spanned, and one may
+visit, dry shod and without the use of ferry boats, every city from the
+Atlantic to the Golden Gate.
+
+But the great bridge was not to be consecrated to the use of the public
+without a baptism of blood. On Decoration Day, which occurred the
+seventh day after the opening of the bridge, there was a grand military
+parade in New York, reviewed by President Arthur from a stand in Madison
+Square, and impressive ceremonies at the various cemeteries in Brooklyn.
+From early morning a steady stream of pedestrians poured each way,
+across the bridge. About four o'clock in the afternoon there came a lock
+in the crowd, just at the top of the stairs on the New York side,
+leading down to the concrete roadway Men, women and children were wedged
+together in a jam, created by the fearful pressure of two opposing
+crowds, extending to either end of the bridge. Some one stumbled and
+fell on the stairs. The terrible pressure prevented him or her from
+rising, and others fell over the obstacle thus placed in the pathway.
+Those immediately behind were hopelessly forced on over them. A panic
+ensued. Women screamed and wrung their hands; children cried and called
+pitifully for "help!" Men shouted themselves hoarse, swore and fought. A
+hundred hats and bonnets were afterwards found upon the spot, trampled
+into shapelessness. Clothes were torn off, and many emerged from the
+crush in only their undergarments. Parents held their children aloft to
+keep them from being trampled upon. Hundreds of men climbed with
+difficulty on the beams running over the railroads, and dropping down
+were caught by those in the carriage-way beneath. A number of women also
+escaped in that manner.
+
+At last, after almost superhuman efforts, the crowd was pressed back
+sufficiently to gather up the prostrate bodies, which were taken to the
+roadway below, and ranged along the wall, waiting for ambulances to
+convey them away. Twelve persons were found dead, some of them bruised,
+discolored, and covered with blood, and others apparently suffocated to
+death. The list of injured was very much larger--how much will probably
+never be known, since many, assisted by their friends, returned to their
+homes without reporting their hurts. The dead and wounded were most of
+them conveyed to the City Hall Police Station, and were there claimed by
+their friends; and the day which had begun so joyously ended in gloom.
+
+New York is one of the most wonderful products of our wonderful western
+civilization. It is itself a world in epitome. Thoroughly cosmopolitan
+in its character, almost every nationality is represented within its
+boundaries, and almost every tongue spoken. It is the great monetary,
+scientific, artistic and intellectual centre of the western world.
+Containing much that is evil, it also abounds with more that is good. It
+is well governed. Its sanitary arrangements are such as to make it
+peculiarly free from epidemic diseases. The record of its crimes is
+undoubtedly a long one; but when the number of its inhabitants is
+considered, it will be found to show an average comparing favorably with
+other cities. Thousands of happy homes are found throughout its length
+and breadth. Hundreds of good and charitable enterprises are originated
+and fostered within its limits, and grow, some of them, to gigantic
+proportions, reaching out strong arms to the uttermost confines of the
+country and even of the world, comforting the afflicted, lifting up the
+degraded, and shedding the light of truth in dark places. It is already
+a great city, a wonderful city. But what it is to-day is only the
+beginning of what those who live fifty years hence will behold it. There
+is still space upon Manhattan Island for twice or thrice its present
+population and business; and the no distant future will undoubtedly see
+this space fully occupied, while it is among the possibilities that New
+York will become, in point of inhabitants and commercial interests, the
+first city in the world.
+
+ [Illustration: NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN BRIDGE.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+OMAHA.
+
+ Arrival in Omaha.--The Missouri River.--Position and Appearance
+ of the City.--Public Buildings.--History.--Land Speculation.--
+ Panic of 1857.--Discovery of Gold in Colorado.--"Pike's Peak
+ or Bust."--Sudden Revival of Business.--First Railroad.--Union
+ Pacific Railroad.--Population.--Commercial and Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Bridge over the Missouri.--Union Pacific Depot.--
+ Prospects for the Future.
+
+
+On the afternoon of October twenty-first, 1876, I sat in the saddle upon
+the eastern bank of the Missouri River, opposite Omaha, Nebraska, having
+that day accomplished a horseback journey of twenty-two miles, on my way
+from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Paul Revere, the faithful horse who
+had borne me all the way from Boston, declined entering the ferry boat,
+it being his firm conviction that rivers should either be crossed by
+bridges or forded. At last, being gently coerced, the horse reluctantly
+consented, and the muddy current of the river was soon crossed. At three
+o'clock I entered the city of Omaha, the half-way house across the
+continent, it having been a little more than five months since I dashed
+out of the surf, my horse's hoofs wet and dripping with the brine of the
+Atlantic.
+
+Omaha lies on the eastern boundary of Nebraska, opposite Council Bluffs,
+on the western bank of the Missouri River, a turbulent stream, which is
+never satisfied with its position, but is constantly shifting and
+changing, and making for itself new channels. A bottom land about three
+miles wide stretches out between Omaha and Council Bluffs, and through
+this the Missouri rolls, a swift, muddy stream, slowly but surely
+carrying the Rocky Mountains down to the Mississippi, which, in its
+turn, deposits them in the Gulf of Mexico, and helps to extend our Gulf
+coast. The Missouri vibrates like a pendulum, from one side of this
+bottom land to the other; now being near one city, and then near the
+other. At the period of my visit its current washed the front of Omaha,
+leaving Council Bluffs some distance off on the opposite side; but it
+was already beginning its backward swing. Thus the boundary line between
+Nebraska and Iowa is being continually shifted, and one State is
+augmented in territory at the expense of the other.
+
+Omaha is built in part upon the low bottom lands which border the river,
+and which may at any time be menaced by the swollen and angry stream,
+unless precautions are taken, in the building of high and substantial
+stone levees along the river front. The town lies also in part upon the
+table lands beyond, and is extending to the bluffs which rise still
+further away. Its business is chiefly confined to the lower portion,
+where magnificent blocks attest the prosperity of the city. Streets of
+substantial dwellings, and numerous most elegant private residences,
+with large and handsomely ornamented grounds, are discovered as one
+passes through the city. A striking edifice, of Cincinnati freestone,
+four stories high, is occupied as a Post Office and Court House. Its
+High School building is one of the finest in the country. When the State
+Government was, in 1866, removed from Omaha to Lincoln, the Legislature
+donated the Square and Capitol Building at the former place for High
+School purposes. The old Capitol was demolished, and a magnificent
+school building erected on its site, at a cost of $250,000, while other
+fine school edifices, aggregating in cost about $150,000 more, were
+erected in other sections of the city. The High School building is on
+the summit of a hill, overlooking a large extent of country, and has a
+spire one hundred and eighty-five feet high. The Depot of the Union
+Pacific Railroad is also a noteworthy edifice.
+
+Omaha was first laid out in 1853, and thus named, after a now nearly
+extinct tribe of Indians. The first house was built, and the first ferry
+established in that year; and a year later the first brick-kiln was
+burned, and the first newspaper--the Omaha Arrow--established. Where
+Turner Hall now stands, in 1854 was dug the first grave, for an old
+squaw of the Omaha tribe who had been left by her kindred to die.
+Whittier's description of the growth of western cities seems
+particularly applicable to Omaha:--
+
+ "Behind the squaw's light birch canoe
+ The steamer smokes and raves,
+ And city lots are staked for sale
+ Above old Indian graves."
+
+The first Legislature of Nebraska convened in Omaha in the winter of
+1854-5; and in 1856 the Capital was definitely located in that city, and
+the erection of the capitol building commenced. For a year or two there
+was a great land-boom, and city property and "corner lots" were held at
+fabulous prices. But in 1857 a crash came, and for a time the infant
+town was prostrated. However, in 1859 the discovery of gold in Colorado
+gave it a fresh impetus. The miners who marched in a perpetual caravan
+across the plains, in white-topped wagons, marked "Pike's Peak or bust,"
+made Omaha their final starting-point, taking in at that place supplies
+for their long journey. Two years previous all who could get away from
+the apparently doomed town had gone to other sections, to begin anew the
+fight for fortune. Only those remained who were too poor to go, but
+these were now in luck. Fortune came to them, instead of their being
+compelled to undertake an ignis fatuus chase after her. At that time the
+business men of the city laid the foundations of their wealth and
+prosperity.
+
+In 1857 the town was incorporated as a city; but up to 1867 its only
+means of communication with the east was by stage-coach, across Iowa,
+and by steamers on the Missouri, which latter ceased running in winter.
+In 1865 the population of the town was but four thousand five hundred
+persons. In 1867 the first train of cars arrived in the city, on the
+Chicago and Northwestern Railroad. It was not long before other
+railroads, one after another, made it their western terminus, and its
+prosperity was established. Then came the Union Pacific Railroad, which
+started on its long journey across the plains and mountains from this
+point. The trade to the Pacific coast thus necessarily passed through
+Omaha, which became a gateway on the route, while many travelers and
+emigrants paused to breathe and rest before proceeding further, and to
+take in large quantities of supplies. In 1875 its population had
+increased to twenty thousand inhabitants, and in 1880 had run up to
+thirty thousand.
+
+Strange as it may seem, the building of the Union Pacific Railroad has
+diminished rather than increased the local trade of the city. In
+overland times single houses sometimes traded as much as three million
+dollars' worth in a year; but the railroad has so dispersed and
+distributed business, that now none reach even half that amount. The
+city, however, does an immense manufacturing business. Within its limits
+is located the largest smelting works in America, employing nearly two
+hundred men, and doing an annual business of probably not less than five
+millions of dollars. One distillery alone, in 1875, the year previous to
+my visit, paid the government a tax of $316,000; while there are
+extensive breweries, linseed-oil works, steam-engine works, and
+pork-packing establishments. The engine shops, car-works and foundry of
+the Union Pacific Road occupy, with the round-house, about thirty acres
+of land, on the bottom adjoining the table land upon which the city is
+built. Over one million dollars is paid out annually in these
+establishments, for manual labor alone, without including payments for
+merchandise and supplies. A notable industry is the manufacture of
+brick, over five millions being turned out annually from the four
+brick-yards of Omaha. The city is also the headquarters of the Army of
+the Platte, which annually distributes nearly a million of dollars.
+
+The first postmaster of Omaha used his hat for a post office, and
+carried around the mail matter in that receptacle wherever he went,
+delivering it by chance to its owners. Twenty years later the city
+possessed the finest government building west of the Mississippi, while
+the post office receipts are to-day upwards of a million dollars
+annually. Hides, buffalo robes, and furs, to the value of one hundred
+and fifty thousand dollars, are annually collected and shipped from
+Omaha; while two hundred and fifty thousand dollars is the extent in a
+single year of the sewing machine business. The Pacific Railroad ships
+from Omaha vast quantities of grain to the Salt Lake Valley, and brings
+back in return supplies of Utah fruit, fresh and dried. The first
+shipment of fruit, made in 1871, amounted to three hundred pounds. In
+four years the quantity had increased to nine hundred thousand pounds,
+and is still greater to-day. The Grand Central Hotel was the finest
+hotel between Chicago and San Francisco, having been erected in 1873, at
+a cost of three hundred thousand dollars; but it was destroyed by fire
+in 1878.
+
+The visitor to Omaha will probably reach that city by means of the great
+bridge across the Missouri River. This bridge is two thousand seven
+hundred and fifty feet long, with eleven spans, each span two hundred
+and fifty feet in width, and elevated fifty feet above high water mark.
+One stone masonry abutment, and eleven piers, each with two cast iron
+columns, support this bridge. Its construction was commenced in
+February, 1869, and completed in 1872, during most of which time not
+less than five hundred men were employed upon it. Each column was sunk
+in the bed of the river until a solid foundation was reached. One column
+penetrated the earth eighty-two feet below low water, before it rested
+on the bed-rock. The approach to the bridge from the Council Bluffs side
+is by means of a gradually ascending embankment, one mile and a half in
+length. This bridge was constructed at a cost of two million six hundred
+and fifty thousand dollars, and brings an annual revenue of about four
+hundred thousand dollars. It is now, by act of Congress, considered a
+part of the Union Pacific Railroad, making the eastern terminus of that
+road really at Council Bluffs. Its total length, including its necessary
+approaches by embankment on the eastern shore, and by lengthy
+tressel-work on the western shore is nine thousand nine hundred and
+fifty feet, or nearly two miles.
+
+The old depot grounds of the Union Pacific Railroad were on the bank of
+the river, directly under the present bridge. In order to complete the
+connection between the bridge and the road, a branch line, seven
+thousand feet in length, was laid down directly through the city, and a
+new, spacious and most commodious depot constructed, on higher ground.
+And from this depot the westward-bound traveler takes his departure for
+that western empire toward the setting sun, and may, perhaps, continue
+his journey until he has reached and passed the Golden Gate, and only
+the solemn immensity of the ocean lies before him.
+
+Situated midway of the American continent, on a navigable river, which
+drains the northwest, and opens communication with the east and south; a
+prominent point on the great road which clasps a continent and unites
+the Atlantic with the Pacific; and at the same time a terminus for
+lesser roads which open up to it the trade and commerce of the interior;
+and on the borders of two states rich in agricultural and mineral
+wealth, and settled by a thrifty, intelligent and enterprising people;
+Omaha can scarcely fail to become the greatest city west of St. Louis.
+Founded but a generation ago, its business is already stupendous, though
+it is really but a beginning of what it promises to be in the future. As
+Iowa, Nebraska, and the States and Territories still further to the
+northwest, become more thickly settled, with their resources developed,
+it will form their natural commercial centre, to which they will look
+for supplies, and where they will find a market or a port for their
+produce and manufactures. With such an outlook, who will dare to limit
+Omaha's possibilities in the future, or say that any flight of the
+imagination really exceeds what the actuality may prove?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+OTTAWA.
+
+ Ottawa, the seat of the Canadian Government.--History.--
+ Population.--Geographical Position.--Scenery.--Chaudičre
+ Falls.--Rideau Falls.--Ottawa River.--Lumber Business.--
+ Manufactures.--Steamboat and Railway Communications.--Moore's
+ Canadian Boat Song.--Description of the City.--Churches,
+ Nunneries, and Charitable Institutions.--Government Buildings.--
+ Rideau Hall.--Princess Louise and Marquis of Lorne.--Ottawa's
+ Proud Boast.
+
+
+Ottawa was, in 1858, selected by Queen Victoria as the seat of the
+Canadian Government. When, in 1867, the British North American
+Possessions were reconstructed into the Dominion of Canada, Ottawa
+continued to be the Capital city. It was originally called Bytown, after
+Colonel By, of the Royal Engineers, who was, in 1827, commissioned to
+construct the Rideau Canal, and who laid out the town. In 1854 it was
+incorporated as a city, and its name changed to Ottawa, from the river
+upon which it stands. Since that time it has increased rapidly in
+population and importance, and has at the present time not far from
+twenty-five thousand inhabitants. It is situated on the south bank of
+the Ottawa River, at the mouth of the Rideau, one hundred and twenty-six
+miles above Montreal. The scenery around it is most magnificent, and is
+scarcely surpassed by any in Canada. At the west end of the city the
+Ottawa rushes, in a magnificent cataract, over a ragged ledge, two
+hundred feet wide and forty feet high, in what is known as the Chaudičre
+Falls. Chaudičre signifies caldron, and in the seething caldron of
+waters at the base of the falls a sounding line three hundred feet in
+length has not touched bottom. Immediately below the falls is a
+suspension bridge, from which a most satisfactory view can be obtained.
+At the northeast end of the city the Rideau tumbles, in two cataracts,
+into the Ottawa. These cataracts are very picturesque, but are exceeded
+in grandeur by the Chaudičre. The Des Chęnes Rapids, having a fall of
+nine feet, are found about eight miles above Ottawa.
+
+The Ottawa River is, next to the St. Lawrence, the largest stream in
+Canada. Rising in the range of mountains which forms the watershed
+between Hudson Bay and the great lakes, it runs in a southeasterly
+direction for about six hundred miles before it empties into the St.
+Lawrence. It has two mouths, which form the island upon which Montreal
+is situated. The entire region drained by it and its tributaries
+measures eighty thousand square miles. These tributaries and the Ottawa
+itself form highways for, probably, the largest lumber trade in the
+world. The clearing of great tracts of country by the lumbermen has
+opened the way for agriculturists; and numerous thriving settlements are
+found upon and near their banks, all of which look to Ottawa as their
+business centre. As these settlements increase in number and size, the
+prosperity of Ottawa will multiply in proportion. The navigation of the
+river has been much improved by engineering, especially for the
+transportation of lumber, dams and slides having been constructed for
+its passage over rapids and falls.
+
+This immense supply of lumber is, much of it, arrested at Ottawa, where
+the almost unequaled water power is utilized in saw-mills, which furnish
+the city its principal employment, and from which issue yearly almost
+incredible quantities of sawed lumber. There are also flour mills, and
+manufactories of iron castings, mill machinery, and agricultural
+implements, which give it commercial importance, and a sound basis of
+prosperity.
+
+Ottawa is connected by steamer with Montreal, and by the Rideau Canal
+with Lake Ontario at Kingston, while the Grand Trunk Railway sends a
+branch line from Prescott. The Ottawa River is navigable for one hundred
+and eighty-eight miles above the city, by steamers of the Union
+Navigation Company, but there are numerous portages around falls and
+rapids. The last stopping place of the steamer is Mattawa, a remote port
+of the Hudson Bay Company. Beyond that outpost of civilization there is
+nothing but unexplored and unbroken wilderness. Moore's Canadian boat
+song makes mention of the Ottawa River:--
+
+ "Soon as the woods on shore look dim,
+ We'll sing, at St. Ann's, our parting hymn.
+
+ "Ottawa's tide, this trembling moon
+ Shall see us afloat on thy waters soon."
+
+Ottawa is divided into Upper and Lower Town by the Rideau Canal, which
+contains eight massive locks within the city limits, and is crossed by
+two bridges, one of stone and iron, and the other of stone alone. The
+streets of the city are wide and regular. Sparks street is the
+fashionable promenade, containing the principal retail stores. Sussex is
+also a prominent business street. The principal hotels are the Russell
+House, near the Parliament Buildings; Windsor House, in the Upper Town;
+and the Albion, on Court House Square.
+
+The most prominent church edifice in the city is the Roman Catholic
+Cathedral of Notre Dame, which is of stone, with double spires two
+hundred feet in height. The interior is very fine, and contains as an
+altar piece Murillo's "Flight into Egypt." St. Patrick's, Roman
+Catholic, and St. Andrew's, Presbyterian, are also striking churches. At
+the corner of Bolton and Sussex streets is the imposing stone building
+of the Grey Nunnery, while the group of buildings belonging to the Black
+Nunnery is to the eastward of Cartier Square. There are, besides, in the
+city, two convents, two hospitals, three orphan asylums, and a Magdalen
+asylum, all under the control of the Roman Catholics. The Ottawa
+University is also a Roman Catholic institution, and has a large
+building in Wilbrod street. The Ladies' College, in Albert street, is a
+Protestant school.
+
+But all these structures sink into insignificance when compared to the
+Government Buildings, which constitute the most prominent feature of the
+city of Ottawa. They are situated on an eminence known as Barrack Hill,
+which rises one hundred and fifty feet above the river, and were erected
+at a cost of about four millions of dollars. They form three sides of a
+vast quadrangle, which occupies nearly four acres. The Parliament House
+is on the south side or front of the quadrangle, and is four hundred and
+seventy-two feet long, and the same number of feet deep, from the front
+of the main tower, to the rear of the library. The Departmental
+Buildings run north from this main structure, forming the east and west
+sides of the quadrangle. The eastern side is five hundred and eighteen
+feet long, by two hundred and fifty-three feet deep, and the western
+side is two hundred and eleven feet long, by two hundred and
+seventy-seven feet deep. These latter buildings contain the various
+government bureaus, in the west block being also found the model room
+of the Patent Office, and the Post Office. The entire structure is of
+cream-colored sandstone, with arches and doors of red Potsdam sandstone,
+and the external ornamental work of this sandstone. Its architecture is
+in the Italian-Gothic style. Green and purple slates cover the roof, and
+the pinnacles are ornamented with elaborate iron trellis work. The
+columns and arches of the legislative chambers are of marble. These
+chambers are capacious and richly finished, and have stained glass
+windows. The Chamber of Commons is reached by an entrance to the left of
+the main entrance, under the central tower, and the marble of its
+columns and arches is beautiful. The Senate Hall, which is entered from
+the right of the main entrance, contains the vice-regal canopy and
+throne, and a portrait of Queen Victoria. There are also full-length
+portraits, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, of George III, and Queen Charlotte.
+The Library is a circular structure, on the north front of the
+Parliament House, with a dome ninety feet high, and contains about forty
+thousand volumes. A massive stone wall incloses the fourth side of the
+quadrangle, and the inclosure is laid out with tree-shaded walks.
+
+Rideau Hall, the official residence of the Governor General, is in New
+Edinburgh, a suburban town on the opposite side of the Rideau River,
+connected with Ottawa by a bridge. Rideau Hall has been for several
+years past the home of the Marquis of Lorne, Governor General of the
+Dominion of Canada, and the Princess Louise, fourth daughter of Queen
+Victoria. The love which the Canadians bear their Queen was most loyally
+manifested on the arrival of the Governor General and the Princess, his
+wife. Every honor was shown the Marquis which was due his official and
+hereditary rank; but the most extravagant marks of affection and
+veneration were lavished upon the Princess, who was regarded as a
+representative of her mother. Whenever she proceeded through the
+Dominion, her progress was a triumphal procession. The people crowded to
+catch but a glimpse of her face, or to hear the tones of her voice. She
+is described as an extremely affable lady, the beauty of Her Majesty's
+family, caring less for the traditions and observances of royalty than
+her imperial mother, with great native shrewdness and marked ability as
+an artist. She has traveled extensively throughout the dominion of
+Canada, having reached its extreme western limit, and crossed the United
+States from the Atlantic to the Pacific. It is said she does not greatly
+admire Canada, and proposes to spend as little time at Ottawa as
+possible, regarding the somewhat primitive society there as almost
+semi-barbaric. But when she returns permanently to the island of her
+birth she will go with greatly enlarged views, and a knowledge of the
+world, and especially of the people of the new world, which ought to
+constitute her an efficient counsellor in affairs of state.
+
+The Marquis of Lorne, Governor General of Canada, is described as an
+extremely handsome gentleman of the Scotch type, with large literary
+attainments, and with a desire to conciliate the people over whom he has
+been sent to rule. For many generations to come it will undoubtedly be
+Ottawa's highest boast that it has numbered among its citizens the son
+of one of the proudest nobles of the British realm, and a princess of
+the blood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+PITTSBURG.
+
+ Pittsburg at Night.--A Pittsburg Fog.--Smoke.--Description of
+ the City.--The Oil Business.--Ohio River.--Public Buildings,
+ Educational and Charitable Institutions.--Glass Industry.--
+ Iron Foundries.--Fort Pitt Works.--Casting a Monster Gun.--
+ American Iron Works.--Nail Works.--A City of Workers.--
+ A True Democracy.--Wages.--Character of Workmen.--Value of
+ Organization.--Knights of Labor.--Opposed to Strikes.--True
+ Relations of Capital and Labor.--Railroad Strike of 1877.--
+ Allegheny City.--Population of Pittsburg.--Early History--
+ Braddock's Defeat.--Old Battle Ground.--Historic Relics.--
+ The Past and the Present.
+
+
+By all means make your first approach to Pittsburg in the night time,
+and you will behold a spectacle which has not a parallel on this
+continent. Darkness gives the city and its surroundings a
+picturesqueness which they wholly lack by daylight. It lies low down in
+a hollow of encompassing hills, gleaming with a thousand points of
+light, which are reflected from the rivers, whose waters glimmer, it may
+be, in the faint moonlight, and catch and reflect the shadows as well.
+Around the city's edge, and on the sides of the hills which encircle it
+like a gloomy amphitheatre, their outlines rising dark against the sky,
+through numberless apertures, fiery lights stream forth, looking angrily
+and fiercely up toward the heavens, while over all these settles a heavy
+pall of smoke. It is as though one had reached the outer edge of the
+infernal regions, and saw before him the great furnace of Pandemonium
+with all the lids lifted. The scene is so strange and weird that it
+will live in the memory forever. One pictures, as he beholds it, the
+tortured spirits writhing in agony, their sinewy limbs convulsed, and
+the very air oppressive with pain and rage.
+
+But the scene is illusive. This is the domain of Vulcan, not of Pluto.
+Here, in this gigantic workshop, in the midst of the materials of his
+labor, the god of fire, having left his ancient home on Olympus, and
+established himself in this newer world, stretches himself beside his
+forge, and sleeps the peaceful sleep which is the reward of honest
+industry. Right at his doorway are mountains of coal to keep a perpetual
+fire upon his altar; within the reach of his outstretched grasp are
+rivers of coal oil; and a little further away great stores of iron for
+him to forge and weld, and shape into a thousand forms; and at his feet
+is the shining river, an impetuous Mercury, ever ready to do his
+bidding. Grecian mythology never conceived of an abode so fitting for
+the son of Zeus as that which he has selected for himself on this
+western hemisphere. And his ancient tasks were child's play compared
+with the mighty ones he has undertaken to-day.
+
+Failing a night approach, the traveler should reach the Iron City on a
+dismal day in autumn, when the air is heavy with moisture, and the very
+atmosphere looks dark. All romance has disappeared. In this nineteenth
+century the gods of mythology find no place in daylight. There is only a
+very busy city shrouded in gloom. The buildings, whatever their original
+material and color, are smoked to a uniform, dirty drab; the smoke
+sinks, and mingling with the moisture in the air, becomes of a
+consistency which may almost be felt as well as seen. Under a drab sky a
+drab twilight hangs over the town, and the gas-lights, which are left
+burning at mid-day, shine out of the murkiness with a dull, reddish
+glare. Then is Pittsburg herself. Such days as these are her especial
+boast, and in their frequency and dismalness, in all the world she has
+no rival.
+
+In truth, Pittsburg is a smoky, dismal city, at her best. At her worst,
+nothing darker, dingier or more dispiriting can be imagined. The city is
+in the heart of the soft coal region; and the smoke from her dwellings,
+stores, factories, foundries and steamboats, uniting, settles in a cloud
+over the narrow valley in which she is built, until the very sun looks
+coppery through the sooty haze. According to a circular of the Pittsburg
+Board of Trade, about twenty per cent., or one-fifth, of all the coal
+used in the factories and dwellings of the city escapes into the air in
+the form of smoke, being the finer and lighter particles of carbon of
+the coal, which, set free by fire, escapes unconsumed with the gases.
+The consequences of several thousand bushels of coal in the air at one
+and the same time may be imagined. But her inhabitants do not seem to
+mind it; and the doctors hold that this smoke, from the carbon, sulphur
+and iodine contained in it, is highly favorable to lung and cutaneous
+diseases, and is the sure death of malaria and its attendant fevers. And
+certainly, whatever the cause may be, Pittsburg is one of the healthiest
+cities in the United States. Her inhabitants are all too busy to reflect
+upon the inconvenience or uncomeliness of this smoke. Work is the object
+of life with them. It occupies them from morning until night, from the
+cradle to the grave, only on Sundays, when, for the most part, the
+furnaces are idle, and the forges are silent. For Pittsburg, settled by
+Irish-Scotch Presbyterians, is a great Sunday-keeping day. Save on this
+day her business men do not stop for rest or recreation, nor do they
+"retire" from business. They die with the harness on, and die, perhaps,
+all the sooner for having worn it so continuously and so long.
+
+Pittsburg is not a beautiful city. That stands to reason, with the heavy
+pall of smoke which constantly overhangs her. But she lacks beauty in
+other respects. She is substantially and compactly built, and contains
+some handsome edifices; but she lacks the architectural magnificence of
+some of her sister cities; while her suburbs present all that is
+unsightly and forbidding in appearance, the original beauties of nature
+having been ruthlessly sacrificed to utility.
+
+Pittsburg is situated in western Pennsylvania, in a narrow valley at the
+confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, and at the head of
+the Ohio, and is surrounded by hills rising to the height of four or
+five hundred feet. These hills once possessed rounded outlines, with
+sufficient exceptional abruptness to lend them variety and
+picturesqueness. But they have been leveled down, cut into, sliced off,
+and ruthlessly marred and mutilated, until not a trace of their original
+outlines remain. Great black coal cars crawl up and down their sides,
+and plunge into unexpected and mysterious openings, their sudden
+disappearance lending, even in daylight, an air of mystery and diablerie
+to the region. Railroad tracks gridiron the ground everywhere, debris of
+all sorts lies in heaps, and is scattered over the earth, and huts and
+hovels are perched here and there, in every available spot. There is no
+verdure--nothing but mud and coal, the one yellow the other black. And
+on the edge of the city are the unpicturesque outlines of factories and
+foundries, their tall chimneys belching forth columns of inky blackness,
+which roll and whirl in fantastic shapes, and finally lose themselves in
+the general murkiness above.
+
+The tranquil Monongahela comes up from the south, alive with barges and
+tug boats; while the swifter current of the Allegheny bears from the oil
+regions, at the north, slight-built barges with their freights of crude
+petroleum. Oil is not infrequently poured upon the troubled waters, when
+one of these barges sinks, and its freight, liberated from the open
+tanks, refuses to sink with it, and spreads itself out on the surface of
+the stream.
+
+The oil fever was sorely felt in Pittsburg, and it was a form of malaria
+against which the smoke-laden atmosphere was no protection. During the
+early years of the great oil speculation the city was in a perpetual
+state of excitement. Men talked oil upon the streets, in the cars and
+counting-houses, and no doubt thought of oil in church. Wells and
+barrels of petroleum, and shares of oil stock were the things most often
+mentioned. And though that was nearly twenty years ago, and the oil
+speculation has settled into a safe and legitimate pursuit, Pittsburg is
+still the greatest oil mart in the world. By the means of Oil Creek and
+the Allegheny, the oil which is to supply all markets is first shipped
+to Pittsburg, passes through the refineries there, and is then exported.
+
+ [Illustration: PITTSBURGH AND ITS RIVERS.]
+
+The Ohio River makes its beginning here, and in all but the season of
+low water the wharves of the city are lined with boats, barges and tugs,
+destined for every mentionable point on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.
+The Ohio River is here, as all along its course, an uncertain and
+capricious stream. Sometimes, in spring, or early summer, it creeps up
+its banks and looks menacingly at the city. At other times it seems to
+become weary of bearing the boats, heavily laden with merchandise, to
+their destined ports, and so takes a nap, as it were. The last time we
+beheld this water-course its bed was lying nearly bare and dry, while a
+small, sluggish creek, a few feet, or at most, a few yards wide, crept
+along the bottom, small barges being towed down stream by horses, which
+waded in the water. The giant was resting.
+
+The public buildings and churches of Pittsburg are, some of them, of
+fine appearance, while the Mercantile Library is an institution to be
+proud of, being both handsome and spacious, and containing a fine
+library and well-supplied reading room. The city boasts of universities,
+colleges, hospitals, and asylums, and the Convent of the Sisters of
+Mercy is the oldest house of the order in America. There are also two
+theatres, an Opera House, an Academy of Music, and several public halls.
+
+But it is not any of these which has made the city what she is, or to
+which she will point with the greatest pride. The crowning glory of
+Pittsburg is her monster iron and glass works. One-half the glass
+produced in all the United States comes from Pittsburg. This important
+business was first established here in 1787, by Albert Gallatin, and it
+has increased since then to giant proportions. Probably, not less than
+one hundred millions of bottles and vials are annually produced here,
+besides large quantities of window glass. The best wine bottles in
+America are made here, though they are inferior to those of French
+manufacture. A great number of flint-glass works turn out the best
+flint glass produced in the country.
+
+In addition to these glass works--which, though they employ thousands of
+workmen, represent but a fraction of the city's industries--there are
+rolling mills, foundries, potteries, oil refineries, and factories of
+machinery. All these works are rendered possible by the coal which
+abounds in measureless quantities in the immediate neighborhood of the
+city. All the hills which rise from the river back of Pittsburg have a
+thick stratum of bituminous coal running through them, which can be
+mined without shafts, or any of the usual accessories of mining. All
+that is to be done is to shovel the coal out of the hill-side, convey it
+in cars or by means of an inclined plane to the factory or foundry door,
+and dump it, ready for use. In fact, these hills are but immense coal
+cellars, ready filled for the convenience of the Pittsburg
+manufacturers. True, in shoveling the coal out of the hill-side, the
+excavations finally become galleries, running one, two or three miles
+directly into the earth. But there is neither ascent nor descent; no
+lowering of miners or mules in great buckets down a deep and narrow
+shaft, no elevating of coal through the same means. It is all like a
+great cellar, divided into rooms, the ceilings supported by arches of
+the coal itself. Each miner works a separate room, and when the room is
+finished, and that part of the mine exhausted the arches are knocked
+away, pillars of large upright logs substituted, the coal removed, and
+the hill left to settle gradually down, until the logs are crushed and
+flattened.
+
+The "Great Pittsburg Coal Seam" is from four to twelve feet thick, about
+three hundred feet above the water's edge, and about one hundred feet
+from the average summit of the hills. It is bituminous coal which has
+been pressed solid by the great mass of earth above it. The thicker the
+mass and the greater the pressure, the better the coal. It has been
+estimated as covering eight and a half millions of acres, and that it
+would take the entire product of the gold mines of California for one
+thousand years to buy this one seam. When we remember the numerous other
+coal mines, anthracite as well as bituminous, found within the limits of
+the State of Pennsylvania, we are fairly stupefied in trying to
+comprehend the mineral wealth of that State.
+
+The coal mined in the rooms in these long galleries is conveyed in a
+mule-drawn car to the mouth of the gallery, and if to be used by the
+foundries at the foot of the hill, is simply sent to its destination
+down an inclined plane. Probably not less than ten thousand men are
+employed in these coal mines in and near Pittsburg, adding a population
+not far from fifty thousand to that region. Pittsburg herself consumes
+one-third of the coal produced, and a large proportion of the rest is
+shipped down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, some of it as far as New
+Orleans.
+
+The monster iron works of Pittsburg consume large quantities of this
+coal, and it is the abundance and convenience of the latter material
+which have made the former possible. No other city begins to compare
+with Pittsburg in the number and variety of her factories. Down by the
+banks of the swift-flowing Allegheny most of the great foundries are to
+be discovered. The Fort Pitt Works are on a gigantic scale. Here are
+cast those monsters of artillery known as the twenty-inch gun. Not by
+any means a gun twenty inches in length, but a gun with a bore twenty
+inches in diameter, so accurate that it does not vary one-hundredth
+part of an inch from the true line in its whole length. The ball for
+this gun weighs one thousand and eighty pounds, and costs a hundred and
+sixty-five dollars. The gun itself weighs sixty tons, and costs fifty
+thousand dollars, and yet one of these giants is cast every day, and the
+operation is performed with the utmost composure and absence of
+confusion. The mould is an enormous structure of iron and sand, weighing
+forty tons, and to adjust this properly is the most difficult and
+delicate work in the foundry. When it is all ready, three streams of
+molten iron, from as many furnaces, flow through curved troughs and pour
+their fiery cataracts into the mould. These streams run for twenty
+minutes, and then, the mould being full, the furnaces from which they
+flow are closed with a piece of clay. Left to itself, the gun would be
+thirty days in cooling, but this process is expedited to eighteen days,
+by means of cold water constantly flowing in and out of the bore. While
+it is still hot, the great gun is lifted out of the pit, swung across
+the foundry to the turning shop, the end shaven off, the outside turned
+smooth, and the inside hollowed out, with an almost miraculous
+precision. The weight of the gun is thus reduced twenty tons.
+
+The American Iron Works employ two thousand five hundred hands, and
+cover seventeen acres. They have a coal mine at their back door, and an
+iron mine on Lake Superior, and they make any and every difficult iron
+thing the country requires. Nothing is too ponderous, nothing too
+delicate and exact, to be produced. The nail works of the city are well
+worth seeing. In them a thousand nails a minute are manufactured, each
+nail being headed by a blow on cold iron. The noise arising from this
+work can only be described as deafening. In one nail factory two hundred
+different kinds of nails, tacks and brads are manufactured. The
+productions of these different factories and foundries amount in the
+aggregate to an almost incredible number and value, and embrace
+everything made of iron which can be used by man.
+
+George F. Thurston, writing of Pittsburg, says, it has "thirty-five
+miles of factories in daily operation, twisted up into a compact tangle;
+all belching forth smoke; all glowing with fire; all swarming with
+workmen; all echoing with the clank of machinery. Actual measurement
+shows that there are, in the limits of what is known as Pittsburg,
+nearly thirty-five miles of manufactories of iron, of steel, of cotton,
+and of brass alone, not mentioning manufactories of other materials. In
+a distance of thirty-five and one-half miles of streets, there are four
+hundred and seventy-eight manufactories of iron, steel, cotton, brass,
+oil, glass, copper and wood, occupying less than four hundred feet each;
+for a measurement of the ground shows that these factories are so
+contiguous in their positions upon the various streets of the city, that
+if placed in a continuous row, they would reach thirty-five miles, and
+each factory have less than the average front stated. This is
+"manufacturing Pittsburg." In four years the sale and consumption of pig
+iron alone was one-fourth the whole immense production of the United
+States; and through the Ohio and Mississippi rivers and their
+tributaries, its people control the shipment of goods, without breaking
+bulk, over twelve thousand miles of water transportation, and are thus
+enabled to deliver the products of their thrift in nearly four hundred
+counties in the territory of fifteen States. There is no city of its
+size in the country which has so large a banking capital as Pittsburg.
+The Bank of Pittsburg, it is said, is the only bank in the Union that
+never suspended specie payments.
+
+Pittsburg is a city of workers. From the proprietors of these extensive
+works, down to the youngest apprentices, all are busy; and perhaps the
+higher up in the scale the harder the work and the greater the worry. A
+man who carries upon his shoulders the responsibility of an
+establishment whose business amounts to millions of dollars in a year;
+who must oversee all departments of labor; accurately adjust the buying
+of the crude materials and the scale of wages on the one hand, with the
+price of the manufactured article on the other, so that the profit shall
+be on the right side; and who at the same time shall keep himself posted
+as to all which bears any relation to his business, has no time for
+leisure or social pleasures, and must even stint his hours of necessary
+rest.
+
+Pittsburg illustrates more clearly than any other city in America the
+outcome of democratic institutions. There are no classes here except the
+industrious classes; and no ranks in society save those which have been
+created by industry. The mammoth establishments, some of them perhaps in
+the hands of the grandsons of their founders, have grown from small
+beginnings, fostered in their growth by industry and thrift. The great
+proprietor of to-day, it may have been, was the "boss" of yesterday, and
+the journeyman of a few years ago, having ascended the ladder from the
+lowest round of apprenticeship. Industry and sobriety are the main aids
+to success.
+
+The wages paid are good, for the most part, varying according to the
+quality of the employment, some of them being exceedingly liberal. The
+character of the workmen is gradually improving, though it has not yet
+reached the standard which it should attain. Many are intelligent,
+devoting their spare time to self-improvement, and especially to a
+comprehension of the relations of capital and labor, which so intimately
+concern them, and which they, more than any other class of citizens,
+except employers, need to understand, in order that they may not only
+maintain their own rights, but may avoid encroaching on the rights of
+others.
+
+Too many workmen, however, have no comprehension of the dignity of their
+own position. They live only for present enjoyment, spend their money
+foolishly, not to say wickedly, and on every holiday give themselves up
+to that curse of the workingman--strong drink. While this class is such
+a considerable one, the entire ranks of working men must be the
+sufferers. And while ignorance as well as vice has been so prevalent
+among them, it is not to be wondered at that they have been constantly
+undervalued, and almost as constantly oppressed.
+
+The prosperity of the country depends upon the prosperity of the masses.
+With all the money in the hands of a few, there are only the personal
+wants of a few to be supplied. With wages high, work is more plentiful,
+and everybody prospers. The gains of a large manufacturing
+establishment, divided, by means of fair profit and just wages, between
+employers and employed, instead of being hoarded up by one man, make one
+hundred persons to eat where there would otherwise be but one; one
+hundred people to buy the productions of the looms and forges of the
+country, instead of only one; one hundred people, each having a little
+which they spend at home, instead of one man, who hoards his wealth, or
+takes it to Europe to dispose of it. It means all the difference between
+good and bad times, between a prosperous country, where all are
+comfortable and happy, and a country of a few millionaires and many
+paupers.
+
+No description of Pittsburg would be complete without a reference to the
+Knights of Labor, which has taken the place of the old trades unions and
+guilds. While the latter were in existence, that city was often the
+scene of violent and disastrous strikes. The great railroad strike of
+1877, in which a number of lives were lost, and millions of dollars'
+worth of property destroyed, culminated at Pittsburg, and for days the
+city was stricken with panic. The cause of this strike was the decision
+of the railroad corporation to reduce to one dollar a day the wages of a
+certain class of its employees, which were already too low. The cause of
+these strikers was just, but their methods were reprehensible. The
+institution and spread of the Knights of Labor has rendered such another
+strike an impossibility, as that Order, which has a large membership
+among the workmen of Pittsburg, aims to settle, as far as possible, the
+difficulties between employers and employees by arbitration; and its
+spread will, we trust, if it does not pass under the control of
+demagogues, eventually result in a better understanding between capital
+and labor, and in a recognition of the fact that their real interests
+are identical.
+
+Pittsburg has no park or public pleasure ground. Its people are too busy
+to think about such things, or to use them if it had them. On Saturday
+nights its theatres and variety halls are crowded, to listen to
+entertainments which are not always of the best. When its people wish
+to visit a public park, they must cross to Allegheny City, on the west
+bank of the Allegheny River, where there is a park embracing a hundred
+acres, containing a monument to Humboldt, and ornamented with small
+lakes. The Soldiers' Monument, erected to the memory of four thousand
+men of Allegheny County who lost their lives in the war of the
+Rebellion, is also in this latter city, on a lofty hill near the river,
+in the eastern part of the city. Many of the handsome residences of
+Pittsburg's merchants and manufacturers are to be seen in this city,
+which is also famous for its manufacturing interests, and is connected
+with Pittsburg by five bridges. Birmingham is a flourishing suburb on
+the opposite bank of the Monongahela River, containing important glass
+and iron manufactories.
+
+The present population of Pittsburg is 156,381 inhabitants. The first
+settlement upon the site of the city was in 1754, when a French trading
+post was established and named Fort Duquesne. On July ninth, 1755,
+General Braddock, in command of two thousand British troops, accompanied
+by Colonel Washington with eight hundred Virginians, marched toward Fort
+Duquesne with the intention of capturing it. When within a few miles of
+the fort, they were surprised by a large party of French and Indians in
+ambush, and Braddock, who angrily disregarded Washington's advice, saw
+his troops slaughtered by an invisible enemy. The English and colonists
+lost seven hundred and seventy-seven men, killed and wounded, while the
+enemy's loss was scarcely fifty. Braddock himself was mortally wounded,
+and died upon the battle field, and in order that his remains might not
+be disturbed, Washington buried him in the road, and ordered the wagons
+in their retreat to drive over his grave. Washington himself escaped
+unhurt, though he had two horses shot under him, and had four bullets
+sent through his clothes. An Indian who was engaged in this battle
+afterwards said that he had seventeen fair fires at Washington during
+the engagement, but was unable to wound him.
+
+In 1758, Fort Duquesne was abandoned by the French, and immediately
+occupied by the English, who changed its name to Fort Pitt, in honor of
+William Pitt. As a town its settlement dates from 1765. In 1804 it was
+incorporated as a borough, and in 1816 chartered as a city. Its
+population in 1840, was a little more than 20,000. In 1845 a great part
+of the city was destroyed by fire, but was quickly rebuilt, its
+prosperity remaining unchecked.
+
+A little less than ten miles from Pittsburg is the village called
+Braddock's Field, which, in the names of its streets, perpetuates the
+old historic associations. The ancient Indian trail which led to the
+river is still preserved, and the two shallow ravines in which the
+French and Indians lay concealed when they surprised Braddock's troops
+are still there, though denuded of the dense growth of hazel bushes
+which at that period served the purpose of an ambush. From an old oak in
+this neighborhood many bullets have been pried out by persevering relic
+hunters; while in the adjacent gardens the annual spring plowing
+invariably turns up mementoes of that historic event, in the shape of
+bullets, arrow heads, and even bayonets. A sword with a name engraved
+upon it has also been found.
+
+The Pennsylvania Railroad now crosses the location of the thickest of
+the fight, and at the time of its construction a considerable number of
+human bones were dug up and reinterred, the place of the later interment
+being surrounded by a rough fence of common rails. Children now play
+where once the forces of their nation engaged in deadly warfare. The
+hillside, which was then pierced by bullets, is now perforated near its
+summit by large openings, through which emerge car-loads of coal. Thus
+the present and the past strike hands across the century, and modern
+civilization, with its implements of industry and its appliances of
+commerce, supersedes and obliterates the traces of savagery, and of the
+deadly enmity of man toward man. The sword is turned into the plowshare,
+and peace triumphs over bloodshed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+PORTLAND.
+
+ The Coast of Maine.--Early Settlements in Portland.--Troubles
+ with the Indians.--Destruction of the Town in 1690.--Destroyed
+ Again in 1703.--Subsequent Settlement and Growth.--During the
+ Revolution.--First Newspaper.--Portland Harbor.--Commercial
+ Facilities and Progress.--During the Rebellion.--Great Fire
+ of 1866.--Reconstruction.--Position of the city.--Streets.--
+ Munjoy Hill.--Maine General Hospital.--Eastern and Western
+ Promenades.--Longfellow's House.--Birthplace of the Poet.--
+ Market Square and Hall.--First Unitarian Church.--Lincoln
+ Park.--Eastern Cemetery.--Deering's Woods.--Commercial
+ Street.--Old-time Mansion.--Case's Bay and Islands.--Cushing's
+ Island.--Peak's Island.--Long Island.--Little Chebague Island.--
+ Harpswell.
+
+
+The hungry ocean has gnawed and ravaged the New England coast, until
+along almost its entire length it is worn into ragged edges, forming
+islands, capes, promontories, bold headlands, peninsulas, bays, inlets
+and coves. In this coast are united the grand, the picturesque and the
+beautiful. Soft masses of foliage are in close juxtaposition with rugged
+rocks and dashing surf. Violet turf sweeps down to meet the sands washed
+up by the sea. Bays cut deeply into the land, forming safe harbors, and
+emerald islands innumerable dot their surface.
+
+In 1632 George Cleve and Richard Tucker landed on the beach of a
+peninsula, jutting out into a broad and deep bay, and sheltered from the
+ocean by a promontory at the south, now known as Cape Elizabeth, and by
+a guard of islands which clasped hands around it. Here Cleve built, of
+logs, the first house on the site of what is now the city of Portland.
+After a time other colonists came, devoting themselves to fishing and
+buying furs of the Indians. When the people of this distant colony
+wanted to go to Boston, they rode horseback along the beach, which
+formed the original highway. The settlement was first known as Casco,
+but its name was changed to Falmouth in 1668, though a portion of it,
+where Portland now stands, continued to be known as Casco Rock. In 1675
+there were but forty families in the town, and the Rock was still almost
+covered by a dense forest. In that year the Indians, who had long borne
+grievous wrongs at the hands of the settlers with patient endurance,
+arose, under King Philip, to avenge them. The inhabitants of Falmouth
+were either killed or carried into captivity, and the little town was
+wiped out of existence.
+
+Three years later Fort Royal, the largest fortification on the coast,
+was erected on a rocky eminence, near the present foot of India street,
+where the round-house of the Grand Trunk Railway now stands, and
+settlers began to return. A party of French Huguenots settled there,
+mills were set up, roads cut into the forest, and trade established
+between Falmouth and Massachusetts towns. The little settlement existed
+under varying fortunes until 1690, when the French and Indians, after a
+few days' siege, captured the fort, destroyed the town, and carried the
+commanding officer and his garrison captives to Quebec. The war
+continued until 1698, during which time the place was only known as
+"deserted Casco." In 1703 the war broke out again, and what few
+inhabitants had straggled back were killed, and the place remained
+desolate until 1715, when the re-settlement began. Three years later
+twenty families had banded themselves together for mutual defence,
+clustering about the foot of India street, and eastward along the beach.
+The second meeting-house of the town was erected at the corner of India
+and Middle streets, where Rev. Thomas Smith, in 1727, commenced his
+ministry, which extended over a period of sixty-eight years.
+
+The town was incorporated in 1718, and at that time the Neck above Clay
+Cove was all forest and swamp. A brook flowed into the Cove, crossed by
+bridges at Fore and Middle streets. The old bridge at Middle street
+remained until early in the present century. The trails stretching out
+into the forest gradually grew into streets, and the three principal
+ones were named Fore, Middle and Back streets. The name of the latter
+was, late in the century, changed to Congress street.
+
+After a period of sixty years of steady growth, the town had extended
+only as far westward as Centre street, and the upper portion of the Neck
+was still covered with woods. The Indians gave the town little trouble
+after 1725, having made peace in that year, and gradually dwindled away,
+and emigrated to Canada. In 1755 it was no longer a frontier post. Its
+population had increased to nearly 3,000 inhabitants, commerce had been
+established, and the town was a most peaceful and a prosperous one. At
+the commencement of the Revolution 2,555 tons of shipping were owned in
+Falmouth.
+
+When the colonies began to resist the encroachments of England, Falmouth
+took a prominent and patriotic stand. In October, 1775, Captain Henry
+Mowatt, with a fleet of five vessels, opened his batteries on the town,
+and, firing the houses, laid it in ashes. Over four hundred buildings
+were destroyed, leaving only one hundred standing. The place was again
+deserted, the people seeking safety in the interior.
+
+On January first, the _Falmouth Gazette and Weekly Advertiser_, the
+first newspaper of the town, was published by Benjamin Titcomb and
+Thomas B. Waite. In 1786 the town was divided, the Neck receiving the
+name of Portland, having at that time a population of about two
+thousand. In 1793 wharves were extended into the harbor. In 1806, its
+commercial business and general prosperity were unexampled in New
+England. The duties collected at the Custom House reached, in that year,
+$342,809, having increased from $8,109 in 1790. But in 1807, the embargo
+which followed the non-intercourse policy of 1806 resulted in the
+suspension of commerce and the temporary ruin of the shipping interests.
+Commercial houses were prostrated, and great distress prevailed. The
+harbor was empty, and grass grew upon the wharves. In the war of 1812
+privateers were fitted out here, some of which damaged the enemy, while
+others were captured. After the peace of 1815 commerce revived but
+slowly, and the population as slowly increased.
+
+In March, 1820, Maine was separated from Massachusetts, and admitted
+into the Union as a State; and Portland became its capital. In 1832 the
+capital was removed to Augusta. In 1828 the first steamboat anchored in
+the harbor of Portland, having arrived from New York to run as a
+passenger boat between Portland and Boston. The Portland Steam Packet
+Company was organized in 1844, and has continued in successful operation
+ever since.
+
+Portland has one of the deepest and best harbors in the world, with a
+depth of forty feet at low tide. Its surroundings are exceptionally
+favorable for a commercial city, and were it not for its geographical
+location, it being so far north of the great areas of population, it
+would undoubtedly have gained a prominence over most of the Atlantic
+cities. But Boston and New York drew all but the provincial trade and
+commerce, and with a sparsely settled country at its back, there was
+little to build up Portland and give it great prosperity. In 1850 the
+Cumberland and Oxford Canal, connecting the waters of Sebago Lake with
+Portland Harbor, was completed. This was not a great enterprise,
+certainly, as compared with modern undertakings; but the Portlanders
+thought a good deal of it at the time. Between 1840 and 1846, the city
+endured another season of depression. Railroads had given to Boston much
+of the business that had formerly found a natural outlet through
+Portland; but in the latter year a railroad was planned to Canada,
+which, when completed, in 1853, brought it into connection with the
+cities of the British provinces, and with the vast grain-growing regions
+of the west. A winter line of steamers to Liverpool followed, and the
+rapidly increasing commerce of the city soon resulted in the
+construction of a wide business avenue, extending a mile in length,
+along the whole water front of the city. This new street was called
+Commercial, and became the locality of heavy wholesale trade. Closely
+following, came the opening up of railroads to all sections of the
+State, and the establishment of steamboat lines along the coast, as far
+as the Lower Provinces. Trade that had hitherto gone to Boston was thus
+reclaimed, new manufacturing establishments sprung up, and an era of
+prosperity seemed fairly inaugurated.
+
+Portland manifested her patriotism during the war of the Rebellion,
+contributing 5,000 men to the army, of whom four hundred and twenty-one
+returned. In June, 1863, the United States Revenue cutter, Caleb
+Cushing, having been captured by Rebels, and pursued by the officials of
+the city, and becoming becalmed near the Green Islands, was blown up by
+her captors, the latter taking to the boats, only to be captured and
+sent to Fort Preble as prisoners of war.
+
+On the fourth of July, 1866, a fire-cracker, carelessly thrown in a boat
+builder's shop, on Commercial, near the foot of High street, resulted in
+a fire which laid in ruins more than half the city of Portland. The fire
+commenced about five o'clock in the afternoon. The sparks soon
+communicated with Brown's Sugar House, and thence, spreading out like a
+fan, swept diagonally across the city, destroying everything in its
+track, until a space one and one-half miles long, by one and one-fourth
+miles broad, was so completely devastated that only a forest of
+tottering walls and blackened chimneys remained, and it was difficult to
+trace even the streets. The fire was fanned into such a fury by a gale
+which was blowing at the time, that the efforts of the firemen were
+without avail, and the work of destruction was only stayed when, as a
+last resort, buildings in its path were blown up before the flames had
+reached them. The entire business portion, embracing one-half the city,
+was destroyed. Every bank and newspaper office, every lawyer's office,
+many stores, churches, public buildings and private residences were
+swept away. Fireproof structures, which were hastily filled with
+valuables, in the belief that they would withstand the flames, crumbled
+to the earth, as though melted by the intense heat. Only one building
+on Middle street stood unscathed, though the flames swept around it in a
+fiery sea. The fire did not burn itself out until early in the morning
+of the following day, when it paused at the foot of Mountjoy Hill. When
+morning came, the inhabitants looked with terror and dismay upon fifteen
+hundred buildings in ashes, fifty-eight streets and courts desolated,
+ten thousand people homeless, and $10,000,000 worth of property
+destroyed.
+
+The work of succor and reconstruction immediately began. The churches
+were thrown open to shelter the homeless; Mountjoy Hill was speedily
+transformed into a village of tents; barracks were built; contributions
+of food, clothing and money poured in from near and far; the old streets
+were widened and straightened, and new ones opened; and before the year
+had closed many substantial buildings and blocks had been completed, and
+others were in process of erection. The new Portland has arisen from the
+ruins of the old, more stately, more beautiful and more substantial than
+before; and after the lapse of so many years, the evil which the fire
+wrought is forgotten, and only the good is manifest. Railroads have
+since been built, and travel and commerce is each year increasing. The
+population of Portland in 1880 was 33,810.
+
+The approach to Portland is more beautiful, even, than that to New York.
+The city is built upon a small peninsula rising out of Casco Bay, to a
+mean central elevation of more than one hundred feet. This peninsula
+projects from the main land in a northeast direction, and is about three
+miles long, by an average breadth of three-fourths of a mile. An arm of
+the Bay, called Fore River, divides it on the south from Cape
+Elizabeth, and forms an inner harbor of more than six hundred acres in
+extent, and with an average depth, at high water, of thirty feet.
+Vessels of the largest size can anchor in the main harbor, in forty feet
+of water at low tide. The waters of the Back Cove separate it on the
+north from the shores of Deering, and form another inner basin, of large
+extent and considerable depth.
+
+At the northeasternmost extremity of the Neck, Munjoy Hill rises to a
+height of one hundred and sixty-one feet, and commands a beautiful view
+of the city, bay, adjacent islands and the ocean beyond. At the
+southwestern extremity is Bramhall's Hill, rising to one hundred and
+seventy-five feet and commanding city, bay, forests, fields, villages
+and mountains. The land sinks somewhat between these two elevations, but
+its lowest point still rises fifty-seven feet above high tide. The
+elevation of its site, and the beauty of its scenery and surroundings,
+are fast attracting the attention of tourists, and drawing to the city
+hosts of summer visitors.
+
+The peninsula is covered with a network of streets and lanes, containing
+an aggregate length of fifty miles, while it has thirty wharves to
+accommodate the commerce of the port. Congress street, the main
+thoroughfare of the city, is three miles in length, and extends from
+Bramhall to Munjoy. Running parallel to it for a part of its length, on
+the southern slope, are Middle street, a business street, devoted
+principally to the wholesale and retail trade; Fore street, the ancient
+water street of the city, but now devoted to miscellaneous trade; and
+Commercial street, which commands the harbor, and is principally devoted
+to large wholesale business. At the west end there are other streets
+between Congress and Commercial, including Spring, Danforth and York.
+Cumberland, Oxford, supplemented on its western end by Portland,
+Lincoln, along the shore of Back Cove, also supplemented on its western
+end by Kennebec street, are on the northern slope of Congress street.
+The cross streets are numerous. India street, at the eastern end, was
+the early site of population and business; Franklin and Beal streets are
+the only ones running straight across the peninsula, from water to
+water; Exchange street, devoted to banks, brokers' offices and insurance
+agencies, and High and State streets, occupied by private residences,
+are the principal ones. There is partially completed around the entire
+city a Marginal Way, one hundred feet in width, and nearly five miles in
+length.
+
+Munjoy Hill is a suburb, which is almost a distinct village, being
+occupied by residences of the middle class, who have their own schools,
+churches, and places of business. From its summit, at early morning, one
+may see the sun rising out of the ocean, in the midst of emerald
+islands. On this hill, in 1690, Lieutenant Thaddeus Clark, with thirteen
+men, was shot by Indians in ambush, the hill being then covered with
+forest. On the same hill, in 1717, Lieutenant-Governor Dammer made a
+treaty with the Indians, which secured a peace for many years; and in
+1775 Colonel Thompson captured Captain Mowatt, in revenge for which the
+latter subsequently burned the city. In 1808 the third and last
+execution for murder took place here; and in 1866 here arose the village
+of tents after the great conflagration. The Observatory, built in 1807,
+is upon Munjoy, having been erected for the purpose of signaling
+shipping approaching the harbor. It is eighty-two feet high, and from
+it one can obtain the best view of the city and its surroundings. Casco
+Bay lies to the northeast, dotted with islands. To the eastward, four
+miles distant, beyond its barrier of islands, the Atlantic keeps up the
+never-ending music of its waves. To the southward is the city, with the
+harbor and the shipping beyond. Far away to the northeast is Mount
+Washington, faintly outlined upon the horizon, prominent in the distant
+range of mountains. Adjoining the Observatory is the Congress street
+Methodist Episcopal Church, a beautiful edifice, its slender, graceful
+spire being a most conspicuous object from the harbor and the sea, and
+rising to the greatest height of any in the city.
+
+The western end, including Bramhall Hill, is the fashionable quarter;
+and having been spared in the conflagration of 1866, many ancient
+mansions remain, surrounded by newer and more elegant residences. The
+houses are in the midst of well-kept lawns and gardens, and the streets
+are shaded by stately elms, some of them of venerable age. The views
+through these avenues of trees, through some of the streets leading down
+to the water, are delightful beyond description, the overarching foliage
+framing in glimpses of water, fields, distant hills and blue sky. At
+evening, from Bramhall's Hill, one looks over a beautiful and varied
+landscape, brightened by the glow of sunset on the western sky. The
+Maine General Hospital stands on Bramhall Hill, an imposing edifice, and
+one of the most prominent features of the city.
+
+The Western Promenade, a wide avenue planted with rows of trees, runs
+along the brow of Bramhall's Hill. The hill is named after George
+Bramhall, who in 1680 bought a tract of four hundred acres, and made
+himself a home in the wilderness. Nine years later he was killed at the
+foot of the hill, in a fight with the Indians. From the summit of the
+hill may be seen the waters of Fore River on the one hand, and of Back
+Cove on the other. Beyond is a wide stretch of field and forest, broken
+by villages and farmhouses, with the spires of Gorham in view, and far
+away, behind them, Ossipee Mountain, fifty-five miles distant, in New
+Hampshire. To the east is the church of Standish, Maine, and Chocorue
+Peak rising behind it; Mount Carrigain, sixty-three miles away, the line
+of the Saddleback in Sebago, and far beyond, the sun-capped summits of
+the White Mountains.
+
+The Eastern Promenade is on Munjoy's Hill, and commands views equally
+beautiful.
+
+The Preble House is in Congress street, shaded by four magnificent elms,
+which have survived from the days of the Preble Mansion. Next to it,
+sitting back from the street, and also shaded by elms, is the first
+brick house built in Portland. It was begun in 1785, by General Peleg
+Wadsworth, and finished the following year, by his son-in-law, Stephen
+Longfellow. It is known as the Longfellow House, but it is not the place
+where the poet was born. He lived here in his youth, and frequently
+visited the house in later days; and it is still in the possession of
+his family. But Henry Wadsworth Longfellow first saw the light on
+February twenty-seventh, 1807, in an old-fashioned wooden house, at the
+corner of Fore and Hancock streets. The sea at that period flowed up to
+the road opposite the house, which commanded a fine view of the harbor.
+New-made land crowds it further away, and the trains of the Grand Trunk
+Railway run where the tide once ebbed and flowed. Not far off is the
+site of the first house ever built in Portland, by George Cleves, in
+1632.
+
+Nathaniel P. Willis was also born in Portland, but a little more than a
+month earlier than Longfellow. Both his father and his grandfather had
+been publishers, the latter having been apprenticed in the same printing
+office with Benjamin Franklin. Sarah Payson Willis, subsequently Mrs.
+James Parton, still better known as Fanny Fern, a sister of the poet,
+was also a native of Portland. John Neal, born in Portland August
+twenty-fifth, 1793, was a man well known as a poet, novelist and
+journalist. Seba Smith, author of the Jack Downing Papers, Mrs. E. Oakes
+Smith, Mrs. Elizabeth Oakes Allen, Nathaniel Deering, Rev. Elijah
+Kellogg, Mrs. Ann S. Stephens, Mrs. Margaret J. M. Sweat, and other
+well-known authors, have been either natives of or residents in
+Portland. General Neal Dow, who served in the late war, and so famous as
+an advocate of prohibition, finds his home in Portland, at the corner of
+Congress and Dow streets. William Pitt Fessenden, late Senator and
+Secretary of the Treasury, claimed Portland as his home.
+
+Market Square is in the heart of the city, surrounded by stores, hotels,
+halls, and places of amusement. Military Hall stands almost in-the
+centre of the square, and was built in 1825, as a town hall and market
+place. The building contains a history in itself. Here, before the city
+charter was obtained, in 1832, town meetings were held, and subsequently
+it was the headquarters of the city government. Military companies had
+and still have their armories here; and it has been the place of many
+exciting political meetings. In it Garrison uttered his anathemas
+against slavery, and Stephen A. Foster was assaulted by a brutal
+pro-slavery mob. Sumner, Fessenden, and other great orators, have
+poured forth their eloquence within its hall, and parties have been made
+and unmade. On holidays Market Square is crowded with an animated
+throng, and at night, when peddlers and mountebanks take their stands
+and display their wares by the light of flaming torches, the scene is
+especially picturesque.
+
+On Congress street, not far from Market Square, is the First Parish
+(Unitarian) Church, which was rebuilt in 1825, on the site which the old
+church had occupied since 1740. This church is remarkable for its long
+pastorates, there having been but four pastors from 1727 to 1864, a
+period of one hundred and thirty-seven years. The present pastor is the
+Rev. Dr. Thomas Hill, ex-President of Harvard College.
+
+Lincoln Park is a public square, bounded by Congress, Franklin, Federal
+and Pearl streets. It contains a little less than two and one-half
+acres, in the middle of which is a fountain. This park is in the centre
+of the district swept by the conflagration of 1866, and looking on every
+side, not a building meets the eye which was erected previous to that
+year.
+
+The largest and most costly church in Portland is the Cathedral of the
+Immaculate Conception, fronting on Cumberland street. It is one hundred
+and ninety-six feet in length, by one hundred in width, with a spire
+rising in the air two hundred and thirty-six feet. It is of brick, and
+is imposing only on account of its size. Its interior, however, is
+finished and decorated in a style surpassed by few churches in the
+country.
+
+ [Illustration: NIGHT SCENE IN MARKET SQUARE, PORTLAND, MAINE.]
+
+The Eastern Cemetery, on Congress street, is the oldest graveyard in
+Portland. For two hundred years it was the common burial ground of the
+settlement, and here, probably, all the early colonists sleep their
+last sleep, though their graves are forgotten. The oldest tombstone
+which the yard seems to contain is that of Mrs. Mary Green, who died in
+1717. On the opposite side of the yard, near Mountford street, are the
+monuments erected to the memory of William Burroughs, of the United
+States Brig Enterprise, and Samuel Blythe, of His Majesty's Brig Boxer,
+who fought and died together, on September fifth, 1813, and were buried
+here. Lieut. Kerwin Waters, of the Enterprise, wounded in the same
+action, lies beside them. Of him Longfellow sung:--
+
+ "I remember the sea fight far away,
+ How it thundered o'er the tide!
+ And the dead captains, as they lay
+ In their graves o'erlooking the tranquil bay,
+ Where they in battle died."
+
+There is a white marble monument to Commodore Preble, and the death of
+Lieutenant Henry Wadsworth, uncle of the poet Longfellow, who fell
+before Tripoli in 1804, is also commemorated here.
+
+Congress Square, at the junction of Fore street, has an elevated
+position, and is surrounded by churches of various denominations. From
+Congress street, near its junction with Mellen street, the visitor can
+look off to Deering's Woods, which rise on the borders of a creek,
+running in from Back Cove. This tract of woodland has come into
+possession of the city, and will be preserved as a park. Longfellow
+sings of
+
+ "The breezy dome of groves,
+ The shadows of Deering's Woods."
+
+Again:--
+
+ "And Deering's Woods are fresh and fair,
+ And with joy that is almost pain
+ My heart goes back to wander there,
+ And among the dreams of the days that were
+ I find my lost youth again."
+
+The reservoir of the Portland Water Works is at the junction of Bramhall
+and Brackett streets. It has an area of 100,000 square feet, with a
+capacity of 12,000,000 gallons, and is supplied with water from Lake
+Sebago, seventeen miles distant.
+
+The extensive premises of the Grand Trunk Railway lie at the foot of
+India street, where are wharves for the great freight business between
+Canada and Europe, and whence the Dominion and Beaver Line of
+steamships, every fortnight, from November to May, send ships to
+Liverpool. The scene during the winter season is a busy one, and the
+amount of freight handled and shipped is immense. Then begins Commercial
+street, the modern business avenue of the city, which runs its whole
+water front, with a railroad track in the middle of it. On this street
+is the old family mansion of the widow of Brigadier Preble, built in
+1786, on the site of his father's house, destroyed by fire in 1775. It
+then occupied a beautiful and retired locality, looking out upon the
+harbor, and surrounded by ample grounds. But now it is strangely out of
+keeping with its neighbors. Opposite it now stands the grain elevator of
+the Grand Trunk Railway, having been built in 1875, with a capacity of
+200,000 bushels. All around are wholesale shipping and commission
+houses, and wharves for ocean steamships extend up and down the shore.
+
+When Captain John Smith, famous in the early history of Virginia, and
+the first tourist who ever visited Maine, made his famous summer trip
+thither, in 1614, he described the place as follows:--"Westward of
+Kennebec is the country of Ancocisco, in the bottom of a deep bay full
+of many great isles, which divide it into many great harbors." Ancocisco
+was very soon abbreviated to Casco, and the bay is still filled with
+many great isles. Casco Bay, extending from Cape Elizabeth, on the
+west, to Cape Small Point, on the east, a distance of about eighteen
+miles, with a width of, perhaps, twelve miles, contains more islands
+than any other body of water of like extent in the whole United States.
+It is a popular belief that these islands number three hundred and
+sixty-five--one for every day in the year; but a regard for truth
+compels us to state, that of the named and unnamed islands and islets,
+there are only one hundred and twenty-two, while a few insignificant
+rocks and reefs would not swell the number to one hundred and forty.
+These islands are divided into three ranges, the Inner, Middle and
+Outer. The Inner range contains twenty islands; the Middle range,
+twenty-four; and the Outer range, seventy-eight. Besides these islands,
+the shore is very much broken, and extends out into the bay in
+picturesque points or fringes, the creeks, inlets and tidal rivers
+extending far inland. In this bay was discovered, by a mariner named
+Joselyn, in 1639, a triton or merman, and the first sea serpent of the
+coast. Seals breed and sport on a ledge in the inner bay, off the shore
+of Falmouth, and its waters abound with edible fish and sea-fowl.
+
+Ferry boats convey an endless stream of pleasure-seekers to the
+different islands, during the summer season. Cushing's Island lies at
+the mouth of Portland Harbor, forming one shore of the ship channel. Its
+southern shore presents a rocky and precipitous front, culminating in a
+bold bluff nearly one hundred and fifty feet high, known as White Head.
+The island looks out upon the harbor from smiling fields and low,
+tree-bordered beaches. It furnishes good opportunities for fishing and
+bathing, and is fast becoming a popular summer resort. It is five miles
+in circumference, and commands magnificent sea views.
+
+Peak's Island is separated from Cushing's Island by White Head Passage,
+and with the latter forms an effectual barrier to the ocean. Like it, it
+presents a bold front to the sea, and smiles upon the bay. It is about a
+mile and a half long, by a mile and a quarter wide, and rises gradually
+to a central elevation of, perhaps, one hundred feet, commanding
+extensive views of the ocean and harbor, and of the mountains, eighty
+miles away. It is one of the most beautiful of all the islands of Casco
+Bay, and has a resident population of three hundred and seventy persons,
+who are largely descendants of the first settlers.
+
+Long Island lies northeast of Peak's Island, and is separated from it by
+Hussey's Sound. It has an area of three hundred and twelve acres,
+presenting a long, ragged line of shore to the sea. Its population was,
+in 1880, two hundred and fifty-two, the men being engaged in fishing and
+farming.
+
+Little Chebague lies inside of Long Island, and is connected with Great
+Chebague by a sand bar, dry at low water. A hotel and several summer
+cottages stand upon the island, and it is an attractive place.
+
+Harpswell is a long peninsula, about fourteen miles down the bay, and is
+much resorted to by picnic parties. To the eastward lies Bailey's
+Island, one of the most beautiful of the bay, and to the northward is
+Orr's Island, the scene of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel, "The Pearl of
+Orr's Island." Rising between Bailey's Island and Small Point Harbor is
+the Elm Island of Rev. Elijah Kellogg's stories. Whittier has written a
+poem entitled "The Dead Ship of Harpswell," in which he describes a
+spectre ship which never reaches the land, and is a sure omen of
+death:--
+
+ "In vain o'er Harpswell's neck the star
+ Of evening guides her in,
+ In vain for her the lamps are lit
+ Within thy town, Seguin!
+ In vain the harbor boat shall hail,
+ In vain the pilot call;
+ No hand shall reef her spectral sail,
+ Or let her anchor fall."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ Early History.--William Penn.--The Revolution.--Declaration of
+ Independence.--First Railroad.--Riots--Streets and Houses.--
+ Relics of the Past.--Independence Hall.--Carpenters' Hall.--
+ Blue Anchor.--Letitia Court.--Christ Church.--Old Swedes'
+ Church.--Benjamin Franklin.--Libraries.--Old Quaker Almshouse.--
+ Old Houses in Germantown.--Manufactures.--Theatres.--Churches.--
+ Scientific Institutions.--Newspapers.--Medical Colleges.--
+ Schools.--Public Buildings.--Penitentiary.--River Front.--
+ Fairmount Park.--Zoölogical Gardens.--Cemeteries.--Centennial
+ Exhibition.--Bi-Centennial.--Past, Present and Future of the
+ City.
+
+
+In the year 1610, Lord Thomas de la War, on his voyage from England to
+Virginia, entered what is now Delaware Bay, and discovered the river
+flowing into it, to which he also gave his name. The Dutch made a prior
+claim to the discovery of the land which bordered this river, and
+retained possession for a time. But there were difficulties in
+maintaining their settlements, and in 1638 the Swedes sent out a colony
+from Stockholm, and established a footing on the west bank of the river,
+afterwards known as Pennsylvania. The Dutch at New York, however, would
+not submit to this arrangement, and under Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of
+Manhattan, demanded the surrender of their fort--now called Trinity
+Fort--which was yielded. The Dutch authority lasted for a short time
+only. In 1664 the English captured Manhattan and expelled the Dutch, and
+in the same year an expedition under Sir Robert Carr came to the
+Delaware, fired two broadsides into Trinity Fort, landed storming
+parties, assaulted the fort, killed three Dutchmen, wounded ten, and in
+triumph raised the flag of England, which was thereafter supreme on the
+Delaware for nine years.
+
+In 1672 the Dutch tried their strength again, and summoned the English
+fort at Staten Island to surrender. This summons was complied with, and
+the English of New York swore allegiance to the Prince of Orange. The
+people upon the banks of the Delaware soon accommodated themselves to
+the change of masters, and welcomed the Dutch. But this was their last
+appearance upon the Delaware. In the next year, 1673, their settlements
+in America were all ceded, through the fortune of war, to Great Britain,
+and this territory once more passed under the English flag.
+
+About this time the name of William Penn enters into American history.
+The British Government being largely indebted to his father, Admiral
+William Penn, the son found little difficulty in obtaining a grant for a
+large tract of land in America, upon which to found a colony. This was
+in 1681. He immediately sent out to his wooded possessions, which he
+named Pennsylvania, his cousin, Captain William Markham, who had been a
+soldier, with a commission to be Deputy Governor, and with instructions
+to inform the European inhabitants already settled there of the change
+in government, promising them liberal laws. Markham was also to convey a
+message of peace to the Indians, in the name of their new "proprietor."
+He was soon followed by three commissioners, who had power to settle the
+colony, and among other things, to layout a principal city, to be the
+capital of the province, which William Penn, who was a member of the
+Society of Friends, directed should be called Philadelphia--a Greek
+compound signifying "brotherly love." He himself arrived on the great
+territory of which he was sole proprietor in 1682, and found the plans
+of the city and province to his satisfaction. He at once convened an
+Assembly, and the three counties of Philadelphia, Bucks, and Chester
+were created, and proper laws passed for their government.
+
+In less than two years, however, Penn was obliged to return to England,
+and shortly after, in 1692, the British Government took possession of
+the colony, and placed it under the jurisdiction of the Governor of New
+York. But in 1694, the government was restored to Penn, and Markham was
+again made Lieutenant-Governor. Penn, himself, did not return to America
+until 1699. He found his capital very considerably improved. Instead of
+the wilderness he had left, fifteen years before, there were streets,
+houses, elegant stores, warehouses, and shipping on the river. The
+population was estimated at four thousand five hundred persons. His
+visit was, however, brief. In 1701, he set sail again for England,
+intending to return in a few months, but this intention was never
+carried out. In 1708, his pecuniary embarrassments were so great, that
+he was arrested for debt in London, and thrown into the Fleet Prison,
+where he continued for nine years. In 1712 his health and mind gave way,
+and during six years he lingered as an imbecile, childish and gentle in
+his manners, the sad wreck of a strong mind. He died in July, 1718.
+
+The government of Pennsylvania was administered for a time by his widow,
+and subsequently went into the hands of his children and their
+descendants, as proprietors. They usually delegated the administration
+to lieutenant-governors, though they sometimes exercised their
+authority in person, until the American Revolution put an end to all the
+colonial governments.
+
+The history of Philadelphia during the period of the Revolution is
+largely connected with that of the whole country. At a large meeting
+held in the State House in Philadelphia, in April, 1768, it was resolved
+to cease all importations from the mother country, in consequence of the
+exorbitant taxes levied upon them. In 1773, the British East India
+Company being determined to export tea to America, a second meeting was
+called at the State House, at which it was patriotically resolved that
+"Parliament had no right to tax the Americans, without their consent,"
+and that "any one who would receive or sell the tea sent out to America
+would be denounced as an enemy to his country."
+
+The ship Polly, Captain Ryers, was to bring the tea to Philadelphia.
+Handbills, purporting to be issued by the "committee for tarring and
+feathering," were printed and distributed among the citizens. They were
+addressed to the Delaware pilots and to Captain Ryers himself, warning
+the former of the danger they would incur if they piloted the tea ship
+up the river, whilst Captain Ryers was threatened with the application
+of tar and feathers if he attempted to land the tea.
+
+Christmas Day, 1773, the Polly arrived. A committee of citizens went on
+board, told Captain Ryers the danger he was in, and requested him to
+accompany them to the State House. Here the largest meeting was
+assembled that had ever been held in the city. This meeting resolved
+that the tea on board the Polly _should not be landed_, and that it
+should be carried back to England immediately. The captain signified his
+willingness to comply with the resolution, and in two hours after, the
+Polly, with her freight of tea, hoisted sail and went down the river.
+
+In September, 1774, the first Congress, composed of delegates from
+eleven Colonies, met at Carpenters' Hall, on Chestnut street,
+Philadelphia, to consider the condition of the Colonies, in their
+relation to the mother country. This Congress resolved that all
+importations from Great Britain or her dependencies should cease.
+Committees of "inspection and observation," were appointed, which
+exercised absolute authority to punish all persons infringing the order
+of Congress.
+
+On April twenty-fourth, 1775, news of the battles of Concord and
+Lexington reached the city. A meeting was immediately called, by sound
+of gong and bell, at the State House. Eight thousand persons assembled,
+who resolved that they would "associate together, to defend with arms
+their property, liberty and lives." Troops were at once raised, forts
+and batteries built on the Delaware, floating batteries, gunboats and
+ships-of-war constructed, with all the speed possible, and _chevaux de
+frize_ sunk in the river, to prevent the passage of British ships. In
+May, 1776, the English Frigate Roebuck, and Sloop-of-war Liverpool,
+attempting to force their way up the river, the Americans opened fire on
+them, and a regular naval action took place. The British managed to
+escape, and retired to their cruising ground, at the entrance of the
+bay.
+
+ [Illustration: OLD INDEPENDENCE HALL, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+On July second, 1776, Congress, sitting at the State House, resolved in
+favor of the severance of all connection between the American Colonies
+and Great Britain, and independence of that power. On July third and
+fourth, the form of the declaration of independence was debated, and
+adopted on the latter day. July eighth, the Declaration was read to the
+people in the State House yard, and received with acclamations, and
+evidences of a stern determination to defend their independence with
+their lives. The King's Arms were at once torn down from the court room
+in the State House, and burned by the people. Bells were rung and
+bonfires lighted, the old State House bell fulfilling the command
+inscribed upon it, when it was cast, twenty years before: "Proclaim
+Liberty throughout the land, unto all the inhabitants thereof."
+
+In September, 1777, the British army, under General Lord Howe, entered
+Philadelphia. October fourth, Washington attacked it at Germantown, and
+although he did not win a victory, compelled the British commander to
+respect him. The English remained in possession of the city, but the
+Americans held the country around. The Philadelphians having closed the
+Delaware by the _chevaux de frize_, the royal army was in effect hemmed
+in and cut off from communication with the British fleet, which had
+entered the Delaware, but was prevented from approaching the city by the
+American forts and batteries. It had brought but a moderate supply of
+stores, and as these diminished, the troops suffered from scarcity of
+food.
+
+On November twenty-sixth, British frigates and transports arrived at the
+wharves of the city, to the great joy of the royal troops and of the
+inhabitants, provisions having become very scarce and famine threatened.
+Beef sold at five dollars a pound, and potatoes at four dollars a
+bushel, hard money. The British army remained in Philadelphia until June
+eighteenth, 1778, about nine months from its first occupation of the
+city. During that time the officers gave themselves up to enjoyment.
+They amused themselves with the theatre, with balls, parties,
+cock-fights and gambling: and a grand fęte was celebrated in honor of
+their commander, Lord Howe. This fęte, in the style of a tournament of
+chivalry, took place in the lower part of the city, and while it was in
+progress the Americans in considerable force made an attack upon the
+lines north of the city, set fire to the abattis, and brought out the
+entire body of the royal troops to repel the attack.
+
+Upon the evacuation of the city, in June, General Benedict Arnold was
+immediately sent with a small force to occupy it. He remained in
+military command for several months. It was discovered by many that he
+had become largely involved in certain speculating transactions, and the
+shame of the discovery stimulated the traitorous intentions which
+finally carried him over to the British army.
+
+After the inauguration of Washington as President of the new republic,
+it was determined by Congress that Philadelphia should be the seat of
+the United States government for the ensuing ten years, after which it
+should be removed to Washington City. The scheme of the Federal
+Constitution was framed and adopted in September, 1787, by the
+Convention sitting at the State House, with George Washington as
+President. The final adoption of the Constitution of the United States
+of America was celebrated in Philadelphia on the Fourth of July, 1788 by
+a magnificent procession.
+
+The principal officers of Congress removed their residences to
+Philadelphia in the latter part of 1790. At that period Washington lived
+in Market street near Sixth, in a plain two-story brick house, which had
+been the residence of Lord Howe during the British occupation of the
+city. The locality is now occupied, if I mistake not, by the mammoth
+clothing house of Wanamaker & Brown. John Adams, Vice-President, lived
+in the Hamilton mansion at Bush Hill; and Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of
+State, at 174 Market street, between Fourth and Fifth, on the south
+side. Congress assembled for the transaction of business on State House
+Square.
+
+During the stay of the Federal government in Philadelphia, Washington
+and Adams were inaugurated as President and Vice President (March
+fourth, 1797), in the chamber of the House of Representatives.
+
+In 1793, 1797, and 1798, a fearful epidemic of the yellow fever, visited
+Philadelphia and created great alarm, the mortality being dreadful.
+
+The removal of the Federal government to Washington, in 1800, deprived
+Philadelphia of the prominence she had enjoyed as the Capital of the
+nation. In the year 1808 steamboats began to ply regularly on the
+Delaware River. During the war which commenced in 1812 between the
+United States and Great Britain, Philadelphia maintained her loyalty,
+and fulfilled her duty to the country. Several volunteer companies were
+formed, and there was an engagement in July, 1813, between British war
+vessels and the United States gunboat flotilla on the Delaware, in which
+the Philadelphians proved themselves brave and patriotic.
+
+The first railroad, running from Philadelphia to Germantown, was built
+in 1832. The Pennsylvania Railroad was projected in 1845, and chartered
+in the following year.
+
+In 1834 a spirit of riot and disorder which passed over the United
+States, reached Philadelphia, and led to disturbances between whites and
+blacks. The houses of colored people were broken into, a meeting-house
+torn down, and many other outrages committed. Again, in 1835 attacks
+were made on the blacks, and houses burned. In 1838 all friends of the
+abolition of slavery were violently attacked, and much damage done to
+property in the city.
+
+But the most terrible riots which Philadelphia has known occurred in
+1844. A meeting of the Native American party was attacked and dispersed.
+The "Natives" rallied to a market house on Washington street, where they
+were again attacked, and fire-arms used on both sides. Houses were
+broken into and set on fire. The Roman Catholic churches of Saint
+Michael and Saint Augustine, and a female Catholic seminary, were
+burned, and many buildings sacked and destroyed. All the Catholic
+churches were in great danger of sharing the same fate. A large number
+of persons were killed on both sides. On July fourth, of the same year,
+the Native Americans had a very large and showy procession through the
+streets of the city. On Sunday, July seventh, the church of Saint Philip
+de Neri, in Southwark, was broken into by the mob. In clearing the
+streets, the soldiers and the people came into collision. The former
+fired into the crowd, and several persons were killed, and others
+wounded. This occurrence caused intense excitement. The soldiers were
+attacked with cannon and with musketry, and they responded with
+artillery and with musketry. The rioters had four pieces, which were
+worked by sailors. The battle continued during the night of the seventh
+and the morning of the eighth of July. Two soldiers were killed, and
+several wounded. Of the citizens seven were killed, and many wounded.
+This was the most sanguinary riot, and the last of any importance, which
+ever occurred in Philadelphia.
+
+Philadelphia possesses many characteristic features which distinguish
+her from her sister cities. The visitor will be at first struck by the
+extreme regularity of the streets, and the look of primness which
+invests them. They are laid out at right angles, the only notable
+exceptions being those roads, now dignified by the name of avenues,
+which usually led from the infant city into the then adjacent country.
+These avenues, of which Passyunk, Germantown and Ridge are the principal
+ones, are irregular in their course, but take a generally diagonal
+direction; the first southwest, and the other two northwest. The houses
+are mostly of brick, with white marble facings and steps, and white
+wooden shutters to the first story. The streets running east and west,
+from the Delaware to the Schuylkill, are, in the original city, with few
+exceptions named after trees. Thus Cedar, Pine, Spruce, Locust, Walnut,
+Chestnut, Filbert, Mulberry, Cherry, Sassafras and Vine. Cedar became
+South street, and Sassafras and Mulberry became Race and Arch, the
+latter so named because in the early days of the city Front street
+spanned it by an arch. Callowhill street was originally Gallowhill
+street, the word indicating its derivation. The houses on these streets
+are numbered from the Delaware, beginning a new hundred with every
+street. Thus all houses between Front and Second streets are numbered in
+the first hundred, and at Second street a new hundred begins; the even
+numbers being on the southern side, and the odd ones on the northern
+side of the street. The streets running parallel to the river are
+numbered from the river, beginning with Front, then Second, Third, and
+so on, until the furthest western limit of the city is reached. Market
+street, originally called High street, runs between Chestnut and
+Filbert, dividing the city into north and south. The houses on the
+streets crossing Market begin their numbers at that street, running both
+north and south, each street representing an additional hundred. With
+this naming of streets and numbering of houses, no stranger can ever
+lose himself in Philadelphia. The name and number of street and house
+will always tell him just where he is. Thus if he finds himself at 836
+North Sixth street, he knows he is eight squares north of Market street,
+and six squares west of the Delaware River.
+
+The original city was bounded by the Delaware River on the east, and the
+Schuylkill on the west, and extended north and south half a mile on
+either side of Market street. Even before the present century it had
+outgrown its original limits in a northerly and southerly direction, and
+a number of suburbs had sprung up around it, each of which had its own
+corporation. The names of these suburbs were, most of them, borrowed
+from London. Southwark faced the river to the south; Moyamensing was
+just west of Southwark; Spring Garden, Kensington, Northern Liberties,
+Germantown, Roxborough, and Frankford were on the north, and West
+Philadelphia west of the Schuylkill. In 1854 these suburbs, so long
+divided from the "city" merely by geographical lines, were incorporated
+with it; and the City of Philadelphia was made to embrace the entire
+county of Philadelphia--a territory twenty-three miles long, with an
+area of nearly one hundred and thirty square miles. It thus became in
+size the largest city in the country, while it stands only second in
+population.
+
+The old city was laid out with great economy as to space, the streets
+being as narrow as though land were really scarce in the new country
+when it was planned. Market street extends from the Delaware westward--a
+broad, handsome avenue, occupied principally by wholesale stores. It is
+indebted, both for its name and width, to the market houses, which from
+an early date to as late as 1860, if not later, occupied the centre of
+the street; long, low, unsightly structures, thronged early in the
+morning, and especially on market days, with buyers and sellers, while
+market wagons lined the sides of the street. The same kind of structures
+still occupy certain localities of Second, Callowhill, Spring Garden and
+Bainbridge streets. But those in Market street have disappeared, and
+substantial and handsome market buildings have been erected on or near
+the street, instead of in its centre.
+
+A century ago the business of Philadelphia was confined principally to
+Front street, from Walnut to Arch. Now Second street presents the most
+extended length of retail stores in the country, and business has spread
+both north and south almost indefinitely, and is fast creeping westward.
+Market street presents a double line of business houses, from river to
+river. Chestnut, the fashionable promenade and locality of the finest
+hotels and retail stores, is invaded by business beyond Broad, and Arch
+street beyond Tenth; while Eighth street, even more than Chestnut the
+resort of shoppers, is, for many squares, built up by large and handsome
+retail stores. Broad street, lying between Thirteenth and Fifteenth, is
+the handsomest avenue in Philadelphia. It is fifteen miles in length,
+and one hundred and thirteen feet in width, and contains many of the
+finest public buildings and private residences in the city. Ridgway
+Library, the Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Horticultural Hall, Academy of Music,
+Broad Street Theatre, Union League Club House, Masonic Temple, Academy
+of Fine Arts, besides some of the most elegant religious edifices, are
+located on this street.
+
+At the intersection of Broad and Market, where were once four little
+squares left in the original plan of the city, and known as Penn Square,
+are being constructed the vast Public Buildings of the city. They are of
+white marble, four hundred and eighty-six and one-half feet long by four
+hundred and seventy feet wide, and four stories high, covering an area
+of four and one-half acres, not including a large court in the centre.
+The central tower will, when completed, be four hundred and fifty feet
+high, and the total cost of the buildings over ten millions of dollars.
+This building presents a most imposing appearance, whether viewed from
+Market or Broad streets. The Masonic Temple, just to the north, is one
+of the handsomest of its kind in America. It is a solid granite
+structure, in the Norman style, most elaborately ornamented, and with a
+tower two hundred and thirty feet high. Its interior is finished in a
+costly manner, and after the several styles of architecture. The Academy
+of Music is one of the largest opera houses in America, being capable of
+seating three thousand persons.
+
+ [Illustration: MASONIC TEMPLE, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+Third street is the banking and financial centre of Philadelphia; on
+Walnut street are found the greatest proportion of insurance offices;
+South street is the cheap retail street, and is crowded with shoppers,
+especially on market days, and the Jews reign here supreme.
+Bainbridge street (once Shippen) east of Broad represents the squalor
+and crime of the city. "Old clo'" and second-hand stores of all
+descriptions alternate with low drinking places, and occupy forlorn and
+tumble-down tenements. All races and colors, and both sexes mingle here,
+and the man who sighs for missionary work need go no further than this
+quarter.
+
+Chestnut street is, next to Broad, the handsomest in the city. The
+buildings are all of comparatively recent construction, and are many of
+them handsome and costly. On Market street the past century still
+manifests itself in quaint houses of two or three stories in height,
+sometimes built of alternate black and red bricks, and occasionally with
+queer dormer windows, wedged in between more stately and more modern
+neighbors. It will be some time before the street becomes thoroughly
+modernized, and we can scarcely wish that it may become so, for the city
+would thus lose much of its quaint interest.
+
+One of the characteristics of Philadelphia which strikes the traveler is
+that it wears an old-time air, far more so than Boston or New York.
+Boston cannot straighten her originally crooked streets, but her thought
+and spirit are entirely of the nineteenth century. New York is intensely
+modern, the few relics of the past which still remain contrasting and
+emphasizing still more strongly the life and bustle and business of
+to-day. Philadelphia is a quiet city. Its people do not rush hither and
+thither, as though but one day remained in which to accomplish a life
+work. They take time to walk, to eat, to sleep, and to attend to their
+business. In brief, they take life far more easily and slowly than
+their metropolitan neighbors. They do not enter into wild speculative
+schemes; they have no such Stock Exchange, where bulls and bears roar
+and paw the ground, or where they may make or lose fortunes in less time
+than it takes to eat one's dinner. They are a steady, plodding people,
+accumulating handsome fortunes in solid, legitimate ways. There is
+little of the rustle and roar of the elder city; save for the continual
+ring and rattle of the street cars, which cross the city in every
+direction, many of its quarters are as quiet as a country village. Its
+early Quaker settlers have stamped it with the quiet and placidity which
+is the leading trait of their sect; and though the Quaker garb is seen
+less and less often upon the streets, the early stamp seems to have been
+indelible.
+
+Philadelphia retains more of the old customs, old houses, and, perhaps,
+old laws, than any other city in the country. The Quaker City lawyer
+carries his brief in a green bag, as the benches of the Inner Temple
+used to do in Penn's time. The baker cuts a tally before the door each
+morning, just as the old English baker used to do three centuries ago.
+After a death has occurred in it, a house is put into mourning, having
+the shutters bowed and tied with black ribbon, not to be opened for at
+least a year. There are laws (seldom executed, it is true, but still
+upon the statute-books), against profanity and Sabbath-breaking, and
+even regulating the dress of women.
+
+Some of the streets of Philadelphia bear strongly the marks of the past.
+Those, especially, near the river, which were built up in the early
+days, have not yet been entirely renovated; while some ancient buildings
+of historic interest have been preserved with jealous care. First and
+foremost among the latter is Independence Hall, occupying the square
+upon Chestnut street between Fifth and Sixth streets--no doubt,
+considered an imposing edifice at the time of its erection, but now
+overshadowed by the business palaces which surround it. It was here that
+the second Colonial Congress met; here that the Declaration of
+Independence was adopted; and here that the United States Congress
+assembled, until the seat of the General Government was removed to
+Washington, in 1800. In Congress Hall, in the second story of this
+building, Washington delivered his Farewell Address. The building is now
+preserved with great care. The hall where the Declaration of
+Independence was signed is decorated with portraits of the signers, and
+contains, among other objects of interest, as before stated, the bell
+which pealed out freedom to all.
+
+Next in historic importance is Carpenters' Hall, between Third and
+Fourth streets. The first Continental Congress met here, and here the
+first words pointing toward a collision with the mother country were
+spoken in Philadelphia.
+
+When William Penn made his first visit to Philadelphia, on October
+twenty-fourth, 1682, he set foot upon his new possessions at the Blue
+Anchor Landing, at the mouth of Dock Creek, in the vicinity of what is
+now the corner of Front and Dock streets. Here stood the Blue Anchor
+Inn, the first house built within the ancient limits of the city. Then,
+and long afterwards, Dock Creek was a considerable stream, running
+through the heart of the town. But, in course of time, the water became
+offensive, from the drainage of the city, and it was finally arched
+over, and turned into a sewer. The winding of Dock street is accounted
+for by the fact that it follows the former course of the creek. Sloops
+once anchored and discharged their cargoes where now stands Girard Bank,
+on Third street, below Chestnut.
+
+Between Chestnut and Market streets, Second and Front, is found Letitia
+street, where long stood the first brick house built in the Province,
+erected for the use of Penn himself, and named after his daughter
+Letitia. He directed that it should "be pitched in the middle of the
+platt of the town, facing the harbor." The bricks, wooden carvings and
+other materials, were imported from England. At the time of its
+construction a forest swept down to the river in front, forming a
+natural park, where deer ranged at will. Letitia House became a lager
+beer saloon, the front painted with foaming pots of beer. But business
+interests claimed the site and the old house was removed and carefully
+re-erected in Fairmount Park.
+
+The old Slate Roof House, long one of the ancient landmarks, on Second
+street below Chestnut, the residence of William Penn on his second visit
+to this country, during which visit John, his only "American" son was
+born, and where other noted persons lived and died, or at least visited,
+was removed in 1867, to make room for the Commercial Exchange.
+
+Not far off, on Second street, north of Market, is Christ's Church,
+occupying the site of the first church erected by the followers of Penn.
+The present edifice was begun in 1727. Washington's coach and four used
+to draw up proudly before it each Sabbath, and himself and Lady
+Washington, Lord Howe, Cornwallis, Benedict Arnold, Andre, Benjamin
+Franklin, De Chastellux, the Madisons, the Lees, Patrick Henry and
+others whose names have become incorporated in American history, have
+worshiped here. In the aisles are buried various persons, great men in
+their day, but forgotten now. The chime of bells in the lofty tower is
+the oldest in America, and were cast in London. This chime joined the
+State House bell on that memorable Fourth of July, when the latter
+proclaimed liberty throughout the land. Just opposite this church is a
+small street, opening into Second street, its eastern end closed by a
+tall block of warehouses. This street contained Stephen Girard's stores
+and houses.
+
+The great elm tree, at Kensington, under which Penn made his famous
+treaty with the Indians, remained until 1800, when it was blown down. An
+insignificant stone now marks the spot, being inclosed by a fence, and
+surrounded by stone and lumber yards. An elm overshadows it--possibly, a
+lineal descendant of the historic tree.
+
+There is an older religious edifice in Philadelphia than Christ's
+Church. It is the old Swedes' Church, erected in 1697, not far from
+Front and Christian streets, by early Swedish missionaries. Though
+insignificant, compared with modern churches, it was regarded as a
+magnificent structure by the Quakers, Swedes and Indians, who first
+beheld it. The inside carvings, bell and communion service, were a gift
+of the Swedish king. In the graveyard which surrounds it are found the
+dead of nearly two centuries ago, some of the slate-stones over the
+older graves having been imported from the mother country. Here sleeps
+Sven Schute and his descendants, once, under Swedish dominion, lords of
+all the land on which Philadelphia now stands. None of his name now
+lives. Here lie buried, forgotten, Bengtossens, Peterssens, and Bonds.
+Wilson, the ornithologist, was a frequent attendant at this church,
+early in the present century, and he lies in the church yard, having
+been buried there by his own request, as it was "a silent, shady place,
+where the birds would be apt to come and sing over his grave." The
+English sparrows have built their nests above it.
+
+An ancient house possessing special historic interest stands on Front
+street, a few doors above Dock. It is built of glazed black bricks, with
+a hipped roof, and, though it was a place of note in its day, occupied
+by one generation after another of the ruling Quakers, it has now
+degenerated into a workingmen's coffee-house. To it the Friends
+conducted Franklin on his return from England. War was not yet declared,
+but there were mutterings in the distance; all awaited Franklin's
+counsels, sitting silently, as is their wont, waiting for the spirit to
+move to utterance, when Franklin stood up and cried out: "To arms, my
+friends, to arms!"
+
+Franklin has left many associations in the city of his adoption. As a
+boy of seventeen he trudged up High, now Market street, munching one
+roll, with another under his arm, friendless and unknown. Even his
+future wife smiled in ridicule as he passed by. To-day statues are
+erected to his memory, and institutions named after him. The
+Philadelphia Library, the oldest and richest in the city, claims him as
+one of its original founders. In 1729, the Junto, a little association
+of tradesmen of which Franklin was a member, used to meet in the chamber
+of a little house in Pewter-platter alley, to exchange their books.
+Franklin suggested that there should be a small annual subscription, in
+order to increase the stock. To-day the library contains many thousand
+volumes, with many rare and valuable manuscripts and pamphlets. This
+library contains Penn's desk and clock, John Penn's cabinet, and a
+colossal bust of Minerva which overlooked the deliberations of the
+Continental Congress. In an old graveyard at the corner of Fifth and
+Arch, a section of iron railing in the stone wall which surrounds it
+permits the passer to view the plain marble slab which covers the
+remains of Franklin and his wife.
+
+Speaking of libraries, the Apprentices' Library, on the opposite corner
+of Fifth and Arch, overlooks Franklin's grave. It was established by the
+Quakers, and dates back to 1783. The apprentice system has died out, and
+the library is almost forgotten.
+
+As late as 1876, stood the old Quaker Almshouse, on Willings alley,
+between Third and Fourth streets, of which Longfellow gives this
+description in his poem, "Evangeline:"--
+
+ "Then in the suburbs it stood, in the midst of meadows and
+ woodlands;--
+ Now the city surrounds it; but still with its gateway and wicket,
+ Meek in the midst of splendor, its humble walls seem to echo
+ Softly the words of the Lord: 'The poor ye always have with you.'"
+
+Here Evangeline came when the pestilence fell on the city, when--
+
+ "Distant and soft on her ear fell the chimes from the belfry of
+ Christ Church,
+ While intermingled with these, across the meadows were wafted
+ Sounds of psalms that were sung by the Swedes in their church at
+ Wicaco."
+
+And here Evangeline found Gabriel. The ancient building is now leveled,
+and only the poem remains.
+
+Germantown, now incorporated in Philadelphia, is rich in historic
+associations. Stenton, a country seat near Germantown, was for
+generations the centre of the social life of the Quakers. It was built
+in 1731, by James Logan, and was finished with secret passages and
+underground ways, to be used in case of attack by Indians and others.
+The Chew House at Germantown was, during the Revolution, used by Colonel
+Musgrove and six companies, for a long time. The old Johnson House had
+its hall door, which is still preserved, riddled by cannon. In many
+private lawns and gardens of that suburb royalists and rebels sleep
+peacefully side by side. A house, now quaint in its antiquity, at the
+intersection of Main street and West Walnut lane, was used during the
+Revolution as a hospital and amputating room. The old Wistar House,
+built in 1744, played a part in the events of the last century, and
+contains furniture which once belonged to Franklin and Count Zinzendorf.
+There is a room filled with relics of early times.
+
+In 1755 the corner stone of Pennsylvania Hospital was laid. This
+corner stone having been recently uncovered, in making alterations
+to the building, the following inscription, of which Franklin was
+the author, was discovered: "In the Year of Christ, MDCCLV, George
+the Second happily reigning (for he sought the happiness of his
+people)--Philadelphia flourishing (for its inhabitants were public
+spirited)--This Building, By the Bounty of the Government, and of many
+private persons, was piously founded For the Relief of the Sick and
+Miserable. May the God of Mercies Bless the undertaking!"
+
+A noticeable and commendable feature of Philadelphia is its many
+workingmen's homes. In New York the middle classes, whose incomes are
+but moderate, are compelled to seek residences in cheap flats and
+tenement houses, or else go into the country, at the daily expense of
+car or ferry rides. But in Philadelphia flats are unknown, and tenement
+life--several families crowded under a single roof--confined almost
+entirely to the more wretched quarters of the city. There are streets
+upon streets of comfortable and neat dwellings, marble-faced and
+marble-stepped, with their prim white shutters, two or three stories in
+height, and containing from six to nine rooms, with all the conveniences
+of gas, bath-room and water, which are either rented at moderate rates
+or owned outright by single families, who may possibly rent out a room
+or two to lodgers. Philadelphia may have less elegant public and
+business edifices than New York, but her dwelling houses stand as far
+more desirable monuments to the prosperity of a people than the splendor
+united with the squalor of the metropolis.
+
+The manufactures of Philadelphia furnish the foundation of her
+prosperity. Her iron foundries produce more than one-third of the
+manufactured iron of the country, and number among them some of the
+largest in America. The Port Richmond Iron Works of I. P. Morris &
+Company cover, with their various buildings, five acres of ground. The
+Baldwin Locomotive Works, on Broad street, founded in 1831, employ a
+large force of men. It takes eighteen hundred men one day to complete
+and make ready for service a single locomotive; yet these works turn out
+three hundred locomotives a year. Some of the largest men-of-war in the
+world have also been built at the navy yards in Philadelphia and League
+Island. Among them is the old Pennsylvania, of one hundred and twenty
+guns. Besides her iron works there are many mills and factories. Miles
+of carpet, of superior quality, are woven every day, besides immense
+quantities of other woolen and cotton goods and shoes. Her retail
+stores, taken as a whole, will not compare in size and elegance with
+those of New York, though there are two or three exceptions to this
+rule.
+
+The headquarters of the Pennsylvania Railroad is at Philadelphia, and
+there is a grand depot on Broad street, near Market, which is palatial
+in its appointments.
+
+Of her places of amusement, the Academy of Music ranks first in size.
+There are numerous theatres, among which the Walnut Street Theatre is
+the oldest, and the Arch Street Theatre the most elegantly finished and
+furnished, and the best managed. With these and other places of
+amusement, are associated the names of all the prominent musicians,
+actors and actresses of the past and present. The Academy of Music was
+not built when Jenny Lind visited this country, but it was ready for
+occupancy only a few years later; and has witnessed the triumphs of many
+a prima donna, now forgotten by the public, which then worshiped her.
+Forrest began his theatrical career in Philadelphia; and the names of
+noted tragedians and comedians who have come and gone upon her boards
+are legion.
+
+Of churches Philadelphia has many, and beautiful ones. On three corners
+of Broad and Arch streets tall and slender spires point heavenward,
+rising from three of the most costly churches in the city. Surpassing
+them all, however, is the Roman Catholic Cathedral of Saint Peter and
+Saint Paul, on Logan Square. It is of red sandstone, in the Corinthian
+style, and is surmounted by a dome two hundred and ten feet high. The
+interior is cruciform and richly frescoed. The altar piece is by
+Brumidi.
+
+Also, fronting on Logan Square, at the corner of Nineteenth and Race
+streets, is the Academy of Natural Sciences, containing a library of
+twenty-six thousand volumes, and most extensive, valuable and
+interesting collections in zoölogy, ornithology, geology, mineralogy,
+conchology, ethnology, archćology and botany. The museum contains over
+two hundred and fifty thousand specimens, and Agassiz pronounced it one
+of the finest natural science collections in the world. It also contains
+a perfect skeleton of a whale, a complete ancient saurian, twenty-five
+feet long, and the fossil remains of a second saurian so much larger
+than the first that it fed upon it.
+
+Franklin Institute is devoted to science and the mechanical arts, and
+contains a library of fifteen thousand volumes. The Mercantile Library
+occupies a stately edifice, on Tenth street below Market, and contains
+over fifty thousand volumes, exclusive of periodicals and papers. On an
+average, five hundred books are loaned daily, from this institution.
+
+The newspapers of Philadelphia rank second only to those of New York.
+The _Ledger_ has a magnificent building at the corner of Sixth and
+Chestnut, complete in all its appointments, from engine rooms, in the
+basement, to type-setting rooms in the top story. The _Times_ building,
+at the corner of Eighth and Chestnut, is also very fine. The _Public
+Record_ building, newly finished, on Chestnut street above Ninth, near
+the new Post Office, surpasses all others. It represents the profits of
+a daily penny paper, giving news in a condensed form, to meet the wants
+of a working and busy public.
+
+Philadelphia once represented the literary centre of the country. It
+took the lead in periodic literature half a century ago, and claimed, as
+residents, some of the most brilliant novelists, essayists and poets of
+the day. But the glory of that age has departed. The _Continent_, a
+weekly magazine, sought to revive the prestige of the city, but soon
+removed to New York, where it died.
+
+The Medical Colleges of Philadelphia have long stood in the front rank,
+and have attracted students from all parts of the country. A Woman's
+Medical College is in successful operation, with a fine hospital
+connected with it.
+
+Philadelphia has an educational system embracing schools of different
+grades, and a High School. But it pays its teachers less salaries than
+most of the other cities, and the standard of the schools is not so high
+as it should be, in consequence. Girard College should not be
+overlooked, while speaking of educational institutions. Architecturally,
+it is a magnificent marble building, in Grecian style. It is located
+near the Schuylkill River, on Girard avenue. When Girard selected the
+location for his proposed college, it was so far out in the country,
+that he never thought the city would creep up to it. But to-day the
+college is inclosed by it, and its high stone walls block many a street,
+to the inconvenience of the people of the neighborhood. It was
+established for the practical education of orphan boys, and one of the
+provisions of its founder--himself a free thinker--was, that no
+religious instruction should be imparted to the pupils, and no clergyman
+be permitted to enter its doors; a provision which is widely
+interpreted, to the effect that no sectarian bias is given in the
+college.
+
+The United States Mint, located on Chestnut street, above Thirteenth, is
+copied from a Grecian temple at Athens. It contains a very valuable
+collection of coins, embracing those of almost every period of the world
+and every nation. The Custom House is an imitation of the Pantheon at
+Athens. The new Post Office is on Ninth street, extending from Chestnut
+to Market. It is a spacious granite structure, in the Renaissance style,
+four stories in height, with an iron dome, and when completed will cost
+about four millions of dollars.
+
+On the opposite corner from the Post Office is the Continentel Hotel, a
+spacious structure which, when erected, was the largest of its kind in
+the country. It is now exceeded in size by several other hotels in other
+cities, but it is noted for the elegance and excellence of the
+entertainment it offers its guests. Girard Hotel is immediately
+opposite, and ranks second only to the Continental.
+
+The Eastern Penitentiary is on Fairmount avenue, on what was once known
+as Cherry Hill. In it is practiced the plan of solitary confinement for
+prisoners. When Dickens paid his first visit to America, more than forty
+years ago, he visited this prison, and was so moved to pity by the
+solitude of its inmates, that he wrote a touching account of one of the
+prisoners, in whom he was especially interested. But this very prisoner,
+when he was set at liberty, soon committed another crime which sent him
+back to his silent and solitary cell, and every subsequent release was
+followed by a subsequent crime and subsequent imprisonment. Finally,
+when Dickens had been in his grave for years, the old man, still hale
+and hearty, but bearing the marks of age, was once more set free.
+Attention was attracted to him by the newspapers, as having been the
+prison hero of Dickens. The public became interested in him, and an
+effort was made to place him beyond the temptation of crime, so that he
+might go down to his grave a free man. But before many months had
+elapsed, life in the outer world became irksome to him, and he returned,
+by his well-beaten path, back to the penitentiary. He was very proud of
+the notice which Dickens had bestowed upon him, and it seemed to more
+than compensate for the loss of his liberty.
+
+When Penn visited Philadelphia, in its infant days, he wished to
+preserve the bluff overlooking the Delaware, to be forever used as a
+public park and promenade. But the traffic of Front street now rattles
+where he would have had green trees and grass. Philadelphia has no
+pleasant outlook upon the river, to correspond with the Battery of New
+York. The wharves are lined with craft of every description, and the
+flags of many nations are to be seen in her harbor; but commerce creeps
+down to the very shores, and Delaware avenue, which faces the river, is
+dirty and crowded with traffic. Seen from the river the city makes a
+pleasing outline against the sky, with its many spires and domes.
+Smith's Island and Windmill Island lie opposite the city, a short
+distance away, and Camden is on the New Jersey shore. Ferry boats
+continually ply across the Delaware, carrying to and fro the travelers
+of a continent.
+
+Philadelphia is not without its public breathing places, where the
+residents of its narrow streets may enjoy fine trees and green grass.
+When the city was first planned, four squares, of about seven acres
+each, were reserved in its four quarters, two each side of Market
+street, and are now known as Washington, Franklin, Logan and
+Rittenhouse Squares. Washington Square is at Sixth and Walnut, and was
+once a Potters' Field. Many soldiers, victims of the smallpox and camp
+fever, were buried there during the Revolution. Franklin Square, at
+Sixth and Race was also once a burying, ground. A fountain now occupies
+its centre. At Eighteenth and Race is Logan Square, where in 1864 was
+held the great Sanitary Fair. The entire square was roofed over and
+boarded up, the trunks of the trees standing as pillars in the aisles of
+the large building. Its companion, Rittenhouse Square, at Eighteenth and
+Walnut streets, is the centre of the aristocratic quarter of the city.
+It is surrounded by most elegant mansions and costly churches.
+Independence Square lies back of Independence Hall.
+
+There are a few other smaller and newer squares scattered throughout the
+city, but its great pride is Fairmount Park, which is unsurpassed in its
+natural advantages by any park in the world. This park contains nearly
+three thousand acres, embracing eleven miles in length along the
+Schuylkill and Wissahickon rivers. The nucleus of this park was the
+waterworks and reservoir, the former situated on the Schuylkill, in the
+northwestern part of the city, and the latter on a natural elevation
+close by, from which the entire park takes its name, while a small tract
+of land between the two was included in the original park. There was
+added the beautiful estate of Lemon Hill, once the country seat of
+Robert Morris, with the strip along the Schuylkill which led to it. In
+course of time Egglesfield, Belmont, Lansdowne and George's Hill, on the
+opposite side of the river, were added, either by gift or purchase, and
+eventually the tract of land on the eastern bank, extending from Lemon
+Hill to the Wissahickon, and along both banks of the latter as far as
+Chestnut Hill. This park, besides the beautiful river and romantic
+stream which it incloses, includes hills and valleys, charming ravines
+and picturesque rocks.
+
+While the city has gained much, the true lover of nature has lost
+something, by the conversion of this tract of land into a park. While it
+was still private property, nature was at her loveliest. Wild flowers
+blossomed in the dells, and little streams gurgled and tumbled over
+stones down the ravines, while vines and foliage softened the rugged
+outlines of the rocky hillsides. But the landscape gardener has been
+there. The dells are converted into gentle slopes; the wild flowers and
+ferns which beautified them have given place to green sward; one of the
+prettiest of the brooks has been converted into a sewer and covered
+over. The Wissahickon, once the most delightful of wild and wayward
+streams, is now, for a considerable part of its way, imprisoned between
+banks as straight and unpicturesque as those of a canal. The pretty
+country lanes have been obliterated, and the trees which overshadowed
+them have disappeared. Primness and stableness is now the rule. Art has
+sought to improve nature, and has almost obliterated it, instead. Yet
+even the landscape gardener cannot succeed in making the Schuylkill
+entirely unattractive; and velvet turf and trees waving in the wind,
+even though the latter be pruned into a tiresome regularity, are always
+more grateful than the cobble stones and brick pavements of the city
+streets, and thousands every day seek rest or recreation at Fairmount.
+
+Belmont Mansion is now a restaurant. Solitude, a villa built in 1785 by
+John Penn, grandson of William Penn, and the cottage of Tom Moore, not
+far from Belmont where he spent some months during his visit to
+America, are among the attractions of the park.
+
+ [Illustration: GIRARD AVENUE BRIDGE--FAIRMOUNT PARK, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+The Zoölogical Gardens are included in the park, and are situated on the
+western bank of the Schuylkill, opposite Lemon Hill. Here is found the
+finest collection of European and American animals in America, and the
+daily concourse of visitors is very great. The several bridges which
+span the Schuylkill are very picturesque. In the winter, when the river
+at Fairmount, above the dam, is frozen over, the ice is covered with
+skaters, and the bank is thronged with spectators.
+
+Laurel Hill, one of the most beautiful cemeteries of the country,
+adjoins Fairmount Park, and is inclosed by it, seeming to make it a part
+of the park. Mount Vernon Cemetery is nearly opposite Woodlands, in West
+Philadelphia, and contains the Drexel Mausoleum, the costliest in
+America.
+
+Fairmount was the site of the Centennial Exhibition in 1876, and
+numerous and costly buildings were erected there. Of these many were
+removed at once at the close of the Exhibition. The main building, a
+mammoth structure, covering eleven acres, was retained for several years
+for a permanent exhibition building, but was removed in 1883. Memorial
+Hall, erected by the State, at a cost of $1,500,000, standing on an
+elevated terrace between George's Hill and the river, and used as an art
+gallery during the Exhibition, still remains, and is designed for a
+permanent art and industrial collection. North of Memorial Hall stands
+the Horticultural Building, a picturesque structure, in the Mooresque
+style. It is a conservatory, filled with tropical and other plants, and
+is surrounded by thirty-five acres devoted to horticultural purposes.
+
+In October, 1882, Philadelphia celebrated her Bi-centennial, and
+commemorated the landing of Penn, who first stepped upon her shores two
+hundred years before. This Bi-centennial lasted for three days, which
+were celebrated, the first as "Landing Day," the second as "Trades'
+Day," and the third as "Festival Day." On the first day, October
+twenty-fourth, the State House bell rang two hundred times, and the
+chimes of the churches were rung. The ship Welcome, which two hundred
+years before had conveyed Penn to our shores, made a second arrival, and
+a mimic Penn again visited the Blue Anchor, still standing to receive
+him, held treaty with the Indians, and then paraded through the city,
+followed by a large and brilliant procession, which presented the
+harmless anachronism of the Proprietor of two hundred years ago
+hob-nobbing with the city officials and others of the nineteenth
+century. On the second day the different trades and manufacturing
+interests made a great display. In the evening Pennsylvania history was
+represented by ten tableaux; eleven tableaux presented the illustrious
+women of history; and ten tableaux gave the principal scenes in the
+Romayana, the great poem of India. The display of this night pageant was
+gorgeous and beautiful beyond anything ever before seen in this country.
+On the third day the morning was devoted to a parade of Knights Templar,
+and the evening to a reception at the Academy of Music and Horticultural
+Hall. A musical festival was held during the day; also a naval regatta
+upon the Schuylkill, a bicycle meet at Fairmount, and archery contests
+at Agricultural Hall. During the entire three days Philadelphia held
+holiday. Her streets and pavements were crowded with throngs of people
+from the country, and elevated seats along the principal streets were
+constantly filled, at high prices.
+
+If William Penn could really, in person, have stepped upon the scene,
+and beheld the city of his planning as it is to-day, he would
+undoubtedly be astonished beyond expression. In magnitude it must exceed
+his wildest dreams; in commercial and manufacturing enterprises its
+progress reads like some fable of the east. He would look almost in vain
+for his country residence upon the Delaware, once surrounded by noble
+forests, and we fear he would scorn the Blue Anchor and all its present
+associations. Time works wonders. Nearly a million people now find their
+homes where, in 1683, one year after Penn's arrival, there were but one
+hundred houses. In 1684 the population of Philadelphia was estimated at
+2,500. In 1800 it had increased to 41,220. In 1850 it was 121,376. From
+this period to 1860, its growth was almost marvelous, at the latter
+period its inhabitants numbering 565,529. The census of 1880 gave it a
+population of 846,984.
+
+The residents of Philadelphia include every nationality and class of
+people. The Quakers are in a small minority, though they have done much
+to mould the character of the city. Irish and Germans predominate among
+foreigners. Italians, French, Spanish, and Chinese are not so numerous
+as in New York. The society of the Quaker City bears the reputation of
+great exclusiveness. While culture will admit to the charmed circle in
+Boston, and money buys a ready passport to social recognition in New
+York, in Philadelphia the door is closed to all pretensions except those
+of family. Boston asks "How much do you know?" New York, "How much are
+you worth?" but in Philadelphia the question is, "Who was your
+grandfather?"
+
+Philadelphia ranks fourth in commerce among the cities of the Union. As
+a manufacturing city it occupies the very front rank. With the
+inexhaustible coal and iron fields of Pennsylvania at its back, her
+manufacturing interests are certain to grow in extent and importance,
+maintaining the ascendency they have already gained. Its prosperity has
+a firm basis. Like all large cities, there is squalor, misery and crime
+within its borders; but the proportion is smaller than in some other
+cities, and the aggregate amount of domestic content, owing to its many
+comfortable homes, much greater. Thus Philadelphia offers an example, in
+more than one direction, which might be emulated by her sister cities.
+What she will have become when her tri-centennial comes around, who
+shall dare to predict?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+PROVIDENCE.
+
+ Origin of the City.--Roger Williams.--Geographical Location and
+ Importance.--Topography of Providence.--The Cove.--Railroad
+ Connections.--Brown University.--Patriotism of Rhode Island.--
+ Soldiers' Monument.--The Roger Williams Park.--Narragansett
+ Bay.--Suburban Villages.--Points of Interest.--Butter
+ Exchange.--Lamplighting on a New Plan.--Jewelry Manufactories.
+
+
+In the year 1630, Roger Williams, a clergyman, persecuted and banished
+from Massachusetts on account of his peculiar religious views, came to
+Rhode Island and laid the foundation of a city, naming it Providence, in
+gratitude for his deliverance from persecution. This renowned pioneer
+not only laid the corner stone of a great and growing city, but
+ineffaceably stamped his character upon all her institutions, public and
+private.
+
+Providence is the second city of New England in respect to wealth and
+population. It is pleasantly located at the head of Narragansett Bay,
+thirty-five miles from the ocean. Its commercial advantages are
+unsurpassed, and as a manufacturing town it ranks among the first in the
+Atlantic States. The city is divided into two unequal portions by a
+narrow arm of the Bay, which terminates near the geographical centre of
+the town, in a beautiful elliptical sheet of water, about one mile in
+circumference, called the cove, or basin. This basin is inclosed by a
+handsome granite wall, capped by a substantial and ornamental iron
+fence, and is surrounded by a green about eighty feet in width, filled
+with a variety of beautiful and thrifty shade trees.
+
+The eastern portion of the city rises from the water, in some places
+gradually, in others quite abruptly, to the height of more than two
+hundred feet. This elevated land is occupied by elegant private mansions
+surrounded with numerous shade trees and ornamental gardens, making one
+of the most delightful and desirable places for residence to be found in
+any city.
+
+The western portion of the city rises very gradually until it reaches an
+elevation of about seventy-five feet, when it spreads out into a level
+plain, extending a considerable distance to the southwest. The northern
+portion, recently annexed to the city, is more sparsely populated, and
+portions of it are quite rural in appearance and abounding in hills,
+numerous springs and small streams of water.
+
+Providence is about forty-three miles from Boston, the same distance
+from Worcester, ninety miles from Hartford, fifty miles from Stonington,
+and twenty miles from Fall River, with each of which places it is
+connected by numerous daily trains. It also has railroad connections
+with New Bedford and southern Massachusetts, with Fitchburg, and thence
+with Vermont and New Hampshire. There is now in process of construction
+another route to Northern Connecticut, Springfield and the west. It is
+also closely connected with Newport, and other places on Narragansett
+Bay, by steamboats.
+
+ [Illustration: VIEW OF PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, FROM PROSPECT
+ TERRACE.]
+
+Brown University is one of the distinguishing features of Providence,
+and, as an institution of learning, stands in the front rank of American
+colleges. Founded more than one hundred years since, this college has
+come down from the past, hand in hand with Yale and Harvard. Among the
+renowned graduates of Brown University may be mentioned Charles Sumner,
+the great statesman, the devoted patriot, the champion of the negro,
+whose fame and good works will live while freedom is the heritage of the
+American people.
+
+President Wayland, of this institution, was the originator of the public
+Library System of New England--a system whose wonderful power for good
+is markedly on the increase.
+
+During the war no State of the whole sisterhood evinced more patriotism
+than little Rhode Island, and Providence was largely represented in the
+Union army. A Soldiers' Monument stands in the triangular space near the
+Boston and Providence Railroad Depot, inscribed with the names of Rhode
+Island soldiers who were killed in battle. The Monument is surmounted by
+a statue in bronze of the Goddess of Liberty, and in niches of the
+granite pillar below this figure each arm of the service is represented
+by soldiers in bronze. The work is finely executed, and it is one of the
+first objects which attracts the attention of the stranger. The
+Artilleryman stands behind his cannon in grim silence; representatives
+of the infantry, the cavalry and the marine arms of the service are his
+coadjutors, and the entire group is sternly suggestive of war's sad
+havoc.
+
+About a mile and a half from the heart of the city, along a beautiful
+McAdamized road leading to Pawtuxet, is situated the Roger Williams
+Park, a tract of land containing about thirteen hundred acres, which was
+bequeathed to the city by a descendant of Roger Williams, in
+consideration of five hundred dollars, to be raised by the Providence
+people, for the erection of a monument to the city's illustrious
+founder. The sum to be appropriated for that purpose was equivalent to
+twenty-six hundred dollars at the present time.
+
+The embryo park is yet a wilderness, unreclaimed, and primeval
+forest-trees fill the wide enclosure. The ground is undulating with hill
+and dale, and pleasant driveways under the dark pines and hemlocks are
+already laid out.
+
+The memory of Roger Williams is held in great veneration by the citizens
+of Providence, and he is ranked with William Penn in the category of
+noble pioneers. Plenty of eulogistic essays and poems have been written
+concerning him, and his great love of liberty, exemplified in his life,
+is a matter of history. The following fragment of verse, by Francis
+Whipple, one of Rhode Island's poets, places the memory of the two
+heroes side by side:--
+
+ "When warlike fame, as morning mist shall fly,
+ And blood-stained glory as a meteor die,
+ When all the dross is known and cast away,
+ And the pure gold alone allowed to stay,
+ Two names will stand, the pride of virtuous men,
+ Our Roger Williams and good William Penn."
+
+Many of the suburbs of Providence are of some note as places of summer
+resort. The coast scenery along Narragansett Bay is full of charming
+water-pictures, and numerous rocky islands may be seen, on which are
+erected little white cottages, for summer occupation. The islands are
+sometimes connected with the shore by foot-bridges, but often the only
+means of communication with land is by boat.
+
+Nayatt Point, six miles distant from Providence by rail, is, as its name
+implies, a jutting point of land, reaching out into the bay, where
+beautiful drives along the beach and through the neighboring groves,
+added to the salt sea air, are the chief summer attractions. Rocky
+Point, directly opposite Nayatt, is famous for its clam bakes, and on
+moonlight nights in summer, excursion parties from Nayatt, Barrington or
+Warren, glide over the smooth waters of the bay to this lovely spot. The
+red glow of Rocky Point Light can be seen through the night, for miles
+and miles along the coast and down the bay.
+
+Westminster street is the principal avenue of Providence, and is
+handsomely built up with substantial and elegant business blocks. A very
+large hostelry, to be called the Narragansett Hotel, is in process of
+erection at the corner of Dorrance and Broad streets. Just back of this
+building, the new Providence Opera House, a structure of recent date,
+furnished with all the modern appliances for the stage, opens its doors
+to lovers of the histrionic art. The What-Cheer building, the Arcade,
+and the Butler Exchange are all well known business centres. The last
+named place owes its existence to a clause in a Scotchman's will. A
+large inheritance was left to a gentleman in Providence, with a
+stipulation that a certain amount of its yearly income should be used in
+the erection of public buildings in the city. The Butler Exchange is one
+of the children of this proviso.
+
+A recent improvement in Providence is that of lighting the city lamps by
+means of electricity. Only one person is required to light the streets
+of the entire city. A single turn of the screw which commands the
+network of wires leading to the lamp posts, sets every gas jet, far and
+near, aflame, in one instantaneous blaze. It is a marvelous advance on
+the old way of doing things, and will greatly lessen the expenditures of
+the city.
+
+Providence is justly celebrated for its manufacture of jewelry. The
+largest establishments of the kind in New England are in operation here,
+and the work turned out is of the most skillful pattern. A visit to the
+lapidary establishments is full of interest. A shining array of precious
+stones, from the white brilliance of the diamond, to the mottled moss
+agate, greets the bewildered gaze, and skillful workmen are deftly
+transforming them into the beautiful gems which shine in the jeweler's
+window.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+QUEBEC.
+
+ Appearance of Quebec.--Gibraltar of America.--Fortifications and
+ Walls.--The Walled City.--Churches, Nunneries and Hospitals.--
+ Views from the Cliff.--Upper Town.--Lower Town.--Manufactures.--
+ Public Buildings.--Plains of Abraham.--Falls of Montmorenci.--
+ Sledding on the "Cone."--History of Quebec.--Capture of the
+ City by the British.--Death of Generals Wolfe and Montcalm.--
+ Disaster under General Murray.--Ceding of Canada, by France,
+ to England.--Attack by American Forces under Montgomery and
+ Arnold.--Death of Montgomery.--Capital of Lower Canada and of
+ the Province of Quebec.
+
+
+Of all the cities and towns on the American continent, not one wears
+such an Old-World expression as Quebec. Not even St. Augustine, in
+Florida, with its narrow streets, and quaint, overhanging balconies, so
+takes the traveler back to a past age, as that fortified city on the
+lower St. Lawrence. It is not French in any modern sense. But the city
+and its inhabitants belong to a France now passed away, the France of
+St. Louis, the _fleur-de-lis_, and a dominant priesthood. An offshoot
+from such a France, now blotted out and forgotten in the crowding of
+events during the last century, it has remained oblivious of all the
+changes in the parent country, and not even British rule, and the
+infusion of Anglo-Saxon and Celtic blood have been able to more than
+partially obliterate its early characteristics.
+
+Quebec is situated at the confluence of the St. Charles River with the
+St. Lawrence, on the northern side of a point of land which projects
+between these two rivers. This point ends in an abrupt headland, three
+hundred and thirty-three feet above the level of the river; and its
+precipitous sides, crowned with an almost impregnable fortress, have won
+for it the name of the "Gibraltar of America." The most elevated part of
+this promontory is called Cape Diamond, since at one time numerous
+quartz crystals were found there; and upon this is placed the citadel,
+occupying forty acres. From the citadel a line of wall runs towards the
+St. Charles River, until it reaches the brow of the bluff. Continuing
+around this bluff towards the St. Lawrence, it finally completes a
+circle of nearly three miles in circumference, by again connecting with
+the citadel. This encircling wall originally had five gates, but four of
+these were removed some time ago. They are now being replaced by more
+ornamental ones. The old St. Louis Gate, opening upon the street of that
+name, is being replaced by the Kent Gate, in honor of Queen Victoria's
+father, who spent the summer of 1791 near Quebec. Dufferin Gate is being
+erected on St. Patrick street; Palace and Hope gates are to be replaced
+by castellated gates; while a light iron bridge is to occupy the site of
+the Prescott Gate.
+
+The old city is contained within this walled inclosure, and here, in the
+narrow, tortuous, medićval streets, are the stately churches, venerable
+convents, and other edifices, many of them dating back to the period of
+the French occupation of the city. The houses are tall, with narrow
+windows and irregular gables, two or three stories high, and roofed,
+like the public buildings, with shining tin. A very large part of the
+city within the walls is, however, taken up with the buildings and
+grounds of the great religious corporations. Monks, priests, and nuns,
+seemingly belonging to another age and another civilization than our
+own, are jostled in the street by officers whose dress and manners are
+those of the nineteenth century. French is quite as frequently heard as
+English; and everywhere the old and the new, the past century and the
+present, seem inextricably mingled. The past has, however, set its
+ineffaceable stamp upon the city and its people. There is none of the
+hurry and push of most American cities, seen even, to a degree, in
+Montreal. To-day seems long enough for its duties and its pleasures, and
+to-morrow is left to take care of itself. Even the public buildings have
+the stamp of antiquity upon them, and are, in consequence, interesting,
+though few of them are architecturally beautiful.
+
+The churches of Quebec have none of the grandeur of those of Montreal.
+Most prominent among them is the Anglican Cathedral, a plain, gray stone
+edifice in St. Ann street. The Basilica of Quebec, formerly the
+Cathedral, is capable of seating four thousand persons, and with a plain
+exterior, contains some invaluable art treasures in the form of original
+paintings by Vandyke, Caracci, Halle and others. The remains of
+Champlain, the founder and first governor of Quebec, lie within the
+Basilica. The Ursuline Convent is in Garden street, north of Market
+Square, and is composed of a group of buildings surrounded by beautiful
+grounds. It was founded in 1639, originally for the education of Indian
+girls, and is now devoted to the education of girls of the white race.
+The remains of Montcalm are buried within the convent grounds, in an
+excavation made by the bursting of a shell, during the engagement in
+which he lost his life. The Gray Nunnery, the Black Nunnery, and Hôtel
+Dieu with its convent and hospital, under the charge of the Sisters of
+the Sacred Blood, of Dieppe, are among the Roman Catholic religious
+institutions of the city. In the hospital of the Hôtel Dieu ten thousand
+patients are gratuitously cared for annually.
+
+Durham Terrace lies along the edge of the cliff overlooking the St.
+Lawrence. It occupies the site of the old chateau of St. Louis, built by
+Champlain in 1620, and destroyed by fire in 1834. The outlook from this
+terrace is one of the finest in the world; though the view from the
+Grand Battery is conceded to be even finer. Looking down from an
+elevation of nearly three hundred and fifty feet, the lower town, the
+majestic St. Lawrence and the smaller stream of St. Charles rolling away
+in the distance, and a vast stretch of country varied by hills and
+plains, woodlands and mountains, are spread out before the spectator,
+making one of the most beautiful pictures of which it is possible to
+conceive.
+
+The walled city, with the suburbs of St. Louis and St. John between the
+walls to the eastward, and the Plains of Abraham to the westward, is
+known as the upper town. The lower town is reached from the upper by the
+Côte de la Montagne, or Mountain street, a very steep and winding
+street, and lies below the cliff, principally to the northward, though
+it encircles the base of the promontory. Here, in the lower town, is the
+business portion of the city, with all its modern additions. The narrow
+strand between the cliff and the rivers is occupied by breweries,
+distilleries, manufactories, and numerous ship-yards; while the many
+coves of the St. Lawrence, from Champlain street to Cape Rouge, are
+filled with acres of vast lumber rafts. Quebec is one of the greatest
+lumber and timber markets in America, supplying all the seaboard cities
+of the United States. It also builds many ships, and produces sawed
+lumber, boots and shoes, furniture, iron ware and machinery.
+
+The Custom House occupies the extreme point between the St. Lawrence and
+St. Charles rivers. It is Doric in architecture, surmounted by a dome,
+and has a columned façade reached by an imposing flight of steps. The
+Marine Hospital, built in imitation of the Temple of the Muses on the
+banks of the Ilissus, is situated near the St. Charles River. The Marine
+and Emigrants' Hospital is not far away. The General Hospital, an
+immense cluster of buildings further up the river, was founded in 1693,
+and is in charge of the nuns of St. Augustine.
+
+The Plains of Abraham, lying back of Quebec, near the St. Lawrence, and
+the scene of the famous encounter between the forces of Wolfe and
+Montcalm, are fast being encroached upon by suburban residences, large
+conventual establishments, and churches. The Martello towers are four
+circular stone structures, erected upon the Plains to defend the
+approaches of the city. On the plains, near the St. Foye road, is a
+monument composed of a handsome iron column, surmounted by a bronze
+statue of Bellona, presented by Prince Napoleon, and erected in 1854, to
+commemorate the victory won by the Chevalier de Lčris over General
+Murray, in 1760. The Mount Hermon Cemetery, beautifully laid out on the
+edge of the precipice which overhangs the St. Lawrence, lies about three
+miles out, on the St. Louis road.
+
+It is imperative upon the stranger, in Quebec, to visit the Falls of
+Montmorenci, eight miles distant, and among the most beautiful in
+America. A volume of water fifty feet wide makes a leap of two hundred
+and fifty feet, down a sheer rock face, into a boiling and turbulent
+basin. During the winter the spray which is continually flying from this
+cataract congeals and falls like snow, until it builds up an eminence
+which is known as the Cone. This Cone, in favorable seasons, sometimes
+reaches an altitude of one hundred and twenty feet. To visit the Falls
+in sleighs, over the frozen river, and to ride down the Cone on
+hand-sleds, or "toboggins," as they are locally called, is considered
+the very climax of enjoyment by the inhabitants of Quebec. The Cone is
+in the form of a sugar loaf, quite as white and almost as firm. Up its
+steep sides the pleasure seekers toil with their sleds, and then glide
+from the top, impelled by the steepness alone, rushing down the slope
+with fearful velocity, and sometimes out on the ice of the river for
+hundreds of yards, until the force is spent. The interior of the Cone is
+not unfrequently hollowed out in the shape of a room, and a bar is set
+up, for the benefit of thirsty pleasure seekers.
+
+About a mile above Montmorenci Falls are the Natural Steps, a series of
+ledges cut in the limestone rock by the action of the river, each step
+about a foot in height, and as regular in its formation as though it was
+the work of man.
+
+There are points of interest nearer Quebec, among which are the Isle of
+Orleans, a beautiful and romantic place, laid out with charming drives,
+and reached by ferry; _Château Bigot_, an antique and massive ruin,
+standing at the foot of the Charlesbourg mountain; and still further
+away, Lorette, an ancient village of the Huron Indians.
+
+Quebec, the oldest city in British America, was settled in 1608, the
+spot having been visited by Cartier, in 1534. Its history is an
+exceedingly interesting and varied one. Twenty-one years after its
+founding it was seized by the British, who did not restore it to France
+until 1632. In 1690 and in 1711 the British made unsuccessful maritime
+assaults upon it It continued to be the centre of French trade and
+civilization, and of the Roman Catholic missions in North America,
+until, in 1759, it fell into the hands of the British. The Fleur-de-lis
+fluttered from the citadel of Quebec for two hundred and twenty years,
+with the exception of the three years from 1629 to 1632, when Sir David
+Kirke placed the fortification in the hands of England.
+
+In 1759, during the Seven Years' War, the English, under General Wolfe,
+attacked the city and bombarded it. An attempt had been previously made
+to land British troops at Montmorenci, which had been frustrated by
+Montcalm, resulting in a loss of five hundred men. But on the occasion
+of the present attack Wolfe had conceived the idea of landing his troops
+above the town. He pushed his fleet stealthily up the river, under the
+brow of the frowning precipice and beneath the very shadow of the
+fortifications. Passing above the city, he effected a landing where the
+acclivity was a little less steep than at other places, and the troops
+dragged themselves up, and actually brought with them several pieces of
+ordnance. All this was under cover of night; and when day dawned the
+British army with its artillery was found in line of battle on the
+Plains of Abraham. Wolfe had eight thousand men, while the French troops
+numbered ten thousand. Montcalm believed he could easily drive the
+British into the river or compel them to surrender, and so threw the
+whole force of his attack upon the English right, which rested on the
+river. But in the French army were only five battalions of French
+soldiers, the balance being Indians and Canadians. The French right,
+composed of these undisciplined troops, was easily routed and the French
+left was ultimately broken. Five days later the British were in complete
+possession of Quebec. But before this victory was fairly assured to the
+English troops, both the French and English armies had lost their
+commanders.
+
+The spot where Wolfe fell in the memorable battle of September
+thirteenth, 1759, is marked by an unpretending column. A monument was
+shipped from Paris, to commemorate the death of Montcalm, but it never
+reached Quebec, the vessel which conveyed it having been lost at sea. A
+lengthy inscription upon this monument, after giving the Marquis de
+Montcalm's name and many titles, and depicting in glowing words his
+character and his brilliant achievements as a soldier, says: "Having
+with various artifices long baffled a great enemy, headed by an expert
+and intrepid commander, and a fleet furnished with all warlike stores,
+compelled at length to an engagement, he fell--in the first rank--in the
+first onset, warm with those hopes of religion which he had always
+cherished, to the inexpressible loss of his own army, and not without
+the regret of the enemy's, September fourteenth, 1759, of his age
+forty-eight. His weeping countrymen deposited the remains of their
+excellent General in a grave which a fallen bomb in bursting had
+excavated for him, recommending them to the generous faith of their
+enemies." Whether the "generous faith" of their friends was equally to
+be trusted each one must judge for himself; for in the chapel of the
+Ursuline Convent of Quebec, among the curiosities exhibited to the
+visitor, is the skull of the Marquis de Montcalm.
+
+In April, of the following year, the British very nearly lost what Wolfe
+had gained for them. General Murray went out to the Plains of Abraham,
+with three thousand men, to meet the French, under Chevalier de Lčris,
+losing no less than one thousand men, and all his guns, which numbered
+twenty, and being compelled to retreat within the walls. The arrival of
+a British squadron brought him timely relief, and compelled the French
+to retreat, with the loss of all their artillery. The treaty of peace
+made between Louis Fifteenth and England, in 1763, ceded the whole of
+the French Canadian possessions to the British. In December, 1775,
+during the war of the Revolution, a small American force, under General
+Montgomery, made an attack upon the fortress, but was repulsed with the
+loss of their commander and seven hundred men. Arnold preceded
+Montgomery, making an astonishing march, and enduring untold perils, by
+the Kennebec and Chaudičre. Following the course pursued by Wolfe, he
+placed his troops upon the Plains of Abraham; but when Montgomery joined
+him, from Montreal, it was found they had no heavy artillery, and the
+only alternatives were, to retreat, or to carry the place by storm.
+Deciding on the latter course, two columns, headed by Arnold and
+Montgomery, rushed forward. The latter carried the intrenchment, and was
+proceeding toward a second work, when he and the officers who followed
+him were swept down before a gun loaded with grape. Arnold was carried
+from the field, wounded, and the attempt on Quebec was a most disastrous
+failure.
+
+Quebec remained the chief city of Canada until the western settlements
+were erected into a separate Province, as Canada West, when it became
+the Capital of Canada East. In 1867, the British North American
+Provinces were united, in the Dominion of Canada. Canada East, or Lower
+Canada, as a Province, took the name of the city, and the city of Quebec
+became the Capital of the Province. The population of Quebec was, in
+1871, 58,699, of whom a large proportion are descendants of the early
+French settlers, though many English, Scotch and Irish, have domiciled
+themselves within it, and form, really, its most enterprising and
+energetic citizens.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+READING.
+
+ Geographical Position and History of Reading.--Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Population, Streets, Churches and Public
+ Buildings.--Boating on the Schuylkill.--White Spot and the
+ View from its Summit.--Other Pleasure Resorts.--Decoration
+ Day.--Wealth Created by Industry.
+
+
+Reading, the seat of Justice of Berks County, Pennsylvania, is
+beautifully situated near the junction of the Tulpehocken with the
+Schuylkill River, and is midway between Philadelphia and Harrisburg, on
+the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. It was named after the ancient
+borough of Reading, a prominent market town of Berkshire, England, which
+it is said to resemble in some of its geographical surroundings.
+Attention was first called to Reading in the fall of 1748, by the agents
+of Richard and Thomas Penn, who represented it as "a new town with great
+natural advantages, and destined to become a prosperous place." It was
+incorporated as a borough in 1783, and as a city in 1847. The original
+settlers were principally Germans, who gave character to the town, both
+in language and customs. For many years the German tongue was almost
+exclusively spoken, and it is still used in social intercourse and
+religious worship by more than one-half the present population.
+
+The manufacturing interests of Reading are second to no city of like
+population in the United States; while it is the third city in
+Pennsylvania in its manufactures, Pittsburg and Philadelphia alone
+exceeding it. Among these manufactures the working of iron holds the
+first rank. Much of the ore is obtained from Penn's Mountain, on the
+east of the town. Rolling mills, machine shops, car shops, furnaces,
+foundries, cotton mills and hat factories, from their number and extent,
+establish beyond question the claim of Reading to be considered one of
+the first manufacturing towns of America. The shops of the Philadelphia
+and Reading Railroad alone employ two thousand men. From an early hour
+in the morning the eastern bank of the Schuylkill rings out the
+discordant music of numberless factories, betokening the enterprise of
+her productive industries.
+
+Reading has, at the present time, a population numbering not far from
+fifty thousand. It is delightfully situated on an elevated and ascending
+plain, which rises to the eastward into Penn's Mountain, and to the
+southward into the Neversink Mountain. The city is abundantly supplied
+with pure water, by streams flowing from these mountains. It is
+surrounded by a rich farming country, which looks to it for supplies.
+The streets cross each other at right angles, and the chief hotels and
+stores are built around Penn's Square, which occupies the centre of the
+city. It contains thirty-one churches, most prominent among which is
+Trinity, German Lutheran, an antique building with a spire two hundred
+and ten feet in height. Christ Church, Episcopal, is a handsome Gothic
+edifice of more recent date, and with a spire nearly as high. The Grand
+Opera House and Mishler's Academy of Music furnish amusements for the
+pleasure-seekers of the city.
+
+The Schuylkill River is one of the most charmingly picturesque in
+America. Taking its rise among the rocky heights of the Blue Ridge,
+when it reaches Reading it has left all the ruggedness of the mountain
+region behind, and flows between gently sloping banks, which, though
+sometimes rising in the background to considerable elevations, never
+lose their softness of outline and their pastoral beauty. One evening we
+strolled down to this river, and took a most delightful boat ride from
+the Lancaster bridge to the dam opposite the White House and Neversink.
+Two boats were placed at the disposal of our party. It was a lovely May
+evening, the air soft and warm, yet with all the freshness of spring. We
+glided down the stream, the trees upon the banks overhanging the water,
+and catching reflections of themselves in its depths. Our downward
+progress was easy and pleasant. The current aided our efforts, while the
+tranquil waters, rippled only by a passing boat, offered no resistance
+to us in our course. When we turned and headed up stream, we found it
+quite another matter. Then we had to bring all our energies and wills to
+aid us in the labor of rowing. This is something that a man is apt to
+discover many times in his life, that, in both material and moral
+matters, it is easier to float with the current than to make headway
+against it.
+
+A call from Mr. W. H. Zeller, of the Reading _Eagle_, paid me early one
+day, before the sun was up, was an indication that that gentleman was
+ready to pilot me to "White Spot," the famous resort of Reading.
+Starting as soon as possible, we walked up Franklin street, crossed
+Perkiomen avenue, and took a "bee line" for our destination. Up and up
+and up we walked, ran and jumped, over gulches and stones, and from log
+to log, halting occasionally for breath, and to discuss the city and
+landscape at our feet. It was but half-past five o'clock when we reached
+the goal of our walk. Taking in a view from its elevated heights, I felt
+that my visit to Reading would have given me a very indefinite idea of
+its natural beauties, had I not seen it from this point. White Spot is
+upon Penn's Mountain, one thousand feet above the river. I would but
+mislead the imagination of the reader, were I to attempt to convey a
+faithful impression of the magnificent panorama which, for a while,
+almost bewildered me. But let him imagine, if he can, a vast girdle of
+far-off, misty, blue hills, faintly defined by the horizon; against them
+to the north and west jut rows of towering but withal gently sloping
+mountains, purple, black, or darkly blue, just as each drifting cloud
+shadows them; within these encircling hills and mountains scatter the
+loveliest landscape features of which the human mind can conceive; green
+meadows, wooded hills, enchanting groves, dotted here and there with the
+most charming irregularity; farmhouses and farms, in themselves a little
+Arcadia; roads diverging from a common centre, and winding about until
+in the distance they look like the tiny trail which a child's stick
+makes in the sand; a clear, silvery river, looking in the sunshine like
+liquid light, reproducing on its mirrored surface the wonderful beauty
+which clothes either bank, studded with green isles that "blossom as the
+rose," spanned by splendid bridges as delicate in their appearance as
+lace work or filigree, yet supporting thousands of tons daily; in the
+heart of all a city, whose factories, furnaces, churches, majestic
+public buildings, handsome private residences, and attractive suburbs
+betoken prosperity, intelligence, culture, wealth and constant
+improvement; over the whole throw that peculiar _couleur de rose_ with
+which the heart in its happiest moments paints all it loves, and he will
+have a faint conception of the aspect of Reading and its surroundings as
+seen from White Spot.
+
+After resting on the summit, and taking in, to the full, this
+magnificent view, we returned to the city by the way of Mineral Spring,
+another delightful resort, which lies surrounded by charming natural
+beauties, about a mile and a half east of Reading. White House Hotel, a
+mile and a half to the southeast, on the Neversink Mountain, three
+hundred feet above the river, is still another favorite visiting place,
+from which a fine view of the city and surrounding country may be
+obtained, though not equal to that of White Spot.
+
+I was particularly fortunate in finding myself still in Reading on
+Decoration Day, that day which has become a national holiday, and is
+universally observed throughout the northern States. The occurrence of
+this anniversary is hailed by the "Boys in Blue" as affording a blessed
+opportunity for doing honor to their dead comrades, and renewing their
+devotion to the flag which they followed through a four years' war for
+the preservation of the Union. Reading manifested her patriotism by a
+parade of all her civic and military organizations, and by invitation I
+was permitted to participate in the decoration exercises, at the Charles
+Evans Cemetery. The people of Reading are truly loyal, as industrious
+and order-loving people are sure to be. The perpetuation of the Union
+means to them the protection of their homes and the encouragement of
+their industries.
+
+Although the manufacturing interests of Philadelphia and Pittsburg are
+exceedingly large--those of the latter without parallel on the
+continent, if, in the world--a visit to Reading is, nevertheless,
+desirable, for one who would gain a comprehensive idea of the industries
+of Pennsylvania. The city is not a large one, but it is almost wholly a
+city of workers. With the great coal and iron regions of the State at
+its back, their products brought to it by river, railroad and canal, its
+manufacturing enterprises are multiplied in numbers, and are almost
+Cyclopean in their proportions. Here the brawn of the country, with
+giant strength united with surprising skill, hammers and fashions the
+various devices of an advanced civilization, which its brain has already
+imagined and planned. Here wealth is created by the sturdy strokes of
+industry, and the permanent prosperity of the State secured.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+RICHMOND.
+
+ Arrival in Richmond.--Libby Prison.--Situation of the City.--
+ Historical Associations.--Early Settlement.--Attacked by
+ British Forces in the Revolution.--Monumental Church.--St.
+ John's Church.--State Capital.--Passage of the Ordinance
+ of Secession.--Richmond the Capital of the Confederate
+ States.--Military Expeditions against the City.--Evacuation
+ of Petersburg.--Surrender of the City.--Visit of President
+ Lincoln.--Historical Places.--Statues.--Rapid Recuperation
+ After the War.--Manufacturing and Commercial Interests.--
+ Streets and Public Buildings.--Population and Future
+ Prospects.
+
+
+On the morning of October twenty-third, 1863, a large company of Union
+prisoners, including the author, made an entry into Richmond, which was
+the reverse of triumphant, we having been, four days before, made
+prisoners of war in the cavalry fight at New Baltimore, in Northern
+Virginia. A brief stay in Warrenton jail, a forced march on a hot day,
+for a distance of thirty miles, to Culpepper, and then a transfer by
+march and rail, landed us at last at Libby Prison, Richmond. The
+"chivalry" and the descendants of the F. F. V's did not impress us very
+favorably, as we marched from the depot, through some of the principal
+streets, to the James River. Contemptuous epithets were bestowed freely
+upon us, while the female portion of the community was even more bitter
+in its expressions of hatred, and a troop of boys followed in our rear,
+hooting and yelling like young demoniacs.
+
+Libby Prison was situated at the corner of Fourteenth and Cary streets,
+and was an old, dilapidated three-story brick structure, which still
+bore upon its northwest corner the sign "Libby & Son, Ship Chandlers and
+Grocers." The windows were small and protected by iron bars. The story
+of my stay in this prison-house I have recorded in "Capture, Prison-Pen
+and Escape." It was my abiding place until the seventh of the following
+May, when, in a filthy, rough box-car, a number of prisoners, including
+myself, were shipped to Danville. It is needless to say that my
+prolonged stay in Richmond did not materially alter or improve my
+impressions in regard to the city. True, our view of the city from our
+prison windows was limited, but memories only of suffering, privation
+and unnecessary barbarity, prompted by the cruel nature of those who had
+us in charge, are associated with it. The city was at that time the
+heart and centre of the then Southern Confederacy, the seat of the Rebel
+government, the rendezvous of troops, and the hatching place of treason
+and rebellion.
+
+Yet one who views Richmond at the present day, unbiased by the untoward
+circumstances which threw their baleful influence over us, will see much
+to admire in and about the city. It is situated on the north bank of the
+James River, about one hundred miles by water from Chesapeake Bay, and
+the same distance a little west of south of Washington. It is built upon
+several eminences, the principal ones being Shockoe and Richmond hills,
+separated by Shockoe Creek. Like so many other Southern cities, its
+residences are surrounded by gardens, in which are grass plots,
+shrubbery and flowers; and in the business quarter are many substantial
+edifices.
+
+The Richmond of to-day is very different from the Richmond of war times.
+The loyal city has been literally reconstructed upon the ruins of the
+rebellious one. There are few cities around which so many historical
+associations cluster, as around Richmond. It is on the site of a
+settlement made as early as 1611, by Sir Thomas Dale, and in honor of
+Prince Henry called Henrico, from which the county afterwards took its
+name. An early historical account says it contained three streets of
+framed houses, a church, storehouses and warehouses. It was protected by
+ditches and palisades, and no less than five rude forts. Two miles below
+the city a settlement had been made two years previously. In 1644-5 the
+Assembly of Virginia ordered a fort to be erected at the falls of the
+James River, to be called "Forte Charles." In 1676 war was declared
+against the Indians, and bloody encounters took place between the
+aborigines and their white neighbors. Bloody Run, near Richmond, is so
+named, according to tradition, on account of a sanguinary battle which
+one Bacon had there with the Indians; though it is stated on other
+authority that its name originated from the battle in which Hill was
+defeated and Totopotomoi slain.
+
+In 1677 certain privileges were granted Captain William Byrd, upon the
+condition that he should settle fifty able-bodied and well armed men in
+the vicinity of the Falls, to act as a protection to the frontier
+against the Indians. Richmond was established by law as a town in May,
+1742, in the reign of George II, on land belonging to Colonel William
+Byrd, who died two years later. The present Exchange Hotel is near the
+locality of a warehouse owned by that gentleman. In 1779 the capital of
+the State was removed to Richmond, from Williamsburg, the latter, its
+former capital, being in too assailable a position. In 1781 the traitor
+Arnold invested the city with a British force. As soon as he arrived he
+sent a force, under Colonel Simcoe, to destroy the cannon foundry above
+the town. After burning some public and private buildings, and a large
+quantity of tobacco, the British forces left Richmond, encamping for one
+night at Four Mile Creek. The village at that time contained not more
+than eighteen hundred inhabitants, one-half of whom were slaves. In 1789
+it contained about three hundred houses. At that period all the
+principal merchants were Scotch and Scotch-Irish. Paulding describes the
+inhabitants as "a race of most ancient and respectable planters, having
+estates in the country, who chose it for their residence, for the sake
+of social enjoyments. They formed a society now seldom to be met with in
+any of our cities. A society of people not exclusively monopolized by
+money-making pursuits, but of liberal education, liberal habits of
+thinking and acting; and possessing both leisure and inclination to
+cultivate those feelings and pursue those objects which exalt our nature
+rather than increase our fortune." In 1788, a convention met in the
+city, to ratify the Federal Constitution.
+
+At the corner of Broad and Thirteenth streets stands the Monumental
+Church, in commemoration of a terrible calamity which once befell the
+city. On the twenty-sixth of December, 1811, a play entitled "The
+Bleeding Nun" was being performed in the little theatre of the city, and
+proved such a great attraction that the house was crowded, not less than
+six hundred people being present on the eventful night. Just before the
+conclusion of the play the scenery caught fire, and in a few minutes the
+whole building was wrapped in flames. The fire falling from the ceiling
+upon the performers was the first notification the audience had of what
+was transpiring. A scene of the wildest confusion ensued. There was but
+one door through which the entire audience, composed of men, women and
+children, could make its exit. The fire flashed from one portion of the
+interior to another, catching on the garments of the frantic people. All
+pressed in a wild panic toward the door. People jumped and were pushed
+out of the windows. Many were rescued with their clothing literally
+burned off from them, and no less than sixty-nine persons perished in
+the flames, among them George W. Smith, Governor of the State, and many
+other prominent men and women. A great funeral was held in the Baptist
+meeting-house, and the entire population of the city attended, as
+mourners. The remains of the unfortunates were interred beneath a mural
+tablet which is now in the vestibule of the church that was subsequently
+erected on the site of the theatre.
+
+St. John's Church, on Church Hill, at the corner of Broad and
+Twenty-fourth streets, dates back to ante-Revolutionary times, and in it
+was held, in 1775, the Virginia Convention, in which Patrick Henry made
+his famous speech, containing the words "Give me liberty or give me
+death!" It was subsequently the place of meeting of the Convention
+which, in 1788, ratified the Federal Constitution. Among the members of
+this Convention were James Madison, John Marshall, James Monroe, Patrick
+Henry, George Nicholas, George Mason, Edmund Randolph, Pendleton and
+Wythe. Rarely has any occasion in a single State presented such a list
+of illustrious names as we find here. This church is a plain,
+unpretending edifice, built in the style of a century ago, to which has
+been added a modern spire.
+
+The State Capitol stands on the summit of Shockoe Hill, in the centre of
+a park of eight acres. It is of Graeco-Composite style of architecture,
+with a portico of Ionic columns, planned after that of the _Maison
+cassée_ at Nismes, in France, the plan being furnished by Thomas
+Jefferson. Beneath a lofty dome in the centre of the building is
+Houdon's celebrated statue of Washington, of marble, life size,
+representing him clad in the uniform of a revolutionary general. Near
+by, in a niche in the wall, is a marble bust of Lafayette. This building
+has been the scene of many noted political gatherings. In it, on January
+seventh, 1861, was read Governor Letcher's message to the Legislature,
+in which he declared it was "monstrous to see a government like ours
+destroyed merely because men cannot agree about a domestic institution."
+Nevertheless, on the seventeenth of the same month, the Capitol Building
+witnessed the unanimous passage of the following resolution:--
+
+ "_Resolved_, That if all efforts to reconcile the unhappy
+ differences between sections of our country shall prove abortive,
+ then every consideration of honor and interest demands that
+ Virginia shall unite her destinies with her sister slaveholding
+ States."
+
+And on the thirteenth of February, the same edifice saw a State
+Convention meet within its walls; on the sixteenth of April, Governor
+Letcher refused the requisition of the Secretary of War for troops to
+assist in putting down the Rebellion in South Carolina; and the next day
+the Ordinance of Secession was passed, two months having been given to
+an active discussion of its expediency, pro and con. The Confederate
+flag, with eight stars, was raised from the dome of the Capitol, and the
+Custom House, which stands on Main street, between Tenth and Eleventh,
+had the gilt sign on its portico, "United States Court," removed. A
+citizen writing from Richmond, on April twenty-fifth, says: "Our
+beautiful city presents the appearance of an armed camp. Where all these
+soldiers come from, in such a state of preparation, I cannot imagine.
+Every train pours in its multitude of volunteers, but I am not as much
+surprised at the number as at the apparent discipline of the country
+companies. * * But the war spirit is not confined to the men nor to the
+white population. The ladies are not only preparing comforts for the
+soldiers, but arming and practicing themselves. Companies of boys, also,
+from ten to fourteen years of age, fully armed and well drilled, are
+preparing for the fray. In Petersburg, three hundred free negroes
+offered their services, either to fight under white officers, or to
+ditch and dig, or any kind of labor. An equal number in this city and
+across the river, in Chesterfield, have volunteered in like manner."
+
+A resolution was passed by the Convention inviting the Southern
+Confederacy to make Richmond the seat of government. The Ordinance of
+Secession having been submitted to the people, the vote in the city
+stood twenty-four hundred in favor and twenty-four against, being less
+than half the vote polled at the Presidential election in November
+previous. Richmond became a general rendezvous for troops.
+
+The Confederate Congress met in Richmond, in the hall of the House of
+Delegates, on the twentieth of July, 1861, and the seat of government
+continued there until the taking of the city marked the fall of the
+Confederacy. A school-house in the vicinity of the rear of Monumental
+Church, was at that time known as Brockenburg House, and was the
+residence of Jefferson Davis, president of the Southern Confederacy. Two
+tobacco warehouses, under their former titles of Libby & Son and Castle
+Thunder, together with Belle Isle, were military prisons during the war,
+and in the former of these, as already narrated, the writer was confined
+for several months.
+
+About the middle of May, 1862, the Federal forces having passed Yorktown
+and Williamsburg, began to move directly upon Richmond. Consternation
+seized the city, all who could get away packed up everything and fled
+southward. Even President Davis took his family and hastened to North
+Carolina. It was resolved to destroy the city by conflagration as soon
+as the Union troops reached it. The Federal army was, however, compelled
+to abandon the Peninsula, and Richmond was safe for the time being. On
+February twenty-ninth, 1864, General Kilpatrick, with his division of
+cavalry, commenced his march upon the city, and came within six miles,
+when he was compelled to withdraw to Mechanicsburg. The next day he made
+a second attempt, advancing by the Westham or river road, but was
+confronted by superior forces, and again compelled to fall back, and
+shortly after he returned down the Peninsula.
+
+From the beginning of the war Richmond had been the objective point of a
+series of formidable expeditions for its capture, under Generals
+McDowell, McClellan, Burnside, Hooker, Meade and Grant. The strong
+earthworks which were drawn around the city for its protection still
+remain as mementoes of the great struggle. On July thirtieth, 1864, the
+Union forces advanced as far as Petersburg, and after destroying one
+fort, were repulsed. It was not until April second, 1865, that the Rebel
+forces were obliged to surrender that outpost, and on the following day,
+General Weitzel, with his troops, entered the city of Richmond.
+
+President Davis was attending church at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, at
+the corner of Grace and Ninth streets, when a messenger brought him a
+dispatch from General Lee, announcing that Petersburg was about to be
+evacuated. The officers of the Southern Confederacy stood not on the
+order of their going, but went at once. Jefferson Davis took his family
+and left the city immediately. The Rebel authorities took with them what
+stores and treasures they could convey away, burned what they had to
+leave behind, and set fire to the warehouses, public buildings, and
+bridges across the James River. The flames communicated to adjacent
+structures, and it was thought the entire city would be destroyed. A
+large portion of its business section was thus laid waste; the number of
+buildings destroyed being estimated at one thousand, and the entire loss
+at eight millions of dollars.
+
+On the fourth of April, President Lincoln reached Richmond, and entered
+the house which had but two days before been occupied by Jefferson
+Davis, but which was now the headquarters of General Weitzel. He came
+unattended, and walked up from the river into the city, without parade,
+as any ordinary citizen might have done. The news of his presence soon
+spread, and the colored people flocked around him, with strong
+demonstrations of joy. "God bless you, Massa Linkum!" was heard on every
+hand, while the tears rolled down the cheeks of some, and others danced
+for joy. And here, perhaps all unconsciously, the second father of his
+country emulated the first. It is told of Washington, that, a colored
+man having bowed to him, he returned the bow with stately courtesy.
+Being remonstrated with for bowing to a colored person, he replied that
+he did not wish to be outdone in politeness by a negro. At Richmond a
+colored man bowed to Lincoln, with the salutation, "May de good Lord
+bless you, President Linkum!" Lincoln returned the bow with cordiality,
+evidently, like Washington, determined not to be outdone in politeness
+by a negro. But that bow not only indicated the noble nature of the man
+who recognized a humanity broader than a color line, and over whom
+already hung the dark shadow of martyrdom; but it also was a foretoken
+of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution and the Civil Rights
+act, which so quickly followed the quelling of the Rebellion.
+
+In the soldiers' section of the Hollywood Cemetery, in the western
+limits of the city, overlooking the James River, are the graves of
+hundreds of Confederate dead, from the midst of which rises a monumental
+pyramid of rough stone. In the same cemetery, on a hill at its southern
+extremity, a monument marks the resting-place of President Monroe.
+General J. E. B. Stuart, commander of Lee's cavalry, is also buried
+here.
+
+The Tredegar Iron Works, which are still in active operation, and whose
+buildings cover thirteen acres of ground, were the great cannon
+manufactory of the Confederacy. Several battle fields and national
+cemeteries are within a few hours' drive of the city. The old African
+Church, a long, low building in Branch street, near Monumental Church,
+is famous as a place of political meetings, both before and during the
+war.
+
+Crawford's equestrian statue of Washington, in the esplanade leading
+from the Governor's house to the Capitol Square, will recall the early
+days of the Republic. The statue is of bronze, representing a horse and
+rider of colossal size, the horse thrown back partly upon its haunches,
+on a massive granite pedestal, and around it are grouped bronze figures
+of Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, George Mason, Thomas
+Nelson, and Andrew Lewis, all illustrious sons of Virginia. In the
+Capitol Square, north of the Capitol Building, is Foley's statue of
+General "Stonewall" Jackson, of heroic size, on a granite pedestal, and
+near it a life-size marble statue of Henry Clay. In the State Library,
+which contains forty thousand volumes, are many historical portraits.
+
+Richmond has rapidly recuperated since the war. Her streets have been
+rebuilt, and, in common with many other Southern cities, she has, since
+the abolition of slavery, and the consequent elevation of labor and
+attraction of Northern enterprise and capital, developed many industrial
+interests. The Gallego and Haxall flour mills are among the largest in
+the world. It has a large number of cotton, and a still larger number of
+tobacco factories; and contains also forges, furnaces, paper mills, and
+machine shops. Its chief exports are, however, tobacco and flour.
+Richmond owes its present flourishing condition to its river facilities,
+and the immense water power supplied by the falls. It is alike the
+manufacturing and the commercial metropolis of the State. Vessels
+drawing ten feet of water can come within a mile of the centre of the
+city, those drawing fifteen feet, to three miles below. A canal around
+the falls gives river navigation two hundred miles further into the
+interior. Steamboat lines connect it with the principal Atlantic cities,
+and railroads and canals open up communication with the North, South,
+and West.
+
+The city is regularly laid out, the streets crossing each other at right
+angles. Those parallel with the river are named alphabetically, A street
+being on the river. The cross streets are named numerically. The
+principal thoroughfare is Main or E street, which is the centre of
+business. The fashionable quarter is on Shockoe Hill, in the western
+part of the city, where are also the chief public edifices. The
+Penitentiary is in the western suburbs facing the river, and is a
+massive structure three hundred feet long and one hundred and ten feet
+deep. The Almshouse is one of the finest buildings in the city. There
+are a large number of churches, thirteen colleges, and an orphan asylum.
+Five bridges across the James River connect it with Spring Hill and
+Manchester, the latter a pretty town containing two cotton mills.
+
+The population of Richmond, by the census of 1880, was 63,803, which
+showed an increase of more than ten thousand persons in ten years.
+Unlike Charleston, S. C., it is surrounded by a populous rural region,
+whose products find a market here, and whose population look largely to
+the city for their supplies. It will never attain the commercial
+consequence of Savannah or of Norfolk, but as the centre of the tobacco
+region, and the seat of large manufacturing interests, it will always
+possess a certain importance and prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+SAINT PAUL.
+
+ Early History of Saint Paul.--Founding of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Roman Catholics.--Places of Resort.--Falls of
+ Minnehaha.--Carver's Cave.--Fountain Cave.--Commercial
+ Interests.--Present and Future Prospects.
+
+
+The first white man who ever visited the locality where Saint Paul now
+stands, was Father Hennepin, who made a voyage of discovery up the
+Mississippi, above the Falls of Saint Anthony, in 1680. But for more
+than a century and a half after his visit the entire section of country
+remained practically in the possession of the Indians. Eighty-six years
+afterwards Jonathan Carver made a treaty with the Dakotas, and in 1837
+the United States made a treaty with the Sioux, throwing the land open
+to settlement.
+
+The first building in Saint Paul was erected in 1838, but for a number
+of years afterwards it remained merely an Indian trading-post. In 1841 a
+mission was established on the spot by the Jesuits, and a log chapel
+dedicated to Saint Paul, from which the city afterwards took its name.
+
+The land upon which Saint Paul is built was purchased in 1849, at the
+government price of one dollar and twenty-five cents an acre. The same
+year the town was made the capital of the State, while it was yet a
+hamlet of a few log huts. Four years later it had nearly four thousand
+inhabitants, with handsome public buildings, good hotels, stores, mills,
+factories, and other constituents of a prosperous town. In 1846 the
+town had but ten inhabitants. In 1856 it had ten thousand. Steamers were
+coming and going; loads of immigrants were arriving; drays and teams
+were driving hither and thither; carpenters and masons were hard at
+work; yet could not put up houses fast enough; shops and dwellings were
+starting out of the ground, as if by magic. In 1880 the population had
+increased to fifty thousand, and was steadily and rapidly multiplying.
+
+Saint Paul originally occupied the western bank of the Mississippi, but
+has now extended to the eastern bank as well. It is divided into a lower
+and upper town, the former lying on the low shore between the bluff and
+the river, and containing the wholesale houses, shipping houses and
+factories. The latter occupies no less than four plateaus rising one
+above another, in a semicircle around the bend of the river, the first
+plateau being nearly a hundred feet in height. Here are the retail
+stores, public buildings, churches and private residences. The streets
+in the central portions of the city cross one another at right angles,
+but become irregular as they approach the boundaries. They are graded
+and paved and lighted by gas. Two bridges connect the opposite shores of
+the river, and horse cars traverse all sections of the city. Its general
+appearance is pleasing in the extreme. Many of the houses are built of
+blue limestone, which is found underlying one of the terraces in great
+quantities.
+
+The State Capitol building is now in process of construction, and will,
+when completed, be a very handsome edifice, occupying an entire square.
+The United States Custom House, an opera house, a large number of
+handsome churches, and several public school buildings are among the
+objects worthy of note in the city.
+
+Although Saint Paul is settled largely by people from New England and
+New York State, the Roman Catholics still hold an important place in the
+city. The first to take possession of the spot, they will be the last to
+relax their hold. They have a number of large and handsomely finished
+church edifices, and have established an orphan asylum. There is also a
+Protestant orphan asylum, and three free hospitals.
+
+The city boasts an Academy of Sciences, which has a very full museum, a
+Historical Society and a Library Association, each of the latter having
+fine libraries.
+
+Saint Paul is in the midst of a charming and romantic country, and the
+throngs of people who seek a transient home within its borders during
+the heat of summer find abundance of delightful drives and places for
+picnics and excursions. White Bear Lake and Bald Eagle Lake, but a short
+distance away by rail, furnish boating, fishing and bathing for pleasure
+seekers, as well as most enchanting scenery for the lovers of nature.
+The city park is but two miles away, on the shores of Lake Como, and is
+also an attractive place.
+
+All lovers of the romantic should thank Longfellow that by means of his
+exquisite poem of Hiawatha he has rescued the beautiful Falls of
+Minnehaha, meaning in the Dakota language "laughing water," from being
+known as Brown's Falls, a name which some utilitarian egotist had
+bestowed upon it. From a high bank, covered with shrubbery, the clear,
+silvery stream makes a sudden leap of about fifty feet into the chasm
+beneath. A veil of mist rises before the falls, and the sun shining upon
+it spans the cataract with a rainbow.
+
+On the eastern side of the city, in Dayton Bluff, near the river, is
+Carver's Cave, so named after Jonathan Carver, already referred to, who,
+in this cave, in May, 1767, made his treaty with the Indians, by which
+he secured a large tract of land. The cave contains a lake large enough
+to have a boat upon it.
+
+Two miles above Saint Paul, on a beautiful clear stream that flows into
+the Mississippi, is Fountain Cave, a most wonderful and interesting
+production of nature. It seems to have been formed by the action of the
+stream which finds an outlet through it. It has an arched entrance with
+a vaulted roof, the entrance being twenty feet in height by twenty-five
+in width, while roof, sides and floor are of pure white sandstone. This
+cave contains a number of chambers, the largest being one hundred feet
+in length by twenty-five feet in width, and twenty feet in height. The
+cave has been penetrated for a thousand feet or more, and still has
+unexplored recesses.
+
+Saint Paul stands at the head of navigation of the Mississippi River,
+the Falls and Rapids of Saint Anthony, a short distance above,
+effectually barring the further upward progress of craft from below,
+though above the falls small steamboats thread the waters of the
+youthful Mississippi to the furthest outposts of civilization. At this
+point the immense grain fields of the northwest find an outlet for their
+annual products, and to this point comes the merchandise which must
+supply the needs of an already large and constantly increasing
+agricultural, mining and lumbering population. Numerous railroads
+connect it, not only with the great trade centres of the east and south,
+but with a hundred thriving towns and villages in Minnesota and
+Wisconsin, who look to it for supplies; and when the Northern Pacific
+is completed, the entire northwest will be brought into communication
+with Saint Paul, and as the Mississippi will share with the lakes the
+transportation of produce, manufactures and ores of an inexhaustible but
+now scarcely populated region, Saint Paul will derive immense advantages
+from this gigantic enterprise.
+
+Saint Paul is already a town of the greatest importance on the Upper
+Mississippi. Her streets teem with business, and boats of all
+descriptions lie at her wharves. Already a populous city, what she is
+to-day is but the beginning of what the future will behold her. A
+generation hence she will count her inhabitants by hundreds where now
+she counts them by tens; her business will have increased in like
+proportion; and in the no distant future she will be known as the great
+metropolis of the Northwest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+SALT LAKE CITY.
+
+ The Mormons.--Pilgrimage Across the Continent.--Site of Salt
+ Lake City.--A People of Workers.--Spread of Mormons through
+ other Territories.--City of the Saints.--Streets.--Fruit and
+ Shade Trees.--Irrigation.--The Tabernacle.--Residences of the
+ late Brigham Young.--Museum.--Public Buildings.--Warm and Hot
+ Springs.--Number and Character of Population.--Barter System
+ before Completion of Railroad.--Mormons and Gentiles.--Present
+ Advantages and Future Prospects of Salt Lake City.
+
+
+Of all the cities which have sprung into being and grown and prospered,
+since the discovery of the American continent, there is not one with
+which is associated so much interest, and which attracts such universal
+curiosity as Salt Lake City. From the time of the so-called discovery of
+the Book of Mormon, in 1827, by Joseph Smith, through all the wanderings
+of the adherents of Mormonism, beginning with the organization of the
+"Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints," in Manchester, New York,
+including its removal to Kirtland, Ohio, and the establishment of a
+branch church in Jackson County, Missouri; its transplanting to Nauvoo,
+Illinois; the temporary sojourn of its adherents in Iowa; and the final
+exodus, in 1847, over the then almost unknown and unexplored plains and
+mountains of the great west, until they reached the Land of Promise,
+lying between the Wasatch Range and the Sierra Nevadas, and there
+settled themselves permanently, to build up literally a "Kingdom of
+Christ upon the earth," the Mormons have been in more senses than one a
+peculiar people. They have been unpleasantly peculiar in their advocacy
+and practice of polygamy, and during their early sojourn at Salt Lake,
+in their defiance of the United States Government. In some other
+respects they have challenged the admiration of the world, and have set
+patterns in industry, and in a system of government, which seems to
+consider the well-being of all, both of which might be imitated to
+advantage by the "Gentiles" who affect to despise them.
+
+After a weary pilgrimage through a wilderness far greater than that
+traversed by the Israelites in days of old, the Mormons found their
+Canaan in an immense valley, from four thousand to six thousand feet
+above the level of the sea, and walled in by mountain ranges which
+seemed to furnish natural barriers against the incroachments of an
+antagonistic civilization. This valley, the geologist said, was the
+bottom of a great, pre-historic sea, which by some mighty convulsion of
+nature had been lifted up from its original level, and its outlet cut
+off, and, like the Caspian Sea and others, was left to shrink by
+evaporation. In the deepest depression of this valley still remained all
+that was left of this ancient inland ocean, reduced now to seventy-five
+miles in length and thirty in breadth, with an average depth of but
+eight feet. Still holding in solution a large proportion of the salts of
+the greater sea, its waters form one of the purest and most concentrated
+brines in the world, containing twenty-two per cent of chloride of
+sodium, slightly mixed with other salts. All through the valley of the
+Great Salt Lake there are salt and alkaline deposits, evidencing the
+former presence of water. The valley seemed barren and uninviting; yet
+in it, as offering a refuge from the persecutions which they had
+suffered in the east, the Mormons decided to establish their church and
+build their homes. They found the soil, barren as it looked, would grow
+grass, grain and fruits; and though the climate is changeable, the
+winter cold, with deep snows, and the heat of summer intense, they had
+faith to believe that they could endure whatever natural disadvantages
+they could not overcome, and that they should in time receive the reward
+of their piety and industry.
+
+Their chief town and ecclesiastical capital was located on the eastern
+bank of the river Jordan, between Lake Utah, a beautiful body of fresh
+water lying to the southward, and Great Salt Lake, lying twenty miles to
+the northward. The new settlement was eleven hundred miles west of the
+Mississippi, and six hundred and fifty miles east-northeast of the then
+scarcely heard of city of San Francisco. Its site extended close up to
+the base of the great mountains on the north, while to the southward its
+view spread over more than a hundred miles of plain, with a range of
+rugged mountain peaks, snow-capped and bold, lying beyond. A grander
+outlook could scarcely be imagined.
+
+In the laying out of the city the fact was kept in view that it was for
+a people of workers, each one of whom must be self-sustaining. In truth,
+the great success of these people is due to the fact that no class of
+drones has been recognized and provided for. All, from the highest to
+the lowest, were expected to work, church officials as well as laymen;
+and prosperity has attended industry, as it always does. The wilderness
+and solitary place were glad for them, and the desert was made to
+rejoice and blossom as the rose; and a mighty nation within a nation has
+been built up in the valley of Utah, protected by its mountain
+fastnesses. The Mormons have become a strong and prosperous people, and
+have not only possessed themselves of Utah, but have sent out colonies
+to Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Wyoming, Idaho and Arizona, which have
+prospered and increased, until they now practically control those
+Territories.
+
+ [Illustration: MORMON TEMPLE AND TABERNACLE, SALT LAKE CITY.]
+
+It is not my province to speak of the Mormons from either a religious or
+political standpoint. Their material prosperity one cannot fail to see,
+and a truthful historian must note it. The "City of the Saints," as Salt
+Lake City is sometimes called, is doubly interesting, from its history
+and from its peculiar features, so unlike those of any other city. The
+streets are one hundred and twenty-eight feet wide, crossing each other
+at right angles, an eighth of a mile apart, each square thus formed
+containing ten acres. Each square is divided into eight lots, measuring
+ten by twenty rods, and containing one-fourth of an acre. Several of the
+squares in the business quarter of the town have been cut across since
+the original laying out, forming cross streets. The streets are lined
+with trees, while streams of running water course down each side of
+every street, being brought from the neighboring mountains, ten thousand
+feet high, furnishing a pure water supply, and irrigating the gardens.
+Almost every lot has an orchard of pear, apple, plum, apricot, and peach
+trees, and Utah furnishes large quantities of fresh and dried fruit for
+the eastern markets. Apricots, which in the east are almost unknown,
+sometimes grow as large as eastern peaches, from six to eight inches in
+circumference. Locust, maple and box-elder are the favorite shade trees,
+and these grow luxuriantly. When, however, their roots strike soil from
+which the alkali has not yet been washed, their leaves turn from a dark
+green to a sickly yellow. But irrigation washes out this alkali, and the
+trouble from it grows less every year.
+
+Salt Lake City is divided into twenty wards, nearly every one of which
+has a square. Every ward has its master, who superintends the public
+improvements, and sees that every man does his share without shirking.
+The houses are generally of adobe (sun-dried bricks), though a few of
+the newer business blocks are handsome and commodious stone structures.
+Most of the dwelling houses are small, and but a single story in height,
+having separate entrances when there is more than one wife in the
+family. The city is not an imposing one. The wide streets, large grounds
+around each dwelling, and low, small houses, give it more the appearance
+of an overgrown village than that of a city. Nevertheless, it cannot be
+denied that the plan upon which it is built secures to its inhabitants
+the maximum of comfort, health and cleanliness. There are no narrow and
+stifling streets, overshadowed by tall buildings; no dirty alleys; no
+immense crime and pestilence-breeding tenement houses. Each little
+dwelling has its garden and orchard, securing to each family the
+blessings of fresh vegetables and fruit, and making each in a measure
+self-dependent. The air is pure, blowing down the valley from the
+mountain heights; and no foul vapors from half protected sewers or
+reeking courts poison it.
+
+The chief business thoroughfares are Main and Temple streets. The former
+is entirely devoted to trade, while church edifices are found in the
+latter. The Tabernacle is, of course, the most prominent object which
+meets the eye of the traveler as he arrives in Salt Lake City, standing
+out, as it does, in all its huge proportions, surrounded by the tiny
+homes of the people. It is on Temple street, in the heart of the city,
+and is entirely without architectural beauty, its predominant features
+being its hugeness and its ugliness. It is an enormous wooden structure,
+oval in form, with an immense dome-like roof, supported by forty-six
+sandstone pillars. It will seat fifteen thousand persons, and is used
+for the services of the church, lectures and public gatherings. It
+contains one of the largest organs in America. It is inclosed within a
+high wall, and a little to the east of it, within the same inclosure,
+are the foundations of a new temple, estimated to cost ten millions of
+dollars, but which will not probably be finished for many years to come.
+An inferior adobe building, also within the walls, is the celebrated
+Endowment House, where are performed those sacred and mysterious rites
+of the Mormon Church which no Gentile may look upon, and where the
+Saints are sealed to their polygamous wives.
+
+On South Temple street, east of the Tabernacle, is the group of
+buildings known as Brigham Block, inclosed, like the former, by a high
+stone wall, and comprising the Tithing House, the Beehive House, the
+Lion House, the office of the _Deseret News_, and various other offices
+and buildings. The Beehive House and the Lion House constituted the
+residences of the late Brigham Young and eighteen or twenty of his
+wives. A handsome structure nearly opposite, the most pretentious
+structure in Salt Lake City, and known as Amelia Palace, was built by
+Brigham Young, for his favorite wife, Amelia. The theatre is a large
+building with a gloomy exterior, but handsomely fitted up inside. It is
+a favorite resort of the Saints, who make it a source of innocent
+recreation, and entertain no prejudices against it, permitting their
+wives and children to appear upon its boards. One of the daughters of
+Brigham Young was at one time an actress at this theatre.
+
+On South Temple street, opposite the Tabernacle, is the Museum,
+containing interesting products of Mormon industry; specimens of ores
+from the mines of Utah, and precious stones from the desert; a fair
+representation of the fauna of the Territory; relics of the mound
+builders; articles of Indian use and manufacture, and other curiosities,
+which the visitor may behold on the payment of a small admission fee.
+The City Hall, which is at the present time used by the Territorial
+Government, is a handsome building, erected at a cost of sixty thousand
+dollars. In its rear is the city prison. A co-operative store in
+successful operation will be found occupying a handsome building on East
+Temple street. The Deseret National Bank, at the corner of East Temple
+and South First streets, is also a fine building. The two principal
+hotels of Salt Lake City are the Walker House, on Main street, and the
+Townsend House, at the corner of West Temple and South Second streets.
+With all its quaintness and want of resemblance to other cities, it has
+adopted the system of horse cars, which run on the principal streets,
+and make all parts of the city accessible.
+
+About one mile distant from the city are the Warm Springs, issuing from
+the limestone rock at the foot of the mountains. The water of these
+springs contains lime, magnesia, iron, soda, chlorine, and sulphuric
+acid, and their temperature is lukewarm. A bath in them is delightful,
+and beneficial, if not prolonged. Private bathing apartments are fitted
+up for the use of bathers. A mile further north are the Hot Springs,
+also strongly sulphurous, and with a temperature of over 200°. Eggs may
+be boiled in these springs in three minutes, ready for the table. The
+water from these springs forms a beautiful lake, called Hot Spring Lake,
+which practically destroys all agriculture and vegetation for hundreds
+of yards within the vicinity. Strange as it may seem, the hot water does
+not prevent the existence of some kinds of excellent fish, among which
+have been seen some very fine, large trout.
+
+The population of Salt Lake City is something over twenty thousand
+persons, of whom about one-third are Gentiles and apostate Mormons. This
+population is made up of all nationalities, apostles and missionaries
+being continually sent out to nearly every part of the civilized world,
+to make proselytes, and bring them to the fold. These converts to the
+faith are usually from the lower classes, ignorant and superstitious;
+and as a consequence the intellectual and social standards of Salt Lake
+City are not high. But with their new faith these people acquire habits
+of industry, if they never possessed them before; and the conditions of
+the city are favorable for growth in certain directions. Their children
+are educated and brought up to a higher position than that occupied by
+their parents; so that whatever may be our opinion as to the advantages
+or disadvantages, from a religious point of view, in their conversion to
+the Mormon faith, materially, intellectually and socially they have many
+of them undoubtedly made a change for the better. They are taken away
+from the stationary conditions of life in the old world, and
+transplanted into a new and growing country, where there is plenty of
+room and incentive for progress and expansion. Though the first
+generation do not always avail themselves of this room, nor even the
+second, to its fullest extent, ultimately these people will come to
+compare favorably with other classes of American citizens.
+
+The completion of the Union Pacific Railroad, although it deprived the
+Mormons of that isolation which they sought, has been of vast benefit to
+them in material ways. It is said that when the city was first settled
+the whole community could not have raised one thousand dollars in cash.
+And up to the completion of the railroad nine-tenths of the business of
+the Mormon people was conducted on a system of barter. A writer thus
+facetiously describes the condition of things at that period: "A farmer
+wishes to purchase a pair of shoes for his wife. He consults the
+shoemaker, who avers his willingness to furnish the same for one load of
+wood. He has no wood, but sells a calf for a quantity of adobes, the
+adobes for an order on the merchant, payable in goods, and the goods and
+the order for a load of wood, and straightway the matron is shod. Seven
+watermelons purchased the price of a ticket of admission to the theatre.
+He paid for the tuition of his children seventy-five cabbages per
+quarter. The dressmaker received for her services four squashes per day.
+He settled his church dues in sorghum molasses. Two loads of pumpkins
+paid his annual subscription to the newspaper. He bought a 'Treatise on
+Celestial Marriage' for a load of gravel, and a bottle of soothing syrup
+for the baby with a bushel of string beans."
+
+There are not the most harmonious relations existing between the Mormon
+and Gentile people of Salt Lake City. Each regards the other with
+suspicion. The former look upon the latter as hostile to their faith,
+and determined to destroy it. The Gentiles regard certain practices of
+the Mormons with abhorrence, and themselves as at heart rebellious to
+the government to which they have been compelled to submit. The leading
+papers of the two factions are very hostile, and keep alive the feeling
+of antagonism.
+
+Lying between two prominent mountain chains, the chief city in a vast
+valley which the enterprise of man has demonstrated to be fertile;
+furnishing a depot of supplies, and a mart and shipping place for
+produce and manufactures; Salt Lake City is destined to become an
+important point in the western section of our country. Her future is
+assured, even though the people who founded her, together with the faith
+to which they cling, should disappear from the face of the earth, and be
+forgotten, like the lost tribes of Israel, which they believe themselves
+to represent. Essentially American in all her features--since no city of
+the Old World, either ancient or modern, furnishes a prototype--and in
+her very plan including certain sure elements of success, as our Western
+States and Territories become filled up with a thriving and industrious
+people, she will find herself the natural centre of a vast agricultural
+and mining population, and continue to increase in importance and
+prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ San Francisco.--The Golden State.--San Francisco Bay.--Golden
+ Gate.--Conquest of California by Fremont, 1848.--Discovery of
+ Gold.--Rush to the Mines, 1849.--"Forty-niners."--Great Rise
+ in Provisions and Wages.--Miners Homeward Bound.--Dissipation
+ and Vice in the City.--Vigilance Committee.--Great Influx of
+ Miners in 1850.--Immense Gold Yield.--Climate.--Earthquakes.--
+ Productions.--Irrigation.--Streets and Buildings.--Churches.--
+ Lone Mountain Cemetery.--Cliff House.--Seal Rock.--Theatres.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Chinese Theatres.--Joss Houses.--Emigration
+ Companies.--The Chinese Question.--Cheap Labor.--"The Chinese
+ Must Go."--Present Population and Commerce of San Francisco.--
+ Exports.--Manufactures.--Cosmopolitan Spirit of Inhabitants.
+
+
+San Francisco is situated on the best harbor which our Pacific Coast
+affords, a little below the 38th parallel of latitude, and about a
+degree further south than St. Louis, Cincinnati and Washington. It is
+the western terminus of the Central Pacific Railroad, American gateway
+to Asia and the far East.
+
+As the traveler proceeds thitherward from the Valley of the Mississippi,
+on descending the western slopes of the Sierras, he finds himself fairly
+within the Golden State; and in more senses than one does California
+deserve that name. If it be the summer season the very air seems filled
+with a golden haze. In leaving the mountains all freshness is left
+behind. Trees and fields are yellow with drouth, which lasts from April
+to November. Dense clouds of dust fill the air and settle upon
+everything. Whole regions, by the means of extensive and destructive
+mining operations, have been denuded of all verdure, and lie bare and
+unsightly, waiting until the slow processes of time, or the more
+expeditious hand of man, shall reclaim them. But mines have now given
+place to vast grain and cattle farms or ranches; and great fields of
+golden grain and the cattle on a thousand hills are on either side of
+the track. If it be later or earlier in the year there is a wealth of
+bloom such as is never dreamed of in the East. The ground, sometimes, as
+far as the eye can reach, is brilliant with color, a golden yellow the
+predominating hue. In the rainy season the Sacramento valley, the
+occasional victim of prolonged drouth, is sometimes visited by a
+freshet, which carries destruction with it; a mountain torrent, taking
+its rise near the base of Mt. Shasta, and fed by the snows of the
+Sierras, it is fitful in its demeanor. It finds its outlet through San
+Francisco Bay and the Golden Gate to the Pacific.
+
+San Francisco is on a peninsula which extends between the bay of that
+name and the ocean. Its site is nothing more than a collection of sand
+hills, which, before the building of the city, were continually changing
+their positions. The peninsula is thirty miles long and six wide, across
+the city, which stands on the eastern or inner slope.
+
+San Francisco Bay is unsurpassed in the world, except by Puget Sound, in
+Washington Territory, for size, depth, ease of entrance and security.
+The entrance to the bay is through a passage five miles in length and
+about two in width, with its shallowest depth about thirty feet at low
+tide. Rocks rise almost perpendicularly on the northern side of the
+entrance, to a height of three thousand feet. A lighthouse is placed on
+one of these, at Point Bonita. Fort Point, a fortress built on solid
+rock, commands the entrance from the south, and beyond it, until San
+Francisco is reached, are a series of sand dunes, some of them white and
+drifting and others showing green with the scant grass growing upon
+them. The entrance to the bay is called the Golden Gate, a name applied
+with singular appropriateness, since through its portals have passed
+continuous streams of gold since the discovery of the latter in 1848.
+Strangely enough, the name was given before the gold discovery, though
+at how early a date there seems no means of knowing. As far as can be
+ascertained, it first appears in Fremont's "Geographical Memoir of
+California," published in 1847. Six miles eastward from its entrance the
+bay turns southward for a distance of thirty miles, forming a narrow
+peninsula between it and the ocean, on the northeastern extremity of
+which the city is built. It also extends northward to San Puebla Bay,
+which latter extending eastward, connects by means of a narrow strait
+with Suisun Bay, into which the Sacramento River discharges its volume
+of water. These three bays furnish ample and safe harborage for all the
+merchant fleets of the world.
+
+San Francisco Bay is about forty miles in length, its widest point being
+twelve miles. At Oakland, directly east of San Francisco, it is eight
+miles in width. Alcatraz Island, in the centre of the channel, six miles
+from the Golden Gate, is a solid rock rising threateningly above the
+water, and bristling with heavy artillery. It is sixteen hundred feet in
+length, and four hundred and fifty feet in width. Angel Island is
+directly north of Alcatraz, and four miles from San Francisco, contains
+eight hundred acres, and is also fortified. Midway between San
+Francisco and Oakland is Yerba Buena, or Goat Island, which, too, is
+held as a United States military station. Red Rock, Bird Rock, the Two
+Sisters, and other small islands dot the bay.
+
+In 1775 the first ship passed the portals of the Golden Gate, and made
+its way into the Bay of San Francisco. This ship was the _San Carlos_,
+commanded by Caspar De Portala, a Franciscan monk and Spanish Governor
+of Lower California, who set out on a voyage of discovery and
+exploration. The same man had six years previously visited the sand
+hills of the present site of San Francisco, being the first white man to
+set his foot upon them. Portala named the harbor San Francisco, after
+the founder of his monastic order, St. Francis. A mission was founded
+there six years later, on the twenty-seventh of June, by Friars
+Francisco Paloa and Bonito Cambou, under the direction of Father
+Junipero Serra, who had been commissioned by Father Portala as president
+of all the missions in Upper California. This was the sixth mission
+established in California, and up to the year 1800 the Fathers labored
+with great zeal and industry, had established eighteen missions,
+converted six hundred and forty-seven savages, and acquired a vast
+property in lands, cattle, horses, sheep and grain. Presidios or
+military stations were established for the protection of these missions,
+and the Indians readily submitted themselves to the Fathers, and
+acquired the arts of civilization.
+
+The Franciscan friars continued complete sovereigns of the land during
+the first quarter of the present century, and increased in worldly
+goods. Mexico became a republic in 1824, and in 1826 considerably
+curtailed their privileges. In 1845 their property was finally
+confiscated and the missions broken up. The priests returned to Spain;
+the Indians to their savagery; and only the crumbling walls of their
+adobe houses, and their decaying orchards and vineyards, remained to
+tell the tale of the past history of California. From that period until
+1847 California was a bone of contention between Mexico and the United
+States, her territory overrun by troops of both nations. On the
+sixteenth of January, 1847, the Spanish forces capitulated to Fremont,
+and peace was established.
+
+With the exception of the Mission Dolores, there was no settlement at
+San Francisco until 1835, when a tent was erected. A small frame house
+was built the following year, and on the fifteenth of April, 1838, the
+first white child was born. The population of San Francisco, then known
+as Yerba Buena, in 1842 was one hundred and ninety-six persons. In 1847
+it had increased to four hundred and fifty-one persons, including
+whites, Indians, negroes and Sandwich Islanders. In March, 1848, the
+city contained two hundred houses, and eight hundred and fifty
+inhabitants. In November of the same year, the first steamer, a small
+boat from Sitka, made a trial trip around the bay. In this year the
+first public school and the first Protestant church were established.
+
+This year marked the great era in the history of San Francisco. In the
+fall of 1847, Captain John A. Sutter, a Swiss by birth, who had resided
+in California since 1839, began erecting a saw mill at a place called
+Colorna, on the American River, a confluent of the Sacramento, about
+fifty miles east of the city of that name. James W. Marshall, who had
+taken the contract for erecting the mill, was at work with his men
+cutting and widening the tail-race when, on January eighteenth, 1848, he
+observed some particles of a yellow, glittering substance. In February
+specimens of these findings were taken to San Francisco, and pronounced
+to be gold. The truth being soon confirmed, the rush for the gold fields
+commenced. People in all sections of California and Oregon forsook their
+occupations, and set out for the mines. The news spread, increasing as
+it went; until the reports grew fabulous. Many of the earliest miners
+acquired fortunes quickly, and as quickly dissipated them. The journal
+of Rev. Walter Colton, at that time Alcalde of Monterey, contains the
+following paragraph, under date of August twelfth, 1848:--
+
+"My man Bob, who is of Irish extraction, and who had been in the mines
+about two months, returned to Monterey about four weeks since, bringing
+with him over two thousand dollars, as the proceeds of his labor. Bob,
+while in my employ, required me to pay him every Saturday night in gold,
+which he put into a little leather bag and sewed into the lining of his
+coat, after taking out just twelve and a half cents, his weekly
+allowance for tobacco. But now he took rooms and began to branch out; he
+had the best horses, the richest viands, and the choicest wines in the
+place. He never drank himself but it filled him with delight to brim the
+sparkling goblet for others. I met Bob to-day, and asked him how he got
+on. 'Oh, very well,' he replied, 'but I am off again for the mines.'
+'How is that, Bob? you brought down with you over two thousand dollars;
+I hope you have not spent all that; you used to be very saving; twelve
+and a half cents a week for tobacco, and the rest you sewed into the
+lining of your coat.' 'Oh, yes,' replied Bob, 'and I have got _that_
+money yet. I worked hard for it, and the devil can't get it away. But
+the two thousand dollars came aisily, by good luck, and has gone as
+aisily as it came!'"
+
+Reports of the new El Dorado reached the States, and during 1849, from
+Maine to Louisiana came the gold seekers. From every country in Europe,
+from Australia and from China, additions were made to the throng of
+pilgrims, who, by the Isthmus, around the Horn, across the seas, and by
+the terrible journey overland, all rushed pell mell up the Sacramento,
+stopping at San Francisco only long enough to find some means of
+conveyance. We have no space to tell the story of that time. Men came
+and went. Some made fortunes. Others returned poorer than they came.
+Many who attempted the overland route left their bones bleaching on the
+plains. Some went back to their homes, and others remained to become
+permanent citizens of California. What the F. F. V.s are to Virginia,
+and the Pilgrim Fathers to Massachusetts, the "Forty-niners," a large
+number of whom still survive, will be, in the future, to California.
+
+During 1848 ten million dollars' worth of gold had been gathered on the
+Yuba, American and Feather rivers. The city of San Francisco had, in
+January, 1849, two thousand inhabitants, and these were in a hurry to be
+off to the mines as soon as the rainy season was over. Ships began to
+arrive from all quarters, and July of that year found the flags of every
+nation floating in the bay. Five hundred square-rigged vessels lay in
+the harbor, and everybody was scrambling for the mines. These multitudes
+of people, though they thought only of gold, yet had to be fed, clothed
+and housed after a fashion. There were no supplies adequate to the
+demand, and provisions went up to fabulous prices. Apples sold for from
+$1 to $5 apiece, and eggs at the same rates. Laborers demanded from $20
+to $30 for a day's work, and were scarcely to be had at those figures.
+The miners probably averaged $25 a day at the mines, though some were
+making their hundreds. But at the exorbitant prices to be paid for
+everything, few were able to lay up much money.
+
+Late in the year of 1849 the reaction came. The steamers were filled
+with downcast miners, thankful that they had enough left to take
+themselves home. Others having acquired something, stopped at San
+Francisco, and plunged into the worst forms of dissipation. The city
+during this and the following year held a carnival of vice and crime.
+Women there were few or none, save of the worst character, and gambling
+dens, dance houses, and drinking hells flourished on every street. In
+1850 a Vigilance Committee was organized by the better class of
+citizens, which soon exercised a wholesome restraint upon the criminal
+classes. In the same year California was admitted to the Union without
+the preliminary of a Territorial Government, and San Francisco was
+chartered as a city. Courts were established, and the lawless community
+came under the dominion of law and order.
+
+By this time the great haste which seized everybody in his eagerness to
+obtain gold and return home to enjoy it, had somewhat subsided. Men
+began to realize that there were other means of making money besides
+digging for it. Gardens were planted and orchards set out, and it was
+discovered that the apparently barren soil of the State would yield with
+a fruitfulness unparalleled in the East. San Francisco began to be more
+than a canvass city. Mud flats were filled in and sand hills leveled,
+houses, hotels and stores erected, and a wild speculation began in city
+property. Lots which a few days before had been purchased for two or
+three thousand dollars, were held at fifty thousand dollars. A canvas
+tent, fifteen by twenty feet, near the plaza, rented for forty thousand
+dollars per annum. The Parker House, a two-story frame building on
+Kearney street, also near the plaza, brought a yearly rent of one
+hundred and twenty thousand dollars. Board in a hotel or a tent was
+eight dollars per day, and provisions were proportionately high. To
+build a brick house cost a dollar for each brick used. Twenty-seven
+thousand people arrived in San Francisco, by sea or land, during 1850.
+In 1853 thirty-four thousand gold seekers returned home, the yield of
+gold that year having been $65,000,000, the largest annual yield of the
+State. The imports of San Francisco in the same year were over
+$45,000,000. As early as this period it was the third city in tonnage
+entrances in the United States, New York and New Orleans alone exceeding
+it. In 1856 the bad state of public affairs again necessitated the
+interference of a Vigilance Committee, but since that time the city has
+been orderly.
+
+The site of San Francisco was fixed by chance. More desirable places
+might have been selected, but the influx of miners dropped upon the
+first spot convenient for them to land, from which to start post-haste
+to the mines, and that spot is indicated by the present city. Owing to
+its location its climate is not in all respects desirable. The general
+climate of the coast is tempered, both in summer and winter, by a warm
+ocean current, which, flowing northward along the coast of China and
+Siberia, takes a turn to the south when it reaches Alaska, and washes
+the western coast of the continent of America. It is so warm that it
+produces a marked effect upon this coast, just as the Gulf Stream
+tempers the climate of the British Islands. But it has been sensibly
+cooled by its proximity to Arctic seas, and so sends cool breezes to fan
+the land during the heat of summer. These summer sea breezes rushing
+through the narrow opening of the Golden Gate become almost gales, and
+bring both cold and fog with them. The air of winter is mild and
+spring-like. This is the rainy season, but it does not rain
+continuously. It is the season of verdure and growth, and frosts are
+both slight and infrequent in the latitude of San Francisco. Not a drop
+of rain falls during the summer. The mornings are warm and sometimes
+almost sultry; but about ten o'clock the sea breeze springs up, growing
+more violent as the day advances, and frequently bringing a chilly fog
+with it, so that by evening men are glad to wrap themselves in
+overcoats, and women put on their cloaks and furs. The sand, which is
+still heaped in dunes to the westward of the city, and lies upon its
+vacant lots, is lifted and whirled through the air, falling almost like
+sleet, and stinging the faces of pedestrians.
+
+Thunder storms are of rare occurrence at San Francisco, but earthquakes
+are exceedingly frequent. Probably not a year elapses in which slight
+shocks are not felt in the State. Sometimes these shocks extend over
+vast areas, and at other times are merely local. On October
+twenty-first, 1868, a severe earthquake occurred at San Francisco,
+swaying buildings and throwing down numbers in process of erection. The
+houses of the city are mostly built with a view to these disturbances of
+nature. The dwelling houses are seldom more than two and one-half
+stories in height, while the blocks of the business streets do not
+display the altitude of structures in the eastern cities.
+
+The climate is so mild and so favorable that the productions of
+California embrace those of both temperate and semi-tropical latitudes.
+The sand hills of San Francisco were found, with the help of irrigation
+to produce plentifully of both fruits and flowers, and the suburbs of
+the city display many greenhouse plants growing in the open air. Roses
+bloom every month in the year, and strawberries ripen from February to
+December. In San Francisco the mean temperature in January is 49° and in
+June 56°. The average temperature of the year is 54°.
+
+The California market, between Kearney and Montgomery streets, extending
+through from Pine to California streets, displays all the fruits,
+vegetables and grains of the northern States, raised in the immediate
+neighborhood of the city, while oranges, lemons and pomegranates are
+sent from further south. The tenderer varieties of grapes flourish in
+the open air, and the State produces raisins which command a price but
+little below those of Europe. The thrift of the fruit trees of
+California is most remarkable. Most trees begin bearing on the second
+year from the slip or graft, and produce abundantly at three or four
+years of age. Their growth and the size of their productions are
+unequaled on the continent. The above mentioned market is one of the
+sights of the city, and should not be missed by the visitor.
+
+Irrigation has been found necessary to render the sand hills about San
+Francisco productive, and windmills have become familiar objects in the
+landscape, their long arms revolving in the ocean breeze, while little
+streams of water trickling here and there vivify the earth. As a result,
+though trees are scarce, what few there are being mostly stunted live
+oaks, whose long roots extend down deep into the soil, there are flowers
+everywhere. On one side of a fence will be a sand-bank, white with
+shifting sand, on the other, flourishing in the same kind of soil, will
+be an _al fresco_ conservatory, brilliant with color and luxuriant in
+foliage.
+
+Montgomery street is the leading thoroughfare, broad and lined with
+handsome buildings. Toward the north it climbs a hill so steep that
+carriages cannot ascend it, and pedestrians make their way up by means
+of a flight of steps. From this elevation a fine view is obtained of the
+city and bay. Kearney and Market streets are also fashionable
+promenades, containing many of the retail stores. The principal banks
+and business offices are found on California street, and the handsomest
+private residences are on Van Ness avenue, Taylor, Bush, Sutter,
+Leavenworth and Folsom streets, Clay street Hill and Pine street Hill.
+The city extends far beyond its original limits, having encroached upon
+the bay. Solid blocks now stand where, in 1849, big ships rode at
+anchor. It is laid out with regularity, most of its streets being at
+right angles with one another. The business streets are generally paved
+with Belgian blocks or cobble stones, and most of the residence streets
+are planked. The city does not present the handsome and showy
+architecture of many cities of the east, though here and there are fine
+edifices. It is yet too new, and too hurriedly built, to have acquired
+the substantiality and grandeur of older cities. Between fine brick or
+stone structures several stories high are sandwiched insignificant
+wooden houses of only two stories, the relics of a past which is yet
+exceedingly near the present. The public buildings, especially those
+belonging to the United States, are fine.
+
+The City Hall will, when finished, be surpassed by few structures in the
+country. The Palace Hotel, at the corner of Market and New Montgomery
+streets, is a vast building, erected and furnished at a cost of
+$3,250,000. It is entered by a grand court-yard surrounded by
+colonnades, and from its roof a birds-eye view of the whole city can be
+obtained. Baldwin's Hotel, at the corner of Marshall and Powell streets,
+is another palatial structure, costing a quarter of a million more, for
+building, decorating and furnishing, than the Palace Hotel. The Grand
+Hotel, Occidental, Lick House, Russ House and Cosmopolitan are all
+established and popular hotels.
+
+The largest and finest church edifice on the Pacific Coast is that of
+St. Ignatius, Roman Catholic, in McAlister street. The finest interior
+is that of St. Patrick's, also Roman Catholic, in Mission street between
+Third and Fourth. The First Unitarian church, in Geary street, is one of
+the finest churches in the city, remarkable for the purity of its
+architectural design and the elegance of its finish. The Chinese Mission
+House, at the corner of Stockton and Sacramento streets, will prove
+interesting to strangers. The Roman Catholics, who number among their
+adherents all the Spanish citizens, make no concealment of their
+intention to gain a majority of the population. But though they are a
+power in the community, and have many churches, the different Protestant
+sects are largely represented. Indeed, San Francisco is thoroughly
+tolerant in matters of religion. Not only do Catholics and Protestants
+find their own appropriate places of worship, but the Jews have two
+Synagogues, and the Chinese Buddhists three Temples or Joss Houses.
+
+There is but one road leading out of the city, but within the city
+limits there are many modes of conveyance. Cars propelled by endless
+wire cables, which move along the streets without the assistance of
+either horse or steam power, intersect the city in every direction.
+Omnibuses run out on the Point Lobos road to the Cliff House; and he who
+has not ridden or driven thither and watched the seals on Seal Rock, has
+not seen all of San Francisco. This is the one excursion of the city;
+its one pet dissipation. Everybody goes to the Cliff. A drive of five or
+six miles, on a good road, over and through intervening sand hills,
+brings the visitor to the Cliff House. This road leads by Laurel Hill,
+or as it was formerly called, Lone Mountain Cemetery, two and one-half
+miles west of the city, within whose inclosure a conical hill rises to a
+considerable height above the surrounding level country. On its summit
+is a large wooden cross, a prominent landmark, and within the cemetery
+are several fine monuments, conspicuously that of Senator Broderick, and
+a miniature Pantheon, marking the resting place of the Ralston family.
+The Lone Mountain possesses an unrivaled outlook over city, bay, ocean
+and coast range.
+
+The Cliff House is a large, low building, set on the edge of a cliff
+rising abruptly from the ocean, and facing west; and from it you have a
+grand view of the Golden Gate, while oceanward you strain your eyes to
+catch some glimpse of China or Japan, which lie so far away in front of
+you. But you see instead, if the day be clear, the faint but bold
+outlines of the Farallon Islands, and the white sails of vessels
+passing in and out of the Golden Gate.
+
+Late in the year of 1876 I completed my horseback journey across the
+continent, dashing with my horse into the surf to the westward of the
+Cliff House. A long and wearisome, but at the same time interesting and
+reasonably exciting ride, was at an end, and after viewing San
+Francisco, I was free to enjoy those luxuries of modern civilization,
+the railway cars, on my homeward route.
+
+ [Illustration: SEAL ROCKS, FROM THE CLIFF HOUSE, NEAR SAN FRANCISCO.]
+
+The Farallones de los Frayles are six islets lifting up their jagged
+peaks in picturesque masses out in the ocean, twenty-three and one-half
+miles westward of the Golden Gate. The largest Farallon extends for
+nearly a mile east and west, and is three hundred and forty feet high.
+On its highest summit the government has placed a lighthouse, and there
+the light-keepers live, sometimes cut off for weeks from the shore,
+surrounded by barrenness and desolation, but within sight of the busy
+life which ebbs and flows through the narrow strait which leads to San
+Francisco. These islands are composed of broken and water-worn rocks,
+forming numerous sharp peaks, and containing many caves. One of these
+caves has been utilized as a fog-trumpet, or whistle, blown by the force
+of the waves. The mouth-piece of a trumpet has been fixed against the
+aperture of the rock, and the waves dashing against it with force enough
+to crush a ship to pieces, blows the whistle. This fog whistle ceases
+entirely at low water, and its loudness at all times depends upon the
+force of the waves. The Farallones are the homes of innumerable sea
+birds, gulls, mures, shags and sea-parrots, the eggs of the first two
+being regularly collected by eggers, who make a profitable business
+of gathering them at certain seasons of the year. In 1853 one thousand
+dozen of these eggs, the result of a three days' trip, were sold at a
+dollar a dozen. Gathering the eggs is difficult and not unattended by
+danger, as precipices must be scaled, and the birds sometimes show
+themselves formidable enemies. The larger island is also populated by
+immense numbers of rabbits, all descended from a few pairs brought there
+many years ago. Occasionally these creatures, becoming too numerous for
+the resources of the island, die by hundreds, of starvation. Though
+their progenitors were white, they have reverted to the original color
+of the wild race. The cliffs of these islands are alive with seals, or
+sea-lions, as they are called, which congregate upon their sunny slopes,
+play, bark, fight and roar. Some of them are as large as an ox and
+seemingly as clumsy; but they disport themselves in the surf, which is
+strong enough to dash them in pieces, with the utmost ease, allowing the
+waves to send them almost against the rocks, and then by a sudden,
+dextrous movement, gliding out of danger.
+
+The Cliff House has also its sea-lions, on Seal Rock, not far from the
+hotel, and the visitors are never tired of watching them as they wriggle
+over the rocks, barking so noisily as to be heard above the breakers.
+Formerly numbers of them were shot by wanton sportsmen, but they are now
+protected by law. "Ben. Butler" and "General Grant" are two seals of
+unusual size, which appear to hold the remainder of the seal colony in
+subjection. If two begin to fight and squabble about a position which
+each wants, either "Ben" or the "General" quickly settles the dispute by
+flopping the malcontents overboard. The higher these creatures can
+wriggle up the rocks the happier they appear to be; and when a huge
+beast has attained a solitary peak, by dint of much squirming, he
+manifests his satisfaction by raising his small pointed head and
+complacently looking about him. As soon as another spies him, and can
+reach the spot, a squabble ensues, howls are heard, teeth enter into the
+contest, the stronger secures the eminence, and the weaker is
+ignominiously sent to the humbler and lower regions.
+
+An early drive to and a breakfast at the Cliff House, with a return to
+the city before the sea-breeze begins, is the favorite excursion of the
+San Franciscan. The road passes beyond this hotel to a broad, beautiful
+beach, on which, at low tide, one can drive to the Ocean House, at its
+extreme end, and then return to the city by the old Mission grounds,
+which still lie in its southwestern limits. The Mission building is of
+adobe, of the old Spanish style, built in 1778. Adjoining it is the
+cemetery, with its fantastic monuments, and paths worn by the feet of
+the Mission fathers and their dusky penitents.
+
+The largest and finest theatre of the city, and one of the finest in the
+United States, is the Grand Opera House, at the corner of Mission and
+Third streets. Four other theatres and an Academy of Music, furnish
+amusements to the residents of the city. Woodward's Gardens, on Mission
+street between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets, contains a museum, an
+art galley, and a menagerie. There are also two Chinese theatres, one at
+618 Jackson street, and the other at 625-1/2 Jackson street.
+
+The Chinese Quarter of San Francisco, which has become famous the world
+over, occupies portions of Sacramento, Commercial, Dupont, Pacific and
+Jackson streets. It is a locality which no stranger should fail to see.
+Here he steps at once into the Celestial Empire. Chinamen throng the
+streets, dressed in their semi-American, semi-Asiatic costumes, the
+pig-tail usually depending behind, though sometimes it is rolled up, out
+of sight, under the hat. The harsh gutturals of the Chinese language,
+nearly every word ending in ng, are heard on every hand, mingled with
+the grotesque pigeon English. The signs exhibit Chinese characters, and
+the stores and bazaars are filled with Chinese merchandise.
+
+Women are scarce in this quarter, and only of the courtezan class; but
+here and there one meets you, dressed usually in Chinese gown and
+trowsers, with hair arranged in the indescribable Chinese chignon, and
+carrying a fan--for all the world as though she had stepped off a fan or
+a saucer--and not more immodest in demeanor than the same class in our
+eastern cities. There are few or no Chinese wives in San Francisco.
+Chinese immigration takes the form of an immense bow, beginning at
+China, stretching to the Pacific coast of America, and retiring again to
+its starting point; for every Chinaman expects to return to his native
+land, either alive or dead. He does not take root in American soil. He
+comes here to make a little money, leaving his family behind him, and,
+satisfied with a very modest competence, returns as he came. If he dies
+here, his bones are carried back, that they may find a resting-place
+with those of his ancestors. Therefore the women imported are for the
+basest purposes.
+
+But to return to this Chinese Quarter. Here is the old St. Giles of
+London, the old Five Points of New York magnified and intensified. Here
+congregate the roughest and rudest elements, and here stand, shamelessly
+revealed, crime and bestiality too vile to name. In one cellar is a
+gambling-hell, for John Chinaman's besetting weakness is his love of
+gambling. The mode of gambling is very simple, involving no skill, and
+the stakes are small; but many a Celestial loses there, at night, his
+earnings of the day. Near by is an opium cellar, fitted up with benches
+or shelves, on each of which will be found a couple of Chinamen lying,
+with a wooden box for a pillow. While one is preparing his opium and
+smoking, the other is enjoying its full effects, in a half stupor. The
+Chinese tenement houses are crowded and filthy beyond description, and
+the breeding places of disease and crime. They are scattered thickly
+throughout the quarter. Their theatres, of which there are two, already
+referred to, have only male performers, who personate both sexes, and
+give what seems to be passable acting, accompanied by the clash and
+clang of cymbals, the beating of gongs, the sounding of trumpets, and
+other disagreeable noises regarded by the Chinese as music. The entire
+audience are smoking, either tobacco or opium.
+
+The Joss houses, or temples of the Chinese, are more in the nature of
+club houses and employment bureaus, than of religious houses. The first
+floor contains the business room, smoking or lounging room, dining room,
+kitchen, and other offices, which are used by the Emigration Company to
+which the building belongs. The second floor contains a moderate-sized
+hall, devoted to religious rites. Its walls are decorated with moral
+maxims from Confucius and other writers, in which the devotees are
+exhorted to fidelity, integrity, and the other virtues. The Joss or Josh
+is an image of a Chinaman, before whom the Chinese residents of San
+Francisco are expected to come once a year and burn slips of paper.
+Praying is also done, but as this is by means of putting printed
+prayers into a machine run by clockwork, there is no great exhaustion
+among the worshipers.
+
+The Chinese have no Sunday, and are ready to work every day of the week,
+if they can get paid for it. Their only holiday is at New Year, which
+occurs with them usually in February, but is a movable feast, when they
+require an entire week to settle their affairs, square up their
+religious and secular accounts, and make a new start in life. The
+Chinese have one saving virtue. They pay their debts on every New Year's
+day. If they have not enough to settle all claims against them they hand
+over their assets to their creditors, old scores are wiped out, and they
+commence anew.
+
+The six Chinese Emigration Companies, each representing a Chinese
+province, manage the affairs of the immigrants with a precision,
+minuteness and care which is unparalleled by any organization of western
+civilization. Before the passage of the anti-Chinese law, when a ship
+came into port laden with Chinamen, the agents of the different
+companies boarded it, and each took the names of those belonging to his
+province. They provided lodgings and food for the new comers, and as
+quickly as possible secured them employment; lent them money to go to
+any distant point; cared for them if they were sick and friendless, and,
+finally, sent home the bones of those who died on American shores. These
+companies settle all disputes between the Chinese, and when a Chinamen
+wishes to return home, they examine his accounts, and oblige him to pay
+his just debts before leaving. The means for doing all this are obtained
+in the shape of voluntary contributions from the immigrants. These
+companies do not act as employment bureaus, for these are separate and
+thoroughly organized institutions. These latter farm out the work of
+any number of hands, at the price agreed upon, furnishing a foreman,
+with whom all negotiations are transacted, who, perhaps, is the only one
+speaking English, and who is responsible for all the work.
+
+The English spoken by the Chinese is known as "pigeon English," "pigeon"
+being the nearest approach which a Chinamen can make to saying
+"business."
+
+Most English words are more or less distorted. L is always used by them
+for r, mi for I, and the words abound in terminal ee's.
+
+The Chinese problem is one which is agitating the country and giving a
+coloring to its politics. The Pacific States seem, by a large majority
+of their population, to regard the presence of the Mongolian among them
+as an unmitigated evil, to be no longer tolerated. Eastern capitalists
+have hailed their coming as inaugurating the era of cheap labor and
+increased fortunes for themselves. Hence the discussion and the
+disturbances. A lady who had made her home in San Francisco for several
+years past, says, in a letter to the writer of this article, "A person
+not living in California can form no conception of the curse which the
+Chinese are to this section of the world."
+
+Yet without them some of the great enterprises of the Pacific coast,
+notably the Central Pacific Railroad, would have remained long
+unfinished; and they came also to furnish manual labor at a time when it
+was scarce and difficult to obtain at any price. The Chinaman is a
+strange compound of virtue and vice, cleanliness and filth, frugality
+and recklessness, simplicity and cunning. He is scrupulously clean as to
+his person, indulging in frequent baths; yet he will live contentedly
+with the most wretched surroundings, and inhale an air vitiated by an
+aggregation of breaths and stenches of all kinds. He is a faithful
+worker and a wonderful imitator. He cannot do the full work of a white
+man, but he labors steadily and unceasingly. He takes no time for
+drunken sprees, but he is an inveterate opium smoker, and sometimes
+deliberately sacrifices his life in the enjoyment of the drug. He is
+frugal to the last degree, but will waste his daily earnings in the
+gambling hell and policy shop. Scrupulously honest, he is yet the victim
+of the vilest vices which are engrafting themselves upon our western
+coast. Living upon one-third of what will keep a white man, and working
+for one-half the wages the latter demands, he is destroying the labor
+market of that quarter of our country, reducing its working classes to
+his own level, in which in the future the latter, too, will be forced to
+be contented on a diet of "rice and rats," and to forego all educational
+advantages for their children, becoming, like the Chinese themselves,
+mere working machines; or else enter into a conflict of labor against
+labor, race against race.
+
+The latter alternative seems inevitable, and it has already begun.
+China, with her crowded population, could easily spare a hundred million
+people and be the better for it. Those one hundred million Chinamen, if
+welcomed to our shores, would speedily swamp our western civilization.
+They might not become the controlling power--the Anglo-Saxon is always
+sure to remain that--but as hewers of wood and drawers of water, as
+builders of our railroads, hands upon our farms, workers in our
+factories, and cooks and chambermaids in our houses, a like number of
+American men and women would be displaced, and wages quickly reduced to
+an Asiatic level; and such a time of distress as this country never saw
+would dawn upon us.
+
+There seems to be no assimilation between the Caucasian and the
+Mongolian on the Pacific slope. In the East an Irish girl recently
+married a Chinaman; but in San Francisco, though every other race under
+the sun has united in marriage, the Chinaman is avoided as a pariah.
+White and yellow races may meet and fraternize in business, in pleasure,
+and even in crime; but in marriage never. Chinamen rank among the most
+respected merchants of San Francisco, and these receive exceptional
+respect as individuals; but between the two races as races a great gulf
+is fixed. The Chinese immigrant takes no interest in American affairs.
+His world is on the other side of the Pacific. And the American people
+return the compliment by taking no interest in him. It is undeniable
+that, by a certain class of San Francisco citizens, popularly known as
+Hoodlums, the treatment of the Chinese population has been shameful in
+the extreme. A Chinaman has no rights which a white man is bound to
+respect. Insult, contumely, abuse, cruelty and injustice he has been
+forced to bear at the hands of the rougher classes, without hope of
+redress. He has been kicked, and cheated, and plundered, and not a voice
+has been raised in his behalf; but if he has been guilty of the
+slightest peccadillo, how quickly has he been made to feel the heavy
+hand of justice!
+
+It seems a pity that before the cry was raised with such overwhelming
+force, "The Chinese must go!" some little effort had not been made to
+adapt them to Western civilization. They are quick to take ideas
+concerning their labor; why not in other things? We have received and
+adopted the ignorant, vicious hordes from foreign lands to the east of
+us, and are fast metamorphosing them into intelligent, useful citizens.
+We are even trying our hand upon the negro, as a late atonement for all
+the wrong we have done him. But the Indian and the Chinaman seem to be
+without the pale of our mercy and our Christianity. It might not have
+been possible, but still the experiment was worth the trying, of
+attempting to lift them up industrially, educationally and morally, to a
+level with our own better classes, instead of permitting them to drag us
+down. Returning to their own country, and carrying back with them our
+Western civilization, as a little leaven, they might have leavened the
+whole lump. It is too late for that now, and the mandate has gone forth:
+"The Chinese must go!" Considering all things as they are, rather than
+as they might have been, it is undoubtedly better so, and the only
+salvation of our Pacific States.
+
+San Francisco had, in 1880, a population of 232,956. The commerce is
+very large, and must every year increase as the West is built up. The
+chief articles of export are the precious metals, breadstuffs, wines and
+wool. She has important manufactures, embracing watches, carriages,
+boots and shoes, furniture, iron and brass works, silver ware, silk and
+woolen. California seems peculiarly adapted to the silk industry, and
+her silk manufactures will probably assume marked importance in the
+future. The wonderful climate and unequaled productiveness are
+constantly attracting immigration, and the Pacific Central, which spans
+the continent, has vastly improved on the old methods of travel by
+caravan across the plains and over the mountains.
+
+The population of San Francisco is cosmopolitan to the last degree, and
+embraces natives of every clime and nearly every nation on the globe.
+Yet in spite of this strange agglomeration she is intensely Yankee in
+her go-ahead-ativeness, with Anglo-Saxon alertness intensified. In fact,
+as San Francisco is on the utmost limits of the West, beyond which there
+is nothing but a vast expanse of water until we begin again at the East,
+so she represents the superlative of Anglo-Saxon enterprise and American
+civilization, and looks to a future which shall far outstrip her past.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+SAVANNAH.
+
+ First Visit to Savannah.--Camp Davidson.--The City During
+ the War.--An Escaped Prisoner.--Recapture and Final Escape.--A
+ "City of Refuge."--Savannah by Night.--Position of the City.--
+ Streets and Public Squares.--Forsyth Park.--Monuments.--
+ Commerce.--View from the Wharves.--Railroads.--Founding of the
+ City.--Revolutionary History.--Death of Pulaski.--Secession.--
+ Approach of Sherman.--Investment of the City by Union Troops.--
+ Recuperation After the War.--Climate.--Colored Population.--
+ Bonaventure, Thunderbolt, and Other Suburban Resorts.
+
+
+My first visit to Savannah was made on the twenty-ninth of July, 1864,
+when I was brought there as a prisoner of war. I found the city with its
+business enterprises in a state of stagnation, and the streets thronged
+with soldiers in Confederate uniforms. About four thousand troops were
+doing garrison duty in the city, which was thronged with refugees, and
+the entire population was suffering from a paralysis of all industrial
+enterprises, and from the interruption of its commerce by the Federal
+blockade at the mouth of the river. Camp Davidson, where we were
+confined, was in the eastern part of the city, near the Marine Hospital,
+with Pulaski's Monument in full view, to the westward.
+
+The camp was surrounded by a stockade and deadline, and the principal
+amusement and occupation of the prisoners was the digging of a tunnel
+which was to conduct them to liberty beyond the second line of
+sentinels, without the stockade. But our little camp, like Chicago, had
+a cow for an evil genius. This luckless creature broke through the
+tunnel, as it was nearing completion, and suddenly ended it and our
+hopes together.
+
+The nearest Union forces were at Pulaski, at the mouth of the Savannah
+River, and Savannah was one of the most important military posts of the
+Confederate army. Our treatment at Camp Davidson was exceptionally kind
+and considerate, and the ladies of the city, in giving suitable
+interment to the remains of a Union officer who had died in the camp,
+proved themselves to be possessed of generous hearts. Therefore it was
+with regret that we received the order to leave Savannah for Charleston.
+
+I next visited Savannah a few months later, when the war was drawing to
+a close, after General Sherman and his army had made their successful
+entrance into the town. On the sixteenth of December, myself and a
+companion found ourselves twenty miles from Savannah, after having been
+many weeks fugitives from "Camp Sorghum," the prison-pen at Columbia,
+South Carolina. We were on the Savannah River Road, over which
+Kilpatrick's Cavalry and the Fourteenth Army Corps had passed only a
+week before. Emboldened by our successes and hairbreadth escapes of
+three weeks, when we at last felt that deliverance was close at hand, we
+pursued our way, only to fall suddenly into the hands of the enemy. Hope
+deferred maketh the heart sick. But who shall describe the terrible
+sinking of the heart--the worse than sickness--when hope is thus
+suddenly crushed and turned to certain despair? Our second captivity was
+not, however, of long duration. Death was preferable to bondage under
+such masters. Taking our lives in our hands, a second escape was
+effected, and on December twenty-third, but two days after Sherman's
+occupancy of the city, Savannah proved itself, indeed, a city of
+refuge. Union troops welcomed us with open arms, and we were soon
+despatched northward.
+
+The traveler who visits Savannah to-day will view it under very
+different auspices. The white wings of peace have brooded over it for
+more than half a generation, loyalty has taken the place of treason in
+the hearts of her people, and prosperity is visible on her streets and
+wharves. Let him, if he can, approach the city from the sea, and by
+night. Fort Pulaski stands like a sentinel guarding the entrance to the
+harbor, the lighthouse upon the point keeping a bright eye out to
+seaward. As he glides up the river, which winds in countless lagoons
+around low sea islands covered with salt marshes, at last he will see in
+the distance the lights of the city set on a hill, and of the shipping
+at her feet. A distant city is always beautiful at night, though it may
+be hideous by daylight. Night veils all its ugliness in charitable
+shadows; it reveals hitherto unseen beauties of outline, crowns it with
+a tiara of sparkling gems, and enwraps the whole scene in an air of
+romance and mystery which is charming to the person of poetic nature.
+But whether seen by night or day, Savannah is indeed a beautiful city,
+probably the most beautiful in all the Southern States.
+
+The Savannah River winds around Hutchinson Island, and the city is built
+in the form of an elongated crescent, about three miles in length, on
+its southern shore. It is on a bluff about forty feet above the stream,
+this bluff being about a mile wide at its eastern end, and broadening as
+it extends westward. Surrounding it are the low lands occupied by market
+gardens, for Savannah is a great place for market gardeners, and helps
+to supply the northern market in early spring.
+
+The streets of Savannah are laid out east and west, nearly parallel to
+the river, with others crossing them at right angles, north and south.
+They are wide, and everywhere shaded with trees, many of the latter
+being live oaks, most magnificent specimens of which are found in the
+city. Orange trees also abound, with their fragrant blossoms and golden
+fruit, stately palmettoes, magnolias and oleander, rich in bloom, bays
+and cape myrtles.
+
+The streets running north and south are of very nearly uniform width,
+every alternate street passing on either side of a public square, which
+is bounded on the north and south by narrow streets running east and
+west, and intersected in the centre by a wide street taking the same
+direction. These public squares, twenty-four in number, and containing
+from one and a half to three acres, are a marked feature of the city.
+They are placed at regular intervals, as already described, are
+handsomely inclosed, laid out with walks, shaded with evergreen and
+ornamental trees, and in the spring and summer months are green with
+grass. In a number of these are monuments, while others contain
+fountains or statuary. These squares or plazas are surrounded with fine
+residences, each having its own little yard, beautiful with flowers,
+vines, shrubbery and trees. In these premises roses thrive and bloom
+with a luxuriance unknown in the North, and the stately Camelia
+Japonica, the empress among flowers, grows here to a height of twelve or
+fifteen feet, and blossoms in midwinter. Savannah, the most beautiful
+city of the South, if not in the United States, is more like the wealthy
+suburb of some large city, than like a city itself. It is embowered in
+trees, which are green the whole year around; and shares with Cleveland,
+its northern rival in beauty, the _soubriquet_ of the "Forest City."
+
+Forsyth Park, originally laid out in the southern suburb of the city, is
+now the centre of a populous quarter, abounding in handsome edifices.
+Many of the original trees, the beautiful southern pines, are left
+standing in this park, and other trees and shrubbery added. Sphynxes
+guard the Bull street entrance, and in the centre of the old park, which
+was ten acres in extent, is a handsome fountain, modeled after that in
+the Place de la Concorde, in Paris. This fountain is surrounded by a
+profusion of flowers, while shelled walks furnish pathways through the
+park. It has recently been increased in dimensions to thirty acres; in
+the centre of the new or western portion stands a stately monument in
+honor of the Confederate dead.
+
+Pulaski Monument stands in Monterey Square, the first plaza to the
+northward of Forsyth Park. The steps of the monument are of granite, and
+the shaft of fine white marble, fifty-five feet high, surmounted by a
+statue of Liberty holding the national banner. This monument covers the
+spot where, in 1779, Count Pulaski fell, during an attack upon the city,
+while it was occupied by the British. In Johnson Square, the first
+square south of the river intersected by Bull street, is a fine
+Druidical pile, erected to the memory of General Greene and Count
+Pulaski. The corner-stone of this obelisk was laid in 1825, by
+Lafayette, during his visit to America.
+
+Savannah was founded in 1733, by General James Oglethorpe, whose plan
+has been followed in its subsequent erection. Upon each of the
+twenty-four squares were originally left four large lots, known as
+"trust lots," two on the east and two on the west. We are told by Mr.
+Francis Moore, who wrote in 1736, that "the use of this is, in case a
+war should happen, the villages without may have places in town to bring
+their cattle and families into for refuge; and for that purpose there is
+a square left in every ward, big enough for the outwards to encamp in."
+These lots are now occupied by handsome churches, conspicuous public
+buildings, and palatial private residences, thus securing to all the
+squares a uniform elegance which they might otherwise have lacked.
+
+Bay street is the great commercial street of the city. It is an
+esplanade, two hundred feet wide, upon the brow of the cliff overlooking
+the river. Its southern side is lined with handsome stores and offices.
+At the corner of Bay and Bull streets is the Custom House, with the Post
+Office in the basement. Its northern side is occupied by the upper
+stories of warehouses, which are built at the foot of the steep cliff
+fronting the river. These upper stories are connected with the bluff by
+means of wooden platforms, which form a sort of sidewalk, spanning a
+narrow and steep roadway, which leads at intervals, by a series of
+turns, down to the wharves below. Long flights of steps accommodate
+pedestrians in the same descent. The warehouses just spoken of are four
+or five stories high on their river fronts, and but one or two on the
+Bay.
+
+One should walk along the quay below the city to gain a true idea of the
+extent of its commerce. Here, in close proximity to the wharves, are
+located the cotton presses and rice mills. Here everything is dirty and
+dismal, evidently speaking of better days. The beauty of the city is all
+above. The buildings are some of them substantially built of brick, but
+begin to show the ravages of time. There is an old archway, which once
+had pretensions of its own, but the wall has fallen away, and it is now
+an entrance to nowhere. Yet in spite of this general dilapidation, there
+is all the bustle and activity of a full commercial life. The wharves
+are piled with cotton bales, which have found a temporary landing here,
+awaiting shipment to the North, or perhaps across the sea. For Savannah
+is the second cotton port in the United States. But cotton is not its
+only export. It is the great shipping depot for Southern produce bound
+for Northern markets. Some sheds are filled with barrels of rosin, while
+great quantities of rosin litter the ground. From others turpentine in
+great quantities is shipped to various ports. The lumber trade of the
+city is immense, the pine forests of Georgia furnishing an apparently
+inexhaustible supply. The city is also in the centre of the rice-growing
+region, and sends its rice to feed the North. Steamships from all the
+Atlantic ports lie along its wharves, while those of foreign nations are
+by no means scarce. Vessels of too large a draft to lie alongside the
+wharves discharge and load their freight three miles below the city.
+
+The view from the river front is over the river itself, filled with
+craft of all sorts, from the tiny ferry boat up to the immense ocean
+steamer, across to Hutchinson's Island and the Carolina shore. The
+island, which is two miles long by one wide, has upon it numerous lumber
+yards and a large dry dock. Rice was formerly cultivated upon it, but is
+now forbidden by law, because of its unhealthfulness. The river is about
+seven hundred and twenty feet wide in front of the city, with a depth of
+water at the wharves varying from thirteen to twenty-one feet. The
+portion of South Carolina visible is low and flat, dotted here and there
+with palmetto trees. There is little of the picturesque about this
+river view except the busy life, which keeps in constant motion.
+
+Savannah has extensive railroad connection with all parts of the United
+States. She has direct communication by rail with Vicksburg on the
+Mississippi. She also offers an outlet, by means of railroads, for the
+products of Georgia, Florida, and portions of Alabama and Tennessee. She
+has unbroken railroad connection with Memphis, Mobile, Cincinnati,
+Louisville, and the principal commercial cities of the West and North.
+Her water communication is established with all the great Northern and
+Southern seaboard cities. Her harbor is one of the best and safest on
+the South Atlantic coast, and she is the natural eastern terminus of the
+Southern Pacific Railroad, being almost on the same parallel of latitude
+with San Diego, its western terminus.
+
+The corporate limits of Savannah extend backward from the river about
+one and one-half miles, and embrace a total area of three and one-half
+square miles, but additions are fast being made to the southward, which
+will, in time, greatly extend its area, and add to the population,
+which, in 1880, was 30,681.
+
+Savannah's history goes back to the early days of the colonies. Its site
+marks the first settlement in Georgia. General Oglethorpe, with a
+hundred and fourteen men, women and children, having landed at
+Charleston, in January, 1733, sailed from that port with a plentiful
+supply of provisions and a small body of troops for their protection,
+and landed on Yamacraw Bluff, on the Savannah River, eighteen miles from
+its mouth. On the bluff General Oglethorpe laid out a town and called it
+Savannah, and by the ninth of February the colony commenced the erection
+of buildings. The colony survived various haps and mishaps until 1776,
+when, in the War of the Revolution, the British attacked the city, but
+were repulsed. On December twenty-ninth, 1778, they made a second
+attack, surprised the American forces, who attempted to fly, but were
+mostly killed or captured. On the morning of October fourth, 1779, the
+American and French troops made a direct assault upon Savannah,
+attempting to take it from the British, but were obliged to retire with
+heavy loss. Count Pulaski, a Polish nobleman, who had been expatriated
+for participating in the carrying off of King Stanislaus from his
+capital, was wounded in this battle, and soon afterwards died. Pulaski
+Monument, as already stated, was erected on the spot where he fell.
+
+Savannah received its city charter in 1788. In 1850 it had a little more
+than fifteen thousand inhabitants, and in 1860, 22,292. When Secession
+cast its shadow upon the sunny South, it fell like a pall upon Savannah,
+no less than upon the other Southern cities. All her business was
+suspended, and grass grew in her streets. On the northeast corner of
+Bull and Broughton streets stands the building known as Masonic Hall,
+where, on January twenty-first, 1861, the Ordinance of Secession was
+passed. On the sixteenth of March the State Convention assembled in
+Savannah, adopted the Constitution of the Confederate States of America,
+Georgia being the second State to adopt this Constitution without
+submitting it to the people. The mouth of the river was blockaded by
+United States gunboats, and all commerce prevented. On April fifteenth,
+1862, Fort Pulaski was captured by the Federal troops, and great
+excitement prevailed in the city. Women and children left their homes,
+and property and furniture were sent into the interior.
+
+During the following years a number of unsuccessful attempts were made
+by the Union naval forces to capture the city. In December, 1864,
+Sherman was making his famous march to the sea, and was steadily drawing
+nearer the city, while southern chivalry fled before him, and the now
+emancipated slaves gathered and rolled in his rear like a sable cloud.
+On the twentieth, heavy siege guns were put in position by his forces
+between Kingsbridge and the city; and General Hardee, suddenly awakened
+to a sense of the danger which menaced them, set his troops hurriedly to
+work to destroy the navy yard and government property; while the
+ironclads, the "Savannah" and "Georgia," were making a furious fire on
+the Federal left, the garrison, under cover of darkness and confusion,
+were being transported on the first stage of their journey to
+Charleston. Before leaving, they blew up the iron clads and the
+fortifications below the city. On the twenty-first, General Sherman
+received a formal surrender from the municipal authorities. On the
+following day, the twenty-second, he sent a dispatch to the President,
+presenting him, "as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah." On December
+twenty-eighth, 1864, Masonic Hall, already historical, witnessed a
+gathering of loyal citizens celebrating the triumph of the Union army.
+Sherman, when he entered the city, encamped his forces on the still
+vacant "trust lots." This triumphant conclusion of Sherman's march from
+Atlanta broke the backbone of the Confederacy, and was the prelude to
+the downfall of Richmond and the surrender of Lee's army.
+
+Prosperity eventually followed in the wake of peace. The blockade
+lifted, the deserted wharves were soon filled with the shipping of all
+nations. Her silent and empty streets grew noisy and populous with the
+rush of business, and Savannah is now one of the most prosperous of our
+Southern cities. Her architecture is not striking for either its beauty
+or its grandeur; nevertheless she has many fine public and private
+buildings. The City Exchange is one of the former, and it also possesses
+a historical interest, General Sherman having reviewed his troops in
+front of it in his investment of the city. From its tower the best view
+of the city and neighborhood may be obtained. The Court House, the
+United States and Police Barracks, Artillery Armory, Jail, Chatham
+Academy and St. Andrews' Hall, are all conspicuous buildings. The
+Georgia Historical Society has a large and beautiful hall, with a fine
+library and interesting relics. St. John's and Christ's Episcopal
+churches, the Independent Presbyterian Church, and the Roman Catholic
+Cathedral, are all striking edifices. Trinity Church, in Johnson Square,
+is near the spot where John Wesley delivered his famous sermons. Wesley
+visited Savannah in its early days, having been invited thither by
+Oglethorpe. At Bethesda, about ten miles from the city, where the Union
+Farm School is now located, was the site of the Orphan House established
+in 1740 by Whitefield, Wesley's contemporary and companion.
+
+The benevolent, literary and educational institutions of Savannah are
+numerous and well sustained, some of them being among the oldest in the
+country. The Union Society, for the support of orphan boys, and the
+Female Society, for orphan girls, were founded in 1750.
+
+Savannah is situated just above the 32d parallel of latitude, and
+possesses a mean temperature of 66° Fahr. Being within the influence of
+the Gulf Stream it enjoys all the mildness of the tropics in winter,
+while the summers are less oppressive than at New York or Washington. It
+is a favorite resort for northern invalids, being comparatively free
+from malarious fevers and pulmonary diseases.
+
+Colored people abound in Savannah, constituting about three-eighths of
+the entire population. They do most of the menial work of the city,
+being laborers, waiters in the hotels and public houses, and stevedores
+upon the wharves. It is astonishing to see the number of colored men it
+takes to load and set afloat a steamship; and one of the last sights
+which meets the eye of the traveler and lingers in his memory, as he
+leaves the city by means of the river, is the long row of upturned black
+faces, most of them beaming with good humor and jollity, on the wharf,
+as the vessel casts off her lines and turns her head down stream.
+
+Savannah possesses certain famous suburban attractions, without seeing
+which the traveler can scarcely say he has seen the city. In a bend of
+the Warsaw River, a short distance from its junction with the Savannah,
+and about four miles from the city, is the famous Bonaventure Cemetery.
+A hundred years ago this was the country seat of a wealthy English
+gentleman, who, upon the marriage of his daughter, made her a wedding
+present of the estate. The grounds were laid out in wide avenues, and
+shaded by live oaks, and the initials of the young bride and her husband
+were outlined with trees. In course of time the property was converted
+into a cemetery, and for many years has been devoted to that purpose.
+It is filled with monuments to the dead, some of them bearing historic
+names. Meantime the live oaks have grown to enormous dimensions, their
+gigantic branches meeting and interlacing overhead, forming immense
+arches, like those of the gothic aisles of some great cathedral, under
+and through which are visible bright vistas of the river and the sea
+islands lying beyond. The branches are fringed with pendants of the gray
+Spanish moss, yards in length, which sway softly in the breeze, and by
+their sombre color add to the solemnity of the scene. The steamers on
+the Sea Island route to Fernandina, Florida, pass Bonaventure, and
+afford glimpses of white monuments through the avenues of trees.
+Bonaventure is a favorite drive from the city, and is also reached by
+the horse cars.
+
+Thunderbolt, so named, tradition tells us, because a thunderbolt once
+fell there, is a short distance from Bonaventure, down the Warsaw River,
+and is a popular drive and summer resort. A spring of water flows from
+the spot where the lightning is supposed to have entered the ground.
+Jasper's Spring is two and one-half miles west of the city, and is the
+scene of the exploit of Sergeant Jasper, who at the time of the
+Revolution succeeded, with only one companion, in releasing a party of
+American prisoners from a British guard of eight men. Another
+fashionable drive is to White Bluff, ten miles distant from the city.
+The latter, with Beaulieu, Montgomery and the Isle of Hope, furnish salt
+water bathing and delightful sea breezes for the summer visitors.
+
+There is but one line of horse cars in the city, running on South Broad
+street, and then out the Thunderbolt road to Thunderbolt, Bonaventure,
+and the other suburban resorts. This company, we are told, has been so
+reckless in regard to the limitations of its charter, that the municipal
+government refuses to charter a second road. If our Northern cities were
+as scrupulous, we wonder where their many horse railroads would be!
+
+Since the war Northern men and Northern capital have helped to build up
+the various interests of Savannah. Planing mills, foundries, flouring
+and grist mills, have been established, furnishing employment to a
+considerable number of workingmen. Old channels of commerce have been
+extended, and new ones opened; and the natural advantage of her
+position, added to the public spirit which her citizens manifest in the
+accomplishment of great enterprises of internal improvement, give a
+guarantee of increased prosperity in the future.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+SPRINGFIELD.
+
+ Valley of the Connecticut.--Location of Springfield.--The United
+ States Armory.--Springfield Library.--Origin of the Present
+ Library System.--The Wayland Celebration.--Settlement of
+ Springfield.--Indian Hostilities.--Days of Witchcraft.--Trial
+ of Hugh Parsons.--Hope Daggett.--Springfield "Republican."
+
+
+A journey up the Valley of the Connecticut at this season of the year is
+a positive luxury to the tourist or professional traveler. It is a
+broad, beautiful road, winding through hill and dale, with grand old
+forests and mountains in the background, their foliage tipped with
+variegated colors by the fingers of Autumn, as an artist would put a
+finishing touch to his landscape.
+
+A ride of twenty-five miles northward from Hartford brought us to
+Springfield, the most enterprising and important town in Western
+Massachusetts. The United States Armory, located here, gives to the city
+a national consequence. No city in the Union did more to crush out the
+Rebellion than Springfield, through her Armory. Two or three thousand
+men were kept constantly employed here during the war, turning out the
+various arms used in the Federal service. The force now employed is
+considerably less than in war times. All hands are engaged just now upon
+the Springfield rifled musket, which has recently been adopted by the
+Government. The military precision with which every detail is attended
+to is the admiration of all who are shown through the Armory.
+
+A visit to the City Library, on State street, cannot fail to interest
+every person who feels a pride in the public institutions of New
+England. A fine, large, brick and stone building, with plain exterior
+and artistically finished interior, is the Springfield Public Library.
+Over forty thousand volumes cover its shelves, and are so systematically
+arranged that the librarian or his assistants can produce at once any
+work named in the catalogue. The oblong reading room is furnished with
+black walnut tables; and winding staircases, painted in blue and gold,
+lead from the columned alcoves to the galleries above.
+
+The library owns some very old and valuable books of engravings. A room
+on the first floor is devoted to stuffed birds, geological specimens,
+preserved snakes, and a wonderful assortment of curious relics obtained
+from all parts of the world. Icelandic snow shoes and Hindoo gods occupy
+places on the same shelf, in peaceful proximity, and catamounts,
+paralyzed in the act of springing, glare at you harmlessly behind their
+glass cases. Patriotic mementoes are not wanting, as the bullet-riddled
+battle-flags of Massachusetts regiments will testify.
+
+The free public library system is distinctively a New England
+institution, and wields a mighty influence for good. It was originated
+in 1847, by Rev. Francis Wayland, President of Brown University,
+Providence, Rhode Island. On Commencement day of that year Mr. Wayland
+expressed a wish to help the inhabitants of the town of Wayland,
+Massachusetts, to a public library, and tendered a donation of five
+hundred dollars to the town for that purpose, upon the condition that
+another five hundred should be added by the town. The required fund was
+quickly raised, by subscription, and President Wayland immediately
+placed his donation in the hands of one of their prominent citizens,
+Judge Mellen. This was the beginning of the movement which resulted in
+the "Library Act," of May, 1851, in the State of Massachusetts.
+
+The people of Wayland bought their library and provided a room in the
+"Town House" for its safe keeping. A librarian was chosen, whose salary
+was paid by the town, and the institution made its first delivery of
+books August seventh, 1850. Rev. John B. Wright was a member of the
+Massachusetts Legislature, from Wayland, during the session of 1851, and
+through his agency the Act "to authorize cities and towns to establish
+and maintain public libraries" was passed. A "Library Celebration" took
+place in Wayland, August twenty-sixth, 1851, and was a most interesting
+affair. Thus it came to pass that through the practical working of this
+man's idea public libraries were established, not only all over the
+State of Massachusetts, but throughout New England.
+
+Springfield was founded in 1636 by William Pyncheon, who with seven
+other men settled here, with their families, on May fourteenth of that
+year. They were bound together by mutual contract, with the design of
+having their colony consist of forty families. There was an especial
+provision that the number should never exceed fifty.
+
+The early prosperity of Springfield was considerably retarded by Indian
+hostilities.
+
+In October, 1675, the brown warriors of King Phillip made a descent upon
+the place, burning twenty-nine houses and killing three citizens--one of
+them a woman. The timely arrival of Major Pyncheon, Major Treat and
+Captain Appleton, with their troops, prevented further destruction and
+repulsed the attack of the Indians. Springfield was also the scene of
+operations during the troubles of 1786-87. At that time, General
+Shepperd was posted here, for the defence of the Armory.
+
+Thus, through much tribulation, has the thriving town attained its
+present prosperity.
+
+In its infant days, Springfield cherished a strong belief in witchcraft,
+as the following incident will testify: In the same year that Hartford
+set such a bad example to her northern neighbor on the Connecticut, by
+hanging Mrs. Greensmith, Springfield, not to be outdone, preferred a
+charge of witchcraft against one Hugh Parsons--a very handsome and
+pleasing young man, it seems, with whom all the women fell in love. Of
+course, this was not to be tolerated by the male population of the
+place, who hated him, as a natural consequence; and, accordingly, the
+handsomest man in Springfield was indicted and tried, on the grave
+accusation of being in league with the powers of evil. It is not
+surprising that the jury found him guilty. But, through some influence
+not explained, the judge, Mr. Pyncheon, stayed proceedings in his behalf
+until the matter could be laid before the General Court, in Boston.
+There the decision of the Springfield jury was reversed, and Mr. Parsons
+set at liberty. Whether after this his dangerous attractions were duly
+husbanded, or whether he went on, as of old, winning such wholesale
+admiration, we are not informed.
+
+One of the sensations of the hour during my sojourn in Springfield, was
+an encounter between the State Street Baptist Church and Hope Daggett,
+one of its members. The disaffected sister had at sundry times and in
+divers manners made herself so obnoxious to the congregation, by her
+strong-minded peculiarities, that an officer was called upon the scene
+and requested to eject by force, if necessary, the eccentric and
+uncompromising Hope. Officer Maxwell, suiting the action to the word,
+seized the unruly sister, and without stopping to consider the sudden
+fame which this act would launch upon him, thrust her into the street,
+amid the cheers and taunts of friends and enemies. Now it was the
+peculiar misfortune of Miss Daggett to have a wooden leg, and on the day
+following this tragic affair the press of Springfield was devoted to
+various accounts of the engagement, in which Maxwell and the wooden leg
+figured alternately.
+
+I cannot leave Springfield without some mention of its leading paper,
+the Springfield _Republican_, which for many years has been one of the
+solid papers of the Bay State, and a representative organ in politics
+and literature. Its editor, Samuel Bowles, is an energetic business
+manager and a stirring politician, who has fought his way up from
+obscurity to a position in the front rank of American journalism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Approach to St. Louis.--Bridge Over the Mississippi.--View of
+ the City.--Material Resources of Missouri.--Early History of St.
+ Louis.--Increase of Population.--Manufacturing and Commercial
+ Interests.--Locality.--Description of St. Louis in 1842.--
+ Resemblance to Philadelphia.--Public Buildings.--Streets.--
+ Parks.--Fair Week.--Educational and Charitable Institutions.--
+ Hotels.--Mississippi River.--St. Louis During the Rebellion.--
+ Peculiar Characteristics.--The Future of the City.
+
+
+The visitor to St. Louis, if from the east, will probably make his
+approach over the great bridge which spans the Mississippi. This bridge,
+designed by Captain Eads, and begun in 1867, was completed in 1874, and
+is one of the greatest triumphs of American engineering. It consists of
+three spans, resting on four piers. The central span is 520 feet in
+width, and the side ones 500 feet each. They have a rise of sixty feet,
+sufficient to permit the passage of steamers under them, even at high
+water. The piers are sunk through the sand to the bed-rock, a distance
+of from ninety to one hundred and twenty feet, the work having been
+accomplished by means of iron wrought caissons and atmospheric pressure.
+Each span consists of four ribbed arches, made of cast steel. The bridge
+is two stories high, the lower story containing a double car track, and
+the upper one two horse-car tracks, two carriageways and two foot-ways.
+Reaching the St. Louis shore, the car and road ways pass over a viaduct
+of five arches, of twenty-seven feet span each, to Washington avenue,
+where the railway tracks run into a tunnel 4,800 feet long, terminating
+near Eleventh street. Bridge and tunnel together cost eleven millions of
+dollars.
+
+ [Illustration: THE LEVEE AND GREAT BRIDGE AT ST. LOUIS.]
+
+This wonderful structure, which has few if any equals upon the
+continent, will impress the traveler with the commercial magnitude and
+enterprise of the great western city to which it forms the eastern
+portal. Looking from the car window he will see, first, the Mississippi,
+which, if at the period of low water, disappoints him with its apparent
+insignificance; but which, if it be at the time of its annual flood, has
+crept, on the St. Louis side, nearly to the top of the steep levee, and
+has filled up the broad valley miles away on the hither side, a rushing,
+turbulent river, turbid with the yellow waters of the Missouri, which,
+emptying into it twenty miles above, have scarcely, at this point,
+perfectly mingled with the clearer Mississippi. He will see next the
+river front of St. Louis--a continuous line of steamboats, towboats and
+barges, without a sail or mast among them; the levee rising in a steep
+acclivity twenty feet above the river's edge; and multitudinous mules,
+with their colored drivers, toiling laboriously, and by the aid of much
+whipping and swearing, up or down the steep bank, carrying the
+merchandise which has just been landed, or is destined to be loaded in
+some vessel's hold. Beyond the river rises the city, terrace above
+terrace, its outlines bristling with spires, and prominent above all,
+the dome of the Court House.
+
+St. Louis is situated in the very heart of the great Mississippi Valley,
+and a large share of its rich agricultural products and mineral stores
+are constantly poured into her lap. Pilot Knob and Iron Mountain, both
+containing inexhaustible supplies of the useful ore, are not far
+distant. The lead districts of Missouri include more than 6,000 square
+miles. In fifteen counties there is copper. In short, within one hundred
+miles of St. Louis, gold, iron, lead, zinc, copper, tin, silver,
+platina, nickel, emery, cobalt, coal, limestone, granite, pipe-clay,
+fire-clay, marble, metallic paints and salt are found, in quantities
+which will repay working. In the State there are twenty millions acres
+of good farming lands; five millions of acres are among the best in the
+world for grapes; and eight millions are particularly suited to the
+raising of hemp. There is, besides, a sufficiency of timber land. With
+all these resources from which to draw, it would be surprising if St.
+Louis did not become a leading city in the West. Situated, as she is, on
+the Mississippi River, about midway between its source and its mouth,
+the junction of the Missouri twenty miles above, and that of the Ohio
+about one hundred and seventy-five miles below, and being the river
+terminus of a complicated system of western railways, the towns and
+cities, and even the small hamlets of the north, south and west, and to
+a limited extent of the east also, all pay her tribute. As Chicago is
+the gateway to the East, by means of the great chain of lakes and rivers
+at whose head she sits, so St. Louis holds open the door to the South
+and the East as well, through the Mississippi and the Ohio rivers.
+
+In many respects the business rival of Chicago to-day, it has a history
+reaching half a century further back. While Chicago was still a howling
+wilderness, its only inhabitants the warlike Pottawatomies, who
+sometimes encamped upon the shores of its lake and river, St. Louis had
+a local habitation and a name. On February fifteenth, 1764, Pierre
+Laclede Siguest, an enterprising Frenchman, established at this point a
+depot for the furs of the vast region watered by the Mississippi and
+Missouri, and gave it the name of St. Louis. This was done by permission
+of the Governor General of Louisiana, which was then a French province.
+In the course of the year cabins were built, a little corn planted and
+the Indians placated. The Frenchmen seemed to have gotten along with the
+Indians tolerably well in those days. They had no hesitation in marrying
+squaws, even though they already possessed one lawful wife; they were
+good tempered and merry, and attempted no conversion of the Indians with
+a Bible in one hand and a sword in the other. So the two races got along
+nicely together.
+
+The peace of 1763 gave the country east of the Mississippi to the
+English, and the Frenchmen who had settled upon the Illinois made haste
+to remove to St. Louis, to avoid living under the rule of their "natural
+enemy." This was scarcely accomplished when the more terrible news
+reached them that Louis XV had ceded his possessions west of the
+Mississippi to Spain. For the next thirty years the town was a Spanish
+outpost of Louisiana, in which province no one not a Catholic could own
+land.
+
+To go to New Orleans and return was a voyage of ten months; but in that
+early day, and under such surprising difficulties, St. Louis began its
+commercial career. It exported furs, lead and salt, and imported the few
+necessaries required by the settlers, and beads, tomahawks, and other
+articles demanded by the Indians in exchange for furs. In 1799 the
+inhabitants numbered 925, a falling off of 272 from the previous year.
+In 1804, St. Louis passed to the United States, together with the whole
+country west of the Mississippi. In 1811 the population had increased to
+1400, and there were two schools in the town, one French and one
+English. In 1812 the portion of the territory lying north of the
+thirty-fifth degree of latitude was organized as Missouri Territory. In
+1813 the first brick house was erected in St. Louis. In 1820 its
+population was 4,928. In 1822 it was incorporated as a city.
+
+After the cession of Louisiana to the United States, the law forbidding
+Protestant worship, and requiring owners of land to profess the Catholic
+faith, was repealed, and men American born but of English descent began
+to pour into the town. In 1808 a newspaper was established, and in 1811
+many of the old French names of the streets were changed to English
+ones. In 1812 the lead mines began to be worked to better advantage, on
+a larger scale, and agriculture assumed increasing importance. In 1815
+the first steamboat made its appearance.
+
+In 1820 St. Louis cast its vote for slavery, and settled the question
+for Missouri. The population then was 4,928, which in 1830 had increased
+to 5,852; 924 additional inhabitants in ten years! From 1830 to 1860 its
+population trebled every ten years, the census returns of the latter
+year giving it 160,773. In 1870 it had nearly doubled again, the number
+being 310,864 inhabitants. According to the United States Census report
+of 1880, the population was 350,522, which made St. Louis the sixth city
+in the Union. Since that time it has been rapidly on the increase.
+
+St. Louis is among the first of our cities in the manufacture of flour,
+and is a rival of Cincinnati in the pork-packing business. It has
+extensive lumber mills, linseed-oil factories, provision-packing
+houses, manufactures large quantities of hemp, whisky and tobacco, has
+vast iron factories and machine shops, breweries, lead and paint works.
+In brief, it takes a rank second only to New York and Philadelphia in
+its manufactures, to which its prosperity is largely due. In 1874 the
+products of that year were valued at nearly $240,000,000, while it
+furnished employment to about 50,000 workmen. Great as are Chicago's
+manufacturing interests, St. Louis excels her in this respect, while she
+rivals the former city in her commercial interests. The natural
+commercial entreport of the Mississippi Valley, the commerce of St.
+Louis is immense. It receives and exports to the north, east and south,
+breadstuffs, live stock, provisions, cotton, lead, hay, salt, wool,
+hides and pelts, lumber and tobacco.
+
+St. Louis is perched high above the river, so that she is beyond the
+reach of all save the highest floods of that most capricious stream. She
+is built on three terraces, the first twenty, the second one hundred and
+fifty, and the third two hundred feet above low-water mark. The second
+terrace begins at Twenty-fifth street, and the third at Côte Brillante,
+four miles west of the river. The surface here spreads out into a broad,
+beautiful plain. The highest hill in the neighborhood of the city was
+the lofty mound on the bank of the river, a relic of prehistoric times,
+and from which St. Louis derived its name of the "Mound City." Greatly
+to the regret of antiquarians a supposed necessity existed for the
+removal of this mound, and now no trace of it is left.
+
+In 1842 Charles Dickens published his _American Notes_, in which is
+found the following description of St. Louis:
+
+"In the old French portion of the town the thoroughfares are narrow and
+crooked, and some of the houses are very quaint and picturesque, being
+built of wood, with tumble-down galleries before the windows,
+approachable by stairs, or rather ladders, from the street. There are
+queer little barber shops and drinking houses, too, in this quarter; and
+abundance of crazy old tenements, with blinking casements, such as may
+be seen in Flanders. Some of these ancient habitations, with high garret
+gable windows perking into the roofs, have a kind of French spring about
+them; and, being lopsided with age, appear to hold their heads askew,
+besides, as if they were grimacing in astonishment at the American
+improvements."
+
+There is nothing of this now seen in St. Louis, except in the narrower
+streets along the river, which remain a lasting relic of the ancient
+city. Yankee enterprise has obliterated, in the appearance of the city
+at least, all trace of its French and Spanish origin. The work of
+renovation must have commenced soon after Dickens' visit, for Lady
+Emeline Wortley, visiting St. Louis in 1849, describes it as follows:--
+
+"Merrily were huge houses going up in all directions. From our hotel
+windows we had a long view of gigantic and gigantically-growing-up
+dwellings, that seemed every morning to be about a story higher than we
+left them on the preceding night; as if they had slept, during the
+night, on guano, like the small boy in the American tale, who reposed on
+a field covered by it, and whose father, on seeking him the following
+day, found a gawky gentleman of eight feet high, bearing a strong
+resemblance to a Patagonian walking stick."
+
+ [Illustration: SHAW'S GARDEN AT ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI.]
+
+If Chicago is a western reproduction of New York, with its
+characteristic alertness preternaturally developed, St. Louis takes
+Philadelphia for her prototype. The merchants and statesmen plodding
+wearily across the continent during the latter part of the last century
+and early in this, found Philadelphia the chief city of the country, and
+went home with their minds filled with the distinguishing features of
+that city. These they reproduced, as far as was practicable, in their
+own young and growing town. They laid it out with regularity, the
+streets near the river, which describes a slight curve, running parallel
+to it. Further back, they describe straight lines, while the streets
+running from east to west are, for the most part, at right angles with
+those they cross. Imitating Philadelphia, the streets are named
+numerically from the river. Those crossing them have arbitrary names
+given them, while many Philadelphia nomenclatures, such as Market,
+Chestnut, Pine, Spruce, Poplar, Walnut and Vine, are repeated. The
+houses are also numbered in Philadelphia fashion, the streets parallel
+with the river being numbered north and south from Market street, and
+those running east and west taking their numbers from the river. In
+numbering, each street passes on to a new hundred; thus No. 318 is the
+ninth house above Third street on one side of the way.
+
+Not only in these superficial matters is Philadelphia imitated, but the
+resemblance is preserved in more substantial particulars. Many of the
+buildings are large, old-fashioned, square mansions, built of brick with
+white marble trimmings. There is less attempt at architectural display
+than in Chicago, apparently the main thought of the builders being to
+obtain substantiality. Yet there are many handsome buildings, both
+public and private. One of the finest structures of its kind in the
+United States is the Court House, occupying the square bounded by
+Fourth, Fifth, Chestnut and Market streets. It is in the form of a Greek
+cross, of Grecian architecture, built of Genevieve limestone, and is
+surmounted by a lofty iron dome, from the cupola of which it is possible
+to obtain an extensive view of the city and its surroundings. The
+building cost $1,200,000. The fronts are adorned with beautiful
+porticoes. The Four Courts, in Clark avenue, between Eleventh and
+Twelfth streets, is a handsome and spacious building, constructed of
+limestone, at a cost of $1,000,000. A semi-circular iron jail is in its
+rear, so constructed that all its cells are under the observation of a
+single watchman. A Custom House and Post Office has recently been
+erected, at the corner of Olive and Eighth streets. It is of Maine
+granite, with rose-colored granite trimmings, three stories in height,
+with a French roof and Louvre dome, and occupies an entire square. The
+cost of the structure was $5,000,000.
+
+The Chamber of Commerce is the great commercial mart of the city, the
+heart of enormous business interests, whose arteries sometimes pulsate
+with feverish heat, and whose transactions affect business affairs to
+the furthest extent of the country. The edifice is the handsomest of its
+kind in America. It is five stories high, wholly built of gray
+limestone, and cost $800,000. The main hall of the Exchange is two
+hundred feet long, one hundred wide, and seventy high. In the gallery
+surrounding it strangers can at any time witness the proceedings on the
+floor, and watch how fortunes are made and unmade.
+
+The most imposing and ornate building of the city, architecturally
+speaking, is the Columbia Life Insurance building, which is of
+rose-colored granite, in the Renaissance style, four stories high, with
+a massive stone cornice representing mythological figures. The roof is
+reached by an elevator, and affords a fine view.
+
+The city abounds in handsome churches. Most prominent among them all is
+Christ Church (Episcopal) at the corner of Thirteenth and Locust
+streets. It is in the cathedral gothic style, with stained-glass windows
+and lofty nave. The Catholic Cathedral, on Walnut street, between Second
+and Third streets, is an imposing structure with a front of polished
+freestone faced by a Doric portico. The Church of the Messiah
+(Unitarian), at the corner of Olive and Ninth streets, is a handsome
+gothic structure. The Jewish Temple, at the corner of Seventeenth and
+Pine streets, is one of the finest religious edifices in the city. There
+are many others which will challenge the visitor's attention and
+admiration as he passes through the streets of the city.
+
+The wholesale business of St. Louis is confined to Front, Second, Third
+and Main streets. Front street is one hundred feet wide, and extends
+along the levee, being lined with massive stores and warehouses. Fourth
+street contains the leading retail stores, and on every pleasant day it
+is filled with handsome equipages, while on its sidewalks are found the
+fashion and beauty of the city. Washington avenue is one of the widest
+and most elegant avenues in St. Louis, and west of Twenty-seventh street
+contains many beautiful residences. Pine, Olive and Locust streets,
+Chouteau avenue and Lucas Place, are also famed for their fine
+residences. Lindell or Grant avenue, running north and south, on the
+western boundary of the city, and slightly bending toward the river, is
+its longest street, being twelve miles in length.
+
+The corporate limits of St. Louis extend eleven miles along the river,
+and about three miles inland. The densely built portion of the city is
+about six miles in length by two in width. Its public parks are one of
+its striking features. They embrace an aggregate of about 2,000 acres.
+The most beautiful is Lafayette Park, lying between Park and Lafayette,
+Mississippi and Missouri avenues. In it are a bronze statue of Thomas H.
+Benton, by Harriet Hosmer, and a bronze statue of Washington. It is for
+pedestrians only, is elaborately laid out and ornamented, and is
+surrounded by magnificent residences. Missouri Park is a pretty little
+park at the foot of Lucas Place, containing a handsome fountain. St.
+Louis Place, Hyde Park and Washington Square are all attractive places
+of resort. Northern Park, on the bluffs to the north of the city, is
+noted for its fine trees, and contains 180 acres. Forest Park is the
+great park of the city. It lies four miles west of the Court House, and
+contains 1350 acres. The Des Pares runs through it, and the native
+forest trees are still standing. With great natural advantages, it
+requires only time and art to number it among the handsomest parks in
+the country. Tower Grove Park, in the southwest part of the city,
+contains 227 acres, offers delightful drives among green lawns and
+charmingly arranged shrubbery.
+
+Adjoining this park is Shaw's Garden, which contains 109 acres. It
+possesses a peculiar interest, from the manner in which it is arranged.
+It is divided into three sections, the first being the Herbaceous and
+Flower Garden, embracing ten acres, and including every flower which can
+be grown in the latitude of St. Louis, besides several greenhouses
+containing thousands of exotic and tropical plants. The second section,
+called the Fruticetum, comprises six acres devoted to fruit of all
+kinds. The Arboretum, or third section, includes twenty-five acres, and
+contains all kinds of ornamental and fruit trees. The Labyrinth is an
+intricate, hedge-bordered pathway, leading to a summer-house in the
+centre. There are also a museum and botanical library. This garden is
+entirely the result of private taste and enterprise, having been planned
+and executed by Henry Shaw, who has thrown it open to the public, and
+intends it as a gift to the city.
+
+Bellefontaine Cemetery is the most beautiful in the West. It is situated
+in the northern part of the city, about four and one-half miles from the
+Court House, and embraces 350 acres. It contains a number of fine
+monuments, while the trees and shrubbery are most tastefully arranged.
+Calvary Cemetery, north and not far distant, is nearly as large and
+quite as beautiful. Here, in these quiet cities of the dead, far from
+the bustle of the great town, the men and women of this western
+metropolis, whose lives were passed in turmoil and activity, find at
+last that rest which must come to all.
+
+The people of St. Louis are supplied with water from the river, the
+waterworks being situated at Bissell's Point, three and one-half miles
+north of the court house. Two pumping engines, each with a daily
+capacity of 17,000,000 gallons, furnish an ample supply for all the
+needs of the great city.
+
+Fair week, which is usually the first week in October, is the great
+holiday and gala season of St. Louis. The writer of this article was
+once so fortunate as to visit the city early in this week. Every train
+of cars on the many lines which centre at St. Louis, and every
+steamboat which came from up or down the river, brought its living
+freight of men and women, who were out for a week's holiday, and, it may
+have been, paying their annual visit to the greatest city west of the
+Mississippi. The country roads leading to town were black with vehicles
+of all descriptions, and laden with men and merchandise. The laborers
+and mules upon the levee were busier than ever, receiving and
+transporting the articles to be exhibited and sold. Every hotel was
+crowded, and the surplus overflowed into boarding and lodging houses, so
+that their keepers undoubtedly reaped a golden harvest for that one
+week, at least. The streets were thronged with an immense and motley
+multitude: business men, on the alert to extend their trade and add to
+their gains; working women, who found an opportunity for a brief
+holiday; ladies of fashion who viewed the scene resting at their ease in
+their carriages; farmers from the rural districts, looking uncomfortable
+yet complaisant in their Sunday suits, and trying to take in all there
+was to see and understand; their wives, old-fashioned and countrified in
+their dress, and with a tired look upon their faces, which this week
+given up to idleness and sight-seeing could not quite dispel; sporting
+men, easily recognizable by their flashy dress and "horsey" talk;
+gamblers and blacklegs by the score, whose appearance and manners were
+too excessively gentlemanly to pass as quite genuine, and whose gains
+during the week were probably larger and more certain than those of any
+other class; western men, with their patois, borrowed apparently from
+the slang of every nation on the globe; Southerners, with their long
+hair, slouched hats and broad accent; river hands, whose most
+noticeable accomplishments seemed to be disposing of tobacco and
+inventing new oaths; negroes, whose facile natures entered heartily into
+the occasion, and on whose sleek, shining countenances the spirit of
+contentment was plainly visible; eastern men, with the Yankee
+intonation; Germans, in great numbers, patronizingly endorsing their
+adopted country, and selling lager beer with stolid content; Irishmen,
+whose preference was whisky, and who were ever ready for fun or a fight;
+beggars, plying their vocation with an extra whine, adopted to conceal
+an unwonted tendency to cheerfulness; magnates, who looked pompous and
+conscious of their own importance, but who were jostled and pushed with
+the democratic disregard for rank and station which characterizes an
+American crowd.
+
+Probably in no city in the Union would one find quite so cosmopolitan a
+multitude, representing all sections and all nationalities so
+impartially. In the business and populous centre of our country, here
+came all classes and peoples who had been born under, or had sought the
+protection of, our flag, to worship one week at the shrines of Ceres and
+Pomona.
+
+The fair grounds of the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical
+Association are three miles northwest of the Court House, and embrace
+eighty-five acres handsomely laid out and containing extensive
+buildings. The Amphitheatre will seat 40,000 persons. The street cars
+leading to these grounds were at all times filled with people, and in
+addition there was a constant procession of carriages, wagons and carts,
+going and returning. Within the enclosure the dense throng surged and
+swayed like a human whirlpool. The displays in the agricultural and
+mechanical departments were something astonishing; for where in the
+world is there such grain grown and in such quantities, as in the
+Mississippi and Missouri valleys? Where are there such fat oxen, such
+sleek, self-satisfied cows, with such capacity for rich milk? Horses,
+hogs and sheep were all of the best, and indicated that the West is very
+far advanced in scientific stock raising. The farm implements displayed
+all sorts of contrivances for lightening and hastening the farmer's
+toil. It needed but a glance to show that farming in this region was no
+single-man, one-horse affair.
+
+In art the East as yet excels the West; for in the scramble after
+material gain the artistic nature has not been greatly cultivated, and
+its expressions are, for the most part, crude. But they give promise of
+future excellence. St. Louis has no picture gallery worthy the name, but
+excells in scientific and educational institutions.
+
+The Mercantile Library, at the corner of Fifth and Locust streets,
+contains 50,000 volumes, and its hall is decorated by paintings, coins
+and statuary, among which latter may be mentioned Miss Hosmer's
+life-size statue of Beatrice Cenci and Oenone; a bronze copy of the
+Venus de Medici, a sculptured slab from the ruins of Nineveh, and marble
+busts of Thomas H. Benton and Robert Burns. The library with its reading
+room is free to strangers.
+
+Besides the library there is a public school library of 38,000 volumes;
+an Academy of Science, founded in 1856, with a large museum and a
+library of 3,000 volumes; and a Historical Society, founded in 1865,
+with a valuable historical collection. Washington University, organized
+in 1853, embraces the whole range of university studies except theology.
+With it is connected the Mary Institute, for the education of women, the
+Polytechnic School, and the Law School. The public school system of St.
+Louis is one of the best in the country, and its school-houses are
+commendably fine. The Roman Catholic College of the Christian Brothers
+has about four hundred students, and a library of 10,000 volumes.
+Concordia College (German Lutheran), established in 1839, has a library
+of 4,500 volumes. Besides the numerous public schools, the Roman
+Catholics, who embrace a majority of the inhabitants, have about one
+hundred parochial, private and conventual schools. They have also a
+number of convents, charitable homes, asylums and hospitals.
+
+The hotels, chief amongst which are the new Southern Hotel, Lindell
+House, Planters' Hotel, Laclede Hotel and Barnum's Hotel, will compare
+favorably, in point of attendance, comfort and elegance, with any in the
+country. Horse cars traverse the city in every direction, rendering all
+points easily accessible, and carriages are in waiting at the depots and
+steamboat landings. Ferries ply continually to East St. Louis, on the
+Illinois shore, from the foot of Carr street, north of the bridge, and
+from the foot of Spruce street, south of it, the two points of departure
+being about a mile apart.
+
+So long as the Mississippi River washes the levee in front of the city,
+the citizens of St. Louis are in little danger of long remaining dull,
+for want of excitement. That river, one of the uneasiest of water
+courses, constantly furnishes fresh themes of interest, and even of
+anxiety. It has a singular penchant for a frequent change of channels,
+and occasionally threatens to desert to Illinois and leave St. Louis an
+inland town, with its high levee a sort of rampart to receive the
+mocking assaults of Chicago. Then, every spring, there is the annual
+freshet, which, once in ten or fifteen years, creeps up over the top of
+the levee, and finds its way into cellars and first floors of stores and
+warehouses. Occasionally there is a severe winter, when ice is formed
+upon the river as far south even as St. Louis; and when it breaks up in
+the spring, mischief is sure to ensue. A hundred steamboats are in
+winter quarters along the levee, their noses in the sand, and their
+hulls extending riverward, fixed in the ice. At last the great mass of
+congealed water, extending up the river hundreds of miles, begins to
+move down stream. The motion is at first scarcely perceptible; but,
+suddenly, the ice cracks and breaks, and fragments begin to glide
+swiftly with the current of the river. The various masses create
+conflicting currents, and, presently, the surface of the stream is like
+a whirlpool. Some boats are crushed like egg shells between the floes;
+cables snap, and others are drawn out into the midst of the whirling
+waters and are fortunate indeed if they are not overwhelmed or forced
+upon the ice. Meantime, consternation reigns upon the levee. The
+multitudes are powerless to prevent, yet make frantic and futile efforts
+while they watch, the disaster. At the breaking up of the ice in 1866,
+seventeen steamboats were crushed and sunk in a few minutes. Then there
+are other river disasters; steamboats burned; others struck on snags and
+sunk; and now and then a boiler explosion makes up the tale of horrors
+and prevents the Mississippi from ever becoming monotonous or
+uninteresting.
+
+St. Louis was most unfavorably affected by the war, and made to expiate
+her political sin of 1820. On the border land between the North and the
+South, the conflict was carried on in her very midst. Sectional strife
+was most bitter and keen. There was no neutrality, and there could be
+none. All were either for or against; families were divided in deadly
+strife; and while the city suffered to a terrible degree from this
+condition of affairs, in back counties whole sections were depopulated.
+The population being largely southern, either by birth or descent, its
+sympathies were with the South. The class truly loyal was the Germans,
+who numbered about 60,000 of the population, and who were characterized
+by the Secessionists as the "D---- Dutch." The blockade of the river
+reduced the whole business of the city to about a third of its former
+amount. Yet, when the war was ended, St. Louis was quick to recover her
+prostrated energies. In 1866, and but two years after the war, the city
+did more business than in any preceding year; and, relieved from the
+incubus of slavery, which had retarded its progress, it aroused itself
+to new life.
+
+With the Quaker-like simplicity of its outward appearance, its absence
+of business rush, and its general tranquillity, St. Louis' resemblance
+to the Quaker City ceases. It is a town of composite character, but from
+its earliest existence has been under Roman Catholic domination. Even
+now the Roman Catholic element predominates in its population. And its
+French and Spanish founders, though their quaint buildings are torn down
+and replaced by more modern ones, and their very streets re-named, have
+left their impress upon the city. Its many places of amusement, compared
+to its population, its general gayety, its stores closed by sunset in
+winter, and before sunset in summer, its billiard rooms open on Sunday,
+and its ball-playing on the same day, all give indication of its being
+the home of a people whose ancestors had no New England prejudices
+against worldly amusements, and in favor of sobriety, decorum,
+industry, and the observance of the Sabbath.
+
+St. Louis presents a pleasing contrast to many other western cities. Its
+prosperity is substantial--not a sham. The capital which has paid for
+these costly places of business and elegant residences, and is invested
+in these gigantic enterprises, has been created out of the immense
+material wealth of the State--not borrowed on a factitious credit. Its
+merchants do not make princely fortunes in a day, but what they acquire
+they keep. With so satisfactory a past, the errors of its youth atoned
+for, the future of St. Louis cannot fail to be a brilliant one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+SYRACUSE.
+
+ Glimpses on the Rail.--Schenectady.--Valley of the Mohawk.--
+ "Lover's Leap."--Rome and its Doctor.--Oneida Stone---The Lo
+ Race.--Oneida Community.--The City of Salt.--The Six Nations.--
+ The Onondagas.--Traditions of Red Americans.--Hiawatha.--
+ Sacrifice of White Dogs.--Ceremonies.--The Lost Tribes of
+ Israel.--Witches and Wizards.--A Jules Verne Story.--The Salt
+ Wells of Salina.--Lake Onondaga.--Indian Knowledge of Salt
+ Wells.--"Over the Hills and Far Away."--A Castle.--Steam
+ Canal Boats.--Adieux.--Westward Ho!
+
+
+The distance from Albany to Syracuse by rail, on the line of the New
+York Central, is about one hundred and forty-two miles, or reckoned by
+language on the dial, between six and seven hours.
+
+Schenectady, the first stopping point on the route outward, was once
+hovered under the motherly wings of Albany--her lawful progeny. The
+embryo city, however, had aspirations of her own, and set up in the
+world for herself. She now rejoices in a population of about twenty-five
+thousand, and has separated herself from the maternal skirt by seventeen
+miles of intervening country. Union College, the _alma mater_ of many of
+the sons of New York and her sister States, is located at this point.
+
+The route from Albany to the junction of the Watertown and Ogdensburg
+Road, at Rome, takes us through the Valley of the Mohawk--one of the
+loveliest valleys in the State. At Little Falls the scenery is wild and
+rugged, and looking out from the car window to the opposite hillside,
+where the waters break into foam over the rocks, set in a dark framework
+of pines, the imaginative traveler conjectures at once that this must be
+the scene of the "Lover's Leap"--a bit of romance rife in this region.
+But the Mohawk rushes on, unmindful of those legendary lovers; the
+heartless conductor, who cares nothing about dreams, shouts "all
+aboard!" from the platform, and the screech of the engine whistle echoes
+down the valley, as the train is once more in motion.
+
+At Utica we make a longer stop. This point is the largest place between
+Albany and Syracuse, and is as handsome a city as sits on the banks of
+the Mohawk. The Black River Railroad joins the main line of the New York
+Central here, and it is also the location of the State Lunatic Asylum.
+
+Rome comes next in order, in importance and population, and is the last
+place of any note on the road to Syracuse. It is a stirring little city
+of about ten or eleven thousand inhabitants, and at least some of its
+citizens have mastered the art of advertising, if one may judge from the
+pamphlets which flood the arriving and departing trains. We are
+repeatedly made aware of the fact that one of the dwellers in Rome is a
+doctor, and that he doats on curing--not corns, but cancers.
+
+The Midland Road from Oswego, and the Watertown Road--those connecting
+arterial threads from Lake Ontario and Northern New York--unite with the
+main artery, the Central, here, and the flow of human freight down these
+channels is continuous and unceasing.
+
+The second station from Rome, on the road to Syracuse, is Oneida--so
+named from the tribe of red men who, less than a century ago, occupied
+this particular region. A tradition once existed among the Oneidas that
+they were a branch of the Onondagas, to whom they were allied by
+relationship and language. Long ago they lived on the southern shore of
+Oneida Lake, near the mouth of the creek, but afterwards their
+habitation was made higher up the valley. The famous "Oneota" or _Oneida
+Stone_ became their talisman and the centre of their attractions. Many
+of their tribe were distinguished as orators and statesmen.
+
+The Oneida "Community" live about two miles back from the station, and,
+notwithstanding their peculiar religious belief and social practices,
+they have achieved a reputation for quiet thrift, industry and harmony,
+which their more Puritanic neighbors would do well to emulate.
+
+But, at last, our train enters the outskirts of Syracuse, and
+penetrating the heart of the city, rumbles inside the gates of the New
+York Central Station at this place. Outside, all is hurry and bustle,
+and confusion, as we descend the steps and elbow our way through the
+crowd, to run the gauntlet of hack drivers and baggage expressmen, with
+their plated caps and deafening calls.
+
+Syracuse is sometimes known as the Central City, on account of its
+location near the geographical centre of New York. It was first settled
+in 1787, and did not pass the limits of a small village until the
+completion of the Erie canal, in 1825. Two canals and three or four
+lines of railway now centre here, and contribute to the growth of this
+enterprising city. The region surrounding Syracuse is rife with the
+romantic history of that once powerful Indian Confederacy known as the
+Six Nations, now fast fading from the memory of men. The site of their
+ancient Council House was on Onondaga Creek, a few miles distant from
+the city, and is still held sacred to their traditions by the remnant of
+the lost tribes now occupying the Indian reservation. The Onondagas
+became the leading nation of the Confederacy. No business of importance,
+touching the Six Nations, was transacted, except at Onondaga. They held
+the key of the great Council House; they kept the sacred council fire
+ever burning. From what portion of the country they emigrated before
+occupying this region is unknown, but there is a very early tradition
+among them that, many hundred moons ago, their forefathers came from the
+North, having inhabited a territory along the northern banks of the St.
+Lawrence. After a lapse of time there was an exodus of the powerful
+tribe to the hills and hollows of Onondaga.
+
+The River God of this nation was named Hiawatha--which meant "very
+wise." He always embarked in a white canoe, which was carefully guarded
+in a lodge especially set apart for that purpose. Their favorite
+equipments were white. White plumes, from the heron, were worn in their
+head-bands when they went on the war path; white dogs were sacrificed.
+The yearly sacrifice of the dogs, among the Onondagas, was a ceremony of
+great importance with the tribe, and occurred at one of the five stated
+festivals of the Six Nations. On the great sacrificial day it was the
+habit of the people to assemble at the Council House in large numbers.
+Early in the morning, immense fires were built, guns were discharged,
+and loud hallooing increased the noise. Half a cord of wood, arranged in
+alternate layers, was placed near the Council House, by a select
+committee of managers, for the sacrificial offering. The two officiating
+priests for the occasion, as well as the high priest, were dressed in
+long, loose robes of white. At about nine o'clock in the morning the two
+priests appear. The white dogs following them are painted with red
+figures, and adorned with belts of wampum, feathers and ribbons. The
+dogs are then lassooed and suffocated, amid yells and the firing of
+guns. After some intervening ceremonies, the details of which are too
+long for recital here, a procession is formed, led by the priests in
+white, followed by the managers, bearing the dogs on their shoulders. A
+chant is sung as the procession marches around the burning pile three
+successive times; the dogs are then laid at the feet of the officiating
+priest, a prayer is offered to the Great Spirit and the high priest,
+lifting the dogs, casts them into the fire. After this, baskets of herbs
+and tobacco are thrown, at intervals, into the fire, as propitiating
+sacrifices.
+
+Their idea of these sacrifices was, that the sins of the people were, in
+some mysterious manner, transferred yearly to the two priests in white,
+who, in turn, conveyed them to the dogs. Thus the burnt offering
+expiated the sins of the people for a year.
+
+These ideas and customs are so singularly similar to the ancient Jewish
+religious rites as to suggest a possible origin from the same source.
+The mystical council fire of the Six Nations, which was kept always
+burning by the Onondagas, who had charge of it, and which, if
+extinguished, was supposed to prophesy the destruction of the nation,
+may have a deeper meaning than that attached to it by the chiefs
+themselves. It may possibly point to a common parentage with the
+ever-burning flame in the Vestal Temple at Rome, whose eclipse
+endangered the safety of the city. Another point of resemblance may be
+noted. Time, which is reckoned among the Red men by moons, also
+suggests the Jewish year, which began with the new moon, and was
+reckoned by lunar months.
+
+The Six Nations had a firm belief in witches and wizards, and executed
+them, on the discovery of their supposed witchcraft, with a zeal and
+spirit worthy of our early Christian fathers. One old Indian used to
+relate a story something on the Jules Verne order. He said that, as he
+stepped out of his cabin one evening, he sank down deep into an immense
+and brilliantly-lighted cavern, full of flaming torches. Hundreds of
+witches and wizards were there congregated, who immediately ejected him.
+Early next morning he laid the matter before the assembled chiefs at the
+Council House, who asked him whether he could recognize any whom he saw?
+The sagacious Red man thought he could, and singled out many through the
+village, male and female, who were doomed to an untimely execution, on
+the evidence of this person's word.
+
+The Senacas, another numerous and powerful nation of the Confederacy,
+were always noted for the talent and eloquence of their orators and
+statesmen. Corn Planter, Red Jacket, and other celebrities, came of this
+tribe.
+
+Syracuse is celebrated for its salt, the country over; and the most
+singular thing about it is that the salt wells surround a body of fresh
+water. This sheet of water bears the name of Onondaga Lake, and is six
+miles long by one mile wide. It is about a mile and a half from the
+heart of the city. A stratum of marl, from three to twelve feet thick,
+underlaid by marly clay, separates the salt springs from the fresh
+waters of the lake. The wells vary in depth, from two hundred to three
+hundred feet, and the brine is forced from them, by pumps, into large
+reservoirs, which supply the evaporating works. The salt is separated
+from the water partly by solar evaporation and partly by boiling. The
+reservoirs for the solar salt evaporation cover about seven hundred
+acres of land. The brine is boiled in large iron kettles, holding about
+a hundred gallons, which are placed in blocks of brick work, in one or
+two long rows, the whole length of the block. It takes about
+thirty-three and a fourth gallons of brine to make a bushel of salt,
+which will average from fifty to fifty-six pounds in weight.
+
+These salt wells were known to the Indians at a very early
+period--Onondaga salt being in common use among the Delawares in 1770,
+by whom it was brought to Quebec for sale.
+
+Le Moyne, a Jesuit missionary, who had lived among the Hurons, and who
+first came to Onondaga in 1653, with a party of Huron and Onondaga
+chiefs, is supposed to be the first white man who personally knew about
+the springs, though Father Lallemant had previously written of them. In
+a letter which Colonel Comfort Tyler wrote to Dr. Jeremiah Van
+Rensselaer, in 1822, the first manufacture of salt at this place by the
+whites, in 1788, is described. He says: "In the month of May, 1788, the
+family, wanting salt, obtained about a pound from the Indians, which
+they had made from the waters of the springs upon the shore of the lake.
+The Indians offered to discover the water to us. Accordingly, I went
+with an Indian guide to the lake, taking along an iron kettle of fifteen
+gallons capacity. This he placed in his canoe and steered out of the
+mouth of Onondaga Creek, easterly, into a pass since called Mud Creek.
+After passing over the marsh, then covered with about three feet of
+water, and steering toward the bluff of hard land (now that part of
+Syracuse known as Salina), he fastened his canoe, pointed to a hole,
+apparently artificial, and said: "There is the salt!"
+
+Salina, or the first ward, as it is frequently spoken of, lies partly
+upon the shores of this lovely lake of Onondaga, and enjoys the
+advantages of a close proximity to the saline atmosphere of the wells.
+The drives in the vicinity of the lake and about the neighboring
+localities afford an ever-shifting panorama of beautiful views, with
+glimpses of the blue Onondaga at all points. On a breezy day, in the
+early part of May, 1875, when the air was soft with hints of coming
+summer, and the violets along the river banks were just putting on their
+hoods of blue, I took one of those long and delightful drives which so
+exhilarates the blood and gives a kind of champagne sparkle to the mind.
+If there are any known remedial agents which can possibly be an
+improvement on pure air and sunshine, will you tell us what they are,
+Dr. Dio Lewis? My companion was keen-witted and full of jollity; we had
+a spirited animal, and miles upon miles of space quickly vanished behind
+us, as we sped onward over the smooth roadway. The hills seemed to open
+wide their portals and close again as we passed; the valleys allured us
+with their romantic, winding roads, and Lake Onondaga, viewed from all
+points of the compass, tossed itself into a multitude of little waves
+which sparkled in the sunshine like a thousand diamonds. The sky,
+changeful as April, alternated between floating fields of atmospheric
+blue and pillars of gray cloud. As we rounded the last curve of the
+lake, the tall chimneys and long, low buildings of the salt works at
+Salina came into view, forming a more conspicuous than elegant feature
+of the landscape.
+
+The principal street for retail business in Syracuse is named Salina,
+and it always wears an air of brisk trade and enterprise. The large dry
+goods houses of McCarthy and of Milton Price are located on this street.
+Some of the public edifices are built of Onondaga limestone, quarried a
+few miles out of the city. It makes very handsome building material, as
+the Court House and other structures will testify. The ranking hotels of
+Syracuse are the Vanderbilt and Globe, though the Remington, Syracuse
+and Empire Hotels are well-kept and well-conducted houses.
+
+The Erie Canal runs through the heart of the city, and the bridges over
+it are arranged with draws. The first steam canal boat I ever saw lay
+moored at this place, at the corner of Water and Clinton streets. It was
+gay with new paint and floating pennons, and created quite a sensation
+on its first trip out. It belonged to Greenway, the great ale man, and
+was named after his daughter.
+
+The High School, on West Genesee street, has a delightful location on
+the banks of Onondaga Creek, and combines with its other advantages that
+of a public library. It has a free reading room, thrown open to the city
+at large, and a choice collection of many thousand volumes adorn its
+shelves. Sitting at the open window and listening to the noisy waters of
+the creek as it flows past, intermingled with an occasional bird carol
+overhead, I could almost imagine myself out in the heart of the country,
+away from the struggling masses of the crowded marts, in their mad race
+after wealth--with nothing more inharmonious around me than the bird
+orchestra of some imaginary June sky, the low sweep of waters and the
+sound of the summer wind among the pines.
+
+Syracuse rates herself sixty thousand strong, and I am unable to say
+whether the hard figures will bear her out in this assertion. Perhaps,
+however, a small margin of egotism ought to be subtracted from our
+estimate of ourselves, especially when "ourselves" means a city.
+
+James street is decidedly the handsomest thoroughfare in Syracuse. It is
+wide, well paved, and two miles or more in length. On it are
+congregated, with a few exceptions, the finest residences of the city.
+These are surrounded, for the most part, by spacious grounds, and some
+of them by groves of primeval forest growths. The street is an inclined
+plane on one side, with a gentle declivity on the other. From its top,
+quite an extensive prospect opens to the view, taking in most of the
+city of salt, and its enclosing amphitheatre of hills. Looking down the
+street, and over across the valley, the gray turrets of Yates' Castle
+can be seen, nearly hidden by its surrounding trees.
+
+"A castle?" I hear my imaginary reader question. "Yes," I answer, a
+castle,--the real, genuine, article--towers, turrets, gate-keeper's
+lodge and all; nothing lacking but moat and drawbridge, to transport one
+to the times of tournament and troubadours--of knight-errantry and fair
+ladies riding to the chase with hawk and hound.
+
+A Latin motto, on the coat of arms adorning the arched gateway, points
+to an ancestry of noble blood. But, alas for greatness! not even the
+lodge-keeper's family knew the meaning of the Latin inscription. We
+learned, however, that the armorial emblems were of English origin, and
+belonged, possibly, to the times of the royal Georges. The grounds about
+the castle are quite in keeping with the building itself. Winding roads,
+rustic bridges, statuary, summer-houses and fountains, fitly environ
+this antique pile.
+
+Just opposite this place, on the hill-top, stands the Syracuse
+University--its white walls outlined in bold relief against the sky. It
+is a Methodist institution, and its chief office is to prepare young men
+for the ministry, and teach the youthful idea how to shoot, in
+accordance with modern theology. The location is breezy enough, and high
+enough, to satisfy almost any one's aspirations, and, if height has
+anything to do with ideas, the thoughts of these young students ought to
+be well-nigh heavenly.
+
+But, at last, we are compelled to say good-bye to Syracuse, and all its
+pleasant associations, to say nothing of its salt. Westward the star of
+Empire takes its way, and we have engaged a seat on the same train. It
+is with real regret that we part company with these cities of our
+beloved New York--Syracuse not the least among them. But the arrival of
+the midnight "Lightning Express" for Rochester cuts short our musings,
+and we are soon whirling away in the darkness, leaving the country of
+the Onondagas far behind us, slumbering in the arms of night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+TORONTO.
+
+ Situation of Toronto.--The Bay.--History.--Rebellion of 1837.--
+ Fenian Invasion of 1866.--Population.--General Appearance.--
+ Sleighing.--Streets.--Railways.--Commerce.--Manufactures.--
+ Schools and Colleges.--Queen's Park.--Churches.--Benevolent
+ Institutions.--Halls and Other Public Buildings.--Hotels.--
+ Newspapers.--General Characteristics and Progress.
+
+
+Toronto, the capital of the Province of Ontario, is situated on the
+northern shore of Lake Ontario, on a beautiful and nearly circular bay,
+about five miles in length, formed by a long, narrow, curved tongue of
+land, extending out into the lake in a southwest direction. This harbor
+is capable of receiving the largest vessels upon the lake, and is
+defended at its entrance by a fort upon the extreme end of the
+peninsula, which is called Gibraltar Point. This fort was thoroughly
+repaired in 1864, and mounted with the most efficient modern ordnance.
+
+Toronto was founded in 1794, by Governor Simcoe, who gave it the name of
+York. In 1813, it was twice captured by the Americans, who burned the
+public buildings and destroyed the fortifications. It was incorporated
+as a city in 1834, when its name was changed to Toronto, an Indian word,
+signifying "The place of meeting." It was the headquarters of the
+Rebellion in 1837, when Sir Francis Head, then Governor of Upper Canada,
+dissolved the House, for having stopped the supplies, as a retaliatory
+measure upon his refusal to grant an elective legislative council. Sir
+Francis had sent away from Upper Canada the whole of the Queen's army,
+but putting himself at the head of the militia, he succeeded in
+suppressing the insurrection. The city also suffered severely from the
+fire of 1849. It has no manufactures of any importance, but, like most
+of Western Canada, is chiefly dependent upon agriculture.
+
+The growth of Toronto has been more rapid than that of any other city in
+Canada. Though of such recent origin compared with many Canadian towns,
+it is now second only to Montreal in size and population, the former
+having increased from twelve hundred in 1837 to upwards of eighty
+thousand at the present time. The site of the city is low, the
+surrounding country being level, but free from swamp and perfectly dry.
+The ground rises gently from the shores of the lake. The scenery in the
+vicinity is tame and comparatively monotonous, though not unpleasing.
+The city lies along the shores of the lake for something over two miles,
+and extends inward about a mile and a half.
+
+As one approaches Toronto its outlines appear picturesque, being varied
+and broken by an unusual number of handsome spires. The traveler will be
+pleasantly surprised, as he enters the city, at the extent and
+excellence of its public edifices, the number of its churches, and its
+general handsome and well-to-do aspect. Many of the houses and business
+structures are built of light-colored brick, having a soft and cheerful
+appearance. The streets are laid out regularly, crossing each other at
+right angles, and, as a general thing, are well paved. In the winter
+time they are filled with sleighs, and the air is alive with the music
+of sleigh-bells. These sleighs are, some of them, most elegant in form
+and finish, and provided with most costly furs. Every boy has his
+hand-sled or "toboggan." At the same season of the year skating upon the
+bay is a favorite amusement. King and Yonge streets are the leading
+thoroughfares and fashionable promenades, being lined with handsome
+retail stores which would do credit to any city in America. Other
+important business streets are Front, Queen, York, Wellington and Bay.
+
+Five railways centre at Toronto, connecting it with every section of
+Canada, the West and the South. The principal of these are the Grand
+Trunk and Great Western railways, which connect the city by through
+lines with the East and West. While navigation is open magnificent
+steamers connect it with all points on the lake, and carry on an
+extensive commerce. It imports large quantities of lumber, both
+manufactured and unmanufactured; wheat and other grain, soap, salt and
+glue; while foundries, distilleries, breweries, tanneries, rope-walks,
+paper and flour mills, furnish products which reach markets throughout
+the Provinces and States.
+
+Toronto is the centre of the Canadian school system, and its educational
+institutions are numerous and of the highest order. It has Normal and
+Model schools, in the first of which teachers exclusively are trained.
+These schools, with the Educational Museum, built in the plain Italian
+style, are picturesquely grouped in park-like grounds, on Church street.
+The Museum contains a collection of curiosities, and a number of good
+paintings and casts. The University of Toronto exhibits the finest
+buildings in the city, and the finest of their kind in America. They
+stand in a large park, approached by College avenue, half a mile in
+length, and shaded by double rows of trees. The buildings, which are
+of Norman architecture, of gray rubble stone, trimmed with Ohio and Caen
+stone, form the sides of a large quadrangle. It was founded in 1843;
+possesses a library of twenty thousand volumes, and a fine museum of
+natural history, and has attached to it an observatory. Knox College,
+Presbyterian, is situated a short distance north of the University, and
+is a large building, in the Collegiate-Gothic style. Trinity College, in
+Queen street west, overlooks the bay, and is an extensive and
+picturesque structure, turreted and gabled, and surrounded by extensive
+grounds. Upper Canada College is found in King street near John.
+
+ [Illustration: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, CANADA.]
+
+Adjoining the University grounds is Queen's Park, embracing the most
+elevated quarter of the city, and including fifty acres, handsomely laid
+out. In this park a brownstone shaft, surmounted by a colossal statue of
+Britannia, perpetuates the memory of the Canadians who fell in repelling
+the Fenian invasion in 1866. This park is from one hundred to two
+hundred feet above the level of the lake, and is surrounded by handsome
+public buildings and private residences.
+
+The Episcopal Cathedral of St. James, at the corner of King and Church
+streets, is a spacious edifice, in the early English style, with lofty
+tower and spire, and elaborate open roof. It was built in 1852, and is
+surrounded by well shaded grounds. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of St.
+Michael, fronting on Bond street, is a large, decorated Gothic
+structure, with stained windows, and a spire two hundred and fifty feet
+high. The Wesleyan Methodist Church, in McGill street, is the finest
+church of that denomination in America. Its massive tower is surmounted
+by graceful pinnacles, and its interior is tastefully and richly
+decorated. Knox's Church has a beautiful spire. One of the finest
+church edifices in the Dominion is the Jarvis street Baptist Church, in
+the decorated Gothic style. St. Andrews Presbyterian is a massive stone
+structure, which dates back to the Norman style of architecture.
+
+Toronto contains many benevolent institutions, hospitals and asylums.
+Prominent among them is the Provincial Lunatic Asylum, a large and
+handsome building, situated west of the city, and surrounded by two
+hundred acres of handsomely ornamented grounds. The General Hospital is
+a fine structure, east of the city, in Don street, near Sumach.
+
+The Normal School Building, with its beautifully laid out grounds, is
+one of the most attractive spots in the city, and the building is said
+to be the largest of the kind in America. There is very little fine
+scenery in the environs.
+
+One of the most strikingly beautiful buildings of Toronto is Osgood
+Hall, in Queen street, an imposing structure, of elegant Ionic
+architecture, the seat of the Superior Law Courts of Upper Canada, and
+containing an extensive law library. St. Lawrence Hall, in King street,
+is a stately structure, in the Italian style, surmounted by a dome,
+containing a public hall and reading-room. Masonic Hall, an attractive
+stone building, is in Toronto street. The city contains two Opera
+Houses: the Grand, capable of seating two thousand persons, and the
+Royal, with accommodations for about fifteen hundred persons. The Post
+Office, a handsome stone building, stands near the head of Toronto
+street. The Custom House is of cut stone, of imposing proportions,
+extending from Front street to the Esplanade. The City Hall stands in
+Front street near the Lake Shore, in the midst of an open square, and
+is an unpretentious structure, in the Italian style. Near by is the
+extensive Lawrence Market. The Court House is in Church street.
+
+Of the hotels, the Rossin House, corner of King and York streets;
+Queen's Hotel, in Front street; the American House, in Yonge street; and
+the Revere House, in King street, are the most noteworthy.
+
+Toronto takes a front rank in literature, a large number of newspapers
+and periodicals, daily, weekly, and monthly, being issued from its
+presses. It is unlike, in many respects, its sister cities of Lower
+Canada. It has more of a nineteenth century air, and more of American
+and less of European characteristics, than Montreal and Quebec. The
+French Canadians form a smaller proportion of its inhabitants. The
+people in the streets are well dressed and comfortable looking, stout
+and sturdy, though not so tall, on an average, as the people of New
+York. An educated population is growing up, and Toronto already ranks
+well, in general intelligence and public enterprise, with other cities
+of like magnitude in the States while it outranks all others on Canadian
+soil.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+WASHINGTON.
+
+ Situation of the National Capital.--Site Selected by
+ Washington.--Statues of General Andrew Jackson, Scott,
+ McPherson, Rawlins.--Lincoln Emancipation Group.--Navy Yard
+ Bridge.--Capitol Building.--The White House.--Department of
+ State, War and Navy.--The Treasury Department.--Patent Office.--
+ Post Office Department.--Agricultural Building.--Army Medical
+ Museum.--Government Printing Office.--United States Barracks.--
+ Smithsonian Institute.--National Museum.--The Washington
+ Monument.--Corcoran Art Gallery.--National Medical College.--
+ Deaf and Dumb Asylum.--Increase of Population.--Washington's
+ Future Greatness.
+
+
+Washington, the Capital of the United States of America, is situated in
+the District of Columbia, on the left bank of the Potomac, between the
+Anacostia or eastern branch of that river, and about one hundred and
+eighty-five miles from the mouth of Chesapeake Bay. At an early period,
+indeed, before the clamor of war had fairly ceased, or the proud
+standard of England had been driven from its shores, the necessity of a
+territory which should be under the exclusive jurisdiction of Congress
+had engaged the attention of the founders of the new Republic. The
+possession of such a territory formed an important feature in the
+debates upon the framing of the Constitution, and it was only
+forty-eight days after the last act of ratification that the Capital
+City was, by solemn enactment of Congress, located on the eastern shore
+of the beautiful Potomac.
+
+The site of the Capital was selected by General Washington, the beloved
+first President of the Republic, and covers an undulating tract on the
+east bank of the river. From the rugged elevations on the borders of
+Rock Creek, a crescent-shaped ridge crosses the northern portion of the
+city, which is abruptly sundered, as it were, to admit the passage of a
+small stream called the Tiber. From this point the ridge ascends,
+gradually expanding into the extensive plateau of Capitol Hill,
+overlooking the Anacostia on the east. Within this encircling ridge the
+surface declines, in gentle slopes and terraces, down to the banks of
+the Potomac. From the lower falls of the river at Georgetown, beyond the
+outlying spurs of the Blue Ridge, a chain of low wooded hills extend
+across the north, which, continuing along the opposite shores of the
+Anacostia and Potomac, emerge again in the hills on the Virginia side of
+that river, presenting the appearance of a vast amphitheatre, in the
+centre of which stands the Capitol.
+
+The mean altitude of the city is about forty feet above the ordinary low
+tide of the Potomac; the soil on which it is built is generally a
+yellowish-clay intermixed with gravel. In making excavations for wells
+and cisterns, near New Jersey avenue, trees were found, in a good state
+of preservation, at a depth of from six to forty-eight feet below the
+surface.
+
+The Tiber, a little stream, with its tributaries, passes through the
+city. Tradition affirms that this stream received its name more than a
+century before Washington city was founded, in the belief and with the
+prediction that there would arise on its banks, in the future, a Capital
+destined to rival in magnificent grandeur that which crowned the banks
+of its great historic namesake. The streams forming this river have
+their source among the hills to the east, and enter the city in several
+directions, the principal branch winding off to the southwest, around
+the base of Capitol Hill, across Pennsylvania avenue, to the Botanical
+Gardens. Originally its course continued along the Mall and emptied into
+the Potomac immediately west of the Washington Monument, but
+subsequently it was diverted into the canal, the filling up of which
+caused still other changes. The Tiber and its tributaries were utilized
+by diverting them into the sewerage system of the central and southern
+portions of the city; consequently, although the stream traverses one of
+the most populous sections, its course is not visible, the current
+flowing beneath heavy brick arches upon which buildings have been
+erected, and avenues, streets and parks laid out. In primitive days the
+banks of the Tiber were covered with heavy forests, while shad, herring
+and other fish, in their season, were taken from its waters, under the
+very shadow of the hill upon which the Capitol now stands.
+
+There is no city in the Union which presents to the thoughtful and truly
+patriotic American so many objects of interest as does the city of
+Washington. First of all, this feeling is intensified by the fact of its
+having been located and founded by the great, immortal _Pater Patrić_
+whose illustrious name it has the honor of bearing. A plan of the city
+was prepared in 1791, by Peter L'Enfant, a French engineer of fine
+education and decided genius, who had served in the Continental army
+with such distinction as to attract the attention of General Washington.
+He was assisted in the work by the advice and suggestions of Thomas
+Jefferson, who, while diplomatic representative of the United States,
+had studied the plans of the principal cities visited in Europe, with a
+view to the future wants of his country, and was prepared, by the aid of
+his personal knowledge of their details, to contribute valuable
+information and suggestions.
+
+It is evident that the predominating object in designing a plan for the
+city, was first to secure the most eligible situations for the different
+public buildings, and to arrange the squares and areas so that the most
+extended views might be obtained from every direction. The amplest
+arrangements were also made by the founders of Washington for its rapid
+growth and expansion, while they evidently designed and anticipated its
+being magnificently built up and embellished. The indifference of the
+Government and people has permitted these suggestions to remain too long
+unheeded; yet it is consoling to those possessing an intelligent
+patriotism and proud love of country, to know that the neglected
+condition of the Capital of the United States for nearly three-fourths
+of a century was not the result of any defect in the design originated
+by its noble founders.
+
+Any one who has visited the royal residence of the kings of France, will
+immediately recognize the resemblance between the plans of Le Notre for
+Versailles, and L'Enfant for Washington City. The grand avenues, de
+Sceaux and St. Cloud, diverging from the _Cour Royal_, are reproduced in
+Pennsylvania and Maryland avenues, radiating from the east front of the
+Capitol. Its broad thoroughfares are among the principal attractions of
+Washington, and are the finest possessed by any city in the world. The
+avenues, twenty-one in number, radiate from principal centres and
+connect different parts of the city; the original number was thirteen,
+named for the States constituting the Union at the time the Capital was
+laid out. The first in importance is Pennsylvania avenue; its width
+varies from one hundred and sixty to one hundred and eighty feet; its
+length is four and one-half miles, traversing the finest business
+portion of the city, as well as being the most popular and fashionable
+thoroughfare for driving. The War and Treasury departments, Washington
+Circle, and the President's House, are each located on this superb
+street, which, winding up and around Capitol Hill, finds its terminus on
+the banks of the Anacostia.
+
+The spaces at the intersection of the more important avenues form what
+are called _Circles_. Washington Circle, at the intersection of
+Pennsylvania and New Hampshire avenues, contains the equestrian statue
+of General Washington, which was ordered by Congress, and cannon donated
+for the purpose, in 1853. The great hero is represented at the crisis of
+the battle of Princeton; the horse seems shrinking from the storm of
+shot and shell and the fiery conflict confronting him; his rider
+exhibits that calm equanimity of bearing so eminently his
+characteristic. This statue was executed by Clark Mills, at a cost of
+fifty thousand dollars.
+
+At the western base of Capitol Hill stands the naval monument, termed in
+the resolutions of Congress, the "_Monument of Peace_." It was designed
+by Admiral Porter, and erected by subscriptions started by him among the
+officers, midshipmen and men of his fleet, immediately after the fall of
+Fort Fisher. The height of this monument is forty-four feet; it is built
+of Carrara marble and cost $44,000. The surmounting figures represent
+History recording the woes narrated by America, who holds a tablet in
+her hand on which is inscribed: _They died that their country might
+live._ This monument is exceedingly well executed, and was considered,
+in Rome, one of the finest ever sent to America.
+
+Lafayette Square, comprising seven acres lying north of the President's
+House, is beautifully laid out with rustic seats, graveled walks, and
+adorned with a rare variety of trees and shrubbery. In the centre of
+this square stands an equestrian statue of General Andrew Jackson, by
+Clark Mills, originally contracted for by the friends and admirers of
+the General composing the Jackson Monument Association, who subscribed
+twelve thousand dollars towards its erection. Congress afterward granted
+them the brass guns and mortars captured by General Jackson at
+Pensacola. In 1850 an additional donation of guns was made; in 1852
+another appropriation sufficient to complete the work was granted, and
+Congress assumed possession of the monument. The figure of the horse is
+weighted and poised without the aid of rods, as in the celebrated
+statues of Peter the Great, at St. Petersburg, and Charles I., at
+London. This was the first application of the principle, and resulted in
+the production of one of the most graceful and astonishingly beautiful
+works of its kind in existence. The statue is of colossal size, weighing
+fifteen tons, and was erected at a cost of $50,000.
+
+_Scott Square_, lying north of the White House, contains a bronze statue
+of General Winfield Scott, made of cannon captured by the General during
+his Mexican campaign, and donated by Congress in 1867. The work was
+executed by Brown, of New York; with the pedestal, it is twenty-nine
+feet high, and cost $20,000. The General is represented in full uniform,
+mounted on his war-horse, surveying the field of battle.
+
+The _Circle of Victory_, at the intersection of Massachusetts and
+Vermont avenues, contains a bronze equestrian statue of General George
+H. Thomas, of the Army of the Cumberland. The statue confronts the
+South, in the direction of the General's native hills of Virginia. On
+the site of this monument a salute of eight hundred guns was fired in
+commemoration of the capture of Petersburg and Richmond on the third of
+April, 1865; and, a few days later, five hundred guns were fired from
+the same spot in honor of General Lee's surrender and the fall of the
+Southern Confederacy.
+
+On East Capitol street, at a distance of about one mile from the
+Capitol, is a square comprising six and a half acres, beautifully laid
+out and adorned with trees, shrubbery and walks. In this enclosure a
+bronze group called _Emancipation_ has been erected; Abraham Lincoln is
+represented holding in his right hand the proclamation which gave
+freedom to the negroes of the South. A slave kneels at his feet, with
+manacles broken, and in the act of rising as they fall from his hands.
+This monument is said to have been built exclusively of funds
+contributed by the negroes liberated by Lincoln's proclamation of
+January first, 1863. The first contribution of five hundred dollars was
+made, it is stated, by Charlotte Scott, formerly a slave in Virginia,
+out of her first earnings as a freed-woman, and consecrated by her, on
+hearing of President Lincoln's death, to aid in building a monument to
+his memory. The interesting memorial was unveiled with appropriate
+ceremonies, on the anniversary of his assassination, April fourteenth,
+1876, the President and his Cabinet, foreign ministers, and a vast
+concourse of white and colored citizens being present. Including the
+pedestal of Virginia granite, the structure is twenty-two feet in
+height, and cost $20,000. It was in this square, now called _Lincoln
+Square_, that, according to the founder's original plan of
+embellishment, a grand _Historic Column_ was to have been erected, to
+serve as an itinerary column, from which all geographical distances
+within the boundaries of the United States should be calculated.
+
+_McPherson Square_, on Vermont avenue, contains a bronze equestrian
+statue of General James Birdseye McPherson, who was killed near Atlanta,
+at the head of the Army of the Tennessee, in 1864. He is represented in
+full uniform, with field-glasses in hand, surveying the battle-ground. A
+vault was constructed beneath the statue, for the purpose of receiving
+his body, but the devoted opposition of the people prevented its removal
+from his native place.
+
+Farragut and Rawlins squares contain respectively colossal, but not
+equestrian statues of Admiral Farragut and General Rawlins.
+
+Mount Vernon Place, at the intersection of New York and Massachusetts
+avenues, is handsomely laid out and planted with trees; in the centre,
+occupying an elevated circular space, is a superb fountain of bronze.
+
+There are numerous smaller spaces at the intersection of various streets
+and avenues, called triangular reservations, all of which are highly
+adorned with trees, shrubs and beautiful small fountains.
+
+The Government Propagating Gardens cover an area of eighty acres on the
+banks of the Potomac, south of Washington's Monument. The Botanical
+Garden, an instructive place of public resort, lies at the foot of
+Capitol Hill, between Pennsylvania and Maryland avenues. North of the
+Conservatory is found the Bartholdi Fountain, which is supplied with
+water from the aqueduct, its highest stream reaching an altitude of
+sixty-five feet. This fountain is the work of Frederic Augustus
+Bartholdi, a French sculptor and pupil of Scheffer. It will be
+remembered by all who visited the National Centennial Exposition at
+Philadelphia, where it was exhibited, and afterward purchased by
+Congress for the inadequate sum of six thousand dollars. The lower basin
+is twenty-six feet in diameter, and from its centre rises a pedestal
+bearing aquatic monsters and fishes spouting water; three female
+caryatides, eleven feet high, support a basin thirteen feet in diameter;
+a smaller basin above this is upheld by three infant Tritons, the whole
+being surmounted by a mural crown. Twelve lamps, arranged around the
+lower basin, and lighted by electricity, give the most beautiful effects
+of light and water. On the plaza in front of the Treasury Department, is
+another fine fountain, in the form of an immense granite urn, the
+_tassa_ of which measures sixteen feet in diameter.
+
+Immediately in front of Washington city the Potomac expands into a
+broad, lake-like body of water, a mile and a quarter wide and at least
+eighteen feet deep. The Anacostia River, at its mouth, is almost the
+same width and fully as deep. Improving the navigation of the Potomac
+and the construction of a canal to the head waters of the Ohio River,
+were enterprises that began with the founding of the National Capital.
+
+In 1872, Congress appointed a board of officers with a view to the
+improvement of the channel of the river and water fronts of Washington
+and Georgetown, for commercial purposes, as well as the reclamation of
+the malaria-infected marshes opposite the city. These improvements will
+necessitate the rebuilding of Long Bridge for railroad and ordinary
+traveling purposes, and reclaim more than a thousand acres of valuable
+land. It is proposed to remove the National Observatory and use the
+earth for filling up the marshes.
+
+The _Navy Yard Bridge_ crosses the Anacostia River, at the foot of
+Eleventh street, having supplanted the wooden structure built in 1819,
+over which Booth made his escape after the assassination of Lincoln.
+
+The various buildings occupied by the Executive and Legislative branches
+of the Government are worthy of especial notice. The _Capitol_ is
+considered one of the largest and finest edifices of the kind in the
+world, and in point of durability of structure and costliness of
+material, it certainly has no superior. It stands on the west side of
+Capitol Hill, very near the centre of the city, and one mile distant
+from the Potomac River. The main or central building is three hundred
+and fifty two feet in length, with two wings or extensions, each having
+a front of one hundred and forty-three feet on the east and west, and a
+depth of two hundred and thirty-nine feet along the north and south
+_façades_, exclusive of the porticoes. The entire length of this great
+edifice is seven hundred and fifty feet; its greatest depth three
+hundred and twenty-four feet; the ground plan covering three and a half
+acres.
+
+The central and original Capitol building is of freestone, taken from
+the Government quarries at Aquia Creek, forty miles below the city,
+which were purchased for that purpose, by the Commissioners, in 1791.
+This building is now painted white, to correspond with the extensions,
+columns and porticoes of white marble. From the centre rises the great
+dome, designed by Walter, to replace the original one removed in 1856,
+after the additions to the building had rendered it out of proportion.
+The apex is surmounted by a lantern fifty feet high, surrounded by a
+peristyle, and crowned by the bronze statue of Freedom executed by
+Crawford in 1865. The height from the base line to the crest of this
+statue is three hundred and eight feet, making the dome of the Capitol
+rank fifth in height with the greatest structures of the kind in Europe.
+
+The great dome is visible from every elevated point in the District for
+miles around, and from its windows, as far as the eye can reach, is
+extended a panorama of wooded hills, beautiful valleys, with the
+majestic cloud-capped spurs of the Blue Ridge raising their lofty heads
+in the distance. The eastern façade of the building looks out upon the
+extended plain of Capitol Hill, with its background of green hills
+reaching far beyond the Anacostia. On the north a broad valley extends,
+until it unites with the encircling hills of the city; on the south the
+majestic Potomac and Anacostia rivers are seen to meet and mingle their
+placid waters; while from the west are beheld the lawns and groves of
+the Botanic Garden, the Mall, and handsome grounds of the President's
+house, with Georgetown Heights and the glittering domes of the
+Observatory in the distance.
+
+The main entrance, from the grand portico into the rotunda is filled by
+the celebrated bronze door modeled by Rogers, in Rome, 1858, and cast in
+bronze at Munich, by Miller, in 1860. On the panels of this door are
+portrayed, in _alto relievo_, the principal events in the life of
+Christopher Columbus, and the discovery of America. The key of the arch
+is adorned with a fine head of the great navigator; in the four corners
+of the casing are statuettes, representing Asia, Africa, Europe and
+America, with a border in relief of ancient armor, banners and heraldic
+designs emblematic of navigation and conquest. Bordering each leaf on
+the door are statuettes, sixteen in number, of his patrons and
+contemporaries; the nine panels bear _alto relievo_ illustrations of the
+principal events in his life; while between the panels are a series of
+heads, representing the historians of the great discoverer and his
+followers. Altogether, this justly celebrated bronze door, besides being
+wonderful as a work of art, constitutes in itself a small volume of the
+most interesting and important events belonging to the history of our
+country.
+
+ [Illustration: EAST FRONT OF CAPITOL AT WASHINGTON.]
+
+The rotunda into which the door leads is embellished with eight large
+historical paintings, by different artists. Four of these were executed
+by Trumbell, who served as aid-de-camp to Washington in 1775, and
+reproduced in his figures the likenesses of the actors in the scenes
+portrayed. In arranging the characters for the "Declaration of
+Independence," in which the Congress of 1776 is represented in the act
+of signing that great instrument of American liberty, the artist
+conferred with Jefferson, the Author of the Declaration, and John Adams,
+both of whom were present and signers. The individual costumes, the
+furniture, and the hall itself, are represented with scrupulous
+fidelity, all of which tends to increase the interest inspired by this
+painting.
+
+The _National Library_ was founded by act of Congress in 1800, and the
+following year, after the report of John Randolph, of Roanoke, had been
+submitted, setting forth the necessity for further legislation on the
+subject, a second act was passed, which placed it on a permanent basis.
+The number of volumes first contained in the library was three thousand,
+but appropriations were annually made by Congress to increase the
+number. In 1814 the Capitol was burned by the British, and the library
+destroyed; a few months later, Thomas Jefferson offered the Government
+his private collection of 6,700 volumes, among which were many rare and
+valuable works obtained in Europe, and these were purchased for the sum
+of $23,950. In 1866 the Smithsonian Library, containing forty thousand
+volumes, was added, and a year later, the _Peter Force_ collection was
+purchased by Congress, for $100,000; constant additions have increased
+the number, until the library now contains nearly four hundred thousand
+bound volumes, and one hundred thousand pamphlets. It is enriched also
+by journals, manuscripts, and maps relating to the history and
+topography of the country; in respect to the latter, being only
+approached by the library in the British Museum. The Library halls
+occupy the principal floor of the entire west projection of the Capitol.
+
+In the _Vice President's Room_ hangs the original painting of
+Washington, taken from life by Rembrandt Peale, and purchased by the
+Government in 1832, for the sum of two thousand dollars.
+
+The _Senate Reception Room_ is a beautiful and brilliant apartment,
+about sixty feet in length, with its vaulted and arched ceiling, divided
+into four sections, adorned with allegorical frescoes of _Prudence_,
+_Justice_, _Temperance_ and _Strength_, executed by Brumidi, in 1856.
+The ceiling is heavily gilded throughout; the walls finished in stucco
+and gilt, with a base of Scagliola, imitating the marbles of Potomac and
+Tennessee. A finely executed fresco, in oil, by Brumidi, adorns the
+south wall, representing Washington in consultation with Jefferson and
+Hamilton, his Secretaries of State and Treasury.
+
+The _President's Boom_ is an equally magnificent apartment, with groined
+arches embellished with numerous allegorical figures in fresco, the
+decoration, by Brumidi, being, in general design, the same as in the
+private audience chamber of the Vatican at Rome. The work throughout is
+very fine, being richly decorated with arabesques on a groundwork of
+gilt; the luxurious furniture of the apartment is entirely in keeping
+with this high order of artistic finish.
+
+The old _Hall of the House of Representatives_ is a magnificent
+apartment, designed and planned after the theatre at Athens, with
+fourteen Corinthian columns of variegated marble, forming a circular
+colonnade on the north. The bases of these columns are of freestone, the
+capitals of Carrara marble, designed and executed in Italy, after those
+in the temple of Jupiter Stator, at Rome; the paneled dome overhead is
+similar to that of the Pantheon. This venerable apartment was occupied
+by the House of Representatives for thirty-two years; its atmosphere
+must, in consequence, ever continue redolent with historic associations.
+On its walls, in the old days, hung the full-length portraits of
+Washington and Lafayette, presented by the latter on his last visit to
+this country; and the exact spot is pointed out where stood the desk of
+the venerable Ex-President, John Quincy Adams, when that aged patriot
+and senator was stricken by death. When, on the completion of the new,
+the old Hall was abandoned, in 1857, it was set apart, by Congress, as a
+_National Statuary Gallery_, and the President authorized to invite the
+different States to contribute statues, in bronze or marble, of such
+among their distinguished citizens as they might especially desire to
+honor, the number being limited to two from each State. These
+contributions have been coming in slowly from year to year, besides
+which, many valuable statues and paintings have been purchased and
+added, by the Government.
+
+The new _Hall of Representatives_ is said to be the finest in the world;
+its length being one hundred and thirty-nine feet, width ninety-three,
+and height thirty-six feet, while the galleries will seat twenty-five
+hundred persons. The ceiling is of cast-iron, with panels gilded and
+filled with stained-glass centres, on which are represented the
+coat-of-arms of each of the different States. The walls are adorned with
+valuable historical paintings and frescoes.
+
+The _Supreme Court Room_, formerly the old United States Senate Chamber,
+is a semicircular apartment, seventy-five feet in diameter; its height
+and greatest width being forty-five feet. The ceiling is formed by a
+flattened dome, ornamented with square caissons in stucco, with
+apertures for the admission of light. Supporting a gallery back of the
+Judges' seats extends a row of Ionic columns of Potomac marble, with
+capitals of white Italian marble, modeled after those in the Temple of
+Minerva. Along the western wall are marble brackets, each supporting the
+bust of a deceased Chief Justice.
+
+When occupied by the Senate, the Hall contained desks for sixty-four
+Senators. It was in this chamber that the Nation's purest and most
+profound statesmen assembled, and the great "Immortal Trio," Clay,
+Webster and Calhoun, made those wonderful forensic efforts which gave
+their names forever to fame and the admiration of posterity.
+
+The _New Senate Chamber_, first occupied in 1859, is a magnificent
+apartment, belonging to the new extension of the Capitol, one hundred
+and thirteen feet in length by eighty feet in width, and thirty-six feet
+high. The Senators' desks are constructed of mahogany, and arranged in
+concentric semicircles around the apartment. The galleries rise and
+recede in tiers to the corridors of the second floor, and are capable of
+seating twelve thousand people.
+
+Immense iron girders and transverse pieces compose the ceiling, forming
+deep panels, each glazed with a symbolic centre piece; the walls are
+richly painted, the doors elaborately finished with bronze ornaments.
+From the lobby we pass into the _Senate Retiring Room_, handsomely
+furnished, and said to be the finest apartment of the kind in the world.
+The ceiling is composed of massive blocks of polished white marble,
+which form deep panels, resting upon four Corinthian columns, also of
+white Italian marble. Highly polished Tennessee marble lines the entire
+walls, in the panels of which are placed immense plate glass mirrors,
+enhancing the brilliancy and already striking effect of the whole.
+
+The limits of this chapter will not admit of further description of the
+numerous apartments gorgeously furnished; the palatial corridors
+beautifully designed; magnificent vestibules with fluted columns of
+marble; richly gilt paneled ceilings and tinted walls; grand stairways
+of marble and bronze, with the statues, busts, paintings and bronzes,
+which enrich the Capitol, many of them being masterpieces of art, and
+none devoid of merit. A detailed account of all would fill a small
+volume; we are compelled, therefore, to reluctantly leave the subject,
+and proceed to the description of the Public Buildings.
+
+The _President's House_ is situated in the western part of the city,
+distant one and a half miles from the Capitol. A premium of five hundred
+dollars was awarded James Hoban, architect, of South Carolina, for the
+plan, and the corner stone laid, with Masonic honors, October
+thirteenth, 1792. John Adams was the first presidential occupant; he
+took possession during the month of November, 1800, after the Government
+offices had been removed to Washington. This building was burned by the
+British in 1814; the following year Congress authorized its restoration,
+committing the work to the original architect, Hoban, by whom it was
+completed in 1826, in all its details. It is built of freestone, one
+hundred and seventy feet in length, eighty-six in width, with grand
+porticoes on the north and south fronts, supported by Ionic columns. The
+main entrance is on the north, by a spacious vestibule handsomely
+frescoed. The _Blue Room_, in which the President receives, on both
+public and private occasions, is an oval-shaped apartment, finished in
+blue and gilt, with draperies and furniture of blue damask.
+Communicating with this is a second parlor called the _Green Room_, from
+the prevailing color of the furniture and hangings. In this apartment
+are found the portraits of Presidents Madison, Monroe, Harrison and
+Taylor. _The East Room_, which closes the suite, is a truly royal
+apartment, magnificently decorated in a style purely Grecian, the
+ceiling frescoed in oil, mantles of exquisite wood carving, immense
+mirrors in magnificent frames, with the richest furniture, and window
+drapery of the costliest lace and damask. A full length portrait of
+Washington adorns this apartment, purchased by Congress in 1803. When
+the Capitol was burned, in 1814, this painting was rescued from
+destruction by Mrs. Madison, who had it removed from the frame and
+carried to a place of safety. A portrait of Martha, the wife of
+Washington, also hangs in this room, painted by Andrews in 1878.
+
+The numerous other apartments in the President's House exhibit the same
+lavish style of adorning, the furniture being constantly changed and
+renewed; but the vandal spirit of _change_ has not, as yet, dared to lay
+its sacrilegious hand upon or to alter the construction of the house,
+which remains the same as when, almost a century ago, it was first
+occupied by the elder President Adams. It is not difficult, therefore,
+to evoke the spirit of the past while standing among these ancient
+apartments, halls and corridors, and behold in fancy the long line of
+true statesmen, incorruptible patriots and noble men, who have
+successively lived and moved among them, in the early days of the
+Republic. And it is to be devoutly hoped that the vanity and caprice of
+the rulers who, in these later years, are being cast into high places,
+will not prevail in the effort to have this venerable home of the
+Presidents, hallowed by the memories of the nation's past, cast aside,
+and another building, modern and meaningless, substituted in its stead.
+
+Immediately west of the President's House stands the _Department of
+State, War and Navy_, a vast and imposing structure in the Doric style,
+combining the massive proportions of the ancient with the elegance of
+modern architecture. The Diplomatic Reception Room is a magnificent
+apartment, decorated and furnished in the most sumptuous manner, with
+ebonized woods and gold brocade, after the Germanized Egyptian style.
+The portraits of Daniel Webster and Lord Ashburton, by Healy (purchased
+by Congress from the widow of Fletcher Webster, 1879), adorn the walls,
+and over the mantels are busts, in bronze, of Washington and Lafayette.
+In the Diplomatic Ante-room is seen a full-length portrait of the Bey of
+Tunis, sent by special envoy in 1865, with a letter of condolence to the
+Government, on the death of Lincoln. Above this apartment is the
+library, containing a valuable collection of works on diplomacy, and
+many objects of interest, including the original draft of the
+Declaration of Independence, with the desk on which it was written,
+presented to the Government by the heirs of James Coolidge, of
+Massachusetts, to whom it was presented by Thomas Jefferson. The
+original document, _signed_, is also here, together with the sword of
+Washington, purchased by Congress in 1880, and his commission as
+Commander-in-Chief; the staff of Franklin; original drafts of the laws
+of the United States, the Federal Constitution, and other valuable and
+interesting historic documents, from the foundation of the Government.
+The entire building contains one hundred and fifty apartments, and cost
+five million dollars.
+
+The _Treasury Department_ is situated east of the President's House; it
+presents a most classic appearance, with its three stories in the pure
+Ionic style of architecture, upon a basement of rustic work, surmounted
+by an attic and balustrade. It has four fronts and principal entrances;
+the western front, consisting of a colonnade, after the style of the
+temple of Minerva, at Athens, is three hundred and thirty-six feet long,
+with thirty Ionic columns, and recessed porticoes on either end. This
+building contains the vaults in which the current funds and National
+Bank bonds of the Government are kept. The Secretary's office is a
+beautiful apartment, on the second floor. The walls being formed of
+various kinds of highly polished marble. This building contains two
+hundred apartments, exclusive of the basement and attic, and cost six
+million dollars.
+
+ [Illustration: STATE, WAR AND NAVY DEPARTMENTS, WASHINGTON, D. C.]
+
+The _Bureau of Engraving and Printing_, a branch of the Treasury
+Department, occupies a separate building, recently erected, at a cost of
+three hundred thousand dollars. It is a handsome structure, of pressed
+brick, in the Romanesque style, is entirely fireproof, and situated
+between the Agricultural Department and the Washington Monument.
+
+The _Patent Office_, an immense building covering two squares, or two
+and three-fourths acres of ground (which in the original plan of the
+city had been set apart for the erection of a National Mausoleum, or
+church), is in the Doric style of architecture, after the Parthenon at
+Athens, and impresses all who behold it with the grandeur of its
+proportions. The Museum of Models, a collection of inventions, both
+native and foreign, patented by the Government, occupies the four
+immense halls on the second floor, and contains upwards of one hundred
+and fifty-five thousand models, which have accumulated since the fire of
+1836. In December, of that year, the old building was destroyed,
+containing four thousand models, the accumulation of half a century. But
+for this calamity, the progress of mechanical arts in the United States
+could be traced back to the foundation of the Government. The south Hall
+of the Museum is a magnificent apartment, two hundred and forty-two feet
+long, sixty-three feet wide, and thirty feet high, decorated in the
+Pompeiian style, the entire structure of the room being in solid
+masonry. Among the historical relics contained here, are the uniform of
+Washington, worn at the time he resigned his commission, and his sword,
+secretary, compass, and sleeping tent, with camp utensils for cooking,
+etc. The number and variety of models contained in these four large
+halls are almost bewildering, and afford material for hours of study.
+The cost of this immense structure was two million, seven hundred
+thousand, but the entire sum has been principally liquidated by the
+surplus funds received, which annually amount to at least two hundred
+thousand dollars.
+
+The _General Post Office_ building is immediately opposite the Patent
+Office; it is a most imposing edifice, constructed of white marble, from
+the quarries of New York, and was built--the portion fronting on E
+street--in 1839. The northern half of the square was afterward purchased
+by the Government, and the extension begun in 1855; the building, as now
+completed, being three hundred feet in length, by two hundred and four
+in depth, with a large courtyard in the centre, entered on the west
+front by a carriage way, where the mails are received and sent out.
+Above the basement, on every side of this noble structure, arise
+monolithic columns and pilasters, surmounted by handsomely wrought
+capitals, upon which rests a paneled cornice. The main entrance is
+adorned with Doric columns, and the ceiling, walls and floor finished
+with white marble. In the office of the Postmaster-General is a fine
+collection of photographs and crayons of those who have filled this
+position since the appointment of Samuel Osgood, by Washington, in 1789.
+The cost of this building was one million seven hundred thousand
+dollars.
+
+The _Agricultural Building_ is a large and handsome structure, built of
+pressed brick, in the _renaissance_ style of architecture, with
+trimmings of brown stone. Immediately in front of the house is a flower
+garden, beautifully laid out, and planted with an almost countless
+variety of flowers; the remaining grounds adjacent to the building have
+been laid out as an _arboreture_, with walks and drives winding through
+forests of trees and shrubs, all of which have been planted according to
+the strictest botanical rules. The experimental grounds, occupying ten
+acres in the rear of the house, contain artificial lakes, rivers and
+swamps, for the cultivation of water and marsh plants. The building is
+handsomely finished and the various apartments and offices elegantly
+furnished, including a handsome library, thoroughly equipped laboratory,
+and an _Agricultural Museum_, which occupies the main building, and is
+replete with objects of interest and beauty too numerous to admit of
+description. The _Plant Houses_ are immense conservatories, in which the
+fruits and flowers of every clime and country may be found _growing_.
+The main structure is three hundred and twenty feet long, by thirty
+wide, with a projecting wing giving one hundred and fifty feet
+additional. On the north bank of the Potomac is the _Naval Observatory_,
+one of the principal astronomical establishments in the world. The
+Observatory was founded in 1842, the location being selected by
+President Tyler. The site had been called "University Square," from the
+fact that it had been the cherished intention of Washington, from the
+foundation of the city, to urge the erection upon this spot of a
+_National University_. The central building of the Observatory was
+completed in 1844--a two-story building, with wings, and surmounted by a
+dome. The great telescope, purchased in 1873, cost forty-seven thousand
+dollars, and is the most powerful instrument in the world, the
+refracting glass being twenty-six inches; the focal length thirty-two
+and a half feet. The library contains six thousand volumes, a number of
+them very rare, dating back to 1482.
+
+The _Army Medical Museum_ was formerly Ford's Theatre, in which
+President Lincoln was assassinated on the fourteenth of April, 1865. The
+building was purchased a year later, by Congress, remodeled and
+converted to its present use. No trace has been left to indicate the
+exact location of the murder. The Chemical Laboratory, on the first
+floor, was the restaurant in which Booth took his last drink; among the
+relics and curiosities is a portion of the vertebrae taken from the neck
+of the assassin. The first floor is occupied by the record and pension
+division of the Surgeon General's office, and upon the registers are
+inscribed the names of three hundred thousand of the _dead_. The Museum
+is on the third floor, and contains about sixteen thousand medical,
+surgical, and anatomical specimens.
+
+The _Government Printing Office_ is a large four-story building, in
+which the printing of the two Houses of Congress and other Departments
+is done. In 1794 an appropriation of ten thousand dollars was made, and
+sufficed, for "firewood, stationery and printing; the amount required at
+the present time to meet the expenses of this department is two million
+five hundred thousand dollars per annum, showing the rapid advance of
+the country, in extent, population, and the prodigality of its
+representatives as well.
+
+The _United States Barracks_, formerly the _Arsenal_, is situated at the
+extreme southern point of the city. A Government Penitentiary was
+erected on the grounds in 1826; in one of the lower cells was buried
+the body of Booth, and afterward those of the other conspirators. The
+Penitentiary was taken down in 1869, at which time the family of Booth
+was permitted to remove his body to Baltimore, where it was interred in
+the family burial lot at Druid Hill, the grave remaining unmarked. In
+front of the old buildings, the grounds, since the war, have been
+beautifully laid out, and contain a number of cannon captured by the
+Government forces in different conflicts. There is a brass gun with a
+ball shot into its muzzle at the battle of Gettysburg, and two captured
+Blakely guns, one of which bears the inscription: "Presented to the
+Sovereign State of South Carolina, by one of her citizens residing
+abroad, in commemoration of the twentieth of December, 1860." There are
+also British, French, and Mexican cannon, captured from those nations,
+some of them dated as far back as 1756.
+
+On the Anacostia, three-fourths of a mile from the Capitol, is the _Navy
+Yard_, formally established by act of Congress in 1804, and in those
+early days standing unrivaled, as it sent out such famous vessels as the
+Wasp, Argus, and Viper; and frigates, carrying 44 guns each, were built
+in its shops. But the gradual filling up of the channel in which ships
+of the line formerly anchored, and the increased facilities of other
+later established stations, have deprived the old yard of its importance
+as a naval constructing port, although it is still one of the most
+important for the manufacture of supplies. The _Marine Barracks_,
+organized in 1798, are but a short distance from the Navy Yard gate; the
+building is seven hundred feet in length, with accommodations for two
+hundred men. The Barracks were burned by the British in 1814, but were
+at once rebuilt.
+
+The _Smithsonian Institute_, by name, is generally familiar, while
+comparatively few are acquainted with its origin, the design of its
+founder, his antecedents or history, all of which are peculiarly
+interesting, and deserving of a more extended notice than our sketch
+will permit. James Smithson was an Englishman, the son of the first Duke
+of Northumberland, and a grand nephew, on his mother's side, of Charles,
+the proud Duke of Somerset. Whether or not any secret romance was
+connected with his life, we are not informed; all that is known is, that
+he devoted himself to literature and science, was never married, and
+died at Genoa, Italy, in 1828, bequeathing his fortune to his nephew,
+Henry James Hungerford, during life; at his death to become the property
+of the United States; in the language of the will, "To found, at
+Washington, under the name of the Smithsonian Institute, an
+establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men."
+The Government accepted the bequest, which was at its disposal as early
+as 1836, and the original fund, of upwards of five hundred and fifteen
+thousand dollars, was deposited in the Treasury. A little more than ten
+years later the Smithsonian Institute was organized, a board of Regents
+appointed, and the corner-stone laid, with masonic ceremonies, May the
+first, 1847. The building was completed in 1856, the accrued interest
+being mere than sufficient to cover all the expenses of its erection,
+and leaving a permanent fund of six hundred and fifty thousand dollars
+in the Treasury for its future maintenance. In less than a year after
+the close of the war the main building was partially destroyed by fire,
+together with the papers and reports of the Institute, and the personal
+effects of its founder. It was immediately restored, however; but the
+Library, comprising a large collection of valuable scientific works, was
+removed to the Capitol. It would seem that this immense building, so
+generously endowed, could, and should, be made to advance "the increase
+and diffusion of knowledge among men," in a more direct and individual
+manner, by being devoted to educational purposes. But further than its
+use in conducting exchanges between the Government and scientific bodies
+at home and abroad, and the care of the National Museum, the Smithsonian
+Institute has contributed nothing toward "the advancement of knowledge
+among men," and those, generally, of the country whom it was especially
+intended to benefit.
+
+The _National Museum_, completed in 1879, is situated a very short
+distance east of the Institute, and covers nearly two and a half acres
+of ground. It is a handsome structure, of the modernized Romanesque
+style of architecture; having four entrances and eight lofty towers; the
+principal entrance being approached by granite steps, thirty-seven feet
+wide, to a richly tiled platform. Above the inscription plate on the
+globe of the nave, is an allegorical group representing Columbia as the
+patroness of Science and Industry. The whole is surmounted by a dome;
+the windows filled with double glass imported from Belgium; in fine, the
+entire building is externally and internally complete, being finished
+and furnished in the most costly and elegant manner. The large
+collections of the Museum in the Smithsonian Institute, are to be
+divided; objects of purely natural history being alone kept in the
+Institute, the second floor of which will be devoted to archćology,
+including the antiquities of the "Stone Age."
+
+South of the President's House, and but a short distance from the stone
+which marks the centre of the District stands the National Monument to
+the Father of his Country, designed by Mills. It was completed on
+Saturday, December sixth, 1884, by the setting of its marble cap-stone.
+The idea of this National Monument took definite shape in 1833, when the
+_Washington National Monument Association_ was organized, composed of
+some of the most distinguished men of the country. The design was to
+build it by means of popular subscriptions, of individual sums, not to
+exceed one dollar each. In 1847 the collections amounted to $87,000, and
+with this sum it was determined to begin the work. On the Fourth of
+July, 1848 the corner stone of the monument was laid; in 1854, the funds
+of the _National Monument Association_ were exhausted. The structure had
+then reached a height of one hundred and seventy feet, and during the
+succeeding twenty-four years only four feet were added to its altitude.
+August twenty-second, 1876, Congress passed an Act, creating a
+commission for its completion, and made the necessary appropriation,
+which was to be continued annually. Before resuming work on the
+monument, it was deemed best to strengthen the foundation by placing
+under the shaft an additional mass of concrete, one hundred and
+twenty-three feet, three inches beyond the old foundation. The weight of
+the mass then worked under was 32,176 tons. The total pressure on the
+foundation as it now stands is 80,378 tons.
+
+The monument is a marble obelisk, the marble having been brought from
+the quarries of the Beaver Dam Marble Company, Baltimore County,
+Maryland. The shaft, from the floor, is 555 feet, 4 inches high, being
+thirty feet, five inches higher than the spires of the great cathedral
+of Cologne. The present foundation is thirty-six feet, eight inches
+deep, making an aggregate height, from the bed of the foundation, of 592
+feet, the loftiest work of ancient or modern times. The walls of the
+obelisk, at its base, are over fifteen feet thick, and at the 500 feet
+mark, where the pyramidal top begins, eighteen inches thick. The total
+cost of the monument has been $1,130,000. Within the obelisk is an
+elevator and a stairway. On the latter there are nine hundred steps, and
+about twenty minutes are required to make the descent.
+
+The _Corcoran Art Gallery_ is one of the most interesting and valued
+institutions belonging to the National Capitol, and the last that our
+limits will permit being described at length. The building stands on the
+corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street, and is constructed
+of brick, in the Renaissance style of architecture, finished with
+freestone ornaments and a variety of beautiful carving. On the avenue
+front are four statues, in Carrara marble, executed by Ezekiel, in Rome,
+of _Phidias_, _Raphael_, _Michael Angelo_, and _Albert Durer_,
+representing respectively, sculpture, painting, architecture and
+engraving. In the vestibules and corridors are casts of ancient _bas
+reliefs_, with numerous antique busts and statues in marble. The _Hall
+of Bronzes_ contains a very large and interesting collection of bronzes,
+armor, ceramic ware, etc. The Hall of _Antique Sculpture_, almost one
+hundred feet in length, contains casts of the most celebrated specimens
+of ancient sculpture. The _Main Picture Gallery_ is also nearly one
+hundred feet long and fifty feet wide, with a collection of paintings
+ranking among the first of this country, and more than one hundred and
+fifteen in number. The _Octagon Chamber_ contains the original Greek
+Slave, by Powers. In the _East Gallery_ is displayed a valuable
+collection of portraits of distinguished Americans, painted by the best
+native artists; in the _West Gallery_, is a large number of paintings,
+historical, landscape and other subjects.
+
+The _Corcoran Art Gallery_ was presented to the city and country by W.
+W. Corcoran, Esq., in 1869. This magnificent gift, including the donor's
+private collection of paintings and statuary, cost three hundred and
+fifty thousand dollars, to which he added an endowment fund of nine
+hundred thousand dollars more. Mr. Corcoran has also erected and
+elegantly furnished, a large and beautiful building, called the _Louise
+Home_, at a cost of two hundred thousand dollars, with an endowment fund
+of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. _The Home_, the only
+institution of its kind in the entire country, is an asylum for ladies
+of education and refinement who have been reduced in fortune. The house
+is furnished in a style of subdued elegance, with every luxury and
+convenience to be found in the best appointed private residence; while
+the ladies are waited upon and treated with the same attention and
+respect as if they were each paying an extravagant rate of board. There
+are ample accommodations for fifty-five ladies, who must have reached
+the age of fifty-years, as a general rule, and who make their
+application for admission in writing. There is _no charge_ for
+admission, nor expense of any kind, nor _limit_ to the time of remaining
+at the _Louise Home_. This beautiful institution, in which charity is
+bestowed in so refined and delicate, yet magnificent a manner, has been
+erected and endowed by the Founder _in memoriam_ of a beloved wife and
+only daughter and child. It is but due to this great philanthropist, to
+mention here, that in addition to his gifts named above, the _National
+Medical College, of Columbian University_, was his gift, in 1864, and
+cost forty thousand dollars. The original grounds of _Oak Hill
+Cemetery_, comprising ten acres, were also donated by him, together with
+an endowment fund of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars; the
+grounds were incorporated by Congress in 1840. It were fortunate for
+mankind if the number of such benefactors were greater, and the wisdom
+displayed by Mr. Corcoran oftener imitated by the rich, who, if they
+_give_, permit their good deeds only "_to live after them_," instead of
+planning, and directing with their own hands, the schemes of benevolence
+they desire to inaugurate for the benefit of their unfortunate fellow
+beings.
+
+There are many places of historical interest that might be described, as
+well as numerous Halls, Colleges, Hospitals, etc., but the limits of
+this paper will not permit. We shall only refer to the _Government
+Hospital for the Insane_, situated at the junction of the Potomac and
+Anacostia rivers, and one of the finest and largest institutions of the
+kind in the world. It is seven hundred and fifty feet in length by two
+hundred deep, containing five hundred single rooms, and accommodations
+for more than nine hundred patients. The _Deaf and Dumb Asylum and
+College_ are also conspicuous among the Public Institutions, built in
+the pointed Gothic style, and costing the Government $350,000.
+
+During the late war Washington was converted into a vast fortress, and
+made the base of operations for the entire forces of the Union. The
+hills surrounding it were covered with the camps of soldiers, while its
+vast streets and avenues hourly echoed the tread of moving troops, and
+the heavy crushing roll of artillery. At the close of the contest the
+city was found to have risen high upon the wave of revolution; a new
+element had been infused into its population, and the march of
+improvement had begun. In ten years the number of inhabitants had
+increased fifty thousand. With the continuance of peace, and the spirit
+of improvement and progress remaining unchecked, it may reasonably be
+predicted and confidently anticipated, that the close of the Nineteenth
+Century will find the Capital City of this great Republic approaching in
+splendor and importance the realization of the proudest hope and dream
+of magnificence ever cherished in the hearts of its worthy founders, and
+in _itself_ a monument worthy of the immortal name of WASHINGTON.
+
+
+
+
+_TESTIMONIALS._
+
+COMMENDATIONS
+
+OF
+
+Peculiarities of American Cities.
+
+
+_Buffalo Sunday Times._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is the title of the latest work of
+Captain Willard Glazier, whose numerous books show great versatility and
+vivacity. The work before us contains sketches of thirty-nine of the
+principal cities of the United States and Canada. It is replete with
+interest. The pages are not filled with a mass of dry statistics or mere
+description, but record the personal observations of the author,
+detailed in an easy, familiar style.
+
+
+_Hamilton (Canada) Tribune._
+
+The "Peculiarities of American Cities" contains a chatty description of
+the leading American and Canadian cities. A bright, descriptive style
+gives piquancy to the work, which is a gazetteer without seeming to be
+so. The Canadian cities described are Montreal, Toronto, and Quebec, and
+the accounts given of them are accurate. This being so of our own land,
+the probability is strong that the accounts given of the American cities
+are so too.
+
+
+_Rock Island Union._
+
+Captain Willard Glazier, whose war stories have proved so attractive,
+has turned his attention to another field, and proved that he can write
+entertainingly while imparting information to his readers of permanent
+reference value. His new book is entitled "Peculiarities of American
+Cities," and embodies the results of his personal observations and
+studies in the leading towns of the country. There are thirty-nine
+chapters, and each one is devoted to a different city, and may be said
+to be complete in itself. The classification is alphabetical, beginning
+with Albany and ending with Washington. The descriptive work has been
+well and faithfully done, and the prominent features of each city have
+received especial attention. This is the special point of the work--to
+show the distinct peculiarities and characteristics of our cities--and
+the charm lies in the fact that every city is treated in accordance with
+its local color, instead of in a stereotyped manner, as is usually the
+case. The book is a valuable one, and should be perused and studied by
+old and young.
+
+
+_Detroit Journal._
+
+Under the title of "Peculiarities of American Cities," Captain Willard
+Glazier, the author of half a dozen successful volumes, has lately
+produced a very attractive book of nearly six hundred pages. It is
+written in a graceful style, as one would describe a trip through the
+country from East to West, including visits to the chief cities, and
+touching upon their most notable characteristics. The author gives his
+readers the salient and significant points, as they strike an observing
+man and a skilled writer, and in this he has been very successful.
+
+
+_Madison State Journal._
+
+Captain Glazier is a noted American traveler. His canoe trip down the
+Mississippi and his extended horseback tour through the States made him
+quite famous at the time. The volume before us presents the peculiar
+features, favorite resorts, and distinguishing characteristics of the
+leading cities of America, including Canada. The author launches into
+his subject with directness, treating them with perspicuity and in an
+easy, flowing, graphic style, presenting a series of most admirable pen
+pictures. The book is practically invaluable in households where there
+are children and youth.
+
+
+_Chicago Tribune._
+
+In this work Captain Glazier has entered upon a new field in literature,
+and his researches are at once unique and interesting. The first chapter
+opens with a visit to Albany, the quaint old Dutch city of the Hudson,
+and here at the outset the author discovers "peculiarities" without
+limit. Boston is next taken up, and then follow in succession
+thirty-seven of the leading cities of the United States and Canada. The
+book is a compendium of historical facts concerning the cities referred
+to which are not given in any other work with which we are acquainted,
+making this volume a valuable addition to any library.
+
+
+_Saginaw Courier._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a handsome and attractive volume,
+descriptive of the characteristics of many of the cities of North
+America, by one who seems to be thoroughly familiar with the subject,
+and who has developed an aptness in grasping the peculiarities of modern
+city life, as well as the power to graphically portray them. To those
+who may never be able to visit the places described, as well as to those
+who have seen them, the pen pictures will be both interesting and
+entertaining. The author gives his readers the salient and significant
+points as they strike an observant critic and a fascinating writer.
+
+
+_Racine Daily Times._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a work that will give to the
+person who has only money to stay at home an intelligent idea of how the
+great cities of the country look, and what their people do to gain a
+livelihood, and what objects of interest there are to be seen. Through
+the medium of this work one can wander through the streets of far-off
+places; he can watch the rush of the multitude and hear the roar of the
+industries that help to make our country the great land that it is. He
+can gaze upon the palaces of the rich or hurry through scenes where
+poverty is most pitiful and vice most hideous. It is a work that ought
+to be in every house.
+
+
+_Alton Democrat._
+
+One of the most entertaining books is "Peculiarities of American Cities"
+by Captain Willard Glazier, whose pen has enraptured thousands by
+descriptions of battle scenes and heroic adventures. The book is almost
+a necessity, as it familiarizes one with scenes in travel and history.
+The author has the faculty of making his readers see what he has seen
+and feel the impressions which he has felt in the view. The style is
+easy and flowing, not complicated and wearisome, The great cities are
+described in a way which makes the reader familiar with them--their
+history, society, manners, customs, and everything relating to their
+past, present, and future. The book will be a companion of many a
+leisure hour.
+
+
+_Buffalo Courier._
+
+The books written by Captain Willard Glazier have had a very wide,
+almost a phenomenal circulation; in myriads of volumes they have been
+distributed throughout the country. From the time when a very young man,
+and just after the war, in which he served, Captain Glazier published
+his first book, they have, until the one just out, been all founded on
+and descriptive of events and scenes of the Revolution and the
+Rebellion. Now, however, he has turned from the beaten path and taken an
+altogether different topic, as is clearly explained in the title of his
+new work, "Peculiarities of American Cities." There are thirty-nine
+chapters, in which as many different cities have their noteworthy
+characteristics set forth in a pleasing and very interesting style, with
+handsome illustrations.
+
+
+_Hamilton (Canada) Spectator._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a work by Captain Willard Glazier,
+who has earned some fame as a writer of books describing the incidents
+of the War of the Rebellion. The present work is a compilation of facts
+concerning thirty-nine of the principal cities of the continent,
+including Toronto, Quebec, and Montreal, and the information the work
+contains is brought down to recent date. The history, growth in
+commerce, progress in art and science, and architectural and physical
+characteristics of each city are treated of in a very interesting way.
+Few people who have traveled at all but have visited one or more of
+these cities, and will read the work with pleasure. Others will find it
+intensely interesting because it gives them in detail much they have
+often wanted to know of the cities of America.
+
+
+_New York Herald._
+
+The author talks of cities as he has seen them; describing their
+appearance, their public resorts, and the peculiarities which
+characterize them and their people. He leads the reader through the
+streets, into the public parks, museums, libraries, art galleries,
+churches, theatres, etc.; tells him of great business schemes, marts,
+and manufactories; sails to suburban pleasure resorts; describes the
+many avocations and ways of picking up a living which are peculiar to
+large cities and the phases of character in men and women which are to
+be found where men most do congregate. The book will prove to be an
+interesting and instructive one to those who have not seen the cities it
+describes, and interesting to those who have traveled as a review and
+comparison of views from an experienced traveler and chronicler.
+
+
+_Detroit Christian Herald._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" contains brief studies of the
+history, general features, and leading enterprises of thirty-nine cities
+of the United States and Canada. The author states in the preface that
+he has been a resident of one hundred cities, and feels qualified to
+write largely from personal observation and comparison. It is not a dry
+compendium of facts, but is enlivened by picturesque legends, striking
+incidents, and racy anecdotes. Though the author has attempted no
+exhaustive description of these prominent centres of interest, he has
+shown taste and judgment in selecting the things one would most like to
+know, and skill in weaving the facts into an entertaining form.
+
+
+_Davenport Democrat._
+
+This is the fifth of a readable series of popular books by the
+soldier-author, Captain Willard Glazier. Many readers have become
+familiar with "Soldiers of the Saddle," "Capture, Prison-pen, and
+Escape," "Battles for the Union," and "Heroes of Three Wars," and they
+will welcome the volume under notice as one of the most attractive of
+the list. Captain Glazier does not compile--he writes what he has seen.
+He has a trained eye, a facile pen, and a power of graphic description.
+"American Cities" is a work devoted to a pen-portraiture of thirty-nine
+cities, and those who have not or cannot visit these cities have in this
+book an easy and most fascinating way of acquainting themselves with
+their distinguishing characteristics. All readers ought to know
+something of our American cities, each of which has features peculiar to
+itself.
+
+
+_Syracuse Herald._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is the title of a new book by Captain
+Willard Glazier, author of "Soldiers of the Saddle," "Battles for the
+Union," and several other popular works. In its pages the favorite
+resorts, peculiar features, and distinguishing characteristics of the
+leading cities of America are described. Dry statistics are avoided, the
+facts which the general reader most desires being given in the style of
+graphic description for which the author is noted. The book not only
+contains a great deal of information in regard to America's principal
+cities as they exist to-day, but many important events in local history
+are cleverly worked in. The _Herald_ feels safe in commending this book
+as both instructive and entertaining. It will be read with interest by
+those who have "been there," and seen for themselves, as well as by
+those who can at most see only in imagination the places treated.
+
+
+_Indianapolis Educational Weekly._
+
+This book occupies a niche in the literature of the country peculiar to
+itself. It describes thirty-nine cities of America, including all the
+largest cities and some others which, though not quite so large, are
+rapidly growing, and seem destined to occupy positions of importance.
+Still other sketches possess peculiar interest for their historical
+associations. Of the latter class are the stories of Savannah,
+Charleston, and Richmond. It is said that Americans too often rush off
+to Europe without knowing that America possesses a Niagara Palls,
+Yosemite Valley, and Yellowstone National Park. The same may be said of
+our reading. Many books descriptive of European cities and places of
+interest are widely circulated and read. And if they are reliable they
+should be read. But America might, with profit, be studied more. This
+book offers a splendid opportunity to learn something of our American
+cities.
+
+
+_Altoona Times._
+
+The reader will find a great abundance of useful information contained
+in a small compass and very pleasantly imparted in Captain Glazier's
+"Peculiarities of American Cities." Those who have little time to gather
+their information from more extended sources will find this a valuable
+work that will supply a vacant place in their library. It is certainly a
+book very much in advance of the volumes of like import that from time
+to time our people have been solicited to buy.
+
+
+_Boston Transcript._
+
+Captain Glazier's style is particularly attractive, and the discursive,
+anecdotal way in which the author carries his readers over the
+continent, from one city to another, is charmingly interesting. He lands
+his reader, by the easiest method, in a city; and when he has got him
+there, strives to interest and make him happy by causing him to glean
+amusement and instruction from all he sees. Every page of the book is
+teeming with interest and information. Persons are made conversant with
+the chief characteristics and history of cities they may never hope to
+visit. The book has apparently been written principally for the purpose
+of presenting the truth about the various chief centres of trade in the
+country, and the writer has adopted a pleasant conversational style,
+more likely to leave the impression desired than all the histories and
+arid guide-books ever published. It is a delightful book, full of happy
+things.
+
+
+_Pittsburgh Sunday Globe._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities," by Willard Glazier, will be found
+disappointing to those who look for an ordinary re-hash of musty data
+about leading cities, as, aside from the numerous illustrations, which
+are far above the average book illustrations in accuracy, the work will
+be found to contain pleasantly written chapters on the industrial and
+social features of New York, Pittsburgh, Washington, Montreal, Portland,
+Savannah, Boston, Albany, Quebec, Omaha, Chicago, Buffalo, St. Louis,
+Hartford, Cleveland, Richmond, Providence, Baltimore, New Orleans, San
+Francisco, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, etc. The chapter on Pittsburgh
+embraces a summing up of its features as an iron, glass, and oil centre,
+while the descriptions of our people and the labor organizations,
+banking, and business interests are well-timed and as comprehensive as
+the limits of the work will permit. It will make a valuable addition to
+any library.
+
+
+_Fort Wayne Gazette._
+
+The author gives his views concerning the history, character, or
+"peculiarities" of some forty prominent American cities. The subject is
+an interesting one, familiarizing the reader with what belongs
+particularly to his own country. Persons may visit a place frequently,
+yet know nothing in regard to its history or the events connected with
+it which make the same memorable. Such matters have been carefully
+collected by the author and properly arranged into a systematic
+narrative. The chapters are exceedingly entertaining aside from the
+information they convey. The author has the ability to present what he
+wishes to communicate in an admirable way, and is tedious in nothing he
+has written. We know of no work on this subject from which so much that
+is valuable can be obtained in so concise a form. It is a book that will
+never weary or lose in interest, and can be placed in the library among
+the valuable works.
+
+
+_Milwaukee Sentinel._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a book rather unique in character,
+and may be said to occupy a place somewhere between the regular
+guide-book and the volume of travels. As people who stay at home are not
+generally given to reading guide-books, and as volumes of travel
+embracing the same route as that gone over by our author are not common,
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" fills a niche that has hitherto been
+vacant, and meets a want not before satisfied. The writer takes up the
+most important cities of the United States and Canada in alphabetical
+order, beginning with Albany and ending with Washington, and gives a
+more or less extended description of each, commencing usually with a
+slight historical outline, particularly where it would be of general
+interest, as in the case of Boston, but devoting the greater part of his
+space to the treatment of their present condition. The natural
+advantages of each place are considered, its commerce and manufactures
+discussed, its public parks and buildings described, and illustrations
+of a number of the latter given.
+
+
+_New York World._
+
+To become well acquainted with the principal cities of the Union is not
+a matter of secondary importance, but should be one of the first duties
+of an American citizen. It is at once a source of pleasure and profit to
+know the points of interest in the various places; to be able to give an
+account of the commercial transactions, the people and customs; and, in
+fact, to know about other communities what you find it necessary to
+learn of your own. To the great majority of Americans the opportunity is
+not given of personally becoming acquainted with the various cities of
+import, and the only way we have of knowing the peculiarities of our
+sister cities is by the few scraps we read now and then in the
+newspapers. The want of some method by which to instruct the people in
+this matter has long been manifest, but what to do has often been asked
+and remained unanswered. Educators recommend the compilation of
+statistics of the various places, and many plans were suggested by which
+a knowledge of the subject could be diffused among the masses. It has
+finally been solved by Captain Willard Glazier, of whom the country has
+heard in civil and military life on many former occasions. Captain
+Glazier has traveled over the entire continent since the late war, and
+has become well acquainted with the principal cities, and the thought
+struck him to write a book on the points of interest he has visited in
+the various places. For a number of years he has been at the work, and
+finally gives to the public his latest literary effort, which he has
+appropriately entitled "Peculiarities of American Cities." The book is
+just what is needed in every public and private library in the country,
+and will awaken a deep interest in the citizens of each city on which
+the work treats. The public cannot fail to be interested in the work,
+for it treats on a live subject, and, furthermore, the author's style is
+far too pleasing to permit of any lack of interest. Captain Glazier is
+the author of a number of books, all of which have become popular, and
+we predict for this, his latest effort, the success which it merits.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ POPULAR WORKS
+ OF
+ Captain Willard Glazier,
+ THE SOLDIER-AUTHOR.
+
+ I. Soldiers of the Saddle.
+ II. Capture, Prison-Pen and Escape.
+ III. Battles for the Union.
+ IV. Heroes of Three Wars.
+ V. Peculiarities of American Cities.
+ VI. Down the Great River.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Captain Glazier's works are growing more and more popular every
+ day. Their delineations of _social_, military _and frontier_ life,
+ constantly varying scenes, and deeply interesting stories, combine
+ to place their writer in the front rank of American authors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SOLD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.
+
+ PERSONS DESIRING AGENCIES FOR ANY OF CAPTAIN GLAZIER'S
+ BOOKS SHOULD ADDRESS
+
+ THE PUBLISHERS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
+
+
+1. Images have been moved from the middle of a paragraph to the closest
+paragraph break.
+
+2. Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.
+
+3. The words "Phoenix" and "Oenone" uses an oe ligature in the original.
+
+4. The following typographical errors have been corrected:
+
+ "Bath-on-the Hudson" corrected to "Bath-on-the-Hudson" (page 28)
+ "facades" corrected to "façades" (page 30)
+ "scarely" corrected to "scarcely" (page 168)
+ "Real" corrected to "Rčal" (page 236)
+ "Situate" corrected to "Situated" (page 248)
+ "condemed" corrected to "condemned" (page 261)
+ "transferrred" corrected to "transferred" (page 261)
+ "pedestrains" corrected to "pedestrians" (page 312)
+ "possesesion" corrected to "possession" (page 358)
+ "establisment" corrected to "establishment" (page 438)
+ "granduer" corrected to "grandeur" (page 459)
+ "ignominously" corrected to "ignominiously" (page 464)
+ "excelence" corrected to "excellence" (page 523)
+
+4. Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in
+spelling, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peculiarities of American Cities, by
+Willard Glazier
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Peculiarities of American Cities, by Captain Willard Glazier.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
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+ text-align: justify;
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Peculiarities of American Cities, by Willard Glazier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Peculiarities of American Cities
+
+Author: Willard Glazier
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2011 [EBook #35575]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PECULIARITIES OF AMERICAN CITIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Louise Hope and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 649px;">
+<img src="images/icover.jpg" width="649" height="1024" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
+<a name="Frontispiece" id="Frontispiece"></a>
+<span class="caption">Willard Glazier</span>
+<img src="images/illus_004.jpg" width="580" height="1024" alt="Willard Glazier" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>PECULIARITIES</h2>
+
+<h4>OF</h4>
+
+<h1><span class="smcap">American Cities</span>.</h1>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+<h2>CAPTAIN WILLARD GLAZIER,</h2>
+
+<p class="center">AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF THE SADDLE," "CAPTURE, PRISON-PEN<br />
+AND ESCAPE," "BATTLES FOR THE UNION," "HEROES OF THREE<br />
+WARS," "DOWN THE GREAT RIVER," ETC., ETC.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>Illustrated.</h3>
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+
+<h4>PHILADELPHIA:<br />
+HUBBARD BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,<br />
+No. 723 <span class="smcap">Chestnut Street</span>.<br />
+1886.</h4>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class="center">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by<br />
+WILLARD GLAZIER,<br />
+In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>To her</h3>
+
+<p class="center">
+<small>WHO IS NEAREST AND DEAREST</small>;<br />
+
+<small>WHOSE HEART HAS ENCOURAGED</small>;<br />
+
+WHOSE HAND HAS CONTRIBUTED TO THE<br />
+
+<small>ILLUSTRATION AND EMBELLISHMENT<br />
+
+OF ALL MY LITERARY WORK</small>,<br />
+
+This Volume<br />
+
+IS LOVINGLY INSCRIBED<br />
+
+<small>BY</small><br />
+
+<i>THE AUTHOR</i>.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[i]</span></p>
+<h3><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>It has occurred to the author very often that a volume
+presenting the peculiar features, favorite resorts and
+distinguishing characteristics, of the leading cities of
+America, would prove of interest to thousands who
+could, at best, see them only in imagination, and to
+others, who, having visited them, would like to compare
+notes with one who has made their <small>PECULIARITIES</small> a
+study for many years.</p>
+
+<p>A residence in more than a hundred cities, including
+nearly all that are introduced in this work, leads me to
+feel that I shall succeed in my purpose of giving to the
+public a book, without the necessity of marching in slow
+and solemn procession before my readers a monumental
+array of time-honored statistics; on the contrary, it will
+be my aim, in the following pages, to talk of cities as I
+have seen and found them in my walks, from day to day,
+with but slight reference to their origin and past history.</p>
+
+<p class="author">WILLARD GLAZIER.</p>
+
+<p> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 22 Jay Street,<br />
+&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Albany</span>, <i>September 24, 1883</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[ii]</span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[iii]</span></p>
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>Portrait of the Author (Steel)</td><td align='right'><a href="#Frontispiece"><span class="smcap">Frontispiece.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>State Street and Capitol, Albany, N. Y.</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Boston, as Viewed from the Bay</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Soldiers' Monument at Buffalo, N. Y.</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>View of Baltimore, from Federal Hill</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>View of the Battery, Charleston, South Carolina</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Garden at Mount Pleasant, opposite Charleston, S. C.</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Custom House, Charleston, South Carolina</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Magnolia Cemetery, Charleston, South Carolina</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Public Square and Perry Monument, Cleveland, Ohio</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bird's-eye View of Chicago, from the Lake Side</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Burning of Chicago, the World's Greatest Conflagration</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Grand Pacific Hotel, Chicago</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Harrisburg and Bridges over the Susquehanna</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Jackson Square and Old Cathedral, New Orleans</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mardi Gras Festival, New Orleans</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bird's-eye View of New York</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_296">296</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>New York and Brooklyn Bridge</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_318">318</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Pittsburg and its Rivers</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_336">336</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Night Scene in Market Square, Portland, Maine</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_360">360</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Old Independence Hall, Philadelphia</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_370">370</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Masonic Temple, Philadelphia</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_378">378</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Girard Avenue Bridge, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_394">394</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>View of Providence, Rhode Island, from Prospect Terrace</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_400">400</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Tabernacle and Temple, Salt Lake City</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_440">440</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Seal Rocks from the Cliff House, near San Francisco</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_462">462</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Levee and Great Bridge at St. Louis</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_492">492</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Shaw's Garden at St. Louis, Missouri</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_502">502</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>University of Toronto, Canada</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_524">524</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>East Front of Capitol at Washington</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_538">538</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>State, War and Navy Departments, Washington, D. C.</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_546">546</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[iv]</span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[v]</span></p>
+<h2>TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
+<hr style="width: 5%;" />
+
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.&mdash;ALBANY.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>From Boston to Albany.&mdash;Worcester and Pittsfield.&mdash;The Empire
+State and its Capital.&mdash;Old Associations.&mdash;State Street.&mdash;Sketch
+of Early History.&mdash;Killian Van Rensselaer.&mdash;Dutch Emigration.&mdash;Old
+Fort Orange.&mdash;City Heights.&mdash;The Lumber District.&mdash;Van
+Rensselaer Homestead.&mdash;The New Capitol.&mdash;Military
+Bureau.&mdash;War Relics.&mdash;Letter of General Dix.&mdash;Ellsworth and
+Lincoln Memorials.&mdash;Geological Rooms.&mdash;The Cathedral.&mdash;Dudley
+Observatory.&mdash;Street Marketing.&mdash;Troy and Cohoes.&mdash;Stove
+Works.&mdash;Paper Boats.&mdash;Grand Army Rooms.&mdash;Down the
+Hudson. <span class='pagec'>25-37</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.&mdash;BOSTON.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Geographical Location of Boston.&mdash;Ancient Names.&mdash;Etymology
+of the Word Massachusetts.&mdash;Changes in the Peninsula.&mdash;Noted
+Points of Interest.&mdash;Boston Common.&mdash;Old Elm.&mdash;Duel Under
+its Branches.&mdash;Soldiers' Monument.&mdash;Fragmentary History.&mdash;Courtship
+on the Common.&mdash;Faneuil Hall and Market.&mdash;Old
+State House.&mdash;King's Chapel.&mdash;Brattle Square Church.&mdash;New
+State House.&mdash;New Post Office.&mdash;Old South Church.&mdash;Birthplace
+of Franklin.&mdash;"News Letter."&mdash;City Hall.&mdash;Custom
+House.&mdash;Providence Railroad Station.&mdash;Places of General Interest. <span class='pagec'>38-56</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.&mdash;BUFFALO.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The Niagara Frontier.&mdash;Unfortunate Fate of the Eries.&mdash;The
+Battle of Doom.&mdash;Times of 1812.&mdash;Burning of Buffalo.&mdash;Early
+Names.&mdash;Origin of Present Name.&mdash;Growth and Population.&mdash;Railway
+Lines.&mdash;Queen of the Great Lakes.&mdash;Fort Porter and
+Fort Erie.&mdash;International Bridge.&mdash;Iron Manufacture.&mdash;Danger
+of the Niagara.&mdash;Forest Lawn Cemetery.&mdash;Decoration Day.&mdash;The
+Spaulding Monument.&mdash;Parks and Boulevard.&mdash;Delaware
+Avenue.&mdash;On the Terrace.&mdash;Elevator District.&mdash;Church and
+Schools.&mdash;Grosvenor Library.&mdash;Historical Rooms.&mdash;Journalism.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;City Hall.&mdash;Dog-carts and their Attendants. <span class='pagec'>57-71</span></p>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[vi]</span></p>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.&mdash;BROOKLYN.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Brooklyn a Suburb of New York.&mdash;A City of Homes.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Henry Ward Beecher.&mdash;Thomas De
+Witt Talmage.&mdash;Theodore L. Cuyler, <small>D.D.</small>&mdash;Justin D. Fulton, <small>D.D.</small>&mdash;R.
+S. Storrs, <small>D.D.</small>&mdash;Navy Yard.&mdash;Atlantic Dock.&mdash;Washington
+Park.&mdash;Prospect Park.&mdash;Greenwood Cemetery.&mdash;Evergreen
+and Cyprus Hills Cemeteries.&mdash;Coney Island.&mdash;Rockaway.&mdash;Staten
+Island.&mdash;Glen Island.&mdash;Future of Brooklyn. <span class='pagec'>72-84</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.&mdash;BALTIMORE.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Position of Baltimore.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Cathedral and Churches.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Educational Institutions.&mdash;Art Collections.&mdash;Charitable
+Institutions.&mdash;Monuments.&mdash;Railway Tunnels.&mdash;Parks
+and Cemeteries.&mdash;Druid Hill Park.&mdash;Commerce and
+Manufactures.&mdash;Foundation of the City.&mdash;Early History.&mdash;Bonaparte-Patterson
+Marriage.&mdash;Storming of Baltimore in 1814.&mdash;Maryland
+at the Breaking-out of the Rebellion.&mdash;Assault on
+Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, in April, 1861.&mdash;Subsequent
+Events during the War.&mdash;Baltimore Proves Herself Loyal.&mdash;Re-union
+of Grand Army of the Republic in Baltimore, September,
+1882.&mdash;Old Differences Forgotten and Fraternal Relations
+Established. <span class='pagec'>85-106</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.&mdash;CHARLESTON.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>First Visit to Charleston.&mdash;Jail Yard.&mdash;Bombardment of the City.&mdash;Roper
+Hospital.&mdash;Charleston During the War.&mdash;Secession of
+South Carolina.&mdash;Attack and Surrender of Fort Sumter.&mdash;Blockade
+of the Harbor.&mdash;Great Fire of 1861.&mdash;Capitulation in
+1865.&mdash;First Settlement of the City.&mdash;Battles of the Revolution.&mdash;Nullification
+Act.&mdash;John C. Calhoun.&mdash;Population of the
+City.&mdash;Commerce and Manufactures.&mdash;Charleston Harbor.&mdash;"American
+Venice."&mdash;Battery.&mdash;Streets, Public Buildings and
+Churches.&mdash;Scenery about Charleston.&mdash;Railways and Steamship
+Lines.&mdash;An Ancient Church.&mdash;Magnolia Cemetery.&mdash;Drives near
+the City.&mdash;Charleston Purified by Fire. <span class='pagec'>107-120</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.&mdash;CINCINNATI.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Founding of Cincinnati.&mdash;Rapid Increase of Population.&mdash;Character
+of its Early Settlers.&mdash;Pro-slavery Sympathies.&mdash;During
+<span class='pagenum'>[vii]</span>
+the Rebellion.&mdash;Description of the City.&mdash;Smoke and Soot&mdash;Suburbs.&mdash;"Fifth
+Avenue" of Cincinnati.&mdash;Streets, Public
+Buildings, Private Art Galleries, Hotels, Churches and Educational
+Institutions.&mdash;"Over the Rhine."&mdash;Hebrew Population.&mdash;Liberal
+Religious Sentiment.&mdash;Commerce and Manufacturing
+Interests.&mdash;Stock Yards and Pork-packing Establishments.&mdash;Wine
+Making.&mdash;Covington and Newport Suspension Bridge.&mdash;High
+Water.&mdash;Spring Grove Cemetery. <span class='pagec'>121-139</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.&mdash;CLEVELAND.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The "Western Reserve."&mdash;Character of Early Settlers.&mdash;Fairport.&mdash;Richmond.&mdash;Early
+History of Cleveland.&mdash;Indians.&mdash;Opening
+of Ohio and Portsmouth Canal.&mdash;Commerce in 1845.&mdash;Cleveland
+in 1850.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Manufacturing Interests.&mdash;Cuyahoga
+"Flats" at Night.&mdash;The "Forest City."&mdash;Streets and
+Avenues.&mdash;Monumental Park.&mdash;Public Buildings and Churches.&mdash;Union
+Depot.&mdash;Water Rents.&mdash;Educational Institutions.&mdash;Rocky
+River.&mdash;Approach to the City.&mdash;Freshet of 1883.&mdash;Funeral
+of President Garfield.&mdash;Lake Side Cemetery.&mdash;Site of
+the Garfield Monument. <span class='pagec'>140-156</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.&mdash;CHICAGO.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Topographical Situation of Chicago.&mdash;Meaning of the Name.&mdash;Early
+History.&mdash;Massacre at Fort Dearborn.&mdash;Last of the Red
+Men.&mdash;The Great Land Bubble.&mdash;Rapid Increase in Population
+and Business.&mdash;The Canal.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Status of
+the City in 1871.&mdash;The Great Fire.&mdash;Its Origin, Progress and
+Extent.&mdash;Heartrending Scenes.&mdash;Estimated Total Loss.&mdash;Help
+from all Quarters.&mdash;Work of Reconstruction.&mdash;Second Fire.&mdash;Its
+Public Buildings, Educational and Charitable Institutions,
+Streets and Parks.&mdash;Its Waterworks.&mdash;Its Stock Yards.&mdash;Its
+Suburbs.&mdash;Future of the City. <span class='pagec'>157-175</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.&mdash;CHEYENNE.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Location of Cheyenne.&mdash;Founding of the City.&mdash;Lawlessness.&mdash;Vigilance
+Committee.&mdash;Woman Suffrage.&mdash;Rapid Increase of
+Population and Business.&mdash;A Reaction.&mdash;Stock Raising.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;Mineral
+Resources.&mdash;Present Prospects. <span class='pagec'>176-181</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI&mdash;DETROIT.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Detroit and Her Avenues of Approach.&mdash;Competing Lines.&mdash;London
+in Canada.&mdash;The Strait and the Ferry.&mdash;Music on the
+<span class='pagenum'>[viii]</span>
+Waters.&mdash;The Home of the Algonquins.&mdash;Teusha-grondie.&mdash;Wa-we-aw-to-nong.&mdash;Fort
+Ponchartrain and the Early French
+Settlers.&mdash;The Red Cross of St. George.&mdash;Conspiracy of Pontiac.&mdash;Battle
+of Bloody Run.&mdash;The Long Siege.&mdash;Detroit's First
+American Flag.&mdash;Old Landmarks.&mdash;The Pontiac Tree.&mdash;Devastation
+by Fire.&mdash;Site of the Modern City.&mdash;New City Hall.&mdash;Public
+Library.&mdash;Mexican Antiquities. <span class='pagec'>182-193</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.&mdash;ERIE.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Decoration Day in Pennsylvania.&mdash;Lake Erie.&mdash;Natural Advantages
+of Erie.&mdash;Her Harbor, Commerce and Manufactures.&mdash;Streets
+and Public Buildings.&mdash;Soldiers' Monument.&mdash;Erie
+Cemetery.&mdash;East and West Parks.&mdash;Perry's Victory. <span class='pagec'>194-198</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.&mdash;HARRISBURG.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>A Historic Tree.&mdash;John Harris' Wild Adventure with the Indians.&mdash;Harris
+Park.&mdash;History of Harrisburg.&mdash;Situation and
+Surroundings.&mdash;State House.&mdash;State Library.&mdash;A Historic Flag.&mdash;View
+from State House Dome.&mdash;Capitol Park.&mdash;Monument to
+Soldiers of Mexican War.&mdash;Monument to Soldiers of Late War.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Front Street.&mdash;Bridges over the Susquehanna.&mdash;Mt.
+Kalmia Cemetery.&mdash;Present Advantages and Future
+Prospects of Harrisburg. <span class='pagec'>199-206</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.&mdash;HARTFORD.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The City of Publishers.&mdash;Its Geographical Location.&mdash;The New
+State House.&mdash;Mark Twain and the "None Such."&mdash;The
+"Heathen Chinee."&mdash;Wadsworth Atheneum.&mdash;Charter Oak.&mdash;George
+H. Clark's Poem.&mdash;Putnam's Hotel.&mdash;Asylum for Deaf
+Mutes.&mdash;The Sign Language.&mdash;A Fragment of Witchcraftism.&mdash;Hartford
+<i>Courant</i>.&mdash;The Connecticut. <span class='pagec'>207-215</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.&mdash;LANCASTER.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>First Visit to Lancaster.&mdash;Eastern Pennsylvania.&mdash;Conestoga
+River.&mdash;Early History of Lancaster.&mdash;Early Dutch Settlers.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Whit-Monday.&mdash;Home of
+three Noted Persons.&mdash;James Buchanan, his Life and Death.&mdash;Thaddeus
+Stevens and his Burial Place.&mdash;General Reynolds
+and his Death.&mdash;"Cemetery City." <span class='pagec'>216-221</span></p>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[ix]</span></p>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.&mdash;MILWAUKEE.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Rapid Development of the Northwest.&mdash;The "West" Forty Years
+Ago.&mdash;Milwaukee and its Commerce and Manufactures.&mdash;Grain
+Elevators.&mdash;Harbor.&mdash;Divisions of the City.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Northwestern
+National Asylum for Disabled Soldiers.&mdash;German
+Population.&mdash;Influence and Results of German Immigration.&mdash;Bank
+Riot in 1862.&mdash;Ancient Tumuli.&mdash;Mound Builders.&mdash;Mounds
+Near Milwaukee.&mdash;Significance of Same.&mdash;Early
+Traders.&mdash;Foundation of the City in 1835.&mdash;Excelling Chicago
+in 1870.&mdash;Population and Commerce in 1880. <span class='pagec'>222-235</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII&mdash;MONTREAL.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Thousand Islands.&mdash;Long Sault Rapids.&mdash;Lachine Rapids.&mdash;Victoria
+Bridge&mdash;Mont R&egrave;al.&mdash;Early History of Montreal.&mdash;Its
+Shipping Interests.&mdash;Quays.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Population.&mdash;Roman
+Catholic Supremacy.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Nunneries.&mdash;Hospitals,
+Colleges.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Victoria
+Skating Rink.&mdash;Sleighing.&mdash;Early Disasters.&mdash;Points of Interest.&mdash;The
+"Canucks." <span class='pagec'>236-247</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.&mdash;NEWARK.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>From New York to Newark.&mdash;Two Hundred Years Ago.&mdash;The
+Pioneers.&mdash;Public Parks.&mdash;City of Churches.&mdash;The Canal.&mdash;Sailing
+Up-Hill.&mdash;An Old Graveyard.&mdash;New Amsterdam and
+New Netherlands.&mdash;The Dutch and English.&mdash;Adventurers from
+New England.&mdash;The Indians.&mdash;Rate of Population.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Rank
+as a City. <span class='pagec'>248-255</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.&mdash;NEW HAVEN.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The City of Elms.&mdash;First Impressions.&mdash;A New England Sunday.&mdash;A
+Sail on the Harbor.&mdash;Oyster Beds.&mdash;East Rock.&mdash;The
+Lonely Denizen of the Bluff.&mdash;Romance of John Turner.&mdash;West
+Rock.&mdash;The Judges' Cave.&mdash;Its Historical Association.&mdash;Escape
+of the Judges.&mdash;Monument on the City Green.&mdash;Yale
+College.&mdash;Its Stormy Infancy.&mdash;Battle on the Weathersfield
+Road.&mdash;Harvard, the Fruit of the Struggle. <span class='pagec'>256-263</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.&mdash;NEW ORLEANS.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Locality of New Orleans.&mdash;The Mississippi.&mdash;The Old and the
+<span class='pagenum'>[x]</span>
+New.&mdash;Ceded to Spain.&mdash;Creole Part in the American Revolution.
+Retransferred to France.&mdash;Purchased by the United
+States.&mdash;Creole Discontent.&mdash;Battle of New Orleans.&mdash;Increase
+of Population.&mdash;The Levee.&mdash;Shipping.&mdash;Public Buildings,
+Churches, Hospitals, Hotels and Places of Amusement.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Suburbs.&mdash;Public
+Squares and Parks.&mdash;Places of
+Historic Interest.&mdash;Cemeteries.&mdash;French Market.&mdash;Mardi-gras.&mdash;Climate
+and Productions.&mdash;New Orleans during the
+Rebellion.&mdash;Chief Cotton Mart of the World.&mdash;Exports.&mdash;Imports.&mdash;Future
+Prosperity of the City. <span class='pagec'>264-280</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.&mdash;NEW YORK.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Early History of New York.&mdash;During the Revolution.&mdash;Evacuation
+Day.&mdash;Bowling Green.&mdash;Wall Street.&mdash;Stock Exchange.&mdash;Jacob
+Little.&mdash;Daniel Drew.&mdash;Jay Cooke.&mdash;Rufus Hatch.&mdash;The Vanderbilts.&mdash;Jay
+Gould.&mdash;Trinity Church.&mdash;John Jacob Astor.&mdash;Post-Office.&mdash;City
+Hall and Court House.&mdash;James Gordon
+Bennett.&mdash;Printing House Square.&mdash;Horace Greeley.&mdash;Broadway.&mdash;Union
+Square.&mdash;Washington Square.&mdash;Fifth Avenue.&mdash;Madison
+Square.&mdash;Cathedral.&mdash;Murray Hill.&mdash;Second Avenue.&mdash;Booth's
+Theatre and Grand Opera House.&mdash;The Bowery.&mdash;Peter
+Cooper.&mdash;Fourth Avenue.&mdash;Park Avenue.&mdash;Five Points
+and its Vicinity.&mdash;Chinese Quarter.&mdash;Tombs.&mdash;Central Park.&mdash;Water
+Front.&mdash;Blackwell's Island.&mdash;Hell Gate.&mdash;Suspension
+Bridge.&mdash;Opening Day.&mdash;Tragedy of Decoration Day.&mdash;New
+York of the Present and Future. <span class='pagec'>281-318</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.&mdash;OMAHA.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Arrival in Omaha.&mdash;The Missouri River.&mdash;Position and Appearance
+of the City.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;History.&mdash;Land Speculation.&mdash;Panic
+of 1857.&mdash;Discovery of Gold in Colorado.&mdash;"Pike's
+Peak or Bust."&mdash;Sudden Revival of Business.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Union
+Pacific Railroad.&mdash;Population.&mdash;Commercial and
+Manufacturing Interests.&mdash;Bridge over the Missouri.&mdash;Union
+Pacific Depot&mdash;Prospects for the Future. <span class='pagec'>319-325</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.&mdash;OTTAWA.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Ottawa, the Seat of the Canadian Government.&mdash;History.&mdash;Population.&mdash;Geographical
+Position.&mdash;Scenery.&mdash;Chaudi&egrave;re
+Falls.&mdash;Rideau Falls.&mdash;Ottawa River.&mdash;Lumber Business.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Steamboat
+<span class='pagenum'>[xi]</span>
+and Railway Communications.&mdash;Moore's
+Canadian Boat Song.&mdash;Description of the City.&mdash;Churches,
+Nunneries, and Charitable Institutions.&mdash;Government
+Buildings.&mdash;Rideau Hall.&mdash;Princess Louise and Marquis of
+Lorne.&mdash;Ottawa's Proud Boast. <span class='pagec'>326-331</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.&mdash;PITTSBURG.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Pittsburg at Night.&mdash;A Pittsburg Fog.&mdash;Smoke.&mdash;Description of
+the City.&mdash;The Oil Business.&mdash;Ohio River.&mdash;Public Buildings,
+Educational and Charitable Institutions.&mdash;Glass Industry.&mdash;Iron
+Foundries.&mdash;Fort Pitt Works&mdash;Casting a Monster Gun.&mdash;American
+Iron Works.&mdash;Nail Works.&mdash;A City of Workers.&mdash;A
+True Democracy.&mdash;Wages.&mdash;Character of Workmen.&mdash;Value
+of Organization.&mdash;Knights of Labor.&mdash;Opposed to Strikes.&mdash;True
+Relations of Capital and Labor.&mdash;Railroad Strike of
+1877.&mdash;Allegheny City.&mdash;Population of Pittsburg.&mdash;Early History.&mdash;Braddock's
+Defeat.&mdash;Old Battle Ground.&mdash;Historic Relics.&mdash;The
+Past and the Present. <span class='pagec'>332-347</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;PORTLAND.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The Coast of Maine.&mdash;Early Settlements in Portland.&mdash;Troubles
+with the Indians.&mdash;Destruction of the Town in 1690.&mdash;Destroyed
+Again in 1703.&mdash;Subsequent Settlement and Growth.&mdash;During
+the Revolution.&mdash;First Newspaper.&mdash;Portland Harbor.&mdash;Commercial
+Facilities and Progress.&mdash;During the Rebellion.&mdash;Great
+Fire of 1866.&mdash;Reconstruction.&mdash;Position of the City.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Munjoy
+Hill.&mdash;Maine General Hospital.&mdash;Eastern and Western
+Promenades.&mdash;Longfellow's House.&mdash;Birthplace of the Poet.&mdash;Market
+Square and Hall.&mdash;First Unitarian Church.&mdash;Lincoln
+Park.&mdash;Eastern Cemetery.&mdash;Deering's Woods.&mdash;Commercial
+Street.&mdash;Old-time Mansion.&mdash;Case's Bay and Islands.&mdash;Cushing's
+Island.&mdash;Peak's Island.&mdash;Ling Island.&mdash;Little Chebague
+Island.&mdash;Harpswell. <span class='pagec'>348-365</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.&mdash;PHILADELPHIA.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Early History.&mdash;William Penn.&mdash;The Revolution.&mdash;Declaration
+of Independence.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Riots.&mdash;Streets and Houses.&mdash;Relics
+of the Past.&mdash;Independence Hall.&mdash;Carpenters' Hall.&mdash;Blue
+Anchor.&mdash;Letitia Court.&mdash;Christ Church.&mdash;Old Swedes'
+Church.&mdash;Benjamin Franklin.&mdash;Libraries.&mdash;Old Quaker Almshouse.&mdash;Old
+Houses in Germantown.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Theatres.&mdash;Churches&mdash;Scientific
+<span class='pagenum'>[xii]</span>
+Institutions.&mdash;Newspapers.&mdash;Medical
+Colleges.&mdash;Schools.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Penitentiary.&mdash;River
+Front.&mdash;Fairmount Park.&mdash;Zo&ouml;logical Gardens.&mdash;Cemeteries.&mdash;Centennial
+Exhibition.&mdash;Bi-Centennial.&mdash;Past,
+Present and Future of the City. <span class='pagec'>366-398</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.&mdash;PROVIDENCE.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Origin of the City.&mdash;Roger Williams.&mdash;Geographical Location and
+Importance.&mdash;Topography of Providence.&mdash;The Cove.&mdash;Railroad
+Connections.&mdash;Brown University.&mdash;Patriotism of Rhode Island.&mdash;Soldiers'
+Monument.&mdash;The Roger Williams Park.&mdash;Narragansett
+Bay.&mdash;Suburban Villages.&mdash;Points of Interest.&mdash;Butter Exchange.&mdash;Lamplighting
+on a New Plan.&mdash;Jewelry Manufactories. <span class='pagec'>399-404</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.&mdash;QUEBEC.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Appearance of Quebec.&mdash;Gibraltar of America.&mdash;Fortifications and
+Walls.&mdash;The Walled City.&mdash;Churches, Nunneries and Hospitals.&mdash;Views
+from the Cliff.&mdash;Upper Town.&mdash;Lower Town.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Plains of Abraham.&mdash;Falls of
+Montmorenci.&mdash;Sledding on the "Cone."&mdash;History of Quebec.&mdash;Capture
+of the City by the British.&mdash;Death of Generals Wolfe
+and Montcalm.&mdash;Disaster under General Murray.&mdash;Ceding of
+Canada, by France, to England.&mdash;Attack by American Forces
+under Montgomery and Arnold.&mdash;Death of Montgomery.&mdash;Capital
+of Lower Canada and of the Province of Quebec. <span class='pagec'>405-414</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.&mdash;READING.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Geographical Position and History of Reading.&mdash;Manufacturing
+Interests.&mdash;Population, Streets, Churches and Public Buildings.&mdash;Boating
+on the Schuylkill.&mdash;White Spot and the View from
+its Summit.&mdash;Other Pleasure Resorts.&mdash;Decoration Day.&mdash;Wealth
+Created by Industry. <span class='pagec'>415-420</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.&mdash;RICHMOND.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Arrival in Richmond.&mdash;Libby Prison.&mdash;Situation of the City.&mdash;Historical
+Associations.&mdash;Early Settlement.&mdash;Attacked by
+British Forces in the Revolution.&mdash;Monumental Church.&mdash;St.
+John's Church.&mdash;State Capital.&mdash;Passage of the Ordinance of
+Secession.&mdash;Richmond the Capital of the Confederate States.&mdash;Military
+Expeditions against the City.&mdash;Evacuation of Petersburg.&mdash;Surrender
+of the City.&mdash;Visit of President Lincoln.&mdash;Historical
+<span class='pagenum'>[xiii]</span>
+Places.&mdash;Statues.&mdash;Rapid Recuperation After the War.&mdash;Manufacturing
+and Commercial Interests.&mdash;Streets and Public Buildings.&mdash;Population
+and Future Prospects. <span class='pagec'>421-432</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.&mdash;SAINT PAUL.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Early History of Saint Paul.&mdash;Founding of the City.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Roman Catholics.&mdash;Places of Resort.&mdash;Falls of
+Minnehaha.&mdash;Carver's Cave.&mdash;Fountain Cave.&mdash;Commercial
+Interests.&mdash;Present and Future Prospects. <span class='pagec'>433-487</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.&mdash;SALT LAKE CITY.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The Mormons.&mdash;Pilgrimage Across the Continent.&mdash;Site of Salt
+Lake City.&mdash;A People of Workers.&mdash;Spread of Mormons through
+other Territories.&mdash;City of the Saints.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Fruit and
+Shade Trees.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;The Tabernacle.&mdash;Residences of the
+late Brigham Young.&mdash;Museum.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Warm
+and Hot Springs.&mdash;Number and Character of Population.&mdash;Barter
+System before Completion of Railroad.&mdash;Mormons and
+Gentiles.&mdash;Present Advantages and Future Prospects of Salt
+Lake City. <span class='pagec'>438-447</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.&mdash;SAN FRANCISCO.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>San Francisco.&mdash;The Golden State.&mdash;San Francisco Bay.&mdash;Golden
+Gate.&mdash;Conquest of California by Fremont, 1848.&mdash;Discovery
+of Gold.&mdash;Rush to the Mines, 1849.&mdash;"Forty-niners."&mdash;Great
+Rise in Provisions and Wages.&mdash;Miners Homeward Bound.&mdash;Dissipation
+and Vice in the City.&mdash;Vigilance Committee.&mdash;Great
+Influx of Miners in 1850.&mdash;Immense Gold Yield.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Earthquakes.&mdash;Productions.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;Streets
+and Buildings.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Lone
+Mountain Cemetery.&mdash;Cliff House.&mdash;Seal
+Rock.&mdash;Theatres.&mdash;Chinese Quarter.&mdash;Chinese Theatres.&mdash;Joss
+Houses.&mdash;Emigration Companies.&mdash;The Chinese Question.&mdash;Cheap
+Labor.&mdash;"The Chinese Must Go."&mdash;Present Population
+and Commerce of San Francisco.&mdash;Exports.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Cosmopolitan
+Nature of Inhabitants. <span class='pagec'>448-472</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.&mdash;SAVANNAH.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>First Visit to Savannah.&mdash;Camp Davidson.&mdash;The City During the
+War.&mdash;An Escaped Prisoner.&mdash;Recapture and Final Escape.&mdash;A
+"City of Refuge."&mdash;Savannah by Night.&mdash;Position of the
+<span class='pagenum'>[xiv]</span>
+City.&mdash;Streets and Public Squares.&mdash;Forsyth
+Park.&mdash;Monuments.&mdash;Commerce.&mdash;View
+from the Wharves.&mdash;Railroads.&mdash;Founding
+of the City.&mdash;Revolutionary History.&mdash;Death of
+Pulaski.&mdash;Secession.&mdash;Approach of Sherman.&mdash;Investment of
+the City by Union Troops.&mdash;Recuperation After the War.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Colored
+Population.&mdash;Bonaventure, Thunderbolt, and
+Other Suburban Resorts. <span class='pagec'>473-486</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.&mdash;SPRINGFIELD.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Valley of the Connecticut.&mdash;Location of Springfield.&mdash;The
+United States Armory.&mdash;Springfield Library.&mdash;Origin of
+the Present Library System.&mdash;The Wayland Celebration.&mdash;Settlement
+of Springfield.&mdash;Indian Hostilities.&mdash;Days of
+Witchcraft.&mdash;Trial of Hugh Parsons.&mdash;Hope Daggett.&mdash;Springfield
+"Republican." <span class='pagec'>487-491</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.&mdash;ST. LOUIS.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Approach to St. Louis.&mdash;Bridge Over the Mississippi.&mdash;View of the
+City.&mdash;Material Resources of Missouri.&mdash;Early History of St.
+Louis.&mdash;Increase of Population.&mdash;Manufacturing and Commercial
+Interests.&mdash;Locality.&mdash;Description of St. Louis in 1842.&mdash;Resemblance
+to Philadelphia.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Parks.&mdash;Fair
+Week.&mdash;Educational and Charitable Institutions.&mdash;Hotels.&mdash;Mississippi
+River.&mdash;St. Louis During the Rebellion.&mdash;Peculiar
+Characteristics.&mdash;The Future of the City. <span class='pagec'>492-510</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII&mdash;SYRACUSE.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Glimpses on the Rail.&mdash;Schenectady.&mdash;Valley of the Mohawk.&mdash;"Lover's
+Leap."&mdash;Rome and its Doctor.&mdash;Oneida Stone.&mdash;The
+Lo Race.&mdash;Oneida Community.&mdash;The City of Salt.&mdash;The Six
+Nations.&mdash;The Onondagas.&mdash;Traditions of Red Americans.&mdash;Hiawatha.&mdash;Sacrifice
+of White Dogs.&mdash;Ceremonies.&mdash;The Lost
+Tribes of Israel.&mdash;Witches and Wizards.&mdash;A Jules Verne Story.&mdash;The
+Salt Wells of Salina.&mdash;Lake Onondaga.&mdash;Indian Knowledge
+of Salt Wells.&mdash;"Over the Hills and Far Away."&mdash;A Castle.&mdash;Steam
+Canal Boats.&mdash;Adieux.&mdash;Westward Ho! <span class='pagec'>511-521</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII&mdash;TORONTO.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Situation of Toronto.&mdash;The Bay.&mdash;History.&mdash;Rebellion of 1837.&mdash;Fenian
+<span class='pagenum'>[xv]</span>
+Invasion of 1866.&mdash;Population.&mdash;General
+Appearance.&mdash;Sleighing.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Railways.&mdash;Commerce.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Schools
+and Colleges.&mdash;Queen Park.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Benevolent
+Institutions.&mdash;Halls and Other Public Buildings.&mdash;Hotels.&mdash;Newspapers.&mdash;General
+Characteristics and Progress. <span class='pagec'>522-527</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.&mdash;WASHINGTON.</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Situation of the National Capital.&mdash;Site Selected by Washington.&mdash;Statues
+of General Andrew Jackson, Scott, McPherson,
+Rawlins.&mdash;Lincoln Emancipation Group.&mdash;Navy Yard Bridge.&mdash;Capitol
+Building.&mdash;The White House.&mdash;Department of
+State, War and Navy.&mdash;The Treasury Department.&mdash;Patent
+Office.&mdash;Post Office Department.&mdash;Agricultural Building.&mdash;Army
+Medical Museum.&mdash;Government Printing Office.&mdash;United
+States Barracks.&mdash;Smithsonian Institute.&mdash;National
+Museum.&mdash;The Washington Monument.&mdash;Corcoran Art
+Gallery.&mdash;National Medical College.&mdash;Deaf and Dumb
+Asylum.&mdash;Increase of Population.&mdash;Washington's Future
+Greatness. <span class='pagec'>528-558</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[xvi]</span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<h2>ALBANY.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>From Boston to Albany.&mdash;Worcester and Pittsfield.&mdash;The Empire
+State and its Capital.&mdash;Old Associations.&mdash;State Street.&mdash;Sketch
+of Early History.&mdash;Killian Van Rensselaer.&mdash;Dutch Emigration.&mdash;Old
+Fort Orange.&mdash;City Heights.&mdash;The Lumber District.&mdash;Van
+Rensselaer Homestead.&mdash;The New Capitol.&mdash;Military
+Bureau.&mdash;War Relics.&mdash;Letter of General Dix.&mdash;Ellsworth and
+Lincoln Memorials.&mdash;Geological Rooms.&mdash;The Cathedral.&mdash;Dudley
+Observatory.&mdash;Street Marketing.&mdash;Troy and Cohoes.&mdash;Stove
+Works.&mdash;Paper Boats.&mdash;Grand Army Rooms.&mdash;Down the
+Hudson.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>An exceedingly cold day was February fourth,
+1875, the day which marked our journey from
+Boston to Albany. My inclination to step outside our
+car and tip my hat to the various familiar places along
+the route was suddenly checked by a gust of cutting,
+freezing, zero-stinging air. A ride of between one and
+two hours brought us to Worcester, a stirring town of
+about forty thousand inhabitants. Worcester is noted
+principally for its cotton factories, and as a political
+center in Eastern Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>Springfield, Westfield and Pittsfield follow in succession
+along the route, in central and Western Massachusetts,
+the first of which has been made the subject of
+a special chapter in this book. The last I remember
+chiefly as the place where, in the summer of 1866, I
+took my first steps in a new enterprise. Pittsfield has
+large cotton mills, is a summer resort, and is the nearest
+point, by rail, to the Shaker community at Lebanon, five<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+miles distant. At Westfield the Mount Holyoke Railroad
+joins the main line, and semi-annually conveys the
+daughters of the land to the famous <i>Holyoke Female
+Seminary</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Pittsfield we soon reached the State line
+between New York and Massachusetts. I sometimes
+think that after a residence in almost every State of the
+Union, I ought to feel no greater attraction for my
+native State than any other, yet I cannot repress a
+sentiment of stronger affection for good, grand old New
+York than any other in the united sisterhood. The
+Empire State has indeed a charm for me, and a
+congenial breeze, I imagine, always awaits me at its
+boundary.</p>
+
+<p>A ride of another hour brings to view the church
+spires of Albany, and with them a long line of thrilling
+memories come rushing, like many waters, to my mind.
+Here, in 1859, I entered the State Normal School; here
+I resolved to enter the army; and here the first edition
+of my first book was published, in the autumn of 1865.
+The work, therefore, of presenting this chapter upon the
+peculiar features of the Capital City of New York, may
+be regarded as one of the most agreeable duties I have
+to perform in the preparation of these pages.</p>
+
+<p>The traveler now entering Albany from the east
+crosses the Hudson on a beautiful iron railroad bridge,
+which, in the steady march of improvements, has
+succeeded the old-time ferry boat. He is landed at the
+commodious stone building of the New York Central
+and Hudson River Railroad, which is conveniently
+sandwiched between the Delavan House and Stanwix
+Hall, two large, well known and well conducted hotels.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My first night in a city and a hotel was spent here, at
+the old Adams House, located at that time on Broadway
+just opposite the Delavan. I was awakened in the
+morning by the roll and rattle of vehicles, and the usual
+din and confusion of a city street. The contrast to
+my quiet home in the Valley of the St. Lawrence was
+so marked, I can never forget the impression I then
+received, and as I walked up State street toward the
+old Capitol, I almost fancied that such a street might
+be a fit road to Paradise. Albany was the gate through
+which I entered the world, and to my boyish vision the
+view it disclosed was very wide, and the grand possibilities
+that lay in the dim distance seemed manifold. It is
+the oldest city, save Jamestown, Va., in the Union,
+having been settled in the very babyhood of the seventeenth
+century, somewhere about 1612 or 1614. It was
+originally, until the year 1661, only a trading post on
+the frontier, the entire region of country to the westward
+being unexplored and unknown, except as the "far
+west." The red warriors of the Mohegans, Senecas,
+Mohawks and the remaining bands of the "Six Nations"
+held undisputed possession of the soil, and kindled their
+council fires and danced their "corn dances" in peace,
+unmolested as yet by the aggressive pale-faces.</p>
+
+<p>The baptismal name of the embryo city of Albany
+was Scho-negh-ta-da, an Indian word meaning "over
+the plains." The name was afterwards transferred to
+the outlying suburban town now known as Schenectady.
+An immense tract of land bordering the Hudson
+for twenty-four miles, and reaching back from the
+river three times that distance, included Albany within
+its jurisdiction, and was originally owned by a rich<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+Dutch merchant, one Killian Van Rensselaer, from
+Amsterdam. The land was purchased from the Indians
+for the merest trifle, after the usual fashion of white
+cupidity when dealing with Indian generosity and
+ignorance. Emigrants were sent over from the old
+country to people this wide domain, and thus the first
+white colony was established, which subsequently grew
+into sufficient importance to become the Capital city of
+the Empire State.</p>
+
+<p>Before the purchase of Killian Van Rensselaer, a fort
+was built somewhere on what is now known as Broadway,
+and was named Fort Orange, in honor of the
+Prince of Orange, who was at that time patroon of New
+Netherlands, as New York was at first called. Old Fort
+Orange afterwards went by various names, among which
+were Rensselaerwyck, Beaverwyck and Williamstadt.
+In 1664 the sovereignty of the tract passed into the
+hands of the English, and was named Albany, in
+compliment to the Duke of Albany. In 1686 the
+young city aspired to a city charter, and its first
+mayor, Peter Schuyler, was then elected. In 1807
+it became the Capital of the State. As an item of interest,
+it may be mentioned that the first vessel which
+ascended the river as far as Albany was the yacht Half
+Moon, Captain Hendrick Hudson commanding.</p>
+
+<p>Albany, like ancient Rome, sits upon her many hills,
+and the views obtained from the city heights are beautiful
+in the extreme. The Helderbergs and the Catskill
+ranges loom blue and beautiful towards the south,
+Troy and the Green Mountains of Vermont can be seen
+from the north, while beyond the river, Bath-on-the-Hudson
+and the misty hill tops further away, rim the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+horizon's distant verge. The city has a large trade in
+lumber, and that portion of it which is known as the
+"lumber district" is devoted almost exclusively to this
+branch. One may walk, of a summer's day, along the
+smooth and winding road between the river and the
+canal, for two miles or more, and encounter nothing
+save the tasteful cottage-like offices, done in Gothic
+architecture, of the merchant princes in this trade, sandwiched
+between huge piles of lumber, rising white and
+high in the sun, and giving out resinous, piney odors.
+Not far from this vicinity stands the old Van Rensselaer
+homestead, guarded by a few primeval forest trees that
+have survived the wreck of time and still keep their
+ancient watch and ward. The old house, I have been
+told, is now deserted of all save an elderly lady, one of
+the last of the descendants of the long and ancient line
+of Van Rensselaer. Numerous points of interest dot the
+city in all directions, from limit to limit, and claim the
+attention of the stranger. Among the most prominent
+of these is, of course, the new Capitol building now in
+process of construction at the head of State street. A
+very pretty model of the structure is on exhibition in a
+small wooden building standing at the entrance to the
+grounds, which gives, I should judge, a clever idea of
+what the future monumental pile is to be like. Its
+height is very imposing, and the tall towers and minarets
+which rise from its roof will give it an appearance of still
+greater grandeur. It is built of granite quarried from
+Maine and New Hampshire, and is in the form of a
+parallelogram, enclosing an open court. Had I a
+sufficient knowledge of architecture to enable me to
+talk of orders, of pilasters, columns, entablatures and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+fa&ccedil;ades, I might perhaps give my readers a clearer idea
+of the magnificence of this new structure, which will
+stand without a rival, in this country at least, and may
+even dare to compete with some of the marvellous
+splendors of the old world.</p>
+
+<p>The Old Capitol and the State Library stand just in
+front of the new building, and obscure the view from the
+foot of State street. The Senate and Assembly chambers
+in the old building have an antiquated air, with their
+straight-backed chairs upholstered in green and red,
+and the rough stairways leading to the cupola, through
+an unfurnished attic, are suggestive of accident. In
+this cupola, once upon a time, in the year 1832, a certain
+Mr. Weaver, tired of life and its turmoil, swung himself
+out of it on a rope. So the cupola has its bit of
+romance. In this neighborhood, on State street, above
+the Library, is located the Bureau of Military Statistics,
+which is well worth a visit from every New Yorker
+who takes a pride in the military glory of his native
+State. One is greeted at the entrance with a host of
+mementos of our recent civil war, which bring back
+a flood of patriotic memories. Here is a collection
+of nine hundred battle flags, all belonging to the State,
+most of them torn and tattered in hard service, and inscribed
+with the names of historic fields into which they
+went fresh and bright, and out of which they came
+smoked and begrimed, and torn with the conflict of
+battle. Here are old canteens which have furnished
+solace to true comrades on many occasions of mutual
+hardship. Here, too, is the Lincoln collection, with its
+sad reminders of the nation's loved and murdered President;
+and in a corner of the same room the Ellsworth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+collection is displayed from a glass case. His gun and
+the Zouave suit worn by him at the time of his death
+hang side by side, and there, too, is the flag which, with
+impetuous bravery, he tore down from the top of the
+Marshall House at Alexandria, Virginia. In the same
+case hangs the picture of his avenger, Captain Brownell,
+and the rifle with which he shot Jackson. In another
+part of the room may be seen the original letter of
+Governor, then Secretary, Dix, which afterwards became
+so famous, and which created, in a great measure,
+the wave of popularity that carried him into the gubernatorial
+chair.</p>
+
+<p>The letter reads as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="author">"<span class="smcap">Treasury Department</span>,<br />
+January, 29th, 1861.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Lieutenant Caldwell to arrest Captain Breshwood,
+assume command of the cutter, and obey the
+order I gave through you. If Captain Breshwood,
+after arrest, undertakes to interfere with the command
+of the cutter, tell Lieutenant Caldwell to consider him
+as a mutineer and treat him accordingly. If any one
+attempts to haul down the American flag, shoot him on
+the spot.</p>
+
+<p class="author">"<span class="smcap">John A. Dix</span>, <i>Secretary of the Treasury</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The captured office chairs used by Jeff. Davis, in
+Richmond, the lock from John Brown's prison door at
+Harper's Ferry, pieces of plate from the monitors off
+Charleston, torpedoes from James River, the bell of
+the old guard-house at Fort Fisher, captured slave
+chains, miniature pontoon bridges, draft boxes and captured
+Rebel shoes, may be mentioned as a few among
+the many curiosities of this military bureau. Here, too,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+may be seen the pardon, from Lincoln, for Roswell
+Mclntire, taken from his dead body at the battle of
+Five Forks; and near by hangs the picture of Sergeant
+Amos Humiston, of the 154th New York Regiment,
+who was identified by means of the picture of his three
+children, found clasped in his hand as he lay dead on
+the field of Gettysburg. In this room, also, is the
+Jamestown, New York, flag, made by the ladies of that
+place in six hours after the attack on Sumter, and
+which was displayed from the office of the Jamestown
+<i>Journal</i>. Mr. Daly, the polite janitor of the building,
+is always happy to receive visitors, and will show them
+every courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>The Geological Rooms, on State street, are also well
+worthy the time and attention of the visitor. Large
+collections of the various kinds of rock which underlie
+the soil of our country are here on exhibition, as, also,
+the coral formations and geological curiosities of all
+ages. In an upper room towers the mammoth Cohoes
+mastodon, whose skeleton reaches from floor to ceiling.
+This monster of a former age was accidentally discovered
+at that place by parties who were excavating for a
+building. In these rooms, also, there are huge jaws of
+whales, which enable one to better understand the disposition
+of the Bible whales, and how easy it must have
+been for them to gulp down two or three Jonahs, if one
+little Jonah should fail to appease the delicate appetite
+of such sportive fishes. I couldn't help thinking of the
+lost races that must have peopled the earth when this
+old world was young&mdash;when these fossils were undergoing
+formation, and these mastodons made the ground
+tremble beneath their tread.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Where are these peoples now, and where their unrevealed
+histories? Shall we never know more of them
+than Runic stones and mysterious mounds can unfold?
+These reminders of the things that once had an existence
+but have now vanished from the face of the earth,
+and well nigh from the memory of men&mdash;these things
+are full of suggestion, to say the least, and are quite apt
+to correct any undue vanity which may take possession
+of us, or any large idea of future fame. We may, perhaps,
+create a ripple in the surface of remembrance
+which marks the place where our human existence went
+out, and which, at the furthest, may last a few hundred
+years. But who can hope for more than that, or hoping,
+can reasonably expect to find the wish realized? "There
+are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are
+dreamt of in our philosophy."</p>
+
+<p>The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, on
+Eagle street, is one of the finest church structures in
+Albany. It is built of brown freestone, in the Gothic
+style of architecture, and its two towers are each two
+hundred-and-eighty feet in height. Its cost was six
+hundred thousand dollars. The interior decorations
+are beautiful, and the rich stained glass windows are
+the gifts of sister societies. On Easter mornings the
+Cathedral is sure to be crowded by people of all sects
+and creeds, brought there to witness the joyous Easter
+services which terminate the long fast of Lent.</p>
+
+<p>About a mile and a half from the city, on Patroon's
+Hill, is situated the Dudley Observatory, where on
+clear summer nights Albanians come to gaze at the stars
+and the moon, through the large Observatory refractor.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+The structure is built in the form of a cross, eighty-six
+feet long and seventy feet deep.</p>
+
+<p>One of the first peculiarities which attracts the
+attention of the non-resident of Albany is the appearance
+of the business portion of State street, in the
+forenoon, from eight o'clock until twelve. Any time
+between these hours the street, from the lower end of
+Capitol Park down to Pearl street, is transformed into
+a vast market-place. Meat-wagons, vegetable carts,
+restaurants on wheels, and all sorts of huckstering establishments,
+are backed up to the sidewalk, on either side,
+blocking the way and so filling the wide avenue that
+there is barely room for the street-car in its passage up
+and down the hill. The descendants of Killian Van
+Rensselaer and the aristocratic Ten Eycks and Van
+Woerts, of Albany, should exhibit enterprise enough, I
+think, to erect a city market and spare State street this
+spectacle.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 646px;">
+<span class="caption">STATE STREET AND CAPITOL, ALBANY, NEW YORK.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_035.jpg" width="646" height="1024" alt="STATE STREET AND CAPITOL, ALBANY, NEW YORK." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The manufacturing interest of Albany consists largely
+of stove works, in which department it competes with
+its near neighbor, Troy. This flourishing city, of about
+forty-eight thousand souls, is seven miles distant from
+Albany, up the river, and is in manifold communication
+with it by railroads on both sides of the Hudson, as well
+as by street railway. Steam cars run between Albany
+and Troy half hourly, during the day and far into the
+night, and one always encounters a stream of people
+between these two places, whose current sets both ways,
+at all times and seasons. Troy is at the head of navigation
+on the Hudson and communicates by street car with
+Cohoes, Lansingburg and Waterford. Cohoes is a place
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+of great natural beauty, and the Cataract Falls of the
+Mohawk River at that place add an element of wild
+grandeur to the scenery. One of the large, rocky islands
+in the river, known as Simmons' Island, is a popular
+resort for picnic excursions, and is a delightful place in
+summer, with its groves of forest trees, and the pleasant
+noise of waters around its base. The place seems haunted
+by an atmosphere of Indian legend, and one could well
+imagine the departed warriors of the lost tribes of the
+Mohawk treading these wild forest paths, and making
+eloquent "talks" before their red brothers gathered
+around the council fire.</p>
+
+<p>The Mohawk and Hudson rivers unite at Troy, and
+seek a common passage to the sea. Mrs. Willard's
+Seminary for young ladies is located in this city, and is
+a standard institution of learning. Many of the streets
+of Troy are remarkably clean and finely shaded, and
+handsome residences and business blocks adorn them.
+The city is also a headquarters for Spiritualism in this
+section of the country. The Spiritualistic Society has, I
+am told, a flourishing, progressive Lyceum, which
+supersedes, with them, the orthodox Sunday school, and
+the exercises, consisting in part of marches and recitations,
+are conducted in a spirited and interesting manner.</p>
+
+<p>Foundries for hollow-ware and stoves constitute the
+leading branch of manufacture in the city of Troy. To
+one not familiar with the process by which iron is shaped
+into the various articles of common use among us, a visit
+to the foundries of Troy or Albany would be full of
+interest and instruction. Piles of yellow sand are lying in
+the long buildings used as foundries, while on either side
+the room workmen are busily engaged fashioning the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+wet sand into moulds for the reception of the melted
+iron. Originally the sand is of a bright yellow color,
+but it soon becomes a dingy brown, by repeated use in
+cooling the liquid metal.</p>
+
+<p>Each moulder has his "floor," or special amount of
+room allotted him for work, and here, during the forenoon,
+and up to three or four o'clock in the afternoon, he is very
+busy indeed, preparing for the "pouring" operation.
+Pig iron, thrown into a huge cauldron or boiler, and
+melted to a white heat, is then poured, from a kettle lined
+with clay, into the sand-moulds, and in a remarkably
+short space of time the greenish-white liquid which you
+saw flowing into a tiny, black aperture is shaken out of
+the sand by the workmen, having been transformed into
+portions of stoves. These go to the polishing room, and
+thence to the finishing apartment, where the detached
+pieces are hammered together, with deafening noise.</p>
+
+<p>Troy rejoices also in a paper boat manufactory&mdash;the
+boats being made especially for racing and feats of skill.
+They find sale principally in foreign markets, and at
+stated seasons divide the attention of the English with
+the "Derby." The boats are made of layers of brown
+paper put together with shellac.</p>
+
+<p>There is a large society of Grand Army men in Albany,
+one Post numbering five or six hundred members.
+Their rooms are tastefully decorated, and hung with
+patriotic pictures, which make the blood thrill anew, as
+in the days of '61. A miniature fort occupies the centre
+of the room, and emblematic cannon and crossed swords
+are to be seen in conspicuous places.</p>
+
+<p>A trip down the Hudson, in summer, from Albany
+to New York, is said to afford some of the finest scenery<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+in the world, not excepting the famous sail on the castled
+Rhine; and the large river boats which leave Albany
+wharf daily, for our American London, are, indeed,
+floating palaces. The capital city of the Empire State is
+not, therefore, without its attractions, despite the fact
+that it was settled by the Dutch, and that a sort of Rip
+Van Winkle sleep seems, at times, to have fastened itself
+upon the drowsy spirit of Albanian enterprise.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<h2>BOSTON.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Geographical Location of Boston.&mdash;Ancient Names.&mdash;Etymology
+of the Word Massachusetts.&mdash;Changes in the Peninsula.&mdash;Noted
+Points of Interest.&mdash;Boston Common.&mdash;Old Elm.&mdash;Duel Under
+its Branches.&mdash;Soldiers' Monument.&mdash;Fragmentary History.&mdash;Courtship
+on the Common.&mdash;Faneuil Hall and Market.&mdash;Old
+State House.&mdash;King's Chapel.&mdash;Brattle Square Church.&mdash;New
+State House.&mdash;New Post Office.&mdash;Old South Church.&mdash;Birthplace
+of Franklin.&mdash;"News Letter."&mdash;City Hall.&mdash;Custom
+House.&mdash;Providence Railroad Station.&mdash;Places of General Interest.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Boston sits like a queen at the head of her harbor
+on the Massachusetts coast, and wears her crown
+of past and present glory with an easy and self-satisfied
+grace. Her commercial importance is large; her ships
+float on many seas; and she rejoices now in the same
+uncompromising spirit of independence which controlled
+the actions of the celebrated "Tea Party" in the pioneer
+days of '76. Her safe harbor is one of the best on the
+Atlantic seaboard, and is dotted with over a hundred
+islands. On some of these, garrisoned forts look grimly
+seaward.</p>
+
+<p>Boston is built on a peninsula about four miles in
+circumference, and to this fact may be attributed the
+origin of her first name, Shawmutt, that word signifying
+in the Indian vocabulary a peninsula. Its second
+name, Tremount, took its rise from the three peaks of
+Beacon Hill, prominently seen from Charlestown by the
+first settlers there. Many of the colonists were from old
+Boston, in Lincolnshire, England, and on the seventh of
+September, 1630, this name supplanted the first two.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">BOSTON, AS VIEWED FROM THE BAY.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_041.jpg" width="1024" height="627" alt="BOSTON, AS VIEWED FROM THE BAY." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+<p>In this connection may be given the etymology of the
+word Massachusetts, which is somewhat curious. It is
+said that the red Sachem who governed in this part of
+the country had his seat on a hill about two leagues
+south of Boston. It lay in the shape of an Indian
+arrow's head, which in their language was called Mos.
+Wetuset, pronounced <i>Wechuset</i>, was also their name for
+a hill, and the Sachem's seat was therefore named
+Mosentuset, which a slight variation changed into the
+name afterwards received by the colony. Boston, as
+the centre of this colony, began from the first to assume
+the importance of the first city of New England. Its
+history belongs not only to itself, but to the country at
+large, as the pioneer city in the grand struggle for constitutional
+and political liberty. A large majority of
+the old landmarks which connected it with the stormy
+days of the past, and stood as monuments of its primeval
+history, are now obliterated by time and the steady march
+of improvements. The face of the country is changed.
+The three peaks of Beacon Hill, which once lifted themselves
+to the height of a hundred and thirty feet above
+the sea, are now cut down into insignificant knolls. The
+waters of the "black bay" which swelled around its
+base have receded to give place to the encroachments of
+the city. Made lands, laid out in streets and set thick
+with dwellings, supplant the mud flats formerly covered
+by the tide. Thousands of acres which were once the
+bed of the harbor are now densely populated.</p>
+
+<p>The house on Harrison avenue where the writer is
+at present domiciled is located on the spot which once
+was occupied by one of the best wharves in the city.
+The largest ocean craft moored to this wharf, on account
+of the great depth of water flowing around it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+The land has steadily encroached on the water, until the
+peninsula that was is a peninsula no longer, and its
+former geographical outlines have dropped out of sight
+in the whirl and rush of the populous and growing city.
+A few old landmarks of the past, however, still remain,
+linking the <i>now</i> and the <i>then</i>, and among the most
+prominent of these are Faneuil Hall, the Old South
+Church, which was founded in 1660, King's Chapel, the
+Old Granary Burying-ground, Brattle Square Church,
+quite recently demolished, the old State House, and
+Boston Common. The Common antedates nearly all
+other special features of the city, and is the pride of
+Bostonians. Here juvenile Boston comes in winter to
+enjoy the exciting exercise of "coasting," and woe to the
+unwary foot passenger who may chance to collide with
+the long sleds full of noisy boys which shoot like black
+streaks from the head of Beacon street Mall, down the
+diagonal length of the Common, to the junction of
+Boylston and Tremont streets. This winter (1874-5),
+owing to several unfortunate accidents to passers-by
+across the snowy roads of the coasters, elevated bridges
+have been erected, to meet the wants of the people without
+interfering with the rights of the boys. The Common
+was originally a fifty-acre lot belonging to a Mr.
+Blackstone. This was in 1633. It was designed as a
+cow pasture and training ground, and was sold to the
+people of Boston the next year, 1634, for thirty pounds.
+The city was taxed for this purpose to the amount of
+not less than five shillings for each inhabitant. Mr.
+Blackstone afterwards removed to Cumberland, Rhode
+Island, where he died, in the spring of 1675. It is said
+that John Hancock's cows were pastured on the Common
+in the days of the Revolution. On the tenth of May,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+1830, the city authorities forbade the use of the Common
+for cows, at which time it was inclosed by a two-rail
+fence. The handsome iron paling which now surrounds
+the historic area has long since taken the place of the
+ancient fence.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the most noticeable, certainly the most famous
+object on Boston Common, is the Great Tree, or
+Old Elm, which stands in a hollow of rich soil near a
+permanent pond of water, not far from the centre of
+the enclosure. It is of unknown age. It was probably
+over a hundred years old in 1722. Governor Winthrop
+came to Boston in 1630, but before that period the tree
+probably had its existence. It antedates the arrival of
+the first settlers, and it seems not unlikely that the
+Indian Shawmutt smoked the pipe of peace under its
+pendent branches. In 1844 its height was given at
+seventy-two and a half feet&mdash;girth, one foot above the
+ground, twenty-two and a half feet. The storms of
+over two centuries have vented their fury upon it and
+destroyed its graceful outlines. But in its age and decrepitude
+it has been tenderly nursed and partially
+rejuvenated. Broken limbs, torn off by violent gales,
+have been replaced by means of iron clamps, and such
+skill as tree doctors may use. In the last century a
+hollow orifice in its trunk was covered with canvas and
+its edges protected by a mixture of clay and other substances.
+Later, in 1854, Mr. J. V. C. Smith, Mayor
+of the city, placed around it an iron fence bearing the
+following inscription:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<h4>"<span class="smcap">The Old Elm.</span>"</h4>
+
+<p>"This tree has been standing here for an unknown
+period. It is believed to have existed before the settlement
+of Boston, being full-grown in 1722. Exhibited<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+marks of old age in 1792, and was nearly destroyed by
+a storm in 1832. Protected by an iron inclosure in
+1854."</p>
+
+<p>What a long array of exciting events has this tree
+witnessed! In the stirring days of the Revolution the
+British army was encamped around it. In 1812 the
+patriot army occupied the same place, in protecting the
+town against the invasion of a foreign foe. Tumultuous
+crowds have here assembled on election and Independence
+days, and its sturdy branches have faced alike the
+anger of the elements and the wrath of man. Public
+executions have taken place under its shadow, and
+witches have dangled from its branches in death's last
+agonies. Here, in 1740, Rev. George Whitfield preached
+his farewell sermon to an audience of thirty thousand
+people; and here, also, at an earlier date, old Matoonas,
+of the Nipmuck tribe, was shot to death by the dusky
+warriors of Sagamore John, on a charge of committing
+the first murder in Massachusetts Colony. An incident
+of still more romantic interest belongs to the history of
+the Old Elm. On July third, 1728, this spot was the
+scene of a mortal combat between two young men
+belonging to the upper circle of Boston society. The
+cause of dispute was the possession of an unknown fair
+one. The names of the young men were Benjamin
+Woodbridge and Henry Phillips, both about twenty
+years old. The time was evening, the weapons rapiers,
+and Woodbridge was fatally dispatched by a thrust
+from the rapier of his antagonist. Phillips fled to a
+British ship of war lying in the harbor, and was borne
+by fair breezes to English shores. He did not long survive
+his opponent, however, dying, it is said, of despair,
+shortly after his arrival in England.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frog Pond, or Fountain Pond, near the Old Elm,
+has been transformed from a low, marshy spot of stagnant
+water, to the clear sheet which is now the delight of
+the boys. October twenty-fifth, 1848, the water from
+Cochituate Lake was introduced through this pond, and
+in honor of the occasion a large procession marched
+through the principal streets of the city to the Common.
+Addresses, hymns, prayers, and songs, were the order
+of the day, and when the pure water of the lake leaped
+through the fountain gate, the ringing of bells and
+boom of cannon attested the joy of the people.</p>
+
+<p>Near the Old Elm and the Frog Pond, on Flagstaff
+Hill, the corner-stone of a Soldiers' Monument was laid,
+September eighteenth, 1871. Some idea of the style of the
+monument may be gathered from the following description:&mdash;"Upon
+a granite platform will rest the plinth,
+in the form of a Greek cross, with four panels, in which
+will be inserted bas-reliefs representing the Sanitary
+Commission, the Navy, the Departure for the War and
+the Return. At each of the four corners will be a
+statue, of heroic size, representing Peace, History, the
+Army, and the Navy. The die upon the plinth will
+also be richly sculptured, and upon it, surrounding the
+shaft in alto-relievo, will be four allegorical figures representing
+the North, South, East and West. The shaft
+is to be an elegant Doric column, the whole to be surmounted
+by a colossal statue of America resting on a
+hemisphere, guarded by four figures of the American
+eagle, with outspread wings. 'America' will hold in her
+left hand the national standard, and in her right she will
+support a sheathed sword, and wreaths for the victors.
+The extreme height of the monument will be ninety feet.
+The artist is Martin Millmore, of Boston."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the year 1668, a certain Mr. Dunton visited
+Boston, and wrote the following letter to his friends in
+England. It will serve to show the custom of Bostonians
+on training day, and recall some of the scenes
+which transpired over two hundred years ago on the
+historic Common. "It is a custom here," he says, "for
+all that can bear arms to go out on a training day. I
+thought a pike was best for a young soldier, so I carried a
+pike; 'twas the first time I ever was in arms. Having
+come into the field, the Captain called us into line to
+go to prayer, and then prayed himself, and when the
+exercise was done the Captain likewise concluded with
+a prayer. Solemn prayer upon a field, on training day,
+I never knew but in New England, where it seems it is
+a common custom. About three o'clock, our exercises
+and prayers being over, we had a very noble dinner, to
+which all the clergymen were invited."</p>
+
+<p>In 1640, Arthur Perry was Town Drummer for all
+public purposes. There being no meeting-house bell in
+town, he called the congregation together with his drum.
+"He joined the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company
+in that capacity, for which yearly service he received
+five pounds. The second additional musical instrument
+was a clarionet, performed on by a tall, strapping
+fellow with but one eye, who headed the Ancient and
+Honorable a few strides." The first band of music used in
+Boston was in 1790, at the funeral of Colonel Joseph
+Jackson. Yearly, for a period of between two and three
+hundred years, this military company has appeared on
+the Common, to be received by the Governor of the
+State, with his aides, who appointed the new commissions
+for the year to come and received those for the
+year just past. Their anniversary occurs on the first
+Monday in June.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Brewer Fountain, the Deer Park and the Tremont
+and Beacon Street Malls complete the list of conspicuous
+attractions on the Common. The Beacon Street Mall is
+perhaps the finest, being heavily shaded by thickly-set
+rows of American elms. A particular portion of this
+mall is described as the scene of at least <i>one</i> courtship,
+and how many more may have transpired in the neighborhood
+history or tradition tells us not!</p>
+
+<p>The "Autocrat of the Breakfast-table" loved the
+schoolmistress who partook of her daily food at the same
+board with himself and listened quietly to his wise morning
+talks, with only an occasional sensible reply. The
+schoolmistress returned his passion, but the young Autocrat,
+uncertain of his fate, rashly determined that if she
+said him "nay" to this most important question of his
+life, he would take passage in the next steamer bound
+for Liverpool, and never look upon her face again. The
+fateful hour which was to decide his fate approached,
+and the Autocrat proposed a walk. They took the
+direction of the Beacon Street Mall, and what happened
+next his own charming pen-picture best describes:</p>
+
+<p>"It was on the Common that we were walking. The
+<i>mall</i> or boulevard of our Common, you know, has
+various branches leading from it in different directions.
+One of these runs down from opposite Joy street, southward,
+across the length of the whole Common, to Boylston
+street. We called it the long path, and were fond
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I felt very weak indeed (though of a tolerably
+robust habit) as we came opposite the head of this path
+on that morning. I think I tried to speak twice without
+making myself distinctly audible. At last I got out
+the question:&mdash;'Will you take the long path with me?'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Certainly,' said the schoolmistress, 'with much
+pleasure.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Think,' I said, 'before you answer; if you take the
+long path with me now, I shall interpret it that we are
+to part no more!' The schoolmistress stepped back
+with a sudden movement, as if an arrow had struck her.</p>
+
+<p>"One of the long, granite blocks used as seats was
+hard by, the one you may still see close by the Ginko
+tree. 'Pray, sit down,' I said.</p>
+
+<p>"'No, no,' she answered softly, 'I will walk the <i>long
+path</i> with you.'"</p>
+
+<p>Propositions to convert the Common into public
+thoroughfares have ever met with stout resistance from
+"we the people"&mdash;the Commoners of Boston&mdash;and
+only this winter a meeting was held in Faneuil Hall for
+the purpose of protesting against this causeless desecration.
+The occasion of the meeting was a clique movement
+to have a street-car track run through the sacred
+ground. One of the speakers&mdash;a workingman&mdash;waxed
+eloquent on the theme of the "poor man's park, where
+in summer a soiled son of labor might buy a cent apple
+and lounge at his ease under the shady trees."</p>
+
+<p>In 1734, by vote of the town, a South End and
+North End Market were established. Before this the
+people were supplied with meats and vegetables at their
+own doors. In 1740, Peter Faneuil offered to build a
+market-house at his own expense, and present it to the
+town. His proposition was carried by seven majority.
+Faneuil Hall, the "Cradle of Liberty," was first built
+two stories high, forty feet wide, and one hundred feet
+in length. It was nearly destroyed by fire in 1761, and
+in 1805 it was enlarged to eighty feet in width and
+twenty feet greater elevation. "The Hall is never let for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+money," but is at the disposal of the people whenever a
+sufficient number of persons, complying with certain
+regulations, ask to have it opened. The city charter of
+Boston contains a provision forbidding the sale or lease
+of this Hall. For a period of over eighty years&mdash;from
+the time of its erection until 1822&mdash;all town meetings
+were held within its walls. It is "peculiarly fitted for
+popular assemblies, possessing admirable acoustic properties."</p>
+
+<p>The capacity of the Hall is increased by the absence
+of all seats on the floor&mdash;the gallery only being provided
+with these conveniences. Portraits cover the
+walls. Healy's picture of Webster replying to Hayne
+hangs in heavy gilt, back of the rostrum. Paintings of
+the two Adamses, of General Warren and Commodore
+Preble, of Edward Everett and Governor Andrew,
+adorn other portions of the Hall. Nor are Washington
+and Lincoln forgotten. The pictured faces of these
+noble patriots of the past seem to shed a mysterious influence
+around, and silently plead the cause of right
+and of justice. The words which echoed from this rostrum
+in the days before the Revolution still ring down
+from the past, touching the present with a living power
+whenever liberty needs a champion or the people an
+advocate.</p>
+
+<p>Faneuil Hall Market, or Quincy Market, as it is
+popularly called, grew out of a recommendation by
+Mayor Quincy, in 1823. Two years later the corner-stone
+was laid, and in 1827 the building was completed.
+It is five hundred and thirty-five feet long, fifty feet
+wide, and two stories high. Its site was reclaimed from
+the tide waters, and one hundred and fifty thousand dollars
+were expended in its erection.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The capital for its construction was managed in such
+a judicious way that not only the market was built, but
+six new streets were opened and a seventh enlarged,
+without a cent of city tax or a dollar's increase of the
+city's debt.</p>
+
+<p>The Old State House was located on the site of the
+first public market, at the head or western end of State
+street. It was commenced with a bequest of five hundred
+pounds from Robert Keayne, the first commander
+of the "Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company."
+It was known as the Town House, and was erected about
+the year 1670. The present Old State House was built
+in 1748, on the same site. Its vicinity is historic. The
+square in State street below the Old State House, was
+the scene of the Boston massacre, March fifth, 1770.
+"The funeral of the victims of the massacre was
+attended by an immense concourse of people from all
+parts of New England." About the same year also, in
+front of this Town House, occurred the famous battle of
+the broom, between a fencing master just arrived from
+England and Goff, the regicide. This English fencer
+erected an elevated platform in front of the Town
+House and paraded, sword in hand, for three days,
+challenging all America for a trial of his skill. At this
+time three of the judges who signed the death warrant
+for beheading Charles the First, of England, had escaped
+to Boston, and were concealed by the people of Massachusetts
+and Connecticut. Their names were Goff,
+Whalley and Dixwell, for whom, dead or alive, Parliament
+offered one hundred pounds each. The fencing
+master made such a stir about his skill that Goff, hearing
+of it at his place of concealment in the woods of
+Hadley, came to Boston and confronted the wordy hero.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+His sword was a birch broom, his shield a white oak
+cheese slung from his arm in a napkin. After he had
+soaked his broom in a mud-puddle he mounted the
+platform for battle. The fencing master ordered him
+off, but Goff stood his ground and neatly parried the
+first thrust of the braggart. The battle then commenced
+in earnest, and the cheese three times received
+the sword of the fencing master. Before it could be
+withdrawn, Goff each time daubed the face of his antagonist
+with the muddy broom, amid the huzzas of the
+crowd which had gathered from all quarters to witness
+the contest. At the third lunge into the huge cheese the
+swordsman threw aside his small blade, and, unsheathing
+a broadsword, rushed furiously upon Goff.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop, sir!" exclaimed Goff; "hitherto, you see, I
+have only played with you, and have not attempted to
+hurt you, but if you come at me with the broadsword,
+know that I will certainly take your life!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who can you be?" replied the other; "you are
+either Goff, Whalley or the devil, for there was no other
+man in England could beat me!"</p>
+
+<p>Goff immediately retired, amid the plaudits of the
+crowd, and the subdued fencing master slunk away
+with chagrin.</p>
+
+<p>The interior arrangement of the Old State House has
+been entirely remodeled, and is now used exclusively
+for business.</p>
+
+<p>King's Chapel, at the corner of Tremont and School
+streets, is another noteworthy point of interest. The
+corner-stone was laid in 1750, and four years were occupied
+in its construction, the stone for the building material
+being imported. Its church-yard was Boston's
+first burial-ground, and some of the tombstones date<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+back as far as 1658. Mr. Isaac Johnson, one of the
+founders of Boston, is said to have here found his last
+resting place. John Winthrop, his son and grandson&mdash;all
+governors of Connecticut, lay in the same family
+tomb in this yard. Four pastors of the "First Church
+of Christ in Boston" are also buried here. The body of
+General Joseph Warren was placed in King's Chapel
+before it was re-interred at Cambridge, and "dust to
+dust" has been pronounced over many other distinguished
+men at this stone church. The edifice is constructed in
+a peculiar way, with Doric columns of gray stone, and is
+sure to attract the attention of the stranger. It was the
+first Episcopal, as well as the first Unitarian church in
+Boston, and its pulpit is now the exponent of Unitarian
+doctrine, added to the Church of England service.</p>
+
+<p>Going down Washington street towards Charlestown,
+we come to the famous Brattle Square, and its church,
+which once consecrated the spot. Here Edward Everett
+preached to his listening flock, and here, on July
+thirtieth, 1871, Dr. S. K. Lothrop pronounced the last
+sermon within its walls. Its ancient bell has ceased to
+ring, and the old-fashioned pulpit echoes no more to the
+tread of distinguished men.</p>
+
+<p>The first Brattle Square Church was built in 1699.
+It was torn down in 1772, and the next year rebuilt on the
+same site, the dedication taking place July twenty-fifth.</p>
+
+<p>On the night of March sixteenth, 1776, the British
+under Lord Howe were encamped in this neighborhood,
+some of the regiments using Brattle Square Church as a
+barrack. A cannon ball, fired from Cambridge, where
+the American army was then stationed, struck the
+church, and was afterwards built into the wall of the
+historic edifice, above the porch. On the next night<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+ten thousand of Lord Howe's troops embarked from
+Boston. In 1871 the building was sold by the society,
+and a handsome granite block now takes its place.</p>
+
+<p>The new State House on Beacon street is one of the
+most prominent geographical points in all Boston, and
+the view from its cupola is second only to that obtained
+from the glorious height of Bunker Hill monument.
+Its gilded dome is a conspicuous object far and near, and
+glitters in the sunlight like veritable gold. The land
+on which the State House stands was bought by the
+town from Governor Hancock's heirs, and given to the
+State. The corner-stone was laid July fourth, 1793, the
+ceremony being conducted by the Freemasons, Paul
+Revere, as Grand Master, at their head. The massive
+stone was drawn to its place by fifteen white horses,
+that being the number then of the States in the Union.
+Ex-Governor Samuel Adams delivered the address.
+The Legislature first convened in the new State House
+in January, 1798. In 1852 it was greatly enlarged, and
+in 1867 the interior was entirely remodeled. Chantry's
+statue of Washington, the statues of Webster and Mann,
+busts of Adams, Lincoln and Sumner, and that beautiful
+piece of art in marble, the full-length statue of Governor
+Andrew, in the Doric Hall&mdash;all attract the attention
+of the visitor. In this rotunda there are also copies
+of the tombstones of the Washington family of Brington
+Parish, England, presented by Charles Sumner, and
+the torn and soiled battle-flags of Massachusetts regiments,
+hanging in glass cases. In the Hall of
+Representatives and the Senate Chamber, relics of the
+past are scattered about, and the walls are adorned with
+portraits of distinguished men. The eastern wing of
+the State House is occupied with the State Library<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+Large numbers of visitors yearly throng the building
+and climb the circular stairways for the fine view of
+Boston to be obtained from the cupola.</p>
+
+<p>The new Post Office is accounted one of the finest public
+buildings in New England. It has a frontage on Devonshire
+street, of over two hundred feet and occupies the entire
+square between Milk and Water streets. It was several
+years in building, being occupied this winter for the first
+time since the great fire. Its cost was something like three
+millions of dollars. Its style of architecture is grand in
+the extreme. Groups of statuary ornament the central
+projections of the building, and orders of pilasters, columns,
+entablatures and balustrades add to it their elegant
+finish. Its roof is an elaboration of the Louvre and
+Mansard styles, and the interior arrangement cannot be
+surpassed for beauty or convenience. It has three street
+fa&ccedil;ades, from one of which a broad staircase leads to the
+four upper stories. On these floors are located important
+public offices. The Post Office corridor is twelve
+feet in height and extends across two sides of the immense
+building. At the time of the great fire of 1872
+this structure was receiving its roof, and became a barrier
+against the onward sweep of the flames. The massive
+granite walls were cracked and split, but they effectually
+stopped the work of the fire fiend.</p>
+
+<p>In the heart of the city, at the corner of Milk and
+Washington streets, stands one of the most famous
+buildings in Boston, and perhaps the most celebrated
+house of religious worship in the United States. It
+was founded in 1669, and received the name of the Old
+South Church. The first building was made of cedar,
+and stood for sixty years. In 1729 it was taken down,
+and the present building erected on the same spot. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+interior arrangement is described as having been exceedingly
+quaint, with its pulpit sounding board, its high,
+square pews, and double tier of galleries. During the
+Revolution it was frequently used for public meetings,
+and Faneuil Hall assemblies adjourned to the Old South
+whenever the size of the crowd demanded it. Here the
+celebrated "Tea Party" held their meetings, and discussed
+the measures which resulted in consigning the
+British tea, together with the hated tax, to the bottom
+of Boston Harbor. Here Joseph Warren delivered his
+famous oration on the Boston Massacre, drawing tears
+from the eyes of even the British soldiery, sent there to
+intimidate him. In 1775 the edifice was occupied by
+the British as a place for cavalry drill, and a grog-shop
+was established in one of the galleries. In 1782 the
+building was put in repair, and has stood without further
+change until the present time, nearly a hundred
+years. In 1872 it was occupied as a Post Office, and
+has only been vacated this winter. Its day of religious
+service is doubtless over. It will probably be used for
+business purposes, but never again as a society sanctuary.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite the south front of the Old South Church, on
+Milk street, stood the house in which Benjamin Franklin
+was born. Here, on the seventeenth of January,
+1706, the great philosopher was ushered into existence,
+and on the same day was christened at the Old South.
+When he was ten years old, he worked with his father
+in a candle manufactory, on the corner of Union and
+Hanover streets, at the sign of the Blue Bell. He was
+afterwards printer's devil for his brother James, and at
+eighteen established the fourth newspaper printed in this
+country. It was entitled "The New England Courant."</p>
+
+<p>The first newspaper of Boston was also the first in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+colonies, and was printed on a half sheet of Pot paper,
+in small pica. It was entitled "The Boston News
+Letter. Published, by authority, from Monday, April
+seventeenth, to Monday, April twenty-fourth, 1704."
+John Campbell, a Scotchman and bookseller, was proprietor.</p>
+
+<p>Now the Boston press stands in the front rank of the
+world's journalism, and is commodiously accommodated;
+as the elegant buildings of the <i>Transcript</i>, <i>Globe</i>, <i>Journal</i>,
+<i>Herald</i> and other papers, testify. The <i>Advertiser</i> is
+the oldest daily paper in the city.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to properly describe Boston within the
+limits of so short a chapter, and only a glance at a few
+other points of interest will therefore be given.</p>
+
+<p>The City Hall, on School street, is on the site of
+the house of Isaac Johnson, who lived here in 1630,
+and who has been styled the founder of Boston. The
+corner-stone of the new building was laid December twenty-second,
+1672. It is of Concord granite, and is in the
+finest style of modern architecture. Here, under the
+arching roof of the French dome, the fire-alarm telegraph
+centres, and the sentinel who stands guard at this important
+point never leaves his post, night or day. The mysterious
+signal, though touched in the city's remotest rim,
+is instantly obeyed, and in less time than it takes to tell
+it the brave firemen are rushing to the rescue. A fine
+bronze statue of Benjamin Franklin stands in the
+inclosure in front of the building.</p>
+
+<p>The Custom House, on State street, is built of granite,
+even to the roof. It is constructed in the form of a
+Greek cross, and is surrounded by thirty-two granite
+columns, a little over five feet in diameter. The site was
+reclaimed from the tide waters, and the massive building<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+rests upon about three thousand piles. Over a million
+dollars were expended in its erection.</p>
+
+<p>The Old Granary Burying-ground, once a part of the
+Common, received its name from a public granary which
+formerly stood within its limits. Some of the most
+distinguished dust in history is consigned to its keeping.
+Paul Revere, Peter Faneuil, Samuel Adams, John
+Hancock, the victims of the Boston Massacre, the
+parents of Franklin, the first Mayor of Boston, and a
+long list of other names famed in their day and ours, lie
+buried within this ancient ground. Near by, between
+the Common and the Granary Cemetery, stands the
+celebrated Park Street Church, of which W. H. H.
+Murray, the brilliant writer and preacher, was, until
+lately, the pastor. It used to be known as "brimstone
+corner." This winter we attended Park Street Church
+on the same day with the <i>brunette</i> monarch, Kalakaua
+and suite.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most commodious and elegant stations in
+New England, or this country, is that of the Boston
+and Providence Railroad. It is about eight hundred
+feet in length, and is built of brick, with two shades of
+sandstone. The track house is seven hundred feet long,
+covering five tracks, and has a span of one hundred and
+twenty-five feet. Its cost is somewhere in the neighborhood
+of six hundred thousand dollars. The interior
+arrangement is quite novel in style. The waiting-rooms
+open out of an immense central apartment with a balcony
+reaching around the entire inner circumference. Theatre
+tickets, flower and cigar stands, a billiard room and a
+barber shop, are some of the special features of the
+station. Refreshment rooms and dressing rooms, in oak
+and crimson, are also an integral part of the building.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hundreds of interesting places in this singular and
+devious city of Boston must go unnoticed in these pages.
+The beautiful Tremont Temple and its Sunday temperance
+lectures; Music Hall, with its big organ of six
+thousand pipes, through one of which Henry Ward
+Beecher is said to have crawled, before its erection; the
+Parker House, one of the crack hotels of the city; the
+Revere House, where all the distinguished people stop,
+with its special suite of rooms upholstered in blue satin,
+where King Kalakaua smoked his cigars in peace; the
+beneficent Public Library; the Boston Athen&aelig;um, home
+of art; the Boston Theatre, the new and elegant Globe
+Theatre, and the suburban limits, including Charlestown
+and famous Bunker Hill, Cambridge and Harvard
+University, Mt. Auburn, Dorchester Heights, Roxbury
+and East Boston, which was formerly known as Noddle's
+Island, and where now the Cunard line of steamers
+arrive and depart&mdash;all these tempt my pen to linger
+within their charmed localities. But it is a temptation
+to be resisted. When, after many weeks' sojourn in the
+intellectual "Hub," I was at last seated in the outward
+bound train, ticketed for the west, a regret, born of
+pleasant associations and a taste of Boston atmosphere,
+took possession of me. The farewells I uttered held
+an undertone of pain. But the train sped onward,
+unheeding, and the city of the harbor seemed to dissolve
+and disappear in the smoke of her thousand chimneys,
+like a dream of the night.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<h2>BUFFALO.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Niagara Frontier.&mdash;Unfortunate Fate of the Eries.&mdash;The
+Battle of Doom.&mdash;Times of 1812.&mdash;Burning of Buffalo.&mdash;Early
+Names.&mdash;Origin of Present Name.&mdash;Growth and Population.&mdash;Railway
+Lines.&mdash;Queen of the Great Lakes.&mdash;Fort Porter and
+Fort Erie.&mdash;International Bridge.&mdash;Iron Manufacture.&mdash;Danger
+of the Niagara.&mdash;Forest Lawn Cemetery.&mdash;Decoration Day.&mdash;The
+Spaulding Monument.&mdash;Parks and Boulevard.&mdash;Delaware
+Avenue.&mdash;On the Terrace.&mdash;Elevator District.&mdash;Church and
+Schools.&mdash;Grosvenor Library.&mdash;Historical Rooms.&mdash;Journalism.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;City Hall.&mdash;Dog-carts and their Attendants.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Buffalo is a kind of half-way house between
+the East and the West&mdash;if anything may be called
+west this side of the Mississippi River&mdash;and it partakes
+of the characteristics of both sections. It was once the
+chief trading post on the Niagara frontier, and its vicinity
+has been the scene of many a hotly contested battle
+between dusky races now forever lost to this part of the
+world, and almost forgotten of history. Long ago, the
+Eries, or the Cat Nation, lived on the southern shores
+of the same lake whose waters now lap the wharves of
+Buffalo. They left it the heritage of their name, and
+that is all.</p>
+
+<p>The race, in its lack of calculation, did not greatly
+differ from many isolated instances of the paler race of
+mankind around us now; for it died of a too o'erreaching
+ambition. Jealous of the distant fame of the Five
+Nations, the Eries set out to surprise and conquer them
+in deadly battle, and themselves met the fate they had
+meant for the Iroquois. They were exterminated; and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+few returned to the squaws in their lonely wigwams, to
+tell the tale of doom.</p>
+
+<p>The noble race of Senecas succeeded the Cat Nation
+on the shores of Lake Erie, and after them, from across
+the great seas, came the dominant, pushing, civilizing
+Anglo-Saxons.</p>
+
+<p>When the war of 1812 broke out, Buffalo was an
+exceedingly infant city, and did not promise well at all.
+Nobody would have then predicted her importance of
+to-day. Later, in 1813, the battle of Black Rock
+was fought, and while a few old soldiers made a determined
+stand against the onset of the solid British
+phalanx, most of the raw recruits fled down Niagara
+street in a regular Bull Run panic, chased by the pursuing
+foe. The village was then fired by the enemy, and
+every building except one was burned to the ground.
+The description of the suffering and flight of women and
+children, during that harrowing time, draws largely
+on the sympathies of the reader, and sounds strangely
+similar to the newspaper accounts of the burning of
+Western and Pennsylvania towns, of more recent occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>But, though Buffalo was destroyed by fire, it shortly
+evinced all the power of the fabled ph&#339;nix, and rose
+from its ashes to a grander future than its early settlers
+ever dreamed of prophesying for it. The young city,
+however, suffered in its first days from a multiplicity of
+names, struggling under no less than three. The Indians
+named it Te-osah-wa, or "Place of Basswood;" the
+Holland Land Company dragged the Dutch name of
+New Amsterdam across the ocean and endeavored to
+drop it at the foot of Lake Erie; and finally, it took its
+present name of Buffalo, from the frequent visits of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+American Bison to a salt spring which welled up about
+three miles out of the village, on Buffalo creek.</p>
+
+<p>I think Buffalonians have reason to be grateful that
+the last name proved more tenacious than the other two.
+Think of the "Queen City" of the most Eastern West
+being overshadowed by the tiled-roof name of New
+Amsterdam!</p>
+
+<p>It was not until 1822, on the completion of the Erie
+Canal, that Buffalo began the rapid advance towards
+prosperity that now marks its growth, the muster-roll
+of its population, at this writing, numbering the round
+figures of one hundred and sixty-one thousand. It now
+rejoices in business streets three and four miles long&mdash;full-fledged
+two-thirds of the distance, and the remainder
+embryonic. The harbor-front, facing the ship canal and
+the Lake, bristles with the tall tops of huge grain elevators&mdash;a
+whole village of them. A network of railroad
+lines, and the commerce of the great Lakes, have combined
+to build up and carry on a vast business at this
+point, and to make it a station of much importance
+between the East and the West. The rails of the New
+York Central, the Great Western, the Lake Shore, and
+the Buffalo and Philadelphia roads, besides many other
+lines, all centre here, carrying their tide of human
+freight, mainly westward, and transporting the cereals
+of the great grain regions in exchange for the manufactured
+products of less favored localities. When the
+representative of New York or New England wishes
+to go west, he finds his most direct route by rail, via
+Buffalo; or, if he desires a most charming water trip,
+he embarks, also via Buffalo, on one of the handsome
+propellers which ply the Lakes between this city and
+Chicago, and steaming down the length of Lake Erie,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+up through the narrower St. Clair and the broad Huron,
+he passes the wooded shores of Mackinac's beautiful
+island, surmounted by its old fort, and entering Lake
+Michigan, in due time is landed on the breezy Milwaukee
+banks, or is set down within that maelstrom of business,
+named Chicago. Indeed, after Chicago, Buffalo is the
+ranking city of the Lakes, and is said to cover more
+territory than almost any city in the country outside the
+great metropolis&mdash;the distance, from limit to limit,
+averaging seven and eight miles. Its suburban drives
+and places of summer resort, owing to the superior
+water localities of this region, are much out of the usual
+line. Niagara River, famous the world over, allures
+the daring boatman from Fort Porter onward, and the
+wonderful Falls themselves are only eighteen miles
+beyond that. Fort Porter, about two miles out from
+the heart of the city, is located just at the point where
+Niagara River leaves the lake in its mad race to the
+Falls. Here the banks are high and command a wide
+water prospect. Away to the westward the blue lake
+and the blue sky seem to meet and blend together as
+one; and in the opposite direction the rushing river
+spreads out like another lake, towards Squaw Island and
+Black Rock. One or more companies of United States
+Regulars are stationed here, and the barracks and
+officers' quarters surround a square inclosure, which is
+used as a parade ground. Graveled walks are laid out
+around it, and a grassy foot-path leads from the soldiers'
+quarters to the site of the old Fort on the brow of a
+gentle elevation just beyond. The Fort was built for
+frontier defence, in 1812, and the interior, now grass-grown
+and unused, is so deep that the roof of the stone
+structure, once appropriated as a magazine, is nearly on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+a level with the high ground at your feet. During our
+last war the building was occupied as a place of confinement
+for Rebel prisoners. It is now in a state of
+advanced collapse, and the battered walls and open windows
+expose to view the ruin within. A small, square
+outhouse, near one of the embrasures higher up, which
+was used for firing hot shot, is still intact. Field pieces,
+pointing grimly towards the Lake, and little heaps of
+cannon balls lying near, bring freshly to mind the
+nation's last war days, when "the winding rivers ran
+red" with the mingled blood of comrade and foe. The
+sunset gun boomed over the waters while we lingered at
+the old Fort, and the fading glow of day bridged the
+river with arches of crimson and gold.</p>
+
+<p>Diagonally opposite from this point, one looks across
+into the Queen's dominions, where lies the little village
+of Fort Erie, historic as the place from which the
+British crossed to our shores on the night preceding the
+burning of Buffalo.</p>
+
+<p>At Black Rock, about two miles below Fort Porter,
+the great International Railroad Bridge, a mile in
+length, spans the mighty river, having superseded the
+old-time ferry. This bridge is the connecting link
+on the Grand Trunk Road, between Canada and the
+States.</p>
+
+<p>Near its terminus, on the American side, are located
+the immense malleable iron works of Pratt &amp; Letchworth,
+said to be the largest manufactory of the kind in
+the world. Their goods certainly find a world-wide
+market, taking in New England and the Pacific coast,
+Mexico, England and Australia. A pretty picture of
+the country seat of Mr. Letchworth, at Portage, New
+York, may be seen at the Historical Rooms. It is named<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Glen Iris, and is surrounded by handsome grounds,
+groves and fountains.</p>
+
+<p>Boating on the Niagara is much in vogue here,
+notwithstanding the rapid current and the dreadful
+certainty of the Falls in case of accident. The keeper
+of a boat house at Black Rock, opposite Squaw Island,
+told me that the proportion of accidents on the river
+was frightfully large&mdash;far greater than ever got into the
+public prints.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 603px;">
+<span class="caption">SOLDIERS' MONUMENT AT BUFFALO, NEW YORK.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_067.jpg" width="603" height="1024" alt="SOLDIERS' MONUMENT AT BUFFALO, NEW YORK." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Forest Lawn Cemetery&mdash;Buffalo's city of the dead&mdash;is
+one of the loveliest burial places between Brooklyn
+and Chicago. It is picturesque with hill and dale and
+grove, not to mention a large artificial lake lapped in
+one of its grassy hollows, and a winding, wide and
+rocky-bedded creek running through it. The name of
+the creek is spelled S-c-a-j-a-q-u-a-d-a and pronounced
+Kon-joc'-e-ta. The Pratt monument, in a remote portion
+of the grounds, is perhaps the handsomest in the
+cemetery. It looks like a gothic gateway with fluted
+pillars of Italian marbles. A sculptured image of a
+child of one of the Fargos&mdash;of the famous Wells,
+Fargo &amp; Co.&mdash;rests under a glass case on the lap of
+earth which marks her grave. The head is peculiarly
+noble, reminding one of that of the Belvidere Apollo.
+It is said to be a truthful likeness. Decoration Day at
+Forest Lawn was a picture long to be remembered. On a
+little knoll under the trees at the entrance to the grounds
+the military and civic processions assembled to listen to
+the eloquent words of Rev. Mr. Barrett, of Rochester.
+When the brief address was concluded, and the band
+music and singing were over, we followed the committees
+of decoration to the scattered graves of the patriot
+dead, and witnessed the strewing of flowers upon their
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+sacred dust. A hushed circle above the mound of earth,
+a few fitly-spoken words from one of their number who
+knew the soldier-hero, and the floral tributes were tenderly
+placed above the sleeper's head. Thus, oh heroes,
+shall your memory be kept forever green! The flowers
+were wrought into every symbolic shape by which the
+language of affection could be translated. Crowns, and
+crosses, and stars, and anchors of hope, spoke their love
+and solace. The graves of the Confederate dead were
+also decorated, and side by side, under a common mantle
+of flowers, the Blue and the Gray received alike the
+benediction of the hour.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Then beautiful flowers strew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This sweet memorial day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With tears and love for the Blue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And pity for the fallen Gray."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>At Forest Lawn, also, on the historic seventeenth of
+June&mdash;the Bunker Hill Centennial&mdash;a monument was
+dedicated to the memory of nine Spauldings who fought
+at that battle, one hundred years before. The granite
+cenotaph was erected by E. G. Spaulding, of Buffalo,
+descended from the same blood with the heroic nine.
+The names of the list inscribed on the Western front of
+the monument were headed by that of his grandfather,
+Levi Spaulding, who was captain of the ninth company,
+third regiment, under Colonel Reed, of the New Hampshire
+troops, engaged on that day.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"For bright and green the memory still<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of those who stood on Bunker Hill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And nobly met the battle shock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Firm as their native granite rock."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Speeches reviving Revolutionary memories, and fresh
+descriptions of the Bunker Hill contest, were in order.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+There was a semi-military procession, and the interest
+felt in the occasion was general. A grand reception at
+Mr. Spaulding's residence in the evening, concluded the
+patriotic anniversary.</p>
+
+<p>The large park adjoining Forest Lawn is plentiful in
+attractions, including the delights of boating on the
+Konjoceta and loitering in the shadowy coolness of the
+primeval woods. In addition to these, Buffalo is completing
+a grand boulevard system which encircles half
+the City, beginning at what is called the Front, in the
+neighborhood of Fort Porter, and making the circuit of
+the outskirts through Bidwell and Lincoln and Humboldt
+parkways to the intersection of Genesee street
+with the Parade, on the opposite arc of the circle. One
+is sure to find cool breezes along this drive, though the
+day be the hottest of the season. Indeed, the summer
+heats are, at all times, shorn of their fervor in this
+Queen City of the Lakes, and its climatic advantages
+are, therefore, superior.</p>
+
+<p>Delaware Avenue is the leading street of Buffalo for
+private residences, and here much of the aristocracy do
+congregate. It is about three miles long, and double
+rows of shade trees line either side. Fast driving on
+this avenue is licensed by city authority, and racing
+down its gentle incline is much in vogue. In winter,
+when sleighing is good, this is carried to greater excess,
+and the snowy road is black with flying vehicles. Main
+street, the principal business thoroughfare of the city, at
+least for retail trade, is wide, well paved and straight,
+and is built up with substantial business blocks. Its
+sister thoroughfare on the east, Washington street,
+towards the lower end as it approaches the lake, degenerates
+into manufacturing, and the buzz of machinery and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+incessant din of hammers break in on the maiden
+meditations of the passive sight-seer.</p>
+
+<p>As one approaches the Terrace, which is an elbow of
+blocks at one end and a diagonal at the other, one is
+confronted by a confusion of cross streets, which look as
+if they had been gotten up expressly to demoralize one's
+points of compass. They all look out on Buffalo harbor
+and the sea-wall beyond. Ohio street, following the
+bend of the harbor, is the great elevator district of the
+greatest grain mart in the world. Here, when business
+is at high tide, between two and three million bushels of
+grain per day are transferred by these giant monsters with
+high heads. The business places of this department of
+Buffalo enterprise are located principally on Central
+Wharf, in this vicinity, which fronts the harbor and
+which is crowded with offices two tiers deep.</p>
+
+<p>Along the wharf the very air is charged with bustle
+and activity. Vessels of all descriptions are arriving and
+departing at all hours, and the commerce of the great
+lakes pours its flood tide into Buffalo through this gateway.</p>
+
+<p>As for churches and schools, the city overflows with
+them. It is sprinkled in all directions with handsome
+religious edifices, like interrogation points, in stone and
+brick, asking the questions of a higher life. And there
+are thirty-six public schools, besides the State Normal,
+the Central, and the Buffalo Female Academy. This
+last is under the able guidance of Dr. Chester. But
+even these do not complete the list, as I understand there
+are numerous other private institutions of learning.</p>
+
+<p>In one of the triangular pieces of ground where the
+three streets of Niagara, Erie and Church make their
+entrance into Main street, stands the picturesque struc<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>ture
+of St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral. It is built of
+brown stone, and the creeping ivy nearly covers one end
+of it, from the crosses and minarets at the pinnacle to
+the trailing vines on the ground. The gray, gothic
+edifice of St. Joseph's Romish Cathedral, fronting on
+Franklin street, is also very large, and the interior is
+rich in architectural design.</p>
+
+<p>As for the immeasurable realm of books, Buffalo furnishes
+her children access to this, through her libraries.
+Chiefest among them is the Grosvenor, which has
+a bit of history all by itself. It was founded by a
+retired merchant of New York, who had lived in Buffalo
+during the earliest infancy of the city, and whose property
+had been destroyed when the then frontier village
+was fired by the British and Indians, in retaliation for
+the burning of Newark. This generous gentleman also
+left thirty thousand dollars to found a reference library
+for the High School of New York City. His will provided
+a legacy of ten thousand for Buffalo, to be applied
+towards a fire-proof building for a library, and the sum
+of thirty thousand, the interest of which was to be used
+for the purchase of books. The building fund having
+been on interest ever since, now amounts to twenty-eight
+thousand, and in addition the city has donated what is
+known as the Mohawk street property, used at present for
+police purposes, which will sell for an amount sufficiently
+large, together with the deposit already on hand, to erect
+a handsome building. The library is now located over
+the Buffalo Savings Bank, facing a pleasant little park
+between Washington and Main streets.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870 the interest had more than doubled the
+donation, and the Trustees then commenced the work of
+making the library a living institution. After a great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+deal of trouble, they at last secured the services of Alexander
+J. Sheldon, who was willing, without any certain
+compensation, to undertake the task of organizing and
+superintending the library. Mr. Sheldon, who is an
+expert in books, is native to the city, and from boyhood
+has been connected with this line of business. The first
+year of his hard labor at the Grosvenor was rewarded by
+the large sum of five hundred dollars! It was well for
+the institution, however, that Mr. Sheldon was not dependent
+on his salary for support. He entered into the work
+with an enthusiasm which surmounted all difficulties,
+and which has brought the library to its present state of
+progress, making it a credit to the city of Buffalo.</p>
+
+<p>The large reading room is neatly fitted up with black
+walnut cases, nine feet in length, and eight feet high,
+opening on both sides, and capable of holding eight or
+nine hundred average volumes. There are about thirty
+of these cases in the room, with reading tables and easy
+chairs interspersed between them. The style of alcove
+and arrangement, which was also Mr. Sheldon's suggestion,
+produces a very handsome effect. The cases stand
+on black walnut platforms six inches in height, and are
+surmounted by a pretty cornice. The shelves are interchangeable,
+and are of such moderate height that the
+necessity for step-ladders is entirely avoided. There are
+also dummy volumes, made to resemble books and properly
+titled, which, if their mission is to deceive the
+uninitiated, certainly accomplish that task. The number
+of volumes has now accumulated to about eighteen
+thousand, and includes the choicest works in art, science,
+literature and the professions. The fiction department
+comprehends all the recognized standard works, but the
+mass of worthless novels, which pass current in some of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+our circulating libraries, is unhesitatingly excluded.
+The bindings are nearly all morocco, with gilt or
+marbled tops, and the back of each book, as it is added
+to the library, is given a coat of white shellac varnish,
+which prevents it, in a great degree, from fading, and
+renders it easy of renovation.</p>
+
+<p>The small ante-room which is used by the librarian
+and committeemen contains several hundred volumes on
+bibliography, which is a very important feature of such
+an institution. The rooms in summer are breezy, from
+the lake winds, and in winter are heated by steam radiators.
+A heavy cocoa matting deadens all sound on the
+floors, and absolute quiet is thus secured. Thanks to
+the efforts of Mr. Sheldon, the Grosvenor is undoubtedly
+the best library for a student west of the Hudson.</p>
+
+<p>The Historical Rooms deserve notice as one of the
+salient points of Buffalo, and though the Society is
+young and not by any means wealthy, yet it is fairly
+started on its road to distinction. It was founded in
+1862, and subsists principally by donations, as it is yet
+too poor to make purchases of books or relics. The
+Rooms are located at the corner of Main and Court
+streets, nearly opposite the ancient site of the old Eagle
+Tavern. A picture of this hotel as it looked fifty years
+ago may be seen among their collection. A huge gilt
+eagle surmounted the main entrance, and an enclosed
+porch, or what looks like it, at one end of the building,
+bore the inscription "<i>Coach Office</i>," in large letters over
+the doorway. Here also is the noble looking portrait of
+Red Jacket, the great Seneca Chief, together with the
+grand-daughter of Red Jacket's second wife&mdash;Nancy
+Stevenson&mdash;taken at sixteen. This bright-eyed, brown
+maiden married an Indian named Hiram Dennis, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+was still living in 1872. Belts of wampum, war
+hatchets and pipes of peace, besides numerous pictures,
+in oil, of celebrated red warriors, are among the Indian
+mementoes connected with Buffalo's early history. The
+war of 1812 also contributes its scattered waifs to keep
+alive the memory of that time. The sword of Major-General
+Brown, worn at the battle of Sackett's Harbor,
+and a piece of timber from Perry's ship, on which is
+traced the legend "We have met the enemy and they
+are ours," are among the heirlooms of history. Here,
+too, is a Mexican lance from the field of Monterey, and
+the clarionette used in Buffalo's first band of music,
+whose strains helped swell the chorus during the triumphal
+march of Lafayette through her streets in 1824.
+A representation of the first boat on the Erie Canal,
+named "Chief Engineer of Rome," looks quaint enough.
+The walls of the large apartment devoted to historical
+collections are covered with pictures of Buffalo's prominent
+men, and at one end of the room hangs a handsome
+portrait of Millard Fillmore, set in heavy gilt. Their
+list of books and directories is also quite large. The
+story of a city's growth is always one of deep interest,
+and the generations of future years will, no doubt, be
+grateful for these landmarks of their early history.</p>
+
+<p>Journalism in Buffalo rides on the top wave, and her
+leading papers have achieved an enviable fame. Eight
+dailies swell the list, four of which are German, besides
+ten weeklies and seven monthly papers. The history
+of the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i> dates back to October,
+1811. It was issued at that time, under the name of the
+<i>Buffalo Gazette</i>, by the Salisbury brothers, from Canandaigua.
+With the exception of a paper at Batavia,
+begun in 1807, the <i>Gazette</i> was the only paper pub<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>lished
+at that time in Western New York. It afterwards
+changed its name to the <i>Buffalo Patriot</i>, and
+since 1836 it has been issued as the <i>Daily Commercial
+Advertiser</i>. The <i>Courier</i> and <i>Commercial</i> are the ranking
+papers of the city, in point of influence.</p>
+
+<p>Buffalo doesn't seem to be ambitious of display in her
+public buildings, judging from the quality of those
+already on hand. The new City Hall, however, is a noble
+exception to the general rule. It is built of Maine
+granite, in the form of a double Roman cross, and the
+tower, which is two hundred and forty-five feet high, is
+surmounted by four pieces of statuary. Its estimated
+cost is over two millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>St. James' Hall and the Academy of Music are the
+chief places of amusement in the city, the latter place
+being conducted by the Meech brothers, two young
+gentlemen of acknowledged ability. Many noted stars
+of the stage whose names have blazed forth in histrionic
+glory have here made their first conquests, before
+applauding audiences. The stock company is unusually
+good, Ben Rogers, stage manager and first comedian,
+being a host in himself.</p>
+
+<p>The fire department of the city is said to be exceedingly
+efficient, and the police system has gained a
+reputation for thorough work which ought to be the
+terror of the criminal class. It embraces a body of
+mounted police, a corps of detectives and of patrolmen,
+besides the regular force stationed at the harbor.</p>
+
+<p>Among the minor peculiarities of Buffalo may be
+mentioned the superabundance of dog carts to be seen
+in her streets; not the conventional kind that goes
+rolling down Fifth Avenue, among the bewildering
+array of splendid equipages&mdash;coupes, landaus, landau<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>lets,
+drags and what not&mdash;that daily make their way to
+Central Park; not any of these; but the original dog
+cart, with the dog attached. He is to be seen in all the
+varieties of the species, from a muddy yellow to the
+fierce-looking mastiff. He is usually harnessed in company
+with a collapsed old woman or a cadaverous looking
+little boy, and he carries all kinds of mixed freight,
+from an ash barrel to a load of sticks. The undercurrent
+of Buffalo society does not seem to look upon
+the dog in a purely ornamental light.</p>
+
+<p>This chapter on a place so fertile in suggestion might
+be prolonged indefinitely; but we are gazing westward,
+along a line of cities whose terminus does not end until
+it reaches the Golden Gate and the most famous centre
+of population on the Pacific coast. Our steps are bent
+toward that far-off goal, and we must say good-bye to
+the ancient land of the Eries and the former haunts of
+the buffalo.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<h2>BROOKLYN.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Brooklyn a Suburb of New York.&mdash;A City of Homes.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Henry Ward Beecher.&mdash;Thomas De
+Witt Talmage.&mdash;Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D.&mdash;Justin D. Fulton,
+D.D.&mdash;R. S. Storrs, D.D.&mdash;Navy Yard.&mdash;Atlantic Dock.&mdash;Washington
+Park.&mdash;Prospect Park.&mdash;Greenwood Cemetery.&mdash;Evergreen
+and Cyprus Hills Cemeteries.&mdash;Coney Island.&mdash;Rockaway.&mdash;Staten
+Island.&mdash;Glen Island.&mdash;Future of Brooklyn.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>New York holds such supremacy over the other
+cities of the United States that she almost overshadows
+Brooklyn, which lies so near her as to be separated
+only by the narrow channel of the East River.
+Yet Brooklyn in any other locality would be a city of
+the first importance, ranking, as she does, the third in the
+Union as to size and population, and numbering not
+less than six hundred thousand inhabitants. Practically
+New York and Brooklyn are but one city, with identical
+commercial interests, and a great deal else in common.
+Many of the most prominent business men of
+the former city find their homes in the latter; and by
+means of the numerous ferries and the great Suspension
+Bridge there is a constant interchange of people between
+them. The time may come when they will be united
+under one municipal government; though, no doubt,
+many of the older residents of Brooklyn, who have
+helped to build her up to her present extent and prosperity,
+would object to losing her name and identity.
+But should such a union ever take place, there will be
+at once created, next to London, the largest city of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+world, with a population of not less than two millions
+of people.</p>
+
+<p>Brooklyn is situated on the west end of Long Island,
+and overlooks both the East River and the Bay. It
+extends nearly eight miles from north to south, and is
+about four miles from east to west. Its business is not
+so extended or so important as that of New York, nor,
+as a rule, are its business edifices so imposing, though
+some of them present a very fine appearance. It is, in
+fact, a great suburb of the metropolitan city, composed
+more largely of dwellings than of commercial houses. Its
+business men, each morning, make an exodus across the
+East River to Wall street, or Broadway, or other streets
+of New York, and then return at night. It is, in fact,
+a great city of homes, all of them comfortable and many
+of them elegant. There is no squalor, such as is found
+in Mott or Baxter streets and the Five Points and
+their neighborhood, in its sister city. Handsome mansions,
+tasteful cottages and plain but neat rows of dwellings
+are found everywhere, and the streets are beautifully
+shaded by avenues of trees.</p>
+
+<p>The public buildings of Brooklyn worthy of notice
+are few, compared to those of New York. Fulton
+street is its principal thoroughfare, and contains occasional
+handsome edifices. The City Hall, on an open
+square at the junction of Fulton court and Joraleman
+street, is a fine, white marble building, in Ionic style,
+with six columns supporting the roof of the portico.
+It is surmounted by a tower one hundred and fifty-three
+feet in height. Just back of this, to the southeast, and
+facing toward Fulton street, is the County Court House,
+with a white marble front, a Corinthian portico, and an
+iron dome one hundred and four feet high. Beside the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+Court House, to the westward, stands the Municipal
+Building, also of marble, four stories in height, with a
+mansard roof, and a tower at each corner. The Post
+Office is in Washington street, north of the City Hall.
+The Long Island Historical Society has a fine edifice
+at the corner of Clinton and Pierrepont streets, and
+possesses a large library and collection of curiosities.
+The Academy of Design, on Montague street, has a
+handsome exterior; opposite is the Mercantile Library,
+a striking Gothic structure, containing two reading
+rooms and a library of forty-eight thousand volumes.
+The building of the Young Men's Christian Association
+is on Fulton street, at the corner of Gallatin Place, and
+contains a library and free reading room. The Penitentiary
+is an immense stone structure on Nostrand avenue,
+near the city limits. The County Jail, in Raymond
+street, is constructed of red sandstone, in castellated
+Gothic style. The Long Island College Hospital is an
+imposing building, surrounded by extensive grounds,
+on Henry street near Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>Brooklyn is, pre&euml;minently, the City of Churches, of
+which she is said to contain not less than one hundred.
+She has secured the services of the most eminent clergymen
+in the country, and thousands of people each
+year make a pilgrimage thither, for the sole purpose
+of listening to some one or other of those whom they
+have long admired and appreciated at a distance. Most
+prominent among all these clergymen is Henry Ward
+Beecher, who has been the pastor of Plymouth Church
+ever since its organization in 1847. Mr. Beecher came
+of a noted family, his father, Rev. Lyman Beecher,
+being one of the theological lights of his day and generation,
+while his brothers and sisters have all distin<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>guished
+themselves in some way. The author of "Uncle
+Tom's Cabin" was his sister, Mrs. Harriet Beecher
+Stowe, while all of his brothers are, like himself, in the
+ministry.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beecher's popularity has been unparalleled.
+Besides the hundreds who listen to him every Sunday,
+each sermon is reported in full and read by thousands
+of people throughout the country. He has been a
+leader of liberal thought in the Protestant churches;
+and it is largely due to his bold and advanced utterances
+that the church in which he holds communion
+has taken a long step ahead of the position which it
+occupied early in the present century.</p>
+
+<p>Plymouth Church is a plain edifice, in Orange street,
+near Hicks. It has a large seating capacity, yet every
+Sunday it is filled. A goodly proportion of the audience
+is composed of strangers, who are not permitted to take
+seats until the pewholders are provided for. These
+visitors stand in long rows at each of the doors, the rows
+sometimes extending out upon the sidewalk, waiting
+their turns to be seated. Ten minutes before the hour
+of service they are conducted to seats, and the pewholders
+who come after that time must take their
+chances with the rest. On pleasant Sundays every seat
+is occupied, and the aisles and vestibules are crowded.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beecher occupies no pulpit, in the strict sense of
+the word. In front of the organ and choir is a platform,
+upon which are three chairs and three small tables, or
+stands. On one of the latter is a Bible, and on the others
+a profusion of flowers. One realizes in this church the
+grandeur of congregational singing, which is led here by
+a choir of one hundred voices, and accompanied by a
+magnificent organ. When the entire congregation join<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+in some familiar hymn, the singing is exceedingly
+impressive. Mr. Beecher, albeit his reputation is that
+of a sensational preacher, makes little attempt at sensationalism
+in his manner of delivery. He reads well and
+speaks well, with a clear, distinct enunciation, which is
+heard in every part of his church. He talks directly to
+his point, using plain but forcible language, his sermons
+sparkling with original thought and brilliant language,
+all based upon a foundation of plain, practical common
+sense. He has great dramatic power, yet manifests it
+in so unstudied a manner that it is never offensive. He
+imitates the voice and manner of the man of whom he
+is speaking; the maudlin condition of the drunkard, the
+whine of the beggar, the sanctimoniousness of the hypocrite;
+and keeps his audience interested and on the alert.
+The Friday evening lectures are also features of this
+church, and are conducted without formality, yet in a
+decorous manner.</p>
+
+<p>The Brooklyn preacher who is a rival of Beecher, in
+the popular estimation, is Thomas De Witt Talmage,
+whose church is in Schermerhorn street, and known as the
+Tabernacle. It is built in Gothic style, semi-circular in
+form, like an opera house, and is capable of seating 5,000
+persons. It is the largest Protestant place of worship in
+the United States, yet every Sunday it is filled nearly, if
+not quite, to its utmost capacity.</p>
+
+<p>Talmage was born at Bound Brook, New Jersey, in
+1832. After graduating at the Theological Seminary,
+at New Brunswick, he preached in Belleville, New
+Jersey; Syracuse, New York; and Philadelphia, until
+1869, when he came to Brooklyn to be pastor of the
+Central Presbyterian Church. Within a year he had
+become the acknowledged rival of Beecher. His church<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+was crowded, and in 1870 a large amphitheatre, called
+the Brooklyn Tabernacle, capable of seating four thousand
+persons, was built. This building was destroyed
+by fire in 1872, and while it was being rebuilt in its
+present size and form, Talmage preached in the Academy
+of Music, to immense crowds. The great organ used in
+the Boston Coliseum, during the Musical Peace Jubilee,
+accompanies the singing at the Tabernacle, which is
+principally congregational, though a choir of four male
+singers give one or more voluntaries. The singing was
+led by Arbuckle, the celebrated cornetist, but he died in
+May, 1883, and was buried on the day of the opening
+of the Suspension Bridge.</p>
+
+<p>In 1879, Talmage visited Great Britain, and made
+a most successful lecture tour, receiving from five to six
+hundred dollars for each lecture, and netting about fifty
+thousand dollars for the tour. In this country he has
+not been so popular as a lecturer as Beecher. He is a
+tall, angular man, with dark hair, red whiskers, light
+complexion, large mouth and blue eyes. His pulpit is
+merely a platform, about thirty feet in length, built in
+front of the organ, between the pipes and the performer;
+and back and forth on this he paces while delivering
+his sermon, frequently making forcible gestures, which
+have caused him to be caricatured as a contortionist or
+gymnast. He is fluent in his style, with much originality
+of expression, yet with a certain drawl in the middle
+of his sentences, and snarl at their end, which renders
+his elocution not entirely pleasing. He carries his
+audience with him through the heights and depths of
+his oratory, now provoking to smiles, again affecting to
+tears.</p>
+
+<p>Theodore L. Cuyler, <small>D.D.</small>, has been pastor of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church since 1860. He
+was born at Aurora, New York, on January tenth, 1822,
+and preached in Market street church, in New York City,
+from 1853 to 1860. The church edifice where he now
+ministers is one of the most spacious and complete, in
+all its arrangements, in either New York or Brooklyn,
+having seats for two thousand people, while the Sabbath-school
+hall will accommodate one thousand.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Cuyler, during the thirty-seven years of his ministry,
+has delivered five thousand three hundred and
+forty discourses, and a multitude of platform addresses.
+He has received four thousand and forty-one persons
+into church membership, of whom about one-half have
+been on confession of faith. He has published several
+volumes and over two thousand articles in the leading
+religious newspapers. The present membership of the
+Lafayette Avenue Church is nineteen hundred and
+twenty persons. His congregations are very large on
+every Sunday, and he is an untiring pastor, especially
+zealous for temperance. He preaches the old orthodox
+gospel, with no "modern improvements." His discourses
+are able and eloquent, while his chief aim in
+the pulpit is to reach the heart.</p>
+
+<p>Justin D. Fulton, <small>D.D.</small>, is still another eminent
+clergyman of Brooklyn. He was born in 1828, in
+Sherburne, Madison County, New York, and literally
+worked his way through college and to the ministry.
+He began his public life in St. Louis, where he was
+engaged as editor of the <i>Gospel Banner</i>. Preaching in
+the Tabernacle Baptist Church of that city, he delivered
+the first Free-state sermon ever heard in St. Louis. He
+also put his anti-slavery sentiments into his paper, and
+was shortly deposed from his position as editor because<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+he would not believe slavery to be right and defend it.
+From St. Louis he went to Sandusky, Ohio, preaching
+there a short period; and from thence, in 1859, to Albany,
+New York, where he became pastor of the Tabernacle
+Church. In 1863 he received a call from the
+Tremont Temple Church of Boston, and labored with
+that church for ten years, increasing its membership
+from fifty to one thousand. In 1873, he became pastor
+of the Hanson Place Church, of Brooklyn, leaving it,
+however, in 1875, to organize the Centennial Baptist
+Church, in the same city. His popularity as a preacher
+became so great that it was presently found necessary to
+seek a larger place of worship. Therefore, in 1879, the
+Rink was purchased, for much less than its original cost,
+and was consecrated as a People's Church. The Rink
+is an immense edifice, capable of seating nearly six
+thousand persons.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Fulton is an able writer, having published a
+number of volumes, the most prominent among which
+is "The Roman Catholic Element in America." In the
+old days of slavery he was a most able and eloquent
+anti-slavery advocate, and as such created strong prejudice
+against himself in certain quarters. He preached
+the funeral sermon of Colonel Ellsworth, in Tweddle
+Hall, Albany, in which he said that the war must go on
+until the musket should be put in the hands of the
+black man, and he was permitted to prove his manhood
+on the battle field. This drew down upon him the denunciation
+of the conservative press; but he was appointed
+Chaplain of Governor Morgan's staff, and
+served in hospital and camp. He is no less famous
+as an advocate of temperance, and devotes much of his
+energies to work in this field.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In person, Dr. Fulton is tall, stout, finely formed,
+with black whiskers and moustache, and a somewhat
+bald forehead. His manner in the pulpit is full of
+earnestness and impetuosity. He sometimes overwhelms
+his audience with a whirlwind of words. He has strong
+magnetic and nervous power, while he impresses his
+listeners with his sincerity and candor. He makes
+frequent and expressive gestures, and combines in his
+oratory the carefulness of art with the fire of genius.
+In belief he is thoroughly orthodox, having no leanings
+toward the so-called "liberality" of many popular
+clergymen.</p>
+
+<p>R. S. Storrs, <small>D.D.</small>, is pastor of the Church of the
+Pilgrims, at the corner of Remsen and Henry streets.
+He is one of the most noted clergymen of the city, and
+was selected to assist in the opening of the New York
+and Brooklyn Suspension Bridge, making one of the
+addresses of the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>The Unitarian Church of the Saviour, at the corner of
+Pierrepont street and Monroe Place, is an elaborate
+Gothic edifice, as is also St. Ann's Episcopal Church,
+at the corner of Clinton and Livingston streets. The
+Roman Catholic Church of St. Charles Borromeo, in
+Sidney Place, is famous for its music. The Dutch
+Reformed Church, in Pierrepont street, is of brown
+stone, in the richest Corinthian style, and the interior
+elaborately finished.</p>
+
+<p>The United States Navy Yard is one of the features
+of Brooklyn, and is the chief naval station of the
+country. It is on the south shore of Wallabout Bay,
+and contains forty-five acres. The yard is inclosed by a
+high brick wall, and contains numerous foundries,
+workshops and storehouses. Vessels of every kind used<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+by the navy may be seen at almost any time at the yard,
+and it has also a large and varied collection of trophies
+taken in war and relics of earlier times, which prove of
+interest to the visitor.</p>
+
+<p>At the other extremity of Brooklyn, a mile below
+South Ferry, is the Atlantic Dock, which covers an area
+of forty-two and one-half acres, and deserves special
+attention. It is surrounded by piers of solid granite,
+upon which are spacious warehouses.</p>
+
+<p>In the heart of the city, a little south of the Navy
+Yard, between Myrtle and DeKalb avenues, is Washington
+Park, or old Fort Greene. It is on an elevated
+plateau, contains thirty acres, and commands extensive
+views. Its name of Fort Greene dates back to the time
+of the Revolution, when it was the seat of extensive
+fortifications.</p>
+
+<p>The special pride of Brooklyn is Prospect Park, one
+of the finest in America, where art and the landscape
+gardener have assisted rather than thwarted nature in
+her efforts to produce beauty. It is situated on an
+elevated ridge on the southeastern borders of the city,
+and from certain localities commands broad views of
+Brooklyn, New York, the inner and outer harbor, and
+the Jersey shore. It contains five hundred and fifty
+acres, which embrace broad, green lawns, grassy slopes,
+groves, wooded hills, beautiful with ferns and wild
+flowers, lakes and rocky dells. It contains eight miles
+of drives, four miles of bridle paths, and eleven miles of
+walks. At the main entrance, on Flatbush avenue, is
+a large, circular open place known as the Plaza, paved
+with stone and bordered by grassy mounds. A fountain
+of novel design furnishes the welcome sound of splashing,
+trickling water, and not far distant from it is a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+bronze statue of President Lincoln. Within the Park,
+on an eminence overlooking the cottages and dell, is a
+monument, erected in 1877, to the memory of John
+Howard Payne, author of "Home, Sweet Home."</p>
+
+<p>On Gowanus Heights, overlooking Gowanus Bay, in
+the southern portion of Brooklyn, is situated Greenwood
+Cemetery, one of the most beautiful "cities of the
+dead" in the world. It was laid out in 1842, and
+contains over five hundred acres. At least two hundred
+thousand interments have been made in it. It is a
+perfect wilderness of beauty. The surface of the ground
+is uneven, and hills and valleys, grassy slopes, beautiful
+little lakes with fountains playing in their midst, overshadowing
+trees, a profusion of brilliant flowers, and
+the white or gray gleam of a thousand monuments,
+varied and beautiful in design, all unite in forming an
+exquisite spot for the resting place of the dead, which is
+a fitting embodiment and expression of the loving
+remembrance in which they continue to be held by the
+living. Among the many elegant and expensive monuments
+which this cemetery contains, not one will attract
+more attention for its beauty and elaborateness than that
+erected to Charlotte Canda, a young French girl, whose
+fortune was expended in the marble pile above her
+grave. The main entrance to Greenwood, near Fifth
+Avenue and Twenty-third street, has a magnificent gateway
+in the pointed Gothic style, and opens upon a most
+enchanting landscape. On an elevation to the right of
+this entrance, within this cemetery, is obtained an extensive
+view of Brooklyn and the bay. The cemetery
+contains nineteen miles of carriage roads, and seventeen
+miles of footpaths.</p>
+
+<p>Four miles to the eastward of Greenwood are the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+cemeteries of the Evergreen and Cypress Hills, both
+beautiful spots, and the latter especially celebrated as
+containing the grave of a large number of soldiers of the
+late war.</p>
+
+<p>Radiating from Brooklyn, in almost every direction,
+are routes leading to some of the most frequented pleasure
+resorts of the country. On the southern coast of
+Long Island, just east of the Narrows, is Coney Island,
+four and a half miles long, with a firm, gently-sloping
+beach. The island is divided into four distinct places
+of resort: Coney Island Point, or Morton's, at the west
+end, the oldest of the four; West Brighton Beach, or
+Cable's, where there is an iron pier one thousand feet
+long, extending out into the ocean, and an observatory
+three hundred feet high; Brighton Beach, connecting
+with West Brighton by a wide drive and promenade,
+known as the Concourse; and Manhattan Beach, the
+most fashionable resort on the island. At the latter
+place are two vast hotels, and an amphitheatre, with three
+thousand five hundred seats, upon the beach, for the
+accommodation of those who wish to watch the bathers.</p>
+
+<p>Rockaway Beach is to the westward of Coney Island,
+and is about four miles long, with surf bathing on one
+side and still bathing on the other. A colossal tubular
+iron pier, twelve hundred feet long, extends out into the
+ocean, affording a landing for steamboats.</p>
+
+<p>Staten Island, the western boundary of the Narrows,
+is a sort of earthly paradise, which separates the Lower
+Bay from the Upper. It is a beautiful island, having
+an area of nearly sixty square miles, and rising boldly
+from the waters of the bays. It commands extensive
+views over harbor and ocean, and is a favorite
+summer home or place of temporary resort.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Along the shores of the Sound are many places for
+summer rest and recreation. Glen Island, lying in the
+East River, is a famous and attractive picnicing spot
+for both New Yorkers and Brooklynites.</p>
+
+<p>Brooklyn is a beautiful and an extensive city, a fitting
+suburb of the metropolis. The additional facilities for
+transit between the two cities afforded by the completion
+of the Suspension Bridge will tend to her material
+advantage, drawing thither a still larger class of people
+to make their homes in its quiet suburban streets and
+avenues, out of the noise and whirl of the great city.
+Her prosperity must keep pace with that of her elder
+sister, and so close is the bond of common interest between
+them, that whatever benefits one must benefit the other.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<h2>BALTIMORE.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Position of Baltimore.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Cathedral and Churches.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Educational Institutions.&mdash;Art Collections.&mdash;Charitable
+Institutions.&mdash;Monuments.&mdash;Railway Tunnels.&mdash;Parks
+and Cemeteries.&mdash;Druid Hill Park.&mdash;Commerce and
+Manufactures.&mdash;Foundation of the City.&mdash;Early History.&mdash;Bonaparte-Patterson
+Marriage.&mdash;Storming of Baltimore in 1814.&mdash;Maryland
+at the Breaking-out of the Rebellion.&mdash;Assault on
+Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, in April, 1861.&mdash;Subsequent
+Events during the War.&mdash;Baltimore Proves Herself Loyal.&mdash;Re-union
+of Grand Army of the Republic in Baltimore, September,
+1882.&mdash;Old Differences Forgotten and Fraternal Relations
+Established.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>The first in commercial and manufacturing importance
+of all southern cities is Baltimore, situated
+on the north branch of the Patapsco River, fourteen
+miles from its entrance into the Chesapeake Bay, and
+one hundred and ninety-eight miles from the Atlantic. It
+embraces an area of nearly twelve square miles, about
+one-half of which is built up solidly with residences and
+business houses. The city is divided into East and
+West Baltimore, by Jones' Falls, a small stream running
+nearly north and south, and spanned by numerous
+bridges. The northwest branch of the Patapsco also
+runs up into the heart of the city, forming a basin, into
+which small vessels can enter. The outer harbor, or
+main branch of the Patapsco, is accessible to the largest
+ships. The harbor is a safe and capacious one, capable
+of furnishing anchorage to a thousand vessels. At
+the point of the peninsula separating the two branches<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+of the river is situated Fort McHenry, which defends
+the entrance, and which was unsuccessfully bombarded
+by the British fleet in the War of 1812.</p>
+
+<p>The general appearance of the city is striking and
+picturesque. It is regularly laid out, the streets for the
+most part crossing one another at right angles, but there
+is sufficient diversity to prevent sameness. Thus while
+the main part of the city is laid out with streets running
+north and south, crossed by others running east and
+west, large sections show streets running diagonally to
+the points of the compass. The surface of the ground
+upon which the city is built is undulating, and its streets
+are moderately wide. Baltimore street, running east
+and west, is the main business thoroughfare, containing
+the principal retail stores and hotels. North Charles
+street is the most fashionable promenade, while Mount
+Vernon Place, and the vicinity of the Monument and
+Broadway are favorite resorts.</p>
+
+<p>The city abounds in handsome edifices. A generation
+ago, the Catholic Cathedral, at the corner of Mulberry
+and Cathedral streets&mdash;a large granite edifice in the
+form of a cross, one hundred and ninety feet long, one
+hundred and seventy-seven feet at the arms of the cross,
+and surmounted by a dome one hundred and twenty-seven
+feet high&mdash;was the especial pride and boast of
+Baltimoreans. At its west end are two tall towers with
+Saracenic cupolas, resembling the minarets of a Mohammedan
+mosque. It contains one of the largest organs
+in America, and two valuable paintings, "The Descent
+from the Cross," the gift of Louis XVI, and "St. Louis
+burying his officers and soldiers slain before Tunis,"
+presented by Charles X, of France. Now other
+buildings are found equally as magnificent. The Roman<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+Catholic churches of St. Alphonsus, at the corner of Saratoga
+and Park Streets, and of St. Vincent de Paul, in
+North Front Street, are fine in architectural design and
+interior decorations. The Unitarian Church, at the
+corner of North Charles and Franklin streets, is a handsome
+edifice, faced by a colonnade composed of four Tuscan
+columns and two pilasters, which form arcades, and
+containing five bronze entrance doors. Grace Church,
+Episcopal, at the corner of Monument and Park streets,
+and Emmanuel Church, also Episcopal, at the corner of
+Reed and Cathedral streets, are handsome gothic structures,
+the former of red and the latter of gray sandstone.
+Christ's and St. Peter's Episcopal churches, the one at
+the corner of St. Paul and Chase streets, and the other
+at the corner of Druid Hill avenue and Lanvale street,
+are both of marble. The Eutaw Place Baptist Church,
+at the corner of Eutaw and Dolphin streets, has a beautiful
+marble spire one hundred and eighty-six feet high.
+The First Presbyterian Church, at the corner of Park
+and Madison streets, has a spire two hundred and sixty-eight
+feet high, with side towers, respectively seventy-eight
+and one hundred and twenty-eight feet in height,
+and is the most elaborate specimen of Lancet-Gothic
+architecture in the country. The Westminster, at the
+corner of Green and Fayette streets, contains the grave
+and monument of Edgar Allan Poe. Mount Vernon
+Church, which fronts Washington Monument, at the
+corner of Charles and Monument streets, and is in the
+most aristocratic residence quarter of Baltimore, is built
+of green serpentine stone, with buff Ohio and red Connecticut
+sandstone, and has eighteen polished columns of Aberdeen
+granite. The Hebrew Synagogue, in Lloyd street
+near Baltimore street, is a large and handsome edifice.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The City Hall, filling the entire square bounded by
+Holliday, Lexington, North and Fayette streets, built
+of marble, in the Renaissance style, was completed in
+1875, and is one of the finest municipal edifices in the
+United States. It is four stories in height, with a
+French roof, and an iron dome two hundred and sixty
+feet high, with a balcony elevated two hundred and fifty
+feet above the sidewalk, from which a magnificent view
+of the city may be obtained. The Masonic Temple, in
+Charles street, near Saratoga, is a handsome building,
+completed in 1870, at a cost of $200,000. The Exchange,
+in Gay street, between Second and Lombard streets, is
+an extensive structure, surmounted by an immense dome,
+one hundred and fifteen feet high, and fifty-three feet in
+diameter, which overarches a spacious and brilliantly
+frescoed rotunda. Six Ionic columns, the shafts of
+which are single blocks of Italian marble, form colonnades
+on the east and west sides. It contains the United
+States Custom House, Post Office, Merchants' Bank,
+and a fine, large reading-room. The Corn and Flour
+Exchange, the Rialto Building, Odd Fellows' Hall, Y. M. C. A.
+Building, are all modern and elegant structures.
+The Merchant's Shot Tower, which stands at the
+corner of Front and Fayette streets, is two hundred and
+sixteen feet high, and from sixty to twenty feet in
+diameter, and is one of the landmarks of the city. One
+million, one hundred thousand bricks were used in its
+construction.</p>
+
+<p>Peabody Institute faces Washington monument, on the
+south, and was founded and endowed by George Peabody,
+the eminent American-born London banker, for the diffusion
+of knowledge among the people. It contains a free
+library of fifty-eight thousand volumes, a conservatory<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+of music, lecture hall, and a Department of Art, which
+includes art collections and an art school. The Athen&aelig;um,
+at the corner of Saratoga and St. Paul streets,
+contains the Merchants' Library, with twenty-six
+thousand volumes, the Baltimore Library, with fifteen
+thousand volumes, and the collections of the Maryland
+Historical Society, comprising a library of ten thousand
+volumes, numerous historical relics, and fine pictures and
+statuary. The Johns Hopkins University, which was
+endowed with over three millions of dollars, by Johns
+Hopkins, a wealthy citizen of Baltimore, who died in
+1873, has a temporary location at the corner of Howard
+street and Druid Hill avenue, but will probably be permanently
+located at Clifton, two miles from the city on
+the Harford road. The Johns Hopkins Hospital, to be
+connected with the Medical Department of the Johns
+Hopkins University, and endowed with over two millions
+of dollars by the same generous testator, is in
+process of construction at the corner of Broadway and
+Monument street, and will be the finest building of its
+kind in America. The Maryland Institute is a vast
+structure at the corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets,
+and is designed for the promotion of the mechanical arts.
+The main hall is two hundred and fifty feet long, and
+in it is held an annual exhibition of the products of
+American mechanical industry. It contains a library of
+fourteen thousand volumes, a lecture room, and a school
+of design. The first floor is used as a market. The
+Academy of Science, in Mulberry street, opposite
+Cathedral street, has a fine museum of natural history,
+embracing a rich collection of birds and minerals, and
+including a complete representation of the flora and
+fauna of Maryland.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Not only is Baltimore noted for free educational
+institutions, but for her art collections as well. Annual
+exhibitions of American paintings are held in the
+Athen&aelig;um, and the Academy of Art and Science contains
+a fine collection of paintings, engravings and casts.
+The private art gallery of William T. Walters, of No. 65
+Mount Vernon Place, is one of the finest in America.</p>
+
+<p>There are numerous charitable institutions in the city,
+prominent among which are the Hospital for the Insane,
+in East Monument street; Institution for the Instruction
+of the Blind, in North avenue near Charles street;
+State Insane Asylum, a massive pile of granite buildings,
+near Catonsville, six miles from the city; Bay View
+Asylum, an almshouse, on a commanding eminence near
+the outskirts of the city, on the Philadelphia road;
+Mount Hope Hospital, conducted by the Sisters of Charity,
+on North avenue, corner of Bolton street; Episcopal
+Church Home, in Broadway near Baltimore street;
+Sheppard Asylum for the Insane, founded by Moses
+Sheppard, a wealthy Quaker, situated on a commanding
+site near Towsontown, seven miles from the city, and
+Mount Hope Retreat for the insane and sick, four miles
+from the city, on the Reistertown road.</p>
+
+<p>But her monuments are the special pride of Baltimore,
+and from them she derives her name of "The Monumental
+City." Chief among them is Washington
+Monument, whose construction was authorized by the
+Legislature in 1809, the land being donated for the
+purpose by Colonel John Eager Howard. The site is
+one hundred feet above tide-water, in Mount Vernon
+Place, at the intersection of Monument and Washington
+streets. It is a Doric shaft rising one hundred and
+seventy-six and one-half feet, from a base fifty feet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+square by thirty-five feet in height, and is surmounted
+by a colossal figure of Washington, fifteen feet high, the
+whole rising more than three hundred feet above the
+level of the river. It is built of brick, cased with white
+marble, and cost $200,000. From the balcony at the
+head of the shaft, reached by a winding stairs within, a
+most extensive view of the city, harbor and surrounding
+country may be obtained. Battle Monument stands in
+Battle Square, at the intersection of Calvert and Fayette
+streets, and is commemorative of those who fell defending
+the city when it was attacked by the British in
+1814. A square base, twenty feet high, with a pedestal
+ornamented at four corners by a sculptured griffin, has
+on each front an Egyptian door, on which are appropriate
+inscriptions and basso relievo decorations illustrating
+certain incidents in the battle. A fascial column eighteen
+feet in height rises above the base, surrounded by
+bands on which are inscribed the names of those who
+fell. The column is surmounted by a female figure in
+marble, emblematic of the city of Baltimore. The Poe
+Monument, raised in memory of Baltimore's poet, Edgar
+Allan Poe, stands in the churchyard of Westminster
+Presbyterian Church, at the corner of Green and Fayette
+streets. The Wildey Monument has a plain marble
+pediment and shaft, surmounted by a group representing
+Charity protecting orphans, and has been raised in honor
+of Thomas Wildey, the founder of the order of Odd
+Fellows in the United States. It is on Broadway near
+Baltimore street. The Wells and McComas Monument,
+at the corner of Gay and Monument streets, perpetuates
+the memory of two boys bearing those names, who shot
+General Ross, the British Commander, on September
+twelfth, 1814.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The railway tunnels, by which the railroads on the
+north side of the city are connected with tide water at
+Canton, are among the wonders of Baltimore. That of
+the Baltimore and Potomac Road is second in length only
+to the Hoosac Tunnel, in America, it being 6969 feet
+long, while the Union tunnel is half the length. They
+were completed in 1873, at a cost of four million, five
+hundred thousand dollars. Previous to their construction,
+passengers and freight were transferred through the
+city by means of horses and mules attached to the cars.</p>
+
+<p>Federal Hill is a commanding eminence on the south
+side of the river basin, and from it extensive views are
+obtained of the city and harbor. It was occupied by
+Union troops during the civil war, and now contains a
+United States Signal Station. It has been purchased by
+the city for a park. Greenmount Cemetery, in the northern
+part of the city, and Loudon Park Cemetery, both
+have imposing entrances and contain handsome monuments.
+Patterson Park, at the east end of Baltimore
+street, contains seventy acres handsomely laid out, and
+commanding extensive views.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">VIEW OF BALTIMORE FROM FEDERAL HILL.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_099.jpg" width="1024" height="633" alt="VIEW OF BALTIMORE FROM FEDERAL HILL." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The people of the present day can scarcely comprehend
+the grand scale on which landscape gardening was
+attempted a hundred or more years ago. The landed
+gentry, themselves or their fathers immigrants from
+England, considered a well-kept park, like those of the
+immense English estates, an essential to an American one.
+To this day may be seen traces of their efforts in this direction,
+in stately avenues of venerable trees, which the
+iconoclastic hand of modern progress has considerately
+spared. In some rare instances whole estates have remained
+untouched, and have become public property, and
+their beauties thus perpetuated. Bonaventure Cemetery,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+near Savannah, is a notable instance of this, where a magnificently
+planned Southern plantation has been transferred
+from private to public hands, and its valuable trees
+remain, though the hand of art, in attempting to improve,
+has rather marred the majestic beauty of the place.
+Lemon Hill, the nucleus of Fairmount Park, in Philadelphia,
+was, in revolutionary times, the estate of Robert
+Morris, and though the landscape gardener has been
+almost ruthless in his improvements (?), he has been
+considerate enough to spare some of the century-old
+trees. To the same private enterprise, love of the
+picturesque and appreciation of beauty, Baltimore is
+indebted for Druid Hill Park, in the northern suburbs
+of the city. Colonel Nicholas Rogers, a soldier of the
+Revolution and a gentleman of taste and leisure, when
+the war was over, retired to his country residence, a
+little distance from Baltimore, then a city of some ten
+thousand inhabitants, and devoted the remainder of his
+life to improving and adorning its extensive grounds.
+He seemed a thorough master of landscape gardening,
+and all his plans were most carefully matured, so that the
+trees are most artistically grouped and alternated with
+lawns; dense masses of foliage are broken into by bays
+and avenues, and beautiful vistas secured in various
+directions. Also in the selection of his trees a careful
+consideration was had of their autumn foliage, so that
+fine contrasts of color should be produced at that season
+of the year. The result of all this care and labor was
+one of the most charming and enchanting private parks
+which the country afforded. It contained an area of
+nearly five hundred acres.</p>
+
+<p>When Colonel Rogers died, his son, Lloyd N.
+Rogers, who seemed to have inherited only in part the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+tastes of his father, devoted himself solely to the cultivation
+of fruit, doing nothing to add to or preserve the
+beauty of his domain, but, on the other hand, allowing
+it to fall into neglect and decay. However, the harm
+that he wrought was only negative, for he did nothing
+to mar it, and preserved, with jealous care, the grand
+old trees which his father had planted, and with unremitting
+vigilance warded off interlopers and depredators.
+The estate was secluded from the outside world by
+fringes of woodland, and though the city had gradually
+crept to within a quarter of a mile, few people knew
+anything of its beauties. When, therefore, the Commission
+appointed to select the site for a new park decided
+upon Druid Hill as the most available for that purpose,
+it was absolutely necessary to detail its advantages. Mr.
+Rogers reluctantly consented to accept one thousand dollars
+an acre for his estate, and it became city property.
+Subsequently, other small pieces of adjoining property
+were bought, and Druid Lake and grounds were finally
+added, and the people of Baltimore found themselves
+in the possession of a park embracing an area of six
+hundred and eighty acres, which needed not to be created,
+but only to be improved, to be one of the most beautiful
+in the country.</p>
+
+<p>There has been but little attempt at architectural decoration.
+A costly and imposing gateway, a Moorish music
+stand, bright with many colors, a boat-house crowning a
+little island in a miniature lake, a pretty bridge and a
+Moorish arch thrown across a ravine, a few handsome
+fountains, and, finally, the old mansion, renovated and
+enlarged, standing out against the densely-wooded hill
+from which the park takes its name&mdash;these are about all
+which have been attempted in that line. The surface<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+of the Park is gently undulating, with occasional bold
+eminences from which fine views may be obtained of
+the city and surrounding country. Its special attractions
+are its secluded walks, well-kept drives and tree-arched
+bridle-paths, its smooth, velvety turf, and the
+venerable beauty of its trees, which are the oldest of
+those of any park in the country. Its glades and dells
+have been left as nature made them, having been spared
+the artificial touches of the landscape gardener; and its
+little trickling springs and cool, secluded brooks, have a
+sylvan, rustic beauty which is surpassingly delightful.</p>
+
+<p>The future care and improvement of the Park are
+well provided for. About the time that it became a
+matter of public interest, the charter for the first line of
+street passenger railways was granted, and this charter
+stipulated that one-fifth of the gross receipts of the
+road, or one cent for each passenger carried, should be
+paid to the city, to constitute a Park Fund. This
+amount, small at first, but gradually increasing until it
+now amounts to more than a hundred thousand dollars
+annually, was devoted first to paying the interest on the
+Park bonds, and finally to the preservation and improvement
+of the Park. The Park Commissioners, who
+receive no pay for their services, have most judiciously
+administered the fund entrusted to their care.</p>
+
+<p>The foreign and coasting trade of Baltimore are both
+extensive. Two lines of steamships leave the port
+weekly for Europe, and she commands a large share of
+the trade of the West and Northwest. Her shipments
+to Europe are principally grain, tobacco, cotton, petroleum
+and provisions. The city contains rolling mills,
+iron works, nail factories, locomotive works, cotton
+factories and other industrial establishments, num<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>bering
+more than two thousand in all. The rich
+copper ores of Lake Superior are chiefly worked
+here, and nearly four thousand tons of refined copper
+are produced annually. The smelting works in Canton,
+a southern suburb of the city, employ one thousand
+men. There are also extensive flouring mills, while
+oysters, fruit and vegetables, to the value of five million
+dollars, are canned annually. Five hundred thousand
+hides are also annually made into leather and sent to
+New England. Baltimore oysters are renowned as being
+among the best the Atlantic seaboard produces, and no
+one should think of visiting the city without testing
+them. The Chesapeake oyster beds are apparently exhaustless,
+and supply plants for beds all along the coast.</p>
+
+<p>Although the first settlements in Maryland were made
+early in the seventeenth century, the present site of
+Baltimore was not chosen until 1729, and in 1745 the
+town was named Baltimore, in honor of Lord Baltimore,
+a Catholic, to whom the patent of the province of Maryland
+had been originally made out. In 1782 the first
+regular communication with Philadelphia, by means of
+a line of stage coaches, was established, and Baltimore
+was chartered as a city in 1787, having at that time a
+population of twenty thousand, which, by 1850, had
+increased to nearly two hundred thousand; and, according
+to the census of 1880, the population was 332,190
+inhabitants. In 1780 the city became a port of entry,
+and in 1782 the first pavement was laid in Baltimore
+street.</p>
+
+<p>In 1803 Baltimore became the scene of a romance
+which is even yet remembered with interest. Jerome
+Bonaparte, the youngest brother of Napoleon, born in
+Ajaccio, November fifteenth, 1784, found himself, in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+the year just mentioned, while cruising off the West
+Indies, on account of the war between France and
+England, compelled to take refuge in New York. Being
+introduced into the best society of that and neighboring
+cities, he made the acquaintance of Miss Elizabeth
+Patterson, daughter of a merchant of Baltimore. The
+manner of their introduction was peculiar. In a crowded
+saloon the button of young Bonaparte's coat caught in
+the dress of a young lady, and as it took a little time to
+disengage it, the future King of Westphalia had opportunity
+to see that the lady was young, surpassingly
+beautiful and charming. This interview, by some who
+knew the lady and who were acquainted with her
+ambition, thought to be not entirely accidental, resulted,
+on the twenty-seventh of December of the same year, in
+a marriage between the two, the bridegroom being but
+nineteen years of age. Being summoned back to France
+by his Imperial brother, he was quickly followed by his
+young wife, who, however, was not permitted to land in
+France, and retired to England, where she shortly afterwards
+gave birth to a son, whom she named Jerome,
+after his father. Napoleon annulled the marriage, on
+the ground that it had been made contrary to French
+law, which stipulates that the consent of parents must
+be gained in order to legalize a marriage. Jerome
+was compelled, after he succeeded to the Westphalian
+crown, to marry Sophia Dorothea, daughter of King
+Frederick I, of Wurtemburg. Madame Patterson, as
+she was called to the day of her death, though she maintained
+her title to the name of Bonaparte, having an
+utter scorn for America and its democratic institutions,
+spent much of her life in Europe, where at first her
+beauty, and to the last her wit and charming manners<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>,
+secured her admission to the most exclusive salons, and
+a sort of acknowledgment of her claims. She never
+saw her husband again, save on one occasion, when she
+came face to face with him in a European picture-gallery.</p>
+
+<p>Madame Patterson's aristocratic prejudices were greatly
+shocked when her son married a most estimable American
+lady, the mother's ambition seeking for him an
+alliance among the royal or at least noble families of the
+Old World. During the reign of Napoleon III, the
+Pope recognized the first marriage of Jerome Bonaparte,
+and the Emperor, who had taken offence at his cousin,
+the son of Jerome by his princess wife, also legitimatized
+the son, and took him into his service. Madame Patterson
+lived to be nearly a hundred years old, having
+spent her last days in her native city, and dying but a
+few years ago. Her son Jerome survived her not many
+years, leaving two sons, who are known as the Patterson-Bonapartes.</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1814, Baltimore was made the object
+of attack by the British forces, then at war with the
+United States. On the eleventh of that month the fleet
+reached the mouth of the Patapsco, and on the next day
+six thousand men landed at North Point, and proceeded,
+under command of General Ross, toward the city. An
+army of over three thousand men met them and kept
+them in check, in order to gain time to put the forts and
+batteries of Baltimore in proper condition for defence.
+A battle was fought, and the Americans defeated, with
+considerable loss. Among the killed and wounded,
+which numbered one hundred and three, were many of
+the most prominent citizens of Baltimore. The next
+morning the British advanced to the entrenchments<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+about two miles from the city, and at the same time a
+vigorous attack was made by the fleet, upon Fort
+McHenry, at the entrance of the harbor. The fort was
+vigorously bombarded during the next twenty-four
+hours, but without visible effect. The troops which had
+landed, after hovering at a respectful distance from the
+city, until the evening of the thirtieth, then retired to
+their shipping, and set sail down the river, leaving
+behind them their commander, General Ross, who had
+been killed in the battle of the twelfth. It was during
+the siege of Baltimore, while the British fleet lay off
+Fort McHenry, and the bombs were raining upon it,
+that Philip Barton Key wrote the "Star Spangled
+Banner."</p>
+
+<p>From 1814 to 1861, nearly half a century, Baltimore
+had nothing to do but develop her resources and
+extend her commerce, which she did so well and so
+thoroughly, that in 1860 her inhabitants numbered more
+than 212,000, and she stood in the front rank as a
+manufacturing and commercial town.</p>
+
+<p>At the inauguration of President Lincoln, in 1861,
+the sentiments of the people assimilated rather with those
+of Virginia and the South, than with those of Pennsylvania
+and the North. Had it not, by its geographical
+position, been so completely in the power of the Federal
+government, Maryland would probably have seceded
+with Virginia. Great excitement was aroused by the
+attack on Fort Sumter, and the State was with difficulty
+made to retain her old position in the Union. The only
+line of railway from the north and east to Washington
+passed through Baltimore, and when, on the fifteenth of
+April, the President made his call for seventy-five thousand
+men, it was necessary that, in reaching the seat of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+war, they should pass through that city. Apprehensions
+were felt that they might be disturbed, but the Marshal
+of Police, on the eighteenth of April, maintained perfect
+order in the city, and summarily quieted all attempts at
+riot. He also received from the State Rights Association
+a most solemn pledge that the Federal troops should
+not be interfered with. The Mayor issued a proclamation
+invoking all good citizens to uphold and maintain
+the peace and good order of the city.</p>
+
+<p>On the nineteenth, the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment,
+the first to respond to the President's call, arrived, by
+the Philadelphia and Baltimore Railroad. A crowd of
+two or three thousand persons had gathered at the depot
+early in the day, to witness their arrival. Soon after
+eleven o'clock in the morning twenty-nine cars arrived
+from Philadelphia, filled with soldiers. Horses were
+attached to the cars, which were driven along Pratt
+street to the Camden station. The multitude hooted and
+yelled after the first six cars, but did not otherwise
+molest them. The horses becoming frightened by the
+uproar, were detached from the seventh car, which moved
+without their aid nearly to Gay street, where a body of
+laborers were removing the cobblestones from the bed
+of the street, in order to repair it. Some thirty or forty
+men had followed the car to this point, cheering for President
+Davis and the Southern Confederacy, and applying
+contemptuous and insulting epithets to the troops.
+The latter received these taunts in perfect silence; and
+when the horses were again attached, and the car commenced
+moving off, a proposition was made to stone it.
+Almost instantly, acting on the suggestion, nearly every
+window was smashed by projectiles snatched from the
+street. The eighth car was treated in a like manner.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+The ninth car was suffered to pass unmolested, as it was
+apparently empty. When the tenth car approached,
+after an ineffectual attempt to tear up the track, it was
+heaped with paving stones, and a cartload of sand
+dumped upon them, and four or five large anchors,
+dragged from the sidewalk, completed the barricade.
+Progress was impossible, and the car returned to the
+President Street Depot.</p>
+
+<p>Two-thirds of the cars still remained, filled with troops,
+besides others loaded with ammunition and baggage.
+Mayor Brown hastened to the depot, in order to prevent
+any disturbance. The troops were ordered to leave the
+cars and form into line. While forming they were surrounded
+by a dense mass of people, who impeded their
+march, threw great quantities of stones, and knocked
+down and severely injured two soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>Marching through the city, from the President Street
+Depot to the Pratt Street Bridge, they were pursued by
+the excited crowd, who continued to throw stones, and
+even fired muskets at them. When they reached Gay
+street, where the track had been torn up, they were
+again violently assaulted by a fresh mob, and a number
+knocked down and wounded. At the corner of South
+and Pratt streets a man fired a pistol into the ranks of
+the military, when those in the rear ranks immediately
+wheeled and fired upon their assailants, wounding several.
+The guns of the wounded soldiers were seized,
+and fired upon the ranks, killing two soldiers. Reaching
+Calvert street, the troops succeeded in checking
+their pursuers by a rapid fire, and were not again seriously
+molested until they reached Howard street, where
+still another mob had assembled.</p>
+
+<p>The police did their utmost to protect the troops from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+assault, but were pressed back by the excited crowd.
+The soldiers left the Camden station about half-past
+twelve o'clock, and a body of infantry, about one hundred
+and fifty strong, from one of the Northern States,
+which had arrived meantime, next attracted the malevolence
+of the crowd. The excitement was now intense.
+A man displayed the flag of the Confederate States, and
+a general panic ensued. As many as twenty shots were
+fired, happily without injury to any one, and cobblestones
+fell like hail. At last the soldiers gained refuge
+in the cars. Other troops, by order of Governor Hicks,
+were sent back to the borders of the State, and the military
+was called out and quiet restored, by evening. Nine
+citizens of Baltimore had been killed, and many wounded;
+while twenty-five wounded Massachusetts troops were
+sent to the Washington Hospital, and their dead numbered
+two.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Baltimore shares with Charleston the doubtful
+honor of being first in the great civil war which devastated
+the country and sent desolation to many thousand
+homes, both north and south. Charleston fired the first
+gun, and Baltimore shed the first blood.</p>
+
+<p>During the succeeding night, a report reaching the
+city that more Northern troops were on their way
+southward, the bridge at Canton, the two bridges between
+Cockeysville and Ashland, also the bridges over
+Little Gunpowder and Bush rivers were destroyed, by
+order of the authorities of Baltimore. Upon a representation
+of the matter to President Lincoln, he ordered
+that "no more troops should be brought through Baltimore,
+if, in a military point of view, and without interruption
+or opposition, they can be marched around
+Baltimore." The transmission of mails, and removal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+of provisions from the city, were suspended, by the order
+of the Mayor and Board of Police. Four car-loads of
+military stores and equipments, sufficient to furnish a
+thousand men, belonging to the Government, were thus
+detained. On the twenty-fourth of the month the city
+had the appearance of a military camp. Twenty-five
+thousand volunteers had enlisted, and four hundred
+picked men left the city for the Relay House, on the
+Baltimore and Ohio Road, for the purpose of seizing and
+protecting that point, in order to cut off communications
+with Washington by that route.</p>
+
+<p>For a week an unparalleled excitement prevailed in
+Baltimore, which was succeeded by a counter-revolution,
+when the volunteer militia were dismissed, and a large
+number of troops landed at Fort McHenry and shipped
+for Washington, from Locust Point. On the fifth of
+May General Butler removed a portion of his troops to
+Baltimore, and they were permitted to enter and remain
+in the city without disturbance. As they proceeded on
+their way to Federal Hill, they were even greeted with
+cheers, while ladies at windows and doors waved their
+handkerchiefs and applauded. On the sixteenth of
+May the passenger trains between Baltimore and Washington
+resumed their regular trips. On the twenty-seventh
+of June, Marshal of Police Kane was arrested
+and escorted to Fort McHenry, on the charge of being
+at the head of an unlawful combination of men organized
+for resistance to the laws of the United States and
+the State of Maryland. On the first of July the Commissioners
+of Police were arrested, for having acted
+unlawfully. On the sixteenth of July General Dix was
+put in command of the troops stationed at Baltimore,
+and the city thenceforth remained tranquil. At the fall<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+elections a full vote was cast, which resulted in the
+Union candidates receiving a very large majority. At
+the meeting of the Legislature, it appropriated seven
+thousand dollars for the relief of the families of the
+Massachusetts troops killed and wounded at Baltimore
+on April nineteenth.</p>
+
+<p>On June thirtieth, 1863, Major General Schenck, in
+command at Baltimore, put that city and Maryland
+under martial law. The value of merchandise exported
+that year from Baltimore was $8,054,112, and her
+imports during the same time were $4,098,189, showing
+that although on the borderland of strife, her commerce
+was in an exceedingly healthy condition. During July
+a number of her citizens were arrested, on a charge of
+being disloyal to the government. On the Fourth of
+July all citizens were required by the Commander to
+show their colors, from ten o'clock <small>A.M.</small> to six o'clock,
+<small>P.M.</small>; an absence of the national flag being considered
+tantamount to a confession of disloyalty. In 1864 the
+State adopted a new Constitution, which conferred freedom
+upon the slaves within her borders, and in November
+a Freedman's Bureau was established by Major General
+Wallace, having its headquarters at Baltimore.</p>
+
+<p>The following year saw the close of the war, and
+Baltimore, which had not suffered like her sister cities at
+the South, her port being free from blockade, but had
+rather witnessed increased prosperity arising from the
+demands of the war, continued her prosperous career.
+Although many violent disunionists had found their
+homes within the city, the popular sentiment had grown
+strongly in favor of the North, and Baltimore had come
+to see that she had little to lose and much to gain by the
+reestablishment of the Union.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The bitterness of the old war times has passed away,
+and, as if to emphasize this fact, the Grand Army of the
+Republic was invited to hold a reunion in Baltimore in
+September, 1882. Accepting the invitation, her citizens
+vied with each other in honoring the veterans of the
+war, and made their visit a regular ovation. Of the
+Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, who had passed through
+Baltimore on that fateful day in April, twenty-one years
+before, and who suffered from the fury of an ungoverned
+mob, only one member attended the reunion, Captain
+C. P. Lord, a resident of Vineland, New Jersey. He
+was lionized on every hand.</p>
+
+<p>This Grand Army reunion had many pleasant and
+amusing features. Here men met each other again who
+had last parted on the battlefield or in a Southern
+prison. Here the dead seemed to come to life, and the
+lost were found. Many officers and soldiers of the
+Confederate army were also present, and it was as
+satisfactory as curious, as more than once happened
+during this occasion, to have two men meet and clasp
+hands in a cordial greeting, as one of them said to the
+other, "The last time we met I tried to put a bullet
+hole through you on a battlefield;" or, "I took you
+prisoner when I saw you last;" or, "This empty sleeve,
+or these crutches, I must thank you for."</p>
+
+<p>The gathering was one which will long be remembered
+by Union and Confederate soldiers, and by the
+citizens of Baltimore as well. It was the inauguration
+of an era of good feeling between the North and the
+South. All personal and sectional enmity had died out,
+and this gathering joined those who had represented, on
+one side the North and on the other the South, in that
+great intestine struggle which is now so long past, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+the terror of which, thank God, is being gradually
+obliterated by time from our memories, in new fraternal
+bonds, which are a good augury for the preservation of
+our Union. When soldiers who suffered so much at
+each other's hands, who were stirred by all the evil
+passions which war develops, and who bore the brunt of
+the conflict, offering all, if need be, as a sacrifice on
+the altar of the cause they had espoused, can so forget
+the past, and shaking hands over the chasm which
+divided them, look forward to a happy and concordant
+future, surely civilians should be willing to bury the
+hatred and prejudice which has so embittered the past,
+and live only for a common country, made of many parts
+whose interests are identical.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<h2>CHARLESTON.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>First Visit to Charleston.&mdash;Jail Yard.&mdash;Bombardment of the City.&mdash;Roper
+Hospital.&mdash;Charleston During the War.&mdash;Secession of
+South Carolina.&mdash;Attack and Surrender of Fort Sumter.&mdash;Blockade
+of the Harbor.&mdash;Great Fire of 1861.&mdash;Capitulation in
+1865.&mdash;First Settlement of the City.&mdash;Battles of the Revolution.&mdash;Nullification
+Act.&mdash;John C. Calhoun.&mdash;Population of the
+City.&mdash;Commerce and Manufactures.&mdash;Charleston Harbor.&mdash;"American
+Venice."&mdash;Battery.&mdash;Streets, Public Buildings and
+Churches.&mdash;Scenery about Charleston.&mdash;Railways and Steamship
+Lines.&mdash;An Ancient Church.&mdash;Magnolia Cemetery.&mdash;Drives near
+the City.&mdash;Charleston Purified by Fire.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>My first introduction to the city of Charleston can
+scarcely be said to have been under propitious
+circumstances. True, a retinue of troops conducted
+my companions and myself, with military pomp, to our
+quarters in the city. But these quarters, instead of
+being any one of its fine hotels, were none other than
+the Charleston Jail Yard, for the year was 1864, and we
+were prisoners of war.</p>
+
+<p>After a varied experience of prison life at Richmond,
+Danville, Macon and Savannah, I had been sent, with a
+number of others, to Charleston, South Carolina, to be
+placed under the fire of our batteries, which were then
+bombarding the city. We had received more humane
+treatment at Savannah than at any previous place of
+detention; therefore it was with a sinking of the heart
+that we found ourselves, when we arrived at our destination,
+thrown into the jail yard at Charleston, which was
+the grand receptacle of all Union prisoners in that city.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+The jail was a large octagonal building, four stories
+high, surmounted by a lofty tower. A workhouse and a
+gallows also occupied the yard. The jail building was
+for the accommodation of criminals, military prisoners,
+and Federal and Rebel deserters, all of whom at least
+had the advantage of shelter from sun and storm. The
+war prisoners were permitted the use of the yard only,
+which was in the most filthy condition conceivable,
+having been long used as a prison-pen, without receiving
+any cleaning or purification whatever. The only shelter
+afforded us were the remnants of a few tents, which had
+been cut to pieces, more or less, by former prisoners, to
+make themselves clothing.</p>
+
+<p>This jail yard was in the southeastern portion of the
+city, and apparently directly under the fire of our
+batteries on Morris Island. But though the shells came
+screaming over our heads, and proved a subject of
+interest, discussion, and even mathematical calculation
+among the prisoners, who were thankful for anything
+which should take their minds, even momentarily, from
+the misery which they endured, so carefully were
+they aimed, not to do us mischief, that though they
+exploded all about us&mdash;in front, behind, and on either
+side&mdash;not one of them fell within the prison enclosure.
+The scene at night was of peculiar beauty. These
+messengers of death presented the spectacle of magnificent
+fireworks, and every explosion sounded as the
+voice of a friend to us, assuring us that the great
+Northern army was still exerting itself to crush out the
+rebellion and open our prison doors and set us free.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">VIEW ON THE BATTERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_117.jpg" width="1024" height="629" alt="VIEW ON THE BATTERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Reaching Charleston and its jail yard September
+twelfth, 1864, on the twenty-ninth I was transferred to
+the Roper Hospital, having given my parole that I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+would not attempt to escape. The quarters here were
+so much more comfortable that it was almost like a
+transition from hell to heaven. Leaving behind me
+the filthiness of the jail yard, and my bed there on the
+chill, bare ground, where I had protection against neither
+heat nor cold, storm nor sunshine, to be permitted the
+freedom of the beautiful garden of the hospital, and to
+sleep even upon the hard floor of the piazza, were
+luxuries before unenjoyed in my experience of southern
+prisons. And here the Sisters of Charity, those angels
+among women, did what they could to alleviate the
+sufferings of the sick, and to add to the comfort of us
+all. Their ministrations were bestowed indiscriminately
+on Rebels and Federals, with a charity as broad and
+boundless as true religion.</p>
+
+<p>On October fifth we were ordered to leave Charleston,
+and were sent, in the foulest of cattle cars, to Columbia,
+the Capital of the State. We left Charleston without a
+regret. It was the breeding place of the rankest treason,
+the cradle of the Rebellion, and the scene of untold
+cruelties to Union prisoners. At the time of our brief
+visit to the city, it was undergoing all the horrors of an
+actual siege. About one-third of its territory had been
+destroyed by fire during the early part of the war,
+caused by shells thrown from the Union batteries on
+Morris Island. This portion of the city was deserted
+by all its inhabitants save the negroes, who, during every
+brief cessation in the bombardment, flocked in and took
+possession, rent free, to scatter as quickly when one or
+more of them had been killed by the sudden appearance
+and explosion of shells in this quarter. The balance of
+the city was forsaken by non-combatants, and the blockade
+had put an end to all her commerce. The quiet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+industries of peace had given place to all the turmoil of
+war. Her streets were filled with military, while the
+boom of the distant batteries, the whiz of the flying
+shells, and the noise of their explosion, were daily and
+familiar sounds.</p>
+
+<p>During the four years of the war, Charleston was one
+of the chief points of Federal attack, though it remained
+in possession of the Confederate forces until
+the beginning of 1865. These were four terrible years
+to the city. Yet her sufferings she had brought upon
+herself. The first open and public movement in favor
+of the dissolution of the Union was made in that city.
+South Carolina was the first to call a State convention,
+and to secede from the Union. This convention was
+held at Columbia, the Capital of the State, but was
+adjourned to Charleston, where the Ordinance of Secession
+was unanimously passed on the twentieth of December,
+1860. Fort Sumter, which was one of the largest forts in
+Charleston, a massive fortress of solid masonry, standing
+on an island commanding the principal entrance, at the
+mouth of Charleston Harbor, was in command of Major
+Robert Anderson, with a garrison of eighty men. On the
+twenty-seventh of December he ran up the stars and
+stripes. Governor Pickens immediately demanded a
+surrender of the fort, which was promptly refused.
+Early on Friday morning, April twelfth, 1861, the
+initial gun of the terrible four years' war was fired by
+the Rebel forces from the howitzer battery on James
+Island, west of Sumter. Fort Moultrie, on Sullivan
+Island, on the northeast, the gun battery at Cumming's
+Point, the northwest extremity of Morris Island, and
+other batteries and fortifications which the Confederates
+had seized and appropriated to their own use, all fol<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>lowed
+in a deadly rain of shells upon Sumter. The
+firing was kept up for thirty-five hours, and Sumter
+made a vigorous defence, until the quarters were entirely
+burned, the main gates destroyed by fire, the supplies
+exhausted, and the magazine surrounded by flames,
+when Major Anderson accepted the terms of capitulation
+offered by General Beauregard.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the surrender of the Fort, which was received
+as a good omen by the South, troops began to pour into
+the city, so that by the sixteenth of the same month as
+many as ten thousand had arrived. The blockade of
+the port was commenced on the tenth of May, and
+continued until the close of the war. In the latter part
+of 1861 an attempt was made by the Federal government
+to seal up the channel of the harbor with sunken
+ships, to prevent the egress of privateers. On the
+twenty-first of December seventeen vessels were sunk,
+in three or four rows, across the channel. But this
+attempt at blockade proved a failure. The current
+washed some of them away, and many passages in a
+water front of six miles were left unobserved, and more
+vessels ran the blockade and reached the city, than at
+any other southern port.</p>
+
+<p>On the tenth of December, 1861, a fire broke out in
+the city, which destroyed nearly all its public buildings,
+banks and insurance offices, and several churches, besides
+many dwellings, reducing thousands to homelessness
+and the extremity of want. The loss occasioned by this
+conflagration was estimated at ten millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>In 1863, the women, children and other non-combatants
+were ordered out of the city, and free transportation,
+food and lodgings were furnished those unable to
+pay for them. Morris Island had been captured by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+Federal Army, who used it as a point of attack against
+Sumter and the city. Its shells had wrought destruction
+in all parts of the city, especially in its lower portions.
+On February seventeenth, 1865, Charleston, which had
+withstood all attacks from the seaward, capitulated to
+the Union forces, Columbia having been captured by
+Sherman.</p>
+
+<p>The history of Charleston goes back to earliest
+colonial times. In 1671 a few persons located themselves
+on Ashley River, at Old Charleston. But in 1680
+this settlement was abandoned, and the foundations of
+the present city laid, several miles nearer the sea. The
+whole country, up to 1671, between the thirtieth and
+thirty-sixth parallel of latitude, was called Carolina,
+having received the name in honor of Charles IX, of
+France. In that year the division was made between the
+Northern and Southern provinces. In 1685 the young
+settlement received a considerable influx of French
+Huguenot refugees.</p>
+
+<p>During the early part of the eighteenth century the
+war of Queen Anne against France and Spain greatly
+disturbed the young colony; and a little later the
+Indians threatened its existence. All the inhabitants
+of the region took refuge at Charleston, which was
+vigorously defended.</p>
+
+<p>In 1700, the same year that Kidd was captured and
+taken to England, no less then seven pirates were
+secured, and executed at Charleston. Subsequently
+others shared the same fate.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">GARDEN AT MOUNT PLEASANT, OPPOSITE CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_123.jpg" width="1024" height="632" alt="GARDEN AT MOUNT PLEASANT, OPPOSITE CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>South Carolina was among the foremost of the
+American colonies to strike for independence. On the
+twenty-eighth of June, 1776, Charleston was attacked
+by the British, an attempt being made to destroy the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+military works on Sullivan's Island. But Colonel
+Moultrie, in honor of whom the fort was subsequently
+named, made a gallant defence and repulsed them. In
+1779 they made a second attack upon the city, this time
+approaching it by land, but were again compelled to
+retreat. Sir Henry Clinton, with seven or eight
+thousand men, opened his batteries upon Charleston on
+the second of April, 1780. Fort Moultrie, on Sullivan's
+Island, was compelled to surrender on the fourteenth,
+and the city yielded on May eleventh. The British
+retained possession of the city until the close of the
+war.</p>
+
+<p>Charleston took a prominent part in the passage of
+the nullification act by the State, which maintained that
+any one of the States might set aside or nullify any
+act of Congress which it deemed unconstitutional or
+oppressive. The occasion of this nullification act was
+the Tariff Laws of 1828, which were not considered
+favorable to the Southern States. A convention of the
+State declared them null and void, and made preparations
+to resist their execution. John C. Calhoun, who
+was at that time Vice-President under Andrew Jackson,
+resigned his office, became a leader in the nullification
+movement, and was the father of the doctrine of State
+Sovereignty, the legitimate outcome of the principles
+of which was the late attempt to dissolve the Union.</p>
+
+<p>The population of Charleston in 1800 was 18,711;
+in 1850, 42,985 inhabitants; in 1860, 40,519; in 1870,
+48,956; and in 1880, 50,000 inhabitants. It has not
+made so rapid a growth as other cities, even in the South,
+but is, nevertheless, a prosperous town, with large commercial,
+and since the war, large manufacturing interests.
+It is one of the chief shipping ports for cotton, and also<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+exports rice, lumber, naval stores and fertilizers. Immense
+beds of marl were discovered in the vicinity of the city
+in 1868, and now the manufacture of fertilizers from
+marl and phosphate is one of its principal industries.
+There are also flour and rice mills, carriage and wagon
+factories and machine shops. The city is learning that
+the surest foundation stone for its future prosperity is
+its manufacturing interests; and, probably, the political
+battle of 1861, could it be fought over again to-day, in
+that city, would find the nullifiers largely in the
+minority. The city which was so marred and blemished
+during its long state of siege, has been rebuilt, and all
+traces of the fratricidal conflict removed; and though
+Charleston would not be true to her traditions if she did
+not still cherish a strong Southern sentiment, the years
+which have passed since the cessation of hostilities have
+done much toward softening the asperities of feeling
+on both sides.</p>
+
+<p>As a seaboard city, Charleston is most favorably
+situated. It has an excellent harbor, seven miles in
+length, with an average width of two miles, landlocked
+on all sides, except an entrance about a mile in width.
+This entrance is blocked by a bar, which, however,
+serves both as a bulwark and a breakwater. Of its two
+passages, its best gives twenty-two feet in depth at flood
+tide, and sixteen feet at ebb.</p>
+
+<p>The harbor of Charleston is impregnable, as the
+Union troops learned to their cost during the late war.
+Standing directly in the channel are forts Ripley and
+Sumter. On a point extending out into the strait,
+between the two, is Fort Johnson. Directly in front of
+the city, one mile distant from it, is Castle Pinckney,
+covering the crest of a mud shoal, and facing the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+entrance. Sullivan's Island, a long, low, gray stretch of
+an island, dotted here and there by clumps of palmettoes,
+lies on the north of the entrance of the harbor, with
+Fort Moultrie on its extreme southern point, as a doorkeeper
+to the harbor. On the southern side is Morris
+Island, long, low and gray also, with tufts of pines
+instead of palmettoes, and with batteries at intervals
+along its whole sea front, Fort Wagner standing near
+its northern end. Sullivan's Island, the scene of fierce
+conflict during the Revolution, and later, during the
+Rebellion, is to-day the Long Branch or Coney Island of
+South Carolina, containing many beautiful cottages and
+fine drives, and furnishing good sea bathing. The
+village occupies the point extending into the harbor.</p>
+
+<p>As one approaches Charleston from the sea, the
+name which has been applied to it, of the "American
+Venice," seems not inappropriate. The shores are low,
+and the city seems to rise out of the water. It is built
+something after the manner of New York, on a long
+and narrow peninsula, formed by the Cooper and
+Ashley rivers, which unite in front of the city.
+It has, like New York, its Battery, occupying the
+extreme point of the peninsula, its outlook commanding
+the entire harbor, bristling with fortifications, so
+harmless in time of peace, so terrible in war. The
+Battery contains plots of thin clover, neatly fenced and
+shelled promenades, a long, solid stone quay, which
+forms the finest sea-walk in the United States, and has
+a background of the finest residences in the city, three
+storied, and faced with verandahs. The dwelling-houses
+throughout the city are mostly of brick or wood,
+and have large open grounds around them, ornamented
+with trees, shrubbery, vines and flowers. The city is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+laid out with tolerable regularity, the streets generally
+crossing each other at right angles. King street, running
+north and south, is the fashionable promenade,
+containing the leading retail stores. Meeting street,
+nearly parallel with King, contains the jobbing and
+wholesale stores. Broad street, the banks, brokers' and
+insurance offices. Meeting street, below Broad, Rutledge
+street, and the west end of Wentworth street, contain
+fine private residences.</p>
+
+<p>The City Hall, an imposing building, standing in an
+open square, the Court House, the Police Headquarters,
+and the venerable St. Michael's Church (Episcopal), all
+stand at the intersection of Broad and Meeting streets.
+St. Michael's was built in 1752, after designs by a pupil
+of Sir Christopher Wren. The view from the belfry is
+very fine, embracing the far stretch of sea and shore, the
+shipping, fortresses of the harbor, and near at hand
+buildings as ancient as the church itself. It is the
+church of the poem&mdash;a favorite with elocutionists&mdash;"How
+he saved St. Michael." Says the poem, in one of
+its stanzas, its spire rose</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"High over the lesser steeples, tipped with a golden ball<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That hung like a radiant planet caught in its earthward fall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">First glimpse of home to the sailor who made the harbor round,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And last slow fading vision, dear, to the outward bound."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">CUSTOM HOUSE, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_129.jpg" width="1024" height="611" alt="CUSTOM HOUSE, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Next in interest among the churches of Charleston is
+St. Philip's Episcopal Church, in Church street, near
+Queen. The building itself is not so venerable as St.
+Michael's, though its church establishment is older.
+The view from the steeple is fine; but its chief interest
+centres in the churchyard, where lie some of South
+Carolina's most illustrious dead. In one portion of the
+churchyard is the tomb of John C. Calhoun, consisting
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+of a plain granite slab, supported by brick walls, and
+bearing the simple inscription "Calhoun." The ruins
+of St. Finbar's Cathedral (Roman Catholic) stand at
+the corner of Broad and Friend streets. The building,
+which was one of the costliest edifices of Charleston,
+was destroyed by the great fire of 1861, and the walls,
+turrets and niches still standing are exceedingly
+picturesque. Other handsome church edifices abound.
+The old Huguenot Church, at the corner of Church and
+Queen streets has its walls lined with quaint and elegant
+mural entablatures.</p>
+
+<p>The Post Office, at the foot of Broad street, is a
+venerable structure, dating back to the colonial period,
+the original material for its construction having being
+brought from England in 1761. It received considerable
+damage during the war, but has since been renovated.</p>
+
+<p>The new United States Custom House, which, when
+completed, will be the finest edifice in the city, is of
+white marble, in very elegant Corinthian style, and
+is situated south of the market wharf, on Cooper
+River.</p>
+
+<p>The old Orphan House of Charleston is one of the
+most famous institutions in the country. It stands in
+spacious grounds between Calhoun and Vanderbuist
+streets, and a statue of William Pitt, erected during
+the Revolution, stands in the centre of the grounds.
+John Charles Fremont, the conqueror of California, and
+once a candidate for the Presidency, and C.C. Memminger,
+Secretary of the Treasury of the Confederate
+States, were both educated here. The Charleston
+Library, at the corner of Broad and Church streets,
+founded in 1748, and the College of Charleston, located
+in the square bounded by George, Green, College and St.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+Philip streets, and founded in 1788, are both spacious
+and commodious buildings.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most characteristic sights of Charleston is
+to be seen between six and nine o'clock in the morning,
+in and about market Hall, in Meeting street, near the
+Bay. The Hall is a fine building in temple form, with
+a lofty portico in front, and a row of long, low sheds in
+the rear.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing picturesque in the country around
+about Charleston. On the contrary, it is low, flat and
+uninteresting. Looking across the Ashley River, which
+is more than a quarter of a mile wide here, there is on
+the opposite side a long, low line of nearly dead level,
+with occasional sparse pine forests, interspersed with
+fields of open sand. There are no palmettoes, but here
+and there are gigantic oaks, hung with pendants of gray
+Spanish moss, and occasional green spikes of the Spanish
+bayonet. The view across the Cooper is very similar.
+Large extents of country in the neighborhood of Charleston,
+especially that lying along the streams, and stretching
+for many miles inland, are low and swampy. The
+region is sparsely settled, and furnishes no thriving
+agricultural or manufacturing population, which, seeking
+a market or a port for its productions, and wanting
+supplies in return, helps to build up the city. Several
+railways connecting with the North, West and South
+centre here; and she is also connected, by means of
+steamship lines, with the principal Atlantic seaports
+and some European ones. She is also the centre of a
+great lumber region, and annually exports many million
+feet of lumber.</p>
+
+<p>There are few points of interest about the city. Besides
+Sullivan's Island, Mount Pleasant, on the northern<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+shore of the harbor, so named, probably, because the land
+is sufficiently high to escape being a swamp, is a favorite
+picnic resort. The antiquarian will find interest in the
+old Church of St. James, about fifteen miles from
+Charleston, on Goose Creek. It is secluded in the very
+heart of the pine forest, entirely isolated from habitations,
+and is approached by a road scarcely more than a
+bridle-path. The church was built in 1711, and the
+royal arms of England, which are emblazoned over the
+pulpit, saved it from destruction during the Revolutionary
+War. On the walls and altars are tablets in
+memory of the early members of the organization, one
+dated 1711, and another 1717. The pews are square
+and high, the pulpit or reading desk exceedingly small,
+and the floor is of stone. On the other side of the road,
+a short distance from this church, is a farm known as
+The Oaks, approached by a magnificent avenue, a quarter
+of a mile in length, of those trees, believed to be nearly
+two hundred years old. They are exceedingly large, and
+form a continuous archway over the road, their branches
+festooned with long fringes of gray moss, which soften
+and conceal the ravages of age.</p>
+
+<p>Magnolia Cemetery lies just outside the city, on its
+northern boundary. It is beautified by live oaks and
+magnolias, and contains, among other fine monuments,
+those of Colonel William Washington, of Revolutionary
+fame, Hugh Legar&eacute; and Dr. Gilmore Simms, the
+novelist. The roads leading out of the city by the
+Cooper and Ashley rivers afford attractive drives.
+What the scenery lacks in grandeur and picturesqueness
+is made up in beauty by the abundance of lovely foliage,
+composed of pines, oaks, magnolias, myrtles and jasmines,
+exhibiting a tropical luxuriance.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On the twenty-seventh of April, 1838, Charleston was
+visited by a fire which proved exceedingly disastrous.
+Nearly one-half the city was swept by the flames, which
+raged for twenty-eight hours, and were finally averted
+only by the blowing up of buildings in their path.
+There were 1158 buildings destroyed, involving a loss
+of three millions of dollars. The most shocking feature
+of the catastrophe was that, in the carelessness of handling
+the gunpowder in blowing up these buildings, four of
+the most prominent citizens were killed, and several
+others injured. The fire of 1861 exceeded this in destructiveness,
+and to it were added the terrific effects of
+a four years' besiegement. So that it can be truly said
+that Charleston has been purified by fire. She is to-day
+fully recovered from the effects, and as prosperous as
+her geographical position will permit.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">MAGNOLIA CEMETERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_135.jpg" width="1024" height="647" alt="MAGNOLIA CEMETERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<h2>CINCINNATI.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Founding of Cincinnati.&mdash;Rapid Increase of Population.&mdash;Character
+of its Early Settlers.&mdash;Pro-slavery Sympathies.&mdash;During
+the Rebellion.&mdash;Description of the City.&mdash;Smoke and
+Soot.&mdash;Suburbs.&mdash;"Fifth Avenue" of Cincinnati.&mdash;Streets, Public
+Buildings, Private Art Galleries, Hotels, Churches and Educational
+Institutions.&mdash;"Over the Rhine."&mdash;Hebrew Population.&mdash;Liberal
+Religious Sentiment.&mdash;Commerce and Manufacturing
+Interests.&mdash;Stock Yards and Pork-packing Establishments.&mdash;Wine
+Making.&mdash;Covington and Newport Suspension Bridge.&mdash;High
+Water.&mdash;Spring Grove Cemetery.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Cincinnati, whether we consider what its past
+history has been, or whether we regard it as it is
+to-day, is probably the most matter-of-fact and prosaic
+of all our western cities. A generation ago it derived its
+chief importance from the pork-packing business, in
+which, though it once stood at the head, it is now completely
+distanced by Chicago. Its extensive factories and
+foundries give it material wealth, while its geographical
+situation guarantees its commercial importance. Unlike
+most of the towns and cities of this western world, no
+interesting historical associations cling around its site.
+The Indians seem to have been troublesome and
+treacherous here, as elsewhere; but the records tell no
+stories of famous wars, terrible massacres, or hairbreadth
+escapes. In all the uninteresting accumulation
+of dry facts and statistics regarding the founding and
+subsequent growth of the city, there is just one exceptional
+romance.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In early times three settlements were made along
+the banks of the Ohio River, on what is now the
+southern boundary of the State of Ohio. The first
+was at Columbia, at the mouth of the Little Miami
+River, in November, 1788, on ten thousand acres,
+purchased by Major Benjamin Stites, from Judge
+Symmes. The second settlement was commenced but
+a month later, on the north bank of the Ohio River,
+opposite the mouth of the Licking River, Matthias
+Denman, of New Jersey, being the leading spirit in the
+new undertaking, he having purchased about eight
+hundred acres, also from Judge Symmes, for an equivalent
+of fifteen pence an acre. Judge Symmes himself
+directed the third settlement, which was founded in
+February, 1789, and gave it the name of North Bend,
+from the fact that it was the most northern bend of the
+Ohio River, below the mouth of the great Kanawha.</p>
+
+<p>A spirit of rivalry existed between these three settlements,
+which lay but a few miles apart. Each one
+regarded itself as the future great city of the west. In
+the beginning, Columbia took the lead; but North
+Bend presently gained the advantage, as the troops
+detailed by General Harmer for the protection of the
+settlers in the Miami Valley landed there, through the
+influence of Judge Symmes. This detachment soon
+took its departure for Louisville, and was succeeded by
+another, under Ensign Luce, who was at liberty to
+select the spot, for the erection of a substantial block-house,
+which seemed to him best calculated to afford
+protection to the Miami settlers. He put up temporary
+quarters at North Bend, sufficient for the security of his
+troops, and began to look for a suitable site on which
+to build the block-house. While he was leisurely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+pursuing this occupation, he was attracted by a pair of
+beautiful black eyes, whose owner was apparently not
+indifferent to his attentions. This woman was the wife
+of one of the settlers at the Bend, who, when he perceived
+the condition of affairs, thought best to remove
+her out of danger, and at once proceeded to take up his
+residence at Cincinnati. The gallant commander, still
+ostensibly engaged in locating his block-house, felt
+immediately impelled to go to Cincinnati, on a tour
+of inspection. He was forcibly struck by the superior
+advantages offered by that town, over all other points
+on the river, for a military station. In spite of
+remonstrance from the Judge, the troops were, accordingly,
+removed, and the erection of a block-house
+commenced at once. The settlers at the Bend, who at
+that time outnumbered those of the more favored place,
+finding their protection gone, gave up their land and
+followed the soldiers, and ere long the town was almost
+deserted. In the course of the ensuing summer, Major
+Doughty arrived at Cincinnati, with troops from
+Fort Harmer, and established Fort Washington, which
+was made the most important and extensive military
+station in the northwest territory. North Bend still
+continued its existence as a town, and was finally
+honored by becoming the home of General Wm. H.
+Harrison, ninth President of the United States, and
+there still rest his mortal remains. Farms now occupy
+the place where Columbia once stood.</p>
+
+<p>The unsettled condition of the frontier prevented
+Cincinnati from making a rapid growth in its early
+years. In 1800, twelve years after the first colonist
+landed on the shore of the Ohio opposite the Licking
+River, there were but 750 inhabitants. In 1814 the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+town was incorporated as a city. In 1820 its inhabitants
+numbered 9,602, and in 1830, 16,230. About this
+time the Miami Canal was built, running through the
+western portion of the State of Ohio, and connecting
+Cincinnati with Lake Erie at Toledo. This gave an
+impetus to trade, and during the next ten years the
+population increased nearly three hundred per cent.,
+numbering in 1840, 46,382 inhabitants. In 1850 it
+had again more than doubled, amounting to 115,436.
+In 1860 the number was 161,044; in 1870, 216,239;
+while according to the United States census returns of
+1880 the population in that year was 255,708.</p>
+
+<p>The career of Cincinnati will not compare in brilliancy
+with that of Chicago. It has not displayed the same
+energy and activity. Outwardly, it has not made the
+most of its superior natural advantages, and intellectually,
+although it boasts some of the most readable and
+successful newspapers in the country, it has fallen
+behind other cities. Settled originally by emigrants
+from Pennsylvania and New Jersey, descendants of
+Germans, Swedes and Danes, its inhabitants were
+plodders rather than pushers. They lacked the practical
+and mental activity of New Englanders and New
+Yorkers. By habits of industry and economy they
+were sure to accumulate wealth; but they cared little
+for outward display, and less for educational and
+intellectual advancement. The churches met better
+support than the schools, "book learning" being held
+in small estimation by this stolid yet thrifty race. They
+patterned their city after Philadelphia, the most
+magnificent city their eyes had ever beheld, and
+anything more splendid than which their imaginations
+were powerless to depict; called their streets Walnut,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+Spruce and Vine, and felt that they should be commended
+for having built them up with a view to substantiality
+rather than to display.</p>
+
+<p>Yankee capital and enterprise, in the course of time,
+found their way to Cincinnati, to build up its factories
+and stimulate public improvements. But, on the line
+between freedom and slavery, its population largely
+southern by immigration or descent, and by sympathy,
+Cincinnati up to the time of the war was more a
+southern than a northern city. Her leading families
+were connected by marriage with Kentucky, Virginia
+and Maryland; many of her leading men had immigrated
+from those States; and her aristocracy scorned the
+northern element which had helped to build up the
+city, and repudiated all its tendencies.</p>
+
+<p>Public sentiment had been, from its earliest history,
+intensely pro-slavery. In 1836 a mob broke into and
+destroyed the office of the <i>Philanthropist</i>, an anti-slavery
+paper, published by James G. Birney, scattered
+the type, and threw the press into the river, having
+previously resolved that no "abolition paper" should
+be either "published or distributed" in the town. In
+1841 the office of the same paper was again raided and
+destroyed, and a frenzied mob, numbering at one time
+as many as fifteen hundred men, engaged in a riot
+against the negro residents in the city, until, to secure
+their safety, it was found necessary to incarcerate the
+latter, to the number of 250 to 300, in the county jail.
+Houses were broken into and furniture destroyed,
+several persons killed, and twenty or thirty more or
+less seriously wounded. Yet at this very period,
+Salmon Portland Chase, the future statesman and financier,
+but then an obscure young lawyer, was living in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Cincinnati, and was already planning the beginnings of
+that Liberty party which, after many vicissitudes, and
+under a different name, finally accomplished the abolition
+of slavery; and in this same city, but ten years later, Mrs.
+Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin."</p>
+
+<p>When the war began, Cincinnati found itself in an
+anomalous position. Geographically it was on the side
+of the north, while to a large extent its social and
+business relations allied it with the south. Many of the
+leading families furnished adherents to the southern
+cause; but the masses of the people, notably the
+Germans, who had already become an important factor
+in its population, were stirred by the spirit of
+patriotism, and casting aside once for all their conservatism,
+they identified themselves with the cause of the
+Union. Trade was greatly disturbed. The old
+profitable relations with the south were broken up for
+the time being, but Cincinnati did not find herself a
+loser. Army contractors made fortunes, and the business
+of supplying gunboats, military stores and provisions to
+the army gave employment to immense numbers, and
+stimulated all branches of trade. From this period
+Cincinnati dates her new life. Heretofore she had
+stagnated in all but a business sense. With the steady
+increase of her population came a new element.
+Southern supineness and Middle State stolidity were
+aroused and shaken out of themselves, when slavery no
+longer exerted its baleful influence over the country
+and the city. Fresh life was infused into her people,
+and the war marked the dawn of a new era for the city,
+an era in which public spirit took a prominent place.</p>
+
+<p>The name, Cincinnati, was bestowed upon the city at
+its foundation, as tradition has it, by General St. Clair,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+who called it after the society of that name, of which
+himself and General Hamilton were both members.
+The county was subsequently named in honor of General
+Hamilton. The young town barely escaped the name
+of Losantiville, a word of original etymology, compounded
+by a pedantic schoolmaster, who, wishing to
+indicate the position of the future city as opposite the
+mouth of the Licking River, united <i>os</i>, mouth, <i>anti</i>,
+against or opposite to, and <i>ville</i>, as meaning city,
+prefacing the whole with L, the initial letter of Licking;
+hence "Losantiville." But the name, although accepted
+for several months, was not permanently adopted.</p>
+
+<p>Cincinnati is nearly in the centre of the great valley
+of the Ohio, being only fifty-eight miles nearer Cairo,
+at its junction with the Mississippi, than to its head
+waters at Pittsburg. It occupies the half circle formed
+by an outward curve of the river, which bends continually
+in one direction or another. The plateau upon
+which the business part of the city is built is sixty feet
+above the low-water mark of the river. Back of this is
+a terrace some fifty feet higher yet, graded to an easy
+slope, the whole shut in by an amphitheatre of what
+appears to be hills, though when one mounts to their
+summits he finds himself on an undulating table-land,
+four or five hundred feet above the river, which extends
+backward into the country. The river flows through
+a wide and deep ravine, which the raging floods have,
+in the long ages since they began their course, cut for
+themselves, through an elevated region of country. In
+the remote west these ravines, chiseled through the solid
+rocks, are bordered by steep precipices; on the Ohio
+the yielding soil has been washed away in a gradual
+slope, leaving the graceful outlines of hills.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The city proper is occupied by stores, offices, public
+buildings, factories, foundries, and the dwelling houses
+of the poorer and middle classes, over all which hangs a
+pall of smoke, caused by the bituminous coal used as fuel
+in the city. Cleanliness in either person or in dress is
+almost an impossibility. Hands and faces become grimy,
+and clean collars and light-hued garments are perceptibly
+coated with a thin layer of soot. Clothes hung out
+in the weekly wash acquire a permanent yellow hue
+which no bleaching can remove. The smoke of hundreds
+of factories, locomotives and steamboats arises and unites
+to form this dismal pall, which obscures the sunlight,
+and gives a sickly cast to the moonbeams.</p>
+
+<p>But beyond the city, on the magnificent amphitheatre
+of hills which encircle it, are half a dozen beautiful suburbs,
+where the homes of Cincinnati's merchant princes
+and millionaires are found, as elegant as wealth combined
+with art can make them, surrounded by enchanting
+scenery, and commanding extensive views over the city and
+surrounding country. Cincinnati has no Fifth Avenue
+like New York, but it has its Mount Auburn, its Walnut
+Hills, its Price's Hill, its Clifton and its Avondale,
+which are as much superior to Fifth Avenue as the
+country is superior to the city, and as space is preferable
+to narrowness. As far as the eye can reach, on these
+billowed outlines of hills and valleys, elegant cottages,
+tasteful villas, and substantial mansions, surrounded by
+a paradise of grass, gardens, lawns, and tree-shaded
+roads, are clustered. Each little suburb has its own
+corporation, and its own municipal government, while
+even its mayor and aldermen may do daily business in
+the large city below it.</p>
+
+<p>In the city itself Pearl street is noted for its wholesale<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+trade, and for the uniform elegance of its buildings.
+Third street, between Main and Vine, contains the
+banking, brokering, and insurance offices. Fourth street
+is the fashionable promenade and business street. Freeman
+street, in the neighborhood of Lincoln Park, is also
+a favorite promenade. Both the East and West Ends
+contain many fine residences. Along Front street, at
+the foot of Main, is the public landing, an open space one
+thousand feet long and four hundred and twenty-five feet
+wide. The city has a frontage of ten miles on the river,
+and extends back three miles.</p>
+
+<p>The United States Government building, occupying
+the square bounded by Main and Walnut, and Fifth and
+Sixth streets, and accommodating the Custom House,
+Post Office, and United States Courts; the County Court
+House, in Main street, near Canal street; the City buildings
+occupying an entire square on Plum street, between
+Eighth and Ninth; the Chamber of Commerce, on
+Fourth street between Main and Walnut; and the
+Masonic Temple, at the corner of Third and Walnut
+streets, are among the most imposing buildings of the
+city. The Exposition buildings, in Elm street, fronting
+Washington Park, cover three and one-half acres of
+ground, and have seven acres of space for exhibiting.
+The Exhibition opens annually, during the first week
+in September, and closes the first week in October. The
+Springer Music Hall will seat 5,000 persons, and contains
+one of the largest organs in the world, having more
+pipes, but fewer speaking stops, than the famous Boston
+organ. Pike's Opera House, in Fourth street, between
+Vine and Walnut, is a very handsome building. Cincinnati
+is noted for its appreciation and encouragement
+of fine music. The Emery Arcade, said to be the largest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+in America, extends from Vine to Race street, between
+Fourth and Fifth. The roof is of glass, and in it are
+shops of various kinds, and the Hotel Emery.</p>
+
+<p>The late Henry Probasco, on Clifton Heights, and
+Joseph Longworth, on Walnut Hills, each had very fine
+private art galleries, to which visitors were courteously
+admitted, and the city itself occupies a high standard in
+art matters. The Tyler-Davidson fountain, in Fifth
+street, between Vine and Walnut, the gift of Mr.
+Probasco, exhibits a series of basins, one above another,
+the shaft ornamented by figures, and the whole surmounted
+by a gigantic female figure, from whose outstretched
+hands the water rains down in fine spray.
+The fountain was cast in Munich, and cost nearly
+$200,000.</p>
+
+<p>The Burnet House has been, for more than a quarter
+of a century, the principal hotel in Cincinnati. The
+Grand Hotel is newer and more elegant. The Gibson
+House is large and centrally located. There are various
+opera houses, theatres, variety and concert halls, a
+gymnasium, a Floating Bath, and Zo&ouml;logical Gardens,
+with a collection of birds and animals, among the best
+in the country.</p>
+
+<p>St. Peter's Cathedral (Roman Catholic), in Plum street,
+between Seventh and Eighth, is the finest religious
+edifice in the city. Its altar of Carrara marble was
+carved in Genoa, and its altar-piece, "St. Peter
+Delivered," by Murillo, a work of art of world-wide
+reputation. Many of the Protestant churches are
+elegant, and some of them actually magnificent. The
+Hebrew Synagogue on Plum street, opposite the
+Cathedral, and the Hebrew Temple, at the corner of
+Eighth and Mound streets, both handsome edifices, one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+in Moorish and the other in Gothic style, have each of
+them brilliant interiors.</p>
+
+<p>Among the educational institutions of Cincinnati are
+the University of Cincinnati, having in connection with
+it a School of Design and a Law School, St. Xavier's
+College (Jesuit); Wesleyan Female College; Seminary
+of Mount St. Mary's, a famous Roman Catholic
+College; Lane Theological Seminary, of which Dr. Lyman
+Beecher was once president, and where Henry Ward
+Beecher once studied theology for three years; several
+medical colleges, and scientific, classical and mechanical
+institutes.</p>
+
+<p>A number of parks surround the city, furnishing fine
+pleasure grounds, and containing magnificent views of
+the river and its shores.</p>
+
+<p>More than a third of the residents of Cincinnati are
+of German birth or descent. Besides being scattered all
+through the city, they also occupy a quarter exclusively
+their own, on the north of the Miami Canal, which they
+have named "the Rhine." "Over the Rhine," one
+seems to have left America entirely, and to have entered,
+as by magic, the Fatherland. The German tongue is
+the only one spoken, and all signs and placards are in
+German. There are German schools, churches and
+places of amusement. The beer gardens will especially
+recall Germany to the mind of the tourist. The Grand
+Arbeiter and Turner Halls are distinctive features of
+this quarter of the city, and specially worthy of a
+visit.</p>
+
+<p>The Jews also constitute a proportion of the inhabitants,
+respectable both as to numbers and character; and, what
+is worthy of remark, there is an unwonted harmony
+between Christians and Hebrews, so that an exchange<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+of pulpits between them has been among the actual facts
+of the past. Dr. Max Lilienthal, one of the most
+eloquent and learned rabbis of the country, presides
+over one of the Jewish congregations, and has preached
+to Christian audiences; and Mr. Mayo, the Unitarian
+clergyman, has spoken by invitation in the synagogues.
+The Jews of the city are noted for their intelligence,
+public spirit and liberality, and are represented in the
+municipal government, and on the boards of public and
+charitable institutions. Quite as worthy of note is the
+fact that the Young Men's Christian Association of
+Cincinnati is not influenced by that spirit of narrow
+bigotry which in certain other cities of the Union
+excludes Unitarians from fellowship.</p>
+
+<p>The venerable Archbishop Purcell, who for half a
+century had been at the head of the Roman Catholic
+Church in this diocese, was a man of genial manners,
+sincerely beloved by all. But the closing days of his
+life were sadly clouded by a gigantic financial failure,
+amounting to several millions of dollars, with which he
+was connected. As heavily as the blow has fallen upon
+many of his flock, the only blame they impute to the
+dead prelate is that of most faulty judgment and general
+incapacity in financial affairs. The most singular part
+of it all was that the difficulties should have remained
+so long undiscovered, until such an immense amount of
+property was involved.</p>
+
+<p>Cincinnati's commerce is very extended, and so are
+her manufacturing interests. Steamboats from all
+points on the Mississippi and the Ohio lay up at her
+levee, which extends five or six miles around the bank
+of the river in front of the city. The traveler may
+take his ticket for St. Paul, New Orleans, Pittsburg,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+high up the Red River, or any intervening point. The
+staple article of trade is pork, though she exports wine,
+flour, iron, machinery, whisky, paper and books. In
+addition to the water ways, a large number of railways,
+connecting the city with every section of the country,
+centres here.</p>
+
+<p>The stock yards of Cincinnati are on an extended
+scale, though not equaling those of Chicago. The
+Union Railroad's Stock Yards, comprising fifty acres on
+Spring Grove avenue, have accommodations for 25,000
+hogs, 10,000 sheep, and 5,000 cattle. In the pork
+packing establishments, thousands of hogs from the
+farms of Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, are slaughtered
+daily. In a single establishment fifty men will slaughter
+and dispose of 1,500 hogs a day. Each man has his
+own special line of work, the labor being divided among
+pen-men, knockers-down, stickers, scalders, bristle-snatchers,
+scrapers, shavers, hangers or "gamble-men,"
+gutters, hose-boys, slide-boys, splitters, cutters with
+their attendants, weighers, cleavers, knife-men, ham-trimmers,
+shoulder-trimmers, packers, salters, weighers
+and branders, lard-men, bookkeepers, porters and laborers,
+of whom fifty will unitedly dispose of a hog once
+in every twenty seconds. The old saying is that it
+takes nine tailors to make a man, but it takes fifty men,
+belonging to all the professions named above, to make
+one complete butcher. The work is accomplished so
+rapidly that the creature has no time to realize what has
+happened to him, before the different portions of his
+dissected body are slipping down wooden pipes, each to
+its appropriate apartment below, to be finally disposed of.</p>
+
+<p>Nowhere east of the Rocky Mountains are grapes
+cultivated to such an extent, and such quantities of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+wine manufactured, as on the southern slopes of the hills
+which hem in the city of Cincinnati. This business is
+mostly engaged in by Germans, who make excellent
+wine, which has acquired a world-wide celebrity. But
+the grape-rot, which has especially affected the Catawbas,
+from which the best wine is produced, has of late
+years rather checked the industry. Some of the wine
+cellars of Cincinnati are famous, not only for the
+quantity of native wine which they contain, but for its
+quality as well.</p>
+
+<p>Looking across the river, which at low water is,
+perhaps, a third of a mile wide, to the Kentucky side,
+one sees, on the right bank of the Licking River, the
+city of Covington, a mass of black factories and tall
+chimneys, from which dense smoke is always ascending,
+and spreading out over the valley. On the left or
+opposite bank of the Licking is Newport, the two
+towns connected by a suspension bridge. Covington is
+also connected with Cincinnati by a suspension bridge,
+1,057 feet long from tower to tower, its entire length
+2,252 feet, and elevated by two iron cables above the
+river, at low water, one hundred feet. Its weight is
+600 tons, but it is estimated that it will sustain a weight
+of 16,000 tons, and is one of the finest structures of
+its kind in the world. This bridge was nine years in
+construction, and cost nearly two millions of dollars.
+There are also two pier railroad bridges across the Ohio
+at Cincinnati.</p>
+
+<p>Along the summit of the steep levee, close to the line
+of stores, there is a row of massive posts, three feet
+thick and twenty feet high, and forty or fifty feet above
+the usual low water mark. The stranger will be
+puzzled to imagine their use. But let him visit the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+city during the spring freshet, and he will speedily
+discover their purpose. The swelling of the river at
+that period brings the steamboats face to face with the
+warehouses on the levee, and they are secured to these
+huge posts by means of strong cables, to prevent them
+being swept down the stream by the mighty rush of
+waters. The usual difference between the high and
+low water mark of the Ohio River at Cincinnati is
+about forty feet, though a flood has been known to
+mark a much higher figure than that. When this
+occurs, which it does once or twice in a generation, the
+overflowing water carries desolation to all the lower
+parts of the city. The ground floors of houses are
+submerged, cellars filled, merchandise damaged or
+destroyed. People betake themselves to the upper
+stories, and make their way about the streets in boats.</p>
+
+<p>The latest and most disastrous flood on record was
+that of 1883, when, on February fifteenth, the river indicated
+sixty-six feet and four inches above low water
+mark. Furious rain storms throughout the Ohio
+Valley had swollen all the streams to an unprecedented
+height, and caused terrible disaster to all the towns and
+cities on the shores of the Ohio River. For seven miles
+along the water front of Cincinnati the water overflowed
+valuable property, reaching from two to eight blocks
+into the city, so that the great suspension bridge, entrance
+to which is from the top of the decline, could not be
+reached except in boats. A thousand firms were
+washed out. In Mill Creek Valley are the large
+manufacturing establishments, which employ over thirty
+thousand men, women, and children, and these were all
+cut off by water. Twelve wards in the city, and seven
+townships in the country, were more or less affected by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+the flood. The entire population of the flooded city
+districts is nearly 130,000, and one quarter of these,
+exclusive of business interests, were sufferers by the
+flood, their houses being either under water or totally
+destroyed. The waterworks were stopped, and the
+city was left in darkness by the submergence of the
+gasworks.</p>
+
+<p>On Tuesday, February thirteenth, although the flood
+had not yet reached its height, the freight depot of the
+Cincinnati Southern Railroad was undermined by the
+bursting of a culvert under it, and fell into the surrounding
+water, carrying with it, to certain death, several people.
+More than twenty railroad tracks were submerged, some
+of them to a depth of twelve feet, so that nearly all
+communication was cut off. Policemen patrolled the
+streets in boats. The churches were thrown open to
+receive the homeless, and nearly every organization in
+the city, from the Chamber of Commerce to the ladies'
+sewing societies, entered upon the work of relieving the
+sufferers. Contributions poured in most liberally from
+abroad, the Free Masons of Cleveland alone shipping
+twelve large boats, with a generous supply of stores.
+Before relief could come to them, many persons suffered
+severely, from both cold and hunger. They were
+rescued from their flooded homes by the aid of skiffs,
+some of them with barely enough clothing to conceal
+their nakedness.</p>
+
+<p>It is estimated that eight square miles of Cincinnati
+were under water, five of which were in the Mill Creek
+Valley. Provisions became scarce, and commanded
+high prices. Newport, on the Kentucky shore, was in
+even a more deplorable condition than Cincinnati.
+Supplies became entirely exhausted, and on the night of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+the fourteenth, fifteen thousand people there were without
+fuel or provisions.</p>
+
+<p>On the sixteenth of February the waters had begun
+to subside, and gradually regained their normal level,
+making more apparent, as the flood decreased, the ruin
+and desolation which had attended it. A vast deposit
+of mud was left upon the streets, many premises had
+been undermined by the sucking currents, malaria
+haunted the wet cellars, the destruction of merchandise
+was found to be very heavy indeed, while thousands of
+men were compelled to remain out of employment until
+the factories and mills could be put in working condition.
+The great flood of 1883 will long be remembered
+by the citizens of Cincinnati.</p>
+
+<p>The breaking up of the ice in the river, in the spring,
+is also a time of great peril to property. There is usually
+more or less rise in the river at that period, with a swifter
+current, and the floating blocks sometimes drag boats
+away from their moorings, and crush them to either
+partial or utter destruction. The Ohio River, known to
+the French as <i>La Belle Riviere</i>, so called because of its
+high and picturesque banks, is, like the Mississippi, a
+capricious stream, and neither life nor property is always
+safe upon its bosom or along its shores.</p>
+
+<p>The pride of Cincinnati is Spring Grove Cemetery,
+five miles northwest of the city, which is one of the most
+beautiful in the West. It is in the valley of Mill Creek,
+and is approached by a handsome avenue, one hundred
+feet wide. It contains six hundred acres, well wooded,
+and so laid out as to present the appearance of a park.
+The boundaries of the lots are indicated by sunken stone
+posts at each corner, there being neither railing, fence,
+nor hedge within the cemetery, to define these lots. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+graves are leveled off, even with the ground, and the
+monuments are remarkable, for their variety and good
+taste. The Dexter mausoleum, which represents a
+Gothic chapel, will attract special attention; while one
+of the principal objects in the cemetery is the bronze
+statue of a soldier, cast in Munich, and erected in 1864,
+to the memory of the Ohio volunteer soldiers who died
+during the War.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of many changes for the better since the
+war, Cincinnati still retains her distinctive character.
+She has taken long strides in the direction of intellectual
+development, and has now numerous and extensive
+public libraries, of which any city might be proud. The
+theatres and other places of amusement, which, not long
+since, were represented by shaky buildings, third-rate
+talent and a general dearth of attractions, and patronized
+more largely by the river men than by any other single
+class, have risen to take rank among the best in the
+country. But she is still a city noted for her wealth;
+for her solid business enterprises and scrupulous honesty,
+rather than for that spirit of speculation in which, in
+other cities, fortunes are quickly made, and even more
+quickly lost. Her prosperity has a solid foundation in
+her factories, her foundries, her mills and engine shops.
+A man, to be successful in Cincinnati, must know how
+to <i>make</i> and to <i>do</i>, as well as how to buy and sell. Men
+have risen from the humblest ranks by dint of industry
+and energy alone, while they were yet young, to be the
+masters of princely fortunes. Even a newspaper publisher
+in that city, a few years since, estimated his property
+at five millions of dollars, an instance which,
+probably, has not a parallel in the civilized world.
+Nicholas Longworth died worth twelve millions of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+dollars, and her living millionaires are to be counted by
+hundreds.</p>
+
+<p>Cincinnati stands in the front rank of the manufacturing
+cities of America, and the secret of her financial
+success is that she has made what the people of Ohio and
+other States needed and were sure to buy. Receiving
+their products in return, and turning these to account,
+her merchants have made a double profit. As long as
+the Ohio River sweeps by the city's front, and as long as
+the smoke of her factories and her foundries ascends to
+heaven and obscures the fair face thereof, and corn, transformed
+into pork, is sent away in such quantities to the
+Eastern cities and to Europe; so long as the cotton of
+the South, the hay of the blue grass region, and the grain
+of the North and West, find a market on her shores, her
+prosperity is secure; and the Queen City of the West, as
+she proudly styles herself, will go on increasing in population
+and in prosperity.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>CLEVELAND.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The "Western Reserve."&mdash;Character of Early Settlers.&mdash;Fairport.&mdash;Richmond.&mdash;Early
+History of Cleveland.&mdash;Indians.&mdash;Opening
+of Ohio and Portsmouth Canal.&mdash;Commerce in 1845.&mdash;Cleveland
+in 1850&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Manufacturing Interests.&mdash;Cuyahoga
+"Flats" at Night.&mdash;The "Forest City."&mdash;Streets and
+Avenues.&mdash;Monumental Park.&mdash;Public Buildings and Churches.&mdash;Union
+Depot.&mdash;Water Rents.&mdash;Educational Institutions.&mdash;Rocky
+River.&mdash;Approach to the City.&mdash;Freshet of 1883.&mdash;Funeral
+of President Garfield.&mdash;Lake Side Cemetery.&mdash;Site of
+the Garfield Monument.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>In early colonial times, out of utter ignorance of the
+boundless territory extending westward, the first
+American Colonies were chartered by the Kings of
+England with permission to extend westward indefinitely.
+After the close of the Revolutionary War, while
+negotiations were in progress in regard to the final
+treaty of peace with the United States, which was
+ultimately signed at Paris on November thirtieth, 1782,
+Mr. Oswald, the British Commissioner, proposed the
+Ohio River as the western boundary of the young nation,
+and had it not been for the firmness and persistence of
+John Adams, one of the American Commissioners, who
+insisted upon the right of the United Colonies to the
+territory as far westward as the Mississippi, it is
+probable that the rich section of country between these
+two rivers would still have formed a portion of the
+British dominions, or have been the source of subsequent
+contention and expense. When the Colonies had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+become independent States, many of them claimed the
+right of soil and jurisdiction over large portions of
+western unappropriated land originally embraced in
+their charters. Congress urged upon these States to
+cede these lands to the general government, for the
+benefit of all. They all yielded to this request, except
+Connecticut, who retained a small tract of land in the
+northeastern portion of the present State of Ohio, which
+was subsequently divided up five counties in length
+along the lake, with an average width of two counties.
+The lower boundary of this tract of land was 40&deg; 22&acute;
+north latitude, and it extended from the Pennsylvania
+line on the east, one hundred and twenty miles westward,
+to a line running north and south, a little west
+of the present location of Sandusky City. This tract
+of land was called the "Western Reserve of Connecticut."</p>
+
+<p>In 1801 Connecticut ceded all her jurisdictional
+claims over the territory, but it continues to be known,
+to this day, as the "Connecticut Reserve," the "Western
+Reserve," or simply as the "Reserve." This "Western
+Reserve" is like a little piece of New England in a
+mosaic, representing many sections and many peoples.
+It is a peculiarity of the Anglo-Saxon race, that in
+emigrating it usually moves along parallels of latitude,
+and rarely diverges much either northward or southward.
+We find to the eastward of Ohio, Connecticut,
+and Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, and
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and Virginia, and
+all of these States have contributed to her population.
+Thus, below the Reserve, the people are largely from
+Pennsylvania; still further south, from Maryland and
+Virginia; and the lower section of the State is allied<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+more by kindred and sympathy with the South than
+with the North. But on the Western Reserve, the
+cosmopolitan character of the inhabitants is at once lost.
+It is New England in descent and ideas. The little
+white meeting house, and the little red school house not
+far off, both as bare and homely as a stern Puritan race
+could conceive of, were everywhere met in the early
+days of its settlement, after the log cabin epoch had
+passed away. Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont
+furnished the principal immigrants, and they built their
+neat and thrifty little New England towns over again,
+and maintained their New England sturdiness and
+simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>The inhabitants of the Reserve have been, and are
+still, noted for their thrift, their intelligence and their
+superior culture. That section has furnished many
+distinguished public men, and one President, to the
+country. It was, in the old slavery days, spoken of
+contemptuously as "the hotbed of abolitionism," and
+gave both Giddings and Wade to fight the battle against
+Southern dominion in the United States Congress.
+Here Garfield was born, and here he is buried.
+Howells, the novelist, was a native of the Reserve, and
+passed his life until early manhood in its northeasternmost
+county.</p>
+
+<p>The northern shores of the Reserve are washed by
+Lake Erie, one of the shallowest, most treacherous and
+least picturesque of the chain of lakes which form our
+northern boundary. It embraces the "Great Divide"
+between the north and the south, its waters flowing to
+the sea by both the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi.
+Summit and Portage counties, by their names, indicate
+the locality of this Divide.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Very early in the present century, the sturdy New
+England pioneers, looking for a suitable harbor upon
+the lake, discovered the mouth of Grand River, about
+thirty-five miles northeast of the Cuyahoga River;
+and in 1803, two miles up this river, the first warehouse
+on the lake was built.</p>
+
+<p>In 1812 the town of Fairport, at the mouth of
+this river, was laid out, and was destined by its
+founders to be the future great lake city of Ohio.
+It had one of the best harbors on the lake, if not
+the best, well defended from storms, and easy of
+access, so that vessels entered it without difficulty when
+they could not make other ports. The water was deep
+enough for any large craft, and in the course of time the
+government expended a considerable sum of money in
+improving the harbor. A line of boats was speedily
+established between Fairport and Buffalo, which in those
+railroadless days were liberally patronized. Nearly all
+the lake steamers bound for other ports stopped there,
+and its business constantly increased. A lighthouse
+was built, and its future prosperity seemed assured.</p>
+
+<p>During the great period of land speculation, between
+1830 and 1840, the town of Richmond was laid out on
+the opposite bank of the Grand River, by wealthy
+eastern capitalists, who established their homes there,
+and transported to the infant city the wealth, magnificence
+and luxurious social customs of the east. During
+their brief reign, they gave entertainments such as were
+not equaled in that section of the country for many
+long years afterwards. A large village was built and a
+steamboat was owned there.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, a little town had been growing up on the
+banks of the Cuyahoga. The first permanent settlement<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+had been made as early as 1796, and named Cleveland,
+in honor of General Moses Cleveland, of Canterbury,
+Connecticut. At that period the nearest white settlement
+was Conneaut, on the east, and another at the mouth of
+the River Raisin, to the west. Immigration at that period
+did not march steadily westward, each new settlement
+being in close proximity to an older one, but it took
+sudden jumps over wide extents of territory, so that for
+many years isolated families or small neighborhoods
+were far apart. Each little settlement had to be sufficient
+unto itself, since, to reach any other involved a long,
+difficult and often dangerous journey. Up to nearly
+1800 each house in Cleveland had its own hand grist-mill
+standing in the chimney-corner, in which the flour
+or meal for the family consumption was slowly and
+laboriously ground each day. In the spring of 1799
+Wheeler W. Williams and Major Wyatt erected the
+first grist and saw mill on the Reserve, at Newburg, a
+few miles above the mouth of the Cuyahoga.</p>
+
+<p>The first ball ever given in Cleveland was on the
+Fourth of July, 1801, in a log cabin, the company
+numbering thirty, of both sexes. The first militia
+muster was held at Doane's Corners, on the sixteenth
+of June, 1806. The spot is now incorporated in the
+city of Cleveland. Never before had been so many
+whites collected together in this region as on this
+occasion, which was one of general excitement. The
+militia consisted of about fifty privates, with the usual
+complement of officers, but a surveying party and a
+number of strangers were present and added to the
+spectators.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning of the century the Indians were in
+the habit of meeting every autumn, at Cleveland, piling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+their canoes up at the mouth of the Cuyahoga, and
+scattering into the interior of the country, which
+constituted their great winter hunting ground. In the
+spring they returned, disposed of their furs, and entering
+their canoes, departed up the lake for their villages, in
+the region of Sandusky and Maumee, where they raised
+their crops of corn and potatoes. Many local names
+are of Indian origin; Cuyahoga means "crooked river."
+Geauga, the name of an adjoining county, signifies
+"raccoon." Their encampment on going and returning
+was usually on the west bank of the river, and in their
+drinking bouts, in which they occasionally indulged,
+they were sometimes quarrelsome and dangerous, but do
+not seem, on the whole, to have given the settlers much
+trouble. On the twenty-sixth of June, 1812, an Indian
+named McMic was hanged for murder, on the public
+square of Cleveland. There were fears that the Indians
+would rally to his rescue, and a large number of citizens
+from Cuyahoga and adjoining counties, armed themselves
+and attended the execution, prepared for any
+outbreak. The Indians remained peaceable, but the
+prisoner, at the last moment, refused to ascend the scaffold.
+Finally, his scruples were overcome by a pint of
+whisky, which he swallowed with satisfaction before
+yielding to the inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>In 1813 Cleveland became a depot for supplies and
+troops during the war, and a permanent garrison was
+established here, a small stockade having been erected
+on the lake bank, at the foot of Ontario street. The
+return of peace was celebrated in true American style.
+The cannon which was fired in honor of the occasion was
+supplied with powder by one Uncle Abram, who carried
+an open pail of the explosive material on his arm. An<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>other
+citizen bore a lighted stick with which to touch off
+the gun. In the excitement, the latter swung his stick
+in the air; a spark fell into Uncle Abram's powder, and
+that worthy, whether from astonishment or some other
+cause, suddenly sprang twenty feet into the air, his
+ascent being accompanied by a deafening report. When
+he came down again, his clothing was singed off, and he
+vociferously protested that he was dead. But the
+multitude refused to take his word for it, and it was not
+a great while before he had completely recovered from
+the accident.</p>
+
+<p>The Ohio Canal, which connects Lake Erie at this
+point with the Ohio River at Portsmouth, was completed
+in 1834, and from that date her prosperity seems to have
+been established. She was incorporated a city in 1836.
+About this time the great western land bubble burst,
+and with it the hopes of Fairport and Richmond. The
+latter city speedily disappeared from the face of the
+earth, and its name from the map. Its houses were
+taken up bodily and removed to adjacent towns. Boats
+still continued to stop at Fairport, but they began to stop
+more frequently at Cleveland, and while the business of
+the former point was at a standstill, that of the latter
+continued to increase. In 1840 its population was over
+6,000, and its supremacy fairly established. In 1850
+Fairport was still a little hamlet, the boats passing her
+far out in the lake without giving her so much as a nod
+of recognition; while the wharves of Cleveland were
+lined with shipping, and her population did not fall far
+short of 20,000.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the Cleveland and Portsmouth Canal, which
+opened up a line of traffic with the south and southwest,
+communication was also had with the East, by means of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+canal to Pittsburg and to New York, and the lakes were
+a highway, not only to the East but to the North and
+West. Cleveland became the great mart of the grain-growing
+country. Its harbor was extended and improved
+by the erection of piers each side of the mouth of the
+river, two hundred feet apart, and extending out several
+hundred feet into the lake, furnishing effective break-waters,
+and ample room for the loading and unloading
+of vessels. A lighthouse was erected at the end of each
+pier, and one already stood upon the cliff.</p>
+
+<p>In 1845 the number of vessels which arrived by lake
+was 2,136; and of these 927 were steamers. The tonnage
+then owned at that port amounted to 13,493, and the
+number of vessels of all kinds eighty-five. The total
+value of exports and imports by the lake for that year
+was over $9,000,000. Cleveland occupied a small region
+on the cliff at the mouth of the Cuyahoga. Ontario
+street was filled with boarding-houses and private residences.
+Euclid avenue and Prospect street extended
+for a few squares, and were then lost in the country.
+The flats through which the river wound its devious
+way were occupied as pastures for the cows of persons
+living in the heart of the city. The business portion of
+the town was contained, for the most part, in the two
+squares on Superior street, west of Ontario. Ohio City
+was a separate corporation, a straggling, dilapidated
+town, looking like a country village, on the western bank
+of the Cuyahoga, connected with Cleveland by means of
+drawbridges.</p>
+
+<p>In the fall of 1852 the first whistle of the locomotive
+was heard down by the river side, in the city of Cleveland.
+It started the city into new life, and woke all the
+farmers within the sound of its hoarse screech into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+renewed energy. That fall and winter there was a butter
+famine in all that region. The market being opened to
+New York, butter went suddenly up from eight and ten
+cents a pound, to twelve, sixteen, and then to twenty
+cents. Buyers could afford to pay no such fancy price
+for an article which might be dispensed with; and producers
+were equally unwilling to put upon their own
+tables anything which would yield them such a handsome
+profit on selling. And so many families, not only
+of mechanics, but of farmers as well, went without butter
+that winter; the latter happy in receiving, first twenty,
+then twenty-two, and finally twenty-five cents per pound
+for the products of their dairies.</p>
+
+<p>This first railroad gave the city a fresh start, and
+presently others found their terminus here. Population
+and business have both steadily increased since then,
+until in 1880 the former was 160,142, and its commerce
+immense, especially with Canada and the mining
+regions of Lake Superior. Since 1860 the city has
+rapidly developed in the direction of manufacturing
+industries. The headquarters of the giant monopoly,
+known as the Standard Oil Company, Cleveland is the
+first city of the world in the production of refined petroleum.
+The old pasture grounds of the cows of 1850 are
+now completely occupied by oil refineries and manufacturing
+establishments; and the river, which but a generation
+ago flowed peaceful and placid through green fields,
+is now almost choked with barges, tugs and immense
+rafts. Looking down upon the Cuyahoga Flats, from
+the heights of what was once Ohio City, but is now
+known as the West Side of Cleveland itself, the view,
+though far from beautiful, is a very interesting one.
+There are copper smelting, iron rolling, and iron<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+manufacturing works, lumber yards, paper mills,
+breweries, flour mills, nail works, pork-packing establishments,
+and the multitudinous industries of a
+great manufacturing city, which depends upon these
+industries largely for its prosperity. The scene at
+night, from this same elevated position, is picturesque
+in the extreme. The whole valley shows a black background,
+lit up with a thousand points of light from
+factories, foundries and steamboats, which are multiplied
+into two thousand as they are reflected in the
+waters of the Cuyahoga, which looks like a silver
+ribbon flowing through the blackness.</p>
+
+<p>Cleveland is acknowledged to be the most beautiful
+city of the many which are found upon the shores of
+the great lakes. It stands on a high bluff overlooking
+Lake Erie. It is laid out, for the most part, with
+parallel streets, crossed by others at right angles; and
+even in the heart of the city nearly every house has its
+little side and front yard filled with shrubbery and
+shaded by trees, a large majority of the latter being
+elms. The great number of these trees fairly entitle
+Cleveland to be known as the "Forest City." The
+streets are very wide, and the principal ones are paved.</p>
+
+<p>The main business thoroughfare and fashionable
+promenade is Superior street, which is one hundred
+and thirty-two feet wide, and lined with handsome
+hotels and retail stores. From the foot of this street,
+and on a level with it, was completed, in 1878, a great
+stone viaduct, connecting the East Side with the West
+Side, reaching the latter at the junction of Pearl and
+Detroit streets. This roadway is 3,211 feet long, and
+cost $2,200,000. Some years before a bridge had been
+constructed in the same locality, at a sufficient elevation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+to permit the passage under it of various craft; but
+even at this height there was quite a descent to reach it,
+and an equal ascent on leaving it on the other side.
+The drawbridge near the mouth of the river was
+totally inadequate to meet the needs of business, and
+was often open for long periods of time while vessels
+were passing through.</p>
+
+<p>Ontario, Bank, Water, Mervin and River streets and
+Euclid avenue are other important business streets on
+the East Side. Detroit, Pearl and Lorain are the
+principal thoroughfares on the West Side.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">PUBLIC SQUARE AND PERRY MONUMENT, CLEVELAND, OHIO.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_167.jpg" width="1024" height="646" alt="PUBLIC SQUARE AND PERRY MONUMENT, CLEVELAND, OHIO." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Monument Park is a square ten acres in extent, in
+the centre of the city, crossed by Superior and Ontario
+streets. It is divided by these streets into four sections
+and is shaded by fine trees. In the southeast section
+stands a monument to Commodore Perry, the hero of
+the battle of Lake Erie, erected in 1860, at a cost of
+$8,000. It contains a colossal statue of the Commodore,
+in Italian marble, standing on a pedestal of Rhode
+Island granite, the entire monument being about twenty
+feet in height. In front of the pedestal is a marble
+medallion, representing Perry in a small boat passing
+from the Lawrence to the Niagara, in the heat of battle.
+In the southwest corner of the Park is a pool and
+cascade, and in the northwest a handsome fountain. In
+this park was erected the large catafalque under which
+the casket containing the remains of the late President
+Garfield was laid in state until and during the grand
+public funeral, after which it was taken to the cemetery.
+This park is surrounded by very handsome churches
+and public buildings, among which latter are the
+Custom House, Post Office, Federal Courts, County
+Court House and City Hall, all magnificent edifices.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+Case Hall, near the park, contains a concert hall capable
+of seating fifteen hundred persons, a library, reading
+room, and the rooms of the Cleveland Library Association.
+The Opera House, a new and handsome building,
+is on Euclid avenue. There are, besides, an Academy
+of Music and the Globe Theatre and several minor
+theatres.</p>
+
+<p>The business portion of Euclid avenue extends from
+the Park to Erie street, beyond which it is lined with
+handsome residences, elegant cottages and superb villas,
+the grounds around each being more and more extensive
+as it approaches the country. It is one of the finest
+avenues in the world, and is not less than ten miles in
+length, embracing during its course several suburbs
+which a generation since were remote from the city, and
+are now considerably surprised to find themselves brought
+so near it. Euclid avenue crosses the other streets
+diagonally, and was evidently one of the original roads
+leading into the city before it attained its present
+dimensions. The majority of the streets are parallel
+with the lake front, which pursues a course from the
+northeast to the southwest. But Euclid avenue runs
+directly eastward for about three miles, to Doane's
+Corners, one of the historic spots in the neighborhood
+of Cleveland, and then turns to the northeast, following
+nearly parallel to the course of the lake. Prospect
+street runs parallel to Euclid avenue, and is only second
+to it in the beauty and elegance of its residences. St.
+Clair street is also a favorite suburban avenue, extending
+parallel to the lake, a little distance from it, far out into
+the country, and containing many handsome residences.</p>
+
+<p>Newburg, once three miles from the city, and the site
+of the first saw and grist mill on the Reserve, is now<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+included as a suburb of Cleveland, and contains extensive
+iron manufactories.</p>
+
+<p>The Union Depot, erected in 1866, is one of the finest
+and largest in the country. It is built on the shore of the
+lake, below the bluff, and near the mouth of the Cuyahoga.
+Streets more or less steeply graded furnish access
+to it for carriages and vehicles of all descriptions, while
+a long flight of massive stone steps conduct the pedestrian
+directly to the summit of the cliff, where horse-cars,
+leading by various routes to all quarters of the city,
+are waiting for him. All the railroads leading out of
+the city centre here. In the keystone over the main
+entrance of the depot is a bas relief portrait of Mr.
+Amasa Stone, under whose supervision it was built.
+Similar portraits of Grant and Lincoln are found upon
+keystones at either end of the building.</p>
+
+<p>The waterworks stand near the lake, west of the
+river, and by means of a tunnel extending some six
+thousand feet out under the lake, pure water, forced by
+two powerful engines into a large reservoir upon the cliff,
+is supplied to the entire city. This reservoir is a popular
+resort for pleasure seekers, and furnishes a fine view of
+the city, lake and surrounding country.</p>
+
+<p>Cleveland enjoys superior educational facilities. Her
+schools are not excelled by any in the country, and
+she has, besides, several large libraries. The Western
+Reserve College, until recently located at Hudson, a
+small village about twenty miles to the southeast, has
+been, within the last few years, removed to this city.
+The Medical College, a branch of the Western Reserve
+College, founded in 1843, occupies an imposing building
+at the corner of Erie and St. Clair streets. Near this
+college, on the shore of the lake, stands the extensive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+United States Marine Hospital, surrounded by grounds
+nine acres in extent, beautifully laid out and well kept.</p>
+
+<p>There are a number of parks and gardens in the
+suburbs of Cleveland, one of the most extensive having
+been a donation to the city by Mr. Wade, one of her
+millionaires. The favorite drive, however, next to the
+avenue, is across the Cuyahoga and seven miles westward
+to Rocky River, which flows into the lake through
+a narrow gorge between perpendicular cliffs which
+project themselves boldly into the lake. Here a park
+has been laid out, and all that art can do has been done
+to add to the natural beauties of the place. From this
+point a distant view of the city may be obtained, its
+spires pointing to the sky out of a billow of green. To
+the west is Black River Point, with its rocky promontories,
+and on the north stretches out an unbroken
+expanse of water, with here and there the long black trail
+of a steamer floating in the air, its wake like a white
+line upon the water; or white specks of sails dotting the
+horizon. The coast between Cleveland and Rocky
+River is high and precipitous, the emerging streams
+rushing into the lake by means of rapids and waterfalls.
+On this inhospitable coast, which affords no landing for
+even a small boat, more than one frail bark came to
+grief in the early days of the white man's possession of
+the land, and nearly all its living freight found a watery
+grave. In 1806 a man by the name of Hunter, his
+wife and child, a colored man named Ben, and a small
+colored boy, were driven by a squall upon these rocks.
+They climbed up as far as possible, the surge constantly
+beating over them, and finally they died, one after the
+other, from exposure and hunger, and after five days
+only the man Ben was rescued alive. A similar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+occurrence transpired the following spring. Of the
+eighteen deaths which took place at Cleveland during
+the first twelve years after its settlement, eleven were
+caused by drowning.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty or thirty years ago nothing more desolate or
+devoid of beauty can be imagined than was the lake
+and river approach to Cleveland. The cars ran along
+the foot of the cliff, while the space between the tracks
+and the table land upon which the city is built was
+given up to rubbish and neglect. Little huts, the size
+of organ boxes, were perched here and there, swarming
+with dirty, half-clad children and untidy women, and
+festooned with clothes-lines, from which dangled a
+motley array of garments. Blackness, dirt and decay
+were visible everywhere; and the vestibule of the most
+beautiful city in America presented to the visitor the
+opposite extreme of repulsiveness. But now all this is
+changed; one enters the Forest City through a continuous
+park. Coming from the east, the waves of the beautiful
+inland sea almost wash the tracks. On the left the
+steep slope is covered by green grass, shrubbery and
+trees, the line broken here and there, perhaps, by private
+grounds no less beautiful, while the United States Marine
+Hospital crowns the cliff, at Erie street, with its ample
+and well-kept grounds. Reaching the depot the
+traveler at once ascends the cliff, and avoids the
+necessary ugliness of the immense railroad yard, with its
+gridiron of tracks. Even the river, once so unsightly,
+presents to view the ceaseless movements of multifarious
+business, all of which indicate the prosperity and
+thriving industry of the city.</p>
+
+<p>It is a peculiarity of western cities that they give so
+much thought and spend so much money in public<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+improvements, and especially those which are merely
+decorative. Cleveland is in no wise behind the rest.
+No city in the east, though many of them boast extensive
+and expensive public parks, bestows so much thought,
+labor and money, to make her general appearance
+beautiful and attractive to the stranger. If first
+impressions count for much, as it is said they do, then
+Cleveland has proved herself wise. She possesses many
+natural advantages of position. She is not in a slough,
+like Chicago, being built on a gravelly plain about one
+hundred feet above the lake. Nor is she subject to
+inundation, like Cincinnati, most of her business sites
+and residences being far above the water. The Cuyahoga
+River sometimes, however, does damage to the
+manufacturing establishments along its shores. In
+February, 1883, a freshet occurred, which raised the
+river ten feet above its ordinary level, and flooded all
+its valley. Enormous quantities of lumber and shingles
+were washed from the lumber yards. The Valley
+Railroad was several feet under water; paper mills,
+furnaces and other property submerged nearly to the
+top of the first story. The Infirmary Farm, further up
+the river, was under water, and the damage of the flood
+was estimated at not less than a million dollars. The
+water was higher than at any period since 1859, when
+a similar disaster occurred.</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were turned towards Cleveland, when, in
+September, 1881, a mournful cortege proceeded thither,
+accompanying the remains of the murdered Chief
+Magistrate. A mighty concourse of people assembled
+in the park to assist at the last sad rites, and then the
+funeral procession passed out the beautiful Euclid
+avenue to Lake View Cemetery, where the casket was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+deposited in a vault prepared for it, and was guarded
+by soldiers night and day; and there, on a spot overlooking
+the lake, and surrounded by a lovely country,
+varied by hill and dale, cultivated farms and elegant
+suburban residences, all that is mortal of James Abram
+Garfield has found its last resting-place, while his
+memory lives in fifty millions of hearts, and his fame is
+immortal. The youngest son of his mother, and she a
+widow, reared in poverty and obscurity, by dint of his
+unswerving integrity and overmastering intellect, he
+rose to occupy the highest position which man can
+accord to his fellow man, that of being the chosen head
+of a free, intelligent and powerful people. Cut off as
+he was, in the prime of his life, a nation mourned her
+dead, and Lake View Cemetery is to-day a spot of
+national interest. It is five miles from the city, contains
+three hundred acres, and lies two hundred and fifty feet
+above the level of the lake. It commands extensive
+views, and though opened as late as 1870, is already
+very beautiful. It was here that Garfield expressed his
+desire to be buried. Here, on a knoll commanding one
+of the finest views the cemetery affords, his tomb will be
+eventually constructed, and a monument reared to him,
+as a mark of the nation's appreciation of his character
+and sorrow at his untimely death.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">EUCLID AVENUE, CLEVELAND, OHIO.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_175.jpg" width="1024" height="654" alt="EUCLID AVENUE, CLEVELAND, OHIO." title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<h2>CHICAGO.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Topographical Situation of Chicago.&mdash;Meaning of the Name.&mdash;Early
+History.&mdash;Massacre at Fort Dearborn.&mdash;Last of the Red
+Men.&mdash;The Great Land Bubble.&mdash;Rapid Increase in Population
+and Business.&mdash;The Canal.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Status of
+the City in 1871.&mdash;The Great Fire.&mdash;Its Origin, Progress and
+Extent.&mdash;Heartrending Scenes.&mdash;Estimated Total Loss.&mdash;Help
+from all Quarters.&mdash;Work of Reconstruction.&mdash;Second Fire.&mdash;Its
+Public Buildings, Educational and Charitable Institutions,
+Streets and Parks.&mdash;Its Waterworks.&mdash;Its Stock Yards.&mdash;Its
+Suburbs.&mdash;Future of the City.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>"See two things in the United States, if nothing
+else&mdash;see Niagara and Chicago," said Richard
+Cobden, the English statesman, to Goldwin Smith, on
+the eve of the departure of the latter to America. And
+truly, if one would obtain a proper sense of America's
+wonders and achievements, then Niagara and Chicago
+may be accepted as respectively the highest types of
+each. Niagara remains the same yesterday, to-day and
+forever. But if it were a desirable thing to see Chicago
+at the time of the visit referred to, how much more so
+is it to-day, when, Ph&#339;nix-like, she has arisen from her
+own ashes, turning that which seemed an overwhelming
+disaster into positive blessing; drawing her fire-singed
+robes proudly about her, crowning herself with the
+diadem of her own matchless achievements, and sitting
+beside her inland sea, the queenliest city of them all.</p>
+
+<p>Situated upon a flat and relatively low tract of
+country, Chicago is yet upon one of the highest plane<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+elevations of our continent. Lake Michigan represents
+the headwaters of the great chain of American lakes,
+through which, in connection with the St. Lawrence,
+much of the rainfall of that city finds its way to the
+Atlantic; while through the canal to the Illinois River,
+its sewage is borne to the Gulf of Mexico. Perhaps
+no more hopeless site could have been selected for a
+city than that seemed half a century ago. A bayou or
+arm of the lake penetrated the land for half a mile or
+more, but a sand-bar across its mouth prevented the
+ingress of all but the smallest craft. This bayou, called
+by courtesy the Chicago River, separated into two
+branches, the course of one of which was in a northerly
+direction, and of the other in a southerly one. The
+land was barely on a level with the lake, and at portions
+of the year was a vast morass, some parts of it being
+entirely under water. Teams struggled helplessly
+through the black ooze of its prairies, and a carriage
+would sink three or four feet in mud and mire within
+two miles of where the court house now stands. Sometimes
+in this slough a board would be set up, with a
+rude inscription: "No bottom here." But American
+enterprise has found a bottom and reared a city, the
+history of whose seemingly magical building almost
+rivals the tales of the Arabian Nights.</p>
+
+<p>Chicago is an Indian word, signifying the widely-varying
+titles of a king or deity, and a skunk or wild
+onion. In its early history, while drainage it had none,
+and its water supply was mere surface water, foul with
+all the accumulated impurities of the soil, and while
+from the lagoon, which lay stagnant for twelve or fifteen
+miles, a horrible, sickening stench constantly arose, the
+latter appellations seemed singularly appropriate, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+no doubt originated in these conditions. But since the
+city has been purified by fire, and its sanitary conditions
+made such as they should be, it has earned its right to
+the nobler titles.</p>
+
+<p>The first white visitors to the site of Chicago were
+Joliet and Marquette, who arrived in August, 1673.
+The year following his first visit Pere Marquette
+returned and erected a rude church. Later the French
+seem to have built a fort on the spot, but no traces of it
+now remain. Very early in the nineteenth century John
+Kinzie, an Indian trader, and agent of the American
+Fur Company, having traded with the Indians at this
+point for some time, probably influenced the government
+to build a fort here. Accordingly, in 1804, Fort
+Dearborn was built and garrisoned with about fifty men
+and three pieces of artillery. Mr. Kinzie removed his
+family to the place the same year.</p>
+
+<p>In 1812, Fort Dearborn was the scene of a bloody Indian
+massacre. Captain Hull, then in command of the
+fort, having placed too great confidence in the professions
+of fidelity of the Pottawatomie tribe, and trusting to an
+escort of that tribe to convey the soldiers and inhabitants
+of the fort to Fort Wayne, saw his entire party either
+killed or taken prisoners, and found himself a prisoner.
+The fort stood at the head of Michigan avenue, below
+its intersection with Lake street. Abandoned and
+destroyed at this period, it was rebuilt in 1816, and
+finally demolished in 1856.</p>
+
+<p>For four years the place was deserted by the whites,
+and even the fur traders did not care to visit it. In
+1818 two families had established themselves upon the
+spot. In 1820 some dozen houses represented the future
+city, and in 1827 a government agent reported the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+place as a collection of pens and kennels, inhabited by
+squatters, "a miserable race of men, hardly equal to the
+Indians." The population numbered seventy in 1830.
+In 1832 there were six hundred people in the miserable
+little town. In September, 1833, the United States
+purchased of the Indians 20,000,000 acres of land in
+the northwest, the latter pledging themselves to remove
+twenty days' journey west of the Mississippi. Seven
+thousand redskins attended the making of this treaty,
+which was ratified by the chiefs in a large tent on the bank
+of the river. A year later four thousand Indians returned
+to receive an annuity of $30,000 worth of goods. The
+distribution of these goods was the occasion of, first, a
+fierce scramble, followed by a bloody fight, in which
+several Indians were killed and others wounded; the
+scene closing by a wild debauch, so that on the following
+morning few of the recipients were any better off for
+the property which had been given them. Similar
+scenes, with similar results, were enacted in 1835. But
+that was the last Chicago saw of the red men. In
+September, a train of forty wagons, each drawn by four
+oxen, conveyed away on their far westward march the
+children and effects of the Pottawatomies, while the
+squaws and braves walked beside them. It took them
+twenty days to reach the Mississippi, and twenty days
+longer it took them to attain a point which can now be
+reached from Chicago in fifteen hours.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF CHICAGO, FROM THE LAKE SIDE.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_181.jpg" width="1024" height="619" alt="BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF CHICAGO, FROM THE LAKE SIDE." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>In 1827, Major Long, a government agent sent to
+visit the place, spoke of the site as "affording no
+inducements to the settler, the whole amount of trade
+on the lake not exceeding the cargoes of five or six
+schooners, even at the time when the garrison received
+its supplies from the Mackinac." In 1833 the tide of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+immigration began. At the end of that year there
+were fifty families floundering in the Chicago mud. In
+1834 there were nearly two thousand inhabitants of the
+town, and at the close of 1835 more than three
+thousand. In 1835-6 Chicago became the headquarters
+of a great land speculation. Multitudes of towns
+sprang up in every direction, on paper. The country
+was wild with excitement. Even eastern capitalists
+were seized with the mania, and fortunes were made
+and lost in this wild gambling in prospective cities. The
+bubble shortly burst, resulting in great business depression.
+The State was bankrupt, and Chicago languished. But
+not for long. Turning from the frenzy of speculation, its
+inhabitants wisely gave their attention to developing
+legitimate business interests. The United States had,
+in 1833, spent $30,000 in dredging out the Chicago
+River, and in the spring of 1834 a most timely freshet
+had swept away the bar at the mouth of the river,
+making it accessible for the largest craft. In 1838 a
+venturesome trader shipped from that port seventy-eight
+bushels of wheat. In 1839 four thousand bushels were
+sent. In 1842 the amount of wheat exported arose all
+at once from forty thousand bushels to nearly six hundred
+thousand bushels. In 1839 three thousand cattle were
+driven across the prairies, and sent to the eastern market;
+and every year thereafter showed a surprising increase.
+Yet with all this accumulating commerce, the streets of
+the city were still quagmires, and many a farmer came
+to grief with his load of grain within what is now city
+limits. Before there was a railroad begun or a canal
+finished, Chicago exported two and a quarter millions
+of bushels of grain in a year, and sent back on the
+wagons which brought it loads of merchandise.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Illinois River is connected with the Chicago
+River, and through that to Lake Michigan, by a canal
+which enters it at La Salle, ninety-six miles from
+Chicago. This canal was begun in 1836 and completed
+in 1848. It gave a fresh impetus to the youthful
+western town, and established its future prosperity.
+Connected as it already was with the east by the
+magnificent lake and river system of our northern
+borders, this canal opened up communication with the
+south and west, and made Chicago the portal, so to
+speak, between the different sections of our country.</p>
+
+<p>In 1849 the first railroad had approached within ten
+miles of the city. In 1852 direct communication with
+the east was gained by the completion of the Michigan
+Central and Michigan Southern railroads, while more
+than one western railroad was projected, and some of
+them were in actual progress of construction. To-day,
+Illinois and its adjoining States are literally gridironed
+with iron roads, nearly all of which centre at Chicago.
+In 1857 there were living beside the still stagnant
+waters of the Chicago River one hundred thousand
+people.</p>
+
+<p>In 1871 Chicago was the fourth city of the country,
+claiming a population of 334,000 persons. By a <i>chef
+d'ouvre</i> of engineering, the waters of the river had been
+turned backward, and made to carry away its sewage to
+fertilize the shores of the Illinois and the Mississippi.
+The streets had been drained, hollow places filled up,
+and their grade had been gradually raised, until it stood
+twelve feet higher than at first. Some of the buildings
+were raised at once to the latest established grade, and
+others remained as they had been built. The consequence
+was that the plank sidewalks became a series of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+stairs, adapting themselves to the buildings which they
+fronted. The principal streets were paved with stone
+or with the Nicholson pavement. The triple river was
+spanned by no less than seventeen drawbridges, while
+two tunnels afforded uninterrupted travel between the
+opposite sides. Efficient waterworks had been constructed
+to provide pure water for the use of the city.
+The total trade for the year previous to the great fire
+was estimated at $400,000,000. Its grain trade had
+reached such enormous proportions that seventeen large
+elevators, with an aggregate capacity of 11,580,000
+bushels were required for its accommodation. Eighteen
+banks were in operation, with an aggregate capital of
+$10,000,000 and with nearly $17,000,000 of deposits.
+The city was beginning to give its attention largely to
+manufactures, and its lumber trade had grown into
+something almost fabulous. Miles of lumber yards
+extended along one of the forks of the river, and its
+harbor was sometimes choked with arriving lumber
+vessels. In a single day, three or four years before the
+fire, a favorable wind blew into port no less than
+two hundred and eighteen vessels loaded with
+lumber. One hundred passenger and one hundred
+and twenty freight trains arrived and departed daily;
+and seventy-five vessels unloaded and loaded at her
+wharves every twenty-four hours.</p>
+
+<p>Chicago <i>Redivivus</i> should bear upon her shield a cow
+rampant. On the evening of the eighth of October,
+1871, Mrs. Scully's cow kicked herself into history, and
+Chicago into ruin and desolation. Chicago is divided
+by the river and its branches into three different
+sections, known as the north, south and west sides. The
+principal business portion of the city is on the south<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+side, and along the margins of the lake and streams.
+The "burnt district," which even yet the Chicagoan
+will outline to the visitor with peculiar pride, was
+confined almost wholly to the south and north
+sides.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of October seventh a planing mill had
+caught fire on the west side, and the conflagration had
+spread over a territory embracing about twenty acres,
+destroying a million dollars' worth of property. This
+fire, terrible as it seemed, probably saved the west side
+from destruction on that fatal night of the eighth,
+imposing as it did a broad banner of desolation, when
+the flames essayed to leap across the river.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">BURNING OF CHICAGO. THE WORLD'S GREATEST CONFLAGRATION.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_187.jpg" width="1024" height="641" alt="BURNING OF CHICAGO. THE WORLD'S GREATEST CONFLAGRATION." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>At about nine o'clock in the evening of Sunday, October
+eighth, 1871, a cow kicked over a lantern among
+loose, dry hay, in a stable at or near the corner of
+Jefferson and DeKoven streets, on the west side. There
+had been no rain of any consequence for fourteen weeks,
+and roofs and wooden buildings were as dry as tinder.
+There was a strong wind blowing from the southwest,
+and before the engines could reach the spot, half a dozen
+adjoining buildings were wrapped in flames. The
+buildings of that quarter were mostly of wood, and
+there were several lumber yards along the margin of
+the river. The flames swept through these with resistless
+fury, and then made a bold and sudden leap
+across the river into the very heart of the business
+portion of the south side. Many of the buildings
+here also were of wood, while the wooden sidewalks,
+and wooden block pavements, the latter filled
+with an inflammable composition, seemed constructed
+especially to aid and hasten the work of the flames.
+The fire marched steadily toward the north and east,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+destroying everything in its course. Even fireproof
+buildings seemed to melt down as it touched them.</p>
+
+<p>The wind increased to a gale, and all night long the
+fire wrought its terrible will, like a devouring demon;
+and at sunrise it had already leaped the narrow barrier
+of the river, and was devastating the northern side,
+sweeping away block after block of the wooden
+structures which occupied to a large extent that quarter
+of the city. The flames seized upon the shipping in the
+river, and when it left it only blackened hulls remained.
+The water supply, upon which the city had founded
+hopes in case of such extremity, failed. The walls of
+the buildings, weakened by the overpowering heat, had
+fallen in upon the engines, and hope was quenched in
+that quarter.</p>
+
+<p>The flames spread southward as far as Taylor street,
+and to the northward they only paused when, at Fullerton
+avenue, the broad prairie lay before them, and there
+was nothing more to burn. The track of the fire was
+nearly five miles in length, running north and south,
+and averaged a mile in width. It continued from
+nine o'clock on Sunday night until daybreak Tuesday
+morning, and then nothing was left of all the business
+portion of Chicago, save a vast blackened field on which
+the flames still smouldered, with piles of rubbish,
+formed by fallen buildings, and here and there portions
+of walls still standing. Every bank, insurance office,
+hotel, theatre, railroad depot, law office, newspaper
+office, most of the churches, all but one of the wholesale
+stores, and many of the warehouses and retail stores, six
+elevators, fifty vessels, and sixteen thousand dwellings,
+including many elegant mansions, besides numberless
+humble homes, were destroyed; two hundred persons<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+killed, and a hundred thousand people suddenly found
+themselves homeless and penniless, without food to eat
+or clothes to wear.</p>
+
+<p>The scenes accompanying the fire were terrible and
+heart-rending. They were a mingling of the horrible
+and grotesque, the tragic and the ridiculous, such as was
+probably never witnessed before on so grand a scale,
+and we trust will never be repeated; and over it all the
+smoke hung like a pall, stifling and blinding, and the
+flames cast a baleful glare, which lit up the scene and
+made it seem like a literal inferno.</p>
+
+<p>The fire spread with a rapidity which baffled all
+attempts to check it. Many made a feeble effort to
+save their household goods, an effort which was too
+often futile, while others barely escaped with their lives,
+clad only in their scant night garments. The streets
+were filled with a frantic multitude; vehicles of every
+description, laden with movable property; men, women
+and children, some of them burdened with their belongings,
+and others nearly naked, forgetful of all but the
+terrible danger of the hour, all wild with the insanity
+born of fear, and all fleeing from the pursuing demon
+which pressed on behind them, and whose hot breath
+scorched their garments and singed their hair. Many
+took refuge in the river or the lake; but the hissing
+flames stooped down and licked the water, and the
+poor victims were made to feel the tortures of a double
+death. Very few of these escaped with their lives.</p>
+
+<p>The progress of the flames was so swift that many
+were overwhelmed by the crumbling walls of their
+houses or workshops before they had time to escape,
+and found in them a fiery tomb. Others were suffocated
+by the smoke. Children were separated from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+parents, and young and old sought safety wherever they
+could find it, and a mad panic reigned everywhere.
+Many saloons were thrown open, and whisky flowed
+freely, and the turbulent riot of drunkenness was added,
+to increase the confusion and despair of the dreadful
+night. Sneak thieves and larger depredators found
+spoil on every hand. In this terrible calamity each
+one seemed to throw off his mask, and become what he
+really was&mdash;the brave man, the noble gentleman, the
+selfish coward, the bully or the thief.</p>
+
+<p>A single leaf of a quarto Bible, charred around its
+edges, was all that was left of the immense stock of the
+Western News Company. It contained the first chapter
+of the Lamentations of Jeremiah, which begins with the
+following words: "How doth the city sit solitary that
+was full of people! how is she become as a widow!
+she that was great among the nations, and princess
+among the provinces, how is she become tributary!
+She weepeth sore in the night, and her tears are on her
+cheeks: among all her lovers she hath none to comfort
+her."</p>
+
+<p>The amount lost by the insurance companies, American
+and foreign, by the Chicago fire, was $88,634,133.
+More than 2,200 acres were swept by the flames in the
+space of thirty hours. The value of buildings alone
+consumed was estimated at $75,000,000, while their
+contents were at least as much more. The total loss
+probably was not much less than $200,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had the news of the dreadful calamity
+gone abroad to the world, than the spirit of generosity
+prompted efficient aid from all quarters. St. Louis,
+Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Cleveland, New York, Boston,
+Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Montreal, cities and towns in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+the north, south, east and west, sent generous, and some
+of them princely, donations. Even China forwarded
+$1,290. By December first the public cash donations
+had reached $2,508,000. The naked were clothed, the
+hungry fed, the homeless housed in at least temporary
+quarters, and Chicago set herself to the task of reconstruction.</p>
+
+<p>The smouldering ruins were yet glowing with heat,
+and the smoke was still ascending here and there, when,
+on Wednesday morning, the work of regeneration began.
+Within a month, five or six thousand temporary
+tenements had been erected. Meantime the foundations
+for the permanent structures were being laid, on a scale
+far surpassing those of the past. In a year not a trace
+of the fire remained.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly three years later, on July fourteenth, 1874,
+another great fire swept over the devoted city, destroying
+eighteen blocks, or sixty acres, in the heart of the city,
+and about $4,000,000 worth of property. Over six
+hundred houses were consumed, but by far the larger
+number were mere wooden shanties.</p>
+
+<p>To-day Chicago counts her great fire as one of her
+chief blessings. The city is entirely rebuilt, but not with
+rickety wooden structures, the previous plenitude of
+which had rendered her so easy a prey to the devouring
+element. Solid, substantial, handsome, and in many
+instances magnificent, the stranger can scarcely realize
+that these blocks of buildings are not the growth of a
+century, or of a generation even, but have sprung from
+the ground almost in a night. The new Chicago is surpassingly
+beautiful and grand. The visitor will walk
+through squares and squares of streets, each teeming
+with life and commercial activity, and bearing no trace,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+save in increased elegance, of the disaster of little more
+than a decade ago; and is forced to the conclusion that,
+for courage and enterprise, Chicago has proved herself
+unsurpassed by any city in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Chicago has a water frontage of thirty-eight miles,
+of which twenty-four are improved, without including
+the lake front, where an outer harbor is in process of
+construction. The rivers are now spanned by thirty-five
+drawbridges, while a tunnel, 1,608 feet long, with a
+descent of forty-five feet, connects the south and west
+sides of Washington street, and another tunnel, with a
+total length of 1,854 feet, connects the north and south
+sides on the line of La Salle street.</p>
+
+<p>State street, on the south side, is the Broadway of
+Chicago. Randolph street is famous for its magnificent
+buildings, among which are the city and the county
+halls. Washington street is one of the fashionable promenades,
+lined with retail stores, though Dearborn street
+closely rivals it. The United States Custom House and
+Post Office, a magnificent structure, costing upward of
+$5,000,000, occupies the square bounded by Clark,
+Adams, Jackson and Dearborn streets. The Chamber
+of Commerce, a spacious and imposing building, with
+elaborate interior decorations, is at the corner of Washington
+and La Salle streets, opposite City Hall Square.
+Its ceiling is frescoed with allegorical pictures representing
+the trade of the city, the great fire and the rebuilding.
+The Union Depot, in Van Buren street, at the
+head of La Salle, is among the finest buildings of the
+city. The Exposition Building is a vast ornate structure
+of iron and glass, occupying the lake front, extending
+from Monroe to Jackson street, and with a front of
+eight hundred feet on Michigan avenue. The centre of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+the edifice is surmounted by a dome one hundred and
+sixty feet high and sixty feet in diameter. Annual
+expositions of the art and industry of the city are held
+here every autumn.</p>
+
+<p>Among the hotels of Chicago the Palmer House takes
+the lead. This house was destroyed by the fire, but has
+been rebuilt with a magnitude and elaborateness far
+exceeding its former self, and constituting it one of the
+finest, if not the finest, in the world. It is entirely fireproof,
+being constructed only of incombustible materials,
+brick, stone, iron, marble and cement. It has three
+fronts, on State and Monroe streets and Wabash
+avenue, and the building and furnishing cost $3,500,000.
+It is kept on both the American and European
+plans, and continually accommodates from six hundred
+to one thousand guests. The Grand Pacific Hotel is
+but little inferior to the Palmer House. It occupies
+half the block bounded by Jackson, Clark, Adams and
+La Salle streets. The Sherman and Tremont Houses are
+fine hotels and centrally located.</p>
+
+<p>There are about three hundred churches in Chicago,
+including those untouched by fire and those which have
+been since rebuilt. The great Tabernacle, on Monroe
+street, where Messrs. Moody and Sankey held their
+meetings, is used for sacred concerts and other religious
+gatherings, and will seat ten thousand persons.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL, CHICAGO.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_195.jpg" width="1024" height="660" alt="GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL, CHICAGO." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>In literary and educational institutions Chicago holds
+a foremost place. Its common schools are among the
+best in the country, with large, handsome, convenient
+and well-ventilated buildings. The University of
+Chicago, founded by the late Stephen A. Douglas,
+occupies a beautiful site overlooking the lake, and boasts
+the largest telescope in America. It has a Public
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+Library containing 60,000 volumes. The Academy of
+Sciences lost a valuable collection of 38,000 specimens in
+the fire, but has erected a new building and is slowly
+gathering a new museum and library. There are three
+Theological Seminaries, and three Medical Colleges,
+three hospitals, and a large number of charitable institutions
+within the city. The fire department is most
+efficiently organized, and its annual expenses are scarcely
+less than $1,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>Chicago has the most extensive system of parks and
+boulevards of any city in the United States. Lincoln
+Park, lying upon the lake to the northward, contains
+310 acres, and served, during the great fire, as a place
+of refuge for thousands of people driven thither by the
+raging element. The Lake Shore Drive, the great north
+side boulevard, extends from Pine street to Lake View,
+and is one of the finest drives in the world. Humboldt
+Park, Central Park and Douglas Park extend along
+the western boundaries of the city, are large, contain
+lakes, ponds, walks, drives, fountains and statuary, and
+are connected with each other by wide and elaborately
+ornamented boulevards. The great South Parks are
+approached on the north by Drexel and Grant Boulevards.
+Drexel Boulevard is devoted exclusively to
+pleasure, all traffic over it being forbidden. The most
+southerly of the two south parks extends upwards of a
+mile and a half along the shore of the lake. Union
+Park is located in the very centre of the residence
+portion of the west side.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever Chicago accomplishes is on so gigantic a
+scale that strangers almost hold their breath in astonishment.
+Among the titanic achievements of this youthful
+giant are the waterworks, which supply pure<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+drinking water to its six hundred thousand population.
+The water supply is by means of a tunnel sent out
+under Lake Michigan for a distance of two miles, the
+water being forced by numerous engines into an
+immense standpipe, 154 feet high. The works are
+situated at the foot of Chicago avenue. In tunneling
+under the lake, excavations went on simultaneously at
+the land end and two miles out in the lake; and so
+accurate were the calculations that when the two tunnels
+met in the centre, they were found to be but seven
+and one-half inches out of the line, and there was a
+variation of but three inches in the horizontal measurements.
+This tunnel, which is made of iron, protected
+by heavy masonry, is large enough for a canoe to pass
+through it when it is but partially filled with water, it
+being nine feet in diameter. The exit at the lake end of
+the tunnel is protected by a breakwater, and securely
+anchored to its place by means of heavy stones. Storms
+never affect it, save sometimes to produce a light
+tremor; and even large fields of ice, which grate by it
+with a fearful, crunching noise, have thus far failed to
+shake its foundations.</p>
+
+<p>Chicago ships a considerable portion of her grain in
+the shape of flour, there being extensive flouring mills in
+the city. The present annual export of flour is probably
+not less than 3,000,000 barrels. Chicagoans have also
+found it possible to pack fifteen or twenty bushels of
+corn in a single barrel. "The corn crop," remarks Mr.
+Ruggles, "is condensed and reduced in bulk by feeding
+it into an animal form, more portable. The hog eats
+the corn, and Europe eats the hog. Corn thus becomes
+incarnate, for what is a hog but fifteen or twenty bushels
+of corn on four legs?" The business of pork-packing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+has attained enormous proportions in Chicago. It has
+entirely superseded Cincinnati, the former "Porkopolis,"
+in this branch of trade. Cincinnati, Louisville,
+St. Louis, Indianapolis and Milwaukee do not together
+furnish a total number of head slaughtered equal to
+that of Chicago.</p>
+
+<p>The stock yards, just outside the city limits on the
+southwest, are the largest in the world. They cover
+hundreds of acres, and constitute what has been styled
+"The Great Bovine City of the World." This bovine
+city is regularly laid out in streets and alleys crossing
+each other at right angles. The principal street is
+called Broadway, and it is a mile long and seventy-five
+feet wide. On either side are the cattle pens, and it is
+divided by a light fence into three paths, so that herds
+of cattle can pass one another without wrangling, and
+leave an unobstructed road for the drovers. These
+yards are connected with all the railroads in the west
+centering in Chicago. The company have twenty-five
+miles of track. A cattle train stops along the street of
+pens; the side of each car is removed, and the living
+freight pass over a declining bridge into clean, planked
+inclosures, where food and water is quickly furnished
+them. A large and comfortable hotel furnishes accommodation
+for their owners; there is a Cattle Exchange,
+a spacious and elegant edifice; a bank solely for the
+cattle-men's use; and a telegraph office, which reports
+the price of beef, pork and mutton from all parts of the
+world. The present capacity of the yards is 25,000
+head of cattle, 100,000 hogs, 22,000 sheep, and 1,200
+horses. A town of five thousand inhabitants has grown
+up in the immediate vicinity of these stock yards.</p>
+
+<p>In some of the yards not less than five hundred beeves<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+are slaughtered daily. Much of this beef is sent in
+refrigerator cars to the Atlantic cities, while enormous
+quantities are cooked and packed in cans and sent all
+over the world.</p>
+
+<p>Suburban towns have spread out from Chicago, in
+every direction, over the prairie. South Chicago, one of
+the principal of these, is twelve miles to the southward,
+at the mouth of the Calumet river, and has a large
+amount of capital invested in iron and steel works. The
+sloughy morasses which still exist between the parent
+city and its thrifty offshoots are fast being filled up,
+and bridged over with pavements, so that the mud,
+which a generation ago was the chief distinguishing
+feature of Chicago and its vicinity, but which is now
+confined to outlying sections, will soon be a thing of
+the past. Chicago is itself extending rapidly in all
+directions, and numberless suburban streets are lined
+with pretty cottages, whose rural surroundings have
+given to the city its appropriate name of "The Garden
+City."</p>
+
+<p>Taking its past as a criterion, who shall dare to
+predict the future of Chicago? It has by no means
+come to a stand-still, but is to-day increasing its population,
+developing its resources, and extending its
+commercial enterprises to a degree that is scarcely
+credible, save as one is faced by actual facts and figures.
+These miles of streets, filled with the incessant roar of
+business; these lofty temples, magnificent warehouses
+and elegant residences; these public institutions of
+learning; this gigantic commerce, this high degree of
+civilization; all of which have been attained by older
+cities after a prolonged struggle with adversity, are here
+the creations and accumulations of less than two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+generations. Up the Chicago River, where considerably
+less than a century ago the Indian paddled his solitary
+canoe, and John Jacob Astor annually sent his single
+small schooner to bring provisions to the garrison and
+to take away his furs, there swarms a fleet of vessels
+of all descriptions, bringing goods from, and sending
+them to, every quarter of the world. Where, no later
+than 1834, a grand wolf hunt was held, and one bear
+and forty wolf scalps were the trophies of the day, the
+bears of the Stock Exchange alone rage and howl, and
+the only wolves are human ones. Chicago is a great
+and a magnificent city, embodying more perfectly than
+any other in the world the possibilities of accomplishment
+of the Anglo-Saxon race, given its best conditions
+of freedom, independence and intelligence.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+
+<h2>CHEYENNE.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Location of Cheyenne.&mdash;Founding of the City.&mdash;Lawlessness.&mdash;Vigilance
+Committee.&mdash;Woman Suffrage.&mdash;Rapid Increase of
+Population and Business.&mdash;A Reaction.&mdash;Stock Raising.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;Mineral
+Resources.&mdash;Present Prospects.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Cheyenne is the half-way house, on the Union
+Pacific Railroad, between the civilization of the
+East and that of the West. It is situated on Crow
+Creek, a branch of the South Platte River, just at the
+foot of the Rocky Mountains. A few miles away to the
+westward the ascent of the Black Hills begins, the road
+ascending over the rugged granite hills, and winding in
+and out of miles of snow sheds. It is five hundred
+and sixteen miles from Omaha, and has an elevation of
+more than six thousand feet above the sea, being one
+thousand more than Denver, and with an atmosphere
+proportionately rarer and dryer.</p>
+
+<p>The city is a child of the Pacific Railroad, being,
+during the building of that road, its winter terminus.
+When it was found that Cheyenne was probably to
+become an important railroad point, there was a grand
+influx of roughs, of all classes and of both sexes, to the
+spot. Habitations sprang up as if by magic, and were
+of the rudest construction, some of them being mere
+dug-outs in the sand hills. Town lots ran up to fabulous
+prices. The first city government was organized in
+August, 1867, and the first newspaper, the <i>Cheyenne
+Leader</i>, published on the nineteenth day of the following<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+month. On the thirtieth of November, 1867, the track
+layers reached the city limits, and were greeted by music
+and a grand demonstration on the part of the people.
+The first passenger train arrived the next day.</p>
+
+<p>In the winter of 1868 Cheyenne contained not less
+than six thousand inhabitants. Lawlessness was the
+order of the day, and gambling, drinking and shooting
+were the favorite recreations. Knock-downs and robberies
+were matters of course, and murders of too frequent
+occurrence to cause special excitement. During these
+early days of its history the young city acquired two
+names, both of which were exceedingly suggestive, not
+to say appropriate. Its rapid growth fastened upon it
+the name of "Magic City of the Plains;" the desperate
+character of its inhabitants, that of "Hell on Wheels."</p>
+
+<p>When the city was but six months old, the patience
+of the order-loving people was tried beyond endurance.
+A Vigilance Committee was formed, and justice came
+swift and sure, without the intervening and delaying
+processes of the law. Its first public demonstration
+occurred in the following manner. Three men had
+been arrested on January tenth, 1868, charged with
+stealing $900, and put under bonds to appear at court.
+On the morning of the day after their arrest they were
+found on Eddy street, walking abreast and tied together,
+with a placard attached to them, bearing the following
+inscription, in conspicuous lettering: "$900 stole;
+$500 returned; thieves, F. S. Clair, W. Grier, E. D.
+Brownville. City authorities, please not interfere until
+10 o'clock <small>A. M.</small> Next case goes up a tree. Beware of
+Vigilance Committee." During that year no less than
+twelve desperadoes were hung and shot, and five sent to
+the penitentiary, through the agency of the Vigilance<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+Committee. The condition of affairs was at once
+materially improved.</p>
+
+<p>In 1871 the Territorial Legislature passed a bill
+giving universal suffrage, without distinction of sex.
+The ladies at once made use of their newly-acquired
+political right, with an earnestness and universality
+entirely unexpected by those who had conferred
+its exercise upon them. In their capacity as grand
+jurors, they closed every gambling saloon and
+brothel in the city, put restrictions upon the liquor
+traffic, brought criminals to justice who had heretofore
+defied the law, and, in brief, made a clean sweep of the
+city, raising its social and moral standard. Women of
+all classes voted, and, strange to say, even the worst
+women voted for law and order. Political parties
+found it necessary to put up men with a good moral
+record, as well as those politically sound, for the women
+would not vote for a bad man. All classes recognized
+the good results of woman suffrage, and all opposition
+to it was speedily overcome.</p>
+
+<p>Cheyenne is now one of the best governed and
+most orderly cities in the country; and every Governor
+of the Territory, whatever his political complexion,
+has given his unqualified testimony in favor of women
+at the polls. Women not only deposit their ballots
+unmolested, but are treated with the utmost courtesy,
+and the polling places are made comfortable, and even
+elegant, for their reception. It is no uncommon thing
+for husband and wife to vote opposing tickets, but no
+divisions or even disturbances in families have resulted,
+thus far.</p>
+
+<p>On the first of July, 1867, there was but one
+house in Cheyenne, standing on what is now Eddy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets, built
+of logs, smoothly plastered outside and in, and owned
+by Judge J. R. Whitehead. Six months thereafter
+there were no less than three thousand houses in the
+city. The first lots were offered for sale in July, 1867,
+at one hundred and fifty dollars. Thirty days afterward
+they sold at one thousand dollars each, and in
+two or three months later for two thousand five hundred
+and three thousand dollars. Stores were erected with
+marvelous rapidity, in its early history, a good-sized
+and comparatively substantial warehouse being put up
+in forty-eight hours. The business of the first six
+months was enormous, single houses making sales of from
+ten thousand to thirty thousand dollars per month. In
+two months after the Post-Office was established, it
+averaged twenty-six hundred letters a day.</p>
+
+<p>As the railroad progressed westward across the
+mountains, and finally reached the Pacific, Cheyenne
+suffered a reaction from its sudden and wonderful
+prosperity. The road took much of its business with it,
+and the town fell dead. But the discovery of gold in
+the Black Hills gave a fresh impetus to its business
+interests. It is also located in the midst of a great stock-raising
+region, and is surrounded by ranches of
+stock-men engaged in raising cattle, horses and sheep for
+market. The cattle and horses find sustenance the year
+round in the native grasses, and Cheyenne is the natural
+centre and trading post of these ranch-men. Each year
+the business increases, and the shipments from the city
+become larger. Wool is becoming an important export,
+being produced in great quantities on the large sheep
+farms.</p>
+
+<p>The railroad has constructed extensive machine and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+repair shops at Cheyenne, which furnish employment
+for a large number of workmen. The rickety structures
+of its early days are fast giving place to substantial brick
+buildings. There is a fine Court House and Jail, a
+City Hall, Opera House, and several Public School
+buildings. In proportion to its population, Cheyenne
+has now more substantial and handsome business houses
+than any other western city.</p>
+
+<p>Stock raising is the only agricultural pursuit for
+which Wyoming is adapted. The soil about Cheyenne
+is barren, and in no way suited for farming purposes.
+The rainfall during the year is very slight, and it has
+been found necessary to resort to irrigation. Therefore,
+ditches run through the streets, supplying water for the
+gardens throughout the city, and, by means of this
+irrigation, what was once a desert is becoming green
+with trees and shrubbery.</p>
+
+<p>The mineral resources of Wyoming are very rich.
+Silver and gold are both found in the ranges of hills
+and mountains to the north and west. Moss agates,
+opals, topaz, garnets, amethysts, onyx and jasper have
+all been found in the immediate neighborhood of
+Cheyenne, and some of the specimens are exceedingly
+beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>The high elevation of the city gives it a delightful
+climate. The winters are mild, and the summers free
+from excessive heat.</p>
+
+<p>Cheyenne has a special niche in my memory, since,
+in making my horseback journey from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific, in 1876, it was the last place at which I
+dined before entering the Black Hills and falling into
+the hands of the treacherous Arrapahoes.</p>
+
+<p>The rapid growth which Cheyenne made at the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+beginning of her existence, and the feverish activity of
+her business enterprises, have given place long since to a
+slower but more healthy life and development. Her trade
+interests are being placed on a firmer foundation, and
+when the resources of the surrounding country are
+utilized to the fullest advantage of the city, its prosperity
+will be assured.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+
+<h2>DETROIT.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Detroit and Her Avenues of Approach.&mdash;Competing Lines.&mdash;London
+in Canada.&mdash;The Strait and the Ferry.&mdash;Music on the
+Waters.&mdash;The Home of the Algonquins.&mdash;Teusha-grondie.&mdash;Wa-we-aw-to-nong.&mdash;Fort
+Ponchartrain and the Early French
+Settlers.&mdash;The Red Cross of St. George.&mdash;Conspiracy of Pontiac.&mdash;Battle
+of Bloody Run.&mdash;The Long Siege.&mdash;Detroit's First
+American Flag.&mdash;Old Landmarks.&mdash;The Pontiac Tree.&mdash;Devastation
+by Fire.&mdash;Site of the Modern City.&mdash;New City Hall.&mdash;Public
+Library.&mdash;Mexican Antiquities.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Four lines of railway leading westward from
+Niagara, place Buffalo and Detroit <i>en rapport</i>
+with each other, through their connecting steel rails, and
+compete for the patronage of the traveler. In addition
+to this, there are not less than two lines by water, thus
+affording the tourist&mdash;if he develops a desire to tempt
+the waves of Old Erie&mdash;ample scope for his choice.
+The Lake Shore route takes one through a continuous
+succession of ever-changing landscapes on the southern
+shore of Lake Erie, and skirts the two great States
+of Ohio and Pennsylvania before reaching Michigan.
+It is, perhaps, the preferable route by rail,
+looking at it from a purely &aelig;sthetic standpoint. The
+Great Western Road crosses, at Suspension Bridge, the
+famous chasm cut by Niagara, in its recession from
+Ontario, and gives a faint conception, as seen in the
+distance, of the glorious Falls themselves. The roar
+and rush of water&mdash;at the rate of twenty-five million<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+tons per minute&mdash;is borne down the deeply-cut channel,
+and clouds of spray are visible from the car windows.
+Below the bridge the swift drifts and eddies can be seen
+foaming on their way to the whirlpool, a mile and a half
+further down. This route also takes the traveler
+through London, Canada, a quaint old English town of
+twenty thousand inhabitants, on the Thames River. The
+place is brimming over with localities the names of
+which, carried in the affections of her settlers across the
+ocean, serve as reminders of the old London left forever
+behind them on Britannia's Isle. Blackfriar's Bridge
+and Westminster Bridge both cross the new Thames,
+and Kensington and Covent Garden market belong also
+to the transplanted nomenclature. On Saturdays the
+great square in the heart of the town is filled with
+marketers and hucksters of all descriptions, and every
+kind of merchandise, from a feather bed to a table
+knife, is there bought and sold. Squaws and Indians
+and quaintly dressed women commingle with the crowd
+and sell their various wares. The scene is very
+picturesque, and wears an atmosphere of being a
+hundred years old.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Trunk Road&mdash;the most northerly of the
+three routes leading through Canada&mdash;has nothing
+except its easy-going time to recommend it to favor.
+The traveler on this road stands a fair chance of missing
+his connecting links in the great railway chain which
+interthreads the continent east and west, or of being
+delayed for hours at a time by running off the rails.
+The Canada Southern is a newly completed road, and is
+said to be the most direct and shortest of all the competing
+lines. This route follows the windings of the
+northern shore of Lake Erie, just opposite from the Lake<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+Shore Road on the southern side, and the shifting landscapes
+are perhaps quite as full of natural beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Detroit, the fair "City of the Strait," spreads itself
+along the river front for miles, and the approach from
+Windsor, on the opposite shore, is suggestive of the pictured
+lagoons of Venice, Queen of the Adriatic. The
+Detroit River, or strait, is one of the most beautiful water
+avenues west of the Hudson. It is from half a mile to
+a mile wide, is always of a clear green color, and is never
+troubled by sand bars or anything which might affect its
+navigation. It has an average depth of twenty-five
+feet at the wharves and perhaps forty or fifty feet in the
+centre of the river bed. No floods disturb its calm flow
+or change the pervading green of its waters. It is, with
+reason, the pride of the city, and the ferry boats of the
+several lines plying between Detroit and Windsor are
+of the most attractive type. In summer a corps of
+musicians are engaged for the regular trips, and are considered
+as indispensable to the boat's outfit as the captain
+or pilot. Their syren strains entice the lounger at the
+wharf, and he may ride all day, if he chooses, for the sum
+of ten cents. Whole families spend the day on the river,
+in this way, taking their dinner in baskets, as they would
+go to a picnic. The people of Detroit, perhaps, inherit
+the pleasure-loving characteristics of their French ancestors,
+or at least they do not seem to have their minds
+exclusively concentrated on the struggle after the almighty
+dollar.</p>
+
+<p>Detroit, as the principal mart of the Peninsular State&mdash;the
+nucleus which gradually crystallized into the heart
+of Michigan&mdash;has an early history of thrilling interest;
+the site of the present populous city of a hundred and
+twenty thousand souls was long ago, in the shadowy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+years of its Indian lore, the home of a dusky tribe of
+the Algonquin family&mdash;a race which was once as populous
+and widespread as the waves of the ocean.</p>
+
+<p>In 1610 the first white man who set foot on these wild
+and unexplored shores found it occupied by the clustered
+wigwams of a peaceful Indian village named <i>Teushagrondie</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Beside that broad but gentle tide<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"> &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; *</span>
+<span class="i0">Whose waters creep along the shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ere long to swell Niagara's roar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here, quiet, stood an Indian village;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Unknown its origin or date;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Algonquin huts and rustic tillage,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where stands the City of the Strait.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"> &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp; &nbsp; *</span>
+<span class="i0">From dark antiquity it came,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In myths and dreamy ages cast."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Another of its ancient names was "Wa-we-aw-to-nong,"
+meaning <i>round by</i>, in allusion to its circuitous
+way of approach.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"No savage home, however rare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">If told in legend or in song,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Could with that charming spot compare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The lovely Wa-we-aw-to-nong."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In 1679, the <i>Griffin</i>, under La Salle&mdash;the first vessel
+that ever sailed these inland seas&mdash;anchored off the
+group of islands at the entrance to Detroit River. Peaceful
+Indian tribes were scattered along the banks, and the
+white man was received with friendly overtures.</p>
+
+<p>In 1701, La Motte Cadillac founded Detroit. He
+erected a military fort on the site of the future city,
+which he named after his French patron, <i>Pontchartrain</i>.
+It was surrounded by a strong stockade of wooden
+pickets, with bastions at each angle. A few log huts<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+with thatched roofs of straw and grass were built within
+the enclosure, and as the number of settlers increased
+the stockade was enlarged, until it included about a
+hundred houses closely crowded together. The streets
+were very narrow, with the exception of a wide carriage
+road or boulevard which encircled the town just within
+the palisades. The object of the establishment of this
+military post was to aid in securing to the French the
+large fur trade of the northwest, and it was also a point
+from whence the early Jesuit fathers extended their
+missionary labors.</p>
+
+<p>The little military colony was the centre of the settlement,
+and the Canadian dwellings were scattered up and
+down the banks above and below the fort for miles.
+The river almost washed the foot of the stockade&mdash;Woodbridge
+street being at that time the margin of the
+water&mdash;and three large Indian villages were within the
+limits of the settlement. Below the fort were the
+lodges of the Pottawattomies, on the eastern shore dwelt
+the Wyandots, and higher up Pontiac and the Ottawas
+had pitched their wigwams.</p>
+
+<p>Fort Pontchartrain remained in the possession of the
+French until 1760, when, by the fall of Quebec, it fell
+into the hands of the British, and was surrendered to
+Major Robert Rogers on the twelfth of September. The
+Red Cross of St. George now supplanted the <i>Fleur-de-lis</i>
+of France, and the change to British rule was ill
+relished by the surrounding Indian tribes, who had
+been the firm friends and allies of the French. The
+well known Pontiac conspiracy grew out of this change
+of administration, and a general massacre of the whites
+was determined upon. Pontiac, chief of the Ottawas,
+was the leading spirit of the bloody plot, and so well<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+laid were his plans that ten out of the thirteen posts
+which were simultaneously attacked fell before their
+savage onsets. The post at Detroit, at that time under
+command of Major Gladwyn, was only saved through
+the timely betrayal of Pontiac's plot, by Catherine, a
+beautiful Ojibway girl, who dwelt in the village of the
+Pottawattomies, and who had become much attached to
+Major Gladwyn, of the Fort. The day before the
+intended massacre she brought him a pair of moccasins
+which she had made for him, and then revealed the
+intended surprise of Pontiac. The garrison and occupants
+of the fort were supported by two small vessels,
+the Beaver and the Gladwyn, which lay anchored in
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of May sixth, 1763, a large flotilla of
+birch canoes, filled with warriors lying flat on their faces,
+crossed the river above the Port, landing just beyond
+the banks of Bloody Run, or Parent's Creek, as it was
+then called. About ten o'clock, sixty chiefs, with
+Pontiac at their head, marched to the Port and
+demanded admittance. It was granted, but all preparation
+was made on the part of Gladwyn to repel the first
+sign of treachery. Every soldier was armed to the
+teeth, and the eagle eye of Gladwyn watched every
+movement of Pontiac, as that brave made a speech
+of mock friendship. When the savages discovered the
+failure of their plans, their disappointed rage knew no
+bounds, and after passing out of the gates of the Fort,
+their mad thirst for blood was only glutted by massacres
+of isolated families, and the tomahawk and
+scalping knife sealed the doom of many an unhappy
+victim who that day crossed the path of Pontiac's
+warriors.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From this hour Detroit was in a state of siege, and
+for eleven long months the siege continued. Bravely
+the little band at the Fort held out until reinforcements
+arrived&mdash;Captain Dalzell, with a force of three hundred
+regulars, coming to their aid. A few days afterwards&mdash;at
+two o'clock on the morning of July thirty-first&mdash;an
+attack was made on the Indians, who were stationed
+along the banks of Parent's Creek, about a mile and a
+half from the Fort. The troops neared the narrow,
+wooden bridge which spanned the creek, when suddenly,
+in the gloom of night, the Indian war-whoop
+burst on their ears, and a blaze of leaden death followed.
+Captain Dalzell rushed to the front across the bridge,
+leading his men forward, but their foes were not to be
+seen.</p>
+
+<p>Bewildered in the gloom, the English troops were
+obliged to fall back to the fort and wait for daylight
+before renewing the attack. Hundreds of Indians lay
+in ambuscade along the river, whither the soldiers were
+obliged to pass on their way to the Fort, and the creek
+ran red with their blood. The waters of the little
+stream, after this crimson baptism, were re-christened
+with the name of Bloody Run. The survivors entered
+the Fort next morning with a loss of seventy killed and
+forty wounded.</p>
+
+<p>During the war of the Revolution, Detroit was subjected
+to greater annoyance from Indian tribes than
+before, but this was the only way in which the war
+affected it. Through the treaty of Greenville, made
+by General Wayne with the red men, in August, 1795,
+Detroit and all the region of the northwest became the
+property of the United States, and in 1796 Captain
+Porter, from General Wayne's army, took possession of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+the post, and flung to the breeze the first American
+banner that ever floated over the soil of the Peninsular
+State.</p>
+
+<p>"Pontiac's Grate" was the eastern entrance to the
+town, and occupies the site of the old United States
+Court House. In 1763, a rude chapel stood on the
+north side of St. Ann street&mdash;nearly in the middle of
+the present Jefferson avenue&mdash;while opposite was a
+large military garden, in the centre of which stood a
+block house, where all the councils with the Indians
+were held. These were the only public buildings in
+the town.</p>
+
+<p>The "Pontiac Tree," behind which many a soldier
+took shelter on the night of the bloody battle at Parent's
+Creek, and whose bark is fabled to have been thickly
+pierced with bullets, stood as an old landmark for years,
+on the site of the ancient field of conflict, and many a
+stirring legend is told of it.</p>
+
+<p>On June eleventh, 1805&mdash;just five months after
+Michigan was organized as a territory&mdash;Detroit was
+laid in ruins by a wholesale conflagration, which left
+only two houses unharmed. An act of Congress was
+passed for her relief, and thus, through baptisms of fire
+and blood, and through tribulation, has she arisen to her
+present proud estate. The stranger landing on these
+shores now is struck with the handsome general
+appearance of the city&mdash;its clean, wide streets, varying
+in width from fifty to two hundred feet&mdash;its elegant
+business blocks and pervading air of enterprise. The
+ground on which the city stands rises gradually
+from the river to an elevation of thirty or forty feet,
+thus affording both a commanding prospect and excellent
+drainage. Detroit is an authorized port of entry, and is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+about seven miles distant from Lake St. Clair and eighteen
+miles from Lake Erie. Ship and boat building has
+been an extensive branch of business here, and in 1859
+there were nine steam saw mills located in the city,
+sawing forty million feet of lumber annually. There
+are also works for smelting copper ore two miles below
+the city, or rather within that suburban portion of the
+city known as Hamtramck.</p>
+
+<p>Among the first objects of interest which attract the
+stranger's attention are the new City Hall and the
+Soldiers' Monument. The City Hall, fronting on one
+side of the square known as the Campus Martius, is a
+structure of which any city in the land might be proud.
+It is built of Cleveland sandstone, and faces on four
+streets,&mdash;being two hundred feet long on Woodward
+avenue and Griswold street, with a width of ninety
+feet on Fort street and Michigan avenue.</p>
+
+<p>It is built in the style of the Italian renaissance,
+with Mansard roof and a tower rising from the centre
+of the building, adorned at its four corners with colossal
+figures fourteen feet high, representing "<i>Justice</i>,"
+"<i>Industry</i>," "<i>Arts</i>," and "<i>Commerce</i>." Its height
+from the ground to the top of the tower is a hundred
+and eighty feet, and the three ample stories above the
+basement furnish accommodation to the city and county
+offices, in addition to the Circuit and Recorder's Courts.
+The walls are frescoed, the floors laid in mosaics of
+colored marbles, and the Council Chamber and other
+public rooms are furnished with black walnut chairs
+and desks, and paneled in oak. With these exceptions,
+there is no woodwork about the immense building.
+Everything, from basement to dome, is brick and iron
+and stone. Even the floors are built in delicate arches<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+of brick and iron, and iron staircases follow the windings
+of the tower to its dizzy top. It is reckoned fireproof.
+The exterior is curiously carved, and two large
+fountains adorn the inclosing grounds. The estimated
+cost of the building is about six hundred thousand
+dollars.</p>
+
+<p>From the airy outlook of the City Hall Tower,
+Detroit appears like a vast wheel, many of whose streets
+diverge like spokes from this common centre, reaching
+outward until they touch, or seem to touch, the wooded
+rim of the distant horizon. The hub of this immense
+wheel is the triangular open space called the Campus
+Martius, and the Soldiers' Monument, occupying the
+centre of the Campus Martius, is also the centre of
+this imaginary hub. Michigan avenue&mdash;one of the
+long arms of the wheel&mdash;loses itself in the western
+distance, and is called the Chicago road. Woodward
+avenue leads into the interior, toward Pontiac, and
+Gratiot avenue goes in the direction of Port Huron.
+Fort street, in yet another direction, guides the eye to
+Fort Wayne and the steeples of Sandwich, four miles
+away. Toward the southern or river side of the city,
+the resemblance to the wheel is nearly lost, and one sees
+nothing but compact squares of blocks, cut by streets
+crossing each other at right angles and running parallel
+and perpendicular to the river. Between the Campus
+Martius and Grand Circus Park there are half a dozen
+or more short streets, which form a group by themselves,
+and break in somewhat on the symmetry of the larger
+wheel, without destroying it. This point gives the best
+view of Detroit to be obtained anywhere about the city.</p>
+
+<p>The Soldiers' Monument is a handsome granite
+structure, fifty-five feet in height, the material of which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+was quarried from the granite beds of Westerly, Rhode
+Island, and modeled into shape under the superintending
+genius of Randolph Rogers, of Rome, Italy. It is
+surmounted by a massive allegorical statue, in bronze, of
+Michigan, and figures of the soldier and sailor, in the
+same material, adorn the four projections of the
+monument; while bronze eagles with spread wings are
+perched on smaller pedestals in the intermediate spaces.
+Large medallions, also in bronze, with the busts of
+Grant, Lincoln, Sherman and Farragut, in low relief,
+cover the four sides of the main shaft, and higher up
+the following inscription is imprinted against the white
+background of granite:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Erected by the people of Michigan<br />
+in honor of the martyrs who fell<br />
+and the heroes who fought<br />
+in defence of Liberty and Union.</span>"</p>
+
+<p>The bronzes and ornaments were imported from the
+celebrated foundry at Munich, Bavaria, and the cost of
+the monument&mdash;donated exclusively by private subscription&mdash;amounted
+to fifty-eight thousand dollars.
+The unveiling of the statue took place April ninth,
+1872.</p>
+
+<p>Another feature of the city is the Public Library,
+founded in March, 1865, and at present occupying the
+old Capitol, until the new and elegant Library building
+now in process of construction is completed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">WOODWARD AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_219.jpg" width="1024" height="655" alt="WOODWARD AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Beginning entirely without funds, ten years ago, it
+can now exhibit a muster roll of twenty-five thousand
+volumes, and is fairly started on the high road to
+fortune. There is a kind of poetic justice in the fact
+that its principal source of revenue accrues from county
+fines and penalties. Here is a knotty question for the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+divinity doctors, for in this case, at least, good is born of
+evil. The library is under the control of the Board of
+Education, and was given an existence from the State
+constitution. Some very rare volumes of Mexican
+antiquities have recently been purchased from England
+by the School Board and added to the library, at a cost
+of four hundred dollars. They contain a pictorial and
+hieroglyphic history of the Aztec races occupying
+Mexico when Cortes came over from a foreign shore
+with his Spanish galleons. The earliest date goes back
+to 1324, and the strange figures in the centre of the page
+are surrounded by devices indicating cycles of thirteen
+years, four of which made a great cycle, or a period of
+fifty-two years. The deeds of the Aztec king, <i>Tenuch</i>,
+and his successors, are here recorded, and through the
+efforts of an English nobleman who devoted his life to
+these researches, we have the translation rendered for us.</p>
+
+<p>The city has a scientific association, two years old, and
+also a Historical Society, in which her citizens manifest
+considerable pride.</p>
+
+<p>Detroit has been called, with reason, one of the most
+beautiful cities of the West. Transformed from the
+ancient <i>Teushagrondie</i> into the present populous "City
+of the Strait," she sits like a happy princess, serene, on
+the banks of her broad river, guarding the gates of St.
+Clair. Backed by a State whose resources are second to
+none in the Union, emerging from an early history of
+bloody struggle and battle, rising like the fabled
+Ph&#339;nix, from the ashes of an apparent ruin, contributing
+her best blood and treasure to the war for liberty and
+union, she may well be proud of her past record, her
+present progress, her advancement toward a high
+civilization and her assured position.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+
+<h2>ERIE.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Decoration Day in Pennsylvania.&mdash;Lake Erie.&mdash;Natural Advantages
+of Erie.&mdash;Her Harbor, Commerce, and Manufactures.&mdash;Streets
+and Public Buildings.&mdash;Soldiers' Monument.&mdash;Erie
+Cemetery.&mdash;East and West Parks.&mdash;Perry's Victory.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>I took my fourth ride from Buffalo westward, on
+the Lake Shore Road, on the afternoon of May
+twenty-ninth, 1875, the day set apart that year by the
+patriotic citizens of Pennsylvania, for the decoration of
+her soldiers' graves. Passing the State line or boundary
+between New York and Pennsylvania, a little beyond
+Dunkirk, an unusually large assemblage of citizens and
+soldiers, with bouquets and a great profusion of flowers,
+at nearly every station, betokened the earnest patriotism
+of the old Keystone State. Pennsylvania will never
+be behind her sister States in doing honor to the brave
+men who gave up their lives while fighting her battles;
+and the demonstrations of each Decoration Day are
+evidences that she will not soon forget their deeds, or
+their claim upon her deepest gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>A beautiful sight opens to the view of the tourist as
+he turns his eye toward the broad, blue expanse of the
+lake, which may be seen at intervals from the car
+windows, from Buffalo to Toledo. The mind is quite
+naturally occupied with grand commercial schemes, on
+viewing such wonderful facilities for the promotion of
+enterprise. We have here, in Lake Erie, the connecting
+link in a chain of fresh-water oceans, which stretch from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+the Atlantic, westward, almost to the Rocky Mountains.
+Our internal prosperity is largely due to this great chain
+of lakes, which secure and facilitate cheap transportation,
+and have made possible the great inland cities, the pride
+of our Middle States.</p>
+
+<p>Erie is an intermediate point between Buffalo and
+Cleveland, and having a most excellent harbor, would
+seem destined to take rank among the first cities of
+America. But by that inscrutable law which, seemingly
+beyond reason, governs and controls the foundation
+and growth of cities and towns, natural advantages do
+not always seem to count; and as a large fish swallows
+a smaller one, so has Erie been dwarfed by her older
+rivals, who, getting an earlier foothold upon the shore
+of the lake, have absorbed its trade, and continued to
+maintain the advantage they at first secured. An
+increase of commerce on Lake Erie will undoubtedly
+throw a share to the city of Erie, and thus she may
+eventually succeed in occupying the position to which
+her harbor and railroads entitle her.</p>
+
+<p>Erie is on the lake, about midway of the brief stretch
+of shore which the narrow section of Western Pennsylvania,
+jutting up between New York and Ohio, secures
+to that State. It is her only lake town of any importance,
+is a port of entry, and has a population of nearly thirty
+thousand inhabitants. The harbor is the largest and
+best on Lake Erie. It is about four miles in length,
+one mile in width, and in depth varying from nine to
+twenty-five feet, thus permitting access to the largest
+lake vessels. It is formed by an island four miles in
+length, which lies in front of the city, and which, from
+its name of Presque Isle, indicates that within the
+memory of man it has been a peninsula. The bay is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+known as Presque Isle Bay. It is protected by a
+breakwater, and three lighthouses guard the entrance.
+Several large docks, furnished with railroad tracks,
+permit the transfer of merchandise to take place
+directly between the vessels and the cars. The terminus
+of the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, and connected
+by the Lake Shore Railroad with all important points
+in the east and west, the city is fast developing into a
+strong commercial centre. A canal connecting with
+Beaver River, a tributary of the Ohio, facilitates
+commerce in the western section of Pennsylvania, and
+furnishes extensive water-power, of which various kinds
+of mills avail themselves. These mills and the many
+factories and foundries of the city&mdash;for Erie is a manufacturing
+town of considerable importance&mdash;produce
+iron ware, cars, machinery, organs, furniture, brass,
+leather, boots and shoes, and send them, by the various
+methods of transportation, to markets in the States and
+Canada. The great forest and mining regions of
+Pennsylvania find, at Erie, an outlet for their lumber,
+coal and iron ore; while the numerous productive farms
+which lie in the vicinity of the lake send quantities of
+grain to be shipped at this port.</p>
+
+<p>The city is built upon an elevated bluff, commanding
+an extensive view of the lake. It is regularly laid out,
+with broad streets crossing each other at right angles,
+and its general appearance is prosperous and pleasing.
+In the centre of the city are the Parks, two finely shaded
+inclosures, intersected by State street, and surrounded by
+handsome buildings. A Soldiers' Monument stands in
+one of them, erected to commemorate the memory of the
+brave men who fell in the War of the Rebellion. It is
+surmounted by two bronze statues of heroic size. There<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+are also two handsome fountains within the Park inclosure.
+Near by is the classic structure used as a Court
+House. The Custom House is erected in a substantial
+style, near the shores of the lake. A new Opera House
+is also one of the features of the city. The Union
+Depot is an immense building, nearly five hundred feet
+in length, in the Romanesque style, two stories in height
+and surmounted by a cupola forty feet high. State
+street is the principal business thoroughfare.</p>
+
+<p>The Erie Cemetery, on the south side, is one of the
+most beautiful in the country. It is on a bluff overlooking
+the city and the lake, and comprises seventy-five acres,
+in which tree-shaded walks, elegant drives, velvet
+turf, running water, masses of shrubbery and brilliant
+flowers, together with the plain white headstones and
+the elaborate monuments which mark the resting-places
+of the dead, are united in a harmonious effect, which is
+most satisfactory to the beholder. Erie is very proud
+of this cemetery, and spares no pains to perfect it, while
+every year adds to its beauty.</p>
+
+<p>East and West Parks lie, as their names indicate, in
+opposite directions within the city, and are beautiful
+breathing places where its citizens resort for rest and
+recreation. Art has joined with nature in rendering
+these places attractive, and their trees, shrubbery, lawns,
+walks and drives, and general picturesqueness, combine
+to make them very charming spots.</p>
+
+<p>Erie has historical associations which render her of
+interest to one who would gather facts concerning his
+country. Lake Erie was the scene of a naval engagement
+between the British and Americans, on September
+tenth, 1813, in which the latter were victorious.
+Commodore Perry, in command of the American fleet,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+sailed from this port on the memorable day, and when
+the engagement was concluded, brought thither his
+prizes. Several of his ships sunk in Lawrence Bay,
+and in fair weather the hull of the Niagara is still
+visible.</p>
+
+<p>The development of Western Pennsylvania is contributing
+more and more, as the years go by, to
+the prosperity of Erie. Her exceptionally fine harbor
+is already beginning to be recognized by commerce,
+and though the city may never rival Cleveland or
+Buffalo, the time may come when Erie will take rank
+as only second to them on Lake Erie, in commercial
+importance.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>HARRISBURG.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A Historic Tree.&mdash;John Harris' Wild Adventure with the Indians.&mdash;Harris
+Park.&mdash;History of Harrisburg.&mdash;Situation and
+Surroundings.&mdash;State House.&mdash;State Library.&mdash;A Historic Flag.&mdash;View
+from State House Dome.&mdash;Capitol Park.&mdash;Monument to
+Soldiers of Mexican War.&mdash;Monument to Soldiers of Late War.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Front Street.&mdash;Bridges over the Susquehanna.&mdash;Mt.
+Kalmia Cemetery.&mdash;Present Advantages and Future
+Prospects of Harrisburg.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>A century and a half ago, John Harris, seeking
+traffic with the red men of the Susquehanna,
+built a rude hut, dug a well, and thereby began a work
+which, taken up by his son, led to the founding of the
+Capital City of Pennsylvania, a city destined to take
+rank among the first of a great State. The stump of
+an old tree, in a beautiful little park which skirts the
+Susquehanna, on a line parallel with Front street,
+marks the scene of an early adventure of Harris with
+the Indians, and tells the stranger of his birth and
+death. About 1718 or 1719, Harris, who had settled
+at this point on the Susquehanna, as a trader, was
+visited by a predatory band of Indians returning from
+the "Patowmark," who made an exchange of goods with
+him, for rum. Becoming drunken and riotous, he finally
+refused them any more liquor, when they seized him
+and bound him to a tree, dancing around their captive,
+until he thought his last day had come. His negro
+servant, however, summoned some friendly Shawnees
+from the opposite side of the river, who, after a slight<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+struggle with the drunken Indians, rescued Harris from
+his bonds and probably from a death by torture. The
+stump referred to is that of the historical tree, which was
+a gigantic mulberry, eleven feet seven inches in circumference.
+Here also is the grave of Harris, which is
+surrounded by a strong iron fence, and a young mulberry
+tree has been planted, by one of his descendants, to take
+the place of the one whose trunk alone stands as a
+monument of the past.</p>
+
+<p>During the summer months this romantic spot is the
+favorite resort of the boys and girls of the neighborhood,
+and whenever the weather is favorable, a large troop of
+juveniles may be seen spinning their tops, rolling their
+hoops and playing at croquet on the lawn. What a
+contrast is here unfolded to the imagination, as we stand
+at the grave of the venerable pioneer, and contemplate
+the wonderful change that has characterized the progress
+of events during the past hundred years. But little
+more than a century ago there was a solitary trader
+with his family upon the borders of a great river in the
+wilderness. His goods were brought on a pack-horse,
+and his ferry was a row boat. To-day a thriving,
+beautiful city takes the place of the log cabin; children
+sport where once the treacherous Indian sought the life
+of the hardy frontiersman; the river is spanned by
+wonderful bridges; and a hundred railroad trains pass
+through its streets in the course of twenty-four hours.</p>
+
+<p>Harrisburg was laid out by John Harris, Jr., the
+son of the pioneer, in 1785; it was incorporated as a
+borough in 1791; became the State Capital in 1812;
+and received a city charter in 1860. Its population in
+1880 numbered more than thirty thousand persons.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">HARRISBURG AND BRIDGES OVER THE SUSQUEHANNA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_229.jpg" width="1024" height="631" alt="HARRISBURG AND BRIDGES OVER THE SUSQUEHANNA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Harrisburg is most picturesquely situated, on the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+Susquehanna River, at the eastern gateway of the
+Alleghenies. The river is here a mile wide, shallow at
+most seasons of the year, but capable of becoming a
+turbulent torrent, carrying destruction along its banks.
+On the opposite side of the river to the south are the
+Conestoga Hills; while to the northward are the bold
+and craggy outlines of the Kittatinny or Blue Mountains.
+But five miles away is the gap in these mountains
+through which the Susquehanna forces its way, and the
+summits of these sentinels are plainly visible. Although
+on the very threshold of the mountainous region of
+Pennsylvania, the pastoral beauty of landscape which
+characterizes eastern Pennsylvania creeps up to meet
+the ruggedness which predominates beyond; and the
+two are here blended with most charming results; the
+softness of the one half veiling the ruggedness of the
+other; while the picturesqueness of each is heightened
+by contrast.</p>
+
+<p>The handsomest and most noticeable building of
+Harrisburg is the State House, which is conspicuously
+placed on an eminence near the centre of the city. It
+is T-shaped, having a front of one hundred and eighty
+feet by eighty in depth, and with an extension of one
+hundred and five feet by fifty-four feet. It is built of
+brick, and is three stories high, including the basement.
+A large circular portico, sustained by six Ionic columns,
+fronts the main entrance. The building is surmounted
+by a dome, reaching an altitude of one hundred and
+eight feet. A State Library, with accommodation for
+one hundred thousand volumes, and possessing at the
+present time thirty thousand volumes, is one of the
+features of the Capitol. This library contains a number
+of portraits, curiosities and art treasures, prominent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+among which are two small portraits of Columbus and
+Americus Vespucius, the work of a celebrated Florentine
+artist; a picture of the event already narrated in
+the life of John Harris; and a reflecting telescope,
+purchased by Benjamin Franklin, and through which
+was taken the first observation in the western hemisphere,
+of the transit of Venus.</p>
+
+<p>In the Flag Room of the State House, where are
+preserved the Pennsylvania State flags used by the
+different regimental organizations in the war for the
+Union, is a flag captured by the Confederates at Gettysburg,
+and afterwards recaptured in the baggage of Jefferson
+Davis. We find the following brief account of the
+capture of this flag in the "Harrisburg Visitors' Guide,"
+prepared by Mr. J. R. Orwig, Assistant State Librarian,
+to whom we are indebted for favors in our literary
+work. "It was on the evening of the first day; all the
+color guard were killed, the last being Corporal Joseph
+Gutelius, of Mifflinburg, Union County. When surrounded,
+and almost alone, he was commanded to
+surrender the flag. His mute reply was to enfold it in
+his arms, and he was instantly shot dead through its
+silken folds." He lies buried at Gettysburg.</p>
+
+<p>The view from the State House dome is exceptionally
+grand. I stood on that eminence one bright morning,
+during the early part of my sojourn at Harrisburg, in
+the spring of 1877. To eastward is a picturesque,
+rolling country, varied by hill and dale, field and woodland,
+with villages or isolated farmhouses nestling here
+and there in their midst, the brilliant green tint of the
+foreground melting imperceptibly away into the soft
+purple haze of the far distance. In front of the city
+to the westward lies the broad river, gleaming like a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+ribbon of silver in the sunlight, dotted with emerald
+islands, and winding away to the southeast, between
+sloping banks and rocky crags, until it at last loses itself
+in the misty horizon. To the northward is distinctly
+seen the gap in the mountains through which the river
+approaches the city. The bold and abrupt outlines of
+the mountains are plainly traced, and the scenery in
+this region is exceptionally grand. Immediately surrounding
+the State House is the city, spread out with its
+labyrinth of streets, its factories and furnaces, its stately
+public buildings, and its elegant private residences,
+presenting a panorama fair to look upon, and evidencing
+the prosperity and industry of its people. To obtain a
+view from this dome is well worth a visit to Harrisburg.</p>
+
+<p>The State House is surrounded by Capitol Park,
+embracing thirteen acres, and inclosed by an iron fence.
+These grounds gently slope from the centre, and are
+ornamented with stately trees, beautiful shrubbery and
+flowers and closely-shorn greensward. The site was set
+apart for its present purpose before Harrisburg was a
+city, by John Harris, its public-spirited founder. Fine
+views are obtained from it of the suburb of East
+Harrisburg and the Reservoir, Mt. Kalmia Cemetery,
+the tower of the new State Arsenal, and the dome of the
+State Insane Asylum. The prominent feature of this
+park, next to the State House, is, however, the beautiful
+monument erected to the memory of the soldiers who
+fell in the Mexican War. It is one hundred and five
+feet high, with a sub-base of granite, a base proper,
+with buttresses at each corner surmounted by eagles,
+and a Corinthian column of Maryland marble, surmounted
+by a statue of Victory, the latter executed at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+Rome, of fine Italian marble. The sides of the base
+are paneled, and contain the names of the different
+battles of the Mexican War. The monument is surrounded
+by an inclosure constructed of muskets used by
+the United States soldiers in Mexico. In front of the
+monument are a number of guns, trophies of the
+Mexican war, and several others presented by General
+Lafayette.</p>
+
+<p>Another monument, at the intersection of State and
+Second streets, is in its design purely antique, being
+founded on the proportions of the pair of obelisks at
+the gate of Memphis, and of that which stands in the
+Place Vendome at Paris. It contains the following
+inscription: "To the Soldiers of Dauphin County, who
+gave their lives for the life of the Union, in the war for
+the suppression of the Rebellion, 1861-5. Erected by
+their fellow-citizens, 1869."</p>
+
+<p>In East Harrisburg, or "Allison's Hill," as it is
+called, will be seen Brant's private residence, built in
+the style of the Elizabethan period, the massive stone
+Catholic Convent, and St. Genevieve's Academy. On
+State street is Grace M. E. Church, one of the most
+costly and beautiful churches in the State. Not far
+away is St. Patrick's Pro-Cathedral. The State Lunatic
+Asylum is a vast and imposing edifice, a mile and a half
+north of the city.</p>
+
+<p>Front street, which overlooks the river, is the favorite
+promenade of the city. Here may be seen the broad
+river, with its craft and numerous islands, the villages on
+the opposite shore, and the delightful landscape beyond.
+Here the citizens often congregate on fine evenings, to
+watch the sunset views, which are especially fine from
+this point. On the ridge opposite, is Fort Washington<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+and the line of defenses erected in 1863, in expectation
+of an invasion of the Southern army. Front street is
+by far the finest street in the city, containing the most
+imposing residences, being bordered by trees, and
+forming a most attractive drive. From State street to
+Paxton, it presents an almost unbroken range of
+palatial buildings of brick, stone, marble or granite.
+On this street is found the residence of the Governor,
+presented to the State by the citizens of Harrisburg, in
+1864, as the Executive Mansion. A more desirable
+location for a residence can scarcely be imagined than
+that of Hon. J. D. Cameron, on the southeast corner
+of State and Front streets, overlooking the Susquehanna.
+Near the corner of Front street and Washington
+avenue is the old "Harris Mansion," originally
+erected in 1766, by John Harris, and remaining in the
+Harris family until 1840, but now the home of Hon.
+Simon Cameron.</p>
+
+<p>The Market street bridge spans the river, resting
+midway on Forster's Island, the western end being an
+ancient structure, dating back to 1812, while the eastern
+end, having once been destroyed by flood, and once by
+fire, was rebuilt in modern style in 1866. The second
+bridge across the river is at the head of Mulberry
+street, but it is used for trains alone. This bridge is
+also divided by Forster's Island. It has once been
+destroyed by fire, and was entirely remodeled in 1856.</p>
+
+<p>Mt. Kalmia Cemetery is a charming resting-place of
+the dead, on the heights overlooking the city. Its
+natural beauties are many, and they have been
+enhanced by art. It is reached from East State street.</p>
+
+<p>Harrisburg has extensive iron manufactories, and is
+the centre of six important railways. More than one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+hundred passenger trains arrive and depart daily, and
+few cities have a greater number of transient visitors.
+It is one of the most prosperous cities of the Commonwealth;
+situated in a fertile valley, in view of some of
+the grandest scenery in America, with railroads, canals
+and macadamized roads, diverging in all directions,
+and connecting it with every section of the country;
+with important business interests, and an intelligent,
+industrious and prosperous population; the political
+centre of one of the chief States of the Union; it has
+much to congratulate itself upon in the present, and
+more to hope for from the future. Another decade will
+see vastly increased business interests, and a population
+nearly if not quite double that of to-day.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
+
+<h2>HARTFORD.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The City of Publishers.&mdash;Its Geographical Location.&mdash;The New
+State House.&mdash;Mark Twain and the "None Such."&mdash;The
+"Heathen Chinee."&mdash;Wadsworth Atheneum.&mdash;Charter Oak.&mdash;George
+H. Clark's Poem.&mdash;Putnam's Hotel.&mdash;Asylum for Deaf
+Mutes.&mdash;The Sign Language.&mdash;A Fragment of Witchcraftism.&mdash;Hartford
+<i>Courant</i>.&mdash;The Connecticut River.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Having decided to pitch our tents in Hartford,
+we moved from New Haven by rail, on the
+afternoon of September eighth, 1874. A hot, dusty day it
+was, indeed, with mercury at ninety-two in the shade,
+and dust enough to enable passengers of the rollicking
+order to inscribe monograms on the backs of their
+unsuspecting neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>The distance, according to recent time tables, is one
+dollar, or an hour and fifteen minutes. The scenery
+encountered on this route is less varied than that from
+New York to New Haven, and yet there is much to
+interest the careful observer. The only town of any
+importance between these rival cities is Meriden, an
+enterprising city of twenty thousand souls, standing
+midway between them.</p>
+
+<p>Hartford, the capital of nutmegdom, is the second city
+of Connecticut, having, as shown by the last census, a
+population of thirty-seven thousand. Pleasantly situated
+on the Connecticut River, and enjoying now the
+advantage of exclusive legislation for the State, Hartford
+is destined to become one of the most important cities of
+New England.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Authors, artists and publishers have ever found
+Hartford a fruitful field for the development of brains
+and enterprise. It is, perhaps, not exaggeration to say
+that in no other city of the United States of the same size
+is there so large a proportion of the population devoted
+to literature. The American and Hartford Publishing
+Companies, the firms of Burr, Scranton, Worthington,
+Dustin, Gilman and Company, and many others of less
+note, are located here.</p>
+
+<p>The new State House, now in process of erection, is
+destined to be one of the finest buildings in the country.
+The site commands a view of the city and its surroundings
+for many miles. Among the objects of interest to
+be found here are the residence of "Mark Twain" and
+the State Insane Asylum. "Mark's" house is at the
+end of Farmington avenue, on a little eminence, at the
+foot of which flows a nameless stream.</p>
+
+<p>Its style of construction is so unlike the average
+house that it has won for itself the characteristic title
+of "The None Such."</p>
+
+<p>It is still in the hands of the architect, and will probably
+not be ready for occupancy before November. If
+this building is not regarded as a marvel, then I will
+confess that, after nearly twenty years of travel, I have
+yet to learn the meaning of that term as applied to
+architecture. The plat of ground on which the house
+and adjacent buildings stand was selected and purchased
+by Mrs. "Twain"&mdash;so said the gentlemanly architect
+who replied to our inquiries. As the genial "Mark"
+desires the maximum quantity of light, his apartments
+are so arranged as to give him the sun all day. The
+bricks of the outer walls of the house are painted in three
+colors, making the general effect decidedly fantastic.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Taking it all in all, I have nowhere seen a more
+curious study in architecture, and hope, for the satisfaction
+of its eccentric owner, that it will quite meet his
+expectations.</p>
+
+<p>The Celestials, or representatives from China, are now
+so often seen, from California eastward to New England,
+that they have ceased to be considered objects of special
+interest in any part of the United States. I have met
+them more or less in my journeyings during the last two
+years, and have often wondered if others see their strange
+characteristics from the same standpoint that I do. To
+me, Ah Sin is ingenious, enterprising, economical, and
+the essence of quiet good humor.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite my quarters here in Hartford are two of
+these odd-looking Chinamen, whom I will, for convenience,
+name Ching Wing Shing and Chang Boomerang.</p>
+
+<p>My rooms being directly opposite the store of Boomerang
+and Company, an excellent opportunity is afforded
+me for witnessing their varied devices to invite trade and
+entertain their customers. Although only tea and coffee
+are advertised, Chang's store will be found, on close inspection,
+to strongly resemble the "Old Curiosity Shop,"
+described by Dickens, there being a small assortment of
+everything in their line, from tea and coffee to watermelons.</p>
+
+<p>Chang and Ching invariably wear a smile upon
+their "childlike and bland" features. School children
+passing that way seem to take pleasure in teasing
+these mild-mannered China merchants, and unfortunate
+indeed is the firm of Boomerang and Company, if their
+backs are turned on their youthful tormenters; for these
+mischievous urchins seem to think it no crime to pilfer
+anything owned or presided over by their pig-tailed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+neighbors. Should Chang or Ching discover their
+sportive enemies gliding away with the tempting fruits
+of their stands, it is useless to pursue, for a troop of
+juvenile confederates will rush into the store the moment
+it is vacated and help themselves to whatever may
+please their fancy.</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE WADSWORTH ATHENEUM.</h4>
+
+<p>While taking a stroll down Main street the other day
+my attention was arrested by a three-story brownstone
+building, standing on the east side and back some
+distance from the street. I had only to glance at the
+large, bold lettering across its front to be told that it
+was the Wadsworth Atheneum. Deciding to take a
+look at the interior of this receptacle of antiquities, I
+soon made the acquaintance of W. J. Fletcher, the
+gentlemanly assistant librarian of the Watkins Library,
+who seemed to take an especial pleasure in showing
+me everything of interest, and who spared no pains in
+explaining everything about which I had a question
+to ask.</p>
+
+<p>There were so many curiosities of ancient as well as
+modern pattern, that it would be impossible to notice all
+in a work of this magnitude, and hence I shall content
+myself with presenting a few subjects which, to me at
+least, were of striking interest. Stepping into the
+Historical Rooms my attention was first called to the
+stump of the famous Charter Oak, which will ever form
+an interesting chapter in Connecticut history. A very
+comfortable seat or arm-chair has been moulded from
+this aged relic, and while sitting within its venerable
+arms, I copied the following poem by George H.
+Clark, the manuscript of which is framed and hung<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+up over the chair. I cannot endorse the sentiment of
+the poet, but will record his lines.</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+September 10th, 1858.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>:&mdash;You seem to take so much interest in my
+lines on the destruction of the old oak, that I have thought
+you might be pleased with a copy in the author's
+handwriting, and accordingly inclose one. Yours,</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+<span class="smcap">Geo. H. Clark</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE OAK.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">1. &nbsp; "Yes&mdash;blot the last sad vestige out&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Burn all the useless wood;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Root up the stump, that none may know<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Where the dead monarch stood.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Let traffic's inauspicious din<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Here run its daily round,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And break the solemn memories<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Of this once holy ground.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">2. &nbsp; "Your fathers, long the hallowed spot<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Have kept with jealous care,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That worshippers from many lands<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Might pay their homage there;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">You spurn the loved memento now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Forget the tyrant's yoke,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And lend Oblivion aid to gorge<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Our cherished Charter Oak.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">3. &nbsp; "'Tis well, when all our household gods<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">For paltry gain are sold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That e'en their altars should be razed<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And sacrificed for gold.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Then tear the strong, tenacious roots,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">With vandal hands, away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And pour within that sacred crypt<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The garish light of day.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">4. &nbsp; "Let crowds unconscious tread the soil<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">By Wordsworth sanctified,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Let Mammon bring, to crown the hill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Its retinue of pride,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Destroy the patriot pilgrim's shrine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">His idols overthrow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Till o'er the ruin grimly stalks<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The ghost of long ago.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">5. &nbsp; "So may the muse of coming time<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Indignant speak of them<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Who Freedom's brightest jewel rent<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">From her proud diadem,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And lash with her contemptuous scorn<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The man who gave the stroke<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That desecrates the place where stood<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The brave old Charter Oak."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It appears to me that no more sensible thing could
+have been done after the tree fell to the ground, August
+twenty-first, 1859, than to preserve it here, where it will
+outlive, by centuries, its rapid decay in an open field,
+exposed to sun and storm. Thousands may now see the
+famous oak that otherwise might never know its location
+or history. It stood on the grounds formerly owned by
+Samuel Wordsworth, near Charter Oak Avenue, and its
+top having been blown down and broken during a
+violent storm, it was afterwards dug up and taken to the
+Historical Rooms of the Wadsworth Atheneum.</p>
+
+<p>After occupying two hours in looking through the
+Historical Department, we came to a corner of the room
+devoted to an exhibition of the relics identified with the
+history of General Israel Putnam, the Revolutionary
+patriot, who was commander-in-chief of the American
+forces engaged at the battle of Bunker Hill.</p>
+
+<p>Connecticut takes a lively interest in anything that
+pertains to her favorite hero, and we were engaged not
+less than half an hour in an examination of the various
+articles impersonating "Old Put." Most Americans
+are familiar with the story of his early life and adven<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>tures,
+but I think few are aware of the fact that at one
+time he was a country landlord. Here at the Atheneum
+they have the very sign-board that attracted the traveler
+to "Putnam's Hotel." A life-size portrait of the
+gallant General Wolfe, who was slain while leading his
+army against Quebec, is painted on the board, which is
+three feet long by two and a half wide. Imagine now,
+the hero of a hundred battles and adventures, performing
+the duties of "mine host"&mdash;at once hostler, bartender
+and perhaps table girl in the dining room.</p>
+
+<p>The character of the man who had the ability to rise
+from the position of an humble farmer and inn-keeper
+to that of Senior Major-General of the United States
+armies, is an index to the character of the American
+people. Often on the battle-field were the titled nobility
+of Great Britain compelled to fly before the crushing
+blows of this sturdy yeoman, who, leaving his plow in the
+furrow, rushed to the field of danger and glory. Casting
+aside the habiliments of the farmer, he buckled on
+his armor and dared to lead where the bravest dared to
+follow. Israel Putman</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+"Sleeps the sleep that knows not breaking,"<br />
+</p></div>
+
+<p>but his glorious deeds will never be forgotten while the
+blessings of liberty are appreciated by the descendants
+of that galaxy of devoted patriots who rallied around
+the standard of George Washington.</p>
+
+<p>The Deaf and Dumb Institute, situated on Asylum
+Hill, is the oldest institution of the kind in the United
+States, having been established in 1817, by Rev. F. H.
+Gallaudet, a noble and generous philanthropist, who
+devoted his life and fortune to the elevation and enlightenment
+of the afflicted. A monument recently erected to
+his memory, in front of the Institute, attests the regard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+in which he is still held by those who revere him as
+their benefactor.</p>
+
+<p>It was my pleasure, while in Hartford, to attend a
+lecture in the sign language, by Professor D. E. Bartlett,
+who is reputed to be the oldest teacher living, and who
+commenced work at this institute forty years ago. I
+shall never forget my emotions as I eagerly watched
+sign and gesture, and at the same time noted its effect
+upon the features of each face in his attentive audience.
+What a noble mission, to thus lead these children of
+silence from the prison darkness of ignorance into the
+beautiful light of knowledge? May those who devote
+their lives to such a cause reap the rich reward which
+their benevolence deserves!</p>
+
+<p>In 1652 Hartford had the <i>honor</i> of executing the first
+witch ever heard of in America. Her name was Mrs.
+Greensmith. She was accused in the indictment of
+practicing evil things on the body of Ann Cole, which
+did not appear to be true; but a certain Rev. Mr. Stone
+and other ministers swore that Greensmith had confessed
+to them that the devil possessed her, and the
+righteous court hung her on their indictment.</p>
+
+<p>What would that court have done with the spiritual
+manifestations rife in these parts to-day? It is a
+bitter sarcasm on our Plymouth Rock progenitors that,
+having fled from the old country on account of religious
+persecution, they should inaugurate their freedom to
+worship God on the shores of the new world by hanging
+witches!</p>
+
+<p>The leading paper of the city is the Hartford <i>Courant</i>,
+which is ably edited by General Joseph R. Hawley, and
+is a powerful political organ throughout New England.
+General Hawley distinguished himself during the late<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+war as a brave officer, entering the army as captain and
+rising to the rank of brigadier general. The <i>Courant</i>,
+like its soldier-editor, may always be found fighting in
+the van.</p>
+
+<p>The Connecticut River at Hartford is about a quarter
+of a mile wide, and sweeps onward in a swift current,
+through sinuous banks, until it mingles with the waters
+of the Sound at Saybrook. The valley through which
+this river seeks a passage to the sea is one of the
+loveliest to be found anywhere, and gazing down upon
+it from the surrounding heights, as it lies veiled in blue
+distance, is like looking upon a dream of Arcadia.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
+
+<h2>LANCASTER.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>First Visit to Lancaster.&mdash;Eastern Pennsylvania.&mdash;Conestoga
+River.&mdash;Early History of Lancaster.&mdash;Early Dutch Settlers.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Whit-Monday.&mdash;Home of
+three Noted Persons.&mdash;James Buchanan, his Life and Death.&mdash;Thaddeus
+Stevens and his Burial Place.&mdash;General Reynolds
+and his Death.&mdash;"Cemetery City."</p></div>
+
+
+<p>My first visit to Lancaster was made on a bright
+morning in the early part of April, 1877. We
+rode out of the West Philadelphia Depot in the eight
+o'clock accommodation, which we were told would make
+sixty-five stops in a short journey of seventy-three miles.
+I did not count the stations, but should have no
+hesitancy in fully indorsing my informant. The
+frequency of the halts gave us an excellent opportunity
+to explore the surrounding country, and reminded one
+of street-car experiences in metropolitan cities, where
+one is brought to a stand at every crossing. Eastern
+Pennsylvania is beyond question the finest section of the
+State; and the tourist who sojourns at Bryn Mawr,
+Downingtown, Bird-in-Hand, and many of their sister
+villages, will see abundant evidences of the wealth
+and prosperity of an industrious people. The country
+is sufficiently rolling to be picturesque, without any of
+the ruggedness which characterizes the central and
+western portions of the State. Sometimes from the car
+windows the roofs and spires of several villages may be
+seen in different directions, while substantial farmhouses
+with their commodious out-buildings, are on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+every hand. The land is brought to a high state of
+cultivation, and the entire region seems almost like
+an extensive park.</p>
+
+<p>Lancaster, the county-seat of Lancaster County,
+Pennsylvania, is situated on the Conestoga River,
+seventy-three miles from Philadelphia. This river,
+which is a tributary of the Susquehanna, is made navigable
+by nine locks and slack-water pools, from Lancaster
+to its mouth at Safe Harbor, eighteen miles distant.
+Considerable trade is brought to the city by its means;
+while Tidewater Canal opens up navigable communication
+to Baltimore, by way of Port Deposit. Lancaster
+was, from 1799 to 1812, the seat of the State
+government; it was incorporated in 1818, and was at
+one time the principal inland town of Pennsylvania.
+The oldest turnpike in the United States terminates at
+Lancaster, connecting that city with Philadelphia. It
+has now something more than twenty-five thousand
+inhabitants, largely descended from the early Dutch
+settlers, whose names are still borne, and whose language,
+corrupted into "Pennsylvania Dutch," is still a most
+familiar one in that region.</p>
+
+<p>The city is principally a manufacturing one, producing
+locomotives, axes, carriages and cotton goods, and being
+particularly celebrated for its rifles. It has many fine
+buildings, both public and private. The Court House
+and County Prison will both attract attention, the
+former being in the Corinthian and the latter in the
+Norman style of architecture. Fulton Hall, near the
+Market-place, is a large edifice used for public
+assemblies. Franklin and Marshall College, organized
+in 1853 by the union of Marshall College with the old
+Franklin College, founded in 1787, is found on James<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+street, and possesses a library of thirteen thousand
+volumes. It has a large number of both daily and
+weekly newspapers, and not less than fifteen churches.</p>
+
+<p>Whit-Monday is by far the greatest social holiday
+with the Germans of Lancaster city and county, and,
+as such, is the scene of general festivities among the
+city folk and a large influx of country visitors. On
+the return of this day in Lancaster, the venders of beer,
+peanuts, colored lemonade and pop-corn are stationed
+at every corner, and are unusually clamorous and busy.
+The pic-nics, shows and flying horses are well patronized;
+but I am told that the scene in the public square
+is not so animated as in former days, when soap venders
+and the razor strop man monopolized the attention of
+the rustic lads and lasses. Public ceremonies have no
+apparent place in the observance of this anniversary.</p>
+
+<p>Lancaster is noted for having been the residence of
+three persons who have played an important part in
+the affairs of the nation: James Buchanan, our fifteenth
+President; Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, the champion of
+the slave; and General Reynolds, the gallant soldier,
+who fell at Gettysburg. These all sleep their last sleep
+within the city limits. James Buchanan, though born
+in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, made his home at
+Lancaster during all the years of his statesmanship,
+finding at Wheatland, his country residence, in the
+vicinity of the city, relaxation from the cares of public
+life. Born in 1791, in 1814 he was elected a member
+of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. In
+1820 he was elected Congressman, holding that position
+until 1831, when he was appointed ambassador to
+Russia. In 1834 he was made Senator; in 1845
+Secretary of State under President Polk, and Ambas<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>sador
+to England in 1854. In 1856 he was elected
+President of the United States, the close of his administration
+being signalized by the secession of South
+Carolina, and the incipient steps of the Rebellion. He
+died at his home at Wheatland, in Lancaster, on June
+first, 1868.</p>
+
+<p>The remains of Thaddeus Stevens, for so many years
+one of the most fearless champions of the anti-slavery
+cause in Congress, lie buried in "Schreiner's Cemetery,"
+in a quiet and retired corner at the side furthest from
+its entrance on West Chestnut street. An exceedingly
+plain stone, with a simple but expressive inscription,
+tells the stranger the date of his birth and death, and
+the reasons which led him to request that his remains
+should be laid in this, the most unpretentious cemetery
+I have ever seen within the limits of any city. The
+word Stevens is clearly cut in large letters on the west
+end of the stone. On the opposite end I noticed a
+gilt star. On the north side is the following inscription:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+"<span class="smcap">Thaddeus Stevens,<br />
+Born at Danville, Caledonia Co., Vermont,<br />
+April 4th, 1792.<br />
+Died at Washington, D. C,<br />
+August 11th, 1868.</span>"</p>
+
+<p>On the south side of the monument are found these
+words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"I repose in this quiet and secluded spot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Not from any natural preference for solitude,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">But finding other cemeteries limited as to race,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By charter rules,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">I have chosen this that I might illustrate in my death<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The principles which I advocated through a long life:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Equality of man before his Creator."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>General Reynolds was among the first to fall at the
+battle of Gettysburg. On the evening of June thirtieth,
+1863, while commanding the First, Third and Eleventh
+Corps of the Army of the Potomac, he encamped near
+the village of Emmetsburg, Maryland. He was ordered
+by General Meade to move early in the morning,
+with his First and Third Corps, in the direction of
+Gettysburg. The Third Cavalry Division, under General
+John Buford, was attacked on Wednesday morning,
+on the Chambersburg pike, about two miles west of the
+village, by the vanguard of the Rebel army, which,
+however, were driven back upon their reserves, but
+advanced again and, with greatly augmented numbers,
+drove the Union troops before them. General Wadsworth,
+hearing the sound of the conflict, came up with
+his men and seized the range of hills in the direction of
+Chambersburg, overlooking the battle ground from the
+northwest. While Wadsworth was getting into position,
+Reynolds rode forward, unattended, to gain an idea
+of the position and numbers of the enemy. He discovered
+a heavy force not far distant, in a grove, and, while
+reconnoitring through his field-glass, one of the enemy's
+sharpshooters took aim at him, with fatal effect. He
+fell to the ground, never to rise again. He was a
+brave and dauntless soldier, who had already won such
+distinction on the battlefield that few were entrusted
+with as heavy responsibilities as he. Had his life been
+prolonged, no doubt he would have been promoted still
+higher, and his name might have been written among
+those of the successful generals of the war. His ashes
+repose at Lancaster, where due honor is done them.</p>
+
+<p>Lancaster might not inappropriately be called the
+Cemetery City, for every principal street seems to lead<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+to a cemetery. Here, in these cities of the dead, lie
+those who have passed away for many generations back.
+Numerous venerable stones record, in Dutch, the names
+and virtues of Herrs and Fraus who lived and died in
+the last century, while more modern tombstones and
+monuments are erected over the later dead. Few
+places are more interesting to one who would study a
+people and their history, than an old graveyard; and
+few cities furnish the visitor more numerous or better
+opportunities than Lancaster.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
+
+<h2>MILWAUKEE.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Rapid Development of the Northwest.&mdash;The "West" Forty Years
+Ago.&mdash;Milwaukee and its Commerce and Manufactures.&mdash;Grain
+Elevators.&mdash;Harbor.&mdash;Divisions of the City.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Northwestern
+National Asylum for Disabled Soldiers.&mdash;German
+Population.&mdash;Influence and Results of German Immigration.&mdash;Bank
+Riot in 1862.&mdash;Ancient Tumuli.&mdash;Mound Builders.&mdash;Mounds
+Near Milwaukee.&mdash;Significance of Same.&mdash;Early
+Traders.&mdash;Foundation of the City in 1835.&mdash;Excelling Chicago
+in 1870.&mdash;Population and Commerce in 1880.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>There is no more astonishing fact connected
+with the history of our country than the rapid
+settlement of the Northwest, the development of its vast
+agricultural and mineral resources, and the almost
+magical growth of towns and cities along the margins of
+its lakes and rivers. A person who has not passed
+middle age can remember when the "West" indicated
+Indiana and Illinois, which were reached by the
+emigrant after many days of weary travel in his own rude-covered
+wagon, and before starting on his journey to which
+he bade kindred and friends a solemn adieu, scarcely
+hoping to meet them again in this world. Then the
+present great trade centres of the west were mere villages,
+with ambitious aspirations, it is true, but contending for a
+successful future against fearful odds. A man who has
+reached threescore and ten can remember when most
+of these towns and cities had no existence save as Indian
+trading posts, and when most of the country west of the
+Mississippi was as yet unexplored and regarded either as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+a desert waste or a howling wilderness. Only the brave
+Jesuit missionaries had at that period dared the perils of
+something even more dangerous than a frontier life, and
+established missions throughout the Northwest, on the
+sites of what are to-day thriving towns.</p>
+
+<p>But the genius and daring of the Anglo-Saxon race
+have changed all this. Civilization has impressed itself
+so deeply on our Northwestern territory, that were it, by
+any unfortunate contingency, destroyed or removed to-day,
+it would take longer time to obliterate its footprints
+than it has required to make them.</p>
+
+<p>Among the cities of the West remarkable for rapid
+growth, Milwaukee, on the western bank of Lake
+Michigan, is especially prominent. First settled in
+1835, and not chartered as a city until 1846, she has
+made such rapid strides in both population and commerce,
+that in 1880 her inhabitants numbered 115,578,
+and in 1870 she claimed the rank of the fourth city in
+the Union in marine commerce, a rank which she has
+since lost, not by any backward steps on her own
+part, but because of the sudden and astonishing development
+of other cities.</p>
+
+<p>A rival of Chicago, Milwaukee shares with that city
+the commerce of the lakes, and is connected by steamboats
+with many points on the opposite side of Lake
+Michigan and with more distant ports. She is the lake
+terminus of a large number of railroads which drain an
+agricultural region of great extent and fertility; while
+her nearness to the copper mines of Lake Superior and
+the inexhaustible iron mines distant but from forty to
+fifty miles to the northward, contribute to make her a
+manufacturing centre. A single establishment for the
+manufacture of railroad iron was established, at a cost of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+a million of dollars. She has other iron works, and manufactures
+machinery, agricultural implements, car wheels
+and steam boilers, large quantities of tobacco and cigars;
+furnishes the Northwest with furniture, and has extensive
+pork packing establishments, while the products of her
+flouring mills and lager beer breweries find markets in
+every quarter of the United States, and have a reputation
+all their own. The rolling mill of the North Chicago
+Rolling Mill Company is one of the most extensive in
+the West.</p>
+
+<p>As a grain depot, Milwaukee takes high rank.
+There are six immense elevators within the limits of the
+city, with a united capacity of 3,450,000 bushels; the
+largest one, the grain elevator of the Milwaukee and St.
+Paul Railroad, being one of the largest on the continent,
+and having a storage capacity of 1,500,000 bushels.
+The flour mills of E. Sanderson &amp; Company have a
+daily capacity of one thousand barrels of flour.</p>
+
+<p>The harbor of Milwaukee is the best on the south or
+west shore of Lake Michigan. It is formed by the mouth
+of the Milwaukee River, and the largest lake boat can
+ascend it for two miles, to the heart of the city, at which
+point the Menomonee River unites with the Milwaukee.
+The course of the Milwaukee River is nearly due south,
+while that of the Menomonee is nearly due west; and
+by these two rivers and their united stream after their
+junction, the city is divided into three very nearly equal
+districts, which are severally known as the East, being
+that portion of the city between the Milwaukee River and
+Lake Michigan; the West, that portion included between
+the two rivers; and the South, or the territory south of
+them both. The city embraces an area of seventeen
+square miles, and is laid out with the regularity char<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>acteristic
+of western cities. The business quarter lies in
+a sort of hollow in the neighborhood of the two rivers,
+whose shores are lined with wharves. The East and
+West portions of the city are chiefly occupied by residences,
+the former being upon a high bluff, overlooking
+the lake, and the latter upon a still higher bluff west of
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>Milwaukee is known as the "Cream City of the
+Lakes," this name being derived from the cream-colored
+brick of which many of the buildings are constructed.
+It gives to the streets a peculiarly light and cheerful
+aspect. The whole architectural appearance of the city
+is one of primness rather than of grandeur, which might
+not inappropriately suggest for it the name of the
+"Quaker City of the West." The residence streets are
+shaded by avenues of trees, which add to the cheerful
+beauty of the town. The principal hotels and retail
+stores are found upon East Water street, Wisconsin
+street and Second avenue, which are all three wide and
+handsome thoroughfares. The United States Custom
+House stands on the corner of Wisconsin and Milwaukee
+streets, and is the finest public building in the city. It
+is of Athens stone, and contains the Post Office and
+United States Courts. The County Court House is also
+a striking edifice. The Opera House, used for theatrical
+purposes, is worthy of mention; while the Academy of
+Music, which was erected in 1864, by the German
+Musical Society, at a cost of $65,000, has an elegant
+auditorium, seating two thousand three hundred persons.
+The Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. John, and the new
+Baptist Church, are fine church edifices, but the finest
+which the city contains is the Immanual Presbyterian
+Church. A Free Public Library possesses a collection of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+fourteen thousand volumes, and a well-supplied reading
+room. Several banking houses have imposing buildings.
+The most prominent among the educational institutions
+of the city is the Milwaukee Female College, which was
+finished in 1873. There are three Orphan Asylums, a
+Home for the Friendless, and two Hospitals. One of the
+chief points of interest to the visitor is the Northwestern
+National Asylum for disabled soldiers, which furnishes
+excellent accommodation for from seven hundred to
+eight hundred inmates. It is an immense brick edifice,
+located three miles from the city, in the midst of grounds
+four hundred and twenty-five acres in extent, more than
+half of which is under cultivation, and the remainder
+laid out as a park. The institution has a reading room,
+and a library of two thousand five hundred volumes, for
+the use and benefit of its patriot guests.</p>
+
+<p>No one who visits Milwaukee can fail to be struck
+with the semi-foreign appearance of the city. Breweries
+are multiplied throughout its streets, lager beer saloons
+abound, beer gardens, with their flowers and music and
+cleanly arbor-shaded tables, attract the tired and thirsty
+in various quarters. German music halls, gasthausen,
+and restaurants are found everywhere, and German
+signs are manifest over many doors. One hears German
+spoken upon the streets quite as often as English, and
+Teuton influence upon the political and social life of the
+city is everywhere seen and felt. Germans constitute
+nearly one-half the entire population of Milwaukee,
+and have impressed their character upon the people and
+the city itself in other ways than socially. Steady-going
+plodders, with their love for music and flowers, they have
+yet no keen taste for display, and every time choose the
+substantial rather than the ornamental. Milwaukee is a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+sort of rendezvous for the Scandinavian emigrants, who
+are pouring in like a mighty tide to fill up the States of
+Wisconsin and Minnesota. Danes and Swedes, and
+especially Norwegians, stop here, and it may be, linger
+for a longer or shorter period, before they strike out
+into the, to them, unknown country which is to be their
+future home. Domestic service is largely supplied by
+the Norwegians, who prove themselves honest, industrious
+and capable.</p>
+
+<p>This mighty influx of the Germanic and Scandinavian
+races into our Northwest is certain to produce a permanent
+impression upon the social condition of those States.
+Yet our system of government is adapted to the successful
+management of such immigration. It cannot, perhaps,
+do so much with the immigrants themselves. Many of
+them intelligent, but more of them ignorant and stupid,
+they remain foreign in their habits and ideas to the end
+of their lives. But it makes citizens of their sons,
+trains them up with an understanding of democratic
+institutions, gives them an education, for the most part,
+forces them to acquire our language, and instead of
+making them a separate class, recognizes them as an
+undivided part of the whole population. In brief, it
+Americanizes them, and though habits and traits of
+character and race still cling to them in some degree,
+their original nationality is soon lost in the great
+cosmopolitan tide of civilized humanity which swells
+and surges around them. Different races intermarry
+and blend, and form a composite of personnel and
+character which is fast becoming individualized and
+recognized as the type of the true American. After a
+few generations but little remains save the patronymic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+to remind the descendants of these immigrants of their
+original descent.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever the German race has settled it has taken
+substantial prosperity with it. The members of that
+race have proved themselves honest, industrious, and
+pre&euml;minently loyal. To the "Dutch" St. Louis owed
+her own modified loyalty during the late civil war.
+The German element of Cincinnati also turned the
+tide of popular sentiment in favor of the North, and
+secured for that city, during war times, an immunity
+from disturbance, and a prosperity unexampled during
+her previous history. They bring with them not only
+thrift, but an appreciation for the refining arts which is
+not found in any other class of immigrants. The German
+quarter of a city may nearly always be discovered
+by the abundance of flowers in windows and balconies,
+and growing thriftily in secluded courts. The German
+better appreciates his beer when sipped in the midst of
+natural beauties, and to the sound of music. To this
+music-loving characteristic of her German population
+Milwaukee owes her finest music hall, the Academy of
+Music already described. They are not quick of thought,
+but even their stolidity, when it is offset and modified by
+the almost supernatural sharpness and quickness of wit
+of other nationalities which also look to America as
+a refuge from oppression, produces a useful counter-balance,
+and the offspring of the two will be apt to
+possess stability of character with intellectual alertness.
+The Germans have their faults, undoubtedly, but they
+are less obnoxious than those of some other classes of
+immigrants, and when modified often become virtues.</p>
+
+<p>Milwaukee, since her existence as a city, has had a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+comparatively uneventful history. She has not been
+ravaged by flood, like Cincinnati, nor by fire, like
+Chicago, nor by pestilence, like Memphis, nor by famine,
+like many cities in the old world. She has moved on
+in the even tenor of her way, increasing her commerce
+and adding to her industries, perfecting her school
+system and enlarging her own domain. The only
+disturbance which is recorded against her in the chronicles
+of her existence, occurred in June, 1862, when
+there was a riot, in consequence of the rejection, by the
+bankers of Milwaukee, of the notes of most of the banks
+of the State. The banks of Wisconsin being governed,
+at that time, by a free banking law, modeled, in a great
+measure, after that of New York, had purchased largely
+the bonds of different Southern States, and deposited
+them with the State Comptroller as a security for their
+issues, the bonds of said States usually being lower than
+those of the Northern States. When the Southern
+States withdrew from the Union there was, in consequence,
+a rapid reduction of the value of these securities,
+and an equally rapid depreciation of the value of the
+bank notes based upon them. Their issues were finally
+curtailed, occasioning severe loss and great bitterness of
+feeling on the part of those who held them. The riot
+consequent on this state of affairs resulted in a considerable
+destruction of property, though no lives were lost.
+It was finally quelled by the State authorities.</p>
+
+<p>Of the original inhabitants of Wisconsin, we have no
+knowledge whatever. The only traces they have left of
+their existence are numerous ancient mounds or tumuli,
+which are scattered at various points all over the State.
+Their antiquity is attested by the fact that trees of four
+hundred years' growth are found standing upon them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+Discoveries in the Lake Superior copper regions, of
+mines which had once been worked, over which trees of
+a like age were growing, seem to indicate that the
+same people raised the mounds and worked the mines.
+In all probability their antiquity extends further backward
+than this. The Indians, improperly called the
+aborigines, have no traditions concerning the construction
+of these mounds, which are evidently none of their
+handiwork, but belong to a race which has been supplanted
+and disappeared from the globe. The similarity
+of these mounds to those discovered in Central America
+leads to the conclusion that they were both the work of
+one and the same race; but whether they were constructed
+as tombs or as places for altars, there is a division of
+opinion. Those in Central America were evidently once
+surmounted by temples or places of worship and sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>These mounds vary in size, shape and height. At
+Prairie du Chien one of the largest of these tumuli was
+leveled to furnish a site for Fort Crawford. It was
+circular in form, having a base of some two hundred
+feet, and was twenty feet high. The circular form is the
+most common in those mounds, although there are many
+different shapes. Some appear like wells, inclosing an
+open space; others like breastworks with angles; still
+others have a space through them, as if they formed a
+sort of gateway. On the dividing ridge between the
+Mississippi and Wisconsin rivers mounds are found in
+the form of birds with their wings and tails spread; of
+deer, rabbits and other animals. One even bears a
+marked resemblance to an elephant. There are also a
+few mounds representing a man lying on his face.
+They are three or four feet high at the highest points,
+rounding over the sides.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One of the most singular characteristics of these
+mounds is that they seem invariably to be composed of
+earth brought from a greater or less distance. The
+surface of the surrounding ground usually comes up to
+the base of the mound in a smooth level, when it does
+not already possess a natural elevation; but there is no
+evidence of the ground anywhere in the neighborhood
+having been disturbed to furnish the earth for their
+construction. In some instances the soil of these tumuli
+is of an actually different character, the like of which has
+not been discovered within several miles of the mounds.</p>
+
+<p>These antiquities constitute the only mementos and
+annals transmitted to us, of the mysterious race which
+once peopled our western territory, and extended as far
+east as the shores of the Ohio, as far north as the great
+lakes, and westward and southward to Central America.
+It seems a pity that no systematic effort has been made
+to perpetuate them, if not for the benefit of future
+generations whose interest and curiosity should be excited
+at beholding them, at least out of a consideration for the
+unknown race whose work they are, and as enduring
+monuments to whose numbers and industry they have
+remained up to the present time, when all else has
+perished. The plow, the hoe and the spade, those
+iconoclastic weapons of civilization, are fast effacing them
+from the surface of the country. When the plow once
+breaks the sod which has covered them and preserved
+their form, the wind and rain each lend speedy assistance
+to the work of destruction, and but a few years
+will elapse before most of them will have disappeared
+altogether, and the places which have known them for
+untold centuries will know them no more forever.</p>
+
+<p>It is a fact worthy of mention that these mounds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+have most frequently been found on sites selected for
+modern towns and cities, as though ancients and
+moderns alike had instinctively chosen for their abiding
+places those localities most favored by nature for
+the uses of man. Numerous earthworks about Milwaukee
+attest the favor in which the locality of that
+city was held by this pre-historic race. These works
+extend from Kinnickinnic Creek, near the "Indian
+Fields," where they are most abundant, to a point six
+miles above the city. They occupy high grounds near
+but not in immediate proximity to the lake and streams,
+and are most varied in their form, while many are of
+large extent. They are chiefly from one hundred to
+four hundred feet in diameter, and represent turtles,
+lizards, birds, the otter and buffalo, while a number
+have the form of a war club. Occasionally, a mound is
+elevated so as to overlook or command many others, as
+though it was a sort of high or superior altar for the
+observance of religious or sacrificial rites. Milwaukee
+is to be commended for her failure to manifest that
+spirit of modern vandalism which, in other sections,
+has sacrificed the relics of a by-gone age and people to
+the fancied utility of civilization. The Forest Home
+Cemetery incloses a number of these mounds, and so
+they are preserved for the benefit of the antiquary and
+curiosity seeker. We trust she will continue to cherish
+sacredly these few monuments left as the sole legacy of
+the ancient inhabitants of the West.</p>
+
+<p>The early Indian name of the river upon which the
+city of Milwaukee now stands was Mellcoki. So says
+one tradition. Another gives the name as Man-a-wau-kee,
+from the name of a valuable medicinal root
+known as Man-wau; hence, the land or place of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+Man-wau. Still another gives the Indian name as
+Me-ne-wau-kee&mdash;-a rich or beautiful land. The Indians
+had a village on the site of the present city. The Milwaukee
+tribe were troublesome and difficult to manage.
+About the first trader who ventured to establish a post
+among them was Alexander Laframboise, who came
+from Mackinaw and located on the spot previous to or
+about 1785. This trading post, having been mismanaged,
+was discontinued about 1800, and another soon
+took its place. A succession of trading posts and fur
+stations followed, until about 1818, when Solomon
+Juneau, a Frenchman, established himself there permanently,
+with a little colony of half-breeds, who built
+themselves log cabins on the banks of the stream, two
+miles from the lake, near the junction of the Menomonee.
+Below them, on the river flats, where now extend
+the business streets of the city, the low marshy ground
+was overgrown by tall reeds and rushes, while away
+back from the river stretched the boundless prairie.
+The place was known, thenceforth, as Juneau's Settlement.
+This settlement gradually attracted, first, other
+traders, and finally immigrants. In 1825 it was still
+nothing more than a trading station, but ten years later
+it had become a settlement and called itself a town,
+taking the name of Milwaukee, from the river upon
+which it was built.</p>
+
+<p>Chicago had already begun her marvelous growth,
+and was at that very time extending herself to extraordinary
+dimensions&mdash;on paper. The little town of
+Milwaukee had then no thought of rivalry, but was
+content to plod along for eleven years more before it
+received its city charter. By 1850 its growth had been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+remarkable, and it numbered more than twenty thousand
+inhabitants. In 1860 it had more than doubled
+this population, recording over forty-five thousand inhabitants,
+and in 1870 it had almost doubled again, the
+census reporting more than seventy-one thousand persons
+for that year. In the same year Milwaukee received
+18,466,167 bushels of wheat, actually exceeding Chicago
+by about a million of bushels. The shipments of wheat
+the same year were 16,027,780 bushels, and of flour
+1,225,340 barrels. Her exports for that year also included
+butter, hops, lumber, wool and shingles, of all
+which commodities she shipped immense quantities.
+From 1870 to 1880 the increase of population and
+commerce was equally astonishing, while her manufactures
+had grown in like proportion.</p>
+
+<p>The vast lumber regions to the northwest help to
+build up her business; new towns which spring up
+throughout the State become tributary to her; and the
+farms which are multiplying in that fertile region send
+a share of their products to find a gateway through her
+to the eastern markets and to Europe. She divides
+with Chicago the trade which, by means of the great
+lakes and the great railway trunk lines, is busy going to
+and fro in the land, from east to west and from west to
+east. When the Northern Pacific Railway furnishes a
+continuous route of travel and freight between Lake
+Superior and the Northern Pacific States, the business of
+Milwaukee will be naturally augmented. But her
+future prosperity depends largely upon the prosperity
+of the agricultural population which surrounds her,
+which fills her elevators and warehouses, and furnishes
+freight for her boats with its products, and has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+need of her manufactures in return. And thus we
+see illustrated the fundamental principle of political
+economy, that that which concerns one must concern
+all; that one class or section of people cannot suffer
+without affecting in some degree all classes and sections.
+All are interdependent, and all must stand or
+fall together.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h3>
+
+<h2>MONTREAL.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Thousand Islands.&mdash;Long Sault Rapids.&mdash;Lachine Rapids.&mdash;Victoria
+Bridge.&mdash;Mont R&egrave;al.&mdash;Early History of Montreal.&mdash;Its
+Shipping Interests.&mdash;Quays.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Population.&mdash;Roman
+Catholic Supremacy.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Nunneries.&mdash;Hospitals.&mdash;Colleges.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Victoria
+Skating Rink.&mdash;Sleighing.&mdash;Early Disasters.&mdash;Points of Interest.&mdash;The
+"Canucks."</p></div>
+
+
+<p>The traveler who visits Montreal should, if
+possible, make his approach to that city by a
+descent of the St. Lawrence River, that he may become
+acquainted with some of the most beautiful scenery in
+America. Leaving Kingston, at the outlet of Lake
+Ontario, he will wind his way through the mazes of the
+Thousand Islands, which will seem to him as if belonging
+to an enchanted country. These islands, situated at
+the head of the St. Lawrence, extend down the river for
+a distance of thirty miles, and are innumerable and of
+every size and shape. Wolf Island, about fifteen miles
+in length, is the largest; while some of the smallest
+seem like mere flower-pots rising out of the water, with
+but a single plant. They are most picturesque in
+appearance, their rocky foundations being veiled and
+softened by the trees and shrubbery which cover them.
+In past ages mythology would have made these islands
+the sacred abodes of the gods, and peopled their woods
+and dells with nymphs and fauns, while the intervening
+channels would have been presided over by naiads. A
+little more than a generation ago, a single inhabitant, a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+freebooter, who levied toll upon the passers up and
+down the river, and who concealed his ill-gotten booty
+in his numerous lurking-places in the islands, turned
+this terrestrial paradise into a pirate's den. To-day the
+Thousand Islands have become famous summer resorts
+for the denizens of our northern cities; and large and
+small are studded with attractive cottages and imposing
+villas; while nature, already so beautiful in its wild
+state, has been trained into the tamer beauty of modern
+landscape gardening.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond the islands the majestic St. Lawrence rolls on
+until it reaches the rapids, celebrated in song by Thomas
+Moore. Here the river narrows, and the current rushes
+impetuously over and between the rocks which jut from
+its bottom; while the pilot, with watchfulness and skill,
+guides the boat through the treacherous channel, and
+lands her safely in the smoother waters beyond. These
+rapids are known as the Long Sault Rapids, and are
+nine miles in length. A raft will drift this whole
+distance in forty minutes. The passage of boats down
+these rapids was considered impossible until 1840, when
+the famous Indian pilot, Teronhiah&eacute;r&eacute;, after watching
+the course of rafts down the stream, attempted it, and
+discovered a safe channel for steamboats. Many of the
+pilots are still Indians, who exhibit great skill and
+courage in the undertaking. There has never yet been
+a fatal accident in shooting these rapids. The Cornwall
+Canal, eleven miles long, permits vessels to go around
+the rapids in ascending the river.</p>
+
+<p>The Lachine Rapids, nine miles above Montreal,
+although the shortest, are the most dangerous. It is
+easy enough to descend these rapids, if one is not
+particular as to results; but it is difficult enough to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+descend them safely. The faint-hearted had better
+commit themselves to the more placid waters of the
+canal, or take to the railroad. But to the brave
+traveler there is a certain exhilaration in thus toying
+with and conquering danger. The rapids fairly passed,
+one can distinguish the long line and graceful archways
+of the Victoria Bridge, and the towers and spires of
+Montreal.</p>
+
+<p>Montreal is on an island thirty-two miles in length,
+and with a width at its widest of ten miles. It is at
+the junction of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa, both of
+them noble rivers, and is connected with the mainland
+by two bridges, one of them spanning the Ottawa by a
+series of immense arches; and the other, the Victoria
+bridge, thrown across the St. Lawrence. The length of
+the latter bridge is nearly two miles. It rests upon
+twenty-three piers and two abutments of solid masonry,
+the central span being three hundred and thirty feet
+long. Its total cost was about $6,300,000. It was
+formally opened to the public by the Prince of Wales,
+on the occasion of his visit to America during the
+summer of 1860. The railway track runs through an
+iron tube, twenty-two feet high and sixteen feet wide.
+The river rolls nearly a hundred feet below, in summer
+a sweeping flood, and in winter a sort of glacier, the ice
+masses piled and heaped upon one another, as they have
+been upheaved or hurled in the contentions between the
+current and the frost-king.</p>
+
+<p>The city of Montreal is distinctly outlined against
+Mount Royal or Mont R&egrave;al, which rises back of it, its
+edifices showing dark and gray, except where the sun
+catches its numerous tin roofs, making them glitter like
+burnished steel. It takes its name from Mont R&egrave;al, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+mountain already referred to, which closes it in on one
+side, and rises seven hundred and fifty feet above the
+river. Its eastern suburb, still known as Hochelaga,
+was the site of an Indian village when it was discovered,
+in 1535, by Jacques Cartier, and this explorer it was
+who gave the name to the mountain. In 1642, just
+one hundred and fifty years after the discovery of
+America, it was settled by the French, retaining its
+Indian name for a century later, when that appellation
+was replaced by the French one of "Ville Marie." In
+1761 the city came into the possession of the British,
+and received its present name. In 1775 it was
+captured by the Americans under General Montgomery,
+and held by them until the following summer.</p>
+
+<p>Montreal was, under both French and British rule, an
+outpost of Quebec until 1832, when it became a separate
+port. The shallower parts of the river being deepened
+above Quebec, Montreal became accessible to boats drawing
+from nineteen to twenty-two feet of water. It is
+now the chief shipping port of Canada. It is five
+hundred miles from the sea, and ninety miles above
+tidewater; and being at the head of ship navigation of
+the St. Lawrence, and at the foot of the great chain of
+inland lakes, rivers and canals which connect it with
+the very centre of the American continent, its commerce
+is very important. At the confluence of the Ottawa
+with the St. Lawrence, it is also the outlet of a vast
+lumber country. It feels, however, the serious disadvantage
+of being, for five months in the year, blockaded,
+and made, to all intents and purposes, an inland city, by
+the closing of navigation during the winter. Then, by
+means of the Grand Trunk and other railways, it becomes
+tributary to Portland, Maine, and finds, at that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+city, a port for its commerce. Its two miles of quays,
+including the locks and stone-cut wharves of the Lachine
+Canal, all built of solid limestone, would do credit to any
+city in the world; while a broad wall or esplanade extends
+between these quays and the houses which overlook
+the river. Montreal takes a front rank in its
+manufacturing interests, which embrace all kinds of
+agricultural and mechanical implements, steam engines,
+printing types, India-rubber shoes, paper, furniture,
+woolens, cordage and flour. In 1874 its exports were
+valued at over twenty-two millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The population of Montreal in 1779 was only about
+seven thousand inhabitants. In 1861 it had increased
+to 70,323; and in 1871 the census returns made the
+population 115,926. Of these inhabitants, probably
+more than one-half are Roman Catholics, representing
+a great variety of nationalities, among which, however,
+French Canadians and Irish predominate. The Catholics
+were, at first, under French dominion, in exclusive
+possession of the city, and the different religious societies
+gained vast wealth. Ever since Canada has passed into
+the hands of England they still hold their own, and
+exercise an influence over the people, and display a
+magnificence in their edifices and appointments, unknown
+in other sections of America.</p>
+
+<p>No city of the same size in the United States has such
+splendid churches. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of
+Notre Dame, fronting on the Place d'Armes, is the
+largest on the continent. It is two hundred and forty-one
+feet in length, by one hundred and thirty-five feet
+in width, and is capable of seating more than ten
+thousand persons. It is a massive structure, built of
+stone, in the Gothic style with a tower at each corner,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+and one in the middle of each flank, numbering six in
+all. The towers on the main front are two hundred
+and twelve feet high, and furnish to visitors a magnificent
+view of the city. In one of these towers is a fine
+chime of bells, the largest of which, the "Gros Bourdon,"
+weighs twenty-nine thousand four hundred
+pounds. But as large as is this cathedral, it will be
+surpassed in size by the Cathedral of St. Peter, now in
+process of erection at the corner of Dorchester and
+Cemetery streets, and built after the general plan of St.
+Peter's at Rome. This cathedral will be three hundred
+feet long by two hundred and twenty-five feet wide at the
+transepts, and will be surmounted by five domes, the
+largest of which will be two hundred and fifty feet in
+height, supported on four piers and thirty-two Corinthian
+columns. The vestibule alone will be two
+hundred feet long by thirty feet wide, and will be
+fronted by a portico, surmounted by colossal statues
+of the Apostles. It will, when completed, be by far
+the finest and largest church edifice in America. St
+Patrick's Church at the west end of Lagauch&egrave;re street,
+is noticeable for its handsome Gothic windows of
+stained glass, and will seat five thousand persons. The
+Church of the Ges&uuml;, in Blewry street, has the finest
+interior in the city, the vast nave, seventy-five feet in
+height, being bordered by rich composite columns, and
+the walls and ceilings beautifully frescoed.</p>
+
+<p>The Roman Catholic churches undoubtedly exceed
+in size and number those of the Protestants, though
+some of the latter are worthy of note. Christ Church
+Cathedral&mdash;Episcopal, in St. Catherine street, is the
+most perfect specimen of English Gothic architecture in
+America. It is built of rough Montreal stone, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+Caen stone facings, cruciform, and surmounted by a
+spire two hundred and twenty-four feet high. St.
+Andrew's Church&mdash;Presbyterian, in Radegonde street,
+is a fine specimen of Gothic architecture, being an
+imitation, on a reduced scale, of Salisbury Cathedral.
+Zion Church&mdash;Independent, in Radegonde street, near
+Victoria Square, was the scene of the riot and loss of
+life on the occasion of Gavazzi's lecture in 1852.</p>
+
+<p>Like Quebec, Montreal is famous for its nunneries.
+The Gray Nunnery, founded in 1692, for the care of
+lunatics and children, is situated in Dorchester street.
+This nunnery owns Nun's Island, in Lake St. Louis,
+above Montreal, once an Indian burial ground, but
+now in a high state of cultivation. In Notre Dame
+street, near the Place d'Armes, is the Black or Congregational
+Nunnery, which dates from 1659, and is
+devoted to the education of girls. At Hochelaga is the
+Convent of the Holy Name of Mary. The H&ocirc;tel
+Dieu, founded in 1644, for the cure of the sick, and St.
+Patrick's Hospital, are both under the charge of the
+Sisters of St. Joseph. The Christian Brothers have
+control of numerous schools, and render material aid
+to morality and religion. The Seminary of St. Sulspice
+is a large and stately building, devoted to the education
+of Catholic priests. Nuns and priests are familiar
+objects upon the streets, and not always a welcome sight
+to the Protestant eye; nevertheless, the good works in
+which they engage are numerous and not to be undervalued.</p>
+
+<p>The number of hospitals, scientific institutions,
+libraries, reading-rooms, schools and universities of
+Montreal is remarkable. Many of them are under
+Catholic control, and all are worthy of a highly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+civilized and prosperous community. First among the
+educational institutions of the city is McGill College,
+founded by a bequest of the Hon. James McGill, in
+1811, and erected into a university, by royal charter, in
+1821. It is beautifully situated at the base of Mount
+Royal, and, besides a large corps of able professors,
+possesses one of the finest museums in the country.</p>
+
+<p>Montreal is a beautiful city. Its public buildings
+are constructed of solid stone, in which a handsome
+limestone, found in the neighborhood, predominates.
+Its churches, banks, hospitals and colleges are all
+edifices of which to be proud. Its private dwellings
+are, a majority of them, substantially built, while many
+of the roofs, cupolas and spires are covered with metal,
+which, seen at a distance, glitters in the sun. The most
+elegant private residences are found upon the slope of
+Mont R&egrave;al, surrounded by ample grounds containing
+fine lawns, trees and shrubbery. From these hillside
+residences the scenery is most lovely, looking over a
+panorama of city, river and country, with the blue
+tops of the mountain ranges of New York, Vermont
+and New Hampshire plainly perceptible on clear
+days.</p>
+
+<p>St. Paul street is the chief commercial thoroughfare,
+and extends nearly parallel to the river, but a square or
+two back from it, the whole length of the city. Commissioner
+street faces the quays and monopolizes much
+of the wholesale trade. McGill, St. James and Notre
+Dame are also important business streets. Great St.
+James and Notre Dame streets are the fashionable promenades,
+while Catherine, Dorchester and Sherbrook streets
+contain the finest private residences. At the intersection
+of McGill and St. James streets, in a small public square,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+called Victoria Square, is a fountain and a bronze statue
+of Queen Victoria. A number of fine buildings surround
+this square, prominent among which are the Albert
+buildings and the beautiful Gothic structure of the
+Young Men's Christian Association.</p>
+
+<p>Bontecour's Market, a spacious stone edifice in the
+Doric style, is one of the handsomest buildings in the
+city. It fronts the river at the corner of St. Paul and
+Water streets, is three stories high, surmounted by a
+dome, from which the view is exceptionally fine. The
+new City Hall, at the head of Jacques Cartier Square,
+containing the offices of the various civil and corporate
+functionaries, is an elegant structure, spacious and perfect
+in all its appointments. The Court House, in Notre
+Dame street, is three hundred feet long by one hundred
+and twenty-five feet wide, in the Doric style, and
+erected at a cost of over three hundred thousand dollars.
+It includes a law library of six thousand volumes.
+Back of it is the Champs de Mars, a fine military
+parade ground. The Custom House is between St.
+Paul street and the river, on the site of an old market-place,
+and is a massive structure with a fine tower.
+The Post Office is an elegant building near the Place
+d'Armes, in great St. James street. In the Place
+d'Armes, is the Bank of Montreal and the City Bank,
+Masonic Hall, the headquarters of the Masons of Canada,
+and several other of the principal banks of the city.
+Mechanics' Institute, in great St. James street, though
+plain externally, has an elaborately decorated lecture
+room. The principal hotels are the Windsor, in Dorchester
+street, one of the finest of its kind in America;
+the St. Lawrence, in Great St. James street; the Ottawa
+House, corner of St. James and Notre Dame streets;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+Montreal House, in Custom House Square; the Richelieu
+Hotel, and the Albion.</p>
+
+<p>One of the principal points of attraction in both
+winter and summer is the Victoria Skating Rink, in
+Dominion Square. This extensive building is used
+during the milder months of the year for horticultural
+shows, concerts and miscellaneous gatherings. In the
+winter the doors of this place are thronged with a crowd
+of sleighs and sleigh drivers, while inside, skaters and
+spectators form a living, moving panorama, pleasant to
+look upon. The place is lighted by gas, and men and
+women, old and young, with a plentiful sprinkling of
+children, on skates, are practicing all sorts of gyrations.
+The ladies are prettily and appropriately dressed in
+skating costumes, and some of them are proficient in
+the art of skating. The spectators sit or stand on a
+raised ledge around the ice parallelogram, while the
+skaters dart off, singly or in pairs, executing quadrilles,
+waltzes, curves, straight lines, letters, labyrinths, and
+every conceivable figure. Now and then some one
+comes to grief in the surging, moving throng; but is
+quickly on his or her feet again, the ice and water shaken
+off, and the zigzag resumed. Children skate; boys and
+girls; ladies and gentlemen, and even dignified military
+officers. Some skate well, some medium, some shockingly
+ill; but all skate, or essay to do so. It is the grand
+Montrealese pastime, and though the ice is sloppy, and
+the air chill and heavy with moisture, everybody has a
+good time.</p>
+
+<p>There is one other amusement of the public, and that
+is sleighing. The winter in the latitude of Montreal is
+long and cold, and sometimes the snow falls to a depth
+of several feet, lying upon the ground for months.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+When winter settles down upon the city, the river
+freezes over, leaving the island an island no longer, but
+making it part and parcel of the surrounding continent.
+Then the people wrap themselves in furs and betake
+themselves to their sleighs, and glide swiftly along the
+well-beaten roads, between the white drifts. Vehicles
+of every description, from the most elegant appointed
+sleigh down to the rough box sled, are seen upon the
+road, and the jingle of bells is everywhere heard, as the
+sledges follow, pass and repass one another on the snowy
+track. Ladies closely wrapped in furs and veils, and
+their cavaliers in fur caps with flaps brought closely
+around ears and chin, alike bid defiance to the temperature,
+which is not infrequently in the neighborhood
+of zero; and the blood seems to course more quickly for
+the keenness of the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>During its long history, Montreal has had disasters
+as well as successes. Something over a hundred
+years after its founding as a French colony it was nearly
+destroyed by fire, and a little later it became a favorite
+point of attack during the two American wars. But to-day
+it is the most thriving city of the British provinces.
+It has pushed its railway communications with great
+energy, and so long as peace is maintained between
+Canada and the United States it will continue to prosper.
+In the event of war, the city lies in an exposed
+position, and during the winter its only outlet, by rail
+to Portland, would be cut off.</p>
+
+<p>The Nelson Monument in Jacques Cartier Square,
+and near it the old Government House, will prove
+objects of interest to the visitor, though the former is in
+somewhat of a dilapidated condition. The city is supplied
+with water by works which are situated a mile or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+so above it, in the midst of beautiful scenery. Mount
+Royal Cemetery is two miles from the city, on the
+northern slope of the mountain. One of the most beautiful
+views in the neighborhood of Montreal is the famous
+around the mountain drive, nine miles in length, and
+passing by Mount Royal Park.</p>
+
+<p>First settled by the French, their descendants, the
+French Canadians, form a considerable proportion of
+the population of Montreal. But whatever they may
+have been in the past, they have degenerated into an
+illiterate, unenterprising people. The English, Irish
+and Scotch, who during the past century have been
+emigrating to Canada in such numbers, have monopolized
+most of the business, and have rescued Montreal,
+as well as Lower Canada generally, from a stagnation
+which was sure to creep upon it if left in the hands of
+the descendants of the early French settlers. Arcadian
+innocence and simplicity have developed, or rather
+degenerated, into indolence, stolidity and ignorance.
+The priests do the thinking for these people, who, apparently
+have few ambitions in life beyond meeting its
+daily wants. Thus, though the streets of Montreal
+still bear the old names, and though its architecture still
+retains much of the quaintness which it early assumed,
+the business is largely in the hands of the Anglo-Saxons
+and Celts, who are its later settlers; and English pluck,
+Irish industry, Scotch thrift and American push, are all
+brought into marked contrast with the sluggishness and
+lethargy of the "Canucks." The names over the
+principal business houses are either English, Scotch or
+Irish; and the sympathies of the intelligent people are
+entirely in harmony with the government under which
+they live.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>NEWARK.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>From New York to Newark.&mdash;Two Hundred Years Ago.&mdash;The
+Pioneers.&mdash;Public Parks.&mdash;City of Churches.&mdash;The Canal.&mdash;Sailing
+Up-Hill.&mdash;An Old Graveyard.&mdash;New Amsterdam and
+New Netherlands.&mdash;The Dutch and English.&mdash;Adventurers from
+New England.&mdash;The Indians.&mdash;Rate of Population.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Rank
+as a City.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Nine miles, in a westerly direction, from New
+York, on a lovely morning in the early autumn
+of 1880, by the comfortable cars of that most perfect
+of all railways, the "Pennsylvania," brought our little
+party to Newark, which I had often heard spoken of
+as the leading commercial and manufacturing city of
+New Jersey.</p>
+
+<p>Situated in the northeastern corner of the State, on
+the west bank of the Passaic, three miles from its
+entrance into Newark Bay&mdash;the city of Newark occupies
+the most delightful spot in a State famed for its
+beauty. In our short journey from New York we
+passed over broad, level meadows, bearing some resemblance
+to a western prairie. The Passaic and the
+Hackensack rivers traverse these prairie-like meadows,
+while rising abruptly in the distance you behold the
+historic Bergen Heights.</p>
+
+<p>Disembarking at the conveniently located Market
+Street Depot, we sought and found a temporary home,
+and then lost no time in gratifying our native curiosity,
+by exploring the city and learning something of its
+origin and history.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Newark is over two hundred years old, and yet is
+regularly laid out; its wide and well paved streets are
+adorned and shaded with grand old elms&mdash;some of them
+coeval with the founding of the city. Its chief business
+thoroughfare, Broad street, running north and south,
+through the central part of the city, has many fine business
+blocks, and a finer avenue cannot be found than the
+south end of Broad street, lined with wide-spreading
+elms, and extending, apparently, into infinitude. One
+peculiarity that absorbed my attention, was the vast
+number of manufacturing establishments here, located,
+for the most part, outside of the central streets, and these
+are doubtless the source of her prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>About two hundred years ago Newark was an obscure
+hamlet of some sixty odd settlers. Since that time it
+has grown into a city of one hundred and thirty
+thousand inhabitants. The handful of original settlers
+were, for the most part, upright, earnest and sturdy
+mechanics, of Anglo-Saxon blood, and they laid the
+foundation of what is now one of the most important
+cities of the Union, ranking, indeed, among the foremost
+of the world's industrial bee-hives&mdash;a monster workshop,
+whose skilled labor cannot well be surpassed
+anywhere. They called their village after the old
+English town of Newark-on-Trent; and Newark-on
+Passaic has now grown into a city ten times greater
+than its ancient namesake.</p>
+
+<p>The public parks possess a startling interest to the
+stranger visiting Newark for the first time. Seldom
+have I found so many, and of such extent, in a city that
+measures only five miles long, by five broad. Possessed
+of such breathing places, a town must of necessity be
+healthy, and I accordingly found this strongly indicated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+in the faces of all I met, more especially of the blooming
+young maidens and their mammas. We are told that
+when the first settlers purchased the site of Newark and
+its surrounding lands, of the native Indians, and laid
+out their embryo city, they wisely reserved certain tracts
+for public purposes, and that most of these still exist as
+ornaments of the city. Besides those set apart for
+churches and graveyards, the principal reservations were
+the "Training-place," the "Market-place," and the
+"Watering-place." The Training-place is now Military
+Park, on the east side of Broad street, near its centre;
+and the Market-place is now Washington Park. These
+and several others in various parts of this favored city,
+form delightful retreats from the sun's rays&mdash;shaded by
+majestic elms&mdash;a veritable <i>rus in urbe</i>. The suburbs
+also are passing beautiful, extending to Orange on the
+west, and to within a mile of Elizabeth on the south&mdash;both
+busy towns.</p>
+
+<p>Like Brooklyn, Newark may be called a city of
+churches, and its enlightened and industrious citizens
+are a church-going people. The Reformed Dutch
+Church dates from 1663; and the First Presbyterian
+from 1667. These were the parent churches, and their
+progeny are manifold and prosperous, as noted in the
+exceptionally high standard of morality that generally
+characterizes the peaceful workers in this hive of
+industry.</p>
+
+<p>I was especially struck with the canal which flows
+under Broad street, and the ingenuity displayed in
+surmounting a hill that crosses it, by the barges
+navigating its waters. Here it may be almost said
+that among their numberless other inventions, the inhabitants
+of Newark have discovered the art of sailing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+up a hill! Instead of a lock, by which similar difficulties
+of inland navigation are usually overcome, the
+barges are drawn in a cradle up an inclined plane, by
+means of a stationary steam engine placed at the top of
+the hill, where the canal recommences, and the barges
+are re-launched to continue their course westward.</p>
+
+<p>In my rambles down Broad street, on its well-paved
+sidewalk, flanked by flourishing stores, in which every
+commodity, from a five hundred dollar chronometer
+down to a ten cent pair of men's socks, is presented for
+sale, I stopped at an arched gateway on my right, my
+attention being arrested by a patch of green sward
+behind it. The gate stood invitingly open, and passing
+through, I found myself in a venerable and disused
+graveyard.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the oldest of the city graveyards," said an
+elderly gentleman, to whom I addressed myself for
+information, "and is of the same age as the city itself.
+It is the resting-place of many of the original inhabitants.
+The first church of Newark stood here, and
+around, you will observe, are tombs, bearing dates of
+two centuries ago." Such, I found, on investigation, to
+be the case. These old stones&mdash;most of their inscriptions
+now undecipherable,&mdash;were erected to commemorate
+the dead colonists' names and virtues, more than one
+hundred years before Washington was born, or they had
+dreamed of casting off the authority of mother England.
+I reflected: what was Newark like in those far-away
+days, two hundred years ago? How did she compare
+with Newark in the year of grace 1880?</p>
+
+<p>In 1608 Henry Hudson descended the noble river
+which bears his name, and the settlement of <i>New Amsterdam</i>
+by the Hollanders soon followed. Next, <i>New<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+Netherlands</i> was added to the territory of the Dutchmen,
+then a great maritime people. Down to the beginning of
+the seventeenth century the colonization of New Netherlands,
+on the western banks of the Hudson, had made
+but little progress. It was all a wilderness, peopled
+only by Indians. The white man had scarcely penetrated
+its fertile valleys. The story is told, however, that
+some of Hudson's hardy crew had sailed in their boats
+through the <i>Kill-von-Kule</i>, at the north of what is now
+Staten Island, and passed northward into the Passaic
+River. The enterprising Dutch traders were no doubt
+fully cognizant of the boundless possibilities of the
+country, whose fairest spot was destined to form the site
+of the city of Newark.</p>
+
+<p>But these Dutchmen were only lawless adventurers.
+By right of discovery, a priority of title to all the lands
+in North America was claimed by England, who declared
+war upon Holland and all her reputed possessions.
+<i>New Amsterdam</i> and the province of <i>New Netherlands</i>
+were among the first to succumb, and in 1664 England
+obtained complete command of the Atlantic coast. <i>New
+Amsterdam</i> then became <i>New York</i>, in honor of the
+Duke of York, brother of King Charles II; and <i>New
+Netherlands</i> became <i>New Jersey</i>, in compliment to the
+Countess of Jersey, a court favorite. To this conquest
+by England we owe our English tongue, for had the
+Hollanders vanquished the English, and retained possession,
+we should doubtless all be speaking "low
+Dutch" to-day, instead of English. But this is a
+digression.</p>
+
+<p>Colonization rapidly followed when the phlegmatic
+Dutchmen were turned out, and the first English governor
+of the province of New Jersey inaugurated a very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+liberal form of government. This induced many adventurers
+from New England to unite their fortunes with
+the colonists of New Jersey. Under the leadership of
+the enterprising Captain Treat, these New Englanders
+proceeded to select a site for their new town. They
+soon found a spot exactly suited to their wishes; a fertile
+soil, beautiful woodlands, and a navigable stream;
+while away to the eastward was a wide and sheltered
+bay.</p>
+
+<p>In May, 1666, about thirty families, John Treat
+being their captain, laid the foundation of Newark. A
+conference was held with the Indians, which resulted
+satisfactorily to all. They transferred the land to the
+white men, and received in payment for what now
+constitutes the county of Essex, "Fifty double-hands
+of powder, one hundred bars of lead, twenty axes,
+twenty coats, ten guns, twenty pistols, ten kettles, ten
+swords, four blankets, four barrels of beer, two pairs of
+breeches, fifty knives, twenty hoes, eight hundred and
+fifty fathoms of wampum, two ankers of liquor, or
+something equivalent; and three troopers' coats, with
+the ornaments thereon."</p>
+
+<p>A few years later a second purchase was made, by
+which the limits of the city they were building were
+extended westward to the top of Orange Hill, the
+equivalent being "two guns, three coats and thirteen
+cans of rum."</p>
+
+<p>For many years, Newark grew and prospered.
+In 1681 she was the "most compact town in the
+province, with a population of 500." In 1713 Queen
+Anne granted a charter of incorporation, thus making
+the township of Newark a body politic, which continued
+in force until the Revolution. With the successful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+close of the war, Newark entered on a new and prosperous
+era, and the population increased very largely.
+In 1795 bridges were built over the Passaic and the
+Hackensack. In 1810 the population is given as
+6,000, and in 1830 it had increased to 11,000. From
+this date its rate of progress has been very rapid, and
+at the present time Newark ranks as the thirteenth city
+of the Union in population.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot conclude this chapter without a few words
+on the manufactures of Newark. The early settlers
+were, as we have said, in the main, mechanics and artisans,
+and from this circumstance the growth of the city
+lay in the direction of manufactures. Newark, to-day,
+is among the foremost cities of the Union in intelligent
+industry. So early as 1676 efforts were made to promote
+the introduction of manufactures. The nearness
+of the city to New York, the chief market in the Union,
+with shipping facilities to every quarter of the globe;
+with the great iron and coal fields easy of access, and a
+thrifty and industrious people, Newark drew to her
+mills and factories abundant capital and skilled workmen.
+She has contributed more useful inventions to
+industrial progress than any other American city. The
+Newark Industrial Exposition was originated in 1872,
+for the purpose of holding an annual exhibition of her
+local manufactures. The enterprise met with signal
+success. We have counted no less than four hundred
+distinct manufactories in operation in this extraordinary
+city, a list of which would occupy too much of our
+space. Hardware, tools, machinery, jewelry, leather,
+hats, and trunks seem to predominate. Of the last-named
+indispensable article, Newark has the most extensive
+manufactory in the world, 7,000 trunks per week,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+or about 365,000 yearly being produced here. It is said
+that in the manufacture of the best steam fire-engines,
+Newark ranks first. The number of persons finding
+employment in the factories is about 25,000, and the
+amount of wages paid weekly averages $250,000, or
+about $13,000,000 per year. The annual value of the
+productions of all her manufactories amounts to about
+$60,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is seen that Newark has developed into one of
+the principal producing cities of the United States, the
+value of her diversified manufactured products making
+her, in this respect, the third, if not the second city of
+the Union.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h3>
+
+<h2>NEW HAVEN.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The City of Elms.&mdash;First Impressions.&mdash;A New England Sunday.&mdash;A
+Sail on the Harbor.&mdash;Oyster Beds.&mdash;East Rock.&mdash;The
+Lonely Denizen of the Bluff.&mdash;Romance of John Turner.&mdash;West
+Rock.&mdash;The Judges' Cave.&mdash;Its Historical Association.&mdash;Escape
+of the Judges.&mdash;Monument on the City Green.&mdash;Yale
+College.&mdash;Its Stormy Infancy.&mdash;Battle on the Weathersfield
+Road.&mdash;Harvard, the Fruit of the Struggle.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Leaving New York by the New York, New
+Haven and Hartford Railroad, we found ourselves,
+at the end of a three hours' ride, in New Haven,
+the beautiful "City of Elms."</p>
+
+<p>Everything here bears the impress of New England,
+with the special peculiarities of Connecticut, land of
+smart sayings and of the proverbial wooden nutmegs
+and oak hams. Stepping from the cars, my ears were
+first saluted by the salutations of two genial Yankees,
+one of whom, I inferred from the conversation, had
+just arrived from Bridgeport, and the other at the
+depot had awaited his coming. Compliments were
+passed by the latter, who saluted his friend with&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, old boy, where have you been all summer? I
+see you have got your dust full of eyes."</p>
+
+<p>The reply to this salute was in entire harmony with
+the interrogation, and both walked away from the
+station, amusing each other with odd maxims and
+witty retorts.</p>
+
+<p>It being our intention to remain several weeks in
+New Haven, we decided to take up our abode at a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+private house, and with this object in view we started
+in pursuit of suitable accommodations. It was soon
+discovered that in the matter of board we were competing
+with "Old Yale," students always being preferred,
+owing to the prospect of permanency.</p>
+
+<p>A reconnoissance of several hours, during which we
+saw more stately elms than I ever expect to see again
+in so short a period, brought us to 66 Chapel street,
+where we were pleasantly lodged, with an excellent
+table, and favored with a Yankee landlord from the
+classic banks of the Rhine.</p>
+
+<p>Universal quiet on the streets, and an inexhaustible
+supply of brown bread and beans at the breakfast
+table, was an unmistakable evidence that we had
+reached a New England Sunday. After breakfast, the
+weather being fine, I was invited to accompany some
+young gentlemen in a sail down the harbor. Being
+uncertain as to the propriety of such a proceeding on
+the seventh day, I was promptly assured that the Blue
+Laws of Connecticut would not be outraged in case I
+had taken a generous ration of brown bread and beans
+before starting.</p>
+
+<p>A ride of half an hour, with but little wind in our
+sails, carried us down through the oyster beds, to a
+point nearly opposite the lighthouse at the mouth of
+the harbor. A novel sight, in my judgment, is a
+multitude of oyster plantations staked out in such a
+manner as to show the proprietor of each particular
+section his exact limit or boundary.</p>
+
+<p>To those of my readers who are familiar with hop-growing
+regions, I would say that an oyster farm is not
+unlike a hop field which seems to have been suddenly
+inundated by water, leaving only the tops of the poles<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+above the surface. Oyster raising is one of the leading
+features of New Haven enterprise, and the Fair Haven
+oysters, in particular, are regarded among the best that
+are cultivated on the Atlantic coast. On our return
+trip up the harbor the tide was going out, and as the
+water was extremely shallow in many places, and also
+very clear, we could see oysters and their less palatable
+neighbors, clams, in great abundance. I was strongly
+tempted to make substantial preparation for an oyster
+dinner, but on being informed that such a course would
+be equivalent to staking out claims in a strange water-melon
+patch, I concluded to desist, and contented myself
+with seeing more oysters in half an hour than I had
+seen in all my life before.</p>
+
+
+<h4>EAST ROCK.</h4>
+
+<p>One of the famous places of resort in the neighborhood
+of New Haven is East Rock, an abrupt pile of
+red-brown trap rock, lifting itself up from the plain to
+a height of four hundred feet. The summit of this
+monumental pile spreads out in a wide plateau of twenty-five
+or thirty acres, sloping gradually back towards the
+meadow lands which border the winding Quinnipiac
+River. It is owned and occupied by a somewhat eccentric
+individual, rejoicing in the name of Milton
+Stuart, who related to me the story of his life in this
+strange locality since taking up his abode here, some
+twenty years ago. On being told that I would commit
+to paper some account of my wanderings about New
+Haven, he seemed to take an especial pleasure in showing
+me his grounds and telling me everything of interest
+concerning them.</p>
+
+<p>With ready courtesy he pointed out a heap of stones<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+on the western slope of the bluff, which he said was all
+that remained of a hut formerly occupied by one John
+Turner, who made a hermit of himself on this rock,
+years ago, all because the lady of his love refused to
+become Mrs. Turner. He met her while teaching in the
+South&mdash;so the story ran&mdash;and all his energies seemed to
+be paralyzed by her refusal to listen to his suit. He
+came to East Rock and built this wretched hovel of
+stone, where he lived in solitude, and where one morning
+in that long ago, he was found dead on the floor of
+his hovel. How many romances like this lie about us
+unseen, under the every-day occurrences of life!</p>
+
+
+<h4>WEST ROCK</h4>
+
+<p>is a continuation of the precipitous bluff of which East
+Rock is one extremity, and is about a mile further up
+the valley. It is not so high nor so imposing as East
+Rock, and the view from its wooded top fades into tameness
+beside the remote ocean distance and the flash of
+city spires to be seen from East Rock. But it makes up
+in historical interest what it may lack in other attractions;
+for here, about a quarter of a mile from its
+southernmost point, is located the "Judge's Cave,"
+famous as the hiding-place of the regicides who tried
+and sentenced King Charles the First, in the seventeenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>On the restoration of Charles II to the throne of his
+father, three of the high court which had condemned
+the first Charles wisely left England for the shores of
+the New World. Their names were Goffe, Whalley and
+Dixwell. Whalley was a lieutenant-general, Dixwell
+was a colonel, and Goffe a major-general. These noted
+army officers arrived at Boston, from England, July<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+twenty-seventh, 1660, and first made their home in
+Cambridge. Finding that place unsafe, they afterwards
+went to New Haven.</p>
+
+<p>The next year news came from England that thirty-nine
+of the regicide judges were condemned, and ten
+already executed, as traitors. An order from the king
+was sent to the Colonial governors of Massachusetts and
+Connecticut, for the arrest of the judges. They were
+thus compelled to fly for their lives, and sought refuge
+in the cave on West Rock, which afterwards bore their
+name. Here they lived concealed for some time, being
+supplied with food by Richard Sperry, who lived about
+a mile west of the cave. The food was tied up in
+a cloth and laid on a stump near by, from which the
+judges could take it unobserved.</p>
+
+<p>One night they beheld the blazing eyes of a catamount
+or panther, peering in upon them at their cave, and were
+so frightened that they fled in haste to the house of Mr.
+Sperry, and could not again be induced to return. Several
+large boulders, from twenty to thirty feet in height,
+thrown together, doubtless, by some volcanic convulsions,
+unite to form the cave.</p>
+
+<p>Dixwell afterwards lived in New Haven, under an
+assumed name, and the graves of all three may now be
+seen, at one side of Centre Church, on the City Green.</p>
+
+<p>The following inscription is on a marble slab over
+the ashes of Dixwell, erected by his descendants in
+1849:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Here rests the remains of John Dixwell, Esq., of the Priory of
+Folkestone, in the county of Kent, England. Of a family long
+prominent in Kent and Warwickshire, and himself possessing large
+estates and much influence in his county, he espoused the popular
+cause in the revolution of 1640. Between 1640 and 1660 he was
+Colonel in the Army, an active member of four parliaments, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+thrice in the Council of State; and one of the High Court which
+tried and condemned King Charles the First. At the restoration of
+the monarchy he was compelled to leave his country, and after a
+brief residence in Germany, came to New Haven, and here lived in
+seclusion, but enjoying the esteem and friendship of its most worthy
+citizens, till his death in 1688-9."</p></div>
+
+<p>The little brown headstone which first marked his
+resting place bore only his initials and the date of his
+death:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"J. D. Esq.</span><br />
+Deceased March Y<sup>e</sup> 18th in Y<sup>e</sup> 82<sup>D</sup> Year of his age 1688/9."<br />
+</p></div>
+
+<p>That was all&mdash;his name being suppressed, at his
+request.</p>
+
+<p>The headstones of Goffe and Whalley are marked in
+the same obscure way.</p>
+
+<p>Yale College adds largely to the importance of New
+Haven, and the elegant new College buildings now in
+process of erection, built of brown freestone, cannot
+well be surpassed in style of architecture. "Old Yale"
+was originally a small school, established in Saybrook
+by Rev. Thomas Peters, who lived at that place, and
+who bequeathed his library to the school at his death.
+It soon acquired the title of the "Illustrious School,"
+and about the year 1700 was given a charter of incorporation
+from the General Assembly, making it a college.</p>
+
+<p>It was named Yale, after its greatest benefactor, who
+was at that time governor of one of the West India
+islands. The historian, Dr. Samuel Peters, who wrote
+nearly a hundred years ago, said that Greek, Latin,
+Geography, History and Logic were well taught in this
+seminary, but it suffered for want of tutors in the
+Hebrew, French and Spanish languages. He remarks,
+incidentally, that "oratory, music and <i>politeness</i> are
+equally neglected here and in the Colony." The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+students, numbering at that time one hundred and
+eighty, were allowed two hours' play with the foot ball
+every day, and were seated at four tables in the large
+dining room. This ancient historian says the college
+was built of wood, was one hundred and sixty feet long
+and three stories high, besides garrets. In 1754 another
+building, of brick, one hundred feet long, with double
+rooms and a double front, was added. About 1760 a
+chapel and library were erected, which was described as
+being "very elegant." The "elegant" structure of a
+hundred years ago will soon be discarded for the new
+one of brown freestone.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1717 the seminary was removed from
+Saybrook to New Haven, but it had a hard time in
+getting there. A vote was passed to remove the college
+from Saybrook, because, as the historian says, Saybrook
+was suspected of being too much in sympathy with the
+Church of England and not sufficiently alienated from
+the mother country. But there was a division in the
+vote, the Hartford ballot being in favor of removing
+the college to Weathersfield, while the New Haven
+party declared in behalf of their own city. A small
+battle grew out of this split between the Weathersfield
+and New Haven factions. Hartford, in order to carry
+its vote into execution, prepared teams, boats and a mob,
+and privately set off for Saybrook, seizing upon the
+college apparatus, library and students, which they
+carried to Weathersfield.</p>
+
+<p>This redoubled the jealousy of the "saints" at New
+Haven, who thereupon determined to fulfill their vote,
+and accordingly, having collected a mob, they set out
+for Weathersfield, where they seized by surprise the
+students and library. On the road to New Haven they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+were overtaken by the Hartford faction, who, after an
+inglorious battle, were obliged to retire with only part
+of the library and part of the students. From this
+affair sprang the two colleges, Yale and Harvard.</p>
+
+<p>The Massachusetts Bay people acted the part of
+peacemakers, and settled the difficulty between these
+two hostile factions, which resulted finally in placing the
+college at New Haven. So it seems our Puritan ancestors
+had their little disputations then, much as our
+Alabama and Arkansas brothers do now.</p>
+
+<p>What a flaming head-line that college battle doubtless
+furnished the bulletin boards and colonial press of 1717!
+Imagine a column beginning with this:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Sharp Fight on the Weathersfield Road!</i><br />
+<i>Large Captures of Students!</i><br />
+<i>New Haven Victorious!</i></p>
+
+<p>But out of revenge for the victory, the sons of Hartford
+were not sent to Yale College to be educated. No,
+rather than go to Yale they went much further away,
+at greater expense, and where fewer educational advantages
+could be obtained. What were such disadvantages,
+however, compared to the satisfaction of standing by
+their party and ignoring the New Haven vote?</p>
+
+<p>But old Yale grew and flourished, despite the stormy
+days of its childhood, and has now a world-wide reputation.
+Many distinguished men of letters call her
+"Alma Mater," and in all their wanderings carry her
+memory green in their hearts.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h3>
+
+<h2>NEW ORLEANS.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Locality of New Orleans.&mdash;The Mississippi.&mdash;The Old and the
+New.&mdash;Ceded to Spain.&mdash;Creole Part in the American Revolution.&mdash;Retransferred
+to France.&mdash;Purchased by the United
+States.&mdash;Creole Discontent.&mdash;Battle of New Orleans.&mdash;Increase
+of Population.&mdash;The Levee.&mdash;Shipping.&mdash;Public Buildings,
+Churches, Hospitals, Hotels and Places of Amusement.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Suburbs.&mdash;Public
+Squares and Parks.&mdash;Places of
+Historic Interest.&mdash;Cemeteries.&mdash;French Market.&mdash;Mardi-gras.&mdash;Climate
+and Productions.&mdash;New Orleans during the
+Rebellion.&mdash;Chief Cotton Mart of the World.&mdash;Exports.&mdash;Imports.&mdash;Future
+Prosperity of the City.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>As the traveler proceeds down the Mississippi, from
+its source to its mouth, a unique phenomenon
+strikes his attention. The river seems to grow higher
+as he descends. The bluffs, which on one side or the
+other rise prominently along its banks in its upper
+waters, grow less bold, and finally disappear as he progresses
+southward. And if it should be the season of
+high water, he will find himself, as he nears New Orleans,
+gliding down a river which is higher than its bordering
+land, and which is restrained in its penchant for destruction,
+by massive dykes, or levees, as they are termed in
+this section.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans, the commercial metropolis of Louisiana,
+known as the "Crescent City," is situated on the eastern,
+or, more correctly speaking, the northern bank of the
+Mississippi River, which here, after running northward
+several miles, takes a turn to the eastward. Originally
+built in the form of a crescent, around this bend in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+river, it has at the present time extended itself so far up
+stream that its shore line is now more in the shape of a
+letter S. It is one hundred and twelve miles from the
+mouth of the Mississippi, 1,200 miles south of St. Louis,
+and 1,438 miles southwest of Washington. The city
+limits embrace an area of nearly 150 square miles, but
+the city proper is a little more than twelve miles long
+and three miles wide. It is built on alluvial soil, the
+ground falling off toward Lake Pontchartrain, which is
+five miles distant to the northward, so that portions of the
+city are four feet lower than the high water level of the
+river. The city is protected from inundation by a
+levee, twenty-six miles in length, fifteen feet wide and
+fourteen feet high. The streets are drained into canals,
+from which the water is raised by means of steam
+pumps, with a daily capacity of 42,000,000 gallons,
+which elevates it sufficiently to carry it off to Lake
+Pontchartrain.</p>
+
+<p>The geological history of this section of the country
+is extremely interesting. The whole region south of
+New Orleans is made land, having been brought down
+from the Rocky Mountains and the western plains, by
+that tireless builder, the Mississippi, which has heaped
+it up, grain by grain, probably changing the entire
+course of its lower waters in doing so, filling up old
+channels and wearing itself new ones, until it finally extends
+its delta, like an outstretched hand, far out into
+the waters of the Gulf of Mexico. The river has a history
+and a romance, all its own, beginning with the time
+when French and Spanish, alike, were searching for the
+"Hidden River"&mdash;that mysterious stream which, according
+to Indian tradition, "flowed to the land from which
+the sweet winds of the southwest brought them health<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+and happiness, and where there was neither snow nor
+ice," and which was known by so many different names&mdash;and
+ending with the construction of the gigantic jetties,
+which have given depth and permanence to the channels
+of its delta.</p>
+
+<p>The visitor finds the city very unlike northern towns
+with which he has been familiar. To the Creole
+quarter especially there is a foreign look, which is
+intensified by the frequent sound of foreign speech. It
+is as if one had stepped into some old-world town, and
+left America, with its newness and its harshness of
+speech, far behind. But it is not so far away, either. It
+is only around the corner, or, at best, a few squares off.
+New Orleans of the nineteenth century jostles New
+Orleans of the eighteenth on every hand. It has seized
+upon the old streets, with their quaint French and
+Spanish names, and carried them to an extent never
+dreamed of by those who originally planned them. It
+has reared modern structures beside those hoary with
+age, and set down the post common school building and
+the heretical Protestant church beside the venerable
+convent and the solemn cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>The main streets describe a curve, running parallel
+to the river, and present an unbroken line from the
+upper to the lower limits of the city, a distance of about
+twelve miles. The cross streets run for the most part at
+right angles from the Mississippi River, with greater
+regularity than might be expected from the curved
+outline of the river banks. Many of the streets are
+well paved, and some of them are shelled; but many
+are unpaved, and, from the nature of the soil, exceedingly
+muddy in wet weather, and intolerably dusty in
+dry. The city is surrounded by cypress swamps, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+its locality and environments render it very unhealthy,
+especially during the summer season. Yet, notwithstanding
+its insalubrity, it is constantly increasing in
+population and business importance. Certain sanitary
+precautions, adopted in later years, have somewhat
+improved its condition.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans has a history extending further back
+than that of most southern towns. While others were
+making their first feeble struggles for existence with
+their treacherous foes, the red-skins, New Orleans was
+stirred by discontent and insurrection. In 1690,
+d'Iberville, in the name of France, founded the province
+of Louisiana, and Old Biloxi, at the mouth of
+the Lost River, as the Mississippi was still termed, was
+made the capital. The choice of site proved a disastrous
+one, and the seat of government was moved to New
+Biloxi, further up the river. Meantime, Bienville, his
+younger brother, laid out a little parallelogram of
+streets and ditches on a crescent-shaped shore of the
+river, in the midst of cypress swamps and willow
+jungles. A colony of fifty persons, many of them
+galley slaves, formed this new settlement. Houses were
+built, a fort added, and the little town received its
+present name, in honor of the Regent of France, the
+Duke of Orleans. In the same year John Law sent
+eight hundred men from La Rochelle. They had no
+sooner landed than they scattered to the four winds, a
+number of Germans among them alone remaining in or
+near the promised city. Amid many discouragements
+the town prospered, and when, one after another, three
+cargoes of women were sent out from the old country,
+to furnish wives for the new settlers, their content was
+complete. Thus many of the proudest aristocrats of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+New Orleans trace their descent from these "<i>Filles de
+Casette</i>," as they were called, each one being endowed
+with a small chest of property.</p>
+
+<p>Here the French Creoles were born, and lived a wild,
+unrestrained life, valorous but uneducated, and became
+such men and women as one would expect to find in a
+military outpost so far from the civilized world. For
+sixty-three years the little colony struggled for life,
+enduring floods and famines, and the terrors of Indian
+warfare, when, in 1762, the province of Louisiana was
+transferred by an unprincipled king to Spain. The
+news did not reach the remote American settlement
+until 1764. It was hardly to be expected that a colony
+so separated by time and distance from the mother
+country should be intensely loyal, but the people felt
+themselves to be French and French only, and they
+resented this unwitting transfer of their allegiance as an
+unendurable grievance.</p>
+
+<p>The Spanish Governor, Ulloa, did not land in New
+Orleans until two years later; and though he showed
+himself to be a man of great discretion, and inclined to
+adopt a conciliatory policy, the people made the little
+town so hot for him, that in two more years he was glad
+to return to Spain. They sent a memorial after him,
+which, being a most unique document, is worth recording,
+in substance. Says a recent historian, Mr. George
+W. Cable:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It enumerated real wrongs, for which France and
+Spain, but not Ulloa, were to blame. Again, with these
+it mingled such charges against the banished Governor
+as&mdash;that he had a chapel in his own house; that he
+absented himself from the French churches; that he
+inclosed a fourth of the public common to pasture his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+private horses; that he sent to Havana for a wet nurse;
+that he ordered the abandonment of a brick-yard near
+the town, on account of its pools of putrid water; that
+he removed leprous children from the town to the inhospitable
+settlement at the mouth of the river; that he
+forbade the public whipping of slaves in the town;
+that masters had to go six miles to get a negro flogged;
+that he had landed in New Orleans during a thunder
+and rain storm, and under other ill omens; that he
+claimed to be king of the colony; that he offended the
+people with evidences of sordid avarice; and that he
+added to these crimes&mdash;as the text has it&mdash;'many others,
+equally just and terrible!'"</p>
+
+<p>In 1769 the colony was in open revolt, and was considering
+the project of forming a republic. But the
+arrival of a Spanish fleet of twenty-four sail checked
+their aspirations towards independence, and paralyzed
+their efforts, and they yielded without a struggle.</p>
+
+<p>In 1768 New Orleans was a town of 3,200 persons,
+a third of whom were black slaves. After the establishment
+of Spanish rule, although the population was
+thoroughly Creole, and opposed to the presence of
+English traders, the government at first winked at their
+appearance, and finally openly tolerated them, so that
+English boats supplied the planters with goods and
+slaves, and English warehouses moored upon the river
+opposite the town disposed of merchandise.</p>
+
+<p>In 1776, at the breaking out of the American Revolution,
+the Creole and Anglo-American came into active
+relations with each other, a relation which has since
+qualified every public question in Louisiana. The
+British traders were suddenly cut off from communication,
+and French merchants commanded the trade of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+the Mississippi. Americans followed close after the
+French, and the tide of immigration became Anglo-Saxon.
+France was openly supporting the American
+colonies in their rebellion against England, and in 1779
+Spain declared war against Great Britain, so that the
+sympathies of the Creoles were led, by every tie, to the
+rebels. Galvez, then Governor of Louisiana, and also
+son of the Viceroy of Mexico, a young man, brave,
+talented and sagacious, who had adopted a most liberal
+policy in his administration, discovered that the British
+were planning the surprise of New Orleans. Making
+hasty but efficient preparations, with a little army of
+1,430 men, and with a miniature gun fleet of but ten
+guns, he marched, on the twenty-second of August, 1779,
+against the British forts on the Mississippi. On the
+seventh of September, Fort Bute, on Bayou Manchac,
+yielded to the first assault of the Creole Militia. The
+Fort of Baton Rouge was garrisoned by five hundred
+men with thirteen heavy guns. On the twenty-first of
+September, after an engagement of ten hours, Galvez
+reached the fort. Its capitulation included the surrender
+of Fort Panmure, a place which, by its position,
+would have been very difficult of assault. In the Mississippi
+and Manchac, four English schooners, a brig
+and two cutters were captured. On the fourteenth of
+the following March, Galvez, with an army of two
+thousand men, having set sail down the Mississippi,
+captured Fort Charlotte, on the Mobile River. On the
+eighth of May, 1781, Pensacola, with a garrison of
+eight hundred men, and the whole of West Florida,
+surrendered to Galvez. One of the rewards bestowed
+upon her Governor for his valorous achievements was
+the Captain-generalship of Louisiana and West Florida.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+He never returned to New Orleans, however, and four
+years later succeeded his father as Viceroy of Mexico.
+Thus, while Andrew Jackson was yet a child, New
+Orleans was defended from British conquest by this
+gallant Spanish soldier.</p>
+
+<p>In 1803 Louisiana was transferred to France by
+Spain, and great was the rejoicing of the Creole colonists,
+who, during the forty years of their Spanish
+domination, had never forgotten their French origin.
+But their joy was quickly turned to bitterness by the
+news which speedily followed, that Louisiana had been
+sold, by Napoleon I, to the United States. The younger
+generation, and those who had a clear apprehension of
+all in the way of prosperity which this change might
+mean to them, were quickly reconciled, and set about
+the business of life with renewed interest. But to the
+French Creoles, as a class, who, during their long
+alienation had still at heart been thoroughly French, to
+become a part of a republic, and that republic English
+in its origin, was intensely distasteful. This was the
+deluge indeed, which Providence had not kindly stayed
+until after their time. They withdrew into a little community
+of their own, and refused companionship with
+such as sacrificed their caste by accepting the situation,
+and adapting themselves to it. But in spite of these
+disaffected persons, the prosperity of the city dated from
+that time. Its population increased, and its commerce
+made its first small beginnings.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans was incorporated as a city in 1804, having
+then a population of about 8,000 inhabitants. In 1812
+the first steamboat was put upon the Mississippi, though
+it was not until several years later that, after a period
+of experiment and disaster, success was attained with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+them. Yet without steamboats the development of the
+great Mississippi Valley, and the creation of the extended
+cities upon its banks, would have been well-nigh
+impossible. Its winding course, its swift current, its
+shifting channel, and the snags which line its bottom,
+make navigation by other craft than steamboats well-nigh
+impossible. Canoes, batteaux and flat-boats might
+make the voyage down the river with tolerable speed
+and safety, but to return against the current was a
+difficult thing to do; and a trip from St. Louis or
+Louisville to New Orleans and return required months.
+Where, then, would have been the mighty commerce of
+the West, but for the timely invention of the steam
+engine, and its application to water craft?</p>
+
+<p>On January eighth, 1815, New Orleans was successfully
+defended against the British by General Jackson,
+who threw up a strong line of defences around the city,
+protected by batteries, and who, with a force of scarcely
+six thousand men, defeated fifteen thousand British,
+under Sir Edward Packenham, the enemy sustaining
+a loss of seven hundred killed, fourteen hundred
+wounded, and five hundred taken prisoners, while the
+American loss was but seven men killed and six wounded.
+The old battle field is still retained as a historic spot.
+It is four and one-half miles south of Canal street,
+washed by the waters of the Mississippi, and extends
+backward about a mile, to the cedar swamps. A marble
+monument, seventy feet in height, and yet unfinished,
+commemorative of the victory, overlooks the ground.
+In the southwest corner of the field is a national
+cemetery.</p>
+
+<p>The old city bears the impress of the two nations to
+which it at different times belonged. Many of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+streets still retain the old French and Spanish names, as,
+for instance, Tchapitoulas, Baronne, Perdido, Toulouse,
+Bourbon and Burgundy streets. There are still, here and
+there, the old houses, sandwiched in between those of a
+later generation&mdash;quaint, dilapidated, and picturesque.
+Sometimes they are rickety, wooden structures, with
+overhanging porticoes, and with windows and doors all
+out of perpendicular, and ready to crumble to ruin with
+age. Others are massive stone or brick structures, with
+great arched doorways, and paved floors, worn by the
+feet of many generations, dilapidated and heavy, and
+possessing no beauty save that which is lent them by
+time.</p>
+
+<p>The city is made up of strange compounds, which
+even yet, after the lapse of more than three-quarters of
+a century since it became an American city, do not perfectly
+assimilate. Spanish, French, Italians, Mexicans
+and Indians, Creoles, West Indians, Negroes and
+Mulattoes of every shade, from shiny black to a faint
+creamy hue, Southerners who have forgotten their foreign
+blood, Northerners, Westerners, Germans, Irish and
+Scandinavians, all come together here, and jostle one
+another in the busy pursuits of life. The levee at New
+Orleans represents all spoken languages; and the popular
+levee clerk must have a knowledge of multitudinous
+tongues, which would have secured him a high and
+authoritative position at Babel. The Romish devotee,
+the mild-faced "sister," in her ugly black habiliments
+and picturesque head-gear, the disciple of Confucius, the
+descendant of the New England Puritan, the dusky
+savage, who still looks to the Great Spirit as the giver
+of all life and light, the modern skeptic, and the black
+devotee of Voodoo, all meet and pass and repass each<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+other. All nationalities, all religions, all civilizations,
+meet and mingle to make up this city, which, upholding
+the cross to indicate its religion, still, in its municipal
+character, accepts the Mohammedan symbol of the
+crescent. Added to the throng which comes and goes
+upon the levee, merchants, clerks, hotel runners, hackmen,
+stevedores, and river men of all grades, keep up a
+general motion and excitement, while piled upon the
+platforms which serve as a connecting link between the
+water-craft and the shore, are packages of merchandise
+in every conceivable shape, cotton bales seeming to be
+most numerous.</p>
+
+<p>Along the river front are congregated hundreds of
+steamers, and thousands of nondescript boats, among
+them numerous barges and flat-boats, thickly interspersed
+with ships of the largest size, from whose masts
+float the colors of every nation in the civilized world.
+New Orleans is emphatically a commercial town, depending
+in only a small degree, for her success, upon
+manufactures.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 637px;">
+<span class="caption">JACKSON SQUARE AND OLD CATHEDRAL, NEW ORLEANS.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_305.jpg" width="637" height="1024" alt="JACKSON SQUARE AND OLD CATHEDRAL, NEW ORLEANS." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>New Orleans is not a handsome city, architecturally
+speaking, though it has a number of fine buildings. Its
+situation is such that it could never become imposing,
+under the most favorable circumstances. The Custom
+House, a magnificent structure, built of Quincy granite,
+is, next to the Capitol at Washington, the largest building
+in the United States. It occupies an entire square, its
+main front being on Canal street, the broadest and handsomest
+thoroughfare in the city. The Post Office occupies
+its basement, and is one of the most commodious
+in the country. The State House is located on St. Louis
+street, between Royal and Chartres streets, and was
+known, until 1874, as the St. Louis Hotel. The old
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+dining hall is one of the most beautiful rooms in the
+country, and the great inner circle of the dome is richly
+frescoed, with allegorical scenes and busts of eminent
+Americans. The United States Branch Mint, at the
+corner of Esplanade and Decatur streets, is an imposing
+building, in the Ionian style. The City Hall, at the
+intersection of St. Charles and Lafayette streets, is the
+most artistic of the public buildings of the city. It is
+of white marble, in the Ionic style, with a wide and
+high flight of granite steps, leading to a beautiful portico.
+The old Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Louis is the
+most interesting church edifice in New Orleans. It
+stands in Chartres street, on the east side of Jackson
+Square. The foundations were laid in 1793, and the
+building completed in 1794, by Don Andre Almonaster,
+perpetual <i>regidor</i> of the province. It was altered and
+enlarged in 1850. The paintings in the roof of the
+building are by Canova and Rossi. The old Ursuline
+Convent, in Conde street, a quaint and venerable building,
+erected in 1787, during the reign of Carlos III,
+by Don Andre Almonaster, is one of the most interesting
+relics of the early Church history of New Orleans.
+It is now occupied as a residence by the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>The Charity Hospital, on Common street, was founded
+in 1784, has stood on its present site since 1832, and is
+one of the most famous institutions of the kind in the
+country. Roman Catholic churches, schools, hospitals
+and asylums abound, some of them dating back for
+nearly or quite a century.</p>
+
+<p>The St. Charles Hotel is one of the institutions of New
+Orleans, and one of the largest and finest hotels in the
+United States. It occupies half a square, and is bounded
+by St. Charles, Gravior and Common streets. The city<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+has a French opera house, an academy of music, and
+several theatres and halls. Like those of St. Louis, its
+inhabitants are passionately fond of gayety, and places
+of amusement are well patronized. Sunday, as in all
+Catholic cities, is devoted to recreation, and the inhabitants,
+in their holiday garments, give themselves up to
+enjoyment. Theatres, concert rooms and beer gardens
+are filled with pleasure-seekers.</p>
+
+<p>Canal street, the main business thoroughfare and
+promenade of New Orleans, is nearly two hundred feet
+wide, and has a grass plot twenty-five feet wide, in the
+centre, bordered on each side by trees. Claiborne, Rampart,
+St. Charles and Esplanade streets are similarly
+embellished. They all contain many fine stores and
+handsome residences. Royal, Rampart and Esplanade
+streets are the principal promenades of the French
+quarter. The favorite drives are out the Shell Road to
+Lake Pontchartrain, and out a similar road to Carrollton.
+The lake is about five miles north of the city, forty
+miles long and twenty-four wide, and is famous for its
+fish and game. Cypress swamps, the trees covered with
+the long, gray Spanish moss peculiar to the latitude, lie
+between the lake and the city, and render the drive in
+that direction an interesting one.</p>
+
+<p>Carrollton, in the north suburbs, has many fine public
+gardens and private residences. On the opposite shore
+of the river is Algiers, where there are extensive dry
+docks and ship-yards. A little further up the river, on
+the same side, is Gretna, where, during Spanish rule, lay
+moored two large floating English warehouses, fitted up
+with counters and shelves, and stocked with assorted
+merchandise.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans has a few small, tastefully laid out<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+squares, among which are Jackson, Lafayette, Douglass,
+Annunciation and Tivoli Circle. The City
+Park, near the northeast boundary, contains one hundred
+and fifty acres, which are tastefully laid out, but
+which is little frequented. Jackson Square has a historic
+interest, it having been the old Place d'Armes of colonial
+times. It was here that Ulloa landed in that ill-omened
+thunder storm, and here that public meetings were held
+and the colony's small armies gathered together. The
+inclosure, though small, is adorned with beautiful trees
+and shrubbery, and shell-strewn paths, and in the centre
+stands Mills' equestrian statue of General Jackson.</p>
+
+<p>The city is not without other objects of historic
+interest. During the Indian wars barracks arose on
+either side of the Place d'Armes, and in 1758 other
+barracks were added, a part of whose ruin still stands,
+in the neighborhood of Barracks street. Then there is
+the battle field, already referred to, and many buildings
+belonging to a past century, some of which have distinctive
+historic associations. Near Jackson Square is
+the site of the oldest Capuchin Monastery in the
+United States. Sailing down the Mississippi, the
+voyager will reach a portion of the stream which flows
+almost directly south. Here is a point in the river
+which bears the name, to this day, of the English Turn.
+Up the mouth of the Mississippi sailed one day, in the
+seventeenth century, a proud English vessel, bent on
+exploration and acquisition of territory to England.
+Threading for a hundred miles the comparatively direct
+course of the stream, it had then made two abrupt
+right-angled turns, when, coming around a third point,
+in advance of it, it saw a French ship, armed and
+equipped, and bearing down stream under full sail.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+The English ship was given to understand that the
+Mississippi was "no thoroughfare" for boats of its
+nationality, and commanded to turn and retrace its
+course, which it reluctantly, but no less surely did.
+Hence the name "English Turn."</p>
+
+<p>The Cemeteries of New Orleans are most peculiar in
+their arrangement and modes of interment. The ground
+is filled with water up to within two or three feet of
+the surface, and the tombs are all above ground. A
+great majority of them are also placed one above another.
+Each "oven," as it is called, is just large enough to
+admit a coffin, and is hermetically sealed when the
+funeral rites are over. A marble tablet is usually
+placed upon the brick opening. Some of the structures
+are, however, costly and beautiful, being made of
+marble, granite or iron. There are thirty-three cemeteries
+in and near the city, and of these the Cypress
+Grove and Greenwood are best worth visiting.</p>
+
+<p>The most picturesque and characteristic feature of
+New Orleans is the French Market, on the Levee, near
+Jackson Square. The gathering begins at break of
+day on week-days and a little later on Sunday morning,
+and comprises people of every nationality represented
+in the city. French is the prevailing language, but it
+will be heard in every variety, from the pure Parisian
+to the childish jargon of the negroes.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">NIGHT PARADE OF THE MYSTIC CREW&mdash;MARDI-GRAS FESTIVAL, NEW ORLEANS.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_311.jpg" width="1024" height="641" alt="NIGHT PARADE OF THE MYSTIC CREW&mdash;MARDI-GRAS FESTIVAL, NEW ORLEANS." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Mardi-Gras, or Shrove Tuesday, is observed in New
+Orleans by peculiar rites and ceremonies. Rex, King
+of the Carnival, takes possession of the city, and passes
+through the streets, accompanied by a large retinue, his
+staff and courtiers robed in Oriental splendor. The
+city gives itself up to mirth and gayety, with an abandon
+only paralleled by that witnessed in Italy on the same
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+occasion; and the day is concluded by receptions,
+tableaux and balls.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans boasts a semi-tropical climate, being
+situated in latitude 29&deg; 58&acute; north. The summers are
+oppressively hot, but the winters are mild and pleasant,
+with just sufficient frost to kill any germs of disease
+engendered by her unhealthful situation. Semi-tropical
+fruits, such as the orange, banana, fig and pine-apple,
+grow readily in her gardens, where are also cultivated
+many of the productions of the temperate zone. The
+neighboring country is clothed with a rich and luxuriant
+semi-tropical vegetation, and forests of perennial green,
+in which the cypress and live-oak predominate.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans had a population, in 1820, of 27,000.
+In 1850 it had increased to 116,375, and in 1860 to
+168,675. In common with other cities of the South,
+New Orleans suffered in her business interests severely
+during the war of the Rebellion. Louisiana having
+seceded from the Union in 1861, New Orleans was closely
+blockaded by the Federal fleet, and on April twenty-fourth,
+1862, the defences near the mouth of the river
+were forced by Commodore Farragut, in command of an
+expedition of gunboats. On the surrender of the city
+General B. F. Butler was appointed its military
+Governor, and held possession of it until the close of
+the war. Its commerce was entirely destroyed during
+that period, its business interests crushed, and many of
+its leading men impoverished, and, in addition, the
+State was disturbed by intestine troubles, which kept
+affairs in an unsettled condition. New Orleans did not
+rally as quickly as St. Louis from the effects of the war.
+Nevertheless, in 1870 its population had increased to
+191,418, and in 1874 the value of its exports, including<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+rice, flour, pork, tobacco, sugar, etc., but excepting
+cotton, were estimated at $93,715,710. Its imports the
+same year were valued at more than $14,000,000. It
+is the chief cotton mart of the world, and its wharves
+are lined with ships which bear this commodity to
+every quarter of the globe. In the amount and value
+of its exports, it ranks second only to New York,
+though its imports are not in the same proportion,
+which always speaks well for the business prosperity of
+a city. The census of 1880 gave it a population of
+216,140, showing that its progress still continues. No
+longer cursed by the presence of the "peculiar institution,"
+its former slave marts turned into commercial
+depots or abolished altogether, and its population numbering
+to a greater degree every year the industrious
+class, New Orleans will do more in the future than
+maintain her present prosperity; she will build up
+new industries, and originate new schemes of advancement;
+so that she is certain to continue her present
+supremacy over her sister cities in the South.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h3>
+
+<h2>NEW YORK.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Early History of New York.&mdash;During the Revolution.&mdash;Evacuation
+Day.&mdash;Bowling Green.&mdash;Wall Street.&mdash;Stock Exchange.&mdash;Jacob
+Little.&mdash;Daniel Drew.&mdash;Jay Cooke.&mdash;Rufus Hatch.&mdash;The Vanderbilts.&mdash;Jay
+Gould.&mdash;Trinity Church.&mdash;John Jacob Astor.&mdash;Post-Office.&mdash;City
+Hall and Court House.&mdash;James Gordon
+Bennett.&mdash;Printing House Square.&mdash;Horace Greeley.&mdash;Broadway.&mdash;Union
+Square.&mdash;Washington Square.&mdash;Fifth Avenue.&mdash;Madison
+Square.&mdash;Cathedral.&mdash;Murray Hill.&mdash;Second Avenue.&mdash;Booth's
+Theatre and Grand Opera House.&mdash;The Bowery.&mdash;Peter
+Cooper.&mdash;Fourth Avenue.&mdash;Park Avenue.&mdash;Five Points
+and its Vicinity.&mdash;Chinese Quarter.&mdash;Tombs.&mdash;Central Park.&mdash;Water
+Front.&mdash;Blackwell's Island.&mdash;Hell Gate.&mdash;Suspension
+Bridge.&mdash;Opening Day.&mdash;Tragedy of Decoration Day.&mdash;New
+York of the Present and Future.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Less than three hundred years ago the narrow strip
+of territory now occupied by what its wide-awake
+and self-asserting citizens delight to term "The Metropolis
+of the New World," was a broken and rugged
+wilderness, which the foot of white man had never trod,
+not, at least, within the memory of its then oldest inhabitants,
+a few half-naked savages of the Manhattan tribe,
+from whom the island derives its name of Manhattan.
+In 1609 Henry Hudson, an English navigator in the
+service of the Dutch East India Company, landed near
+the present site of the Battery, securing, by right of discovery,
+the territory to the States of the Netherlands.
+Dutch traders soon followed, and in 1614 a small fort
+and four houses were erected in the neighborhood of
+what is now Bowling Green. The infant metropolis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+was christened New Amsterdam, and Peter Minuits sent
+out, in 1626, as its first Governor. He purchased the
+island from its native owners, for goods, about twenty-four
+dollars in value. Minuits was recalled in 1631,
+his successors being Wonter Von Twiller, 1633; William
+Krift, 1638; and Peter Stuyvesant, 1647. In
+1644 a fence was built nearly along the line of what is
+now Wall street, and in 1653 palisades and breastworks,
+protected by a ditch, were added along this line.
+These palisades remained in existence until near the
+beginning of the present century.</p>
+
+<p>Peter Stuyvesant was the last of the Dutch Governors.
+In 1664 Charles II, of England, gave the territory to
+his brother James, Duke of York, and an expedition
+was sent out under the command of Colonel Richard
+Nicholls, to take possession of it. The fort was easily
+captured, and the name of the settlement changed to New
+York. In 1673 the town was recaptured by the Dutch,
+who again changed its name to New Orange; but the
+following year it was restored to the English by treaty.</p>
+
+<p>In 1689 Jacob Leister instituted an insurrection
+against the unpopular administration of Nicholls, which
+he easily overthrew, and strengthened the fort by a
+battery of six guns outside its walls. This was the
+origin of the "Battery." In 1691 he was arrested and
+convicted on a charge of treason and murder, condemned
+to death, and executed.</p>
+
+<p>Negro slavery was introduced into New York at an
+early period, and in the year 1741 the alleged discovery
+of a plot of the slaves to burn the city and murder the
+whites resulted in twenty negroes being hanged, a
+lesser number being burned at the stake, and seventy-five
+being transported.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From the very first the mass of citizens of New York
+took an active part in the struggle for independence. In
+1765 the "Sons of Liberty" were organized to resist
+the Stamp Act; in 1770 a meeting of three thousand
+citizens resolved not to submit to this oppression; and in
+1773 a Vigilance Committee was formed to resist the
+landing of the tea, by whom, in the following year, a
+tea-laden vessel was sent back to England, while
+eighteen chests of tea were thrown overboard from
+another. On the eighteenth of September, 1776, as a
+result of the disastrous defeat of the American troops,
+under General Washington, on Long Island, New
+York fell into the hands of the British, who held it
+until the twenty-sixth of November, 1783, when they
+evacuated it. The day is still annually celebrated, under
+the name of "Evacuation Day."</p>
+
+<p>From 1784 to 1797 New York was the Capital of the
+State, and from 1785 to 1790 the seat of government of
+the United States. The adoption of the National Constitution
+was celebrated in grand style in 1788; and on
+April thirtieth, 1789, Washington was inaugurated at
+the City Hall, as the first President of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>In 1791 the city was visited by yellow fever. In
+1795 and 1798 it reappeared, with added violence, over
+two thousand persons falling victims to it during the
+latter year. It made visits at intervals until 1805, after
+which it did not reappear until 1819. It came again in
+1822 and 1823, occasioning considerable alarm, but
+since then its visits in an epidemic form have ceased.</p>
+
+<p>In 1820 the surveying and laying out of Manhattan
+Island north of Houston street, after ten years of labor,
+was completed. The opening of the Erie Canal, in 1825,
+gave the city a fresh impetus on the road to prosperity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+The first steam ferry between New York and Jersey
+City was started in 1812. In 1825 the city was first
+lighted by gas; while the great Croton Aqueduct, through
+which it receives its immense water supply, was not
+completed until 1842.</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1835, the most disastrous fire ever
+known in the city destroyed over $18,000,000 worth of
+property. In July, 1845, a second conflagration consumed
+property to the amount of $5,000,000. Both
+these great fires were in the very heart of the business
+portion of the city.</p>
+
+<p>In July, 1853, an industrial exhibition was opened,
+with striking ceremonies, in a so-called Crystal Palace,
+on Reservoir Square. This building, in the form of a
+Greek cross, was made almost wholly of iron and glass,
+being three hundred and sixty-five feet in length each
+way, with a dome one hundred and twenty-three feet
+high. The flooring covered nearly six acres of ground.
+This structure was destroyed by fire in 1858.</p>
+
+<p>New York has been the scene of several sanguinary
+riots within the past half century. In 1849, when
+Macready, the English tragedian, attempted to play a
+second engagement at the Astor Place Opera House,
+the friends of Forrest attacked the building, resulting
+in calling out of the military, the killing of thirty-two
+persons, and wounding of thirty-six others. In July,
+1863, a mob, made up of the poorer classes of the population,
+rose in fierce opposition to the draft rendered
+necessary by the requisition for troops by the general
+government. For several days this mob was in practical
+possession of the city, and it was dispersed only by
+a free use of military force. This mob resulted in the
+death of one thousand persons, and the destruction of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+$1,500,000 worth of property. In 1871 a collision
+occurred between a procession of Irish Orangemen, who
+were commemorating the Battle of the Boyne, and their
+Catholic fellow-countrymen, during which sixty-two
+persons lost their lives.</p>
+
+<p>The summer of 1871 was made memorable by the
+discovery that the most stupendous frauds upon the public
+treasury had been carried on for several years, by certain
+city officials, some of whom had been extraordinarily
+popular. A mass meeting, called at Cooper Institute
+on the fourth of September, appointed a committee of
+seventy-six to take measures for securing better government
+for the city. The elections in November following
+resulted in a complete sweeping out of the obnoxious
+officials, many of whom were subsequently prosecuted,
+convicted and imprisoned, or obliged to fly the country.</p>
+
+<p>New York City, the greater portion of which lies on
+Manhattan Island, is situated at the mouth of the
+Hudson River, some eighteen miles from the Atlantic
+Ocean. Its extreme length north from the Battery is
+sixteen miles, while the average breadth of the island is
+one and three-fifths of a mile. The city has an area of
+about 27,000 acres, of which 14,000 are on Manhattan
+Island, and about 12,000 on the main land; while the
+remainder is in the East River and the Bay, and
+includes Ward's, Blackwell's, Randall's, Governor's
+Ellis', and Bedloe's Islands. It is bounded on the north
+by the town of Yonkers; on the east by the Bronx and
+East Rivers; on the south by the Bay; and on the west
+by the Hudson River. Manhattan Island is separated
+on the north, from the main land, by Spuyten Duyvel
+Creek and Harlem River, both names recalling the
+Dutch origin of the city.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The more ancient portion of New York, from Fourteenth
+street to the Battery, is laid out somewhat irregularly.
+As far north as Central Park, five miles from the
+Battery, it is quite compactly built. Various localities
+in the more northern and less densely built-up part of
+the island are known by different names; as Yorkville,
+near Eighty-sixth street; and Harlem, in the vicinity of
+One-hundred-and-twenty-fifth street, on the eastern side;
+and Bloomingdale and Manhattanville, opposite them, on
+the western. North of Manhattanville, near One-hundred-and-fiftieth
+street, is Carmansville, and a mile and
+a half further north are Washington Heights; while
+Inwood lies at the extreme northwestern point of the
+island. All these are places of interest, and offer
+numerous attractions to the visitor.</p>
+
+<p>That part of New York lying on the mainland, comprising
+the twenty-third and twenty-fourth wards, was
+added to it in 1874, and contains many thriving towns
+and villages. Prominent among them is Morrisania,
+with avenues running north and south, and streets
+crossing them at right angles, and numbered in continuation
+of those of Manhattan Island. Numerous other
+towns, with a host of beautiful country residences, are
+scattered over the high and rolling land of which this
+late addition to the area of the city is composed; but
+with the exception of Morrisania it has not yet been
+regularly laid out for building purposes. The whole
+country in this section of the city, with a romantic
+natural beauty, to which wealth and artistic taste have
+largely contributed, is a perfect paradise of picturesqueness.</p>
+
+<p>The foreigner who visits New York usually approaches
+it from the lower bay, through the "Narrows,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+a strait lying between Staten Island on the left and Long
+Island on the right. From the heights of the former,
+a beautiful island, rising green and bold from the water's
+edge, frown the massive battlements of Fort Wadsworth
+and Fort Tompkins; while on the latter is Fort Hamilton;
+and in the midst of the water, gloomy and barren,
+is Fort Lafayette, famous as a political prison during
+the late war. New York Bay is one of the most
+beautiful, if not <i>the</i> most beautiful, in the world.
+Staten Island rises abruptly on one shore, with hills and
+valleys, green fields and trees, villages and villas; and
+on the other shore are the wood-crowned bluffs of Long
+Island. Within the bay Ellis' Island is near the
+Jersey shore; Bedloe's Island is not far from its centre,
+and is the selected site of the colossal statue of Liberty
+which France has presented to New York; while Governor's
+Island, the largest of the three, lies to the right,
+between New York and Brooklyn. Each island is
+fortified, the latter containing Castle William and old
+Fort Columbus.</p>
+
+<p>The bay is dotted with the shipping of every nation.
+Ocean steamers are setting out on their long journeys,
+or just returning from foreign shores. The finest steamboats
+and ferry boats in the world dart hither and
+thither, like water spiders on the surface of a glassy
+pool. Tugs, oyster boats, and sailing vessels of every
+size and description, are all represented. It is a moving
+panorama of water craft. As the city is approached,
+gradually, from the distant haze which broods over it,
+is evolved the forms of towers, spires, and roofs, and all
+its varied and picturesque outlines. The city presents a
+beautiful view from the bay. It rises gradually from the
+water's edge, some portions of it to a considerable eleva<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>tion.
+A prominent feature in its outline is the graceful,
+tapering spire of Trinity Church, while higher still rises
+the clock-tower of the Tribune building. Other towers,
+spires and domes, break the monotony of roofs and
+walls. Approaching the mouth of the East River, the
+most striking objects are the massive towers of the
+Suspension Bridge, one on either shore, while between
+them is the bridge, swung upon what seem at a distance
+like the merest cobwebs.</p>
+
+<p>At the extreme southern end of Manhattan Island is
+the Battery, already referred to, a park of several acres,
+protected by a granite sea wall. It presents a beautiful
+stretch of green turf, fine trees and wide pathways.
+On its southwest border is Castle Garden, a circular
+brick structure, which has a history of its own. It was
+originally constructed for a fort, and was afterwards converted
+into a summer garden. A great ball, to Marquis
+Lafayette, was given in it in 1824; and General Jackson
+in 1832, and President Tyler in 1843, held public
+receptions there. Then it was turned into a concert
+hall, and is chiefly famous, as such, as being the place
+where Jenny Lind made her first appearance in America.
+It is now an emigrant depot, and on days of the arrival
+of emigrant ships, it is very entertaining to watch the
+troops of emigrants, with their quaint gait, unfamiliar
+language, and strange, un-American faces, passing out
+of its portals, and making their first entrance into their
+new life on the western continent.</p>
+
+<p>Just east of the Battery is Whitehall, the terminus of
+numerous omnibus and car lines, and the location of the
+Staten Island, South and Hamilton ferries. There, too,
+is the depot of the elevated railways, which extend in
+four lines, two on the eastern side and two on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+western, the entire length of the city. The Corn Exchange,
+an imposing building, is at the upper end of
+Whitehall. At the junction of Whitehall with Broadway
+is a pretty, old-fashioned square, shaded with trees,
+and surrounded by an iron fence, called Bowling Green.
+This was the aristocratic quarter of the city in its early
+days. No. 1 Broadway, known as the "old Kennedy
+House," was built in 1760, and has been, successively,
+the residence and headquarters of Lords Conwallis and
+Howe, General Sir Henry Clinton and General Washington,
+while Talleyrand lived there during his stay in
+America. Benedict Arnold concocted his treasonable
+projects at No. 5 Broadway. At No. 11 General Gates
+had his headquarters. A few of the old buildings still
+remain, but they have many of them already given way
+to more modern and more pretentious structures. The
+posts of the iron fence around Bowling Green were once
+surmounted by balls, but they were knocked off and
+used for cannon balls during the Revolution. An
+equestrian statue of King George III, which once ornamented
+the Square, was melted up during the same
+period, and furnished material for forty-two thousand
+bullets.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger in New York sometimes wonders why its
+principal business street is called Broadway, since there
+are many others which are quite as broad, some of them
+even broader. But if he will visit the extreme southern
+portion of the city, he will quickly comprehend. The
+old streets are narrow, being scarcely more than mere
+alleys, with pavements barely broad enough for two to
+walk abreast, so that Broadway, when originally laid
+out, seemed a magnificent thoroughfare.</p>
+
+<p>As already described, Wall street formed the northern<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+boundary of the young colonial city. In that early day,
+as now, wealth and fashion sought to avoid the more
+plebeian business streets, and so withdrew to the neighborhood
+of this northern boundary, and established,
+first their residences, and then their commercial houses.
+Wall street then became what it has since remained,
+the monetary centre of the city, only that now it is
+more than that; it is the great monetary centre of
+the entire country. On it and the blocks leading from
+it, all embraced in comparatively a few acres, are probably
+stored more gold and silver than in all the rest of
+the United States put together, while the business interests
+represented extend to every section, not only of the
+continent, but of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Nowhere else in America are there such and so many
+magnificent buildings as in this section of the city. The
+streets are narrow, and overshadowed as they are by
+edifices six or more stories in height, seem to be dwarfed
+into mere alley-ways. Nearly every building is worthy
+of being called a temple or a palace. White marble and
+brown stone, with every style of architecture, abound.
+The United States Sub-Treasury Building, at the corner
+of Wall and Nassau streets, is a stately white marble
+structure in the Doric style, occupying the site of the
+old Federal Hall, in which Washington delivered his
+first inaugural address. Opposite is the white marble
+palace, in the style of the Renaissance, known as the
+Drexel Building. A little further down the street, at the
+corner of William, is the United States Custom House,
+formerly the Merchants' Exchange, built of granite. It
+has a portico supported by twelve massive columns, and
+its rotunda in the interior is supported by eight columns
+of Italian marble, the Corinthian capitals of which were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+carved in Italy. Opposite this building is the handsome
+structure of the Bank of New York. Banks, and
+bankers' and brokers' offices fill the street, and are
+crowded into the side streets.</p>
+
+<p>On Broad street, a short distance below Wall, is the
+Stock Exchange, a handsome, but not large building,
+which in point of interest towers over all others in the
+locality. Here are daily exacted the comedies and tragedies
+of financial life, and here fortunes are made and
+fortunes lost by that system of gigantic gambling which
+has come to be known as "dealing in stocks." The
+operations of the Stock Exchange and Gold Room
+concern the whole country, both financially and industrially.
+Here is the true governmental centre, rather
+than at Washington. Wall and Broad streets dictate to
+Congress what the laws of the country concerning finance
+shall be, and Congress obeys. The Bankers' Association
+holds the menace over the government that if their interests
+are not consulted, they will bring ruin upon the
+country; and it is in their power to execute the threat.
+This power was illustrated on the twenty-fourth of.
+September, 1869, a day memorable as Black Friday in
+the history of Wall street. By a small but strong combination
+of bears, gold was made to fall in seventeen
+minutes, from 1.60 to 1.30, after a sale of $50,000,000
+had been effected, and thousands of men, from the
+Atlantic to the Pacific, were ruined. Money was locked
+up, and could not be obtained even at a premium of one
+hundred per cent. This was the forerunner of the panic
+which came four years later, in 1873. Then the Union
+Trust Company failed, carrying with it Jay Cooke, Fisk
+and Hatch, Henry Clews, Howe and Macy, and other
+houses. For the first time during its existence the Stock<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+Exchange was closed. Without its closing, not a merchant
+or banker could have survived. With its doors
+shut no contract could be completed nor stocks transferred,
+and it gave people time, which was absolutely
+needed, to do what they could; or else universal and
+overwhelming ruin would have swept over the country.
+As it was, not less than twenty thousand firms went
+under, and the stringency of the times was felt throughout
+the nation, depressing business and checking industry,
+until Congress took measures for its relief.</p>
+
+<p>The names of Jacob Little, Leonard W. Jerome,
+Daniel Drew, Jay Cooke, Augustus Schell, Rufus Hatch,
+James Fisk, Jr., Jay Gould, Commodore Vanderbilt,
+Wm. H. Vanderbilt, and others, are permanently associated
+with Wall street. Jacob Little was known as the
+"Great Bear of Wall street." He originated the daring,
+dashing style of business in stocks, and was always
+identified with the bears. Meeting many reverses, he
+died at last, comparatively poor, the Southern Rebellion
+having swept away his little remaining fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Leonard W. Jerome was at one time financially the
+rival of Vanderbilt and Drew, with a fortune estimated
+at from six to ten millions. He assumed an unequaled
+style of magnificence in living; but reverses came, and
+his splendid property on Madison Square, including
+residence, costly stables and private theatre, passed into
+the hands of the Union League Club, and was occupied
+by them until they went to their new quarters in Fifth
+Avenue. He himself is now forgotten, although a man
+scarcely past the prime of life; but his name is perpetuated
+in the Jerome Race Course.</p>
+
+<p>Daniel Drew came to New York a poor boy, and, by
+persistent industry and business capacity, worked his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+way up to the highest round of the commercial ladder.
+In 1838 Drew put an opposition boat upon the Hudson,
+with fare at one dollar to Albany; and shortly
+afterward established the People's Line, which has been
+so successful. The panic of 1873 affected him seriously,
+but he staved off failure until 1875. He died in 1879,
+leaving next to nothing of the millions he had made
+during his lifetime. St. Paul's Church, in Fourth
+avenue; the Methodist Church at Carmel, Putnam
+County, New York, his native place; and Drew Theological
+Seminary, are monuments of his munificence
+while money was at his command.</p>
+
+<p>Jay Cooke, having been already tolerably successful
+in business, amassed his millions by negotiating the war
+loan. He was regarded as one of the most prominent
+and safe financiers in the country; but in 1873 his failure
+was complete, and he has not since been heard of in
+financial circles.</p>
+
+<p>Rufus Hatch is one of the successful stock operators
+of New York. Beginning life with nothing, and meeting
+reverses as well as successes, he is now known as one
+of the boldest and most gigantic of street operators.</p>
+
+<p>The name of James Fisk, Jr., is associated with that
+of the Erie Railroad. He commenced life as a peddler.
+In 1868 he was appointed Comptroller of the Erie Road,
+and immediately set about building up the fortunes of
+that corporation. He appeared on Wall street as an
+assistant of Daniel Drew; made himself master of the
+Narragansett Steamship Company, and changed the
+condition of its affairs from disaster to success. He was
+one of the conspirators on Black Friday of 1869. He
+purchased the Opera House and the Fifth Avenue
+Theatre, finding them both good investments. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+was shot by Edward S. Stokes, both himself and Stokes
+having become entangled with a woman named Helen
+Josephine Mansfield. After his death his supposed
+great private fortune dwindled into a comparatively
+small amount.</p>
+
+<p>Commodore Vanderbilt also started in life a penniless
+boy, and became, eventually, the great King of Wall
+street. He built up the Harlem River Railroad, originated
+gigantic enterprises; sent a line of steamships
+across the ocean; gained control of the Hudson River
+Railroad and other roads; and died in 1877, worth not
+far from $100,000,000, the bulk of which he left to his
+eldest son, William H. Vanderbilt. The Vanderbilt
+name has lost none of its lustre in the hands of the
+second generation. In less than ten years, after a
+career of unequaled brilliancy in the financial world,
+William H. Vanderbilt retired, with a fortune probably
+double that of his father.</p>
+
+<p>Jay Gould also achieved success from small beginnings.
+He was in company with Fisk in the control of
+the Erie Railroad, and an associate in bringing about
+the disasters of Black Friday. Soon after the death of
+Greeley he secured a controlling interest in the New
+York <i>Tribune</i>. He is still a power in Wall street, and
+a great railroad magnate.</p>
+
+<p>Broad street still has historical associations clinging
+about it. At the corner of Broad and Pearl streets is
+the famous De Lancy House, built early in the last
+century by Stephen De Lancy, a Huguenot refugee
+from Normandy. In this house, on the evening of
+November twenty-fifth, 1783, Washington and his staff,
+with Governor Clinton, celebrated the evacuation of
+the city by the British troops, and a few days later<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+Washington bade his officers farewell, before departing
+for Annapolis to resign his commission. The house,
+having passed through successive stages of degeneration,
+had at one time sunk so low as to have become a
+German tenement house, with a lager beer saloon on the
+third floor. It has recently been renovated, and has
+again put on an air of respectability. It still bears
+upon it the words: "Washington's Headquarters."
+All about it are, here and there, the relics of the past, in
+the shape of houses which once were homes of the gentility,
+in colonial times.</p>
+
+<p>Pearl street is said to have been originally a cow-path,
+and it is certainly crooked enough to justify such an
+origin. It is the locality of the Cotton Exchange and
+the cotton brokers.</p>
+
+<p>On Broadway, at the head of Wall street, is Trinity
+Church, whose spire was, until a recent period, the highest
+in the city, being two hundred and eighty-four feet in
+height. In the early days, when the aristocracy were
+seeking the select neighborhood of Wall street, this
+church corporation established itself upon the utmost
+northern confines of the city. Its original edifice was
+destroyed by fire, and the present one was erected in
+1846. It is of brown stone, in pure gothic architecture,
+and one of the most beautiful in New York. In the
+rich carving of the exterior numerous birds have built
+their nests. It has stained glass windows, and the finest
+chime of bells in America. Within the church is a
+costly reredos in memory of John Jacob Astor. A
+venerable graveyard lies to its north, where repose the
+remains of Alexander Hamilton, Captain Lawrence, of
+the Chesapeake, Robert Fulton, and the unfortunate
+Charlotte Temple. Some of the headstones, brown and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+crumbling with age, and bearing grotesque carved
+effigies of angels, date back for more than a century. In
+the northeast corner is a stately monument erected to the
+memory of the patriots who died in British prisons in
+New York during the Revolution. Trinity Parish is the
+oldest in the city, and fabulously wealthy, the corporation
+having been granted, by Queen Anne, in 1705, a
+large tract of land west of Broadway, extending as far
+north as Christopher street, known as the "Queen's
+Farm." The land, at that time remote from the city,
+now embraces some of its most valuable business portions.
+It is all leased of Trinity Church by the occupants,
+and the church, when the leases expire, becomes
+possessed of the buildings and improvements upon the
+ground, and is thus constantly augmenting its wealth.
+The claims of the Jans Anneke heirs involve this vast
+estate. It has three chapels, one of which, St. Paul's,
+is a few blocks above, on the corner of Broadway and
+Vesey streets, and is surrounded by a graveyard almost
+as ancient as that of Trinity.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF NEW YORK.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_331.jpg" width="1024" height="599" alt="BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF NEW YORK." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>At the northwest corner of Vesey street and Broadway
+is the Astor House, which, when it was built,
+something more than a generation ago, was a marvel of
+size and splendor, though it is now thrown in the shade
+by more modern structures. John Jacob Astor, its
+builder, was born near Heidelberg, in Germany, in 1765,
+and came penniless to the new world, to seek his fortune.
+After serving as a clerk, he then engaged in a small way
+in the fur business, which eventually grew to the proportions
+of the American Fur Company, and brought to
+its founder a large fortune, though no one outside his
+family ever knew its exact amount. He settled most
+of his affairs before his death, selling the Astor House
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+to his son William, for the consideration of one dollar.
+Much of his property was in real estate, which constantly
+increased in value. He died in 1848, and his senior
+son being an imbecile, William B. Astor, the younger
+brother, inherited most of his father's fortune. The son
+became vastly richer than his father, dying in 1875,
+leaving behind him a fortune of $50,000,000, which
+was mostly bequeathed to his eldest son, John Jacob,
+who is now the head of the house.</p>
+
+<p>The Post Office stands opposite the Astor House, on
+the east side of Broadway, at the southern extremity of
+City Hall Park. It is a massive structure, of Doric and
+Renaissance architecture, four stories in height, beside a
+Mansard roof, costing $7,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>Half a century ago the City Hall Park was the chief
+park of New York, and the elegance and aristocracy of
+the city gathered around it. The City Hall stands in
+the park, and back of it is the new Court House, still
+unfinished, a massive edifice in Corinthian style, which,
+when completed, will have a dome two hundred and ten
+feet above the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>On the western side of Broadway, opposite St. Paul's,
+is the splendid building of the New York <i>Herald</i>. The
+<i>Herald</i> is the representative newspaper of New York,
+and is probably the most enterprising sheet in the world.
+James Gordon Bennett, its founder, was born in Scotland
+in 1795, and came to America in 1819. After
+various literary ventures, he decided to establish a paper
+which should embody his ideal of a metropolitan journal.
+On the sixth of May, 1855, the first number of the
+New York <i>Herald</i> was issued, being then a small penny
+sheet. Mr. Bennett was editor, reporter and correspondent.
+He was his own compositor and errand boy,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+mailed his papers and kept his accounts. His rule, from
+the very first, was never to run a dollar in debt. He
+succeeded in establishing a paper which has no parallel
+in history, while, since his death, his son's enterprise has
+still further increased its scope and popularity. Young
+Bennett, the present proprietor of the <i>Herald</i>, named
+after his father, was trained especially for the duties
+which were to devolve upon him. He is thoroughly at
+home in French, German, Italian and Scotch. He is a
+skilled engineer, and can run either the engines or
+presses of his establishment. He is a practical printer,
+and can also telegraph with skill and accuracy. He gives
+strict personal supervision to the affairs of his immense
+establishment, which yields him a yearly income equaling
+that of a merchant prince.</p>
+
+<p>Extending from the <i>Herald</i> Building northward, on
+the eastern side of City Hall Park, is what is known as
+Printing House Square, including the offices of the
+principal daily and weekly papers. The magnificent
+granite structure of the <i>Staats Zeitung</i> faces this square on
+the north. The immense <i>Tribune</i> Building, nine stories
+high, with its tall clock tower, flanks it on the east, on
+Nassau street. The <i>Sun</i> modestly nestles in the shadow
+of the <i>Tribune</i>. The <i>Times</i> Building is found on Park
+Row, where also is the <i>World</i> office. <i>Truth</i> lurks in a
+basement on Nassau street. But a square or two below
+is the <i>Evening Post</i> Building, where the venerable poet
+Bryant labored at his editorial duties for so many years.
+A statue of Franklin occupies a small open triangular
+space in the midst of the square.</p>
+
+<p>Horace Greeley's name is inseparably associated with
+that of the <i>Tribune</i>, which he founded. Honest and
+single-minded, he wielded a mighty influence, and his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+paper was a great political power in the country. He
+often made enemies by his honesty and straight-forwardness;
+but both enemies and friends respected him. In
+1872 the Liberal Republican and Democratic parties
+nominated him as their choice for President. Believing
+that he could rally around him men of all parties who
+desired to see reform in political methods, he accepted
+the nomination; and was attacked so bitterly by those
+whom he had supposed to be his friends, and met such
+overwhelming defeat in the contest, that, taken with the
+death of his wife within a week of the election,
+he was crushed completely, his reason left him, and
+before the end of a month he died a broken-hearted
+man.</p>
+
+<p>North of the City Hall Park, on the corner of
+Chambers street, is the old wholesale house of A. T.
+Stewart, now devoted to other purposes, and having two
+stories added to its top. Here, a generation ago, the
+belles of New York City came to do their shopping, it
+having been originally built for the retail trade, as a few
+years later they flocked to the new retail store on Broadway,
+between Ninth and Tenth. The name of A. T.
+Stewart is no longer heard in New York, save in connection
+with the past. It was a power in its day and
+generation. Few men had more to do with Wall street
+than Stewart, and his mercantile business was carried on
+in the Wall street style. He "cornered" goods, "sold
+short," "loaded the market," and "bought long."
+Having emigrated from the north of Ireland, he first
+opened business in a small way, himself and wife living
+in one room over their store. Beginning at the very
+lowest round of the ladder, he worked with the fixed
+resolution of becoming the first merchant in the land.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+He always lived within his income, and never bought a
+dollar's worth of merchandise that he could not pay
+cash for. In the days of his prosperity he built for
+himself and wife a marble palace, at the corner of Fifth
+avenue and Thirty-fourth street, the most finely-finished
+and elegantly-furnished residence in the country. He
+died in 1876, worth, probably, $50,000,000. The theft
+of his remains from the graveyard of St. Mark's Church,
+at Ninth street and Second avenue, was the nine days'
+wonder of the time; and the vault prepared for their
+reception, in the fine Cathedral at Garden City, Long
+Island, remains empty.</p>
+
+<p>Broadway, almost from the Battery, is bordered by
+magnificent structures. The lower end of this thoroughfare
+is devoted principally to insurance, bankers' and
+brokers', railway and other offices, and to the wholesale
+trade. Above Canal street the retail stores begin
+to appear at intervals, and as one approaches Ninth
+street ladies multiply on the western pavement. From
+Ninth street up, the retail trade monopolizes the street,
+and on pleasant afternoons the pavement is filled with
+elegantly dressed ladies who are out shopping. At Tenth
+street Broadway makes a bend to the westward, and on
+the eastern side of the way, facing obliquely down the
+thoroughfare, is Grace Church and parsonage, both
+elegant structures. Grace Church is a fashionable place
+of worship, and the scene of the most exclusive weddings
+and funerals of the city.</p>
+
+<p>Union Square is reached at Fourteenth street. It is
+oval in form, with beautiful green turf, trees and walks,
+and contains a fine fountain in the centre, a colossal
+bronze statue of Washington on a granite pedestal, and
+statues of Hamilton and Lafayette. Along its northern<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+end is a wide plaza for military parades and popular
+assemblies. Union Square was once a fashionable residence
+quarter, but it is now occupied almost wholly by
+business. At Twenty-third street, Broadway runs
+diagonally across Fifth avenue, touching the southwestern
+corner of Madison Square&mdash;not so very long
+since the most genteel locality in New York, but now,
+like Union Square, becoming occupied by hotels and
+business houses.</p>
+
+<p>Fifth Avenue, the most splendid avenue in America,
+makes a beginning at Washington Square, a lovely public
+park embowered in trees, which was once Potters' Field,
+the pauper burying ground, and where one hundred
+thousand bodies lie buried. New York University and
+Dr. Hutton's Church face the square on the east. The
+southern side is given up to business, but the north and
+west are still occupied by handsome private residences.
+Fifth Avenue is a continuous line of palatial hotels,
+gorgeous club-houses, brownstone mansions and magnificent
+churches. No plebeian horse cars are permitted
+to disturb its well-bred quiet, and the rumble of elegant
+equipages is alone heard upon its Belgian pavement.</p>
+
+<p>Business is already invading the lower portion of the
+avenue, piano warehouses being especially prominent.
+On Madison Square are the Fifth Avenue Hotel and
+the Hoffman House. Opposite the latter house is a
+monument erected to General Worth, a hero of the
+Mexican war. Delmonico's and the Caf&eacute; Brunswick,
+rival restaurants, occupy opposite corners of Twenty-sixth
+street. The Stevens House is an elegant family
+hotel on Fifth Avenue and Twenty-seventh street,
+running to Broadway. At Twenty-ninth street is the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+Congregational Church, a stately granite edifice; and
+on the same street, just east of the Avenue, is the Church
+of the Transfiguration, popularly known as "the little
+church around the corner," a name bestowed on it by a
+neighboring clergyman, who, refusing to bury an actor
+from his own church, referred the applicant to this. At
+the corner of Thirty-fourth street is the Stewart marble
+palace already referred to. From Forty-first to Forty-second
+streets is the distributing reservoir of the Croton
+Water-works, with walls of massive masonry in the
+Egyptian style. The Crystal Palace of 1853 occupied
+this square. The Avenue has at this place ascended to
+a considerable elevation, and the locality, embracing
+several streets and avenues, is known as Murray Hill,
+the most wealthy and exclusive quarter of the city. At
+Forty-third street is the Jewish Temple Emanuel,
+the finest specimen of Moorish architecture in the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>Occupying the block between Fiftieth and Fifty-first
+streets is the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Patrick,
+commenced in 1858, and with the towers still incomplete.
+It is of white marble, in decorated Gothic style;
+and the largest and handsomest church in the country.
+It is elaborately carved, the numerous rose windows
+seeming almost like lace work. When completed it
+will have two spires, ornamented with buttresses, niches
+with statues, and pinnacles, and three hundred and
+twenty-eight feet in height. The interior is as beautiful
+as a dream. It is entirely of white marble. Massive
+pillars with elaborately carved capitals support the
+arched roof, while the light is softened and subdued by
+beautiful stained-glass windows. The building is in
+such perfect proportion that one does not realize its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+immense size until he descries the priest at the altar,
+so far away as to seem a mere child.</p>
+
+<p>But eight squares away is Central Park, the great
+breathing-place of the city. Looking back, down the
+Avenue, from the entrance to the Park, there is seen a
+forest of spires rising from magnificent churches which
+we have had no space to mention, and blocks upon blocks
+of palatial residences, the homes of the millionaires of
+the city. The eastern side of Fifth Avenue, facing the
+Park for a number of blocks, is occupied by elegant
+private residences.</p>
+
+<p>Madison Avenue starts from Madison Square, running
+through to Forty-second street. It, with parallel avenues
+and places, shares the prestige of Fifth Avenue, as
+being the aristocratic quarter of the city.</p>
+
+<p>Fourteenth street, once a fashionable thoroughfare, is
+now fast being occupied by large retail stores.</p>
+
+<p>The avenues, commencing at First, and numbering
+as high as Eleventh, run north and south, parallel to
+Fifth Avenue, already described. They are supplemented
+on the eastern side, at the widest part of the island, by
+avenues A, B, C, and D. Most of these avenues commence
+on the eastern side at Houston street, the northern
+boundary of the city in the early part of the present
+century. On the western side, with the exception of
+Fifth and Sixth, they commence but little below Fourteenth
+street. They are mostly devoted to retail trade,
+and, on seeing their miles of stores, one wonders where,
+even in a great city like New York, all the people come
+from who support them.</p>
+
+<p>Second Avenue is almost the only exception among
+the avenues. Early in the century it was what Fifth
+Avenue has become to-day, the fashionable residence<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+avenue; and even yet some of the old Knickerbocker
+families cling to it, living in their roomy, old-fashioned
+houses, and maintaining an exclusive society, while they
+look down with disdain upon the parvenues of Fifth
+avenue. Stuyvesant Square, intersected by Second avenue,
+and bounded on the east by Livingston Place, and
+on the west by Rutherford Place, is one of the quarters
+of the <i>ancient r&eacute;gime</i>. Here still live the Rutherfords
+and the Stuyvesants. Here is the residence of Hamilton
+Fish and William M. Evarts. St. George Church,
+with the largest seating capacity of any church in the
+city, faces this square.</p>
+
+<p>Booth's Theatre is on the corner of Sixth avenue and
+Twenty-third street. It is the most magnificent place
+of amusement in America; built in the Renaissance
+style, with a Mansard roof. Opposite is the Masonic
+Temple, in Ionic and Doric architecture. At the corner
+of Eighth avenue and Twenty-third street is the Grand
+Opera House, once owned by James Fisk, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>New York is at once spendthrift and parsimonious in
+the naming of her streets. Thus, she sometimes repeats
+a name more than once, and again, bestows two or
+three names upon the same street. There is a Broadway,
+an East Broadway, a West Broadway, and a
+Broad street. There is Greenwich avenue and Greenwich
+street. There are two Pearl streets. There is a
+Park avenue, a Park street, a Park row, and a Park
+place. On the other hand, Chatham becomes East
+Broadway east of Bowery; Dey street is transformed
+into John street east of Broadway; Cortlandt becomes
+Maiden Lane at the same dividing line; and other
+streets are in like manner metamorphosed. Fourth
+Avenue, beginning at the Battery as Pearl street, changes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+to the Bowery at Franklin Square. At Eighth street,
+without any change in its direction, it becomes Fourth
+Avenue; from Thirty-fourth to Forty-second streets it
+is Park Avenue, and then relapses into Fourth Avenue
+again. This is one of the most interesting avenues in
+the city; as Pearl street, its windings and its business
+occupations have been referred to.</p>
+
+<p>Bowery has a character all its own. It takes its name
+from Peter Stuyvesant's "Bowerie Farm," through
+which it passes. In it is probably represented every
+civilized nation on the globe. It is unqualifiedly a
+democratic street. While Fifth Avenue represents one
+extreme of city life, the Bowery represents the other.
+Here are the streets and shops of the working classes,
+consisting of dry and fancy goods, cigar shops, lager
+beer saloons, shoe stores, confectionery stores, pawnbrokers'
+shops, and ready-made clothing, plentifully
+besprinkled with variety and concert saloons and beer
+gardens. There are no elegant store fronts or marble
+stores here. The buildings are plain brick edifices,
+three or four stories in height, the upper stories occupied
+by the families of the merchants, or as tenement
+houses. The Germans visit the beer gardens with their
+wives and families, to listen to what is sometimes excellent
+music, and to drink beer. The concert saloons are,
+some of them, the resorts of the lowest of both sexes.
+Near Canal street is the site of the old Bowery Theatre,
+which, having been thrice destroyed by fire, has been
+thrice rebuilt, the last time, quite recently, and is now
+known as Thalia Theatre. A generation and a half ago
+the gamins of New York reigned supreme in the pit.
+Now that they have been relegated to the gallery, they
+still criticise the performance with the frankness and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+originality of expression characteristic of the "Bowery
+boys" of old. One should visit the Bowery at night,
+when the workmen and shop girls, having finished
+their daily labor, are out for recreation and amusement.
+Then he will gain an idea of one phase of city life and
+people which he would not obtain otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>At Seventh street, where Third avenue branches off,
+looking down the Bowery, and occupying the entire
+block to Eighth street, is Cooper Institute, containing
+a free library, free reading-room, free schools of art,
+telegraphy and science, and a hall and lecture room.
+Peter Cooper was one of the representative men of New
+York. Acquiring a large fortune by strictly honorable
+methods, he devoted a generous portion of it to charitable
+objects, and this Institute is one of the lasting
+monuments of his generosity. He was a true philanthropist,
+a man of broad thought and kindly impulses,
+whose name was honored by all classes of the community.
+He died in April, 1883, at a ripe old age.</p>
+
+<p>Occupying the block between Third Avenue and the
+Bowery, which is now dignified by the name of Fourth
+avenue, is the Bible House, the largest structure of its
+kind in the world, except that of London. Here the
+Bible is printed in almost every known language, and
+here are congregated the offices of the various religious
+societies of the city and country. The Young Men's
+Christian Association and Academy of Design occupy
+opposite corners at Twenty-third street, on the west side
+of the avenue. The exterior of the latter is copied from
+a famous palace in Venice, and it is peculiar as well as
+beautiful in its appearance. From Thirty-second to
+Thirty-third streets is the immense structure intended
+by A. T. Stewart as the crowning charitable object of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+his life, to be, perhaps, in some sort, an atonement for
+injustice of which he may have been guilty toward the
+working classes. It was designed as a hotel for working
+women, but in its very plan indicated how little its
+founder understood the nature or needs of that class.
+At its completion, after his death, it did not take many
+weeks to demonstrate that working women preferred a
+place more home-like, and fettered by less restrictions
+than this palace-prison; and so the edifice was turned
+into an ordinary hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Park avenue commences at Thirty-fourth street, being
+built over the track of the Fourth avenue car line.
+In the centre of this avenue, over the tunnels, are little
+spaces inclosed by iron fences, and containing a profusion
+of shrubbery and flowers. The avenue abounds in
+elegant churches and equally fine residences. At Forty-second
+street is the Grand Central Depot, seven hundred
+feet in length, its exterior imposing, and with
+corner and central towers surmounted by domes. At
+Sixty-ninth street, between Fourth and Lexington
+avenues, is the new Normal College, an ecclesiastical-looking
+building, the most complete of its kind in
+America.</p>
+
+<p>Retracing our steps to near the foot of Bowery, we
+come to Chatham street, where the Jews reign supreme,
+and which is the vestibule of the worst quarter of the
+city. Passing along a pavement festooned with cheap,
+ready-made clothing, one comes to Baxter street, and
+from thence to the Five Points, once the most infamous
+locality of New York. Here, a generation
+ago, a respectable man took his life in his hands, who
+attempted to pass through this quarter, even in broad
+daylight. It was the abode of thieves, burglars, garot<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>ters,
+murderers and prostitutes. Hundreds of families
+were huddled together in tumble-down tenement houses,
+living in such filth and with such an utter lack of decency
+as is scarcely to be credited. But home missionaries
+visited the quarter, established mission-schools and
+a house of industry, tore down the disgraceful tenement-houses
+and built better ones in their place; and to-day
+the old Bowery, Cow Bay and Murderers' Alley are
+known only in name. The Five Points is at the crossing
+of Baxter, Worth and Parker streets, and is really
+five points no longer, the carrying through of Worth
+street to the Bowery, forming an additional point. The
+locality is still dreadful enough, with all its improvements.
+Drunken men, depraved women, and swarms of
+half-clad children fill the neighborhood, and even the
+"improved tenement houses," as viewed from the outside,
+seem but sorry abodes for human beings. This is
+the heart of a wretched quarter, which extends westward
+to Broadway, and almost indefinitely in other directions.
+Mott, Mulberry, Baxter, Centre, Elm and Crosby
+streets are all densely populated, containing numberless
+tenement houses. It is possible to walk through some
+of these streets and never hear a word of English.
+Mulberry and Crosby streets are especially the homes of
+Italians, who on Sunday mornings pour out of the
+tenements upon the pavement and street below in such
+throngs that a stranger can scarcely elbow his way
+through. The Chinese have taken possession of the
+lower part of Mott street, and established laundries,
+groceries, tea-houses, lodging-houses, and opium-smoking
+dens. The latter are already attracting the attention
+of the public, and a feeble effort has been made by
+the city government to put a check upon their evil in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>fluence.
+These streets are a festering sore in the very
+heart of the city, and require attention.</p>
+
+<p>The Tombs, the city prison, famous in the criminal
+history of New York, is located in the midst of this
+quarter, on Centre street, occupying an entire block.
+It is a gloomy building, constructed of granite, in imitation
+of an Egyptian temple. Within these forbidding
+walls is the Tombs Police Court, where, early each morning,
+petty cases are disposed of by the magistrate upon the
+bench; and here prisoners are kept awaiting trial.
+Eleven cells of special strength and security are for
+murderers awaiting trial or punishment. There is also
+a special department for women. In the inner quadrangle
+of the building murderers are made to suffer the
+utmost penalty of the law, and the last act of many a
+tragedy which has excited and horrified the public has
+been performed here.</p>
+
+<p>It will be a relief to turn from the gloom and wretchedness
+of the Tombs to the sunshine and freedom of
+New York's great breathing place. Central Park contains
+eight hundred and forty-three acres, and embraces
+an area extending from Fifth to Eighth avenues, and
+from Fifty-ninth to One-hundred-and-tenth streets.
+Originally, it was a desolate stretch of country in the
+suburbs of the city, varied by rocks and marshes, and
+dotted by the hovels of Irish and Dutch squatters, its
+most picturesque features being their goats, which picked
+up a scant living among the rubbish with which it was
+covered. Its whole extent is now covered with a heavy
+sod, planted with trees and shrubbery, and furnishes
+many miles of drives and walks. Every day in the
+year it has numerous visitors, but on Sunday, one must
+fairly elbow one's way through the crowds. In the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+southeast corner are the Zo&ouml;logical Gardens and the
+old State Arsenal; the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
+recently opened, is north of Belvidere, on the east side
+of the Park. The Egyptian Obelisk stands on an eminence
+west of the museum. Winding paths conduct
+the visitor to the Mall, a stately avenue shaded by
+double rows of elms, and ornamented at intervals with
+bronze statues of celebrated American and European
+statesmen and poets; also a number of groups which
+are especially fine. The Terrace is at the northern terminus
+of the Mall, and leads by a flight of broad, stone
+stairs to Central Lake, the prettiest body of water in
+the Park, dotted by gondolas. A fountain, with immense
+granite basins, and a colossal statue of the Angel
+of Bethesda, stands between the terrace and the lake.
+Beyond the lake is the Ramble, consisting of winding,
+shaded paths, and covering thirty-six acres of sloping
+hills. From the tower at Belvidere, a magnificent piece
+of architecture, in the Norman style, may be obtained a
+fine bird's-eye view of the Park. Just above Belvidere
+are the two reservoirs of the water works, extending as
+far north as Ninety-sixth street. Beyond that the Park
+is less embellished by art, and is richer in natural beauties.
+From the eminence upon which stands the old
+Block House, on the northern border of the Park, a
+magnificent and extensive view may be obtained of the
+hills which bound in the landscape, and including High
+Bridge.</p>
+
+<p>One should visit the water front of New York, which
+circles the city on three sides, to gain an idea of its immense
+commerce. A river wall of solid masonry has
+been commenced, which, when completed, will make
+the American metropolis equal to London and Liver<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>pool
+in this respect. A perfect forest of masts lines the
+wharves, representing every kind of craft, and almost
+every nation that sails the seas. Twice a week European
+steamships leave from the foot of Canal street;
+while from various points along the wharves, indicated
+by handsome ferry or shipping houses, boats go and
+come, to and from every port on the river or on the
+Atlantic coast. At Desbrosses and Cortlandt streets
+ferries connect with Jersey City. South, Wall and
+Fulton ferries give access to Brooklyn; while other
+ferries convey passengers to other points on the rivers
+and bay.</p>
+
+<p>Passing up the East River, with the ship-thronged
+wharves and docks of New York on one hand, and the
+Brooklyn Navy Yard on the other, the visitor soon
+obtains a view of Blackwell's, Ward's and Randall's
+islands. Blackwell's Island is at the foot of Forty-sixth
+street, and is one hundred and twenty acres in extent.
+Upon it are located the Almshouse, Female Lunatic
+Asylum, Penitentiary, Work House, Blind Asylum,
+Charity, Smallpox and Typhus Fever hospitals.
+These buildings are all constructed of granite, quarried
+from the island by convicts. They are plain but substantial
+in appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Blackwell's Island, the boat passes cautiously
+through the swirling waters of Hell Gate, once the terror
+of all sailors, but now robbed of most of its horrors. It
+was originally a collection of rocks in mid channel,
+which, as the tides swept in and out, caused the waters
+to rush in a succession of whirlpools and rapids. But a
+few years ago United States engineers undertook and
+accomplished a gigantic excavation, directly under these
+threatening rocks and reefs. When it was completed a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+grand explosion, effected by means of connecting wires,
+blew up these dangerous obstructions, and left a comparatively
+clear and safe channel for vessels. The few remaining
+rocks which this explosion failed to disturb are being
+removed, and with its dangers, much of the romantic
+interest which attached to Hell Gate will pass away.</p>
+
+<p>Ward's Island, embracing two hundred acres, and
+containing the Male Lunatic Asylum, the Emigrant
+Hospital, and the Inebriate Asylum, divides the Harlem
+from the East River. Randall's Island is separated
+from Ward's Island by a narrow channel, and is the last
+of the group. It contains the Idiot Asylum, the House
+of Refuge, the Infant Hospital, Nurseries, and other
+charities provided by the city for destitute children.</p>
+
+<p>The visitor in New York should, if possible, make
+an excursion to High Bridge, a magnificent structure by
+which the Croton Aqueduct is carried across Harlem
+River. It is built of granite, and spans the entire width
+of valley and river, from cliff to cliff. It is composed
+of eight arches, each with a span of eighty feet, and with
+an elevation of a hundred feet clear from the surface of
+the river. The water is led over the bridge, a distance
+of fourteen hundred and fifty feet, in immense iron pipes,
+six feet in diameter. Above these pipes is a pathway
+for pedestrians. At One-hundred-and-sixty-ninth street,
+a little below the High Bridge, is the site of the
+elegant mansion of Colonel Roger Morris, and the
+head-quarters of General Washington during active
+operations in this portion of the island. The situation
+is one of picturesque and historic interest.</p>
+
+<p>Rising grandly above all the shipping of the East
+River, on both its sides, are the massive towers of the
+Suspension Bridge, connecting the sister cities of New<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+York and Brooklyn. Ponderous cables swing in a single
+grand sweep from tower to tower, supporting the bridge
+in its place. It does not seem very much elevated above
+the river, and you feel that a certain majestic sailing
+vessel which is bearing down upon it will bring the top
+of her masts in contact with it. But she sails proudly
+beneath the structure, never bowing her head, and there
+is plenty of room and to spare; for the bridge is one hundred
+and thirty-five feet above high water mark. The
+distance from tower to tower is one thousand five
+hundred and ninety-five feet, while the entire length of
+the bridge, from Park Place to its terminus, on the
+heights in Brooklyn, is six thousand feet, or a little more
+than a mile. Its width is eighty-five feet, affording
+space for two railways, besides two double carriageways,
+and one foot-path. It was commenced in 1871, and
+cost $15,000,000. Its formal opening took place on
+May twenty-fourth, 1883. The day was a rarely beautiful
+one, and was observed as a general holiday by the
+people of both cities. President Arthur and his Cabinet,
+the governors of New York, New Jersey, and Rhode
+Island, with many other distinguished persons, were
+among the guests, while the honors of the occasion were
+done by the Mayors of New York and Brooklyn. Every
+street in the neighborhood of the bridge was packed with
+a dense throng of spectators, while windows, balconies
+and roofs were filled with curious sight seers.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after noon the procession moved down Broadway,
+and a little after one o'clock the President and other
+distinguished guests entered the gateway of the bridge,
+preceded by the Seventh Regiment, the procession
+headed by a company of mounted policemen, while
+Cappa's band played "Hail to the Chief." When the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+party reached the New York tower, they were met by
+President Kingsley of the bridge trustees, and there were
+introductions and welcomes, and the march was resumed.
+At the Brooklyn tower Mayor Low met the President,
+and the Seventy-third Regiment presented arms. In
+announcement of the fact that the bridge was crossed,
+cannons thundered forth salutes, the steam whistles of
+vessels and factories screamed, bells rang, and deafening
+cheers went up from the watching multitude. The further
+ceremonies of the day took place in a pavilion on
+the Brooklyn end, when Mr. William E. Kingsley,
+the President of the Bridge Association, Mayor Low,
+of Brooklyn, Mayor Edson of New York, Hon.
+Abram S. Hewitt and Rev. B. S. Storrs, made able
+addresses. A reception was tendered in the evening, at
+the Academy of Music, by the City of Brooklyn, to the
+President and the Governor of the State, previous to
+which there was a fine display of fireworks from the
+bridge.</p>
+
+<p>During all the excitement of the day, while cannon
+thundered and the multitude cheered, an invalid sat
+alone in his house on Columbia Heights, and regarded
+from afar the completion of his toil of years. John A.
+Roebling, the elder of the two Roeblings, first conceived
+and planned the bridge which connects New York and
+Brooklyn. He had built the chief suspension bridges
+in the country, and to him was intrusted the task of
+putting his own plans into tangible form. While testing
+and perfecting his surveys, his foot was crushed between
+the planking of a pier; lockjaw supervened, and the
+man who had designed the bridge lost his life in its
+service. He was succeeded by his son, Colonel Washington
+A. Roebling, who was equally qualified for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+undertaking. He labored with zeal, giving personal
+superintendence to his workmen, until in the caissons
+he contracted a mysterious disease, which had proved
+fatal to several men in his employ. From that period
+he was confined to his home, a hopeless invalid, his
+intellect apparently quickened as his physical system
+was enfeebled. He has never seen the structure, save
+as it stands from a distance; but from his sick-room
+he has directed and watched over the progress of
+the enterprise, his active assistant being his wife, of
+whom Mayor Edson, in his address on the occasion,
+spoke in the following terms: "With this bridge will
+ever be coupled the thought of one, through the subtle
+alembic of whose brain, and by whose facile fingers,
+communication was maintained between the directing
+power of its construction and the obedient agencies of
+its execution. It is thus an everlasting monument to
+the self-sacrificing devotion of woman." After the conclusion
+of the address, the President and his Cabinet,
+the Governor, and hundreds of others, paid their respects
+to Colonel Roebling, and did honor to the man the completion
+of whose work they were celebrating. After it
+was over Roebling replied, to the suggestion that he
+must be happy, "I am satisfied."</p>
+
+<p>The great bridge was opened to the public at midnight,
+and the waiting throng, which even at that hour
+numbered about twenty thousand persons, were permitted
+to enter the gates and cross the structure. A representative
+of the New York <i>Herald</i> was the first to pay the
+toll of one cent demanded, and the first to begin the
+passage across. With the completion of this bridge the
+continent is entirely spanned, and one may visit, dry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+shod and without the use of ferry boats, every city from
+the Atlantic to the Golden Gate.</p>
+
+<p>But the great bridge was not to be consecrated to the
+use of the public without a baptism of blood. On Decoration
+Day, which occurred the seventh day after the
+opening of the bridge, there was a grand military parade
+in New York, reviewed by President Arthur from a
+stand in Madison Square, and impressive ceremonies at
+the various cemeteries in Brooklyn. From early morning
+a steady stream of pedestrians poured each way,
+across the bridge. About four o'clock in the afternoon
+there came a lock in the crowd, just at the top of the
+stairs on the New York side, leading down to the concrete
+roadway Men, women and children were wedged
+together in a jam, created by the fearful pressure of two
+opposing crowds, extending to either end of the bridge.
+Some one stumbled and fell on the stairs. The terrible
+pressure prevented him or her from rising, and others
+fell over the obstacle thus placed in the pathway. Those
+immediately behind were hopelessly forced on over
+them. A panic ensued. Women screamed and wrung
+their hands; children cried and called pitifully for
+"help!" Men shouted themselves hoarse, swore and
+fought. A hundred hats and bonnets were afterwards
+found upon the spot, trampled into shapelessness. Clothes
+were torn off, and many emerged from the crush in only
+their undergarments. Parents held their children aloft
+to keep them from being trampled upon. Hundreds of
+men climbed with difficulty on the beams running over
+the railroads, and dropping down were caught by those
+in the carriage-way beneath. A number of women also
+escaped in that manner.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last, after almost superhuman efforts, the crowd
+was pressed back sufficiently to gather up the prostrate
+bodies, which were taken to the roadway below, and
+ranged along the wall, waiting for ambulances to convey
+them away. Twelve persons were found dead, some of
+them bruised, discolored, and covered with blood, and
+others apparently suffocated to death. The list of injured
+was very much larger&mdash;how much will probably never
+be known, since many, assisted by their friends, returned
+to their homes without reporting their hurts. The dead
+and wounded were most of them conveyed to the City
+Hall Police Station, and were there claimed by their
+friends; and the day which had begun so joyously
+ended in gloom.</p>
+
+<p>New York is one of the most wonderful products of
+our wonderful western civilization. It is itself a world
+in epitome. Thoroughly cosmopolitan in its character,
+almost every nationality is represented within its boundaries,
+and almost every tongue spoken. It is the great
+monetary, scientific, artistic and intellectual centre of the
+western world. Containing much that is evil, it also
+abounds with more that is good. It is well governed.
+Its sanitary arrangements are such as to make it peculiarly
+free from epidemic diseases. The record of its
+crimes is undoubtedly a long one; but when the number
+of its inhabitants is considered, it will be found to
+show an average comparing favorably with other cities.
+Thousands of happy homes are found throughout its
+length and breadth. Hundreds of good and charitable
+enterprises are originated and fostered within its limits,
+and grow, some of them, to gigantic proportions, reaching
+out strong arms to the uttermost confines of the
+country and even of the world, comforting the afflicted,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+lifting up the degraded, and shedding the light of truth
+in dark places. It is already a great city, a wonderful
+city. But what it is to-day is only the beginning of
+what those who live fifty years hence will behold it.
+There is still space upon Manhattan Island for twice or
+thrice its present population and business; and the no
+distant future will undoubtedly see this space fully
+occupied, while it is among the possibilities that New
+York will become, in point of inhabitants and commercial
+interests, the first city in the world.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN BRIDGE.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_355.jpg" width="1024" height="629" alt="NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN BRIDGE." title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h3>
+
+<h2>OMAHA.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Arrival in Omaha.&mdash;The Missouri River.&mdash;Position and Appearance
+of the City.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;History.&mdash;Land Speculation.&mdash;Panic
+of 1857.&mdash;Discovery of Gold in Colorado.&mdash;"Pike's
+Peak or Bust."&mdash;Sudden Revival of Business.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Union
+Pacific Railroad.&mdash;Population.&mdash;Commercial and
+Manufacturing Interests.&mdash;Bridge over the Missouri.&mdash;Union
+Pacific Depot.&mdash;Prospects for the Future.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>On the afternoon of October twenty-first, 1876, I
+sat in the saddle upon the eastern bank of the
+Missouri River, opposite Omaha, Nebraska, having that
+day accomplished a horseback journey of twenty-two
+miles, on my way from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
+Paul Revere, the faithful horse who had borne me all
+the way from Boston, declined entering the ferry boat,
+it being his firm conviction that rivers should either be
+crossed by bridges or forded. At last, being gently coerced,
+the horse reluctantly consented, and the muddy
+current of the river was soon crossed. At three o'clock
+I entered the city of Omaha, the half-way house across
+the continent, it having been a little more than five
+months since I dashed out of the surf, my horse's
+hoofs wet and dripping with the brine of the Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>Omaha lies on the eastern boundary of Nebraska,
+opposite Council Bluffs, on the western bank of the
+Missouri River, a turbulent stream, which is never satisfied
+with its position, but is constantly shifting and
+changing, and making for itself new channels. A bottom
+land about three miles wide stretches out between Omaha<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+and Council Bluffs, and through this the Missouri rolls,
+a swift, muddy stream, slowly but surely carrying the
+Rocky Mountains down to the Mississippi, which, in its
+turn, deposits them in the Gulf of Mexico, and helps
+to extend our Gulf coast. The Missouri vibrates like
+a pendulum, from one side of this bottom land to the
+other; now being near one city, and then near the other.
+At the period of my visit its current washed the front
+of Omaha, leaving Council Bluffs some distance off on
+the opposite side; but it was already beginning its backward
+swing. Thus the boundary line between Nebraska
+and Iowa is being continually shifted, and one State is
+augmented in territory at the expense of the other.</p>
+
+<p>Omaha is built in part upon the low bottom lands
+which border the river, and which may at any time be
+menaced by the swollen and angry stream, unless precautions
+are taken, in the building of high and substantial
+stone levees along the river front. The town lies
+also in part upon the table lands beyond, and is
+extending to the bluffs which rise still further away.
+Its business is chiefly confined to the lower portion,
+where magnificent blocks attest the prosperity of the
+city. Streets of substantial dwellings, and numerous
+most elegant private residences, with large and handsomely
+ornamented grounds, are discovered as one passes
+through the city. A striking edifice, of Cincinnati freestone,
+four stories high, is occupied as a Post Office and
+Court House. Its High School building is one of the
+finest in the country. When the State Government was,
+in 1866, removed from Omaha to Lincoln, the Legislature
+donated the Square and Capitol Building at the
+former place for High School purposes. The old Capitol
+was demolished, and a magnificent school building<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+erected on its site, at a cost of $250,000, while other
+fine school edifices, aggregating in cost about $150,000
+more, were erected in other sections of the city. The
+High School building is on the summit of a hill, overlooking
+a large extent of country, and has a spire one
+hundred and eighty-five feet high. The Depot of the
+Union Pacific Railroad is also a noteworthy edifice.</p>
+
+<p>Omaha was first laid out in 1853, and thus named,
+after a now nearly extinct tribe of Indians. The first house
+was built, and the first ferry established in that year;
+and a year later the first brick-kiln was burned, and the
+first newspaper&mdash;the Omaha Arrow&mdash;established. Where
+Turner Hall now stands, in 1854 was dug the first
+grave, for an old squaw of the Omaha tribe who had
+been left by her kindred to die. Whittier's description
+of the growth of western cities seems particularly applicable
+to Omaha:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Behind the squaw's light birch canoe<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The steamer smokes and raves,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And city lots are staked for sale<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Above old Indian graves."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The first Legislature of Nebraska convened in Omaha
+in the winter of 1854-5; and in 1856 the Capital was
+definitely located in that city, and the erection of the
+capitol building commenced. For a year or two there
+was a great land-boom, and city property and "corner
+lots" were held at fabulous prices. But in 1857 a crash
+came, and for a time the infant town was prostrated.
+However, in 1859 the discovery of gold in Colorado gave
+it a fresh impetus. The miners who marched in a perpetual
+caravan across the plains, in white-topped wagons,
+marked "Pike's Peak or bust," made Omaha their
+final starting-point, taking in at that place supplies for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+their long journey. Two years previous all who could
+get away from the apparently doomed town had gone to
+other sections, to begin anew the fight for fortune. Only
+those remained who were too poor to go, but these were
+now in luck. Fortune came to them, instead of their
+being compelled to undertake an ignis fatuus chase after
+her. At that time the business men of the city laid the
+foundations of their wealth and prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>In 1857 the town was incorporated as a city; but
+up to 1867 its only means of communication with the
+east was by stage-coach, across Iowa, and by steamers
+on the Missouri, which latter ceased running in winter.
+In 1865 the population of the town was but four thousand
+five hundred persons. In 1867 the first train of
+cars arrived in the city, on the Chicago and Northwestern
+Railroad. It was not long before other railroads,
+one after another, made it their western terminus, and
+its prosperity was established. Then came the Union
+Pacific Railroad, which started on its long journey across
+the plains and mountains from this point. The trade
+to the Pacific coast thus necessarily passed through
+Omaha, which became a gateway on the route, while
+many travelers and emigrants paused to breathe and
+rest before proceeding further, and to take in large
+quantities of supplies. In 1875 its population had increased
+to twenty thousand inhabitants, and in 1880
+had run up to thirty thousand.</p>
+
+<p>Strange as it may seem, the building of the Union
+Pacific Railroad has diminished rather than increased
+the local trade of the city. In overland times single
+houses sometimes traded as much as three million dollars'
+worth in a year; but the railroad has so dispersed and
+distributed business, that now none reach even half that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+amount. The city, however, does an immense manufacturing
+business. Within its limits is located the
+largest smelting works in America, employing nearly
+two hundred men, and doing an annual business of
+probably not less than five millions of dollars. One
+distillery alone, in 1875, the year previous to my visit,
+paid the government a tax of $316,000; while there
+are extensive breweries, linseed-oil works, steam-engine
+works, and pork-packing establishments. The engine
+shops, car-works and foundry of the Union Pacific Road
+occupy, with the round-house, about thirty acres of land,
+on the bottom adjoining the table land upon which the
+city is built. Over one million dollars is paid out
+annually in these establishments, for manual labor alone,
+without including payments for merchandise and supplies.
+A notable industry is the manufacture of brick,
+over five millions being turned out annually from the
+four brick-yards of Omaha. The city is also the headquarters
+of the Army of the Platte, which annually
+distributes nearly a million of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The first postmaster of Omaha used his hat for a
+post office, and carried around the mail matter in that
+receptacle wherever he went, delivering it by chance to
+its owners. Twenty years later the city possessed the
+finest government building west of the Mississippi,
+while the post office receipts are to-day upwards of a
+million dollars annually. Hides, buffalo robes, and
+furs, to the value of one hundred and fifty thousand
+dollars, are annually collected and shipped from Omaha;
+while two hundred and fifty thousand dollars is the
+extent in a single year of the sewing machine business.
+The Pacific Railroad ships from Omaha vast quantities
+of grain to the Salt Lake Valley, and brings back in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+return supplies of Utah fruit, fresh and dried. The first
+shipment of fruit, made in 1871, amounted to three
+hundred pounds. In four years the quantity had increased
+to nine hundred thousand pounds, and is still
+greater to-day. The Grand Central Hotel was the finest
+hotel between Chicago and San Francisco, having been
+erected in 1873, at a cost of three hundred thousand
+dollars; but it was destroyed by fire in 1878.</p>
+
+<p>The visitor to Omaha will probably reach that city
+by means of the great bridge across the Missouri River.
+This bridge is two thousand seven hundred and fifty
+feet long, with eleven spans, each span two hundred and
+fifty feet in width, and elevated fifty feet above high
+water mark. One stone masonry abutment, and eleven
+piers, each with two cast iron columns, support this
+bridge. Its construction was commenced in February,
+1869, and completed in 1872, during most of which time
+not less than five hundred men were employed upon it.
+Each column was sunk in the bed of the river until a
+solid foundation was reached. One column penetrated
+the earth eighty-two feet below low water, before it
+rested on the bed-rock. The approach to the bridge from
+the Council Bluffs side is by means of a gradually
+ascending embankment, one mile and a half in length.
+This bridge was constructed at a cost of two million six
+hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and brings an annual
+revenue of about four hundred thousand dollars. It is
+now, by act of Congress, considered a part of the Union
+Pacific Railroad, making the eastern terminus of that
+road really at Council Bluffs. Its total length, including
+its necessary approaches by embankment on the eastern
+shore, and by lengthy tressel-work on the western shore
+is nine thousand nine hundred and fifty feet, or nearly
+two miles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The old depot grounds of the Union Pacific Railroad
+were on the bank of the river, directly under the
+present bridge. In order to complete the connection
+between the bridge and the road, a branch line, seven
+thousand feet in length, was laid down directly through
+the city, and a new, spacious and most commodious
+depot constructed, on higher ground. And from this
+depot the westward-bound traveler takes his departure
+for that western empire toward the setting sun, and may,
+perhaps, continue his journey until he has reached and
+passed the Golden Gate, and only the solemn immensity
+of the ocean lies before him.</p>
+
+<p>Situated midway of the American continent, on a
+navigable river, which drains the northwest, and opens
+communication with the east and south; a prominent
+point on the great road which clasps a continent and
+unites the Atlantic with the Pacific; and at the same
+time a terminus for lesser roads which open up to it
+the trade and commerce of the interior; and on the
+borders of two states rich in agricultural and mineral
+wealth, and settled by a thrifty, intelligent and enterprising
+people; Omaha can scarcely fail to become the
+greatest city west of St. Louis. Founded but a generation
+ago, its business is already stupendous, though it is
+really but a beginning of what it promises to be in the
+future. As Iowa, Nebraska, and the States and Territories
+still further to the northwest, become more thickly
+settled, with their resources developed, it will form their
+natural commercial centre, to which they will look for
+supplies, and where they will find a market or a port
+for their produce and manufactures. With such an
+outlook, who will dare to limit Omaha's possibilities in
+the future, or say that any flight of the imagination
+really exceeds what the actuality may prove?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>OTTAWA.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Ottawa, the seat of the Canadian Government.&mdash;History.&mdash;Population.&mdash;Geographical
+Position.&mdash;Scenery.&mdash;Chaudi&egrave;re
+Falls.&mdash;Rideau Falls.&mdash;Ottawa River.&mdash;Lumber Business.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Steamboat
+and Railway Communications.&mdash;Moore's
+Canadian Boat Song.&mdash;Description of the City.&mdash;Churches,
+Nunneries, and Charitable Institutions.&mdash;Government
+Buildings.&mdash;Rideau Hall.&mdash;Princess Louise and Marquis of
+Lorne.&mdash;Ottawa's Proud Boast.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Ottawa was, in 1858, selected by Queen Victoria
+as the seat of the Canadian Government. When,
+in 1867, the British North American Possessions were
+reconstructed into the Dominion of Canada, Ottawa continued
+to be the Capital city. It was originally called Bytown,
+after Colonel By, of the Royal Engineers, who was,
+in 1827, commissioned to construct the Rideau Canal, and
+who laid out the town. In 1854 it was incorporated as
+a city, and its name changed to Ottawa, from the river
+upon which it stands. Since that time it has increased
+rapidly in population and importance, and has at the
+present time not far from twenty-five thousand inhabitants.
+It is situated on the south bank of the Ottawa
+River, at the mouth of the Rideau, one hundred and
+twenty-six miles above Montreal. The scenery around
+it is most magnificent, and is scarcely surpassed by any
+in Canada. At the west end of the city the Ottawa
+rushes, in a magnificent cataract, over a ragged ledge,
+two hundred feet wide and forty feet high, in what is
+known as the Chaudi&egrave;re Falls. Chaudi&egrave;re signifies<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+caldron, and in the seething caldron of waters at the
+base of the falls a sounding line three hundred feet in
+length has not touched bottom. Immediately below
+the falls is a suspension bridge, from which a most
+satisfactory view can be obtained. At the northeast
+end of the city the Rideau tumbles, in two cataracts,
+into the Ottawa. These cataracts are very picturesque,
+but are exceeded in grandeur by the Chaudi&egrave;re. The
+Des Ch&ecirc;nes Rapids, having a fall of nine feet, are found
+about eight miles above Ottawa.</p>
+
+<p>The Ottawa River is, next to the St. Lawrence, the
+largest stream in Canada. Rising in the range of
+mountains which forms the watershed between Hudson
+Bay and the great lakes, it runs in a southeasterly direction
+for about six hundred miles before it empties into the
+St. Lawrence. It has two mouths, which form the
+island upon which Montreal is situated. The entire
+region drained by it and its tributaries measures eighty
+thousand square miles. These tributaries and the
+Ottawa itself form highways for, probably, the largest
+lumber trade in the world. The clearing of great tracts
+of country by the lumbermen has opened the way for
+agriculturists; and numerous thriving settlements are
+found upon and near their banks, all of which look to
+Ottawa as their business centre. As these settlements
+increase in number and size, the prosperity of Ottawa
+will multiply in proportion. The navigation of the
+river has been much improved by engineering, especially
+for the transportation of lumber, dams and slides having
+been constructed for its passage over rapids and falls.</p>
+
+<p>This immense supply of lumber is, much of it, arrested
+at Ottawa, where the almost unequaled water power is
+utilized in saw-mills, which furnish the city its principal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+employment, and from which issue yearly almost incredible
+quantities of sawed lumber. There are also
+flour mills, and manufactories of iron castings, mill
+machinery, and agricultural implements, which give it
+commercial importance, and a sound basis of prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>Ottawa is connected by steamer with Montreal, and
+by the Rideau Canal with Lake Ontario at Kingston,
+while the Grand Trunk Railway sends a branch line
+from Prescott. The Ottawa River is navigable for one
+hundred and eighty-eight miles above the city, by
+steamers of the Union Navigation Company, but there
+are numerous portages around falls and rapids. The last
+stopping place of the steamer is Mattawa, a remote port
+of the Hudson Bay Company. Beyond that outpost of
+civilization there is nothing but unexplored and unbroken
+wilderness. Moore's Canadian boat song makes
+mention of the Ottawa River:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Soon as the woods on shore look dim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We'll sing, at St. Ann's, our parting hymn.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Ottawa's tide, this trembling moon<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall see us afloat on thy waters soon."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Ottawa is divided into Upper and Lower Town by
+the Rideau Canal, which contains eight massive locks
+within the city limits, and is crossed by two bridges, one
+of stone and iron, and the other of stone alone. The
+streets of the city are wide and regular. Sparks street
+is the fashionable promenade, containing the principal
+retail stores. Sussex is also a prominent business street.
+The principal hotels are the Russell House, near the
+Parliament Buildings; Windsor House, in the Upper
+Town; and the Albion, on Court House Square.</p>
+
+<p>The most prominent church edifice in the city is the
+Roman Catholic Cathedral of Notre Dame, which is of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+stone, with double spires two hundred feet in height.
+The interior is very fine, and contains as an altar piece
+Murillo's "Flight into Egypt." St. Patrick's, Roman
+Catholic, and St. Andrew's, Presbyterian, are also striking
+churches. At the corner of Bolton and Sussex
+streets is the imposing stone building of the Grey
+Nunnery, while the group of buildings belonging to the
+Black Nunnery is to the eastward of Cartier Square.
+There are, besides, in the city, two convents, two hospitals,
+three orphan asylums, and a Magdalen asylum,
+all under the control of the Roman Catholics. The
+Ottawa University is also a Roman Catholic institution,
+and has a large building in Wilbrod street. The Ladies'
+College, in Albert street, is a Protestant school.</p>
+
+<p>But all these structures sink into insignificance when
+compared to the Government Buildings, which constitute
+the most prominent feature of the city of Ottawa. They
+are situated on an eminence known as Barrack Hill,
+which rises one hundred and fifty feet above the river,
+and were erected at a cost of about four millions of
+dollars. They form three sides of a vast quadrangle,
+which occupies nearly four acres. The Parliament
+House is on the south side or front of the quadrangle,
+and is four hundred and seventy-two feet long, and the
+same number of feet deep, from the front of the main
+tower, to the rear of the library. The Departmental
+Buildings run north from this main structure, forming
+the east and west sides of the quadrangle. The eastern
+side is five hundred and eighteen feet long, by two
+hundred and fifty-three feet deep, and the western side
+is two hundred and eleven feet long, by two hundred
+and seventy-seven feet deep. These latter buildings
+contain the various government bureaus, in the west<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+block being also found the model room of the Patent
+Office, and the Post Office. The entire structure is of
+cream-colored sandstone, with arches and doors of red
+Potsdam sandstone, and the external ornamental work
+of this sandstone. Its architecture is in the Italian-Gothic
+style. Green and purple slates cover the roof,
+and the pinnacles are ornamented with elaborate iron
+trellis work. The columns and arches of the legislative
+chambers are of marble. These chambers are capacious
+and richly finished, and have stained glass windows.
+The Chamber of Commons is reached by an entrance to
+the left of the main entrance, under the central tower,
+and the marble of its columns and arches is beautiful.
+The Senate Hall, which is entered from the right of the
+main entrance, contains the vice-regal canopy and throne,
+and a portrait of Queen Victoria. There are also full-length
+portraits, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, of George III,
+and Queen Charlotte. The Library is a circular structure,
+on the north front of the Parliament House, with
+a dome ninety feet high, and contains about forty
+thousand volumes. A massive stone wall incloses the
+fourth side of the quadrangle, and the inclosure is laid
+out with tree-shaded walks.</p>
+
+<p>Rideau Hall, the official residence of the Governor
+General, is in New Edinburgh, a suburban town on
+the opposite side of the Rideau River, connected with
+Ottawa by a bridge. Rideau Hall has been for several
+years past the home of the Marquis of Lorne, Governor
+General of the Dominion of Canada, and the Princess
+Louise, fourth daughter of Queen Victoria. The love
+which the Canadians bear their Queen was most loyally
+manifested on the arrival of the Governor General and
+the Princess, his wife. Every honor was shown the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+Marquis which was due his official and hereditary
+rank; but the most extravagant marks of affection and
+veneration were lavished upon the Princess, who was
+regarded as a representative of her mother. Whenever
+she proceeded through the Dominion, her progress was
+a triumphal procession. The people crowded to catch
+but a glimpse of her face, or to hear the tones of her
+voice. She is described as an extremely affable lady, the
+beauty of Her Majesty's family, caring less for the
+traditions and observances of royalty than her imperial
+mother, with great native shrewdness and marked
+ability as an artist. She has traveled extensively
+throughout the dominion of Canada, having reached its
+extreme western limit, and crossed the United States
+from the Atlantic to the Pacific. It is said she does
+not greatly admire Canada, and proposes to spend as
+little time at Ottawa as possible, regarding the somewhat
+primitive society there as almost semi-barbaric.
+But when she returns permanently to the island of her
+birth she will go with greatly enlarged views, and a
+knowledge of the world, and especially of the people of
+the new world, which ought to constitute her an efficient
+counsellor in affairs of state.</p>
+
+<p>The Marquis of Lorne, Governor General of Canada,
+is described as an extremely handsome gentleman of the
+Scotch type, with large literary attainments, and with a
+desire to conciliate the people over whom he has been
+sent to rule. For many generations to come it will
+undoubtedly be Ottawa's highest boast that it has
+numbered among its citizens the son of one of the
+proudest nobles of the British realm, and a princess of
+the blood.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h3>
+
+<h2>PITTSBURG.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Pittsburg at Night.&mdash;A Pittsburg Fog.&mdash;Smoke.&mdash;Description of
+the City.&mdash;The Oil Business.&mdash;Ohio River.&mdash;Public Buildings,
+Educational and Charitable Institutions.&mdash;Glass Industry.&mdash;Iron
+Foundries.&mdash;Fort Pitt Works.&mdash;Casting a Monster Gun.&mdash;American
+Iron Works.&mdash;Nail Works.&mdash;A City of Workers.&mdash;A
+True Democracy.&mdash;Wages.&mdash;Character of Workmen.&mdash;Value
+of Organization.&mdash;Knights of Labor.&mdash;Opposed to Strikes.&mdash;True
+Relations of Capital and Labor.&mdash;Railroad Strike of
+1877.&mdash;Allegheny City.&mdash;Population of Pittsburg.&mdash;Early History&mdash;Braddock's
+Defeat.&mdash;Old Battle Ground.&mdash;Historic Relics.&mdash;The
+Past and the Present.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>By all means make your first approach to Pittsburg
+in the night time, and you will behold a spectacle
+which has not a parallel on this continent. Darkness gives
+the city and its surroundings a picturesqueness which
+they wholly lack by daylight. It lies low down in a
+hollow of encompassing hills, gleaming with a thousand
+points of light, which are reflected from the rivers,
+whose waters glimmer, it may be, in the faint moonlight,
+and catch and reflect the shadows as well. Around
+the city's edge, and on the sides of the hills which
+encircle it like a gloomy amphitheatre, their outlines
+rising dark against the sky, through numberless apertures,
+fiery lights stream forth, looking angrily and fiercely up
+toward the heavens, while over all these settles a heavy
+pall of smoke. It is as though one had reached the
+outer edge of the infernal regions, and saw before him
+the great furnace of Pandemonium with all the lids
+lifted. The scene is so strange and weird that it will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+live in the memory forever. One pictures, as he beholds
+it, the tortured spirits writhing in agony, their
+sinewy limbs convulsed, and the very air oppressive
+with pain and rage.</p>
+
+<p>But the scene is illusive. This is the domain of
+Vulcan, not of Pluto. Here, in this gigantic workshop,
+in the midst of the materials of his labor, the god of fire,
+having left his ancient home on Olympus, and established
+himself in this newer world, stretches himself
+beside his forge, and sleeps the peaceful sleep which is
+the reward of honest industry. Right at his doorway are
+mountains of coal to keep a perpetual fire upon his altar;
+within the reach of his outstretched grasp are rivers of
+coal oil; and a little further away great stores of iron for
+him to forge and weld, and shape into a thousand forms;
+and at his feet is the shining river, an impetuous Mercury,
+ever ready to do his bidding. Grecian mythology
+never conceived of an abode so fitting for the son of Zeus
+as that which he has selected for himself on this western
+hemisphere. And his ancient tasks were child's play
+compared with the mighty ones he has undertaken
+to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Failing a night approach, the traveler should reach
+the Iron City on a dismal day in autumn, when the air
+is heavy with moisture, and the very atmosphere looks
+dark. All romance has disappeared. In this nineteenth
+century the gods of mythology find no place in daylight.
+There is only a very busy city shrouded in gloom. The
+buildings, whatever their original material and color,
+are smoked to a uniform, dirty drab; the smoke sinks,
+and mingling with the moisture in the air, becomes of a
+consistency which may almost be felt as well as seen.
+Under a drab sky a drab twilight hangs over the town,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+and the gas-lights, which are left burning at mid-day,
+shine out of the murkiness with a dull, reddish glare.
+Then is Pittsburg herself. Such days as these are her
+especial boast, and in their frequency and dismalness, in
+all the world she has no rival.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, Pittsburg is a smoky, dismal city, at her best.
+At her worst, nothing darker, dingier or more dispiriting
+can be imagined. The city is in the heart of the
+soft coal region; and the smoke from her dwellings,
+stores, factories, foundries and steamboats, uniting,
+settles in a cloud over the narrow valley in which she is
+built, until the very sun looks coppery through the
+sooty haze. According to a circular of the Pittsburg
+Board of Trade, about twenty per cent., or one-fifth, of
+all the coal used in the factories and dwellings of the city
+escapes into the air in the form of smoke, being the finer
+and lighter particles of carbon of the coal, which, set free
+by fire, escapes unconsumed with the gases. The consequences
+of several thousand bushels of coal in the air at
+one and the same time may be imagined. But her
+inhabitants do not seem to mind it; and the doctors
+hold that this smoke, from the carbon, sulphur and
+iodine contained in it, is highly favorable to lung and
+cutaneous diseases, and is the sure death of malaria and
+its attendant fevers. And certainly, whatever the
+cause may be, Pittsburg is one of the healthiest cities
+in the United States. Her inhabitants are all too busy
+to reflect upon the inconvenience or uncomeliness of this
+smoke. Work is the object of life with them. It
+occupies them from morning until night, from the
+cradle to the grave, only on Sundays, when, for the
+most part, the furnaces are idle, and the forges are silent.
+For Pittsburg, settled by Irish-Scotch Presbyterians,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>
+is a great Sunday-keeping day. Save on this day her
+business men do not stop for rest or recreation, nor do
+they "retire" from business. They die with the
+harness on, and die, perhaps, all the sooner for having
+worn it so continuously and so long.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg is not a beautiful city. That stands to
+reason, with the heavy pall of smoke which constantly
+overhangs her. But she lacks beauty in other respects.
+She is substantially and compactly built, and contains
+some handsome edifices; but she lacks the architectural
+magnificence of some of her sister cities; while her
+suburbs present all that is unsightly and forbidding in
+appearance, the original beauties of nature having been
+ruthlessly sacrificed to utility.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg is situated in western Pennsylvania, in a
+narrow valley at the confluence of the Allegheny and
+Monongahela rivers, and at the head of the Ohio, and
+is surrounded by hills rising to the height of four or five
+hundred feet. These hills once possessed rounded outlines,
+with sufficient exceptional abruptness to lend them
+variety and picturesqueness. But they have been leveled
+down, cut into, sliced off, and ruthlessly marred and
+mutilated, until not a trace of their original outlines
+remain. Great black coal cars crawl up and down their
+sides, and plunge into unexpected and mysterious
+openings, their sudden disappearance lending, even in
+daylight, an air of mystery and diablerie to the region.
+Railroad tracks gridiron the ground everywhere, debris
+of all sorts lies in heaps, and is scattered over the earth,
+and huts and hovels are perched here and there, in every
+available spot. There is no verdure&mdash;nothing but mud
+and coal, the one yellow the other black. And on the
+edge of the city are the unpicturesque outlines of fac<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>tories
+and foundries, their tall chimneys belching forth
+columns of inky blackness, which roll and whirl in
+fantastic shapes, and finally lose themselves in the general
+murkiness above.</p>
+
+<p>The tranquil Monongahela comes up from the south,
+alive with barges and tug boats; while the swifter
+current of the Allegheny bears from the oil regions, at
+the north, slight-built barges with their freights of crude
+petroleum. Oil is not infrequently poured upon the
+troubled waters, when one of these barges sinks, and its
+freight, liberated from the open tanks, refuses to sink
+with it, and spreads itself out on the surface of the
+stream.</p>
+
+<p>The oil fever was sorely felt in Pittsburg, and it was
+a form of malaria against which the smoke-laden atmosphere
+was no protection. During the early years of
+the great oil speculation the city was in a perpetual
+state of excitement. Men talked oil upon the streets,
+in the cars and counting-houses, and no doubt thought
+of oil in church. Wells and barrels of petroleum, and
+shares of oil stock were the things most often mentioned.
+And though that was nearly twenty years ago, and the
+oil speculation has settled into a safe and legitimate
+pursuit, Pittsburg is still the greatest oil mart in the
+world. By the means of Oil Creek and the Allegheny,
+the oil which is to supply all markets is first shipped
+to Pittsburg, passes through the refineries there, and
+is then exported.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">PITTSBURGH AND ITS RIVERS.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_375.jpg" width="1024" height="642" alt="PITTSBURGH AND ITS RIVERS." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The Ohio River makes its beginning here, and in all
+but the season of low water the wharves of the city are
+lined with boats, barges and tugs, destined for every
+mentionable point on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.
+The Ohio River is here, as all along its course, an uncertain
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+and capricious stream. Sometimes, in spring, or
+early summer, it creeps up its banks and looks menacingly
+at the city. At other times it seems to become
+weary of bearing the boats, heavily laden with merchandise,
+to their destined ports, and so takes a nap, as
+it were. The last time we beheld this water-course its
+bed was lying nearly bare and dry, while a small, sluggish
+creek, a few feet, or at most, a few yards wide,
+crept along the bottom, small barges being towed down
+stream by horses, which waded in the water. The giant
+was resting.</p>
+
+<p>The public buildings and churches of Pittsburg are,
+some of them, of fine appearance, while the Mercantile
+Library is an institution to be proud of, being both
+handsome and spacious, and containing a fine library
+and well-supplied reading room. The city boasts of
+universities, colleges, hospitals, and asylums, and the
+Convent of the Sisters of Mercy is the oldest house of
+the order in America. There are also two theatres, an
+Opera House, an Academy of Music, and several public
+halls.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not any of these which has made the city
+what she is, or to which she will point with the greatest
+pride. The crowning glory of Pittsburg is her monster
+iron and glass works. One-half the glass produced in
+all the United States comes from Pittsburg. This
+important business was first established here in 1787,
+by Albert Gallatin, and it has increased since then to
+giant proportions. Probably, not less than one hundred
+millions of bottles and vials are annually produced here,
+besides large quantities of window glass. The best wine
+bottles in America are made here, though they are inferior
+to those of French manufacture. A great number<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+of flint-glass works turn out the best flint glass produced
+in the country.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to these glass works&mdash;which, though they
+employ thousands of workmen, represent but a fraction
+of the city's industries&mdash;there are rolling mills, foundries,
+potteries, oil refineries, and factories of machinery. All
+these works are rendered possible by the coal which
+abounds in measureless quantities in the immediate
+neighborhood of the city. All the hills which rise from
+the river back of Pittsburg have a thick stratum of
+bituminous coal running through them, which can be
+mined without shafts, or any of the usual accessories of
+mining. All that is to be done is to shovel the coal out
+of the hill-side, convey it in cars or by means of an
+inclined plane to the factory or foundry door, and dump
+it, ready for use. In fact, these hills are but immense
+coal cellars, ready filled for the convenience of the
+Pittsburg manufacturers. True, in shoveling the coal
+out of the hill-side, the excavations finally become galleries,
+running one, two or three miles directly into the
+earth. But there is neither ascent nor descent; no lowering
+of miners or mules in great buckets down a deep
+and narrow shaft, no elevating of coal through the same
+means. It is all like a great cellar, divided into rooms,
+the ceilings supported by arches of the coal itself. Each
+miner works a separate room, and when the room is
+finished, and that part of the mine exhausted the arches
+are knocked away, pillars of large upright logs substituted,
+the coal removed, and the hill left to settle gradually
+down, until the logs are crushed and flattened.</p>
+
+<p>The "Great Pittsburg Coal Seam" is from four to
+twelve feet thick, about three hundred feet above the
+water's edge, and about one hundred feet from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
+average summit of the hills. It is bituminous coal
+which has been pressed solid by the great mass of earth
+above it. The thicker the mass and the greater the
+pressure, the better the coal. It has been estimated as
+covering eight and a half millions of acres, and that it
+would take the entire product of the gold mines of
+California for one thousand years to buy this one seam.
+When we remember the numerous other coal mines,
+anthracite as well as bituminous, found within the limits
+of the State of Pennsylvania, we are fairly stupefied in
+trying to comprehend the mineral wealth of that State.</p>
+
+<p>The coal mined in the rooms in these long galleries
+is conveyed in a mule-drawn car to the mouth of the
+gallery, and if to be used by the foundries at the foot of
+the hill, is simply sent to its destination down an inclined
+plane. Probably not less than ten thousand men are
+employed in these coal mines in and near Pittsburg,
+adding a population not far from fifty thousand to that
+region. Pittsburg herself consumes one-third of the
+coal produced, and a large proportion of the rest is
+shipped down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, some of
+it as far as New Orleans.</p>
+
+<p>The monster iron works of Pittsburg consume large
+quantities of this coal, and it is the abundance and convenience
+of the latter material which have made the
+former possible. No other city begins to compare with
+Pittsburg in the number and variety of her factories.
+Down by the banks of the swift-flowing Allegheny most
+of the great foundries are to be discovered. The Fort
+Pitt Works are on a gigantic scale. Here are cast those
+monsters of artillery known as the twenty-inch gun.
+Not by any means a gun twenty inches in length, but a
+gun with a bore twenty inches in diameter, so accurate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
+that it does not vary one-hundredth part of an inch from
+the true line in its whole length. The ball for this gun
+weighs one thousand and eighty pounds, and costs a
+hundred and sixty-five dollars. The gun itself weighs
+sixty tons, and costs fifty thousand dollars, and yet one
+of these giants is cast every day, and the operation is
+performed with the utmost composure and absence of
+confusion. The mould is an enormous structure of iron
+and sand, weighing forty tons, and to adjust this properly
+is the most difficult and delicate work in the foundry.
+When it is all ready, three streams of molten iron, from
+as many furnaces, flow through curved troughs and pour
+their fiery cataracts into the mould. These streams run
+for twenty minutes, and then, the mould being full, the
+furnaces from which they flow are closed with a piece of
+clay. Left to itself, the gun would be thirty days in
+cooling, but this process is expedited to eighteen days,
+by means of cold water constantly flowing in and out of
+the bore. While it is still hot, the great gun is lifted
+out of the pit, swung across the foundry to the turning
+shop, the end shaven off, the outside turned smooth,
+and the inside hollowed out, with an almost miraculous
+precision. The weight of the gun is thus reduced twenty
+tons.</p>
+
+<p>The American Iron Works employ two thousand five
+hundred hands, and cover seventeen acres. They have
+a coal mine at their back door, and an iron mine on
+Lake Superior, and they make any and every difficult
+iron thing the country requires. Nothing is too ponderous,
+nothing too delicate and exact, to be produced. The
+nail works of the city are well worth seeing. In them
+a thousand nails a minute are manufactured, each nail
+being headed by a blow on cold iron. The noise arising<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+from this work can only be described as deafening. In
+one nail factory two hundred different kinds of nails,
+tacks and brads are manufactured. The productions of
+these different factories and foundries amount in the
+aggregate to an almost incredible number and value,
+and embrace everything made of iron which can be used
+by man.</p>
+
+<p>George F. Thurston, writing of Pittsburg, says, it
+has "thirty-five miles of factories in daily operation,
+twisted up into a compact tangle; all belching forth
+smoke; all glowing with fire; all swarming with workmen;
+all echoing with the clank of machinery. Actual
+measurement shows that there are, in the limits of what
+is known as Pittsburg, nearly thirty-five miles of manufactories
+of iron, of steel, of cotton, and of brass alone, not
+mentioning manufactories of other materials. In a distance
+of thirty-five and one-half miles of streets, there are
+four hundred and seventy-eight manufactories of iron,
+steel, cotton, brass, oil, glass, copper and wood, occupying
+less than four hundred feet each; for a measurement
+of the ground shows that these factories are so contiguous
+in their positions upon the various streets of the city,
+that if placed in a continuous row, they would reach
+thirty-five miles, and each factory have less than the
+average front stated. This is "manufacturing Pittsburg."
+In four years the sale and consumption of pig
+iron alone was one-fourth the whole immense production
+of the United States; and through the Ohio and Mississippi
+rivers and their tributaries, its people control
+the shipment of goods, without breaking bulk, over
+twelve thousand miles of water transportation, and are
+thus enabled to deliver the products of their thrift in
+nearly four hundred counties in the territory of fifteen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+States. There is no city of its size in the country which
+has so large a banking capital as Pittsburg. The Bank
+of Pittsburg, it is said, is the only bank in the Union
+that never suspended specie payments.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg is a city of workers. From the proprietors
+of these extensive works, down to the youngest
+apprentices, all are busy; and perhaps the higher up
+in the scale the harder the work and the greater the
+worry. A man who carries upon his shoulders the
+responsibility of an establishment whose business
+amounts to millions of dollars in a year; who must
+oversee all departments of labor; accurately adjust the
+buying of the crude materials and the scale of wages on
+the one hand, with the price of the manufactured article
+on the other, so that the profit shall be on the right side;
+and who at the same time shall keep himself posted as
+to all which bears any relation to his business, has no
+time for leisure or social pleasures, and must even stint
+his hours of necessary rest.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg illustrates more clearly than any other
+city in America the outcome of democratic institutions.
+There are no classes here except the industrious classes;
+and no ranks in society save those which have been
+created by industry. The mammoth establishments,
+some of them perhaps in the hands of the grandsons
+of their founders, have grown from small beginnings,
+fostered in their growth by industry and thrift. The
+great proprietor of to-day, it may have been, was the
+"boss" of yesterday, and the journeyman of a few years
+ago, having ascended the ladder from the lowest round
+of apprenticeship. Industry and sobriety are the main
+aids to success.</p>
+
+<p>The wages paid are good, for the most part, varying<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+according to the quality of the employment, some of them
+being exceedingly liberal. The character of the workmen
+is gradually improving, though it has not yet
+reached the standard which it should attain. Many are
+intelligent, devoting their spare time to self-improvement,
+and especially to a comprehension of the relations
+of capital and labor, which so intimately concern them,
+and which they, more than any other class of citizens,
+except employers, need to understand, in order that they
+may not only maintain their own rights, but may avoid
+encroaching on the rights of others.</p>
+
+<p>Too many workmen, however, have no comprehension
+of the dignity of their own position. They live only
+for present enjoyment, spend their money foolishly, not
+to say wickedly, and on every holiday give themselves
+up to that curse of the workingman&mdash;strong drink.
+While this class is such a considerable one, the entire
+ranks of working men must be the sufferers. And
+while ignorance as well as vice has been so prevalent
+among them, it is not to be wondered at that they have
+been constantly undervalued, and almost as constantly
+oppressed.</p>
+
+<p>The prosperity of the country depends upon the prosperity
+of the masses. With all the money in the hands
+of a few, there are only the personal wants of a few to
+be supplied. With wages high, work is more plentiful,
+and everybody prospers. The gains of a large manufacturing
+establishment, divided, by means of fair profit
+and just wages, between employers and employed, instead
+of being hoarded up by one man, make one hundred
+persons to eat where there would otherwise be but one;
+one hundred people to buy the productions of the looms
+and forges of the country, instead of only one; one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+hundred people, each having a little which they spend
+at home, instead of one man, who hoards his wealth, or
+takes it to Europe to dispose of it. It means all the
+difference between good and bad times, between a prosperous
+country, where all are comfortable and happy,
+and a country of a few millionaires and many paupers.</p>
+
+<p>No description of Pittsburg would be complete without
+a reference to the Knights of Labor, which has taken
+the place of the old trades unions and guilds. While
+the latter were in existence, that city was often the
+scene of violent and disastrous strikes. The great railroad
+strike of 1877, in which a number of lives were
+lost, and millions of dollars' worth of property destroyed,
+culminated at Pittsburg, and for days the city was
+stricken with panic. The cause of this strike was the
+decision of the railroad corporation to reduce to one
+dollar a day the wages of a certain class of its employees,
+which were already too low. The cause of these strikers
+was just, but their methods were reprehensible. The
+institution and spread of the Knights of Labor has
+rendered such another strike an impossibility, as that
+Order, which has a large membership among the workmen
+of Pittsburg, aims to settle, as far as possible, the
+difficulties between employers and employees by arbitration;
+and its spread will, we trust, if it does not pass
+under the control of demagogues, eventually result in a
+better understanding between capital and labor, and in a
+recognition of the fact that their real interests are identical.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg has no park or public pleasure ground.
+Its people are too busy to think about such things, or to
+use them if it had them. On Saturday nights its theatres
+and variety halls are crowded, to listen to entertain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>ments
+which are not always of the best. When its
+people wish to visit a public park, they must cross to
+Allegheny City, on the west bank of the Allegheny
+River, where there is a park embracing a hundred acres,
+containing a monument to Humboldt, and ornamented
+with small lakes. The Soldiers' Monument, erected to
+the memory of four thousand men of Allegheny County
+who lost their lives in the war of the Rebellion, is also in
+this latter city, on a lofty hill near the river, in the eastern
+part of the city. Many of the handsome residences of
+Pittsburg's merchants and manufacturers are to be seen
+in this city, which is also famous for its manufacturing
+interests, and is connected with Pittsburg by five bridges.
+Birmingham is a flourishing suburb on the opposite
+bank of the Monongahela River, containing important
+glass and iron manufactories.</p>
+
+<p>The present population of Pittsburg is 156,381
+inhabitants. The first settlement upon the site of the
+city was in 1754, when a French trading post was
+established and named Fort Duquesne. On July ninth,
+1755, General Braddock, in command of two thousand
+British troops, accompanied by Colonel Washington
+with eight hundred Virginians, marched toward Fort
+Duquesne with the intention of capturing it. When
+within a few miles of the fort, they were surprised by a
+large party of French and Indians in ambush, and
+Braddock, who angrily disregarded Washington's advice,
+saw his troops slaughtered by an invisible enemy. The
+English and colonists lost seven hundred and seventy-seven
+men, killed and wounded, while the enemy's loss
+was scarcely fifty. Braddock himself was mortally
+wounded, and died upon the battle field, and in order
+that his remains might not be disturbed, Washington<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+buried him in the road, and ordered the wagons in their
+retreat to drive over his grave. Washington himself
+escaped unhurt, though he had two horses shot under
+him, and had four bullets sent through his clothes. An
+Indian who was engaged in this battle afterwards said
+that he had seventeen fair fires at Washington during
+the engagement, but was unable to wound him.</p>
+
+<p>In 1758, Fort Duquesne was abandoned by the French,
+and immediately occupied by the English, who changed
+its name to Fort Pitt, in honor of William Pitt. As a
+town its settlement dates from 1765. In 1804 it was
+incorporated as a borough, and in 1816 chartered as a
+city. Its population in 1840, was a little more than
+20,000. In 1845 a great part of the city was destroyed
+by fire, but was quickly rebuilt, its prosperity remaining
+unchecked.</p>
+
+<p>A little less than ten miles from Pittsburg is the
+village called Braddock's Field, which, in the names of
+its streets, perpetuates the old historic associations. The
+ancient Indian trail which led to the river is still preserved,
+and the two shallow ravines in which the French
+and Indians lay concealed when they surprised Braddock's
+troops are still there, though denuded of the
+dense growth of hazel bushes which at that period
+served the purpose of an ambush. From an old oak in
+this neighborhood many bullets have been pried out by
+persevering relic hunters; while in the adjacent gardens
+the annual spring plowing invariably turns up mementoes
+of that historic event, in the shape of bullets, arrow
+heads, and even bayonets. A sword with a name engraved
+upon it has also been found.</p>
+
+<p>The Pennsylvania Railroad now crosses the location
+of the thickest of the fight, and at the time of its con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>struction
+a considerable number of human bones were
+dug up and reinterred, the place of the later interment
+being surrounded by a rough fence of common rails.
+Children now play where once the forces of their nation
+engaged in deadly warfare. The hillside, which was
+then pierced by bullets, is now perforated near its summit
+by large openings, through which emerge car-loads
+of coal. Thus the present and the past strike hands
+across the century, and modern civilization, with its implements
+of industry and its appliances of commerce,
+supersedes and obliterates the traces of savagery, and of
+the deadly enmity of man toward man. The sword is
+turned into the plowshare, and peace triumphs over
+bloodshed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h3>
+
+<h2>PORTLAND.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Coast of Maine.&mdash;Early Settlements in Portland.&mdash;Troubles
+with the Indians.&mdash;Destruction of the Town in 1690.&mdash;Destroyed
+Again in 1703.&mdash;Subsequent Settlement and Growth.&mdash;During
+the Revolution.&mdash;First Newspaper.&mdash;Portland Harbor.&mdash;Commercial
+Facilities and Progress.&mdash;During the Rebellion.&mdash;Great
+Fire of 1866.&mdash;Reconstruction.&mdash;Position of the city.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Munjoy
+Hill.&mdash;Maine General Hospital.&mdash;Eastern and Western
+Promenades.&mdash;Longfellow's House.&mdash;Birthplace of the Poet.&mdash;Market
+Square and Hall.&mdash;First Unitarian Church.&mdash;Lincoln
+Park.&mdash;Eastern Cemetery.&mdash;Deering's Woods.&mdash;Commercial
+Street.&mdash;Old-time Mansion.&mdash;Case's Bay and Islands.&mdash;Cushing's
+Island.&mdash;Peak's Island.&mdash;Long Island.&mdash;Little Chebague
+Island.&mdash;Harpswell.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>The hungry ocean has gnawed and ravaged the New
+England coast, until along almost its entire length
+it is worn into ragged edges, forming islands, capes, promontories,
+bold headlands, peninsulas, bays, inlets and
+coves. In this coast are united the grand, the picturesque
+and the beautiful. Soft masses of foliage are in
+close juxtaposition with rugged rocks and dashing surf.
+Violet turf sweeps down to meet the sands washed up
+by the sea. Bays cut deeply into the land, forming safe
+harbors, and emerald islands innumerable dot their
+surface.</p>
+
+<p>In 1632 George Cleve and Richard Tucker landed on
+the beach of a peninsula, jutting out into a broad and
+deep bay, and sheltered from the ocean by a promontory
+at the south, now known as Cape Elizabeth, and by a
+guard of islands which clasped hands around it. Here<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
+Cleve built, of logs, the first house on the site of what is
+now the city of Portland. After a time other colonists
+came, devoting themselves to fishing and buying furs of
+the Indians. When the people of this distant colony
+wanted to go to Boston, they rode horseback along the
+beach, which formed the original highway. The settlement
+was first known as Casco, but its name was changed
+to Falmouth in 1668, though a portion of it, where
+Portland now stands, continued to be known as Casco
+Rock. In 1675 there were but forty families in the
+town, and the Rock was still almost covered by a dense
+forest. In that year the Indians, who had long borne
+grievous wrongs at the hands of the settlers with patient
+endurance, arose, under King Philip, to avenge them. The
+inhabitants of Falmouth were either killed or carried
+into captivity, and the little town was wiped out of
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>Three years later Fort Royal, the largest fortification
+on the coast, was erected on a rocky eminence, near the
+present foot of India street, where the round-house of
+the Grand Trunk Railway now stands, and settlers
+began to return. A party of French Huguenots settled
+there, mills were set up, roads cut into the forest, and
+trade established between Falmouth and Massachusetts
+towns. The little settlement existed under varying
+fortunes until 1690, when the French and Indians, after
+a few days' siege, captured the fort, destroyed the town,
+and carried the commanding officer and his garrison
+captives to Quebec. The war continued until 1698,
+during which time the place was only known as "deserted
+Casco." In 1703 the war broke out again, and
+what few inhabitants had straggled back were killed,
+and the place remained desolate until 1715, when the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
+re-settlement began. Three years later twenty families
+had banded themselves together for mutual defence,
+clustering about the foot of India street, and eastward
+along the beach. The second meeting-house of the town
+was erected at the corner of India and Middle streets,
+where Rev. Thomas Smith, in 1727, commenced his
+ministry, which extended over a period of sixty-eight
+years.</p>
+
+<p>The town was incorporated in 1718, and at that time
+the Neck above Clay Cove was all forest and swamp.
+A brook flowed into the Cove, crossed by bridges at Fore
+and Middle streets. The old bridge at Middle street
+remained until early in the present century. The trails
+stretching out into the forest gradually grew into streets,
+and the three principal ones were named Fore, Middle
+and Back streets. The name of the latter was, late in
+the century, changed to Congress street.</p>
+
+<p>After a period of sixty years of steady growth, the
+town had extended only as far westward as Centre street,
+and the upper portion of the Neck was still covered with
+woods. The Indians gave the town little trouble after
+1725, having made peace in that year, and gradually
+dwindled away, and emigrated to Canada. In 1755 it
+was no longer a frontier post. Its population had increased
+to nearly 3,000 inhabitants, commerce had been
+established, and the town was a most peaceful and a
+prosperous one. At the commencement of the Revolution
+2,555 tons of shipping were owned in Falmouth.</p>
+
+<p>When the colonies began to resist the encroachments
+of England, Falmouth took a prominent and patriotic
+stand. In October, 1775, Captain Henry Mowatt, with
+a fleet of five vessels, opened his batteries on the
+town, and, firing the houses, laid it in ashes. Over four<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>
+hundred buildings were destroyed, leaving only one
+hundred standing. The place was again deserted, the
+people seeking safety in the interior.</p>
+
+<p>On January first, the <i>Falmouth Gazette and Weekly
+Advertiser</i>, the first newspaper of the town, was published
+by Benjamin Titcomb and Thomas B. Waite.
+In 1786 the town was divided, the Neck receiving the
+name of Portland, having at that time a population of
+about two thousand. In 1793 wharves were extended
+into the harbor. In 1806, its commercial business and
+general prosperity were unexampled in New England.
+The duties collected at the Custom House reached, in
+that year, $342,809, having increased from $8,109 in
+1790. But in 1807, the embargo which followed the
+non-intercourse policy of 1806 resulted in the suspension
+of commerce and the temporary ruin of the shipping
+interests. Commercial houses were prostrated, and
+great distress prevailed. The harbor was empty, and
+grass grew upon the wharves. In the war of 1812
+privateers were fitted out here, some of which damaged
+the enemy, while others were captured. After the peace
+of 1815 commerce revived but slowly, and the population
+as slowly increased.</p>
+
+<p>In March, 1820, Maine was separated from Massachusetts,
+and admitted into the Union as a State; and Portland
+became its capital. In 1832 the capital was removed
+to Augusta. In 1828 the first steamboat anchored in
+the harbor of Portland, having arrived from New
+York to run as a passenger boat between Portland and
+Boston. The Portland Steam Packet Company was
+organized in 1844, and has continued in successful
+operation ever since.</p>
+
+<p>Portland has one of the deepest and best harbors in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+the world, with a depth of forty feet at low tide. Its
+surroundings are exceptionally favorable for a commercial
+city, and were it not for its geographical location, it
+being so far north of the great areas of population, it
+would undoubtedly have gained a prominence over most
+of the Atlantic cities. But Boston and New York drew
+all but the provincial trade and commerce, and with a
+sparsely settled country at its back, there was little to
+build up Portland and give it great prosperity. In 1850
+the Cumberland and Oxford Canal, connecting the
+waters of Sebago Lake with Portland Harbor, was
+completed. This was not a great enterprise, certainly,
+as compared with modern undertakings; but the Portlanders
+thought a good deal of it at the time. Between
+1840 and 1846, the city endured another season of depression.
+Railroads had given to Boston much of the
+business that had formerly found a natural outlet through
+Portland; but in the latter year a railroad was planned
+to Canada, which, when completed, in 1853, brought it
+into connection with the cities of the British provinces,
+and with the vast grain-growing regions of the
+west. A winter line of steamers to Liverpool followed,
+and the rapidly increasing commerce of the city soon
+resulted in the construction of a wide business avenue,
+extending a mile in length, along the whole water front
+of the city. This new street was called Commercial, and
+became the locality of heavy wholesale trade. Closely
+following, came the opening up of railroads to all sections
+of the State, and the establishment of steamboat
+lines along the coast, as far as the Lower Provinces.
+Trade that had hitherto gone to Boston was thus reclaimed,
+new manufacturing establishments sprung up,
+and an era of prosperity seemed fairly inaugurated.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Portland manifested her patriotism during the war of
+the Rebellion, contributing 5,000 men to the army, of
+whom four hundred and twenty-one returned. In June,
+1863, the United States Revenue cutter, Caleb Cushing,
+having been captured by Rebels, and pursued by the
+officials of the city, and becoming becalmed near the
+Green Islands, was blown up by her captors, the latter
+taking to the boats, only to be captured and sent to Fort
+Preble as prisoners of war.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth of July, 1866, a fire-cracker, carelessly
+thrown in a boat builder's shop, on Commercial, near
+the foot of High street, resulted in a fire which laid in
+ruins more than half the city of Portland. The fire
+commenced about five o'clock in the afternoon. The
+sparks soon communicated with Brown's Sugar House,
+and thence, spreading out like a fan, swept diagonally
+across the city, destroying everything in its track, until
+a space one and one-half miles long, by one and one-fourth
+miles broad, was so completely devastated that
+only a forest of tottering walls and blackened chimneys
+remained, and it was difficult to trace even the streets.
+The fire was fanned into such a fury by a gale which
+was blowing at the time, that the efforts of the firemen
+were without avail, and the work of destruction was only
+stayed when, as a last resort, buildings in its path were
+blown up before the flames had reached them. The
+entire business portion, embracing one-half the city,
+was destroyed. Every bank and newspaper office,
+every lawyer's office, many stores, churches, public buildings
+and private residences were swept away. Fireproof
+structures, which were hastily filled with valuables,
+in the belief that they would withstand the flames,
+crumbled to the earth, as though melted by the intense<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span>
+heat. Only one building on Middle street stood unscathed,
+though the flames swept around it in a fiery
+sea. The fire did not burn itself out until early in the
+morning of the following day, when it paused at the
+foot of Mountjoy Hill. When morning came, the inhabitants
+looked with terror and dismay upon fifteen
+hundred buildings in ashes, fifty-eight streets and courts
+desolated, ten thousand people homeless, and $10,000,000
+worth of property destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>The work of succor and reconstruction immediately
+began. The churches were thrown open to shelter the
+homeless; Mountjoy Hill was speedily transformed into
+a village of tents; barracks were built; contributions
+of food, clothing and money poured in from near and
+far; the old streets were widened and straightened, and
+new ones opened; and before the year had closed many
+substantial buildings and blocks had been completed,
+and others were in process of erection. The new Portland
+has arisen from the ruins of the old, more stately,
+more beautiful and more substantial than before; and
+after the lapse of so many years, the evil which the fire
+wrought is forgotten, and only the good is manifest.
+Railroads have since been built, and travel and commerce
+is each year increasing. The population of Portland in
+1880 was 33,810.</p>
+
+<p>The approach to Portland is more beautiful, even, than
+that to New York. The city is built upon a small
+peninsula rising out of Casco Bay, to a mean central
+elevation of more than one hundred feet. This peninsula
+projects from the main land in a northeast direction,
+and is about three miles long, by an average breadth of
+three-fourths of a mile. An arm of the Bay, called
+Fore River, divides it on the south from Cape Elizabeth,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span>
+and forms an inner harbor of more than six hundred
+acres in extent, and with an average depth, at high water,
+of thirty feet. Vessels of the largest size can anchor
+in the main harbor, in forty feet of water at low tide.
+The waters of the Back Cove separate it on the north
+from the shores of Deering, and form another inner basin,
+of large extent and considerable depth.</p>
+
+<p>At the northeasternmost extremity of the Neck,
+Munjoy Hill rises to a height of one hundred and
+sixty-one feet, and commands a beautiful view of the
+city, bay, adjacent islands and the ocean beyond. At
+the southwestern extremity is Bramhall's Hill, rising
+to one hundred and seventy-five feet and commanding
+city, bay, forests, fields, villages and mountains. The
+land sinks somewhat between these two elevations, but
+its lowest point still rises fifty-seven feet above high
+tide. The elevation of its site, and the beauty of its
+scenery and surroundings, are fast attracting the attention
+of tourists, and drawing to the city hosts of summer
+visitors.</p>
+
+<p>The peninsula is covered with a network of streets
+and lanes, containing an aggregate length of fifty miles,
+while it has thirty wharves to accommodate the commerce
+of the port. Congress street, the main thoroughfare of
+the city, is three miles in length, and extends from
+Bramhall to Munjoy. Running parallel to it for a
+part of its length, on the southern slope, are Middle
+street, a business street, devoted principally to the
+wholesale and retail trade; Fore street, the ancient water
+street of the city, but now devoted to miscellaneous
+trade; and Commercial street, which commands the
+harbor, and is principally devoted to large wholesale
+business. At the west end there are other streets between<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span>
+Congress and Commercial, including Spring, Danforth
+and York. Cumberland, Oxford, supplemented on its
+western end by Portland, Lincoln, along the shore of
+Back Cove, also supplemented on its western end by
+Kennebec street, are on the northern slope of Congress
+street. The cross streets are numerous. India street,
+at the eastern end, was the early site of population and
+business; Franklin and Beal streets are the only ones
+running straight across the peninsula, from water to
+water; Exchange street, devoted to banks, brokers'
+offices and insurance agencies, and High and State
+streets, occupied by private residences, are the principal
+ones. There is partially completed around the entire
+city a Marginal Way, one hundred feet in width, and
+nearly five miles in length.</p>
+
+<p>Munjoy Hill is a suburb, which is almost a distinct
+village, being occupied by residences of the middle class,
+who have their own schools, churches, and places of
+business. From its summit, at early morning, one may
+see the sun rising out of the ocean, in the midst of
+emerald islands. On this hill, in 1690, Lieutenant Thaddeus
+Clark, with thirteen men, was shot by Indians in
+ambush, the hill being then covered with forest. On
+the same hill, in 1717, Lieutenant-Governor Dammer
+made a treaty with the Indians, which secured a peace for
+many years; and in 1775 Colonel Thompson captured
+Captain Mowatt, in revenge for which the latter subsequently
+burned the city. In 1808 the third and last
+execution for murder took place here; and in 1866 here
+arose the village of tents after the great conflagration. The
+Observatory, built in 1807, is upon Munjoy, having been
+erected for the purpose of signaling shipping approaching
+the harbor. It is eighty-two feet high, and from it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span>
+one can obtain the best view of the city and its surroundings.
+Casco Bay lies to the northeast, dotted with
+islands. To the eastward, four miles distant, beyond
+its barrier of islands, the Atlantic keeps up the never-ending
+music of its waves. To the southward is the
+city, with the harbor and the shipping beyond. Far away
+to the northeast is Mount Washington, faintly outlined
+upon the horizon, prominent in the distant range of
+mountains. Adjoining the Observatory is the Congress
+street Methodist Episcopal Church, a beautiful edifice,
+its slender, graceful spire being a most conspicuous
+object from the harbor and the sea, and rising to the
+greatest height of any in the city.</p>
+
+<p>The western end, including Bramhall Hill, is the
+fashionable quarter; and having been spared in the
+conflagration of 1866, many ancient mansions remain,
+surrounded by newer and more elegant residences. The
+houses are in the midst of well-kept lawns and gardens,
+and the streets are shaded by stately elms, some of them
+of venerable age. The views through these avenues of
+trees, through some of the streets leading down to the
+water, are delightful beyond description, the overarching
+foliage framing in glimpses of water, fields, distant hills
+and blue sky. At evening, from Bramhall's Hill, one
+looks over a beautiful and varied landscape, brightened
+by the glow of sunset on the western sky. The Maine
+General Hospital stands on Bramhall Hill, an imposing
+edifice, and one of the most prominent features of the
+city.</p>
+
+<p>The Western Promenade, a wide avenue planted with
+rows of trees, runs along the brow of Bramhall's Hill.
+The hill is named after George Bramhall, who in 1680
+bought a tract of four hundred acres, and made himself<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span>
+a home in the wilderness. Nine years later he was
+killed at the foot of the hill, in a fight with the Indians.
+From the summit of the hill may be seen the waters of
+Fore River on the one hand, and of Back Cove on the
+other. Beyond is a wide stretch of field and forest,
+broken by villages and farmhouses, with the spires of
+Gorham in view, and far away, behind them, Ossipee
+Mountain, fifty-five miles distant, in New Hampshire.
+To the east is the church of Standish, Maine, and Chocorue
+Peak rising behind it; Mount Carrigain, sixty-three
+miles away, the line of the Saddleback in Sebago,
+and far beyond, the sun-capped summits of the White
+Mountains.</p>
+
+<p>The Eastern Promenade is on Munjoy's Hill, and
+commands views equally beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>The Preble House is in Congress street, shaded by
+four magnificent elms, which have survived from the
+days of the Preble Mansion. Next to it, sitting back
+from the street, and also shaded by elms, is the first
+brick house built in Portland. It was begun in 1785,
+by General Peleg Wadsworth, and finished the following
+year, by his son-in-law, Stephen Longfellow. It is
+known as the Longfellow House, but it is not the place
+where the poet was born. He lived here in his youth,
+and frequently visited the house in later days; and it is
+still in the possession of his family. But Henry
+Wadsworth Longfellow first saw the light on February
+twenty-seventh, 1807, in an old-fashioned wooden house,
+at the corner of Fore and Hancock streets. The sea at that
+period flowed up to the road opposite the house, which
+commanded a fine view of the harbor. New-made land
+crowds it further away, and the trains of the Grand
+Trunk Railway run where the tide once ebbed and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span>
+flowed. Not far off is the site of the first house ever
+built in Portland, by George Cleves, in 1632.</p>
+
+<p>Nathaniel P. Willis was also born in Portland, but a
+little more than a month earlier than Longfellow. Both
+his father and his grandfather had been publishers, the
+latter having been apprenticed in the same printing office
+with Benjamin Franklin. Sarah Payson Willis, subsequently
+Mrs. James Parton, still better known as Fanny
+Fern, a sister of the poet, was also a native of Portland.
+John Neal, born in Portland August twenty-fifth, 1793,
+was a man well known as a poet, novelist and journalist.
+Seba Smith, author of the Jack Downing Papers, Mrs. E.
+Oakes Smith, Mrs. Elizabeth Oakes Allen, Nathaniel
+Deering, Rev. Elijah Kellogg, Mrs. Ann S. Stephens,
+Mrs. Margaret J. M. Sweat, and other well-known
+authors, have been either natives of or residents in
+Portland. General Neal Dow, who served in the late
+war, and so famous as an advocate of prohibition, finds
+his home in Portland, at the corner of Congress and Dow
+streets. William Pitt Fessenden, late Senator and Secretary
+of the Treasury, claimed Portland as his home.</p>
+
+<p>Market Square is in the heart of the city, surrounded
+by stores, hotels, halls, and places of amusement. Military
+Hall stands almost in-the centre of the square, and
+was built in 1825, as a town hall and market place. The
+building contains a history in itself. Here, before the
+city charter was obtained, in 1832, town meetings were
+held, and subsequently it was the headquarters of the
+city government. Military companies had and still have
+their armories here; and it has been the place of many
+exciting political meetings. In it Garrison uttered his
+anathemas against slavery, and Stephen A. Foster was
+assaulted by a brutal pro-slavery mob. Sumner, Fes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span>senden,
+and other great orators, have poured forth their
+eloquence within its hall, and parties have been made and
+unmade. On holidays Market Square is crowded with
+an animated throng, and at night, when peddlers and
+mountebanks take their stands and display their wares
+by the light of flaming torches, the scene is especially
+picturesque.</p>
+
+<p>On Congress street, not far from Market Square, is
+the First Parish (Unitarian) Church, which was rebuilt
+in 1825, on the site which the old church had occupied
+since 1740. This church is remarkable for its long
+pastorates, there having been but four pastors from 1727
+to 1864, a period of one hundred and thirty-seven years.
+The present pastor is the Rev. Dr. Thomas Hill, ex-President
+of Harvard College.</p>
+
+<p>Lincoln Park is a public square, bounded by Congress,
+Franklin, Federal and Pearl streets. It contains
+a little less than two and one-half acres, in the middle
+of which is a fountain. This park is in the centre of
+the district swept by the conflagration of 1866, and
+looking on every side, not a building meets the eye
+which was erected previous to that year.</p>
+
+<p>The largest and most costly church in Portland is the
+Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, fronting on
+Cumberland street. It is one hundred and ninety-six
+feet in length, by one hundred in width, with a spire
+rising in the air two hundred and thirty-six feet. It is
+of brick, and is imposing only on account of its size.
+Its interior, however, is finished and decorated in a
+style surpassed by few churches in the country.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">NIGHT SCENE IN MARKET SQUARE, PORTLAND, MAINE.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_401.jpg" width="1024" height="673" alt="NIGHT SCENE IN MARKET SQUARE, PORTLAND, MAINE." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The Eastern Cemetery, on Congress street, is the
+oldest graveyard in Portland. For two hundred years
+it was the common burial ground of the settlement, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span>
+here, probably, all the early colonists sleep their last
+sleep, though their graves are forgotten. The oldest
+tombstone which the yard seems to contain is that of
+Mrs. Mary Green, who died in 1717. On the opposite
+side of the yard, near Mountford street, are the monuments
+erected to the memory of William Burroughs, of
+the United States Brig Enterprise, and Samuel Blythe,
+of His Majesty's Brig Boxer, who fought and died together,
+on September fifth, 1813, and were buried here.
+Lieut. Kerwin Waters, of the Enterprise, wounded in the
+same action, lies beside them. Of him Longfellow sung:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"I remember the sea fight far away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">How it thundered o'er the tide!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the dead captains, as they lay<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In their graves o'erlooking the tranquil bay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where they in battle died."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There is a white marble monument to Commodore
+Preble, and the death of Lieutenant Henry Wadsworth,
+uncle of the poet Longfellow, who fell before Tripoli in
+1804, is also commemorated here.</p>
+
+<p>Congress Square, at the junction of Fore street, has
+an elevated position, and is surrounded by churches of
+various denominations. From Congress street, near
+its junction with Mellen street, the visitor can look off
+to Deering's Woods, which rise on the borders of a
+creek, running in from Back Cove. This tract of woodland
+has come into possession of the city, and will be
+preserved as a park. Longfellow sings of</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The breezy dome of groves,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The shadows of Deering's Woods."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"And Deering's Woods are fresh and fair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And with joy that is almost pain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My heart goes back to wander there,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And among the dreams of the days that were<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I find my lost youth again."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span>The reservoir of the Portland Water Works is at the
+junction of Bramhall and Brackett streets. It has an
+area of 100,000 square feet, with a capacity of 12,000,000
+gallons, and is supplied with water from Lake
+Sebago, seventeen miles distant.</p>
+
+<p>The extensive premises of the Grand Trunk Railway
+lie at the foot of India street, where are wharves for the
+great freight business between Canada and Europe, and
+whence the Dominion and Beaver Line of steamships,
+every fortnight, from November to May, send ships to
+Liverpool. The scene during the winter season is a
+busy one, and the amount of freight handled and shipped
+is immense. Then begins Commercial street, the modern
+business avenue of the city, which runs its whole water
+front, with a railroad track in the middle of it. On
+this street is the old family mansion of the widow of
+Brigadier Preble, built in 1786, on the site of his father's
+house, destroyed by fire in 1775. It then occupied a
+beautiful and retired locality, looking out upon the
+harbor, and surrounded by ample grounds. But now
+it is strangely out of keeping with its neighbors. Opposite
+it now stands the grain elevator of the Grand Trunk
+Railway, having been built in 1875, with a capacity of
+200,000 bushels. All around are wholesale shipping
+and commission houses, and wharves for ocean steamships
+extend up and down the shore.</p>
+
+<p>When Captain John Smith, famous in the early
+history of Virginia, and the first tourist who ever visited
+Maine, made his famous summer trip thither, in 1614,
+he described the place as follows:&mdash;"Westward of
+Kennebec is the country of Ancocisco, in the bottom of a
+deep bay full of many great isles, which divide it into
+many great harbors." Ancocisco was very soon abbreviated
+to Casco, and the bay is still filled with many<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span>
+great isles. Casco Bay, extending from Cape Elizabeth,
+on the west, to Cape Small Point, on the east, a distance
+of about eighteen miles, with a width of, perhaps, twelve
+miles, contains more islands than any other body of
+water of like extent in the whole United States. It is a
+popular belief that these islands number three hundred
+and sixty-five&mdash;one for every day in the year; but a
+regard for truth compels us to state, that of the
+named and unnamed islands and islets, there are only one
+hundred and twenty-two, while a few insignificant rocks
+and reefs would not swell the number to one hundred
+and forty. These islands are divided into three ranges,
+the Inner, Middle and Outer. The Inner range contains
+twenty islands; the Middle range, twenty-four;
+and the Outer range, seventy-eight. Besides these
+islands, the shore is very much broken, and extends out
+into the bay in picturesque points or fringes, the
+creeks, inlets and tidal rivers extending far inland. In
+this bay was discovered, by a mariner named Joselyn, in
+1639, a triton or merman, and the first sea serpent of
+the coast. Seals breed and sport on a ledge in the inner
+bay, off the shore of Falmouth, and its waters abound
+with edible fish and sea-fowl.</p>
+
+<p>Ferry boats convey an endless stream of pleasure-seekers
+to the different islands, during the summer season.
+Cushing's Island lies at the mouth of Portland Harbor,
+forming one shore of the ship channel. Its southern
+shore presents a rocky and precipitous front, culminating
+in a bold bluff nearly one hundred and fifty feet
+high, known as White Head. The island looks out
+upon the harbor from smiling fields and low, tree-bordered
+beaches. It furnishes good opportunities for
+fishing and bathing, and is fast becoming a popular<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span>
+summer resort. It is five miles in circumference, and
+commands magnificent sea views.</p>
+
+<p>Peak's Island is separated from Cushing's Island by
+White Head Passage, and with the latter forms an
+effectual barrier to the ocean. Like it, it presents a bold
+front to the sea, and smiles upon the bay. It is about
+a mile and a half long, by a mile and a quarter
+wide, and rises gradually to a central elevation of,
+perhaps, one hundred feet, commanding extensive
+views of the ocean and harbor, and of the mountains,
+eighty miles away. It is one of the most beautiful of
+all the islands of Casco Bay, and has a resident population
+of three hundred and seventy persons, who are
+largely descendants of the first settlers.</p>
+
+<p>Long Island lies northeast of Peak's Island, and is
+separated from it by Hussey's Sound. It has an area
+of three hundred and twelve acres, presenting a long,
+ragged line of shore to the sea. Its population was, in
+1880, two hundred and fifty-two, the men being engaged
+in fishing and farming.</p>
+
+<p>Little Chebague lies inside of Long Island, and is
+connected with Great Chebague by a sand bar, dry at low
+water. A hotel and several summer cottages stand upon
+the island, and it is an attractive place.</p>
+
+<p>Harpswell is a long peninsula, about fourteen miles
+down the bay, and is much resorted to by picnic
+parties. To the eastward lies Bailey's Island, one of the
+most beautiful of the bay, and to the northward is Orr's
+Island, the scene of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel,
+"The Pearl of Orr's Island." Rising between Bailey's
+Island and Small Point Harbor is the Elm Island of
+Rev. Elijah Kellogg's stories. Whittier has written a
+poem entitled "The Dead Ship of Harpswell," in which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span>
+he describes a spectre ship which never reaches the land,
+and is a sure omen of death:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"In vain o'er Harpswell's neck the star<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of evening guides her in,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In vain for her the lamps are lit<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Within thy town, Seguin!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In vain the harbor boat shall hail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In vain the pilot call;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No hand shall reef her spectral sail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or let her anchor fall."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h3>
+
+<h2>PHILADELPHIA.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Early History.&mdash;William Penn.&mdash;The Revolution.&mdash;Declaration
+of Independence.&mdash;First Railroad.&mdash;Riots&mdash;Streets and Houses.&mdash;Relics
+of the Past.&mdash;Independence Hall.&mdash;Carpenters' Hall.&mdash;Blue
+Anchor.&mdash;Letitia Court.&mdash;Christ Church.&mdash;Old Swedes'
+Church.&mdash;Benjamin Franklin.&mdash;Libraries.&mdash;Old Quaker Almshouse.&mdash;Old
+Houses in Germantown.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Theatres.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Scientific
+Institutions.&mdash;Newspapers.&mdash;Medical
+Colleges.&mdash;Schools.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Penitentiary.&mdash;River
+Front.&mdash;Fairmount Park.&mdash;Zo&ouml;logical Gardens.&mdash;Cemeteries.&mdash;Centennial
+Exhibition.&mdash;Bi-Centennial.&mdash;Past,
+Present and Future of the City.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>In the year 1610, Lord Thomas de la War, on his
+voyage from England to Virginia, entered what
+is now Delaware Bay, and discovered the river flowing
+into it, to which he also gave his name. The Dutch
+made a prior claim to the discovery of the land which
+bordered this river, and retained possession for a time.
+But there were difficulties in maintaining their settlements,
+and in 1638 the Swedes sent out a colony from
+Stockholm, and established a footing on the west bank
+of the river, afterwards known as Pennsylvania. The
+Dutch at New York, however, would not submit to this
+arrangement, and under Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of
+Manhattan, demanded the surrender of their fort&mdash;now
+called Trinity Fort&mdash;which was yielded. The Dutch
+authority lasted for a short time only. In 1664 the
+English captured Manhattan and expelled the Dutch,
+and in the same year an expedition under Sir Robert<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span>
+Carr came to the Delaware, fired two broadsides into
+Trinity Fort, landed storming parties, assaulted the fort,
+killed three Dutchmen, wounded ten, and in triumph
+raised the flag of England, which was thereafter supreme
+on the Delaware for nine years.</p>
+
+<p>In 1672 the Dutch tried their strength again, and
+summoned the English fort at Staten Island to surrender.
+This summons was complied with, and the English
+of New York swore allegiance to the Prince of
+Orange. The people upon the banks of the Delaware
+soon accommodated themselves to the change of masters,
+and welcomed the Dutch. But this was their last appearance
+upon the Delaware. In the next year, 1673,
+their settlements in America were all ceded, through the
+fortune of war, to Great Britain, and this territory
+once more passed under the English flag.</p>
+
+<p>About this time the name of William Penn enters
+into American history. The British Government being
+largely indebted to his father, Admiral William Penn,
+the son found little difficulty in obtaining a grant for a
+large tract of land in America, upon which to found a
+colony. This was in 1681. He immediately sent out
+to his wooded possessions, which he named Pennsylvania,
+his cousin, Captain William Markham, who had been
+a soldier, with a commission to be Deputy Governor, and
+with instructions to inform the European inhabitants
+already settled there of the change in government,
+promising them liberal laws. Markham was also to
+convey a message of peace to the Indians, in the name
+of their new "proprietor." He was soon followed by
+three commissioners, who had power to settle the colony,
+and among other things, to layout a principal city, to be
+the capital of the province, which William Penn, who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span>
+was a member of the Society of Friends, directed should
+be called Philadelphia&mdash;a Greek compound signifying
+"brotherly love." He himself arrived on the great
+territory of which he was sole proprietor in 1682, and
+found the plans of the city and province to his satisfaction.
+He at once convened an Assembly, and the three
+counties of Philadelphia, Bucks, and Chester were
+created, and proper laws passed for their government.</p>
+
+<p>In less than two years, however, Penn was obliged to
+return to England, and shortly after, in 1692, the British
+Government took possession of the colony, and placed
+it under the jurisdiction of the Governor of New York.
+But in 1694, the government was restored to Penn, and
+Markham was again made Lieutenant-Governor. Penn,
+himself, did not return to America until 1699. He
+found his capital very considerably improved. Instead of
+the wilderness he had left, fifteen years before, there were
+streets, houses, elegant stores, warehouses, and shipping
+on the river. The population was estimated at
+four thousand five hundred persons. His visit was,
+however, brief. In 1701, he set sail again for England,
+intending to return in a few months, but this intention
+was never carried out. In 1708, his pecuniary embarrassments
+were so great, that he was arrested for debt in
+London, and thrown into the Fleet Prison, where he
+continued for nine years. In 1712 his health and mind
+gave way, and during six years he lingered as an imbecile,
+childish and gentle in his manners, the sad wreck
+of a strong mind. He died in July, 1718.</p>
+
+<p>The government of Pennsylvania was administered
+for a time by his widow, and subsequently went into the
+hands of his children and their descendants, as proprietors.
+They usually delegated the administration to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span>
+lieutenant-governors, though they sometimes exercised
+their authority in person, until the American Revolution
+put an end to all the colonial governments.</p>
+
+<p>The history of Philadelphia during the period of the
+Revolution is largely connected with that of the whole
+country. At a large meeting held in the State House
+in Philadelphia, in April, 1768, it was resolved to cease
+all importations from the mother country, in consequence
+of the exorbitant taxes levied upon them. In 1773,
+the British East India Company being determined to
+export tea to America, a second meeting was called at
+the State House, at which it was patriotically resolved
+that "Parliament had no right to tax the Americans,
+without their consent," and that "any one who would
+receive or sell the tea sent out to America would be
+denounced as an enemy to his country."</p>
+
+<p>The ship Polly, Captain Ryers, was to bring the tea
+to Philadelphia. Handbills, purporting to be issued
+by the "committee for tarring and feathering," were
+printed and distributed among the citizens. They were
+addressed to the Delaware pilots and to Captain Ryers
+himself, warning the former of the danger they would
+incur if they piloted the tea ship up the river, whilst
+Captain Ryers was threatened with the application of
+tar and feathers if he attempted to land the tea.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas Day, 1773, the Polly arrived. A committee
+of citizens went on board, told Captain Ryers the
+danger he was in, and requested him to accompany them
+to the State House. Here the largest meeting was
+assembled that had ever been held in the city. This
+meeting resolved that the tea on board the Polly <i>should
+not be landed</i>, and that it should be carried back to
+England immediately. The captain signified his wil<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span>lingness
+to comply with the resolution, and in two hours
+after, the Polly, with her freight of tea, hoisted sail and
+went down the river.</p>
+
+<p>In September, 1774, the first Congress, composed of
+delegates from eleven Colonies, met at Carpenters'
+Hall, on Chestnut street, Philadelphia, to consider the
+condition of the Colonies, in their relation to the mother
+country. This Congress resolved that all importations
+from Great Britain or her dependencies should cease.
+Committees of "inspection and observation," were appointed,
+which exercised absolute authority to punish all
+persons infringing the order of Congress.</p>
+
+<p>On April twenty-fourth, 1775, news of the battles of
+Concord and Lexington reached the city. A meeting
+was immediately called, by sound of gong and bell, at
+the State House. Eight thousand persons assembled,
+who resolved that they would "associate together, to
+defend with arms their property, liberty and lives."
+Troops were at once raised, forts and batteries built on
+the Delaware, floating batteries, gunboats and ships-of-war
+constructed, with all the speed possible, and <i>chevaux
+de frize</i> sunk in the river, to prevent the passage of
+British ships. In May, 1776, the English Frigate Roebuck,
+and Sloop-of-war Liverpool, attempting to force
+their way up the river, the Americans opened fire on
+them, and a regular naval action took place. The
+British managed to escape, and retired to their cruising
+ground, at the entrance of the bay.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 686px;">
+<span class="caption">OLD INDEPENDENCE HALL, PHILADELPHIA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_413.jpg" width="686" height="1024" alt="OLD INDEPENDENCE HALL, PHILADELPHIA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>On July second, 1776, Congress, sitting at the State
+House, resolved in favor of the severance of all connection
+between the American Colonies and Great Britain,
+and independence of that power. On July third and
+fourth, the form of the declaration of independence was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span>
+debated, and adopted on the latter day. July eighth,
+the Declaration was read to the people in the State
+House yard, and received with acclamations, and evidences
+of a stern determination to defend their independence
+with their lives. The King's Arms were at
+once torn down from the court room in the State House,
+and burned by the people. Bells were rung and bonfires
+lighted, the old State House bell fulfilling the command
+inscribed upon it, when it was cast, twenty years before:
+"Proclaim Liberty throughout the land, unto all the
+inhabitants thereof."</p>
+
+<p>In September, 1777, the British army, under General
+Lord Howe, entered Philadelphia. October fourth,
+Washington attacked it at Germantown, and although
+he did not win a victory, compelled the British commander
+to respect him. The English remained in
+possession of the city, but the Americans held the country
+around. The Philadelphians having closed the
+Delaware by the <i>chevaux de frize</i>, the royal army was
+in effect hemmed in and cut off from communication
+with the British fleet, which had entered the Delaware,
+but was prevented from approaching the city by the
+American forts and batteries. It had brought but a
+moderate supply of stores, and as these diminished, the
+troops suffered from scarcity of food.</p>
+
+<p>On November twenty-sixth, British frigates and transports
+arrived at the wharves of the city, to the great joy
+of the royal troops and of the inhabitants, provisions
+having become very scarce and famine threatened. Beef
+sold at five dollars a pound, and potatoes at four dollars
+a bushel, hard money. The British army remained in
+Philadelphia until June eighteenth, 1778, about nine
+months from its first occupation of the city. During<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span>
+that time the officers gave themselves up to enjoyment.
+They amused themselves with the theatre, with balls,
+parties, cock-fights and gambling: and a grand f&ecirc;te was
+celebrated in honor of their commander, Lord Howe.
+This f&ecirc;te, in the style of a tournament of chivalry, took
+place in the lower part of the city, and while it was in
+progress the Americans in considerable force made an
+attack upon the lines north of the city, set fire to the
+abattis, and brought out the entire body of the royal
+troops to repel the attack.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the evacuation of the city, in June, General
+Benedict Arnold was immediately sent with a small
+force to occupy it. He remained in military command
+for several months. It was discovered by many that
+he had become largely involved in certain speculating
+transactions, and the shame of the discovery stimulated
+the traitorous intentions which finally carried him over
+to the British army.</p>
+
+<p>After the inauguration of Washington as President
+of the new republic, it was determined by Congress that
+Philadelphia should be the seat of the United States
+government for the ensuing ten years, after which it
+should be removed to Washington City. The scheme
+of the Federal Constitution was framed and adopted in
+September, 1787, by the Convention sitting at the State
+House, with George Washington as President. The
+final adoption of the Constitution of the United States
+of America was celebrated in Philadelphia on the Fourth
+of July, 1788 by a magnificent procession.</p>
+
+<p>The principal officers of Congress removed their residences
+to Philadelphia in the latter part of 1790. At
+that period Washington lived in Market street near
+Sixth, in a plain two-story brick house, which had been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span>
+the residence of Lord Howe during the British occupation
+of the city. The locality is now occupied, if I
+mistake not, by the mammoth clothing house of Wanamaker
+&amp; Brown. John Adams, Vice-President, lived
+in the Hamilton mansion at Bush Hill; and Thomas
+Jefferson, Secretary of State, at 174 Market street,
+between Fourth and Fifth, on the south side. Congress
+assembled for the transaction of business on State House
+Square.</p>
+
+<p>During the stay of the Federal government in Philadelphia,
+Washington and Adams were inaugurated as
+President and Vice President (March fourth, 1797),
+in the chamber of the House of Representatives.</p>
+
+<p>In 1793, 1797, and 1798, a fearful epidemic of the
+yellow fever, visited Philadelphia and created great
+alarm, the mortality being dreadful.</p>
+
+<p>The removal of the Federal government to Washington,
+in 1800, deprived Philadelphia of the prominence
+she had enjoyed as the Capital of the nation. In the
+year 1808 steamboats began to ply regularly on the
+Delaware River. During the war which commenced in
+1812 between the United States and Great Britain,
+Philadelphia maintained her loyalty, and fulfilled her
+duty to the country. Several volunteer companies were
+formed, and there was an engagement in July, 1813,
+between British war vessels and the United States
+gunboat flotilla on the Delaware, in which the Philadelphians
+proved themselves brave and patriotic.</p>
+
+<p>The first railroad, running from Philadelphia to
+Germantown, was built in 1832. The Pennsylvania
+Railroad was projected in 1845, and chartered in the
+following year.</p>
+
+<p>In 1834 a spirit of riot and disorder which passed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span>
+over the United States, reached Philadelphia, and led
+to disturbances between whites and blacks. The houses
+of colored people were broken into, a meeting-house
+torn down, and many other outrages committed. Again,
+in 1835 attacks were made on the blacks, and houses
+burned. In 1838 all friends of the abolition of slavery
+were violently attacked, and much damage done to
+property in the city.</p>
+
+<p>But the most terrible riots which Philadelphia has
+known occurred in 1844. A meeting of the Native
+American party was attacked and dispersed. The
+"Natives" rallied to a market house on Washington
+street, where they were again attacked, and fire-arms
+used on both sides. Houses were broken into and set
+on fire. The Roman Catholic churches of Saint
+Michael and Saint Augustine, and a female Catholic
+seminary, were burned, and many buildings sacked and
+destroyed. All the Catholic churches were in great
+danger of sharing the same fate. A large number of
+persons were killed on both sides. On July fourth, of
+the same year, the Native Americans had a very large
+and showy procession through the streets of the city.
+On Sunday, July seventh, the church of Saint Philip de
+Neri, in Southwark, was broken into by the mob. In
+clearing the streets, the soldiers and the people came
+into collision. The former fired into the crowd, and
+several persons were killed, and others wounded. This
+occurrence caused intense excitement. The soldiers
+were attacked with cannon and with musketry, and they
+responded with artillery and with musketry. The rioters
+had four pieces, which were worked by sailors. The
+battle continued during the night of the seventh and the
+morning of the eighth of July. Two soldiers were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span>
+killed, and several wounded. Of the citizens seven
+were killed, and many wounded. This was the most
+sanguinary riot, and the last of any importance, which
+ever occurred in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>Philadelphia possesses many characteristic features
+which distinguish her from her sister cities. The visitor
+will be at first struck by the extreme regularity of the
+streets, and the look of primness which invests them.
+They are laid out at right angles, the only notable
+exceptions being those roads, now dignified by the name
+of avenues, which usually led from the infant city into
+the then adjacent country. These avenues, of which
+Passyunk, Germantown and Ridge are the principal
+ones, are irregular in their course, but take a generally
+diagonal direction; the first southwest, and the other
+two northwest. The houses are mostly of brick, with
+white marble facings and steps, and white wooden
+shutters to the first story. The streets running east and
+west, from the Delaware to the Schuylkill, are, in the
+original city, with few exceptions named after trees.
+Thus Cedar, Pine, Spruce, Locust, Walnut, Chestnut,
+Filbert, Mulberry, Cherry, Sassafras and Vine. Cedar
+became South street, and Sassafras and Mulberry became
+Race and Arch, the latter so named because in the early
+days of the city Front street spanned it by an arch.
+Callowhill street was originally Gallowhill street, the
+word indicating its derivation. The houses on these
+streets are numbered from the Delaware, beginning a
+new hundred with every street. Thus all houses between
+Front and Second streets are numbered in the first hundred,
+and at Second street a new hundred begins; the
+even numbers being on the southern side, and the odd
+ones on the northern side of the street. The streets run<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span>ning
+parallel to the river are numbered from the river,
+beginning with Front, then Second, Third, and so on,
+until the furthest western limit of the city is reached.
+Market street, originally called High street, runs between
+Chestnut and Filbert, dividing the city into north and
+south. The houses on the streets crossing Market begin
+their numbers at that street, running both north and
+south, each street representing an additional hundred.
+With this naming of streets and numbering of houses,
+no stranger can ever lose himself in Philadelphia. The
+name and number of street and house will always tell
+him just where he is. Thus if he finds himself at 836
+North Sixth street, he knows he is eight squares north
+of Market street, and six squares west of the Delaware
+River.</p>
+
+<p>The original city was bounded by the Delaware River
+on the east, and the Schuylkill on the west, and extended
+north and south half a mile on either side of Market
+street. Even before the present century it had outgrown
+its original limits in a northerly and southerly direction,
+and a number of suburbs had sprung up around it, each
+of which had its own corporation. The names of these
+suburbs were, most of them, borrowed from London.
+Southwark faced the river to the south; Moyamensing
+was just west of Southwark; Spring Garden, Kensington,
+Northern Liberties, Germantown, Roxborough, and
+Frankford were on the north, and West Philadelphia
+west of the Schuylkill. In 1854 these suburbs, so long
+divided from the "city" merely by geographical lines,
+were incorporated with it; and the City of Philadelphia
+was made to embrace the entire county of Philadelphia&mdash;a
+territory twenty-three miles long, with an area of
+nearly one hundred and thirty square miles. It thus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span>
+became in size the largest city in the country, while it
+stands only second in population.</p>
+
+<p>The old city was laid out with great economy as to
+space, the streets being as narrow as though land were
+really scarce in the new country when it was planned.
+Market street extends from the Delaware westward&mdash;a
+broad, handsome avenue, occupied principally by wholesale
+stores. It is indebted, both for its name and width,
+to the market houses, which from an early date to as
+late as 1860, if not later, occupied the centre of the
+street; long, low, unsightly structures, thronged early
+in the morning, and especially on market days, with
+buyers and sellers, while market wagons lined the sides
+of the street. The same kind of structures still occupy
+certain localities of Second, Callowhill, Spring Garden
+and Bainbridge streets. But those in Market street
+have disappeared, and substantial and handsome market
+buildings have been erected on or near the street,
+instead of in its centre.</p>
+
+<p>A century ago the business of Philadelphia was confined
+principally to Front street, from Walnut to Arch.
+Now Second street presents the most extended length
+of retail stores in the country, and business has spread
+both north and south almost indefinitely, and is fast
+creeping westward. Market street presents a double
+line of business houses, from river to river. Chestnut,
+the fashionable promenade and locality of the finest
+hotels and retail stores, is invaded by business beyond
+Broad, and Arch street beyond Tenth; while Eighth
+street, even more than Chestnut the resort of shoppers,
+is, for many squares, built up by large and handsome
+retail stores. Broad street, lying between Thirteenth
+and Fifteenth, is the handsomest avenue in Philadel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span>phia.
+It is fifteen miles in length, and one hundred
+and thirteen feet in width, and contains many of the
+finest public buildings and private residences in the
+city. Ridgway Library, the Deaf and Dumb Asylum,
+Horticultural Hall, Academy of Music, Broad Street
+Theatre, Union League Club House, Masonic Temple,
+Academy of Fine Arts, besides some of the most elegant
+religious edifices, are located on this street.</p>
+
+<p>At the intersection of Broad and Market, where were
+once four little squares left in the original plan of the
+city, and known as Penn Square, are being constructed
+the vast Public Buildings of the city. They are of
+white marble, four hundred and eighty-six and one-half
+feet long by four hundred and seventy feet wide, and
+four stories high, covering an area of four and one-half
+acres, not including a large court in the centre. The
+central tower will, when completed, be four hundred and
+fifty feet high, and the total cost of the buildings over ten
+millions of dollars. This building presents a most
+imposing appearance, whether viewed from Market or
+Broad streets. The Masonic Temple, just to the north,
+is one of the handsomest of its kind in America. It is
+a solid granite structure, in the Norman style, most
+elaborately ornamented, and with a tower two hundred
+and thirty feet high. Its interior is finished in a costly
+manner, and after the several styles of architecture.
+The Academy of Music is one of the largest opera
+houses in America, being capable of seating three
+thousand persons.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 639px;">
+<span class="caption">MASONIC TEMPLE, PHILADELPHIA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_423.jpg" width="639" height="1024" alt="MASONIC TEMPLE, PHILADELPHIA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Third street is the banking and financial centre of
+Philadelphia; on Walnut street are found the greatest
+proportion of insurance offices; South street is the cheap
+retail street, and is crowded with shoppers, especially
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
+on market days, and the Jews reign here supreme. Bainbridge
+street (once Shippen) east of Broad represents
+the squalor and crime of the city. "Old clo'" and
+second-hand stores of all descriptions alternate with low
+drinking places, and occupy forlorn and tumble-down
+tenements. All races and colors, and both sexes mingle
+here, and the man who sighs for missionary work
+need go no further than this quarter.</p>
+
+<p>Chestnut street is, next to Broad, the handsomest in
+the city. The buildings are all of comparatively
+recent construction, and are many of them handsome and
+costly. On Market street the past century still manifests
+itself in quaint houses of two or three stories in
+height, sometimes built of alternate black and red
+bricks, and occasionally with queer dormer windows,
+wedged in between more stately and more modern
+neighbors. It will be some time before the street
+becomes thoroughly modernized, and we can scarcely
+wish that it may become so, for the city would thus lose
+much of its quaint interest.</p>
+
+<p>One of the characteristics of Philadelphia which
+strikes the traveler is that it wears an old-time air,
+far more so than Boston or New York. Boston cannot
+straighten her originally crooked streets, but her thought
+and spirit are entirely of the nineteenth century. New
+York is intensely modern, the few relics of the past
+which still remain contrasting and emphasizing still
+more strongly the life and bustle and business of to-day.
+Philadelphia is a quiet city. Its people do not rush
+hither and thither, as though but one day remained in
+which to accomplish a life work. They take time to
+walk, to eat, to sleep, and to attend to their business.
+In brief, they take life far more easily and slowly than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span>
+their metropolitan neighbors. They do not enter into
+wild speculative schemes; they have no such Stock
+Exchange, where bulls and bears roar and paw the
+ground, or where they may make or lose fortunes
+in less time than it takes to eat one's dinner. They are
+a steady, plodding people, accumulating handsome fortunes
+in solid, legitimate ways. There is little of the
+rustle and roar of the elder city; save for the continual
+ring and rattle of the street cars, which cross the city in
+every direction, many of its quarters are as quiet as a
+country village. Its early Quaker settlers have stamped
+it with the quiet and placidity which is the leading
+trait of their sect; and though the Quaker garb is seen
+less and less often upon the streets, the early stamp
+seems to have been indelible.</p>
+
+<p>Philadelphia retains more of the old customs, old
+houses, and, perhaps, old laws, than any other city in
+the country. The Quaker City lawyer carries his brief
+in a green bag, as the benches of the Inner Temple used
+to do in Penn's time. The baker cuts a tally before the
+door each morning, just as the old English baker used
+to do three centuries ago. After a death has occurred
+in it, a house is put into mourning, having the shutters
+bowed and tied with black ribbon, not to be opened for
+at least a year. There are laws (seldom executed, it is
+true, but still upon the statute-books), against profanity
+and Sabbath-breaking, and even regulating the dress of
+women.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the streets of Philadelphia bear strongly the
+marks of the past. Those, especially, near the river,
+which were built up in the early days, have not yet been
+entirely renovated; while some ancient buildings of
+historic interest have been preserved with jealous care.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span>
+First and foremost among the latter is Independence
+Hall, occupying the square upon Chestnut street between
+Fifth and Sixth streets&mdash;no doubt, considered an imposing
+edifice at the time of its erection, but now overshadowed
+by the business palaces which surround it.
+It was here that the second Colonial Congress met;
+here that the Declaration of Independence was adopted;
+and here that the United States Congress assembled,
+until the seat of the General Government was removed
+to Washington, in 1800. In Congress Hall, in the
+second story of this building, Washington delivered his
+Farewell Address. The building is now preserved with
+great care. The hall where the Declaration of Independence
+was signed is decorated with portraits of the
+signers, and contains, among other objects of interest, as
+before stated, the bell which pealed out freedom to all.</p>
+
+<p>Next in historic importance is Carpenters' Hall,
+between Third and Fourth streets. The first Continental
+Congress met here, and here the first words
+pointing toward a collision with the mother country
+were spoken in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>When William Penn made his first visit to Philadelphia,
+on October twenty-fourth, 1682, he set foot upon
+his new possessions at the Blue Anchor Landing, at the
+mouth of Dock Creek, in the vicinity of what is now
+the corner of Front and Dock streets. Here stood the
+Blue Anchor Inn, the first house built within the
+ancient limits of the city. Then, and long afterwards,
+Dock Creek was a considerable stream, running through
+the heart of the town. But, in course of time, the water
+became offensive, from the drainage of the city, and it
+was finally arched over, and turned into a sewer. The
+winding of Dock street is accounted for by the fact that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span>
+it follows the former course of the creek. Sloops once
+anchored and discharged their cargoes where now stands
+Girard Bank, on Third street, below Chestnut.</p>
+
+<p>Between Chestnut and Market streets, Second and
+Front, is found Letitia street, where long stood the
+first brick house built in the Province, erected for the
+use of Penn himself, and named after his daughter
+Letitia. He directed that it should "be pitched in the
+middle of the platt of the town, facing the harbor."
+The bricks, wooden carvings and other materials, were
+imported from England. At the time of its construction
+a forest swept down to the river in front, forming
+a natural park, where deer ranged at will. Letitia
+House became a lager beer saloon, the front painted with
+foaming pots of beer. But business interests claimed
+the site and the old house was removed and carefully
+re-erected in Fairmount Park.</p>
+
+<p>The old Slate Roof House, long one of the ancient
+landmarks, on Second street below Chestnut, the residence
+of William Penn on his second visit to this country,
+during which visit John, his only "American" son
+was born, and where other noted persons lived and died,
+or at least visited, was removed in 1867, to make room
+for the Commercial Exchange.</p>
+
+<p>Not far off, on Second street, north of Market, is
+Christ's Church, occupying the site of the first church
+erected by the followers of Penn. The present edifice
+was begun in 1727. Washington's coach and four
+used to draw up proudly before it each Sabbath, and
+himself and Lady Washington, Lord Howe, Cornwallis,
+Benedict Arnold, Andre, Benjamin Franklin, De Chastellux,
+the Madisons, the Lees, Patrick Henry and
+others whose names have become incorporated in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+American history, have worshiped here. In the aisles
+are buried various persons, great men in their day, but
+forgotten now. The chime of bells in the lofty tower
+is the oldest in America, and were cast in London. This
+chime joined the State House bell on that memorable
+Fourth of July, when the latter proclaimed liberty
+throughout the land. Just opposite this church is a
+small street, opening into Second street, its eastern end
+closed by a tall block of warehouses. This street contained
+Stephen Girard's stores and houses.</p>
+
+<p>The great elm tree, at Kensington, under which Penn
+made his famous treaty with the Indians, remained until
+1800, when it was blown down. An insignificant stone
+now marks the spot, being inclosed by a fence, and
+surrounded by stone and lumber yards. An elm overshadows
+it&mdash;possibly, a lineal descendant of the historic
+tree.</p>
+
+<p>There is an older religious edifice in Philadelphia
+than Christ's Church. It is the old Swedes' Church,
+erected in 1697, not far from Front and Christian
+streets, by early Swedish missionaries. Though insignificant,
+compared with modern churches, it was regarded
+as a magnificent structure by the Quakers, Swedes and
+Indians, who first beheld it. The inside carvings, bell
+and communion service, were a gift of the Swedish king.
+In the graveyard which surrounds it are found the dead
+of nearly two centuries ago, some of the slate-stones over
+the older graves having been imported from the mother
+country. Here sleeps Sven Schute and his descendants,
+once, under Swedish dominion, lords of all the land on
+which Philadelphia now stands. None of his name
+now lives. Here lie buried, forgotten, Bengtossens,
+Peterssens, and Bonds. Wilson, the ornithologist, was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span>
+a frequent attendant at this church, early in the present
+century, and he lies in the church yard, having been
+buried there by his own request, as it was "a silent,
+shady place, where the birds would be apt to come and
+sing over his grave." The English sparrows have built
+their nests above it.</p>
+
+<p>An ancient house possessing special historic interest
+stands on Front street, a few doors above Dock.
+It is built of glazed black bricks, with a hipped roof,
+and, though it was a place of note in its day, occupied
+by one generation after another of the ruling Quakers, it
+has now degenerated into a workingmen's coffee-house.
+To it the Friends conducted Franklin on his return from
+England. War was not yet declared, but there were
+mutterings in the distance; all awaited Franklin's counsels,
+sitting silently, as is their wont, waiting for the
+spirit to move to utterance, when Franklin stood up
+and cried out: "To arms, my friends, to arms!"</p>
+
+<p>Franklin has left many associations in the city of his
+adoption. As a boy of seventeen he trudged up High,
+now Market street, munching one roll, with another
+under his arm, friendless and unknown. Even his
+future wife smiled in ridicule as he passed by. To-day
+statues are erected to his memory, and institutions
+named after him. The Philadelphia Library, the
+oldest and richest in the city, claims him as one of its
+original founders. In 1729, the Junto, a little association
+of tradesmen of which Franklin was a member,
+used to meet in the chamber of a little house in Pewter-platter
+alley, to exchange their books. Franklin suggested
+that there should be a small annual subscription,
+in order to increase the stock. To-day the library
+contains many thousand volumes, with many rare and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span>
+valuable manuscripts and pamphlets. This library
+contains Penn's desk and clock, John Penn's cabinet,
+and a colossal bust of Minerva which overlooked the
+deliberations of the Continental Congress. In an old
+graveyard at the corner of Fifth and Arch, a section of
+iron railing in the stone wall which surrounds it
+permits the passer to view the plain marble slab which
+covers the remains of Franklin and his wife.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of libraries, the Apprentices' Library, on
+the opposite corner of Fifth and Arch, overlooks
+Franklin's grave. It was established by the Quakers,
+and dates back to 1783. The apprentice system has
+died out, and the library is almost forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>As late as 1876, stood the old Quaker Almshouse, on
+Willings alley, between Third and Fourth streets, of
+which Longfellow gives this description in his poem,
+"Evangeline:"&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Then in the suburbs it stood, in the midst of meadows and woodlands;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now the city surrounds it; but still with its gateway and wicket,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Meek in the midst of splendor, its humble walls seem to echo<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Softly the words of the Lord: 'The poor ye always have with you.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Here Evangeline came when the pestilence fell on the
+city, when&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Distant and soft on her ear fell the chimes from the belfry of Christ Church,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While intermingled with these, across the meadows were wafted<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sounds of psalms that were sung by the Swedes in their church at Wicaco."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And here Evangeline found Gabriel. The ancient
+building is now leveled, and only the poem remains.</p>
+
+<p>Germantown, now incorporated in Philadelphia, is
+rich in historic associations. Stenton, a country seat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span>
+near Germantown, was for generations the centre of the
+social life of the Quakers. It was built in 1731, by James
+Logan, and was finished with secret passages and
+underground ways, to be used in case of attack by
+Indians and others. The Chew House at Germantown
+was, during the Revolution, used by Colonel Musgrove
+and six companies, for a long time. The old Johnson
+House had its hall door, which is still preserved,
+riddled by cannon. In many private lawns and
+gardens of that suburb royalists and rebels sleep peacefully
+side by side. A house, now quaint in its antiquity,
+at the intersection of Main street and West
+Walnut lane, was used during the Revolution as a
+hospital and amputating room. The old Wistar House,
+built in 1744, played a part in the events of the last
+century, and contains furniture which once belonged to
+Franklin and Count Zinzendorf. There is a room
+filled with relics of early times.</p>
+
+<p>In 1755 the corner stone of Pennsylvania Hospital
+was laid. This corner stone having been recently
+uncovered, in making alterations to the building, the
+following inscription, of which Franklin was the author,
+was discovered: "In the Year of Christ, MDCCLV,
+George the Second happily reigning (for he sought the
+happiness of his people)&mdash;Philadelphia flourishing (for
+its inhabitants were public spirited)&mdash;This Building,
+By the Bounty of the Government, and of many private
+persons, was piously founded For the Relief of the Sick
+and Miserable. May the God of Mercies Bless the
+undertaking!"</p>
+
+<p>A noticeable and commendable feature of Philadelphia
+is its many workingmen's homes. In New York
+the middle classes, whose incomes are but moderate, are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
+compelled to seek residences in cheap flats and tenement
+houses, or else go into the country, at the daily expense
+of car or ferry rides. But in Philadelphia flats are
+unknown, and tenement life&mdash;several families crowded
+under a single roof&mdash;confined almost entirely to the
+more wretched quarters of the city. There are streets
+upon streets of comfortable and neat dwellings, marble-faced
+and marble-stepped, with their prim white shutters,
+two or three stories in height, and containing from six
+to nine rooms, with all the conveniences of gas, bath-room
+and water, which are either rented at moderate rates or
+owned outright by single families, who may possibly
+rent out a room or two to lodgers. Philadelphia may
+have less elegant public and business edifices than New
+York, but her dwelling houses stand as far more desirable
+monuments to the prosperity of a people than the
+splendor united with the squalor of the metropolis.</p>
+
+<p>The manufactures of Philadelphia furnish the foundation
+of her prosperity. Her iron foundries produce
+more than one-third of the manufactured iron of the
+country, and number among them some of the largest
+in America. The Port Richmond Iron Works of I. P.
+Morris &amp; Company cover, with their various buildings,
+five acres of ground. The Baldwin Locomotive Works,
+on Broad street, founded in 1831, employ a large force of
+men. It takes eighteen hundred men one day to complete
+and make ready for service a single locomotive;
+yet these works turn out three hundred locomotives a
+year. Some of the largest men-of-war in the world
+have also been built at the navy yards in Philadelphia
+and League Island. Among them is the old
+Pennsylvania, of one hundred and twenty guns.
+Besides her iron works there are many mills and facto<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>ries.
+Miles of carpet, of superior quality, are woven
+every day, besides immense quantities of other woolen
+and cotton goods and shoes. Her retail stores, taken as
+a whole, will not compare in size and elegance with
+those of New York, though there are two or three
+exceptions to this rule.</p>
+
+<p>The headquarters of the Pennsylvania Railroad is at
+Philadelphia, and there is a grand depot on Broad
+street, near Market, which is palatial in its appointments.</p>
+
+<p>Of her places of amusement, the Academy of Music
+ranks first in size. There are numerous theatres, among
+which the Walnut Street Theatre is the oldest, and the
+Arch Street Theatre the most elegantly finished and
+furnished, and the best managed. With these and other
+places of amusement, are associated the names of all
+the prominent musicians, actors and actresses of the past
+and present. The Academy of Music was not built
+when Jenny Lind visited this country, but it was ready
+for occupancy only a few years later; and has witnessed
+the triumphs of many a prima donna, now forgotten by
+the public, which then worshiped her. Forrest began
+his theatrical career in Philadelphia; and the names
+of noted tragedians and comedians who have come and
+gone upon her boards are legion.</p>
+
+<p>Of churches Philadelphia has many, and beautiful
+ones. On three corners of Broad and Arch streets tall
+and slender spires point heavenward, rising from three
+of the most costly churches in the city. Surpassing
+them all, however, is the Roman Catholic Cathedral of
+Saint Peter and Saint Paul, on Logan Square. It is of
+red sandstone, in the Corinthian style, and is surmounted
+by a dome two hundred and ten feet high.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span>
+The interior is cruciform and richly frescoed. The altar
+piece is by Brumidi.</p>
+
+<p>Also, fronting on Logan Square, at the corner of
+Nineteenth and Race streets, is the Academy of Natural
+Sciences, containing a library of twenty-six thousand
+volumes, and most extensive, valuable and interesting
+collections in zo&ouml;logy, ornithology, geology, mineralogy,
+conchology, ethnology, arch&aelig;ology and botany. The
+museum contains over two hundred and fifty thousand
+specimens, and Agassiz pronounced it one of the finest
+natural science collections in the world. It also contains
+a perfect skeleton of a whale, a complete ancient
+saurian, twenty-five feet long, and the fossil remains of a
+second saurian so much larger than the first that it fed
+upon it.</p>
+
+<p>Franklin Institute is devoted to science and the mechanical
+arts, and contains a library of fifteen thousand
+volumes. The Mercantile Library occupies a stately
+edifice, on Tenth street below Market, and contains over
+fifty thousand volumes, exclusive of periodicals and
+papers. On an average, five hundred books are loaned
+daily, from this institution.</p>
+
+<p>The newspapers of Philadelphia rank second only to
+those of New York. The <i>Ledger</i> has a magnificent
+building at the corner of Sixth and Chestnut, complete
+in all its appointments, from engine rooms, in the basement,
+to type-setting rooms in the top story. The <i>Times</i>
+building, at the corner of Eighth and Chestnut, is also
+very fine. The <i>Public Record</i> building, newly finished,
+on Chestnut street above Ninth, near the new Post Office,
+surpasses all others. It represents the profits of a daily
+penny paper, giving news in a condensed form, to meet
+the wants of a working and busy public.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Philadelphia once represented the literary centre of
+the country. It took the lead in periodic literature
+half a century ago, and claimed, as residents, some of the
+most brilliant novelists, essayists and poets of the day.
+But the glory of that age has departed. The <i>Continent</i>,
+a weekly magazine, sought to revive the prestige of the
+city, but soon removed to New York, where it died.</p>
+
+<p>The Medical Colleges of Philadelphia have long
+stood in the front rank, and have attracted students from
+all parts of the country. A Woman's Medical College
+is in successful operation, with a fine hospital connected
+with it.</p>
+
+<p>Philadelphia has an educational system embracing
+schools of different grades, and a High School. But it
+pays its teachers less salaries than most of the other
+cities, and the standard of the schools is not so high as
+it should be, in consequence. Girard College should not
+be overlooked, while speaking of educational institutions.
+Architecturally, it is a magnificent marble building,
+in Grecian style. It is located near the Schuylkill
+River, on Girard avenue. When Girard selected the
+location for his proposed college, it was so far out in the
+country, that he never thought the city would creep up
+to it. But to-day the college is inclosed by it, and its
+high stone walls block many a street, to the inconvenience
+of the people of the neighborhood. It was established
+for the practical education of orphan boys, and
+one of the provisions of its founder&mdash;himself a free
+thinker&mdash;was, that no religious instruction should be
+imparted to the pupils, and no clergyman be permitted
+to enter its doors; a provision which is widely interpreted,
+to the effect that no sectarian bias is given in the
+college.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The United States Mint, located on Chestnut street,
+above Thirteenth, is copied from a Grecian temple at
+Athens. It contains a very valuable collection of coins,
+embracing those of almost every period of the world
+and every nation. The Custom House is an imitation
+of the Pantheon at Athens. The new Post Office is on
+Ninth street, extending from Chestnut to Market. It
+is a spacious granite structure, in the Renaissance style,
+four stories in height, with an iron dome, and when
+completed will cost about four millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>On the opposite corner from the Post Office is the
+Continentel Hotel, a spacious structure which, when
+erected, was the largest of its kind in the country. It is
+now exceeded in size by several other hotels in other
+cities, but it is noted for the elegance and excellence of
+the entertainment it offers its guests. Girard Hotel is
+immediately opposite, and ranks second only to the
+Continental.</p>
+
+<p>The Eastern Penitentiary is on Fairmount avenue, on
+what was once known as Cherry Hill. In it is practiced
+the plan of solitary confinement for prisoners. When
+Dickens paid his first visit to America, more than forty
+years ago, he visited this prison, and was so moved to
+pity by the solitude of its inmates, that he wrote a touching
+account of one of the prisoners, in whom he was
+especially interested. But this very prisoner, when he
+was set at liberty, soon committed another crime which
+sent him back to his silent and solitary cell, and every
+subsequent release was followed by a subsequent crime
+and subsequent imprisonment. Finally, when Dickens
+had been in his grave for years, the old man, still hale
+and hearty, but bearing the marks of age, was once
+more set free. Attention was attracted to him by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span>
+newspapers, as having been the prison hero of Dickens.
+The public became interested in him, and an effort was
+made to place him beyond the temptation of crime, so
+that he might go down to his grave a free man. But
+before many months had elapsed, life in the outer world
+became irksome to him, and he returned, by his well-beaten
+path, back to the penitentiary. He was very
+proud of the notice which Dickens had bestowed upon
+him, and it seemed to more than compensate for the loss
+of his liberty.</p>
+
+<p>When Penn visited Philadelphia, in its infant days,
+he wished to preserve the bluff overlooking the Delaware,
+to be forever used as a public park and promenade.
+But the traffic of Front street now rattles where he
+would have had green trees and grass. Philadelphia
+has no pleasant outlook upon the river, to correspond
+with the Battery of New York. The wharves are lined
+with craft of every description, and the flags of many
+nations are to be seen in her harbor; but commerce
+creeps down to the very shores, and Delaware avenue,
+which faces the river, is dirty and crowded with traffic.
+Seen from the river the city makes a pleasing outline
+against the sky, with its many spires and domes. Smith's
+Island and Windmill Island lie opposite the city, a
+short distance away, and Camden is on the New Jersey
+shore. Ferry boats continually ply across the Delaware,
+carrying to and fro the travelers of a continent.</p>
+
+<p>Philadelphia is not without its public breathing places,
+where the residents of its narrow streets may enjoy fine
+trees and green grass. When the city was first planned,
+four squares, of about seven acres each, were reserved in
+its four quarters, two each side of Market street, and are
+now known as Washington, Franklin, Logan and Rit<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span>tenhouse
+Squares. Washington Square is at Sixth and
+Walnut, and was once a Potters' Field. Many soldiers,
+victims of the smallpox and camp fever, were buried
+there during the Revolution. Franklin Square, at Sixth
+and Race was also once a burying, ground. A fountain
+now occupies its centre. At Eighteenth and Race is
+Logan Square, where in 1864 was held the great Sanitary
+Fair. The entire square was roofed over and
+boarded up, the trunks of the trees standing as pillars in
+the aisles of the large building. Its companion, Rittenhouse
+Square, at Eighteenth and Walnut streets, is the
+centre of the aristocratic quarter of the city. It is surrounded
+by most elegant mansions and costly churches.
+Independence Square lies back of Independence Hall.</p>
+
+<p>There are a few other smaller and newer squares
+scattered throughout the city, but its great pride is
+Fairmount Park, which is unsurpassed in its natural
+advantages by any park in the world. This park contains
+nearly three thousand acres, embracing eleven
+miles in length along the Schuylkill and Wissahickon
+rivers. The nucleus of this park was the waterworks
+and reservoir, the former situated on the Schuylkill, in
+the northwestern part of the city, and the latter on a
+natural elevation close by, from which the entire park
+takes its name, while a small tract of land between the
+two was included in the original park. There was added
+the beautiful estate of Lemon Hill, once the country
+seat of Robert Morris, with the strip along the Schuylkill
+which led to it. In course of time Egglesfield, Belmont,
+Lansdowne and George's Hill, on the opposite side of the
+river, were added, either by gift or purchase, and eventually
+the tract of land on the eastern bank, extending
+from Lemon Hill to the Wissahickon, and along both<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span>
+banks of the latter as far as Chestnut Hill. This park,
+besides the beautiful river and romantic stream which it
+incloses, includes hills and valleys, charming ravines
+and picturesque rocks.</p>
+
+<p>While the city has gained much, the true lover of
+nature has lost something, by the conversion of this tract
+of land into a park. While it was still private property,
+nature was at her loveliest. Wild flowers blossomed
+in the dells, and little streams gurgled and tumbled over
+stones down the ravines, while vines and foliage softened
+the rugged outlines of the rocky hillsides. But the
+landscape gardener has been there. The dells are
+converted into gentle slopes; the wild flowers and ferns
+which beautified them have given place to green sward;
+one of the prettiest of the brooks has been converted into
+a sewer and covered over. The Wissahickon, once the
+most delightful of wild and wayward streams, is now, for
+a considerable part of its way, imprisoned between banks
+as straight and unpicturesque as those of a canal. The
+pretty country lanes have been obliterated, and the trees
+which overshadowed them have disappeared. Primness
+and stableness is now the rule. Art has sought to improve
+nature, and has almost obliterated it, instead. Yet
+even the landscape gardener cannot succeed in making
+the Schuylkill entirely unattractive; and velvet turf
+and trees waving in the wind, even though the latter be
+pruned into a tiresome regularity, are always more
+grateful than the cobble stones and brick pavements of
+the city streets, and thousands every day seek rest or
+recreation at Fairmount.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">GIRARD AVENUE BRIDGE&mdash;FAIRMOUNT PARK, PHILADELPHIA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_441.jpg" width="1024" height="665" alt="GIRARD AVENUE BRIDGE&mdash;FAIRMOUNT PARK, PHILADELPHIA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Belmont Mansion is now a restaurant. Solitude, a
+villa built in 1785 by John Penn, grandson of William
+Penn, and the cottage of Tom Moore, not far from
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span>
+Belmont where he spent some months during his visit
+to America, are among the attractions of the park.</p>
+
+<p>The Zo&ouml;logical Gardens are included in the park, and
+are situated on the western bank of the Schuylkill,
+opposite Lemon Hill. Here is found the finest collection
+of European and American animals in America, and the
+daily concourse of visitors is very great. The several
+bridges which span the Schuylkill are very picturesque.
+In the winter, when the river at Fairmount, above the
+dam, is frozen over, the ice is covered with skaters, and
+the bank is thronged with spectators.</p>
+
+<p>Laurel Hill, one of the most beautiful cemeteries of
+the country, adjoins Fairmount Park, and is inclosed by
+it, seeming to make it a part of the park. Mount
+Vernon Cemetery is nearly opposite Woodlands, in West
+Philadelphia, and contains the Drexel Mausoleum, the
+costliest in America.</p>
+
+<p>Fairmount was the site of the Centennial Exhibition
+in 1876, and numerous and costly buildings were erected
+there. Of these many were removed at once at the
+close of the Exhibition. The main building, a mammoth
+structure, covering eleven acres, was retained for several
+years for a permanent exhibition building, but was
+removed in 1883. Memorial Hall, erected by the State,
+at a cost of $1,500,000, standing on an elevated terrace
+between George's Hill and the river, and used as an art
+gallery during the Exhibition, still remains, and is
+designed for a permanent art and industrial collection.
+North of Memorial Hall stands the Horticultural
+Building, a picturesque structure, in the Mooresque
+style. It is a conservatory, filled with tropical and
+other plants, and is surrounded by thirty-five acres
+devoted to horticultural purposes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In October, 1882, Philadelphia celebrated her Bi-centennial,
+and commemorated the landing of Penn, who
+first stepped upon her shores two hundred years before.
+This Bi-centennial lasted for three days, which were
+celebrated, the first as "Landing Day," the second as
+"Trades' Day," and the third as "Festival Day." On the
+first day, October twenty-fourth, the State House bell
+rang two hundred times, and the chimes of the churches
+were rung. The ship Welcome, which two hundred
+years before had conveyed Penn to our shores, made a
+second arrival, and a mimic Penn again visited the Blue
+Anchor, still standing to receive him, held treaty with
+the Indians, and then paraded through the city, followed
+by a large and brilliant procession, which presented the
+harmless anachronism of the Proprietor of two hundred
+years ago hob-nobbing with the city officials and others
+of the nineteenth century. On the second day the different
+trades and manufacturing interests made a great
+display. In the evening Pennsylvania history was
+represented by ten tableaux; eleven tableaux presented
+the illustrious women of history; and ten tableaux gave
+the principal scenes in the Romayana, the great poem of
+India. The display of this night pageant was gorgeous
+and beautiful beyond anything ever before seen in this
+country. On the third day the morning was devoted
+to a parade of Knights Templar, and the evening to a
+reception at the Academy of Music and Horticultural
+Hall. A musical festival was held during the day;
+also a naval regatta upon the Schuylkill, a bicycle meet
+at Fairmount, and archery contests at Agricultural Hall.
+During the entire three days Philadelphia held holiday.
+Her streets and pavements were crowded with throngs
+of people from the country, and elevated seats along<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span>
+the principal streets were constantly filled, at high
+prices.</p>
+
+<p>If William Penn could really, in person, have stepped
+upon the scene, and beheld the city of his planning as
+it is to-day, he would undoubtedly be astonished beyond
+expression. In magnitude it must exceed his wildest
+dreams; in commercial and manufacturing enterprises
+its progress reads like some fable of the east. He would
+look almost in vain for his country residence upon the
+Delaware, once surrounded by noble forests, and we fear
+he would scorn the Blue Anchor and all its present
+associations. Time works wonders. Nearly a million
+people now find their homes where, in 1683, one year
+after Penn's arrival, there were but one hundred houses.
+In 1684 the population of Philadelphia was estimated at
+2,500. In 1800 it had increased to 41,220. In 1850 it
+was 121,376. From this period to 1860, its growth was
+almost marvelous, at the latter period its inhabitants
+numbering 565,529. The census of 1880 gave it a
+population of 846,984.</p>
+
+<p>The residents of Philadelphia include every nationality
+and class of people. The Quakers are in a small
+minority, though they have done much to mould the
+character of the city. Irish and Germans predominate
+among foreigners. Italians, French, Spanish, and
+Chinese are not so numerous as in New York. The
+society of the Quaker City bears the reputation of great
+exclusiveness. While culture will admit to the charmed
+circle in Boston, and money buys a ready passport to
+social recognition in New York, in Philadelphia the
+door is closed to all pretensions except those of family.
+Boston asks "How much do you know?" New York,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span>
+"How much are you worth?" but in Philadelphia the
+question is, "Who was your grandfather?"</p>
+
+<p>Philadelphia ranks fourth in commerce among the
+cities of the Union. As a manufacturing city it occupies
+the very front rank. With the inexhaustible coal and
+iron fields of Pennsylvania at its back, her manufacturing
+interests are certain to grow in extent and importance,
+maintaining the ascendency they have already gained.
+Its prosperity has a firm basis. Like all large cities,
+there is squalor, misery and crime within its borders;
+but the proportion is smaller than in some other cities,
+and the aggregate amount of domestic content, owing to
+its many comfortable homes, much greater. Thus
+Philadelphia offers an example, in more than one direction,
+which might be emulated by her sister cities. What
+she will have become when her tri-centennial comes
+around, who shall dare to predict?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.</h3>
+
+<h2>PROVIDENCE.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Origin of the City.&mdash;Roger Williams.&mdash;Geographical Location and
+Importance.&mdash;Topography of Providence.&mdash;The Cove.&mdash;Railroad
+Connections.&mdash;Brown University.&mdash;Patriotism of Rhode Island.&mdash;Soldiers'
+Monument.&mdash;The Roger Williams Park.&mdash;Narragansett
+Bay.&mdash;Suburban Villages.&mdash;Points of Interest.&mdash;Butter Exchange.&mdash;Lamplighting
+on a New Plan.&mdash;Jewelry Manufactories.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>In the year 1630, Roger Williams, a clergyman,
+persecuted and banished from Massachusetts on
+account of his peculiar religious views, came to Rhode
+Island and laid the foundation of a city, naming it
+Providence, in gratitude for his deliverance from persecution.
+This renowned pioneer not only laid the
+corner stone of a great and growing city, but ineffaceably
+stamped his character upon all her institutions, public
+and private.</p>
+
+<p>Providence is the second city of New England in
+respect to wealth and population. It is pleasantly
+located at the head of Narragansett Bay, thirty-five miles
+from the ocean. Its commercial advantages are unsurpassed,
+and as a manufacturing town it ranks among
+the first in the Atlantic States. The city is divided into
+two unequal portions by a narrow arm of the Bay, which
+terminates near the geographical centre of the town, in
+a beautiful elliptical sheet of water, about one mile in
+circumference, called the cove, or basin. This basin is
+inclosed by a handsome granite wall, capped by a sub<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span>stantial
+and ornamental iron fence, and is surrounded by
+a green about eighty feet in width, filled with a variety
+of beautiful and thrifty shade trees.</p>
+
+<p>The eastern portion of the city rises from the water,
+in some places gradually, in others quite abruptly, to
+the height of more than two hundred feet. This elevated
+land is occupied by elegant private mansions surrounded
+with numerous shade trees and ornamental
+gardens, making one of the most delightful and desirable
+places for residence to be found in any city.</p>
+
+<p>The western portion of the city rises very gradually
+until it reaches an elevation of about seventy-five feet,
+when it spreads out into a level plain, extending a considerable
+distance to the southwest. The northern portion,
+recently annexed to the city, is more sparsely
+populated, and portions of it are quite rural in appearance
+and abounding in hills, numerous springs and
+small streams of water.</p>
+
+<p>Providence is about forty-three miles from Boston,
+the same distance from Worcester, ninety miles from
+Hartford, fifty miles from Stonington, and twenty miles
+from Fall River, with each of which places it is connected
+by numerous daily trains. It also has railroad
+connections with New Bedford and southern Massachusetts,
+with Fitchburg, and thence with Vermont and
+New Hampshire. There is now in process of construction
+another route to Northern Connecticut, Springfield
+and the west. It is also closely connected with
+Newport, and other places on Narragansett Bay, by
+steamboats.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">VIEW OF PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, FROM PROSPECT TERRACE.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_449.jpg" width="1024" height="658" alt="VIEW OF PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, FROM PROSPECT TERRACE." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Brown University is one of the distinguishing features
+of Providence, and, as an institution of learning,
+stands in the front rank of American colleges. Founded
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span>
+more than one hundred years since, this college has come
+down from the past, hand in hand with Yale and Harvard.
+Among the renowned graduates of Brown University
+may be mentioned Charles Sumner, the great
+statesman, the devoted patriot, the champion of the
+negro, whose fame and good works will live while freedom
+is the heritage of the American people.</p>
+
+<p>President Wayland, of this institution, was the originator
+of the public Library System of New England&mdash;a
+system whose wonderful power for good is markedly on
+the increase.</p>
+
+<p>During the war no State of the whole sisterhood evinced
+more patriotism than little Rhode Island, and Providence
+was largely represented in the Union army. A
+Soldiers' Monument stands in the triangular space near
+the Boston and Providence Railroad Depot, inscribed
+with the names of Rhode Island soldiers who were
+killed in battle. The Monument is surmounted by a
+statue in bronze of the Goddess of Liberty, and in niches
+of the granite pillar below this figure each arm of the
+service is represented by soldiers in bronze. The work
+is finely executed, and it is one of the first objects which
+attracts the attention of the stranger. The Artilleryman
+stands behind his cannon in grim silence; representatives
+of the infantry, the cavalry and the marine arms
+o&pound; the service are his coadjutors, and the entire group
+is sternly suggestive of war's sad havoc.</p>
+
+<p>About a mile and a half from the heart of the city,
+along a beautiful McAdamized road leading to Pawtuxet,
+is situated the Roger Williams Park, a tract
+of land containing about thirteen hundred acres, which
+was bequeathed to the city by a descendant of Roger
+Williams, in consideration of five hundred dollars, to be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span>
+raised by the Providence people, for the erection of a
+monument to the city's illustrious founder. The sum
+to be appropriated for that purpose was equivalent to
+twenty-six hundred dollars at the present time.</p>
+
+<p>The embryo park is yet a wilderness, unreclaimed, and
+primeval forest-trees fill the wide enclosure. The ground
+is undulating with hill and dale, and pleasant driveways
+under the dark pines and hemlocks are already
+laid out.</p>
+
+<p>The memory of Roger Williams is held in great
+veneration by the citizens of Providence, and he is
+ranked with William Penn in the category of noble
+pioneers. Plenty of eulogistic essays and poems have
+been written concerning him, and his great love of liberty,
+exemplified in his life, is a matter of history. The
+following fragment of verse, by Francis Whipple, one
+of Rhode Island's poets, places the memory of the two
+heroes side by side:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"When warlike fame, as morning mist shall fly,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And blood-stained glory as a meteor die,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When all the dross is known and cast away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the pure gold alone allowed to stay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Two names will stand, the pride of virtuous men,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our Roger Williams and good William Penn."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Many of the suburbs of Providence are of some note
+as places of summer resort. The coast scenery along
+Narragansett Bay is full of charming water-pictures,
+and numerous rocky islands may be seen, on which are
+erected little white cottages, for summer occupation.
+The islands are sometimes connected with the shore by
+foot-bridges, but often the only means of communication
+with land is by boat.</p>
+
+<p>Nayatt Point, six miles distant from Providence
+by rail, is, as its name implies, a jutting point of land,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span>
+reaching out into the bay, where beautiful drives along
+the beach and through the neighboring groves, added to
+the salt sea air, are the chief summer attractions. Rocky
+Point, directly opposite Nayatt, is famous for its clam
+bakes, and on moonlight nights in summer, excursion
+parties from Nayatt, Barrington or Warren, glide
+over the smooth waters of the bay to this lovely spot.
+The red glow of Rocky Point Light can be seen through
+the night, for miles and miles along the coast and down
+the bay.</p>
+
+<p>Westminster street is the principal avenue of Providence,
+and is handsomely built up with substantial and
+elegant business blocks. A very large hostelry, to be
+called the Narragansett Hotel, is in process of erection
+at the corner of Dorrance and Broad streets. Just back
+of this building, the new Providence Opera House, a
+structure of recent date, furnished with all the modern
+appliances for the stage, opens its doors to lovers of the
+histrionic art. The What-Cheer building, the Arcade,
+and the Butler Exchange are all well known business
+centres. The last named place owes its existence to a
+clause in a Scotchman's will. A large inheritance was
+left to a gentleman in Providence, with a stipulation
+that a certain amount of its yearly income should be
+used in the erection of public buildings in the city.
+The Butler Exchange is one of the children of this
+proviso.</p>
+
+<p>A recent improvement in Providence is that of lighting
+the city lamps by means of electricity. Only one
+person is required to light the streets of the entire city.
+A single turn of the screw which commands the network
+of wires leading to the lamp posts, sets every gas jet,
+far and near, aflame, in one instantaneous blaze. It is a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span>
+marvelous advance on the old way of doing things, and
+will greatly lessen the expenditures of the city.</p>
+
+<p>Providence is justly celebrated for its manufacture of
+jewelry. The largest establishments of the kind in
+New England are in operation here, and the work
+turned out is of the most skillful pattern. A visit to
+the lapidary establishments is full of interest. A
+shining array of precious stones, from the white brilliance
+of the diamond, to the mottled moss agate, greets
+the bewildered gaze, and skillful workmen are deftly
+transforming them into the beautiful gems which shine
+in the jeweler's window.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>QUEBEC.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Appearance of Quebec.&mdash;Gibraltar of America.&mdash;Fortifications and
+Walls.&mdash;The Walled City.&mdash;Churches, Nunneries and Hospitals.&mdash;Views
+from the Cliff.&mdash;Upper Town.&mdash;Lower Town.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Plains of Abraham.&mdash;Falls of
+Montmorenci.&mdash;Sledding on the "Cone."&mdash;History of Quebec.&mdash;Capture
+of the City by the British.&mdash;Death of Generals Wolfe
+and Montcalm.&mdash;Disaster under General Murray.&mdash;Ceding of
+Canada, by France, to England.&mdash;Attack by American Forces
+under Montgomery and Arnold.&mdash;Death of Montgomery.&mdash;Capital
+of Lower Canada and of the Province of Quebec.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Of all the cities and towns on the American continent,
+not one wears such an Old-World expression
+as Quebec. Not even St. Augustine, in Florida, with
+its narrow streets, and quaint, overhanging balconies, so
+takes the traveler back to a past age, as that fortified
+city on the lower St. Lawrence. It is not French in any
+modern sense. But the city and its inhabitants belong
+to a France now passed away, the France of St. Louis,
+the <i>fleur-de-lis</i>, and a dominant priesthood. An offshoot
+from such a France, now blotted out and forgotten in the
+crowding of events during the last century, it has remained
+oblivious of all the changes in the parent country,
+and not even British rule, and the infusion of Anglo-Saxon
+and Celtic blood have been able to more than
+partially obliterate its early characteristics.</p>
+
+<p>Quebec is situated at the confluence of the St. Charles
+River with the St. Lawrence, on the northern side of a
+point of land which projects between these two rivers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span>
+This point ends in an abrupt headland, three hundred
+and thirty-three feet above the level of the river; and
+its precipitous sides, crowned with an almost impregnable
+fortress, have won for it the name of the "Gibraltar of
+America." The most elevated part of this promontory
+is called Cape Diamond, since at one time numerous
+quartz crystals were found there; and upon this is
+placed the citadel, occupying forty acres. From the
+citadel a line of wall runs towards the St. Charles River,
+until it reaches the brow of the bluff. Continuing around
+this bluff towards the St. Lawrence, it finally completes
+a circle of nearly three miles in circumference, by again
+connecting with the citadel. This encircling wall originally
+had five gates, but four of these were removed
+some time ago. They are now being replaced by more
+ornamental ones. The old St. Louis Gate, opening upon
+the street of that name, is being replaced by the Kent
+Gate, in honor of Queen Victoria's father, who spent
+the summer of 1791 near Quebec. Dufferin Gate is
+being erected on St. Patrick street; Palace and Hope
+gates are to be replaced by castellated gates; while a
+light iron bridge is to occupy the site of the Prescott
+Gate.</p>
+
+<p>The old city is contained within this walled inclosure,
+and here, in the narrow, tortuous, medi&aelig;val streets, are
+the stately churches, venerable convents, and other
+edifices, many of them dating back to the period of the
+French occupation of the city. The houses are tall,
+with narrow windows and irregular gables, two or three
+stories high, and roofed, like the public buildings, with
+shining tin. A very large part of the city within the
+walls is, however, taken up with the buildings and
+grounds of the great religious corporations. Monks,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span>
+priests, and nuns, seemingly belonging to another age
+and another civilization than our own, are jostled in the
+street by officers whose dress and manners are those of
+the nineteenth century. French is quite as frequently
+heard as English; and everywhere the old and the new,
+the past century and the present, seem inextricably
+mingled. The past has, however, set its ineffaceable
+stamp upon the city and its people. There is none of
+the hurry and push of most American cities, seen even,
+to a degree, in Montreal. To-day seems long enough for
+its duties and its pleasures, and to-morrow is left to take
+care of itself. Even the public buildings have the stamp
+of antiquity upon them, and are, in consequence, interesting,
+though few of them are architecturally beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>The churches of Quebec have none of the grandeur
+of those of Montreal. Most prominent among them is
+the Anglican Cathedral, a plain, gray stone edifice in
+St. Ann street. The Basilica of Quebec, formerly the
+Cathedral, is capable of seating four thousand persons,
+and with a plain exterior, contains some invaluable art
+treasures in the form of original paintings by Vandyke,
+Caracci, Halle and others. The remains of Champlain,
+the founder and first governor of Quebec, lie
+within the Basilica. The Ursuline Convent is in
+Garden street, north of Market Square, and is composed
+of a group of buildings surrounded by beautiful
+grounds. It was founded in 1639, originally for the
+education of Indian girls, and is now devoted to the
+education of girls of the white race. The remains of
+Montcalm are buried within the convent grounds, in
+an excavation made by the bursting of a shell, during
+the engagement in which he lost his life. The Gray
+Nunnery, the Black Nunnery, and H&ocirc;tel Dieu with its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span>
+convent and hospital, under the charge of the Sisters of
+the Sacred Blood, of Dieppe, are among the Roman
+Catholic religious institutions of the city. In the
+hospital of the H&ocirc;tel Dieu ten thousand patients are
+gratuitously cared for annually.</p>
+
+<p>Durham Terrace lies along the edge of the cliff overlooking
+the St. Lawrence. It occupies the site of the
+old chateau of St. Louis, built by Champlain in 1620,
+and destroyed by fire in 1834. The outlook from this
+terrace is one of the finest in the world; though the view
+from the Grand Battery is conceded to be even finer.
+Looking down from an elevation of nearly three
+hundred and fifty feet, the lower town, the majestic St.
+Lawrence and the smaller stream of St. Charles rolling
+away in the distance, and a vast stretch of country
+varied by hills and plains, woodlands and mountains,
+are spread out before the spectator, making one of the
+most beautiful pictures of which it is possible to conceive.</p>
+
+<p>The walled city, with the suburbs of St. Louis and
+St. John between the walls to the eastward, and the
+Plains of Abraham to the westward, is known as the
+upper town. The lower town is reached from the
+upper by the C&ocirc;te de la Montagne, or Mountain street,
+a very steep and winding street, and lies below the cliff,
+principally to the northward, though it encircles the
+base of the promontory. Here, in the lower town,
+is the business portion of the city, with all its
+modern additions. The narrow strand between the
+cliff and the rivers is occupied by breweries, distilleries,
+manufactories, and numerous ship-yards; while the
+many coves of the St. Lawrence, from Champlain street
+to Cape Rouge, are filled with acres of vast lumber
+rafts. Quebec is one of the greatest lumber and timber<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span>
+markets in America, supplying all the seaboard cities of
+the United States. It also builds many ships, and
+produces sawed lumber, boots and shoes, furniture, iron
+ware and machinery.</p>
+
+<p>The Custom House occupies the extreme point
+between the St. Lawrence and St. Charles rivers. It
+is Doric in architecture, surmounted by a dome, and
+has a columned fa&ccedil;ade reached by an imposing flight of
+steps. The Marine Hospital, built in imitation of the
+Temple of the Muses on the banks of the Ilissus, is
+situated near the St. Charles River. The Marine and
+Emigrants' Hospital is not far away. The General
+Hospital, an immense cluster of buildings further up
+the river, was founded in 1693, and is in charge of the
+nuns of St. Augustine.</p>
+
+<p>The Plains of Abraham, lying back of Quebec, near
+the St. Lawrence, and the scene of the famous encounter
+between the forces of Wolfe and Montcalm, are fast
+being encroached upon by suburban residences, large
+conventual establishments, and churches. The Martello
+towers are four circular stone structures, erected
+upon the Plains to defend the approaches of the city.
+On the plains, near the St. Foye road, is a monument
+composed of a handsome iron column, surmounted by a
+bronze statue of Bellona, presented by Prince Napoleon,
+and erected in 1854, to commemorate the victory won
+by the Chevalier de L&egrave;ris over General Murray, in
+1760. The Mount Hermon Cemetery, beautifully laid
+out on the edge of the precipice which overhangs the
+St. Lawrence, lies about three miles out, on the St. Louis
+road.</p>
+
+<p>It is imperative upon the stranger, in Quebec, to visit
+the Falls of Montmorenci, eight miles distant, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span>
+among the most beautiful in America. A volume of
+water fifty feet wide makes a leap of two hundred and
+fifty feet, down a sheer rock face, into a boiling and
+turbulent basin. During the winter the spray which is
+continually flying from this cataract congeals and falls
+like snow, until it builds up an eminence which is
+known as the Cone. This Cone, in favorable seasons,
+sometimes reaches an altitude of one hundred and
+twenty feet. To visit the Falls in sleighs, over the
+frozen river, and to ride down the Cone on hand-sleds, or
+"toboggins," as they are locally called, is considered
+the very climax of enjoyment by the inhabitants of
+Quebec. The Cone is in the form of a sugar loaf, quite
+as white and almost as firm. Up its steep sides the
+pleasure seekers toil with their sleds, and then glide
+from the top, impelled by the steepness alone, rushing
+down the slope with fearful velocity, and sometimes out
+on the ice of the river for hundreds of yards, until the
+force is spent. The interior of the Cone is not unfrequently
+hollowed out in the shape of a room, and a bar
+is set up, for the benefit of thirsty pleasure seekers.</p>
+
+<p>About a mile above Montmorenci Falls are the
+Natural Steps, a series of ledges cut in the limestone
+rock by the action of the river, each step about a foot
+in height, and as regular in its formation as though it
+was the work of man.</p>
+
+<p>There are points of interest nearer Quebec, among
+which are the Isle of Orleans, a beautiful and romantic
+place, laid out with charming drives, and reached by
+ferry; <i>Ch&acirc;teau Bigot</i>, an antique and massive ruin,
+standing at the foot of the Charlesbourg mountain; and
+still further away, Lorette, an ancient village of the
+Huron Indians.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Quebec, the oldest city in British America, was settled
+in 1608, the spot having been visited by Cartier, in
+1534. Its history is an exceedingly interesting and
+varied one. Twenty-one years after its founding it was
+seized by the British, who did not restore it to France
+until 1632. In 1690 and in 1711 the British made
+unsuccessful maritime assaults upon it It continued
+to be the centre of French trade and civilization,
+and of the Roman Catholic missions in North America,
+until, in 1759, it fell into the hands of the British.
+The Fleur-de-lis fluttered from the citadel of Quebec
+for two hundred and twenty years, with the exception
+of the three years from 1629 to 1632, when Sir David
+Kirke placed the fortification in the hands of England.</p>
+
+<p>In 1759, during the Seven Years' War, the English,
+under General Wolfe, attacked the city and bombarded
+it. An attempt had been previously made to land
+British troops at Montmorenci, which had been frustrated
+by Montcalm, resulting in a loss of five hundred
+men. But on the occasion of the present attack Wolfe
+had conceived the idea of landing his troops above the
+town. He pushed his fleet stealthily up the river,
+under the brow of the frowning precipice and beneath
+the very shadow of the fortifications. Passing above
+the city, he effected a landing where the acclivity was
+a little less steep than at other places, and the troops
+dragged themselves up, and actually brought with them
+several pieces of ordnance. All this was under cover of
+night; and when day dawned the British army with its
+artillery was found in line of battle on the Plains of
+Abraham. Wolfe had eight thousand men, while the
+French troops numbered ten thousand. Montcalm believed
+he could easily drive the British into the river or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span>
+compel them to surrender, and so threw the whole force
+of his attack upon the English right, which rested on the
+river. But in the French army were only five battalions
+of French soldiers, the balance being Indians
+and Canadians. The French right, composed of these
+undisciplined troops, was easily routed and the French
+left was ultimately broken. Five days later the British
+were in complete possession of Quebec. But before this
+victory was fairly assured to the English troops, both
+the French and English armies had lost their commanders.</p>
+
+<p>The spot where Wolfe fell in the memorable battle of
+September thirteenth, 1759, is marked by an unpretending
+column. A monument was shipped from Paris,
+to commemorate the death of Montcalm, but it never
+reached Quebec, the vessel which conveyed it having
+been lost at sea. A lengthy inscription upon this
+monument, after giving the Marquis de Montcalm's
+name and many titles, and depicting in glowing words
+his character and his brilliant achievements as a soldier,
+says: "Having with various artifices long baffled a
+great enemy, headed by an expert and intrepid commander,
+and a fleet furnished with all warlike stores,
+compelled at length to an engagement, he fell&mdash;in the
+first rank&mdash;in the first onset, warm with those hopes of
+religion which he had always cherished, to the inexpressible
+loss of his own army, and not without the
+regret of the enemy's, September fourteenth, 1759, of
+his age forty-eight. His weeping countrymen deposited
+the remains of their excellent General in a grave which
+a fallen bomb in bursting had excavated for him, recommending
+them to the generous faith of their enemies."
+Whether the "generous faith" of their friends was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a></span>
+equally to be trusted each one must judge for himself;
+for in the chapel of the Ursuline Convent of Quebec,
+among the curiosities exhibited to the visitor, is the
+skull of the Marquis de Montcalm.</p>
+
+<p>In April, of the following year, the British very
+nearly lost what Wolfe had gained for them. General
+Murray went out to the Plains of Abraham, with three
+thousand men, to meet the French, under Chevalier de
+L&egrave;ris, losing no less than one thousand men, and all his
+guns, which numbered twenty, and being compelled
+to retreat within the walls. The arrival of a British
+squadron brought him timely relief, and compelled the
+French to retreat, with the loss of all their artillery. The
+treaty of peace made between Louis Fifteenth and
+England, in 1763, ceded the whole of the French
+Canadian possessions to the British. In December,
+1775, during the war of the Revolution, a small American
+force, under General Montgomery, made an attack
+upon the fortress, but was repulsed with the loss of their
+commander and seven hundred men. Arnold preceded
+Montgomery, making an astonishing march, and enduring
+untold perils, by the Kennebec and Chaudi&egrave;re.
+Following the course pursued by Wolfe, he placed his
+troops upon the Plains of Abraham; but when Montgomery
+joined him, from Montreal, it was found they
+had no heavy artillery, and the only alternatives were,
+to retreat, or to carry the place by storm. Deciding on
+the latter course, two columns, headed by Arnold and
+Montgomery, rushed forward. The latter carried the
+intrenchment, and was proceeding toward a second work,
+when he and the officers who followed him were swept
+down before a gun loaded with grape. Arnold was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a></span>
+carried from the field, wounded, and the attempt on
+Quebec was a most disastrous failure.</p>
+
+<p>Quebec remained the chief city of Canada until the
+western settlements were erected into a separate Province,
+as Canada West, when it became the Capital of
+Canada East. In 1867, the British North American
+Provinces were united, in the Dominion of Canada.
+Canada East, or Lower Canada, as a Province, took the
+name of the city, and the city of Quebec became the Capital
+of the Province. The population of Quebec was, in
+1871, 58,699, of whom a large proportion are descendants
+of the early French settlers, though many English,
+Scotch and Irish, have domiciled themselves within it,
+and form, really, its most enterprising and energetic
+citizens.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.</h3>
+
+<h2>READING.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Geographical Position and History of Reading.&mdash;Manufacturing
+Interests.&mdash;Population, Streets, Churches and Public Buildings.&mdash;Boating
+on the Schuylkill.&mdash;White Spot and the View from
+its Summit.&mdash;Other Pleasure Resorts.&mdash;Decoration Day.&mdash;Wealth
+Created by Industry.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Reading, the seat of Justice of Berks County,
+Pennsylvania, is beautifully situated near the
+junction of the Tulpehocken with the Schuylkill River,
+and is midway between Philadelphia and Harrisburg,
+on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. It was
+named after the ancient borough of Reading, a prominent
+market town of Berkshire, England, which it is
+said to resemble in some of its geographical surroundings.
+Attention was first called to Reading in the fall
+of 1748, by the agents of Richard and Thomas Penn,
+who represented it as "a new town with great natural
+advantages, and destined to become a prosperous place."
+It was incorporated as a borough in 1783, and as a city
+in 1847. The original settlers were principally Germans,
+who gave character to the town, both in language and
+customs. For many years the German tongue was almost
+exclusively spoken, and it is still used in social intercourse
+and religious worship by more than one-half the
+present population.</p>
+
+<p>The manufacturing interests of Reading are second to
+no city of like population in the United States; while it
+is the third city in Pennsylvania in its manufactures,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span>
+Pittsburg and Philadelphia alone exceeding it. Among
+these manufactures the working of iron holds the first
+rank. Much of the ore is obtained from Penn's Mountain,
+on the east of the town. Rolling mills, machine
+shops, car shops, furnaces, foundries, cotton mills and
+hat factories, from their number and extent, establish
+beyond question the claim of Reading to be considered
+one of the first manufacturing towns of America. The
+shops of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad alone
+employ two thousand men. From an early hour in the
+morning the eastern bank of the Schuylkill rings out
+the discordant music of numberless factories, betokening
+the enterprise of her productive industries.</p>
+
+<p>Reading has, at the present time, a population numbering
+not far from fifty thousand. It is delightfully
+situated on an elevated and ascending plain, which rises
+to the eastward into Penn's Mountain, and to the southward
+into the Neversink Mountain. The city is abundantly
+supplied with pure water, by streams flowing from
+these mountains. It is surrounded by a rich farming
+country, which looks to it for supplies. The streets
+cross each other at right angles, and the chief hotels and
+stores are built around Penn's Square, which occupies
+the centre of the city. It contains thirty-one churches,
+most prominent among which is Trinity, German Lutheran,
+an antique building with a spire two hundred and
+ten feet in height. Christ Church, Episcopal, is a
+handsome Gothic edifice of more recent date, and with a
+spire nearly as high. The Grand Opera House and
+Mishler's Academy of Music furnish amusements for the
+pleasure-seekers of the city.</p>
+
+<p>The Schuylkill River is one of the most charmingly
+picturesque in America. Taking its rise among the rocky<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span>
+heights of the Blue Ridge, when it reaches Reading it
+has left all the ruggedness of the mountain region
+behind, and flows between gently sloping banks, which,
+though sometimes rising in the background to considerable
+elevations, never lose their softness of outline and
+their pastoral beauty. One evening we strolled down
+to this river, and took a most delightful boat ride from
+the Lancaster bridge to the dam opposite the White
+House and Neversink. Two boats were placed at the
+disposal of our party. It was a lovely May evening,
+the air soft and warm, yet with all the freshness of
+spring. We glided down the stream, the trees upon the
+banks overhanging the water, and catching reflections
+of themselves in its depths. Our downward progress
+was easy and pleasant. The current aided our efforts,
+while the tranquil waters, rippled only by a passing
+boat, offered no resistance to us in our course. When
+we turned and headed up stream, we found it quite
+another matter. Then we had to bring all our energies
+and wills to aid us in the labor of rowing. This is
+something that a man is apt to discover many times in
+his life, that, in both material and moral matters, it is
+easier to float with the current than to make headway
+against it.</p>
+
+<p>A call from Mr. W. H. Zeller, of the Reading <i>Eagle</i>,
+paid me early one day, before the sun was up, was an
+indication that that gentleman was ready to pilot me to
+"White Spot," the famous resort of Reading. Starting
+as soon as possible, we walked up Franklin street,
+crossed Perkiomen avenue, and took a "bee line" for
+our destination. Up and up and up we walked, ran
+and jumped, over gulches and stones, and from log to log,
+halting occasionally for breath, and to discuss the city and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</a></span>
+landscape at our feet. It was but half-past five o'clock
+when we reached the goal of our walk. Taking in a
+view from its elevated heights, I felt that my visit to
+Reading would have given me a very indefinite idea of
+its natural beauties, had I not seen it from this point.
+White Spot is upon Penn's Mountain, one thousand feet
+above the river. I would but mislead the imagination
+of the reader, were I to attempt to convey a faithful
+impression of the magnificent panorama which, for a
+while, almost bewildered me. But let him imagine, if
+he can, a vast girdle of far-off, misty, blue hills, faintly
+defined by the horizon; against them to the north and
+west jut rows of towering but withal gently sloping
+mountains, purple, black, or darkly blue, just as each
+drifting cloud shadows them; within these encircling
+hills and mountains scatter the loveliest landscape features
+of which the human mind can conceive; green
+meadows, wooded hills, enchanting groves, dotted here
+and there with the most charming irregularity; farmhouses
+and farms, in themselves a little Arcadia; roads
+diverging from a common centre, and winding about until
+in the distance they look like the tiny trail which a child's
+stick makes in the sand; a clear, silvery river, looking
+in the sunshine like liquid light, reproducing on its
+mirrored surface the wonderful beauty which clothes
+either bank, studded with green isles that "blossom as
+the rose," spanned by splendid bridges as delicate in
+their appearance as lace work or filigree, yet supporting
+thousands of tons daily; in the heart of all a city,
+whose factories, furnaces, churches, majestic public
+buildings, handsome private residences, and attractive
+suburbs betoken prosperity, intelligence, culture, wealth
+and constant improvement; over the whole throw that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span>
+peculiar <i>couleur de rose</i> with which the heart in its
+happiest moments paints all it loves, and he will have a
+faint conception of the aspect of Reading and its surroundings
+as seen from White Spot.</p>
+
+<p>After resting on the summit, and taking in, to the
+full, this magnificent view, we returned to the city by
+the way of Mineral Spring, another delightful resort,
+which lies surrounded by charming natural beauties,
+about a mile and a half east of Reading. White House
+Hotel, a mile and a half to the southeast, on the Neversink
+Mountain, three hundred feet above the river, is
+still another favorite visiting place, from which a fine
+view of the city and surrounding country may be
+obtained, though not equal to that of White Spot.</p>
+
+<p>I was particularly fortunate in finding myself still in
+Reading on Decoration Day, that day which has become
+a national holiday, and is universally observed throughout
+the northern States. The occurrence of this anniversary
+is hailed by the "Boys in Blue" as affording
+a blessed opportunity for doing honor to their dead
+comrades, and renewing their devotion to the flag which
+they followed through a four years' war for the preservation
+of the Union. Reading manifested her patriotism
+by a parade of all her civic and military organizations,
+and by invitation I was permitted to participate
+in the decoration exercises, at the Charles Evans Cemetery.
+The people of Reading are truly loyal, as industrious
+and order-loving people are sure to be. The
+perpetuation of the Union means to them the protection
+of their homes and the encouragement of their
+industries.</p>
+
+<p>Although the manufacturing interests of Philadelphia
+and Pittsburg are exceedingly large&mdash;those of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span>
+latter without parallel on the continent, if, in the world&mdash;a
+visit to Reading is, nevertheless, desirable, for one
+who would gain a comprehensive idea of the industries
+of Pennsylvania. The city is not a large one, but it is
+almost wholly a city of workers. With the great coal
+and iron regions of the State at its back, their products
+brought to it by river, railroad and canal, its manufacturing
+enterprises are multiplied in numbers, and are
+almost Cyclopean in their proportions. Here the brawn
+of the country, with giant strength united with surprising
+skill, hammers and fashions the various devices of an
+advanced civilization, which its brain has already
+imagined and planned. Here wealth is created by the
+sturdy strokes of industry, and the permanent prosperity
+of the State secured.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX.</h3>
+
+<h2>RICHMOND.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Arrival in Richmond.&mdash;Libby Prison.&mdash;Situation of the City.&mdash;Historical
+Associations.&mdash;Early Settlement.&mdash;Attacked by
+British Forces in the Revolution.&mdash;Monumental Church.&mdash;St.
+John's Church.&mdash;State Capital.&mdash;Passage of the Ordinance of
+Secession.&mdash;Richmond the Capital of the Confederate States.&mdash;Military
+Expeditions against the City.&mdash;Evacuation of Petersburg.&mdash;Surrender
+of the City.&mdash;Visit of President Lincoln.&mdash;Historical
+Places.&mdash;Statues.&mdash;Rapid Recuperation After the War.&mdash;Manufacturing
+and Commercial Interests.&mdash;Streets and Public Buildings.&mdash;Population
+and Future Prospects.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>On the morning of October twenty-third, 1863, a
+large company of Union prisoners, including the
+author, made an entry into Richmond, which was the
+reverse of triumphant, we having been, four days
+before, made prisoners of war in the cavalry fight at
+New Baltimore, in Northern Virginia. A brief stay
+in Warrenton jail, a forced march on a hot day, for a
+distance of thirty miles, to Culpepper, and then a transfer
+by march and rail, landed us at last at Libby Prison,
+Richmond. The "chivalry" and the descendants of
+the F. F. V's did not impress us very favorably, as we
+marched from the depot, through some of the principal
+streets, to the James River. Contemptuous epithets were
+bestowed freely upon us, while the female portion of
+the community was even more bitter in its expressions
+of hatred, and a troop of boys followed in our rear,
+hooting and yelling like young demoniacs.</p>
+
+<p>Libby Prison was situated at the corner of Fourteenth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span>
+and Cary streets, and was an old, dilapidated three-story
+brick structure, which still bore upon its northwest
+corner the sign "Libby &amp; Son, Ship Chandlers and
+Grocers." The windows were small and protected by
+iron bars. The story of my stay in this prison-house
+I have recorded in "Capture, Prison-Pen and Escape."
+It was my abiding place until the seventh of the following
+May, when, in a filthy, rough box-car, a number of
+prisoners, including myself, were shipped to Danville.
+It is needless to say that my prolonged stay in Richmond
+did not materially alter or improve my impressions in
+regard to the city. True, our view of the city from our
+prison windows was limited, but memories only of suffering,
+privation and unnecessary barbarity, prompted
+by the cruel nature of those who had us in charge, are
+associated with it. The city was at that time the heart
+and centre of the then Southern Confederacy, the seat
+of the Rebel government, the rendezvous of troops, and
+the hatching place of treason and rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>Yet one who views Richmond at the present day,
+unbiased by the untoward circumstances which threw
+their baleful influence over us, will see much to admire
+in and about the city. It is situated on the north bank
+of the James River, about one hundred miles by water
+from Chesapeake Bay, and the same distance a little
+west of south of Washington. It is built upon several
+eminences, the principal ones being Shockoe and Richmond
+hills, separated by Shockoe Creek. Like so many
+other Southern cities, its residences are surrounded by
+gardens, in which are grass plots, shrubbery and flowers;
+and in the business quarter are many substantial edifices.</p>
+
+<p>The Richmond of to-day is very different from the
+Richmond of war times. The loyal city has been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a></span>
+literally reconstructed upon the ruins of the rebellious
+one. There are few cities around which so many historical
+associations cluster, as around Richmond. It is
+on the site of a settlement made as early as 1611, by Sir
+Thomas Dale, and in honor of Prince Henry called
+Henrico, from which the county afterwards took its
+name. An early historical account says it contained
+three streets of framed houses, a church, storehouses and
+warehouses. It was protected by ditches and palisades,
+and no less than five rude forts. Two miles below the
+city a settlement had been made two years previously.
+In 1644-5 the Assembly of Virginia ordered a fort to
+be erected at the falls of the James River, to be called
+"Forte Charles." In 1676 war was declared against
+the Indians, and bloody encounters took place between
+the aborigines and their white neighbors. Bloody Run,
+near Richmond, is so named, according to tradition, on
+account of a sanguinary battle which one Bacon had
+there with the Indians; though it is stated on other
+authority that its name originated from the battle in
+which Hill was defeated and Totopotomoi slain.</p>
+
+<p>In 1677 certain privileges were granted Captain
+William Byrd, upon the condition that he should settle
+fifty able-bodied and well armed men in the vicinity of
+the Falls, to act as a protection to the frontier against
+the Indians. Richmond was established by law as a
+town in May, 1742, in the reign of George II, on land
+belonging to Colonel William Byrd, who died two
+years later. The present Exchange Hotel is near the
+locality of a warehouse owned by that gentleman. In
+1779 the capital of the State was removed to Richmond,
+from Williamsburg, the latter, its former capital, being
+in too assailable a position. In 1781 the traitor Arnold<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span>
+invested the city with a British force. As soon as he
+arrived he sent a force, under Colonel Simcoe, to destroy
+the cannon foundry above the town. After burning
+some public and private buildings, and a large quantity
+of tobacco, the British forces left Richmond, encamping
+for one night at Four Mile Creek. The village at that
+time contained not more than eighteen hundred inhabitants,
+one-half of whom were slaves. In 1789 it
+contained about three hundred houses. At that period
+all the principal merchants were Scotch and Scotch-Irish.
+Paulding describes the inhabitants as "a race of most
+ancient and respectable planters, having estates in the
+country, who chose it for their residence, for the
+sake of social enjoyments. They formed a society now
+seldom to be met with in any of our cities. A society
+of people not exclusively monopolized by money-making
+pursuits, but of liberal education, liberal habits of
+thinking and acting; and possessing both leisure and
+inclination to cultivate those feelings and pursue those
+objects which exalt our nature rather than increase our
+fortune." In 1788, a convention met in the city, to
+ratify the Federal Constitution.</p>
+
+<p>At the corner of Broad and Thirteenth streets stands
+the Monumental Church, in commemoration of a terrible
+calamity which once befell the city. On the twenty-sixth
+of December, 1811, a play entitled "The Bleeding
+Nun" was being performed in the little theatre of the
+city, and proved such a great attraction that the house
+was crowded, not less than six hundred people being
+present on the eventful night. Just before the conclusion
+of the play the scenery caught fire, and in a few
+minutes the whole building was wrapped in flames.
+The fire falling from the ceiling upon the performers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span>
+was the first notification the audience had of what was
+transpiring. A scene of the wildest confusion ensued.
+There was but one door through which the entire
+audience, composed of men, women and children, could
+make its exit. The fire flashed from one portion of the
+interior to another, catching on the garments of the
+frantic people. All pressed in a wild panic toward the
+door. People jumped and were pushed out of the
+windows. Many were rescued with their clothing
+literally burned off from them, and no less than sixty-nine
+persons perished in the flames, among them George
+W. Smith, Governor of the State, and many other
+prominent men and women. A great funeral was held
+in the Baptist meeting-house, and the entire population
+of the city attended, as mourners. The remains of the
+unfortunates were interred beneath a mural tablet which
+is now in the vestibule of the church that was subsequently
+erected on the site of the theatre.</p>
+
+<p>St. John's Church, on Church Hill, at the corner of
+Broad and Twenty-fourth streets, dates back to ante-Revolutionary
+times, and in it was held, in 1775, the
+Virginia Convention, in which Patrick Henry made his
+famous speech, containing the words "Give me liberty or
+give me death!" It was subsequently the place of
+meeting of the Convention which, in 1788, ratified the
+Federal Constitution. Among the members of this
+Convention were James Madison, John Marshall, James
+Monroe, Patrick Henry, George Nicholas, George
+Mason, Edmund Randolph, Pendleton and Wythe.
+Rarely has any occasion in a single State presented such
+a list of illustrious names as we find here. This church
+is a plain, unpretending edifice, built in the style of a
+century ago, to which has been added a modern spire.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The State Capitol stands on the summit of Shockoe
+Hill, in the centre of a park of eight acres. It is of
+Graeco-Composite style of architecture, with a portico
+of Ionic columns, planned after that of the <i>Maison cass&eacute;e</i>
+at Nismes, in France, the plan being furnished by Thomas
+Jefferson. Beneath a lofty dome in the centre of the
+building is Houdon's celebrated statue of Washington,
+of marble, life size, representing him clad in the uniform
+of a revolutionary general. Near by, in a niche in the
+wall, is a marble bust of Lafayette. This building has
+been the scene of many noted political gatherings. In
+it, on January seventh, 1861, was read Governor
+Letcher's message to the Legislature, in which he declared
+it was "monstrous to see a government like ours
+destroyed merely because men cannot agree about a
+domestic institution." Nevertheless, on the seventeenth
+of the same month, the Capitol Building witnessed the
+unanimous passage of the following resolution:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That if all efforts to reconcile the unhappy
+differences between sections of our country shall prove
+abortive, then every consideration of honor and interest
+demands that Virginia shall unite her destinies with
+her sister slaveholding States."</p></div>
+
+<p>And on the thirteenth of February, the same edifice
+saw a State Convention meet within its walls; on the
+sixteenth of April, Governor Letcher refused the requisition
+of the Secretary of War for troops to assist in
+putting down the Rebellion in South Carolina; and the
+next day the Ordinance of Secession was passed, two
+months having been given to an active discussion of its
+expediency, pro and con. The Confederate flag, with
+eight stars, was raised from the dome of the Capitol, and
+the Custom House, which stands on Main street, between<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</a></span>
+Tenth and Eleventh, had the gilt sign on its portico,
+"United States Court," removed. A citizen writing
+from Richmond, on April twenty-fifth, says: "Our
+beautiful city presents the appearance of an armed camp.
+Where all these soldiers come from, in such a state of
+preparation, I cannot imagine. Every train pours in its
+multitude of volunteers, but I am not as much surprised
+at the number as at the apparent discipline of the country
+companies. * * But the war spirit is not confined to
+the men nor to the white population. The ladies are
+not only preparing comforts for the soldiers, but arming
+and practicing themselves. Companies of boys, also,
+from ten to fourteen years of age, fully armed and well
+drilled, are preparing for the fray. In Petersburg,
+three hundred free negroes offered their services, either
+to fight under white officers, or to ditch and dig, or any
+kind of labor. An equal number in this city and across
+the river, in Chesterfield, have volunteered in like
+manner."</p>
+
+<p>A resolution was passed by the Convention inviting
+the Southern Confederacy to make Richmond the seat
+of government. The Ordinance of Secession having
+been submitted to the people, the vote in the city
+stood twenty-four hundred in favor and twenty-four
+against, being less than half the vote polled at the
+Presidential election in November previous. Richmond
+became a general rendezvous for troops.</p>
+
+<p>The Confederate Congress met in Richmond, in the
+hall of the House of Delegates, on the twentieth of
+July, 1861, and the seat of government continued there
+until the taking of the city marked the fall of the Confederacy.
+A school-house in the vicinity of the rear of
+Monumental Church, was at that time known as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</a></span>
+Brockenburg House, and was the residence of Jefferson
+Davis, president of the Southern Confederacy. Two
+tobacco warehouses, under their former titles of Libby
+&amp; Son and Castle Thunder, together with Belle Isle,
+were military prisons during the war, and in the former
+of these, as already narrated, the writer was confined for
+several months.</p>
+
+<p>About the middle of May, 1862, the Federal forces
+having passed Yorktown and Williamsburg, began to
+move directly upon Richmond. Consternation seized the
+city, all who could get away packed up everything and
+fled southward. Even President Davis took his
+family and hastened to North Carolina. It was
+resolved to destroy the city by conflagration as soon as
+the Union troops reached it. The Federal army was,
+however, compelled to abandon the Peninsula, and
+Richmond was safe for the time being. On February
+twenty-ninth, 1864, General Kilpatrick, with his division
+of cavalry, commenced his march upon the city,
+and came within six miles, when he was compelled to
+withdraw to Mechanicsburg. The next day he made a
+second attempt, advancing by the Westham or river
+road, but was confronted by superior forces, and again
+compelled to fall back, and shortly after he returned
+down the Peninsula.</p>
+
+<p>From the beginning of the war Richmond had been
+the objective point of a series of formidable expeditions
+for its capture, under Generals McDowell, McClellan,
+Burnside, Hooker, Meade and Grant. The strong
+earthworks which were drawn around the city for its
+protection still remain as mementoes of the great
+struggle. On July thirtieth, 1864, the Union forces
+advanced as far as Petersburg, and after destroying one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</a></span>
+fort, were repulsed. It was not until April second,
+1865, that the Rebel forces were obliged to surrender
+that outpost, and on the following day, General Weitzel,
+with his troops, entered the city of Richmond.</p>
+
+<p>President Davis was attending church at St. Paul's
+Episcopal Church, at the corner of Grace and Ninth
+streets, when a messenger brought him a dispatch from
+General Lee, announcing that Petersburg was about to
+be evacuated. The officers of the Southern Confederacy
+stood not on the order of their going, but went at once.
+Jefferson Davis took his family and left the city
+immediately. The Rebel authorities took with them
+what stores and treasures they could convey away,
+burned what they had to leave behind, and set fire to
+the warehouses, public buildings, and bridges across
+the James River. The flames communicated to adjacent
+structures, and it was thought the entire city would be
+destroyed. A large portion of its business section was
+thus laid waste; the number of buildings destroyed being
+estimated at one thousand, and the entire loss at eight
+millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth of April, President Lincoln reached
+Richmond, and entered the house which had but two
+days before been occupied by Jefferson Davis, but
+which was now the headquarters of General Weitzel.
+He came unattended, and walked up from the river into
+the city, without parade, as any ordinary citizen might
+have done. The news of his presence soon spread, and
+the colored people flocked around him, with strong demonstrations
+of joy. "God bless you, Massa Linkum!"
+was heard on every hand, while the tears rolled down
+the cheeks of some, and others danced for joy. And
+here, perhaps all unconsciously, the second father of his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</a></span>
+country emulated the first. It is told of Washington,
+that, a colored man having bowed to him, he returned the
+bow with stately courtesy. Being remonstrated with for
+bowing to a colored person, he replied that he did not
+wish to be outdone in politeness by a negro. At Richmond
+a colored man bowed to Lincoln, with the salutation,
+"May de good Lord bless you, President
+Linkum!" Lincoln returned the bow with cordiality,
+evidently, like Washington, determined not to be
+outdone in politeness by a negro. But that bow
+not only indicated the noble nature of the man who
+recognized a humanity broader than a color line, and
+over whom already hung the dark shadow of martyrdom;
+but it also was a foretoken of the Fourteenth
+Amendment to the Constitution and the Civil Rights
+act, which so quickly followed the quelling of the
+Rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>In the soldiers' section of the Hollywood Cemetery, in
+the western limits of the city, overlooking the James
+River, are the graves of hundreds of Confederate dead,
+from the midst of which rises a monumental pyramid
+of rough stone. In the same cemetery, on a hill at its
+southern extremity, a monument marks the resting-place
+of President Monroe. General J. E. B. Stuart,
+commander of Lee's cavalry, is also buried here.</p>
+
+<p>The Tredegar Iron Works, which are still in active
+operation, and whose buildings cover thirteen acres of
+ground, were the great cannon manufactory of the Confederacy.
+Several battle fields and national cemeteries
+are within a few hours' drive of the city. The old
+African Church, a long, low building in Branch street,
+near Monumental Church, is famous as a place of
+political meetings, both before and during the war.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Crawford's equestrian statue of Washington, in the
+esplanade leading from the Governor's house to the
+Capitol Square, will recall the early days of the Republic.
+The statue is of bronze, representing a horse and
+rider of colossal size, the horse thrown back partly upon
+its haunches, on a massive granite pedestal, and around it
+are grouped bronze figures of Patrick Henry, Thomas
+Jefferson, John Marshall, George Mason, Thomas Nelson,
+and Andrew Lewis, all illustrious sons of Virginia. In
+the Capitol Square, north of the Capitol Building, is
+Foley's statue of General "Stonewall" Jackson, of
+heroic size, on a granite pedestal, and near it a life-size
+marble statue of Henry Clay. In the State Library,
+which contains forty thousand volumes, are many historical
+portraits.</p>
+
+<p>Richmond has rapidly recuperated since the war. Her
+streets have been rebuilt, and, in common with many
+other Southern cities, she has, since the abolition of slavery,
+and the consequent elevation of labor and attraction
+of Northern enterprise and capital, developed many industrial
+interests. The Gallego and Haxall flour mills
+are among the largest in the world. It has a large
+number of cotton, and a still larger number of tobacco
+factories; and contains also forges, furnaces, paper mills,
+and machine shops. Its chief exports are, however, tobacco
+and flour. Richmond owes its present flourishing
+condition to its river facilities, and the immense water
+power supplied by the falls. It is alike the manufacturing
+and the commercial metropolis of the State.
+Vessels drawing ten feet of water can come within a
+mile of the centre of the city, those drawing fifteen feet,
+to three miles below. A canal around the falls gives
+river navigation two hundred miles further into the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</a></span>
+interior. Steamboat lines connect it with the principal
+Atlantic cities, and railroads and canals open up communication
+with the North, South, and West.</p>
+
+<p>The city is regularly laid out, the streets crossing each
+other at right angles. Those parallel with the river are
+named alphabetically, A street being on the river. The
+cross streets are named numerically. The principal
+thoroughfare is Main or E street, which is the centre of
+business. The fashionable quarter is on Shockoe Hill,
+in the western part of the city, where are also the chief
+public edifices. The Penitentiary is in the western
+suburbs facing the river, and is a massive structure three
+hundred feet long and one hundred and ten feet deep.
+The Almshouse is one of the finest buildings in the city.
+There are a large number of churches, thirteen colleges,
+and an orphan asylum. Five bridges across the James
+River connect it with Spring Hill and Manchester, the
+latter a pretty town containing two cotton mills.</p>
+
+<p>The population of Richmond, by the census of 1880,
+was 63,803, which showed an increase of more than ten
+thousand persons in ten years. Unlike Charleston, S.
+C., it is surrounded by a populous rural region, whose
+products find a market here, and whose population look
+largely to the city for their supplies. It will never attain
+the commercial consequence of Savannah or of Norfolk,
+but as the centre of the tobacco region, and the seat of
+large manufacturing interests, it will always possess a
+certain importance and prosperity.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI.</h3>
+
+<h2>SAINT PAUL.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Early History of Saint Paul.&mdash;Founding of the City.&mdash;Public
+Buildings.&mdash;Roman Catholics.&mdash;Places of Resort.&mdash;Falls of
+Minnehaha.&mdash;Carver's Cave.&mdash;Fountain Cave.&mdash;Commercial
+Interests.&mdash;Present and Future Prospects.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>The first white man who ever visited the locality
+where Saint Paul now stands, was Father
+Hennepin, who made a voyage of discovery up the
+Mississippi, above the Falls of Saint Anthony, in 1680.
+But for more than a century and a half after his visit
+the entire section of country remained practically in the
+possession of the Indians. Eighty-six years afterwards
+Jonathan Carver made a treaty with the Dakotas, and
+in 1837 the United States made a treaty with the Sioux,
+throwing the land open to settlement.</p>
+
+<p>The first building in Saint Paul was erected in 1838,
+but for a number of years afterwards it remained
+merely an Indian trading-post. In 1841 a mission was
+established on the spot by the Jesuits, and a log chapel
+dedicated to Saint Paul, from which the city afterwards
+took its name.</p>
+
+<p>The land upon which Saint Paul is built was
+purchased in 1849, at the government price of one
+dollar and twenty-five cents an acre. The same year
+the town was made the capital of the State, while it was
+yet a hamlet of a few log huts. Four years later it had
+nearly four thousand inhabitants, with handsome public
+buildings, good hotels, stores, mills, factories, and other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</a></span>
+constituents of a prosperous town. In 1846 the town
+had but ten inhabitants. In 1856 it had ten thousand.
+Steamers were coming and going; loads of
+immigrants were arriving; drays and teams were
+driving hither and thither; carpenters and masons
+were hard at work; yet could not put up houses
+fast enough; shops and dwellings were starting out
+of the ground, as if by magic. In 1880 the population
+had increased to fifty thousand, and was steadily
+and rapidly multiplying.</p>
+
+<p>Saint Paul originally occupied the western bank of
+the Mississippi, but has now extended to the eastern
+bank as well. It is divided into a lower and upper
+town, the former lying on the low shore between the
+bluff and the river, and containing the wholesale houses,
+shipping houses and factories. The latter occupies no
+less than four plateaus rising one above another, in a
+semicircle around the bend of the river, the first plateau
+being nearly a hundred feet in height. Here are the
+retail stores, public buildings, churches and private residences.
+The streets in the central portions of the city
+cross one another at right angles, but become irregular
+as they approach the boundaries. They are graded and
+paved and lighted by gas. Two bridges connect the
+opposite shores of the river, and horse cars traverse all
+sections of the city. Its general appearance is pleasing
+in the extreme. Many of the houses are built of blue
+limestone, which is found underlying one of the terraces
+in great quantities.</p>
+
+<p>The State Capitol building is now in process of construction,
+and will, when completed, be a very handsome
+edifice, occupying an entire square. The United States
+Custom House, an opera house, a large number of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</a></span>
+handsome churches, and several public school buildings
+are among the objects worthy of note in the city.</p>
+
+<p>Although Saint Paul is settled largely by people from
+New England and New York State, the Roman Catholics
+still hold an important place in the city. The first
+to take possession of the spot, they will be the last to
+relax their hold. They have a number of large and
+handsomely finished church edifices, and have established
+an orphan asylum. There is also a Protestant
+orphan asylum, and three free hospitals.</p>
+
+<p>The city boasts an Academy of Sciences, which has a
+very full museum, a Historical Society and a Library
+Association, each of the latter having fine libraries.</p>
+
+<p>Saint Paul is in the midst of a charming and romantic
+country, and the throngs of people who seek a transient
+home within its borders during the heat of summer find
+abundance of delightful drives and places for picnics
+and excursions. White Bear Lake and Bald Eagle
+Lake, but a short distance away by rail, furnish boating,
+fishing and bathing for pleasure seekers, as well as
+most enchanting scenery for the lovers of nature. The
+city park is but two miles away, on the shores of Lake
+Como, and is also an attractive place.</p>
+
+<p>All lovers of the romantic should thank Longfellow
+that by means of his exquisite poem of Hiawatha he has
+rescued the beautiful Falls of Minnehaha, meaning in the
+Dakota language "laughing water," from being known
+as Brown's Falls, a name which some utilitarian egotist
+had bestowed upon it. From a high bank, covered with
+shrubbery, the clear, silvery stream makes a sudden
+leap of about fifty feet into the chasm beneath. A veil
+of mist rises before the falls, and the sun shining upon
+it spans the cataract with a rainbow.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[Pg 436]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On the eastern side of the city, in Dayton Bluff, near
+the river, is Carver's Cave, so named after Jonathan
+Carver, already referred to, who, in this cave, in May,
+1767, made his treaty with the Indians, by which he
+secured a large tract of land. The cave contains a lake
+large enough to have a boat upon it.</p>
+
+<p>Two miles above Saint Paul, on a beautiful clear
+stream that flows into the Mississippi, is Fountain Cave,
+a most wonderful and interesting production of nature.
+It seems to have been formed by the action of the stream
+which finds an outlet through it. It has an arched
+entrance with a vaulted roof, the entrance being twenty
+feet in height by twenty-five in width, while roof, sides
+and floor are of pure white sandstone. This cave contains
+a number of chambers, the largest being one
+hundred feet in length by twenty-five feet in width, and
+twenty feet in height. The cave has been penetrated
+for a thousand feet or more, and still has unexplored
+recesses.</p>
+
+<p>Saint Paul stands at the head of navigation of the
+Mississippi River, the Falls and Rapids of Saint Anthony,
+a short distance above, effectually barring the
+further upward progress of craft from below, though
+above the falls small steamboats thread the waters of the
+youthful Mississippi to the furthest outposts of civilization.
+At this point the immense grain fields of the northwest
+find an outlet for their annual products, and to this
+point comes the merchandise which must supply the
+needs of an already large and constantly increasing
+agricultural, mining and lumbering population. Numerous
+railroads connect it, not only with the great trade
+centres of the east and south, but with a hundred thriving
+towns and villages in Minnesota and Wisconsin, who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg 437]</a></span>
+look to it for supplies; and when the Northern Pacific
+is completed, the entire northwest will be brought into
+communication with Saint Paul, and as the Mississippi
+will share with the lakes the transportation of produce,
+manufactures and ores of an inexhaustible but now
+scarcely populated region, Saint Paul will derive immense
+advantages from this gigantic enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Saint Paul is already a town of the greatest importance
+on the Upper Mississippi. Her streets teem with
+business, and boats of all descriptions lie at her wharves.
+Already a populous city, what she is to-day is but the
+beginning of what the future will behold her. A
+generation hence she will count her inhabitants by
+hundreds where now she counts them by tens; her
+business will have increased in like proportion; and in
+the no distant future she will be known as the great
+metropolis of the Northwest.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg 438]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII.</h3>
+
+<h2>SALT LAKE CITY.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Mormons.&mdash;Pilgrimage Across the Continent.&mdash;Site of Salt
+Lake City.&mdash;A People of Workers.&mdash;Spread of Mormons through
+other Territories.&mdash;City of the Saints.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Fruit and
+Shade Trees.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;The Tabernacle.&mdash;Residences of the
+late Brigham Young.&mdash;Museum.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Warm and
+Hot Springs.&mdash;Number and Character of Population.&mdash;Barter
+System before Completion of Railroad.&mdash;Mormons and Gentiles.&mdash;Present
+Advantages and Future Prospects of Salt Lake City.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Of all the cities which have sprung into being and
+grown and prospered, since the discovery of the
+American continent, there is not one with which is associated
+so much interest, and which attracts such universal
+curiosity as Salt Lake City. From the time of the so-called
+discovery of the Book of Mormon, in 1827, by
+Joseph Smith, through all the wanderings of the adherents
+of Mormonism, beginning with the organization of the
+"Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints," in Manchester,
+New York, including its removal to Kirtland,
+Ohio, and the establishment of a branch church in Jackson
+County, Missouri; its transplanting to Nauvoo, Illinois;
+the temporary sojourn of its adherents in Iowa; and the
+final exodus, in 1847, over the then almost unknown and
+unexplored plains and mountains of the great west,
+until they reached the Land of Promise, lying between
+the Wasatch Range and the Sierra Nevadas, and there
+settled themselves permanently, to build up literally a
+"Kingdom of Christ upon the earth," the Mormons
+have been in more senses than one a peculiar people.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg 439]</a></span>
+They have been unpleasantly peculiar in their advocacy
+and practice of polygamy, and during their early sojourn
+at Salt Lake, in their defiance of the United States Government.
+In some other respects they have challenged
+the admiration of the world, and have set patterns in
+industry, and in a system of government, which seems
+to consider the well-being of all, both of which might
+be imitated to advantage by the "Gentiles" who affect
+to despise them.</p>
+
+<p>After a weary pilgrimage through a wilderness far
+greater than that traversed by the Israelites in days of
+old, the Mormons found their Canaan in an immense
+valley, from four thousand to six thousand feet above
+the level of the sea, and walled in by mountain ranges
+which seemed to furnish natural barriers against the
+incroachments of an antagonistic civilization. This
+valley, the geologist said, was the bottom of a great,
+pre-historic sea, which by some mighty convulsion of
+nature had been lifted up from its original level, and its
+outlet cut off, and, like the Caspian Sea and others, was
+left to shrink by evaporation. In the deepest depression
+of this valley still remained all that was left of this ancient
+inland ocean, reduced now to seventy-five miles in length
+and thirty in breadth, with an average depth of but
+eight feet. Still holding in solution a large proportion
+of the salts of the greater sea, its waters form one of the
+purest and most concentrated brines in the world, containing
+twenty-two per cent of chloride of sodium,
+slightly mixed with other salts. All through the valley
+of the Great Salt Lake there are salt and alkaline
+deposits, evidencing the former presence of water. The
+valley seemed barren and uninviting; yet in it, as
+offering a refuge from the persecutions which they had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg 440]</a></span>
+suffered in the east, the Mormons decided to establish
+their church and build their homes. They found
+the soil, barren as it looked, would grow grass, grain
+and fruits; and though the climate is changeable, the
+winter cold, with deep snows, and the heat of summer
+intense, they had faith to believe that they could endure
+whatever natural disadvantages they could not overcome,
+and that they should in time receive the reward
+of their piety and industry.</p>
+
+<p>Their chief town and ecclesiastical capital was located
+on the eastern bank of the river Jordan, between Lake
+Utah, a beautiful body of fresh water lying to the southward,
+and Great Salt Lake, lying twenty miles to the
+northward. The new settlement was eleven hundred
+miles west of the Mississippi, and six hundred and fifty
+miles east-northeast of the then scarcely heard of city of
+San Francisco. Its site extended close up to the base
+of the great mountains on the north, while to the southward
+its view spread over more than a hundred miles
+of plain, with a range of rugged mountain peaks, snow-capped
+and bold, lying beyond. A grander outlook
+could scarcely be imagined.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">MORMON TEMPLE AND TABERNACLE, SALT LAKE CITY.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_491.jpg" width="1024" height="587" alt="MORMON TEMPLE AND TABERNACLE, SALT LAKE CITY." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>In the laying out of the city the fact was kept in view
+that it was for a people of workers, each one of whom
+must be self-sustaining. In truth, the great success of
+these people is due to the fact that no class of drones
+has been recognized and provided for. All, from the
+highest to the lowest, were expected to work, church
+officials as well as laymen; and prosperity has attended
+industry, as it always does. The wilderness and solitary
+place were glad for them, and the desert was made to
+rejoice and blossom as the rose; and a mighty nation
+within a nation has been built up in the valley of Utah,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg 441]</a></span>
+protected by its mountain fastnesses. The Mormons
+have become a strong and prosperous people, and have
+not only possessed themselves of Utah, but have sent
+out colonies to Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Wyoming,
+Idaho and Arizona, which have prospered and
+increased, until they now practically control those
+Territories.</p>
+
+<p>It is not my province to speak of the Mormons from
+either a religious or political standpoint. Their material
+prosperity one cannot fail to see, and a truthful historian
+must note it. The "City of the Saints," as Salt Lake
+City is sometimes called, is doubly interesting, from its
+history and from its peculiar features, so unlike those
+of any other city. The streets are one hundred and
+twenty-eight feet wide, crossing each other at right angles,
+an eighth of a mile apart, each square thus formed containing
+ten acres. Each square is divided into eight
+lots, measuring ten by twenty rods, and containing one-fourth
+of an acre. Several of the squares in the business
+quarter of the town have been cut across since the
+original laying out, forming cross streets. The streets
+are lined with trees, while streams of running water
+course down each side of every street, being brought
+from the neighboring mountains, ten thousand feet high,
+furnishing a pure water supply, and irrigating the
+gardens. Almost every lot has an orchard of pear,
+apple, plum, apricot, and peach trees, and Utah furnishes
+large quantities of fresh and dried fruit for the
+eastern markets. Apricots, which in the east are almost
+unknown, sometimes grow as large as eastern peaches,
+from six to eight inches in circumference. Locust,
+maple and box-elder are the favorite shade trees, and
+these grow luxuriantly. When, however, their roots<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg 442]</a></span>
+strike soil from which the alkali has not yet been washed,
+their leaves turn from a dark green to a sickly yellow.
+But irrigation washes out this alkali, and the trouble
+from it grows less every year.</p>
+
+<p>Salt Lake City is divided into twenty wards, nearly
+every one of which has a square. Every ward has its
+master, who superintends the public improvements, and
+sees that every man does his share without shirking.
+The houses are generally of adobe (sun-dried bricks),
+though a few of the newer business blocks are handsome
+and commodious stone structures. Most of the dwelling
+houses are small, and but a single story in height, having
+separate entrances when there is more than one wife in
+the family. The city is not an imposing one. The
+wide streets, large grounds around each dwelling, and
+low, small houses, give it more the appearance of an
+overgrown village than that of a city. Nevertheless,
+it cannot be denied that the plan upon which it is built
+secures to its inhabitants the maximum of comfort,
+health and cleanliness. There are no narrow and stifling
+streets, overshadowed by tall buildings; no dirty alleys;
+no immense crime and pestilence-breeding tenement
+houses. Each little dwelling has its garden and orchard,
+securing to each family the blessings of fresh vegetables
+and fruit, and making each in a measure self-dependent.
+The air is pure, blowing down the valley from the
+mountain heights; and no foul vapors from half protected
+sewers or reeking courts poison it.</p>
+
+<p>The chief business thoroughfares are Main and Temple
+streets. The former is entirely devoted to trade, while
+church edifices are found in the latter. The Tabernacle
+is, of course, the most prominent object which meets the
+eye of the traveler as he arrives in Salt Lake City,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg 443]</a></span>
+standing out, as it does, in all its huge proportions, surrounded
+by the tiny homes of the people. It is on Temple
+street, in the heart of the city, and is entirely without
+architectural beauty, its predominant features being its
+hugeness and its ugliness. It is an enormous wooden
+structure, oval in form, with an immense dome-like
+roof, supported by forty-six sandstone pillars. It will
+seat fifteen thousand persons, and is used for the services
+of the church, lectures and public gatherings. It contains
+one of the largest organs in America. It is inclosed
+within a high wall, and a little to the east of it, within
+the same inclosure, are the foundations of a new temple,
+estimated to cost ten millions of dollars, but which will
+not probably be finished for many years to come. An
+inferior adobe building, also within the walls, is the
+celebrated Endowment House, where are performed
+those sacred and mysterious rites of the Mormon Church
+which no Gentile may look upon, and where the Saints
+are sealed to their polygamous wives.</p>
+
+<p>On South Temple street, east of the Tabernacle, is the
+group of buildings known as Brigham Block, inclosed,
+like the former, by a high stone wall, and comprising
+the Tithing House, the Beehive House, the Lion House,
+the office of the <i>Deseret News</i>, and various other offices
+and buildings. The Beehive House and the Lion
+House constituted the residences of the late Brigham
+Young and eighteen or twenty of his wives. A handsome
+structure nearly opposite, the most pretentious
+structure in Salt Lake City, and known as Amelia
+Palace, was built by Brigham Young, for his favorite
+wife, Amelia. The theatre is a large building with a
+gloomy exterior, but handsomely fitted up inside. It is
+a favorite resort of the Saints, who make it a source of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg 444]</a></span>
+innocent recreation, and entertain no prejudices against
+it, permitting their wives and children to appear upon
+its boards. One of the daughters of Brigham Young
+was at one time an actress at this theatre.</p>
+
+<p>On South Temple street, opposite the Tabernacle, is
+the Museum, containing interesting products of Mormon
+industry; specimens of ores from the mines of Utah, and
+precious stones from the desert; a fair representation of
+the fauna of the Territory; relics of the mound builders;
+articles of Indian use and manufacture, and other curiosities,
+which the visitor may behold on the payment of
+a small admission fee. The City Hall, which is at the
+present time used by the Territorial Government, is a
+handsome building, erected at a cost of sixty thousand
+dollars. In its rear is the city prison. A co-operative
+store in successful operation will be found occupying a
+handsome building on East Temple street. The Deseret
+National Bank, at the corner of East Temple and South
+First streets, is also a fine building. The two principal
+hotels of Salt Lake City are the Walker House, on Main
+street, and the Townsend House, at the corner of West
+Temple and South Second streets. With all its quaintness
+and want of resemblance to other cities, it has
+adopted the system of horse cars, which run on the principal
+streets, and make all parts of the city accessible.</p>
+
+<p>About one mile distant from the city are the Warm
+Springs, issuing from the limestone rock at the foot of
+the mountains. The water of these springs contains lime,
+magnesia, iron, soda, chlorine, and sulphuric acid, and
+their temperature is lukewarm. A bath in them is
+delightful, and beneficial, if not prolonged. Private
+bathing apartments are fitted up for the use of bathers.
+A mile further north are the Hot Springs, also strongly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg 445]</a></span>
+sulphurous, and with a temperature of over 200&deg;. Eggs
+may be boiled in these springs in three minutes, ready for
+the table. The water from these springs forms a beautiful
+lake, called Hot Spring Lake, which practically
+destroys all agriculture and vegetation for hundreds of
+yards within the vicinity. Strange as it may seem, the
+hot water does not prevent the existence of some kinds
+of excellent fish, among which have been seen some very
+fine, large trout.</p>
+
+<p>The population of Salt Lake City is something over
+twenty thousand persons, of whom about one-third are
+Gentiles and apostate Mormons. This population is
+made up of all nationalities, apostles and missionaries
+being continually sent out to nearly every part of the
+civilized world, to make proselytes, and bring them to
+the fold. These converts to the faith are usually from
+the lower classes, ignorant and superstitious; and as a
+consequence the intellectual and social standards of Salt
+Lake City are not high. But with their new faith these
+people acquire habits of industry, if they never possessed
+them before; and the conditions of the city are favorable
+for growth in certain directions. Their children are
+educated and brought up to a higher position than that
+occupied by their parents; so that whatever may be our
+opinion as to the advantages or disadvantages, from a
+religious point of view, in their conversion to the Mormon
+faith, materially, intellectually and socially they
+have many of them undoubtedly made a change for the
+better. They are taken away from the stationary conditions
+of life in the old world, and transplanted into a
+new and growing country, where there is plenty of room
+and incentive for progress and expansion. Though the
+first generation do not always avail themselves of this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg 446]</a></span>
+room, nor even the second, to its fullest extent, ultimately
+these people will come to compare favorably with other
+classes of American citizens.</p>
+
+<p>The completion of the Union Pacific Railroad, although
+it deprived the Mormons of that isolation which they
+sought, has been of vast benefit to them in material ways.
+It is said that when the city was first settled the whole
+community could not have raised one thousand dollars
+in cash. And up to the completion of the railroad nine-tenths
+of the business of the Mormon people was conducted
+on a system of barter. A writer thus facetiously
+describes the condition of things at that period: "A
+farmer wishes to purchase a pair of shoes for his wife.
+He consults the shoemaker, who avers his willingness to
+furnish the same for one load of wood. He has no
+wood, but sells a calf for a quantity of adobes, the adobes
+for an order on the merchant, payable in goods, and the
+goods and the order for a load of wood, and straightway
+the matron is shod. Seven watermelons purchased the
+price of a ticket of admission to the theatre. He paid
+for the tuition of his children seventy-five cabbages per
+quarter. The dressmaker received for her services four
+squashes per day. He settled his church dues in sorghum
+molasses. Two loads of pumpkins paid his annual
+subscription to the newspaper. He bought a 'Treatise
+on Celestial Marriage' for a load of gravel, and a bottle
+of soothing syrup for the baby with a bushel of string
+beans."</p>
+
+<p>There are not the most harmonious relations existing
+between the Mormon and Gentile people of Salt Lake
+City. Each regards the other with suspicion. The
+former look upon the latter as hostile to their faith, and
+determined to destroy it. The Gentiles regard certain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg 447]</a></span>
+practices of the Mormons with abhorrence, and themselves
+as at heart rebellious to the government to which
+they have been compelled to submit. The leading papers
+of the two factions are very hostile, and keep alive the
+feeling of antagonism.</p>
+
+<p>Lying between two prominent mountain chains, the
+chief city in a vast valley which the enterprise of man
+has demonstrated to be fertile; furnishing a depot of
+supplies, and a mart and shipping place for produce and
+manufactures; Salt Lake City is destined to become an
+important point in the western section of our country.
+Her future is assured, even though the people who
+founded her, together with the faith to which they cling,
+should disappear from the face of the earth, and be
+forgotten, like the lost tribes of Israel, which they believe
+themselves to represent. Essentially American in all
+her features&mdash;since no city of the Old World, either
+ancient or modern, furnishes a prototype&mdash;and in her
+very plan including certain sure elements of success, as
+our Western States and Territories become filled up with
+a thriving and industrious people, she will find herself
+the natural centre of a vast agricultural and mining
+population, and continue to increase in importance and
+prosperity.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg 448]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>SAN FRANCISCO.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>San Francisco.&mdash;The Golden State.&mdash;San Francisco Bay.&mdash;Golden
+Gate.&mdash;Conquest of California by Fremont, 1848.&mdash;Discovery
+of Gold.&mdash;Rush to the Mines, 1849.&mdash;"Forty-niners."&mdash;Great
+Rise in Provisions and Wages.&mdash;Miners Homeward Bound.&mdash;Dissipation
+and Vice in the City.&mdash;Vigilance Committee.&mdash;Great
+Influx of Miners in 1850.&mdash;Immense Gold Yield.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Earthquakes.&mdash;Productions.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;Streets
+and Buildings.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Lone
+Mountain Cemetery.&mdash;Cliff House.&mdash;Seal
+Rock.&mdash;Theatres.&mdash;Chinese Quarter.&mdash;Chinese Theatres.&mdash;Joss
+Houses.&mdash;Emigration Companies.&mdash;The Chinese Question.&mdash;Cheap
+Labor.&mdash;"The Chinese Must Go."&mdash;Present Population
+and Commerce of San Francisco.&mdash;Exports.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Cosmopolitan
+Spirit of Inhabitants.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>San Francisco is situated on the best harbor
+which our Pacific Coast affords, a little below the
+38th parallel of latitude, and about a degree further
+south than St. Louis, Cincinnati and Washington. It
+is the western terminus of the Central Pacific Railroad,
+American gateway to Asia and the far East.</p>
+
+<p>As the traveler proceeds thitherward from the Valley
+of the Mississippi, on descending the western slopes of
+the Sierras, he finds himself fairly within the Golden
+State; and in more senses than one does California
+deserve that name. If it be the summer season the very
+air seems filled with a golden haze. In leaving the
+mountains all freshness is left behind. Trees and fields
+are yellow with drouth, which lasts from April to
+November. Dense clouds of dust fill the air and settle
+upon everything. Whole regions, by the means of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg 449]</a></span>
+extensive and destructive mining operations, have been
+denuded of all verdure, and lie bare and unsightly,
+waiting until the slow processes of time, or the more
+expeditious hand of man, shall reclaim them. But
+mines have now given place to vast grain and cattle
+farms or ranches; and great fields of golden grain and the
+cattle on a thousand hills are on either side of the track.
+If it be later or earlier in the year there is a wealth of
+bloom such as is never dreamed of in the East. The
+ground, sometimes, as far as the eye can reach, is brilliant
+with color, a golden yellow the predominating hue. In
+the rainy season the Sacramento valley, the occasional
+victim of prolonged drouth, is sometimes visited by a
+freshet, which carries destruction with it; a mountain
+torrent, taking its rise near the base of Mt. Shasta, and
+fed by the snows of the Sierras, it is fitful in its
+demeanor. It finds its outlet through San Francisco
+Bay and the Golden Gate to the Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>San Francisco is on a peninsula which extends between
+the bay of that name and the ocean. Its site is nothing
+more than a collection of sand hills, which, before the
+building of the city, were continually changing their
+positions. The peninsula is thirty miles long and six
+wide, across the city, which stands on the eastern or
+inner slope.</p>
+
+<p>San Francisco Bay is unsurpassed in the world, except
+by Puget Sound, in Washington Territory, for size,
+depth, ease of entrance and security. The entrance to
+the bay is through a passage five miles in length and
+about two in width, with its shallowest depth about
+thirty feet at low tide. Rocks rise almost perpendicularly
+on the northern side of the entrance, to a height of
+three thousand feet. A lighthouse is placed on one of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[Pg 450]</a></span>
+these, at Point Bonita. Fort Point, a fortress built on
+solid rock, commands the entrance from the south, and
+beyond it, until San Francisco is reached, are a series of
+sand dunes, some of them white and drifting and others
+showing green with the scant grass growing upon them.
+The entrance to the bay is called the Golden Gate, a
+name applied with singular appropriateness, since
+through its portals have passed continuous streams of
+gold since the discovery of the latter in 1848. Strangely
+enough, the name was given before the gold discovery,
+though at how early a date there seems no means of
+knowing. As far as can be ascertained, it first appears
+in Fremont's "Geographical Memoir of California,"
+published in 1847. Six miles eastward from its entrance
+the bay turns southward for a distance of thirty miles,
+forming a narrow peninsula between it and the ocean,
+on the northeastern extremity of which the city is built.
+It also extends northward to San Puebla Bay, which
+latter extending eastward, connects by means of a narrow
+strait with Suisun Bay, into which the Sacramento River
+discharges its volume of water. These three bays
+furnish ample and safe harborage for all the merchant
+fleets of the world.</p>
+
+<p>San Francisco Bay is about forty miles in length, its
+widest point being twelve miles. At Oakland, directly
+east of San Francisco, it is eight miles in width. Alcatraz
+Island, in the centre of the channel, six miles from the
+Golden Gate, is a solid rock rising threateningly above
+the water, and bristling with heavy artillery. It is
+sixteen hundred feet in length, and four hundred and
+fifty feet in width. Angel Island is directly north of
+Alcatraz, and four miles from San Francisco, contains
+eight hundred acres, and is also fortified. Midway<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg 451]</a></span>
+between San Francisco and Oakland is Yerba Buena, or
+Goat Island, which, too, is held as a United States
+military station. Red Rock, Bird Rock, the Two
+Sisters, and other small islands dot the bay.</p>
+
+<p>In 1775 the first ship passed the portals of the Golden
+Gate, and made its way into the Bay of San Francisco.
+This ship was the <i>San Carlos</i>, commanded by Caspar
+De Portala, a Franciscan monk and Spanish Governor
+of Lower California, who set out on a voyage of discovery
+and exploration. The same man had six years
+previously visited the sand hills of the present site of
+San Francisco, being the first white man to set his foot
+upon them. Portala named the harbor San Francisco,
+after the founder of his monastic order, St. Francis. A
+mission was founded there six years later, on the twenty-seventh
+of June, by Friars Francisco Paloa and Bonito
+Cambou, under the direction of Father Junipero Serra, who
+had been commissioned by Father Portala as president of
+all the missions in Upper California. This was the sixth
+mission established in California, and up to the year
+1800 the Fathers labored with great zeal and industry,
+had established eighteen missions, converted six hundred
+and forty-seven savages, and acquired a vast property in
+lands, cattle, horses, sheep and grain. Presidios or
+military stations were established for the protection of
+these missions, and the Indians readily submitted themselves
+to the Fathers, and acquired the arts of civilization.</p>
+
+<p>The Franciscan friars continued complete sovereigns
+of the land during the first quarter of the present
+century, and increased in worldly goods. Mexico
+became a republic in 1824, and in 1826 considerably
+curtailed their privileges. In 1845 their property was
+finally confiscated and the missions broken up. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg 452]</a></span>
+priests returned to Spain; the Indians to their savagery;
+and only the crumbling walls of their adobe houses, and
+their decaying orchards and vineyards, remained to tell
+the tale of the past history of California. From that
+period until 1847 California was a bone of contention
+between Mexico and the United States, her territory
+overrun by troops of both nations. On the sixteenth of
+January, 1847, the Spanish forces capitulated to Fremont,
+and peace was established.</p>
+
+<p>With the exception of the Mission Dolores, there was
+no settlement at San Francisco until 1835, when a tent
+was erected. A small frame house was built the following
+year, and on the fifteenth of April, 1838, the first
+white child was born. The population of San Francisco,
+then known as Yerba Buena, in 1842 was one hundred
+and ninety-six persons. In 1847 it had increased to four
+hundred and fifty-one persons, including whites, Indians,
+negroes and Sandwich Islanders. In March, 1848, the
+city contained two hundred houses, and eight hundred
+and fifty inhabitants. In November of the same year,
+the first steamer, a small boat from Sitka, made a trial
+trip around the bay. In this year the first public school
+and the first Protestant church were established.</p>
+
+<p>This year marked the great era in the history of San
+Francisco. In the fall of 1847, Captain John A. Sutter,
+a Swiss by birth, who had resided in California since
+1839, began erecting a saw mill at a place called Colorna,
+on the American River, a confluent of the Sacramento,
+about fifty miles east of the city of that name. James W.
+Marshall, who had taken the contract for erecting the
+mill, was at work with his men cutting and widening the
+tail-race when, on January eighteenth, 1848, he observed
+some particles of a yellow, glittering substance. In<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg 453]</a></span>
+February specimens of these findings were taken to San
+Francisco, and pronounced to be gold. The truth being
+soon confirmed, the rush for the gold fields commenced.
+People in all sections of California and Oregon forsook
+their occupations, and set out for the mines. The news
+spread, increasing as it went; until the reports grew
+fabulous. Many of the earliest miners acquired fortunes
+quickly, and as quickly dissipated them. The journal
+of Rev. Walter Colton, at that time Alcalde of Monterey,
+contains the following paragraph, under date of
+August twelfth, 1848:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My man Bob, who is of Irish extraction, and who
+had been in the mines about two months, returned to
+Monterey about four weeks since, bringing with him
+over two thousand dollars, as the proceeds of his labor.
+Bob, while in my employ, required me to pay him every
+Saturday night in gold, which he put into a little leather
+bag and sewed into the lining of his coat, after taking
+out just twelve and a half cents, his weekly allowance for
+tobacco. But now he took rooms and began to branch
+out; he had the best horses, the richest viands, and the
+choicest wines in the place. He never drank himself
+but it filled him with delight to brim the sparkling
+goblet for others. I met Bob to-day, and asked him how
+he got on. 'Oh, very well,' he replied, 'but I am off
+again for the mines.' 'How is that, Bob? you brought
+down with you over two thousand dollars; I hope you
+have not spent all that; you used to be very saving;
+twelve and a half cents a week for tobacco, and the rest
+you sewed into the lining of your coat.' 'Oh, yes,' replied
+Bob, 'and I have got <i>that</i> money yet. I worked hard
+for it, and the devil can't get it away. But the two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg 454]</a></span>
+thousand dollars came aisily, by good luck, and has gone
+as aisily as it came!'"</p>
+
+<p>Reports of the new El Dorado reached the States, and
+during 1849, from Maine to Louisiana came the gold
+seekers. From every country in Europe, from Australia
+and from China, additions were made to the throng of
+pilgrims, who, by the Isthmus, around the Horn, across
+the seas, and by the terrible journey overland, all rushed
+pell mell up the Sacramento, stopping at San Francisco
+only long enough to find some means of conveyance.
+We have no space to tell the story of that time. Men
+came and went. Some made fortunes. Others returned
+poorer than they came. Many who attempted the overland
+route left their bones bleaching on the plains.
+Some went back to their homes, and others remained to
+become permanent citizens of California. What the
+F. F. V.s are to Virginia, and the Pilgrim Fathers to
+Massachusetts, the "Forty-niners," a large number of
+whom still survive, will be, in the future, to California.</p>
+
+<p>During 1848 ten million dollars' worth of gold had
+been gathered on the Yuba, American and Feather
+rivers. The city of San Francisco had, in January,
+1849, two thousand inhabitants, and these were in a
+hurry to be off to the mines as soon as the rainy season
+was over. Ships began to arrive from all quarters, and
+July of that year found the flags of every nation floating
+in the bay. Five hundred square-rigged vessels lay in
+the harbor, and everybody was scrambling for the mines.
+These multitudes of people, though they thought only
+of gold, yet had to be fed, clothed and housed after a
+fashion. There were no supplies adequate to the demand,
+and provisions went up to fabulous prices. Apples sold
+for from $1 to $5 apiece, and eggs at the same rates.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg 455]</a></span>
+Laborers demanded from $20 to $30 for a day's work,
+and were scarcely to be had at those figures. The miners
+probably averaged $25 a day at the mines, though some
+were making their hundreds. But at the exorbitant
+prices to be paid for everything, few were able to lay up
+much money.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the year of 1849 the reaction came. The
+steamers were filled with downcast miners, thankful that
+they had enough left to take themselves home. Others
+having acquired something, stopped at San Francisco,
+and plunged into the worst forms of dissipation. The
+city during this and the following year held a carnival
+of vice and crime. Women there were few or none, save
+of the worst character, and gambling dens, dance houses,
+and drinking hells flourished on every street. In 1850
+a Vigilance Committee was organized by the better class
+of citizens, which soon exercised a wholesome restraint
+upon the criminal classes. In the same year California
+was admitted to the Union without the preliminary of a
+Territorial Government, and San Francisco was chartered
+as a city. Courts were established, and the lawless
+community came under the dominion of law and order.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the great haste which seized everybody
+in his eagerness to obtain gold and return home to enjoy
+it, had somewhat subsided. Men began to realize that
+there were other means of making money besides
+digging for it. Gardens were planted and orchards set
+out, and it was discovered that the apparently barren
+soil of the State would yield with a fruitfulness unparalleled
+in the East. San Francisco began to be more
+than a canvass city. Mud flats were filled in and sand
+hills leveled, houses, hotels and stores erected, and a wild
+speculation began in city property. Lots which a few<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg 456]</a></span>
+days before had been purchased for two or three thousand
+dollars, were held at fifty thousand dollars. A
+canvas tent, fifteen by twenty feet, near the plaza, rented
+for forty thousand dollars per annum. The Parker
+House, a two-story frame building on Kearney street, also
+near the plaza, brought a yearly rent of one hundred and
+twenty thousand dollars. Board in a hotel or a tent was
+eight dollars per day, and provisions were proportionately
+high. To build a brick house cost a dollar for
+each brick used. Twenty-seven thousand people arrived
+in San Francisco, by sea or land, during 1850. In 1853
+thirty-four thousand gold seekers returned home, the
+yield of gold that year having been $65,000,000, the
+largest annual yield of the State. The imports of San
+Francisco in the same year were over $45,000,000. As
+early as this period it was the third city in tonnage
+entrances in the United States, New York and New
+Orleans alone exceeding it. In 1856 the bad state of
+public affairs again necessitated the interference of a
+Vigilance Committee, but since that time the city has
+been orderly.</p>
+
+<p>The site of San Francisco was fixed by chance. More
+desirable places might have been selected, but the influx
+of miners dropped upon the first spot convenient for
+them to land, from which to start post-haste to the
+mines, and that spot is indicated by the present city.
+Owing to its location its climate is not in all respects
+desirable. The general climate of the coast is tempered,
+both in summer and winter, by a warm ocean current,
+which, flowing northward along the coast of China and
+Siberia, takes a turn to the south when it reaches
+Alaska, and washes the western coast of the continent
+of America. It is so warm that it produces a marked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span>
+effect upon this coast, just as the Gulf Stream tempers the
+climate of the British Islands. But it has been sensibly
+cooled by its proximity to Arctic seas, and so sends cool
+breezes to fan the land during the heat of summer.
+These summer sea breezes rushing through the narrow
+opening of the Golden Gate become almost gales, and
+bring both cold and fog with them. The air of winter
+is mild and spring-like. This is the rainy season, but it
+does not rain continuously. It is the season of verdure
+and growth, and frosts are both slight and infrequent in
+the latitude of San Francisco. Not a drop of rain falls
+during the summer. The mornings are warm and
+sometimes almost sultry; but about ten o'clock the sea
+breeze springs up, growing more violent as the day
+advances, and frequently bringing a chilly fog with it,
+so that by evening men are glad to wrap themselves in
+overcoats, and women put on their cloaks and furs.
+The sand, which is still heaped in dunes to the westward
+of the city, and lies upon its vacant lots, is lifted and
+whirled through the air, falling almost like sleet, and
+stinging the faces of pedestrians.</p>
+
+<p>Thunder storms are of rare occurrence at San Francisco,
+but earthquakes are exceedingly frequent. Probably
+not a year elapses in which slight shocks are not
+felt in the State. Sometimes these shocks extend over
+vast areas, and at other times are merely local. On
+October twenty-first, 1868, a severe earthquake occurred
+at San Francisco, swaying buildings and throwing down
+numbers in process of erection. The houses of the city
+are mostly built with a view to these disturbances of
+nature. The dwelling houses are seldom more than two
+and one-half stories in height, while the blocks of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg 458]</a></span>
+business streets do not display the altitude of structures
+in the eastern cities.</p>
+
+<p>The climate is so mild and so favorable that the productions
+of California embrace those of both temperate
+and semi-tropical latitudes. The sand hills of San
+Francisco were found, with the help of irrigation to
+produce plentifully of both fruits and flowers, and the
+suburbs of the city display many greenhouse plants
+growing in the open air. Roses bloom every month in
+the year, and strawberries ripen from February to
+December. In San Francisco the mean temperature in
+January is 49&deg; and in June 56&deg;. The average temperature
+of the year is 54&deg;.</p>
+
+<p>The California market, between Kearney and Montgomery
+streets, extending through from Pine to California
+streets, displays all the fruits, vegetables and
+grains of the northern States, raised in the immediate
+neighborhood of the city, while oranges, lemons and
+pomegranates are sent from further south. The tenderer
+varieties of grapes flourish in the open air, and the State
+produces raisins which command a price but little below
+those of Europe. The thrift of the fruit trees of California
+is most remarkable. Most trees begin bearing
+on the second year from the slip or graft, and produce
+abundantly at three or four years of age. Their growth
+and the size of their productions are unequaled on the
+continent. The above mentioned market is one of the
+sights of the city, and should not be missed by the
+visitor.</p>
+
+<p>Irrigation has been found necessary to render the
+sand hills about San Francisco productive, and windmills
+have become familiar objects in the landscape, their
+long arms revolving in the ocean breeze, while little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg 459]</a></span>
+streams of water trickling here and there vivify the
+earth. As a result, though trees are scarce, what few
+there are being mostly stunted live oaks, whose long
+roots extend down deep into the soil, there are flowers
+everywhere. On one side of a fence will be a sand-bank,
+white with shifting sand, on the other, flourishing in the
+same kind of soil, will be an <i>al fresco</i> conservatory, brilliant
+with color and luxuriant in foliage.</p>
+
+<p>Montgomery street is the leading thoroughfare, broad
+and lined with handsome buildings. Toward the north
+it climbs a hill so steep that carriages cannot ascend it,
+and pedestrians make their way up by means of a flight
+of steps. From this elevation a fine view is obtained
+of the city and bay. Kearney and Market streets are
+also fashionable promenades, containing many of the retail
+stores. The principal banks and business offices are
+found on California street, and the handsomest private
+residences are on Van Ness avenue, Taylor, Bush,
+Sutter, Leavenworth and Folsom streets, Clay street
+Hill and Pine street Hill. The city extends far beyond
+its original limits, having encroached upon the bay.
+Solid blocks now stand where, in 1849, big ships rode at
+anchor. It is laid out with regularity, most of its streets
+being at right angles with one another. The business
+streets are generally paved with Belgian blocks or cobble
+stones, and most of the residence streets are planked.
+The city does not present the handsome and showy architecture
+of many cities of the east, though here and there
+are fine edifices. It is yet too new, and too hurriedly
+built, to have acquired the substantiality and grandeur
+of older cities. Between fine brick or stone structures
+several stories high are sandwiched insignificant wooden
+houses of only two stories, the relics of a past which is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg 460]</a></span>
+yet exceedingly near the present. The public buildings,
+especially those belonging to the United States, are fine.</p>
+
+<p>The City Hall will, when finished, be surpassed by
+few structures in the country. The Palace Hotel, at the
+corner of Market and New Montgomery streets, is a vast
+building, erected and furnished at a cost of $3,250,000.
+It is entered by a grand court-yard surrounded by colonnades,
+and from its roof a birds-eye view of the whole city
+can be obtained. Baldwin's Hotel, at the corner of
+Marshall and Powell streets, is another palatial structure,
+costing a quarter of a million more, for building,
+decorating and furnishing, than the Palace Hotel. The
+Grand Hotel, Occidental, Lick House, Russ House
+and Cosmopolitan are all established and popular
+hotels.</p>
+
+<p>The largest and finest church edifice on the Pacific
+Coast is that of St. Ignatius, Roman Catholic, in
+McAlister street. The finest interior is that of St. Patrick's,
+also Roman Catholic, in Mission street between
+Third and Fourth. The First Unitarian church, in
+Geary street, is one of the finest churches in the city,
+remarkable for the purity of its architectural design and
+the elegance of its finish. The Chinese Mission House,
+at the corner of Stockton and Sacramento streets, will
+prove interesting to strangers. The Roman Catholics,
+who number among their adherents all the Spanish
+citizens, make no concealment of their intention to gain
+a majority of the population. But though they are a
+power in the community, and have many churches,
+the different Protestant sects are largely represented.
+Indeed, San Francisco is thoroughly tolerant in matters
+of religion. Not only do Catholics and Protestants find
+their own appropriate places of worship, but the Jews<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg 461]</a></span>
+have two Synagogues, and the Chinese Buddhists three
+Temples or Joss Houses.</p>
+
+<p>There is but one road leading out of the city, but
+within the city limits there are many modes of conveyance.
+Cars propelled by endless wire cables, which
+move along the streets without the assistance of either
+horse or steam power, intersect the city in every direction.
+Omnibuses run out on the Point Lobos road to
+the Cliff House; and he who has not ridden or driven
+thither and watched the seals on Seal Rock, has not seen
+all of San Francisco. This is the one excursion of the city;
+its one pet dissipation. Everybody goes to the Cliff. A
+drive of five or six miles, on a good road, over and through
+intervening sand hills, brings the visitor to the Cliff House.
+This road leads by Laurel Hill, or as it was formerly
+called, Lone Mountain Cemetery, two and one-half
+miles west of the city, within whose inclosure a conical
+hill rises to a considerable height above the surrounding
+level country. On its summit is a large wooden cross,
+a prominent landmark, and within the cemetery are
+several fine monuments, conspicuously that of Senator
+Broderick, and a miniature Pantheon, marking the resting
+place of the Ralston family. The Lone Mountain
+possesses an unrivaled outlook over city, bay, ocean and
+coast range.</p>
+
+<p>The Cliff House is a large, low building, set on the
+edge of a cliff rising abruptly from the ocean, and facing
+west; and from it you have a grand view of the Golden
+Gate, while oceanward you strain your eyes to catch
+some glimpse of China or Japan, which lie so far away
+in front of you. But you see instead, if the day be
+clear, the faint but bold outlines of the Farallon Islands,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a></span>
+and the white sails of vessels passing in and out of the
+Golden Gate.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the year of 1876 I completed my horseback
+journey across the continent, dashing with my horse into
+the surf to the westward of the Cliff House. A long
+and wearisome, but at the same time interesting and
+reasonably exciting ride, was at an end, and after viewing
+San Francisco, I was free to enjoy those luxuries of
+modern civilization, the railway cars, on my homeward
+route.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">SEAL ROCKS, FROM THE CLIFF HOUSE, NEAR SAN FRANCISCO.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_515.jpg" width="1024" height="636" alt="SEAL ROCKS, FROM THE CLIFF HOUSE, NEAR SAN FRANCISCO." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The Farallones de los Frayles are six islets lifting up
+their jagged peaks in picturesque masses out in the ocean,
+twenty-three and one-half miles westward of the Golden
+Gate. The largest Farallon extends for nearly a mile
+east and west, and is three hundred and forty feet high.
+On its highest summit the government has placed a
+lighthouse, and there the light-keepers live, sometimes
+cut off for weeks from the shore, surrounded by barrenness
+and desolation, but within sight of the busy life
+which ebbs and flows through the narrow strait which
+leads to San Francisco. These islands are composed of
+broken and water-worn rocks, forming numerous sharp
+peaks, and containing many caves. One of these caves
+has been utilized as a fog-trumpet, or whistle, blown by
+the force of the waves. The mouth-piece of a trumpet
+has been fixed against the aperture of the rock, and the
+waves dashing against it with force enough to crush a
+ship to pieces, blows the whistle. This fog whistle
+ceases entirely at low water, and its loudness at all times
+depends upon the force of the waves. The Farallones
+are the homes of innumerable sea birds, gulls, mures,
+shags and sea-parrots, the eggs of the first two being
+regularly collected by eggers, who make a profitable business
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg 463]</a></span>
+of gathering them at certain seasons of the year. In
+1853 one thousand dozen of these eggs, the result of a three
+days' trip, were sold at a dollar a dozen. Gathering the
+eggs is difficult and not unattended by danger, as
+precipices must be scaled, and the birds sometimes show
+themselves formidable enemies. The larger island is
+also populated by immense numbers of rabbits, all
+descended from a few pairs brought there many years
+ago. Occasionally these creatures, becoming too numerous
+for the resources of the island, die by hundreds, of
+starvation. Though their progenitors were white, they
+have reverted to the original color of the wild race.
+The cliffs of these islands are alive with seals, or sea-lions,
+as they are called, which congregate upon their
+sunny slopes, play, bark, fight and roar. Some of them
+are as large as an ox and seemingly as clumsy; but they
+disport themselves in the surf, which is strong enough
+to dash them in pieces, with the utmost ease, allowing
+the waves to send them almost against the rocks, and
+then by a sudden, dextrous movement, gliding out of
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>The Cliff House has also its sea-lions, on Seal Rock,
+not far from the hotel, and the visitors are never tired of
+watching them as they wriggle over the rocks, barking
+so noisily as to be heard above the breakers. Formerly
+numbers of them were shot by wanton sportsmen, but
+they are now protected by law. "Ben. Butler" and
+"General Grant" are two seals of unusual size, which
+appear to hold the remainder of the seal colony in subjection.
+If two begin to fight and squabble about a
+position which each wants, either "Ben" or the "General"
+quickly settles the dispute by flopping the malcontents
+overboard. The higher these creatures can<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg 464]</a></span>
+wriggle up the rocks the happier they appear to be; and
+when a huge beast has attained a solitary peak, by dint
+of much squirming, he manifests his satisfaction by
+raising his small pointed head and complacently looking
+about him. As soon as another spies him, and can
+reach the spot, a squabble ensues, howls are heard, teeth
+enter into the contest, the stronger secures the eminence,
+and the weaker is ignominiously sent to the humbler and
+lower regions.</p>
+
+<p>An early drive to and a breakfast at the Cliff House,
+with a return to the city before the sea-breeze begins, is
+the favorite excursion of the San Franciscan. The road
+passes beyond this hotel to a broad, beautiful beach, on
+which, at low tide, one can drive to the Ocean House, at
+its extreme end, and then return to the city by the old
+Mission grounds, which still lie in its southwestern
+limits. The Mission building is of adobe, of the old
+Spanish style, built in 1778. Adjoining it is the cemetery,
+with its fantastic monuments, and paths worn by
+the feet of the Mission fathers and their dusky penitents.</p>
+
+<p>The largest and finest theatre of the city, and one of
+the finest in the United States, is the Grand Opera
+House, at the corner of Mission and Third streets. Four
+other theatres and an Academy of Music, furnish amusements
+to the residents of the city. Woodward's Gardens,
+on Mission street between Thirteenth and Fourteenth
+streets, contains a museum, an art galley, and a menagerie.
+There are also two Chinese theatres, one at 618
+Jackson street, and the other at 625&frac12; Jackson street.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese Quarter of San Francisco, which has
+become famous the world over, occupies portions of
+Sacramento, Commercial, Dupont, Pacific and Jackson
+streets. It is a locality which no stranger should fail to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[Pg 465]</a></span>
+see. Here he steps at once into the Celestial Empire.
+Chinamen throng the streets, dressed in their semi-American,
+semi-Asiatic costumes, the pig-tail usually
+depending behind, though sometimes it is rolled up,
+out of sight, under the hat. The harsh gutturals of the
+Chinese language, nearly every word ending in ng, are
+heard on every hand, mingled with the grotesque pigeon
+English. The signs exhibit Chinese characters, and the
+stores and bazaars are filled with Chinese merchandise.</p>
+
+<p>Women are scarce in this quarter, and only of the
+courtezan class; but here and there one meets you, dressed
+usually in Chinese gown and trowsers, with hair arranged
+in the indescribable Chinese chignon, and carrying a fan&mdash;for
+all the world as though she had stepped off a fan
+or a saucer&mdash;and not more immodest in demeanor than
+the same class in our eastern cities. There are few or
+no Chinese wives in San Francisco. Chinese immigration
+takes the form of an immense bow, beginning at
+China, stretching to the Pacific coast of America, and
+retiring again to its starting point; for every Chinaman
+expects to return to his native land, either alive or dead.
+He does not take root in American soil. He comes
+here to make a little money, leaving his family behind
+him, and, satisfied with a very modest competence,
+returns as he came. If he dies here, his bones are
+carried back, that they may find a resting-place with
+those of his ancestors. Therefore the women imported
+are for the basest purposes.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to this Chinese Quarter. Here is the old
+St. Giles of London, the old Five Points of New York
+magnified and intensified. Here congregate the roughest
+and rudest elements, and here stand, shamelessly revealed,
+crime and bestiality too vile to name. In one cellar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[Pg 466]</a></span>
+is a gambling-hell, for John Chinaman's besetting weakness
+is his love of gambling. The mode of gambling is
+very simple, involving no skill, and the stakes are small;
+but many a Celestial loses there, at night, his earnings of
+the day. Near by is an opium cellar, fitted up with
+benches or shelves, on each of which will be found a
+couple of Chinamen lying, with a wooden box for a
+pillow. While one is preparing his opium and smoking,
+the other is enjoying its full effects, in a half stupor. The
+Chinese tenement houses are crowded and filthy beyond
+description, and the breeding places of disease and crime.
+They are scattered thickly throughout the quarter.
+Their theatres, of which there are two, already referred
+to, have only male performers, who personate both sexes,
+and give what seems to be passable acting, accompanied
+by the clash and clang of cymbals, the beating of gongs,
+the sounding of trumpets, and other disagreeable noises
+regarded by the Chinese as music. The entire audience
+are smoking, either tobacco or opium.</p>
+
+<p>The Joss houses, or temples of the Chinese, are more
+in the nature of club houses and employment bureaus,
+than of religious houses. The first floor contains the
+business room, smoking or lounging room, dining room,
+kitchen, and other offices, which are used by the Emigration
+Company to which the building belongs. The second
+floor contains a moderate-sized hall, devoted to religious
+rites. Its walls are decorated with moral maxims from
+Confucius and other writers, in which the devotees are
+exhorted to fidelity, integrity, and the other virtues.
+The Joss or Josh is an image of a Chinaman, before
+whom the Chinese residents of San Francisco are expected
+to come once a year and burn slips of paper. Praying
+is also done, but as this is by means of putting printed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[Pg 467]</a></span>
+prayers into a machine run by clockwork, there is no
+great exhaustion among the worshipers.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese have no Sunday, and are ready to work
+every day of the week, if they can get paid for it. Their
+only holiday is at New Year, which occurs with them
+usually in February, but is a movable feast, when they
+require an entire week to settle their affairs, square up
+their religious and secular accounts, and make a new
+start in life. The Chinese have one saving virtue.
+They pay their debts on every New Year's day. If they
+have not enough to settle all claims against them they
+hand over their assets to their creditors, old scores are
+wiped out, and they commence anew.</p>
+
+<p>The six Chinese Emigration Companies, each representing
+a Chinese province, manage the affairs of the
+immigrants with a precision, minuteness and care which
+is unparalleled by any organization of western civilization.
+Before the passage of the anti-Chinese law, when a ship
+came into port laden with Chinamen, the agents of the
+different companies boarded it, and each took the names
+of those belonging to his province. They provided
+lodgings and food for the new comers, and as quickly as
+possible secured them employment; lent them money to
+go to any distant point; cared for them if they were sick
+and friendless, and, finally, sent home the bones of those
+who died on American shores. These companies settle
+all disputes between the Chinese, and when a Chinamen
+wishes to return home, they examine his accounts, and
+oblige him to pay his just debts before leaving. The
+means for doing all this are obtained in the shape of
+voluntary contributions from the immigrants. These
+companies do not act as employment bureaus, for these
+are separate and thoroughly organized institutions.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[Pg 468]</a></span>
+These latter farm out the work of any number of hands,
+at the price agreed upon, furnishing a foreman, with
+whom all negotiations are transacted, who, perhaps, is
+the only one speaking English, and who is responsible
+for all the work.</p>
+
+<p>The English spoken by the Chinese is known as
+"pigeon English," "pigeon" being the nearest approach
+which a Chinamen can make to saying "business."</p>
+
+<p>Most English words are more or less distorted. L is
+always used by them for r, mi for I, and the words
+abound in terminal ee's.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese problem is one which is agitating the
+country and giving a coloring to its politics. The
+Pacific States seem, by a large majority of their population,
+to regard the presence of the Mongolian among them as
+an unmitigated evil, to be no longer tolerated. Eastern
+capitalists have hailed their coming as inaugurating the
+era of cheap labor and increased fortunes for themselves.
+Hence the discussion and the disturbances. A lady who
+had made her home in San Francisco for several years
+past, says, in a letter to the writer of this article, "A
+person not living in California can form no conception
+of the curse which the Chinese are to this section of the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>Yet without them some of the great enterprises of the
+Pacific coast, notably the Central Pacific Railroad, would
+have remained long unfinished; and they came also to
+furnish manual labor at a time when it was scarce and
+difficult to obtain at any price. The Chinaman is a
+strange compound of virtue and vice, cleanliness and
+filth, frugality and recklessness, simplicity and cunning.
+He is scrupulously clean as to his person, indulging in
+frequent baths; yet he will live contentedly with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[Pg 469]</a></span>
+most wretched surroundings, and inhale an air vitiated
+by an aggregation of breaths and stenches of all kinds.
+He is a faithful worker and a wonderful imitator. He
+cannot do the full work of a white man, but he labors
+steadily and unceasingly. He takes no time for drunken
+sprees, but he is an inveterate opium smoker, and sometimes
+deliberately sacrifices his life in the enjoyment of
+the drug. He is frugal to the last degree, but will
+waste his daily earnings in the gambling hell and policy
+shop. Scrupulously honest, he is yet the victim of the
+vilest vices which are engrafting themselves upon our
+western coast. Living upon one-third of what will
+keep a white man, and working for one-half the wages
+the latter demands, he is destroying the labor market of
+that quarter of our country, reducing its working classes
+to his own level, in which in the future the latter, too,
+will be forced to be contented on a diet of "rice and rats,"
+and to forego all educational advantages for their children,
+becoming, like the Chinese themselves, mere
+working machines; or else enter into a conflict of labor
+against labor, race against race.</p>
+
+<p>The latter alternative seems inevitable, and it has
+already begun. China, with her crowded population,
+could easily spare a hundred million people and be the
+better for it. Those one hundred million Chinamen, if
+welcomed to our shores, would speedily swamp our
+western civilization. They might not become the controlling
+power&mdash;the Anglo-Saxon is always sure to
+remain that&mdash;but as hewers of wood and drawers of
+water, as builders of our railroads, hands upon our
+farms, workers in our factories, and cooks and chambermaids
+in our houses, a like number of American men
+and women would be displaced, and wages quickly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[Pg 470]</a></span>
+reduced to an Asiatic level; and such a time of distress
+as this country never saw would dawn upon us.</p>
+
+<p>There seems to be no assimilation between the Caucasian
+and the Mongolian on the Pacific slope. In the
+East an Irish girl recently married a Chinaman; but in
+San Francisco, though every other race under the sun has
+united in marriage, the Chinaman is avoided as a pariah.
+White and yellow races may meet and fraternize in
+business, in pleasure, and even in crime; but in marriage
+never. Chinamen rank among the most respected
+merchants of San Francisco, and these receive exceptional
+respect as individuals; but between the two races
+as races a great gulf is fixed. The Chinese immigrant
+takes no interest in American affairs. His world is on
+the other side of the Pacific. And the American people
+return the compliment by taking no interest in him. It
+is undeniable that, by a certain class of San Francisco
+citizens, popularly known as Hoodlums, the treatment
+of the Chinese population has been shameful in the
+extreme. A Chinaman has no rights which a white
+man is bound to respect. Insult, contumely, abuse,
+cruelty and injustice he has been forced to bear at the
+hands of the rougher classes, without hope of redress.
+He has been kicked, and cheated, and plundered, and
+not a voice has been raised in his behalf; but if he has
+been guilty of the slightest peccadillo, how quickly has
+he been made to feel the heavy hand of justice!</p>
+
+<p>It seems a pity that before the cry was raised with
+such overwhelming force, "The Chinese must go!"
+some little effort had not been made to adapt them to
+Western civilization. They are quick to take ideas
+concerning their labor; why not in other things? We
+have received and adopted the ignorant, vicious hordes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[Pg 471]</a></span>
+from foreign lands to the east of us, and are fast metamorphosing
+them into intelligent, useful citizens. We
+are even trying our hand upon the negro, as a late
+atonement for all the wrong we have done him. But the
+Indian and the Chinaman seem to be without the pale of
+our mercy and our Christianity. It might not have
+been possible, but still the experiment was worth the
+trying, of attempting to lift them up industrially,
+educationally and morally, to a level with our own better
+classes, instead of permitting them to drag us down.
+Returning to their own country, and carrying back with
+them our Western civilization, as a little leaven, they
+might have leavened the whole lump. It is too late for
+that now, and the mandate has gone forth: "The Chinese
+must go!" Considering all things as they are,
+rather than as they might have been, it is undoubtedly
+better so, and the only salvation of our Pacific States.</p>
+
+<p>San Francisco had, in 1880, a population of 232,956.
+The commerce is very large, and must every year increase
+as the West is built up. The chief articles of export
+are the precious metals, breadstuffs, wines and wool.
+She has important manufactures, embracing watches,
+carriages, boots and shoes, furniture, iron and brass
+works, silver ware, silk and woolen. California seems
+peculiarly adapted to the silk industry, and her silk
+manufactures will probably assume marked importance in
+the future. The wonderful climate and unequaled
+productiveness are constantly attracting immigration,
+and the Pacific Central, which spans the continent, has
+vastly improved on the old methods of travel by caravan
+across the plains and over the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>The population of San Francisco is cosmopolitan to
+the last degree, and embraces natives of every clime and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[Pg 472]</a></span>
+nearly every nation on the globe. Yet in spite of this
+strange agglomeration she is intensely Yankee in her
+go-ahead-ativeness, with Anglo-Saxon alertness intensified.
+In fact, as San Francisco is on the utmost limits
+of the West, beyond which there is nothing but a vast
+expanse of water until we begin again at the East, so
+she represents the superlative of Anglo-Saxon enterprise
+and American civilization, and looks to a future which
+shall far outstrip her past.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[Pg 473]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h3>
+
+<h2>SAVANNAH.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>First Visit to Savannah.&mdash;Camp Davidson.&mdash;The City During the
+War.&mdash;An Escaped Prisoner.&mdash;Recapture and Final Escape.&mdash;A
+"City of Refuge."&mdash;Savannah by Night.&mdash;Position of the
+City.&mdash;Streets and Public Squares.&mdash;Forsyth Park.&mdash;Monuments.&mdash;Commerce.&mdash;View
+from the Wharves.&mdash;Railroads.&mdash;Founding
+of the City.&mdash;Revolutionary History.&mdash;Death of
+Pulaski.&mdash;Secession.&mdash;Approach of Sherman.&mdash;Investment of
+the City by Union Troops.&mdash;Recuperation After the War.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Colored
+Population.&mdash;Bonaventure, Thunderbolt, and
+Other Suburban Resorts.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>My first visit to Savannah was made on the twenty-ninth
+of July, 1864, when I was brought there
+as a prisoner of war. I found the city with its business
+enterprises in a state of stagnation, and the streets
+thronged with soldiers in Confederate uniforms. About
+four thousand troops were doing garrison duty in the
+city, which was thronged with refugees, and the entire
+population was suffering from a paralysis of all industrial
+enterprises, and from the interruption of its commerce
+by the Federal blockade at the mouth of the river.
+Camp Davidson, where we were confined, was in the
+eastern part of the city, near the Marine Hospital, with
+Pulaski's Monument in full view, to the westward.</p>
+
+<p>The camp was surrounded by a stockade and deadline,
+and the principal amusement and occupation of the
+prisoners was the digging of a tunnel which was to
+conduct them to liberty beyond the second line of sentinels,
+without the stockade. But our little camp, like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[Pg 474]</a></span>
+Chicago, had a cow for an evil genius. This luckless
+creature broke through the tunnel, as it was nearing
+completion, and suddenly ended it and our hopes together.</p>
+
+<p>The nearest Union forces were at Pulaski, at the mouth
+of the Savannah River, and Savannah was one of the
+most important military posts of the Confederate army.
+Our treatment at Camp Davidson was exceptionally kind
+and considerate, and the ladies of the city, in giving
+suitable interment to the remains of a Union officer who
+had died in the camp, proved themselves to be possessed
+of generous hearts. Therefore it was with regret that
+we received the order to leave Savannah for Charleston.</p>
+
+<p>I next visited Savannah a few months later, when the
+war was drawing to a close, after General Sherman and
+his army had made their successful entrance into the
+town. On the sixteenth of December, myself and a companion
+found ourselves twenty miles from Savannah, after
+having been many weeks fugitives from "Camp Sorghum,"
+the prison-pen at Columbia, South Carolina. We
+were on the Savannah River Road, over which Kilpatrick's
+Cavalry and the Fourteenth Army Corps had passed
+only a week before. Emboldened by our successes and
+hairbreadth escapes of three weeks, when we at last felt that
+deliverance was close at hand, we pursued our way, only
+to fall suddenly into the hands of the enemy. Hope
+deferred maketh the heart sick. But who shall describe
+the terrible sinking of the heart&mdash;the worse than sickness&mdash;when
+hope is thus suddenly crushed and turned
+to certain despair? Our second captivity was not, however,
+of long duration. Death was preferable to bondage
+under such masters. Taking our lives in our hands, a
+second escape was effected, and on December twenty-third,
+but two days after Sherman's occupancy of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[Pg 475]</a></span>
+city, Savannah proved itself, indeed, a city of refuge.
+Union troops welcomed us with open arms, and we were
+soon despatched northward.</p>
+
+<p>The traveler who visits Savannah to-day will view it
+under very different auspices. The white wings of
+peace have brooded over it for more than half a generation,
+loyalty has taken the place of treason in the hearts
+of her people, and prosperity is visible on her streets and
+wharves. Let him, if he can, approach the city from
+the sea, and by night. Fort Pulaski stands like a sentinel
+guarding the entrance to the harbor, the lighthouse
+upon the point keeping a bright eye out to seaward. As
+he glides up the river, which winds in countless lagoons
+around low sea islands covered with salt marshes, at last
+he will see in the distance the lights of the city set on a
+hill, and of the shipping at her feet. A distant city is
+always beautiful at night, though it may be hideous by
+daylight. Night veils all its ugliness in charitable
+shadows; it reveals hitherto unseen beauties of outline,
+crowns it with a tiara of sparkling gems, and enwraps
+the whole scene in an air of romance and mystery which
+is charming to the person of poetic nature. But whether
+seen by night or day, Savannah is indeed a beautiful city,
+probably the most beautiful in all the Southern States.</p>
+
+<p>The Savannah River winds around Hutchinson Island,
+and the city is built in the form of an elongated crescent,
+about three miles in length, on its southern shore. It
+is on a bluff about forty feet above the stream, this bluff
+being about a mile wide at its eastern end, and broadening as
+it extends westward. Surrounding it are the low
+lands occupied by market gardens, for Savannah is a
+great place for market gardeners, and helps to supply
+the northern market in early spring.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[Pg 476]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The streets of Savannah are laid out east and west,
+nearly parallel to the river, with others crossing them at
+right angles, north and south. They are wide, and
+everywhere shaded with trees, many of the latter being
+live oaks, most magnificent specimens of which are found
+in the city. Orange trees also abound, with their fragrant
+blossoms and golden fruit, stately palmettoes, magnolias
+and oleander, rich in bloom, bays and cape myrtles.</p>
+
+<p>The streets running north and south are of very nearly
+uniform width, every alternate street passing on either
+side of a public square, which is bounded on the north
+and south by narrow streets running east and west, and
+intersected in the centre by a wide street taking the same
+direction. These public squares, twenty-four in number,
+and containing from one and a half to three acres, are a
+marked feature of the city. They are placed at regular
+intervals, as already described, are handsomely inclosed,
+laid out with walks, shaded with evergreen and ornamental
+trees, and in the spring and summer months are
+green with grass. In a number of these are monuments,
+while others contain fountains or statuary. These squares
+or plazas are surrounded with fine residences, each having
+its own little yard, beautiful with flowers, vines, shrubbery
+and trees. In these premises roses thrive and bloom
+with a luxuriance unknown in the North, and the stately
+Camelia Japonica, the empress among flowers, grows
+here to a height of twelve or fifteen feet, and blossoms in
+midwinter. Savannah, the most beautiful city of the
+South, if not in the United States, is more like the
+wealthy suburb of some large city, than like a city itself.
+It is embowered in trees, which are green the whole year
+around; and shares with Cleveland, its northern rival
+in beauty, the <i>soubriquet</i> of the "Forest City."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[Pg 477]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Forsyth Park, originally laid out in the southern
+suburb of the city, is now the centre of a populous
+quarter, abounding in handsome edifices. Many of the
+original trees, the beautiful southern pines, are left
+standing in this park, and other trees and shrubbery
+added. Sphynxes guard the Bull street entrance, and in
+the centre of the old park, which was ten acres in extent, is
+a handsome fountain, modeled after that in the Place de
+la Concorde, in Paris. This fountain is surrounded by
+a profusion of flowers, while shelled walks furnish pathways
+through the park. It has recently been increased
+in dimensions to thirty acres; in the centre of the new
+or western portion stands a stately monument in honor
+of the Confederate dead.</p>
+
+<p>Pulaski Monument stands in Monterey Square, the
+first plaza to the northward of Forsyth Park. The steps
+of the monument are of granite, and the shaft of fine
+white marble, fifty-five feet high, surmounted by a statue
+of Liberty holding the national banner. This monument
+covers the spot where, in 1779, Count Pulaski
+fell, during an attack upon the city, while it was occupied
+by the British. In Johnson Square, the first square
+south of the river intersected by Bull street, is a fine
+Druidical pile, erected to the memory of General
+Greene and Count Pulaski. The corner-stone of this
+obelisk was laid in 1825, by Lafayette, during his visit
+to America.</p>
+
+<p>Savannah was founded in 1733, by General James
+Oglethorpe, whose plan has been followed in its subsequent
+erection. Upon each of the twenty-four squares
+were originally left four large lots, known as "trust lots,"
+two on the east and two on the west. We are told by
+Mr. Francis Moore, who wrote in 1736, that "the use<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[Pg 478]</a></span>
+of this is, in case a war should happen, the villages
+without may have places in town to bring their cattle
+and families into for refuge; and for that purpose there
+is a square left in every ward, big enough for the outwards
+to encamp in." These lots are now occupied by
+handsome churches, conspicuous public buildings, and
+palatial private residences, thus securing to all the
+squares a uniform elegance which they might otherwise
+have lacked.</p>
+
+<p>Bay street is the great commercial street of the city.
+It is an esplanade, two hundred feet wide, upon the brow
+of the cliff overlooking the river. Its southern side is
+lined with handsome stores and offices. At the corner of
+Bay and Bull streets is the Custom House, with the
+Post Office in the basement. Its northern side is occupied
+by the upper stories of warehouses, which are built at
+the foot of the steep cliff fronting the river. These
+upper stories are connected with the bluff by means of
+wooden platforms, which form a sort of sidewalk, spanning
+a narrow and steep roadway, which leads at
+intervals, by a series of turns, down to the wharves below.
+Long flights of steps accommodate pedestrians in the same
+descent. The warehouses just spoken of are four or
+five stories high on their river fronts, and but one or two
+on the Bay.</p>
+
+<p>One should walk along the quay below the city to
+gain a true idea of the extent of its commerce. Here,
+in close proximity to the wharves, are located the
+cotton presses and rice mills. Here everything is dirty
+and dismal, evidently speaking of better days. The
+beauty of the city is all above. The buildings are some
+of them substantially built of brick, but begin to show
+the ravages of time. There is an old archway, which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[Pg 479]</a></span>
+once had pretensions of its own, but the wall has fallen
+away, and it is now an entrance to nowhere. Yet in
+spite of this general dilapidation, there is all the bustle
+and activity of a full commercial life. The wharves are
+piled with cotton bales, which have found a temporary
+landing here, awaiting shipment to the North, or perhaps
+across the sea. For Savannah is the second cotton port
+in the United States. But cotton is not its only export.
+It is the great shipping depot for Southern produce
+bound for Northern markets. Some sheds are filled
+with barrels of rosin, while great quantities of rosin
+litter the ground. From others turpentine in great
+quantities is shipped to various ports. The lumber
+trade of the city is immense, the pine forests of Georgia
+furnishing an apparently inexhaustible supply. The
+city is also in the centre of the rice-growing region, and
+sends its rice to feed the North. Steamships from all
+the Atlantic ports lie along its wharves, while those of
+foreign nations are by no means scarce. Vessels of too
+large a draft to lie alongside the wharves discharge and
+load their freight three miles below the city.</p>
+
+<p>The view from the river front is over the river itself,
+filled with craft of all sorts, from the tiny ferry boat
+up to the immense ocean steamer, across to Hutchinson's
+Island and the Carolina shore. The island, which is
+two miles long by one wide, has upon it numerous lumber
+yards and a large dry dock. Rice was formerly cultivated
+upon it, but is now forbidden by law, because of
+its unhealthfulness. The river is about seven hundred
+and twenty feet wide in front of the city, with a depth
+of water at the wharves varying from thirteen to twenty-one
+feet. The portion of South Carolina visible is low
+and flat, dotted here and there with palmetto trees.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[Pg 480]</a></span>
+There is little of the picturesque about this river view
+except the busy life, which keeps in constant motion.</p>
+
+<p>Savannah has extensive railroad connection with all
+parts of the United States. She has direct communication
+by rail with Vicksburg on the Mississippi. She
+also offers an outlet, by means of railroads, for the
+products of Georgia, Florida, and portions of Alabama
+and Tennessee. She has unbroken railroad connection
+with Memphis, Mobile, Cincinnati, Louisville, and the
+principal commercial cities of the West and North.
+Her water communication is established with all the
+great Northern and Southern seaboard cities. Her
+harbor is one of the best and safest on the South Atlantic
+coast, and she is the natural eastern terminus of the
+Southern Pacific Railroad, being almost on the same
+parallel of latitude with San Diego, its western terminus.</p>
+
+<p>The corporate limits of Savannah extend backward from
+the river about one and one-half miles, and embrace a
+total area of three and one-half square miles, but additions
+are fast being made to the southward, which will,
+in time, greatly extend its area, and add to the population,
+which, in 1880, was 30,681.</p>
+
+<p>Savannah's history goes back to the early days of the
+colonies. Its site marks the first settlement in Georgia.
+General Oglethorpe, with a hundred and fourteen men,
+women and children, having landed at Charleston,
+in January, 1733, sailed from that port with a plentiful
+supply of provisions and a small body of troops for
+their protection, and landed on Yamacraw Bluff, on the
+Savannah River, eighteen miles from its mouth. On
+the bluff General Oglethorpe laid out a town and called
+it Savannah, and by the ninth of February the colony
+commenced the erection of buildings. The colony sur<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[Pg 481]</a></span>vived
+various haps and mishaps until 1776, when, in
+the War of the Revolution, the British attacked the city,
+but were repulsed. On December twenty-ninth, 1778,
+they made a second attack, surprised the American forces,
+who attempted to fly, but were mostly killed or captured.
+On the morning of October fourth, 1779, the
+American and French troops made a direct assault upon
+Savannah, attempting to take it from the British, but
+were obliged to retire with heavy loss. Count Pulaski,
+a Polish nobleman, who had been expatriated for participating
+in the carrying off of King Stanislaus from
+his capital, was wounded in this battle, and soon afterwards
+died. Pulaski Monument, as already stated, was
+erected on the spot where he fell.</p>
+
+<p>Savannah received its city charter in 1788. In 1850
+it had a little more than fifteen thousand inhabitants,
+and in 1860, 22,292. When Secession cast its shadow
+upon the sunny South, it fell like a pall upon Savannah,
+no less than upon the other Southern cities. All
+her business was suspended, and grass grew in her
+streets. On the northeast corner of Bull and Broughton
+streets stands the building known as Masonic Hall,
+where, on January twenty-first, 1861, the Ordinance of
+Secession was passed. On the sixteenth of March the
+State Convention assembled in Savannah, adopted the
+Constitution of the Confederate States of America,
+Georgia being the second State to adopt this Constitution
+without submitting it to the people. The mouth of
+the river was blockaded by United States gunboats, and
+all commerce prevented. On April fifteenth, 1862,
+Fort Pulaski was captured by the Federal troops, and
+great excitement prevailed in the city. Women and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[Pg 482]</a></span>
+children left their homes, and property and furniture
+were sent into the interior.</p>
+
+<p>During the following years a number of unsuccessful
+attempts were made by the Union naval forces to
+capture the city. In December, 1864, Sherman was
+making his famous march to the sea, and was steadily
+drawing nearer the city, while southern chivalry fled
+before him, and the now emancipated slaves gathered
+and rolled in his rear like a sable cloud. On the twentieth,
+heavy siege guns were put in position by his
+forces between Kingsbridge and the city; and General
+Hardee, suddenly awakened to a sense of the danger
+which menaced them, set his troops hurriedly to work to
+destroy the navy yard and government property; while
+the ironclads, the "Savannah" and "Georgia," were
+making a furious fire on the Federal left, the garrison,
+under cover of darkness and confusion, were being
+transported on the first stage of their journey to Charleston.
+Before leaving, they blew up the iron clads and
+the fortifications below the city. On the twenty-first,
+General Sherman received a formal surrender from the
+municipal authorities. On the following day, the twenty-second,
+he sent a dispatch to the President, presenting
+him, "as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah." On
+December twenty-eighth, 1864, Masonic Hall, already
+historical, witnessed a gathering of loyal citizens celebrating
+the triumph of the Union army. Sherman,
+when he entered the city, encamped his forces on the
+still vacant "trust lots." This triumphant conclusion
+of Sherman's march from Atlanta broke the backbone
+of the Confederacy, and was the prelude to the downfall
+of Richmond and the surrender of Lee's army.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[Pg 483]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Prosperity eventually followed in the wake of peace.
+The blockade lifted, the deserted wharves were soon
+filled with the shipping of all nations. Her silent and
+empty streets grew noisy and populous with the rush of
+business, and Savannah is now one of the most prosperous
+of our Southern cities. Her architecture is not
+striking for either its beauty or its grandeur; nevertheless
+she has many fine public and private buildings.
+The City Exchange is one of the former, and it also
+possesses a historical interest, General Sherman having
+reviewed his troops in front of it in his investment of
+the city. From its tower the best view of the city and
+neighborhood may be obtained. The Court House, the
+United States and Police Barracks, Artillery Armory,
+Jail, Chatham Academy and St. Andrews' Hall, are all
+conspicuous buildings. The Georgia Historical Society
+has a large and beautiful hall, with a fine library and
+interesting relics. St. John's and Christ's Episcopal
+churches, the Independent Presbyterian Church, and
+the Roman Catholic Cathedral, are all striking edifices.
+Trinity Church, in Johnson Square, is near the spot
+where John Wesley delivered his famous sermons.
+Wesley visited Savannah in its early days, having been
+invited thither by Oglethorpe. At Bethesda, about ten
+miles from the city, where the Union Farm School is
+now located, was the site of the Orphan House established
+in 1740 by Whitefield, Wesley's contemporary
+and companion.</p>
+
+<p>The benevolent, literary and educational institutions
+of Savannah are numerous and well sustained, some of
+them being among the oldest in the country. The
+Union Society, for the support of orphan boys, and the
+Female Society, for orphan girls, were founded in 1750.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[Pg 484]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Savannah is situated just above the 32d parallel of
+latitude, and possesses a mean temperature of 66&deg; Fahr.
+Being within the influence of the Gulf Stream it enjoys
+all the mildness of the tropics in winter, while the
+summers are less oppressive than at New York or
+Washington. It is a favorite resort for northern invalids,
+being comparatively free from malarious fevers and
+pulmonary diseases.</p>
+
+<p>Colored people abound in Savannah, constituting about
+three-eighths of the entire population. They do most
+of the menial work of the city, being laborers, waiters in
+the hotels and public houses, and stevedores upon the
+wharves. It is astonishing to see the number of colored
+men it takes to load and set afloat a steamship; and one
+of the last sights which meets the eye of the traveler and
+lingers in his memory, as he leaves the city by means
+of the river, is the long row of upturned black faces,
+most of them beaming with good humor and jollity, on
+the wharf, as the vessel casts off her lines and turns her
+head down stream.</p>
+
+<p>Savannah possesses certain famous suburban attractions,
+without seeing which the traveler can scarcely say he has
+seen the city. In a bend of the Warsaw River, a short
+distance from its junction with the Savannah, and about
+four miles from the city, is the famous Bonaventure
+Cemetery. A hundred years ago this was the country
+seat of a wealthy English gentleman, who, upon the
+marriage of his daughter, made her a wedding present of
+the estate. The grounds were laid out in wide avenues,
+and shaded by live oaks, and the initials of the young
+bride and her husband were outlined with trees. In
+course of time the property was converted into a cemetery,
+and for many years has been devoted to that purpose.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[Pg 485]</a></span>
+It is filled with monuments to the dead, some of them
+bearing historic names. Meantime the live oaks have
+grown to enormous dimensions, their gigantic branches
+meeting and interlacing overhead, forming immense
+arches, like those of the gothic aisles of some great cathedral,
+under and through which are visible bright vistas
+of the river and the sea islands lying beyond. The
+branches are fringed with pendants of the gray Spanish
+moss, yards in length, which sway softly in the breeze,
+and by their sombre color add to the solemnity of the
+scene. The steamers on the Sea Island route to Fernandina,
+Florida, pass Bonaventure, and afford glimpses
+of white monuments through the avenues of trees.
+Bonaventure is a favorite drive from the city, and is also
+reached by the horse cars.</p>
+
+<p>Thunderbolt, so named, tradition tells us, because a
+thunderbolt once fell there, is a short distance from
+Bonaventure, down the Warsaw River, and is a popular
+drive and summer resort. A spring of water flows from
+the spot where the lightning is supposed to have entered
+the ground. Jasper's Spring is two and one-half miles
+west of the city, and is the scene of the exploit of Sergeant
+Jasper, who at the time of the Revolution succeeded,
+with only one companion, in releasing a party of American
+prisoners from a British guard of eight men. Another
+fashionable drive is to White Bluff, ten miles distant
+from the city. The latter, with Beaulieu, Montgomery
+and the Isle of Hope, furnish salt water bathing and
+delightful sea breezes for the summer visitors.</p>
+
+<p>There is but one line of horse cars in the city, running
+on South Broad street, and then out the Thunderbolt
+road to Thunderbolt, Bonaventure, and the other suburban
+resorts. This company, we are told, has been so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[Pg 486]</a></span>
+reckless in regard to the limitations of its charter, that the
+municipal government refuses to charter a second road.
+If our Northern cities were as scrupulous, we wonder
+where their many horse railroads would be!</p>
+
+<p>Since the war Northern men and Northern capital have
+helped to build up the various interests of Savannah.
+Planing mills, foundries, flouring and grist mills, have
+been established, furnishing employment to a considerable
+number of workingmen. Old channels of commerce
+have been extended, and new ones opened; and the
+natural advantage of her position, added to the public
+spirit which her citizens manifest in the accomplishment
+of great enterprises of internal improvement, give a
+guarantee of increased prosperity in the future.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[Pg 487]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV.</h3>
+
+<h2>SPRINGFIELD.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Valley of the Connecticut.&mdash;Location of Springfield.&mdash;The United
+States Armory.&mdash;Springfield Library.&mdash;Origin of the Present
+Library System.&mdash;The Wayland Celebration.&mdash;Settlement of
+Springfield.&mdash;Indian Hostilities.&mdash;Days of Witchcraft.&mdash;Trial of
+Hugh Parsons.&mdash;Hope Daggett.&mdash;Springfield "Republican."</p></div>
+
+
+<p>A journey up the Valley of the Connecticut at this
+season of the year is a positive luxury to the
+tourist or professional traveler. It is a broad, beautiful
+road, winding through hill and dale, with grand old
+forests and mountains in the background, their foliage
+tipped with variegated colors by the fingers of Autumn,
+as an artist would put a finishing touch to his landscape.</p>
+
+<p>A ride of twenty-five miles northward from Hartford
+brought us to Springfield, the most enterprising and
+important town in Western Massachusetts. The United
+States Armory, located here, gives to the city a national
+consequence. No city in the Union did more to crush
+out the Rebellion than Springfield, through her Armory.
+Two or three thousand men were kept constantly
+employed here during the war, turning out the various
+arms used in the Federal service. The force now
+employed is considerably less than in war times. All
+hands are engaged just now upon the Springfield rifled
+musket, which has recently been adopted by the Government.
+The military precision with which every detail
+is attended to is the admiration of all who are shown
+through the Armory.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[Pg 488]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A visit to the City Library, on State street, cannot fail
+to interest every person who feels a pride in the public
+institutions of New England. A fine, large, brick and
+stone building, with plain exterior and artistically finished
+interior, is the Springfield Public Library. Over forty
+thousand volumes cover its shelves, and are so systematically
+arranged that the librarian or his assistants can
+produce at once any work named in the catalogue. The
+oblong reading room is furnished with black walnut
+tables; and winding staircases, painted in blue and gold,
+lead from the columned alcoves to the galleries above.</p>
+
+<p>The library owns some very old and valuable books
+of engravings. A room on the first floor is devoted to
+stuffed birds, geological specimens, preserved snakes, and
+a wonderful assortment of curious relics obtained from
+all parts of the world. Icelandic snow shoes and
+Hindoo gods occupy places on the same shelf, in peaceful
+proximity, and catamounts, paralyzed in the act
+of springing, glare at you harmlessly behind their glass
+cases. Patriotic mementoes are not wanting, as the
+bullet-riddled battle-flags of Massachusetts regiments
+will testify.</p>
+
+<p>The free public library system is distinctively a New
+England institution, and wields a mighty influence for
+good. It was originated in 1847, by Rev. Francis
+Wayland, President of Brown University, Providence,
+Rhode Island. On Commencement day of that year
+Mr. Wayland expressed a wish to help the inhabitants
+of the town of Wayland, Massachusetts, to a public
+library, and tendered a donation of five hundred dollars
+to the town for that purpose, upon the condition that
+another five hundred should be added by the town.
+The required fund was quickly raised, by subscription,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[Pg 489]</a></span>
+and President Wayland immediately placed his donation
+in the hands of one of their prominent citizens,
+Judge Mellen. This was the beginning of the movement
+which resulted in the "Library Act," of May,
+1851, in the State of Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>The people of Wayland bought their library and
+provided a room in the "Town House" for its safe
+keeping. A librarian was chosen, whose salary was paid
+by the town, and the institution made its first delivery of
+books August seventh, 1850. Rev. John B. Wright was a
+member of the Massachusetts Legislature, from Wayland,
+during the session of 1851, and through his agency the Act
+"to authorize cities and towns to establish and maintain
+public libraries" was passed. A "Library Celebration"
+took place in Wayland, August twenty-sixth, 1851, and
+was a most interesting affair. Thus it came to pass that
+through the practical working of this man's idea public
+libraries were established, not only all over the State of
+Massachusetts, but throughout New England.</p>
+
+<p>Springfield was founded in 1636 by William
+Pyncheon, who with seven other men settled here, with
+their families, on May fourteenth of that year. They
+were bound together by mutual contract, with the
+design of having their colony consist of forty families.
+There was an especial provision that the number should
+never exceed fifty.</p>
+
+<p>The early prosperity of Springfield was considerably
+retarded by Indian hostilities.</p>
+
+<p>In October, 1675, the brown warriors of King
+Phillip made a descent upon the place, burning twenty-nine
+houses and killing three citizens&mdash;one of them a
+woman. The timely arrival of Major Pyncheon, Major
+Treat and Captain Appleton, with their troops, prevented<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[Pg 490]</a></span>
+further destruction and repulsed the attack of the Indians.
+Springfield was also the scene of operations
+during the troubles of 1786-87. At that time, General
+Shepperd was posted here, for the defence of the Armory.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, through much tribulation, has the thriving
+town attained its present prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>In its infant days, Springfield cherished a strong belief
+in witchcraft, as the following incident will testify:
+In the same year that Hartford set such a bad example
+to her northern neighbor on the Connecticut, by hanging
+Mrs. Greensmith, Springfield, not to be outdone, preferred
+a charge of witchcraft against one Hugh Parsons&mdash;a
+very handsome and pleasing young man, it
+seems, with whom all the women fell in love. Of
+course, this was not to be tolerated by the male population
+of the place, who hated him, as a natural consequence;
+and, accordingly, the handsomest man in Springfield
+was indicted and tried, on the grave accusation of
+being in league with the powers of evil. It is not surprising
+that the jury found him guilty. But, through
+some influence not explained, the judge, Mr. Pyncheon,
+stayed proceedings in his behalf until the matter could
+be laid before the General Court, in Boston. There the
+decision of the Springfield jury was reversed, and Mr.
+Parsons set at liberty. Whether after this his dangerous
+attractions were duly husbanded, or whether he went on,
+as of old, winning such wholesale admiration, we are not
+informed.</p>
+
+<p>One of the sensations of the hour during my sojourn
+in Springfield, was an encounter between the State Street
+Baptist Church and Hope Daggett, one of its members.
+The disaffected sister had at sundry times and in divers
+manners made herself so obnoxious to the congregation,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[Pg 491]</a></span>
+by her strong-minded peculiarities, that an officer was
+called upon the scene and requested to eject by force,
+if necessary, the eccentric and uncompromising Hope.
+Officer Maxwell, suiting the action to the word, seized
+the unruly sister, and without stopping to consider the
+sudden fame which this act would launch upon him,
+thrust her into the street, amid the cheers and taunts of
+friends and enemies. Now it was the peculiar misfortune
+of Miss Daggett to have a wooden leg, and on the day
+following this tragic affair the press of Springfield was
+devoted to various accounts of the engagement, in which
+Maxwell and the wooden leg figured alternately.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot leave Springfield without some mention of
+its leading paper, the Springfield <i>Republican</i>, which for
+many years has been one of the solid papers of the Bay
+State, and a representative organ in politics and literature.
+Its editor, Samuel Bowles, is an energetic business
+manager and a stirring politician, who has fought his
+way up from obscurity to a position in the front rank of
+American journalism.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[Pg 492]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h3>
+
+<h2>ST. LOUIS.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Approach to St. Louis.&mdash;Bridge Over the Mississippi.&mdash;View of the
+City.&mdash;Material Resources of Missouri.&mdash;Early History of St.
+Louis.&mdash;Increase of Population.&mdash;Manufacturing and Commercial
+Interests.&mdash;Locality.&mdash;Description of St. Louis in 1842.&mdash;Resemblance
+to Philadelphia.&mdash;Public Buildings.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Parks.&mdash;Fair
+Week.&mdash;Educational and Charitable Institutions.&mdash;Hotels.&mdash;Mississippi
+River.&mdash;St. Louis During the Rebellion.&mdash;Peculiar
+Characteristics.&mdash;The Future of the City.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">THE LEVEE AND GREAT BRIDGE AT ST. LOUIS.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_547.jpg" width="1024" height="647" alt="THE LEVEE AND GREAT BRIDGE AT ST. LOUIS." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The visitor to St. Louis, if from the east, will probably
+make his approach over the great bridge
+which spans the Mississippi. This bridge, designed by
+Captain Eads, and begun in 1867, was completed in
+1874, and is one of the greatest triumphs of American
+engineering. It consists of three spans, resting on four
+piers. The central span is 520 feet in width, and the
+side ones 500 feet each. They have a rise of sixty feet,
+sufficient to permit the passage of steamers under them,
+even at high water. The piers are sunk through the
+sand to the bed-rock, a distance of from ninety to one
+hundred and twenty feet, the work having been accomplished
+by means of iron wrought caissons and atmospheric
+pressure. Each span consists of four ribbed
+arches, made of cast steel. The bridge is two stories
+high, the lower story containing a double car track,
+and the upper one two horse-car tracks, two carriageways
+and two foot-ways. Reaching the St. Louis
+shore, the car and road ways pass over a viaduct of
+five arches, of twenty-seven feet span each, to Washington
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[Pg 493]</a></span>
+avenue, where the railway tracks run into a tunnel
+4,800 feet long, terminating near Eleventh street.
+Bridge and tunnel together cost eleven millions of
+dollars.</p>
+
+<p>This wonderful structure, which has few if any equals
+upon the continent, will impress the traveler with the
+commercial magnitude and enterprise of the great western
+city to which it forms the eastern portal. Looking from
+the car window he will see, first, the Mississippi, which,
+if at the period of low water, disappoints him with its
+apparent insignificance; but which, if it be at the time
+of its annual flood, has crept, on the St. Louis side, nearly
+to the top of the steep levee, and has filled up the broad
+valley miles away on the hither side, a rushing, turbulent
+river, turbid with the yellow waters of the Missouri,
+which, emptying into it twenty miles above, have scarcely,
+at this point, perfectly mingled with the clearer Mississippi.
+He will see next the river front of St. Louis&mdash;a
+continuous line of steamboats, towboats and barges,
+without a sail or mast among them; the levee rising in
+a steep acclivity twenty feet above the river's edge; and
+multitudinous mules, with their colored drivers, toiling
+laboriously, and by the aid of much whipping and swearing,
+up or down the steep bank, carrying the merchandise
+which has just been landed, or is destined to be
+loaded in some vessel's hold. Beyond the river rises the
+city, terrace above terrace, its outlines bristling with
+spires, and prominent above all, the dome of the Court
+House.</p>
+
+<p>St. Louis is situated in the very heart of the great
+Mississippi Valley, and a large share of its rich agricultural
+products and mineral stores are constantly poured
+into her lap. Pilot Knob and Iron Mountain, both<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[Pg 494]</a></span>
+containing inexhaustible supplies of the useful ore, are
+not far distant. The lead districts of Missouri include
+more than 6,000 square miles. In fifteen counties there
+is copper. In short, within one hundred miles of St.
+Louis, gold, iron, lead, zinc, copper, tin, silver, platina,
+nickel, emery, cobalt, coal, limestone, granite, pipe-clay,
+fire-clay, marble, metallic paints and salt are found, in
+quantities which will repay working. In the State
+there are twenty millions acres of good farming lands;
+five millions of acres are among the best in the world
+for grapes; and eight millions are particularly suited to
+the raising of hemp. There is, besides, a sufficiency of
+timber land. With all these resources from which to
+draw, it would be surprising if St. Louis did not become
+a leading city in the West. Situated, as she is, on the
+Mississippi River, about midway between its source and
+its mouth, the junction of the Missouri twenty miles above,
+and that of the Ohio about one hundred and seventy-five
+miles below, and being the river terminus of a complicated
+system of western railways, the towns and cities,
+and even the small hamlets of the north, south and
+west, and to a limited extent of the east also, all pay her
+tribute. As Chicago is the gateway to the East, by
+means of the great chain of lakes and rivers at whose
+head she sits, so St. Louis holds open the door to the
+South and the East as well, through the Mississippi and
+the Ohio rivers.</p>
+
+<p>In many respects the business rival of Chicago to-day,
+it has a history reaching half a century further back.
+While Chicago was still a howling wilderness, its only
+inhabitants the warlike Pottawatomies, who sometimes
+encamped upon the shores of its lake and river, St. Louis
+had a local habitation and a name. On February<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[Pg 495]</a></span>
+fifteenth, 1764, Pierre Laclede Siguest, an enterprising
+Frenchman, established at this point a depot for the furs
+of the vast region watered by the Mississippi and
+Missouri, and gave it the name of St. Louis. This was
+done by permission of the Governor General of Louisiana,
+which was then a French province. In the course
+of the year cabins were built, a little corn planted and
+the Indians placated. The Frenchmen seemed to have
+gotten along with the Indians tolerably well in those
+days. They had no hesitation in marrying squaws, even
+though they already possessed one lawful wife; they
+were good tempered and merry, and attempted no conversion
+of the Indians with a Bible in one hand and a
+sword in the other. So the two races got along nicely
+together.</p>
+
+<p>The peace of 1763 gave the country east of the Mississippi
+to the English, and the Frenchmen who had
+settled upon the Illinois made haste to remove to St.
+Louis, to avoid living under the rule of their "natural
+enemy." This was scarcely accomplished when the
+more terrible news reached them that Louis XV had
+ceded his possessions west of the Mississippi to Spain.
+For the next thirty years the town was a Spanish outpost
+of Louisiana, in which province no one not a
+Catholic could own land.</p>
+
+<p>To go to New Orleans and return was a voyage of
+ten months; but in that early day, and under such
+surprising difficulties, St. Louis began its commercial
+career. It exported furs, lead and salt, and imported
+the few necessaries required by the settlers, and beads,
+tomahawks, and other articles demanded by the Indians
+in exchange for furs. In 1799 the inhabitants numbered
+925, a falling off of 272 from the previous year.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[Pg 496]</a></span>
+In 1804, St. Louis passed to the United States, together
+with the whole country west of the Mississippi. In
+1811 the population had increased to 1400, and there
+were two schools in the town, one French and one
+English. In 1812 the portion of the territory lying
+north of the thirty-fifth degree of latitude was organized
+as Missouri Territory. In 1813 the first brick house
+was erected in St. Louis. In 1820 its population was
+4,928. In 1822 it was incorporated as a city.</p>
+
+<p>After the cession of Louisiana to the United States,
+the law forbidding Protestant worship, and requiring
+owners of land to profess the Catholic faith, was repealed,
+and men American born but of English descent began
+to pour into the town. In 1808 a newspaper was established,
+and in 1811 many of the old French names of
+the streets were changed to English ones. In 1812 the
+lead mines began to be worked to better advantage, on a
+larger scale, and agriculture assumed increasing importance.
+In 1815 the first steamboat made its appearance.</p>
+
+<p>In 1820 St. Louis cast its vote for slavery, and settled
+the question for Missouri. The population then was
+4,928, which in 1830 had increased to 5,852; 924
+additional inhabitants in ten years! From 1830 to 1860
+its population trebled every ten years, the census returns
+of the latter year giving it 160,773. In 1870 it had
+nearly doubled again, the number being 310,864 inhabitants.
+According to the United States Census report of
+1880, the population was 350,522, which made St. Louis
+the sixth city in the Union. Since that time it has been
+rapidly on the increase.</p>
+
+<p>St. Louis is among the first of our cities in the manufacture
+of flour, and is a rival of Cincinnati in the
+pork-packing business. It has extensive lumber mills,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">[Pg 497]</a></span>
+linseed-oil factories, provision-packing houses, manufactures
+large quantities of hemp, whisky and tobacco,
+has vast iron factories and machine shops, breweries,
+lead and paint works. In brief, it takes a rank second
+only to New York and Philadelphia in its manufactures,
+to which its prosperity is largely due. In 1874 the
+products of that year were valued at nearly $240,000,000,
+while it furnished employment to about 50,000 workmen.
+Great as are Chicago's manufacturing interests,
+St. Louis excels her in this respect, while she rivals the
+former city in her commercial interests. The natural
+commercial entreport of the Mississippi Valley, the
+commerce of St. Louis is immense. It receives and
+exports to the north, east and south, breadstuffs, live
+stock, provisions, cotton, lead, hay, salt, wool, hides and
+pelts, lumber and tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>St. Louis is perched high above the river, so that she
+is beyond the reach of all save the highest floods of that
+most capricious stream. She is built on three terraces,
+the first twenty, the second one hundred and fifty, and
+the third two hundred feet above low-water mark.
+The second terrace begins at Twenty-fifth street, and the
+third at C&ocirc;te Brillante, four miles west of the river.
+The surface here spreads out into a broad, beautiful
+plain. The highest hill in the neighborhood of the city
+was the lofty mound on the bank of the river, a relic of
+prehistoric times, and from which St. Louis derived its
+name of the "Mound City." Greatly to the regret of
+antiquarians a supposed necessity existed for the removal
+of this mound, and now no trace of it is left.</p>
+
+<p>In 1842 Charles Dickens published his <i>American
+Notes</i>, in which is found the following description of
+St. Louis:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[Pg 498]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"In the old French portion of the town the thoroughfares
+are narrow and crooked, and some of the houses
+are very quaint and picturesque, being built of wood,
+with tumble-down galleries before the windows, approachable
+by stairs, or rather ladders, from the street.
+There are queer little barber shops and drinking houses,
+too, in this quarter; and abundance of crazy old tenements,
+with blinking casements, such as may be seen in
+Flanders. Some of these ancient habitations, with high
+garret gable windows perking into the roofs, have a
+kind of French spring about them; and, being lopsided
+with age, appear to hold their heads askew,
+besides, as if they were grimacing in astonishment at
+the American improvements."</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing of this now seen in St. Louis, except
+in the narrower streets along the river, which remain a
+lasting relic of the ancient city. Yankee enterprise has
+obliterated, in the appearance of the city at least, all
+trace of its French and Spanish origin. The work of
+renovation must have commenced soon after Dickens'
+visit, for Lady Emeline Wortley, visiting St. Louis
+in 1849, describes it as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Merrily were huge houses going up in all directions.
+From our hotel windows we had a long view of gigantic
+and gigantically-growing-up dwellings, that seemed
+every morning to be about a story higher than we left
+them on the preceding night; as if they had slept, during
+the night, on guano, like the small boy in the American
+tale, who reposed on a field covered by it, and whose
+father, on seeking him the following day, found a gawky
+gentleman of eight feet high, bearing a strong resemblance
+to a Patagonian walking stick."</p>
+
+<p>If Chicago is a western reproduction of New York,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[Pg 499]</a></span>
+with its characteristic alertness preternaturally developed,
+St. Louis takes Philadelphia for her prototype.
+The merchants and statesmen plodding wearily across
+the continent during the latter part of the last century
+and early in this, found Philadelphia the chief city of the
+country, and went home with their minds filled with the
+distinguishing features of that city. These they reproduced,
+as far as was practicable, in their own young and
+growing town. They laid it out with regularity, the
+streets near the river, which describes a slight curve,
+running parallel to it. Further back, they describe
+straight lines, while the streets running from east to
+west are, for the most part, at right angles with those
+they cross. Imitating Philadelphia, the streets are
+named numerically from the river. Those crossing
+them have arbitrary names given them, while many
+Philadelphia nomenclatures, such as Market, Chestnut,
+Pine, Spruce, Poplar, Walnut and Vine, are repeated.
+The houses are also numbered in Philadelphia fashion,
+the streets parallel with the river being numbered north
+and south from Market street, and those running east
+and west taking their numbers from the river. In
+numbering, each street passes on to a new hundred;
+thus No. 318 is the ninth house above Third street on
+one side of the way.</p>
+
+<p>Not only in these superficial matters is Philadelphia
+imitated, but the resemblance is preserved in more substantial
+particulars. Many of the buildings are large,
+old-fashioned, square mansions, built of brick with white
+marble trimmings. There is less attempt at architectural
+display than in Chicago, apparently the main thought
+of the builders being to obtain substantiality. Yet there
+are many handsome buildings, both public and private.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[Pg 500]</a></span>
+One of the finest structures of its kind in the United
+States is the Court House, occupying the square bounded
+by Fourth, Fifth, Chestnut and Market streets. It is
+in the form of a Greek cross, of Grecian architecture,
+built of Genevieve limestone, and is surmounted by a
+lofty iron dome, from the cupola of which it is possible
+to obtain an extensive view of the city and its surroundings.
+The building cost $1,200,000. The fronts are
+adorned with beautiful porticoes. The Four Courts, in
+Clark avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, is
+a handsome and spacious building, constructed of limestone,
+at a cost of $1,000,000. A semi-circular iron jail
+is in its rear, so constructed that all its cells are under
+the observation of a single watchman. A Custom House
+and Post Office has recently been erected, at the corner
+of Olive and Eighth streets. It is of Maine granite,
+with rose-colored granite trimmings, three stories in
+height, with a French roof and Louvre dome, and occupies
+an entire square. The cost of the structure was
+$5,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>The Chamber of Commerce is the great commercial
+mart of the city, the heart of enormous business interests,
+whose arteries sometimes pulsate with feverish heat,
+and whose transactions affect business affairs to the
+furthest extent of the country. The edifice is the handsomest
+of its kind in America. It is five stories high,
+wholly built of gray limestone, and cost $800,000. The
+main hall of the Exchange is two hundred feet long, one
+hundred wide, and seventy high. In the gallery surrounding
+it strangers can at any time witness the proceedings
+on the floor, and watch how fortunes are made and
+unmade.</p>
+
+<p>The most imposing and ornate building of the city,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[Pg 501]</a></span>
+architecturally speaking, is the Columbia Life Insurance
+building, which is of rose-colored granite, in the Renaissance
+style, four stories high, with a massive stone cornice
+representing mythological figures. The roof is reached
+by an elevator, and affords a fine view.</p>
+
+<p>The city abounds in handsome churches. Most prominent
+among them all is Christ Church (Episcopal) at the
+corner of Thirteenth and Locust streets. It is in the
+cathedral gothic style, with stained-glass windows and
+lofty nave. The Catholic Cathedral, on Walnut street,
+between Second and Third streets, is an imposing structure
+with a front of polished freestone faced by a Doric
+portico. The Church of the Messiah (Unitarian), at
+the corner of Olive and Ninth streets, is a handsome
+gothic structure. The Jewish Temple, at the corner of
+Seventeenth and Pine streets, is one of the finest religious
+edifices in the city. There are many others which
+will challenge the visitor's attention and admiration as
+he passes through the streets of the city.</p>
+
+<p>The wholesale business of St. Louis is confined to
+Front, Second, Third and Main streets. Front street is
+one hundred feet wide, and extends along the levee,
+being lined with massive stores and warehouses. Fourth
+street contains the leading retail stores, and on every
+pleasant day it is filled with handsome equipages, while
+on its sidewalks are found the fashion and beauty of the
+city. Washington avenue is one of the widest and most
+elegant avenues in St. Louis, and west of Twenty-seventh
+street contains many beautiful residences. Pine, Olive
+and Locust streets, Chouteau avenue and Lucas Place,
+are also famed for their fine residences. Lindell or
+Grant avenue, running north and south, on the western
+boundary of the city, and slightly bending toward<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[Pg 502]</a></span>
+the river, is its longest street, being twelve miles in
+length.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">SHAW'S GARDEN AT ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_559.jpg" width="1024" height="646" alt="SHAW'S GARDEN AT ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The corporate limits of St. Louis extend eleven miles
+along the river, and about three miles inland. The
+densely built portion of the city is about six miles in
+length by two in width. Its public parks are one of its
+striking features. They embrace an aggregate of about
+2,000 acres. The most beautiful is Lafayette Park, lying
+between Park and Lafayette, Mississippi and Missouri
+avenues. In it are a bronze statue of Thomas H. Benton,
+by Harriet Hosmer, and a bronze statue of Washington.
+It is for pedestrians only, is elaborately laid out and
+ornamented, and is surrounded by magnificent residences.
+Missouri Park is a pretty little park at the foot of Lucas
+Place, containing a handsome fountain. St. Louis Place,
+Hyde Park and Washington Square are all attractive
+places of resort. Northern Park, on the bluffs to the
+north of the city, is noted for its fine trees, and contains
+180 acres. Forest Park is the great park of the city.
+It lies four miles west of the Court House, and contains
+1350 acres. The Des Pares runs through it, and the
+native forest trees are still standing. With great natural
+advantages, it requires only time and art to number it
+among the handsomest parks in the country. Tower
+Grove Park, in the southwest part of the city, contains
+227 acres, offers delightful drives among green lawns
+and charmingly arranged shrubbery.</p>
+
+<p>Adjoining this park is Shaw's Garden, which contains
+109 acres. It possesses a peculiar interest, from the
+manner in which it is arranged. It is divided into
+three sections, the first being the Herbaceous and Flower
+Garden, embracing ten acres, and including every flower
+which can be grown in the latitude of St. Louis, besides<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[Pg 503]</a></span>
+several greenhouses containing thousands of exotic and
+tropical plants. The second section, called the Fruticetum,
+comprises six acres devoted to fruit of all kinds.
+The Arboretum, or third section, includes twenty-five
+acres, and contains all kinds of ornamental and fruit trees.
+The Labyrinth is an intricate, hedge-bordered pathway,
+leading to a summer-house in the centre. There are
+also a museum and botanical library. This garden is
+entirely the result of private taste and enterprise, having
+been planned and executed by Henry Shaw, who has
+thrown it open to the public, and intends it as a gift to
+the city.</p>
+
+<p>Bellefontaine Cemetery is the most beautiful in the
+West. It is situated in the northern part of the city,
+about four and one-half miles from the Court House, and
+embraces 350 acres. It contains a number of fine
+monuments, while the trees and shrubbery are most
+tastefully arranged. Calvary Cemetery, north and not
+far distant, is nearly as large and quite as beautiful.
+Here, in these quiet cities of the dead, far from the bustle
+of the great town, the men and women of this western
+metropolis, whose lives were passed in turmoil and
+activity, find at last that rest which must come to all.</p>
+
+<p>The people of St. Louis are supplied with water
+from the river, the waterworks being situated at Bissell's
+Point, three and one-half miles north of the court house.
+Two pumping engines, each with a daily capacity of
+17,000,000 gallons, furnish an ample supply for all the
+needs of the great city.</p>
+
+<p>Fair week, which is usually the first week in October,
+is the great holiday and gala season of St. Louis. The
+writer of this article was once so fortunate as to visit the
+city early in this week. Every train of cars on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[Pg 504]</a></span>
+many lines which centre at St. Louis, and every steamboat
+which came from up or down the river, brought its
+living freight of men and women, who were out for a
+week's holiday, and, it may have been, paying their
+annual visit to the greatest city west of the Mississippi.
+The country roads leading to town were black with
+vehicles of all descriptions, and laden with men and
+merchandise. The laborers and mules upon the levee
+were busier than ever, receiving and transporting the
+articles to be exhibited and sold. Every hotel was
+crowded, and the surplus overflowed into boarding and
+lodging houses, so that their keepers undoubtedly reaped
+a golden harvest for that one week, at least. The streets
+were thronged with an immense and motley multitude:
+business men, on the alert to extend their trade and
+add to their gains; working women, who found an
+opportunity for a brief holiday; ladies of fashion who
+viewed the scene resting at their ease in their carriages;
+farmers from the rural districts, looking uncomfortable
+yet complaisant in their Sunday suits, and trying to take
+in all there was to see and understand; their wives, old-fashioned
+and countrified in their dress, and with a tired
+look upon their faces, which this week given up to idleness
+and sight-seeing could not quite dispel; sporting
+men, easily recognizable by their flashy dress and
+"horsey" talk; gamblers and blacklegs by the score,
+whose appearance and manners were too excessively
+gentlemanly to pass as quite genuine, and whose gains
+during the week were probably larger and more certain
+than those of any other class; western men, with their
+patois, borrowed apparently from the slang of every
+nation on the globe; Southerners, with their long hair,
+slouched hats and broad accent; river hands, whose most<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[Pg 505]</a></span>
+noticeable accomplishments seemed to be disposing of
+tobacco and inventing new oaths; negroes, whose facile
+natures entered heartily into the occasion, and on whose
+sleek, shining countenances the spirit of contentment
+was plainly visible; eastern men, with the Yankee
+intonation; Germans, in great numbers, patronizingly
+endorsing their adopted country, and selling lager beer
+with stolid content; Irishmen, whose preference was
+whisky, and who were ever ready for fun or a fight;
+beggars, plying their vocation with an extra whine,
+adopted to conceal an unwonted tendency to cheerfulness;
+magnates, who looked pompous and conscious of
+their own importance, but who were jostled and pushed
+with the democratic disregard for rank and station which
+characterizes an American crowd.</p>
+
+<p>Probably in no city in the Union would one find quite
+so cosmopolitan a multitude, representing all sections
+and all nationalities so impartially. In the business and
+populous centre of our country, here came all classes and
+peoples who had been born under, or had sought the
+protection of, our flag, to worship one week at the
+shrines of Ceres and Pomona.</p>
+
+<p>The fair grounds of the St. Louis Agricultural and
+Mechanical Association are three miles northwest of the
+Court House, and embrace eighty-five acres handsomely
+laid out and containing extensive buildings. The
+Amphitheatre will seat 40,000 persons. The street cars
+leading to these grounds were at all times filled with
+people, and in addition there was a constant procession
+of carriages, wagons and carts, going and returning.
+Within the enclosure the dense throng surged and swayed
+like a human whirlpool. The displays in the agricultural
+and mechanical departments were something astonishing;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[Pg 506]</a></span>
+for where in the world is there such grain grown and in
+such quantities, as in the Mississippi and Missouri valleys?
+Where are there such fat oxen, such sleek, self-satisfied
+cows, with such capacity for rich milk? Horses,
+hogs and sheep were all of the best, and indicated that the
+West is very far advanced in scientific stock raising. The
+farm implements displayed all sorts of contrivances for
+lightening and hastening the farmer's toil. It needed
+but a glance to show that farming in this region was no
+single-man, one-horse affair.</p>
+
+<p>In art the East as yet excels the West; for in the
+scramble after material gain the artistic nature has not
+been greatly cultivated, and its expressions are, for the
+most part, crude. But they give promise of future
+excellence. St. Louis has no picture gallery worthy the
+name, but excells in scientific and educational institutions.</p>
+
+<p>The Mercantile Library, at the corner of Fifth and
+Locust streets, contains 50,000 volumes, and its hall is
+decorated by paintings, coins and statuary, among which
+latter may be mentioned Miss Hosmer's life-size statue
+of Beatrice Cenci and &#338;none; a bronze copy of the
+Venus de Medici, a sculptured slab from the ruins of
+Nineveh, and marble busts of Thomas H. Benton and
+Robert Burns. The library with its reading room is
+free to strangers.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the library there is a public school library of
+38,000 volumes; an Academy of Science, founded in
+1856, with a large museum and a library of 3,000 volumes;
+and a Historical Society, founded in 1865, with
+a valuable historical collection. Washington University,
+organized in 1853, embraces the whole range of university
+studies except theology. With it is connected the
+Mary Institute, for the education of women, the Poly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[Pg 507]</a></span>technic
+School, and the Law School. The public school
+system of St. Louis is one of the best in the country, and
+its school-houses are commendably fine. The Roman
+Catholic College of the Christian Brothers has about
+four hundred students, and a library of 10,000 volumes.
+Concordia College (German Lutheran), established in
+1839, has a library of 4,500 volumes. Besides the numerous
+public schools, the Roman Catholics, who embrace
+a majority of the inhabitants, have about one hundred
+parochial, private and conventual schools. They have
+also a number of convents, charitable homes, asylums
+and hospitals.</p>
+
+<p>The hotels, chief amongst which are the new Southern
+Hotel, Lindell House, Planters' Hotel, Laclede Hotel
+and Barnum's Hotel, will compare favorably, in point of
+attendance, comfort and elegance, with any in the country.
+Horse cars traverse the city in every direction,
+rendering all points easily accessible, and carriages are in
+waiting at the depots and steamboat landings. Ferries
+ply continually to East St. Louis, on the Illinois shore,
+from the foot of Carr street, north of the bridge, and from
+the foot of Spruce street, south of it, the two points of
+departure being about a mile apart.</p>
+
+<p>So long as the Mississippi River washes the levee in
+front of the city, the citizens of St. Louis are in little
+danger of long remaining dull, for want of excitement.
+That river, one of the uneasiest of water courses, constantly
+furnishes fresh themes of interest, and even of
+anxiety. It has a singular penchant for a frequent
+change of channels, and occasionally threatens to desert
+to Illinois and leave St. Louis an inland town, with its
+high levee a sort of rampart to receive the mocking
+assaults of Chicago. Then, every spring, there is the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[Pg 508]</a></span>
+annual freshet, which, once in ten or fifteen years, creeps
+up over the top of the levee, and finds its way into
+cellars and first floors of stores and warehouses. Occasionally
+there is a severe winter, when ice is formed upon
+the river as far south even as St. Louis; and when it
+breaks up in the spring, mischief is sure to ensue. A
+hundred steamboats are in winter quarters along the
+levee, their noses in the sand, and their hulls extending
+riverward, fixed in the ice. At last the great mass of
+congealed water, extending up the river hundreds of
+miles, begins to move down stream. The motion is at
+first scarcely perceptible; but, suddenly, the ice cracks
+and breaks, and fragments begin to glide swiftly with
+the current of the river. The various masses create conflicting
+currents, and, presently, the surface of the stream
+is like a whirlpool. Some boats are crushed like egg
+shells between the floes; cables snap, and others are
+drawn out into the midst of the whirling waters and are
+fortunate indeed if they are not overwhelmed or forced
+upon the ice. Meantime, consternation reigns upon the
+levee. The multitudes are powerless to prevent, yet
+make frantic and futile efforts while they watch, the disaster.
+At the breaking up of the ice in 1866, seventeen
+steamboats were crushed and sunk in a few minutes.
+Then there are other river disasters; steamboats burned;
+others struck on snags and sunk; and now and then a
+boiler explosion makes up the tale of horrors and prevents
+the Mississippi from ever becoming monotonous
+or uninteresting.</p>
+
+<p>St. Louis was most unfavorably affected by the war,
+and made to expiate her political sin of 1820. On the
+border land between the North and the South, the conflict
+was carried on in her very midst. Sectional strife<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">[Pg 509]</a></span>
+was most bitter and keen. There was no neutrality,
+and there could be none. All were either for or against;
+families were divided in deadly strife; and while the
+city suffered to a terrible degree from this condition of
+affairs, in back counties whole sections were depopulated.
+The population being largely southern, either by birth
+or descent, its sympathies were with the South. The
+class truly loyal was the Germans, who numbered about
+60,000 of the population, and who were characterized
+by the Secessionists as the "D&mdash;&mdash; Dutch." The
+blockade of the river reduced the whole business of the
+city to about a third of its former amount. Yet, when
+the war was ended, St. Louis was quick to recover her
+prostrated energies. In 1866, and but two years after
+the war, the city did more business than in any preceding
+year; and, relieved from the incubus of slavery, which
+had retarded its progress, it aroused itself to new life.</p>
+
+<p>With the Quaker-like simplicity of its outward appearance,
+its absence of business rush, and its general
+tranquillity, St. Louis' resemblance to the Quaker City
+ceases. It is a town of composite character, but from
+its earliest existence has been under Roman Catholic
+domination. Even now the Roman Catholic element
+predominates in its population. And its French and
+Spanish founders, though their quaint buildings are torn
+down and replaced by more modern ones, and their very
+streets re-named, have left their impress upon the city.
+Its many places of amusement, compared to its population,
+its general gayety, its stores closed by sunset in
+winter, and before sunset in summer, its billiard rooms
+open on Sunday, and its ball-playing on the same day,
+all give indication of its being the home of a people
+whose ancestors had no New England prejudices against<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[Pg 510]</a></span>
+worldly amusements, and in favor of sobriety, decorum,
+industry, and the observance of the Sabbath.</p>
+
+<p>St. Louis presents a pleasing contrast to many other
+western cities. Its prosperity is substantial&mdash;not a sham.
+The capital which has paid for these costly places of business
+and elegant residences, and is invested in these gigantic
+enterprises, has been created out of the immense material
+wealth of the State&mdash;not borrowed on a factitious credit.
+Its merchants do not make princely fortunes in a day,
+but what they acquire they keep. With so satisfactory
+a past, the errors of its youth atoned for, the future of
+St. Louis cannot fail to be a brilliant one.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[Pg 511]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h3>
+
+<h2>SYRACUSE.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Glimpses on the Rail.&mdash;Schenectady.&mdash;Valley of the Mohawk.&mdash;"Lover's
+Leap."&mdash;Rome and its Doctor.&mdash;Oneida Stone&mdash;-The
+Lo Race.&mdash;Oneida Community.&mdash;The City of Salt.&mdash;The Six
+Nations.&mdash;The Onondagas.&mdash;Traditions of Red Americans.&mdash;Hiawatha.&mdash;Sacrifice
+of White Dogs.&mdash;Ceremonies.&mdash;The Lost
+Tribes of Israel.&mdash;Witches and Wizards.&mdash;A Jules Verne Story.&mdash;The
+Salt Wells of Salina.&mdash;Lake Onondaga.&mdash;Indian Knowledge
+of Salt Wells.&mdash;"Over the Hills and Far Away."&mdash;A Castle.&mdash;Steam
+Canal Boats.&mdash;Adieux.&mdash;Westward Ho!</p></div>
+
+
+<p>The distance from Albany to Syracuse by rail, on
+the line of the New York Central, is about one
+hundred and forty-two miles, or reckoned by language
+on the dial, between six and seven hours.</p>
+
+<p>Schenectady, the first stopping point on the route outward,
+was once hovered under the motherly wings of
+Albany&mdash;her lawful progeny. The embryo city, however,
+had aspirations of her own, and set up in the world
+for herself. She now rejoices in a population of about
+twenty-five thousand, and has separated herself from
+the maternal skirt by seventeen miles of intervening
+country. Union College, the <i>alma mater</i> of many of
+the sons of New York and her sister States, is located
+at this point.</p>
+
+<p>The route from Albany to the junction of the Watertown
+and Ogdensburg Road, at Rome, takes us through
+the Valley of the Mohawk&mdash;one of the loveliest valleys
+in the State. At Little Falls the scenery is wild and
+rugged, and looking out from the car window to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[Pg 512]</a></span>
+opposite hillside, where the waters break into foam over
+the rocks, set in a dark framework of pines, the imaginative
+traveler conjectures at once that this must be the
+scene of the "Lover's Leap"&mdash;a bit of romance rife in
+this region. But the Mohawk rushes on, unmindful of
+those legendary lovers; the heartless conductor, who
+cares nothing about dreams, shouts "all aboard!" from
+the platform, and the screech of the engine whistle
+echoes down the valley, as the train is once more in
+motion.</p>
+
+<p>At Utica we make a longer stop. This point is the
+largest place between Albany and Syracuse, and is as
+handsome a city as sits on the banks of the Mohawk.
+The Black River Railroad joins the main line of the
+New York Central here, and it is also the location of the
+State Lunatic Asylum.</p>
+
+<p>Rome comes next in order, in importance and population,
+and is the last place of any note on the road to
+Syracuse. It is a stirring little city of about ten or
+eleven thousand inhabitants, and at least some of its
+citizens have mastered the art of advertising, if one may
+judge from the pamphlets which flood the arriving and
+departing trains. We are repeatedly made aware of the
+fact that one of the dwellers in Rome is a doctor, and
+that he doats on curing&mdash;not corns, but cancers.</p>
+
+<p>The Midland Road from Oswego, and the Watertown
+Road&mdash;those connecting arterial threads from Lake Ontario
+and Northern New York&mdash;unite with the main
+artery, the Central, here, and the flow of human freight
+down these channels is continuous and unceasing.</p>
+
+<p>The second station from Rome, on the road to Syracuse,
+is Oneida&mdash;so named from the tribe of red men
+who, less than a century ago, occupied this particular<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[Pg 513]</a></span>
+region. A tradition once existed among the Oneidas
+that they were a branch of the Onondagas, to whom
+they were allied by relationship and language. Long
+ago they lived on the southern shore of Oneida Lake,
+near the mouth of the creek, but afterwards their
+habitation was made higher up the valley. The famous
+"Oneota" or <i>Oneida Stone</i> became their talisman and
+the centre of their attractions. Many of their tribe
+were distinguished as orators and statesmen.</p>
+
+<p>The Oneida "Community" live about two miles back
+from the station, and, notwithstanding their peculiar
+religious belief and social practices, they have achieved
+a reputation for quiet thrift, industry and harmony,
+which their more Puritanic neighbors would do well to
+emulate.</p>
+
+<p>But, at last, our train enters the outskirts of Syracuse,
+and penetrating the heart of the city, rumbles inside the
+gates of the New York Central Station at this place.
+Outside, all is hurry and bustle, and confusion, as we
+descend the steps and elbow our way through the crowd,
+to run the gauntlet of hack drivers and baggage expressmen,
+with their plated caps and deafening calls.</p>
+
+<p>Syracuse is sometimes known as the Central City, on
+account of its location near the geographical centre of
+New York. It was first settled in 1787, and did not
+pass the limits of a small village until the completion
+of the Erie canal, in 1825. Two canals and three or
+four lines of railway now centre here, and contribute to
+the growth of this enterprising city. The region surrounding
+Syracuse is rife with the romantic history of
+that once powerful Indian Confederacy known as the
+Six Nations, now fast fading from the memory of men.
+The site of their ancient Council House was on Onon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[Pg 514]</a></span>daga
+Creek, a few miles distant from the city, and is
+still held sacred to their traditions by the remnant of the
+lost tribes now occupying the Indian reservation. The
+Onondagas became the leading nation of the Confederacy.
+No business of importance, touching the Six
+Nations, was transacted, except at Onondaga. They held
+the key of the great Council House; they kept the sacred
+council fire ever burning. From what portion of the
+country they emigrated before occupying this region is
+unknown, but there is a very early tradition among them
+that, many hundred moons ago, their forefathers came
+from the North, having inhabited a territory along the
+northern banks of the St. Lawrence. After a lapse of
+time there was an exodus of the powerful tribe to the
+hills and hollows of Onondaga.</p>
+
+<p>The River God of this nation was named Hiawatha&mdash;which
+meant "very wise." He always embarked in a
+white canoe, which was carefully guarded in a lodge
+especially set apart for that purpose. Their favorite
+equipments were white. White plumes, from the heron,
+were worn in their head-bands when they went on the
+war path; white dogs were sacrificed. The yearly sacrifice
+of the dogs, among the Onondagas, was a ceremony
+of great importance with the tribe, and occurred at one
+of the five stated festivals of the Six Nations. On the
+great sacrificial day it was the habit of the people to
+assemble at the Council House in large numbers. Early
+in the morning, immense fires were built, guns were discharged,
+and loud hallooing increased the noise. Half
+a cord of wood, arranged in alternate layers, was placed
+near the Council House, by a select committee of managers,
+for the sacrificial offering. The two officiating
+priests for the occasion, as well as the high priest, were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[Pg 515]</a></span>
+dressed in long, loose robes of white. At about nine
+o'clock in the morning the two priests appear. The
+white dogs following them are painted with red figures,
+and adorned with belts of wampum, feathers and
+ribbons. The dogs are then lassooed and suffocated, amid
+yells and the firing of guns. After some intervening
+ceremonies, the details of which are too long for recital
+here, a procession is formed, led by the priests in white,
+followed by the managers, bearing the dogs on their
+shoulders. A chant is sung as the procession marches
+around the burning pile three successive times; the dogs
+are then laid at the feet of the officiating priest, a prayer
+is offered to the Great Spirit and the high priest, lifting
+the dogs, casts them into the fire. After this, baskets of
+herbs and tobacco are thrown, at intervals, into the fire,
+as propitiating sacrifices.</p>
+
+<p>Their idea of these sacrifices was, that the sins of the
+people were, in some mysterious manner, transferred
+yearly to the two priests in white, who, in turn, conveyed
+them to the dogs. Thus the burnt offering expiated the
+sins of the people for a year.</p>
+
+<p>These ideas and customs are so singularly similar to
+the ancient Jewish religious rites as to suggest a possible
+origin from the same source. The mystical council fire
+of the Six Nations, which was kept always burning by
+the Onondagas, who had charge of it, and which, if extinguished,
+was supposed to prophesy the destruction of
+the nation, may have a deeper meaning than that attached
+to it by the chiefs themselves. It may possibly
+point to a common parentage with the ever-burning
+flame in the Vestal Temple at Rome, whose eclipse endangered
+the safety of the city. Another point of
+resemblance may be noted. Time, which is reckoned<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[Pg 516]</a></span>
+among the Red men by moons, also suggests the Jewish
+year, which began with the new moon, and was reckoned
+by lunar months.</p>
+
+<p>The Six Nations had a firm belief in witches and
+wizards, and executed them, on the discovery of their
+supposed witchcraft, with a zeal and spirit worthy of our
+early Christian fathers. One old Indian used to relate
+a story something on the Jules Verne order. He said
+that, as he stepped out of his cabin one evening, he sank
+down deep into an immense and brilliantly-lighted
+cavern, full of flaming torches. Hundreds of witches
+and wizards were there congregated, who immediately
+ejected him. Early next morning he laid the matter
+before the assembled chiefs at the Council House, who
+asked him whether he could recognize any whom he
+saw? The sagacious Red man thought he could, and
+singled out many through the village, male and female,
+who were doomed to an untimely execution, on the evidence
+of this person's word.</p>
+
+<p>The Senacas, another numerous and powerful nation
+of the Confederacy, were always noted for the talent
+and eloquence of their orators and statesmen. Corn
+Planter, Red Jacket, and other celebrities, came of this
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>Syracuse is celebrated for its salt, the country over;
+and the most singular thing about it is that the salt
+wells surround a body of fresh water. This sheet of
+water bears the name of Onondaga Lake, and is six
+miles long by one mile wide. It is about a mile and a
+half from the heart of the city. A stratum of marl,
+from three to twelve feet thick, underlaid by marly clay,
+separates the salt springs from the fresh waters of the
+lake. The wells vary in depth, from two hundred to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[Pg 517]</a></span>
+three hundred feet, and the brine is forced from them,
+by pumps, into large reservoirs, which supply the evaporating
+works. The salt is separated from the water
+partly by solar evaporation and partly by boiling. The
+reservoirs for the solar salt evaporation cover about
+seven hundred acres of land. The brine is boiled in
+large iron kettles, holding about a hundred gallons,
+which are placed in blocks of brick work, in one or two
+long rows, the whole length of the block. It takes
+about thirty-three and a fourth gallons of brine to make
+a bushel of salt, which will average from fifty to fifty-six
+pounds in weight.</p>
+
+<p>These salt wells were known to the Indians at a very
+early period&mdash;Onondaga salt being in common use
+among the Delawares in 1770, by whom it was brought
+to Quebec for sale.</p>
+
+<p>Le Moyne, a Jesuit missionary, who had lived among
+the Hurons, and who first came to Onondaga in 1653,
+with a party of Huron and Onondaga chiefs, is supposed
+to be the first white man who personally knew about
+the springs, though Father Lallemant had previously
+written of them. In a letter which Colonel Comfort
+Tyler wrote to Dr. Jeremiah Van Rensselaer, in 1822,
+the first manufacture of salt at this place by the whites,
+in 1788, is described. He says: "In the month of
+May, 1788, the family, wanting salt, obtained about a
+pound from the Indians, which they had made from the
+waters of the springs upon the shore of the lake. The
+Indians offered to discover the water to us. Accordingly,
+I went with an Indian guide to the lake, taking along
+an iron kettle of fifteen gallons capacity. This he
+placed in his canoe and steered out of the mouth of
+Onondaga Creek, easterly, into a pass since called Mud<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[Pg 518]</a></span>
+Creek. After passing over the marsh, then covered with
+about three feet of water, and steering toward the bluff
+of hard land (now that part of Syracuse known as
+Salina), he fastened his canoe, pointed to a hole, apparently
+artificial, and said: "There is the salt!"</p>
+
+<p>Salina, or the first ward, as it is frequently spoken of,
+lies partly upon the shores of this lovely lake of Onondaga,
+and enjoys the advantages of a close proximity to
+the saline atmosphere of the wells. The drives in the
+vicinity of the lake and about the neighboring localities
+afford an ever-shifting panorama of beautiful views, with
+glimpses of the blue Onondaga at all points. On a
+breezy day, in the early part of May, 1875, when the
+air was soft with hints of coming summer, and the violets
+along the river banks were just putting on their
+hoods of blue, I took one of those long and delightful
+drives which so exhilarates the blood and gives a kind
+of champagne sparkle to the mind. If there are any
+known remedial agents which can possibly be an improvement
+on pure air and sunshine, will you tell us
+what they are, Dr. Dio Lewis? My companion was
+keen-witted and full of jollity; we had a spirited
+animal, and miles upon miles of space quickly vanished
+behind us, as we sped onward over the smooth roadway.
+The hills seemed to open wide their portals and close
+again as we passed; the valleys allured us with their
+romantic, winding roads, and Lake Onondaga, viewed
+from all points of the compass, tossed itself into a multitude
+of little waves which sparkled in the sunshine like
+a thousand diamonds. The sky, changeful as April,
+alternated between floating fields of atmospheric blue
+and pillars of gray cloud. As we rounded the last
+curve of the lake, the tall chimneys and long, low<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[Pg 519]</a></span>
+buildings of the salt works at Salina came into view,
+forming a more conspicuous than elegant feature of the
+landscape.</p>
+
+<p>The principal street for retail business in Syracuse is
+named Salina, and it always wears an air of brisk trade
+and enterprise. The large dry goods houses of McCarthy
+and of Milton Price are located on this street. Some
+of the public edifices are built of Onondaga limestone,
+quarried a few miles out of the city. It makes very
+handsome building material, as the Court House and
+other structures will testify. The ranking hotels of
+Syracuse are the Vanderbilt and Globe, though the
+Remington, Syracuse and Empire Hotels are well-kept
+and well-conducted houses.</p>
+
+<p>The Erie Canal runs through the heart of the city,
+and the bridges over it are arranged with draws. The
+first steam canal boat I ever saw lay moored at this
+place, at the corner of Water and Clinton streets. It
+was gay with new paint and floating pennons, and
+created quite a sensation on its first trip out. It belonged
+to Greenway, the great ale man, and was named after
+his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>The High School, on West Genesee street, has a
+delightful location on the banks of Onondaga Creek,
+and combines with its other advantages that of a public
+library. It has a free reading room, thrown open to the
+city at large, and a choice collection of many thousand
+volumes adorn its shelves. Sitting at the open window
+and listening to the noisy waters of the creek as it flows
+past, intermingled with an occasional bird carol overhead,
+I could almost imagine myself out in the heart of
+the country, away from the struggling masses of the
+crowded marts, in their mad race after wealth&mdash;with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[Pg 520]</a></span>
+nothing more inharmonious around me than the bird
+orchestra of some imaginary June sky, the low sweep
+of waters and the sound of the summer wind among
+the pines.</p>
+
+<p>Syracuse rates herself sixty thousand strong, and I
+am unable to say whether the hard figures will bear her
+out in this assertion. Perhaps, however, a small margin
+of egotism ought to be subtracted from our estimate of
+ourselves, especially when "ourselves" means a city.</p>
+
+<p>James street is decidedly the handsomest thoroughfare
+in Syracuse. It is wide, well paved, and two miles or
+more in length. On it are congregated, with a few
+exceptions, the finest residences of the city. These are
+surrounded, for the most part, by spacious grounds, and
+some of them by groves of primeval forest growths.
+The street is an inclined plane on one side, with a gentle
+declivity on the other. From its top, quite an extensive
+prospect opens to the view, taking in most of the city of
+salt, and its enclosing amphitheatre of hills. Looking
+down the street, and over across the valley, the gray
+turrets of Yates' Castle can be seen, nearly hidden by
+its surrounding trees.</p>
+
+<p>"A castle?" I hear my imaginary reader question.
+"Yes," I answer, a castle,&mdash;the real, genuine, article&mdash;towers,
+turrets, gate-keeper's lodge and all; nothing
+lacking but moat and drawbridge, to transport one to
+the times of tournament and troubadours&mdash;of knight-errantry
+and fair ladies riding to the chase with hawk
+and hound.</p>
+
+<p>A Latin motto, on the coat of arms adorning the
+arched gateway, points to an ancestry of noble blood.
+But, alas for greatness! not even the lodge-keeper's
+family knew the meaning of the Latin inscription. We<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[Pg 521]</a></span>
+learned, however, that the armorial emblems were of
+English origin, and belonged, possibly, to the times of
+the royal Georges. The grounds about the castle are
+quite in keeping with the building itself. Winding
+roads, rustic bridges, statuary, summer-houses and fountains,
+fitly environ this antique pile.</p>
+
+<p>Just opposite this place, on the hill-top, stands the
+Syracuse University&mdash;its white walls outlined in bold
+relief against the sky. It is a Methodist institution, and
+its chief office is to prepare young men for the ministry,
+and teach the youthful idea how to shoot, in accordance
+with modern theology. The location is breezy enough,
+and high enough, to satisfy almost any one's aspirations,
+and, if height has anything to do with ideas, the thoughts
+of these young students ought to be well-nigh heavenly.</p>
+
+<p>But, at last, we are compelled to say good-bye to
+Syracuse, and all its pleasant associations, to say nothing
+of its salt. Westward the star of Empire takes its way,
+and we have engaged a seat on the same train. It is
+with real regret that we part company with these cities of
+our beloved New York&mdash;Syracuse not the least among
+them. But the arrival of the midnight "Lightning
+Express" for Rochester cuts short our musings, and we
+are soon whirling away in the darkness, leaving the
+country of the Onondagas far behind us, slumbering in
+the arms of night.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">[Pg 522]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>TORONTO.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Situation of Toronto.&mdash;The Bay.&mdash;History.&mdash;Rebellion of 1837.&mdash;Fenian
+Invasion of 1866.&mdash;Population.&mdash;General Appearance.&mdash;Sleighing.&mdash;Streets.&mdash;Railways.&mdash;Commerce.&mdash;Manufactures.&mdash;Schools
+and Colleges.&mdash;Queen's Park.&mdash;Churches.&mdash;Benevolent
+Institutions.&mdash;Halls and Other Public Buildings.&mdash;Hotels.&mdash;Newspapers.&mdash;General
+Characteristics and Progress.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Toronto, the capital of the Province of Ontario,
+is situated on the northern shore of Lake Ontario,
+on a beautiful and nearly circular bay, about five miles
+in length, formed by a long, narrow, curved tongue of
+land, extending out into the lake in a southwest direction.
+This harbor is capable of receiving the largest vessels
+upon the lake, and is defended at its entrance by a fort
+upon the extreme end of the peninsula, which is called
+Gibraltar Point. This fort was thoroughly repaired in
+1864, and mounted with the most efficient modern
+ordnance.</p>
+
+<p>Toronto was founded in 1794, by Governor Simcoe,
+who gave it the name of York. In 1813, it was twice
+captured by the Americans, who burned the public
+buildings and destroyed the fortifications. It was incorporated
+as a city in 1834, when its name was changed
+to Toronto, an Indian word, signifying "The place of
+meeting." It was the headquarters of the Rebellion in
+1837, when Sir Francis Head, then Governor of Upper
+Canada, dissolved the House, for having stopped the
+supplies, as a retaliatory measure upon his refusal to grant
+an elective legislative council. Sir Francis had sent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">[Pg 523]</a></span>
+away from Upper Canada the whole of the Queen's
+army, but putting himself at the head of the militia, he
+succeeded in suppressing the insurrection. The city
+also suffered severely from the fire of 1849. It has no
+manufactures of any importance, but, like most of
+Western Canada, is chiefly dependent upon agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>The growth of Toronto has been more rapid than
+that of any other city in Canada. Though of such
+recent origin compared with many Canadian towns, it is
+now second only to Montreal in size and population, the
+former having increased from twelve hundred in 1837 to
+upwards of eighty thousand at the present time. The
+site of the city is low, the surrounding country being
+level, but free from swamp and perfectly dry. The
+ground rises gently from the shores of the lake. The
+scenery in the vicinity is tame and comparatively monotonous,
+though not unpleasing. The city lies along
+the shores of the lake for something over two miles, and
+extends inward about a mile and a half.</p>
+
+<p>As one approaches Toronto its outlines appear picturesque,
+being varied and broken by an unusual number
+of handsome spires. The traveler will be pleasantly
+surprised, as he enters the city, at the extent and excellence
+of its public edifices, the number of its churches,
+and its general handsome and well-to-do aspect. Many
+of the houses and business structures are built of light-colored
+brick, having a soft and cheerful appearance.
+The streets are laid out regularly, crossing each other at
+right angles, and, as a general thing, are well paved. In
+the winter time they are filled with sleighs, and the air
+is alive with the music of sleigh-bells. These sleighs
+are, some of them, most elegant in form and finish, and
+provided with most costly furs. Every boy has his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">[Pg 524]</a></span>
+hand-sled or "toboggan." At the same season of the
+year skating upon the bay is a favorite amusement.
+King and Yonge streets are the leading thoroughfares
+and fashionable promenades, being lined with handsome
+retail stores which would do credit to any city in
+America. Other important business streets are Front,
+Queen, York, Wellington and Bay.</p>
+
+<p>Five railways centre at Toronto, connecting it with
+every section of Canada, the West and the South. The
+principal of these are the Grand Trunk and Great
+Western railways, which connect the city by through
+lines with the East and West. While navigation is
+open magnificent steamers connect it with all points on
+the lake, and carry on an extensive commerce. It
+imports large quantities of lumber, both manufactured
+and unmanufactured; wheat and other grain, soap, salt
+and glue; while foundries, distilleries, breweries, tanneries,
+rope-walks, paper and flour mills, furnish
+products which reach markets throughout the Provinces
+and States.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, CANADA.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_583.jpg" width="1024" height="619" alt="UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, CANADA." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Toronto is the centre of the Canadian school system,
+and its educational institutions are numerous and of the
+highest order. It has Normal and Model schools, in
+the first of which teachers exclusively are trained.
+These schools, with the Educational Museum, built in
+the plain Italian style, are picturesquely grouped in
+park-like grounds, on Church street. The Museum
+contains a collection of curiosities, and a number of good
+paintings and casts. The University of Toronto exhibits
+the finest buildings in the city, and the finest of their
+kind in America. They stand in a large park, approached
+by College avenue, half a mile in length, and
+shaded by double rows of trees. The buildings, which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">[Pg 525]</a></span>
+are of Norman architecture, of gray rubble stone, trimmed
+with Ohio and Caen stone, form the sides of a large
+quadrangle. It was founded in 1843; possesses a
+library of twenty thousand volumes, and a fine museum
+of natural history, and has attached to it an observatory.
+Knox College, Presbyterian, is situated a short
+distance north of the University, and is a large building,
+in the Collegiate-Gothic style. Trinity College, in Queen
+street west, overlooks the bay, and is an extensive and
+picturesque structure, turreted and gabled, and surrounded
+by extensive grounds. Upper Canada College
+is found in King street near John.</p>
+
+<p>Adjoining the University grounds is Queen's Park,
+embracing the most elevated quarter of the city, and
+including fifty acres, handsomely laid out. In this park
+a brownstone shaft, surmounted by a colossal statue of
+Britannia, perpetuates the memory of the Canadians who
+fell in repelling the Fenian invasion in 1866. This
+park is from one hundred to two hundred feet above the
+level of the lake, and is surrounded by handsome public
+buildings and private residences.</p>
+
+<p>The Episcopal Cathedral of St. James, at the corner
+of King and Church streets, is a spacious edifice, in the
+early English style, with lofty tower and spire, and
+elaborate open roof. It was built in 1852, and is
+surrounded by well shaded grounds. The Roman
+Catholic Cathedral of St. Michael, fronting on Bond
+street, is a large, decorated Gothic structure, with stained
+windows, and a spire two hundred and fifty feet high.
+The Wesleyan Methodist Church, in McGill street, is
+the finest church of that denomination in America. Its
+massive tower is surmounted by graceful pinnacles, and
+its interior is tastefully and richly decorated. Knox's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">[Pg 526]</a></span>
+Church has a beautiful spire. One of the finest church
+edifices in the Dominion is the Jarvis street Baptist
+Church, in the decorated Gothic style. St. Andrews
+Presbyterian is a massive stone structure, which dates
+back to the Norman style of architecture.</p>
+
+<p>Toronto contains many benevolent institutions, hospitals
+and asylums. Prominent among them is the
+Provincial Lunatic Asylum, a large and handsome
+building, situated west of the city, and surrounded by
+two hundred acres of handsomely ornamented grounds.
+The General Hospital is a fine structure, east of the city,
+in Don street, near Sumach.</p>
+
+<p>The Normal School Building, with its beautifully
+laid out grounds, is one of the most attractive spots in
+the city, and the building is said to be the largest of
+the kind in America. There is very little fine scenery
+in the environs.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most strikingly beautiful buildings of
+Toronto is Osgood Hall, in Queen street, an imposing
+structure, of elegant Ionic architecture, the seat of the
+Superior Law Courts of Upper Canada, and containing
+an extensive law library. St. Lawrence Hall, in
+King street, is a stately structure, in the Italian style,
+surmounted by a dome, containing a public hall and
+reading-room. Masonic Hall, an attractive stone
+building, is in Toronto street. The city contains two
+Opera Houses: the Grand, capable of seating two
+thousand persons, and the Royal, with accommodations
+for about fifteen hundred persons. The Post Office, a
+handsome stone building, stands near the head of Toronto
+street. The Custom House is of cut stone, of imposing
+proportions, extending from Front street to the Esplanade.
+The City Hall stands in Front street near the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">[Pg 527]</a></span>
+Lake Shore, in the midst of an open square, and is an
+unpretentious structure, in the Italian style. Near by is
+the extensive Lawrence Market. The Court House
+is in Church street.</p>
+
+<p>Of the hotels, the Rossin House, corner of King and
+York streets; Queen's Hotel, in Front street; the
+American House, in Yonge street; and the Revere
+House, in King street, are the most noteworthy.</p>
+
+<p>Toronto takes a front rank in literature, a large number
+of newspapers and periodicals, daily, weekly, and
+monthly, being issued from its presses. It is unlike, in
+many respects, its sister cities of Lower Canada. It has
+more of a nineteenth century air, and more of American
+and less of European characteristics, than Montreal and
+Quebec. The French Canadians form a smaller proportion
+of its inhabitants. The people in the streets are
+well dressed and comfortable looking, stout and sturdy,
+though not so tall, on an average, as the people of New
+York. An educated population is growing up, and
+Toronto already ranks well, in general intelligence and
+public enterprise, with other cities of like magnitude
+in the States while it outranks all others on Canadian
+soil.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">[Pg 528]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h3>
+
+<h2>WASHINGTON.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Situation of the National Capital.&mdash;Site Selected by Washington.&mdash;Statues
+of General Andrew Jackson, Scott, McPherson,
+Rawlins.&mdash;Lincoln Emancipation Group.&mdash;Navy Yard Bridge.&mdash;Capitol
+Building.&mdash;The White House.&mdash;Department of
+State, War and Navy.&mdash;The Treasury Department.&mdash;Patent
+Office.&mdash;Post Office Department.&mdash;Agricultural Building.&mdash;Army
+Medical Museum.&mdash;Government Printing Office.&mdash;United
+States Barracks.&mdash;Smithsonian Institute.&mdash;National
+Museum.&mdash;The Washington Monument.&mdash;Corcoran Art Gallery.&mdash;National
+Medical College.&mdash;Deaf and Dumb Asylum.&mdash;Increase
+of Population.&mdash;Washington's Future Greatness.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Washington, the Capital of the United States
+of America, is situated in the District of
+Columbia, on the left bank of the Potomac, between the
+Anacostia or eastern branch of that river, and about one
+hundred and eighty-five miles from the mouth of Chesapeake
+Bay. At an early period, indeed, before the clamor
+of war had fairly ceased, or the proud standard of
+England had been driven from its shores, the necessity
+of a territory which should be under the exclusive
+jurisdiction of Congress had engaged the attention of
+the founders of the new Republic. The possession of
+such a territory formed an important feature in the
+debates upon the framing of the Constitution, and it was
+only forty-eight days after the last act of ratification
+that the Capital City was, by solemn enactment of
+Congress, located on the eastern shore of the beautiful
+Potomac.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">[Pg 529]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The site of the Capital was selected by General
+Washington, the beloved first President of the Republic,
+and covers an undulating tract on the east bank of the
+river. From the rugged elevations on the borders of
+Rock Creek, a crescent-shaped ridge crosses the northern
+portion of the city, which is abruptly sundered, as it were,
+to admit the passage of a small stream called the Tiber.
+From this point the ridge ascends, gradually expanding
+into the extensive plateau of Capitol Hill, overlooking
+the Anacostia on the east. Within this encircling ridge
+the surface declines, in gentle slopes and terraces, down
+to the banks of the Potomac. From the lower falls of
+the river at Georgetown, beyond the outlying spurs of
+the Blue Ridge, a chain of low wooded hills extend
+across the north, which, continuing along the opposite
+shores of the Anacostia and Potomac, emerge again in
+the hills on the Virginia side of that river, presenting
+the appearance of a vast amphitheatre, in the centre of
+which stands the Capitol.</p>
+
+<p>The mean altitude of the city is about forty feet above
+the ordinary low tide of the Potomac; the soil on which
+it is built is generally a yellowish-clay intermixed with
+gravel. In making excavations for wells and cisterns,
+near New Jersey avenue, trees were found, in a good
+state of preservation, at a depth of from six to forty-eight
+feet below the surface.</p>
+
+<p>The Tiber, a little stream, with its tributaries, passes
+through the city. Tradition affirms that this stream
+received its name more than a century before Washington
+city was founded, in the belief and with the prediction
+that there would arise on its banks, in the future, a
+Capital destined to rival in magnificent grandeur that
+which crowned the banks of its great historic namesake.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">[Pg 530]</a></span>
+The streams forming this river have their source
+among the hills to the east, and enter the city in several
+directions, the principal branch winding off to the southwest,
+around the base of Capitol Hill, across Pennsylvania
+avenue, to the Botanical Gardens. Originally its
+course continued along the Mall and emptied into the
+Potomac immediately west of the Washington Monument,
+but subsequently it was diverted into the canal,
+the filling up of which caused still other changes. The
+Tiber and its tributaries were utilized by diverting them
+into the sewerage system of the central and southern
+portions of the city; consequently, although the stream
+traverses one of the most populous sections, its course is
+not visible, the current flowing beneath heavy brick
+arches upon which buildings have been erected, and
+avenues, streets and parks laid out. In primitive days
+the banks of the Tiber were covered with heavy forests,
+while shad, herring and other fish, in their season, were
+taken from its waters, under the very shadow of the hill
+upon which the Capitol now stands.</p>
+
+<p>There is no city in the Union which presents to the
+thoughtful and truly patriotic American so many
+objects of interest as does the city of Washington. First
+of all, this feeling is intensified by the fact of its having
+been located and founded by the great, immortal <i>Pater
+Patri&aelig;</i> whose illustrious name it has the honor of
+bearing. A plan of the city was prepared in 1791, by
+Peter L'Enfant, a French engineer of fine education
+and decided genius, who had served in the Continental
+army with such distinction as to attract the attention of
+General Washington. He was assisted in the work by
+the advice and suggestions of Thomas Jefferson, who,
+while diplomatic representative of the United States,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">[Pg 531]</a></span>
+had studied the plans of the principal cities visited in
+Europe, with a view to the future wants of his country,
+and was prepared, by the aid of his personal knowledge
+of their details, to contribute valuable information and
+suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident that the predominating object in designing
+a plan for the city, was first to secure the most
+eligible situations for the different public buildings, and
+to arrange the squares and areas so that the most
+extended views might be obtained from every direction.
+The amplest arrangements were also made by the founders
+of Washington for its rapid growth and expansion,
+while they evidently designed and anticipated its being
+magnificently built up and embellished. The indifference
+of the Government and people has permitted these suggestions
+to remain too long unheeded; yet it is consoling
+to those possessing an intelligent patriotism and proud
+love of country, to know that the neglected condition of
+the Capital of the United States for nearly three-fourths
+of a century was not the result of any defect in the design
+originated by its noble founders.</p>
+
+<p>Any one who has visited the royal residence of the
+kings of France, will immediately recognize the resemblance
+between the plans of Le Notre for Versailles, and
+L'Enfant for Washington City. The grand avenues,
+de Sceaux and St. Cloud, diverging from the <i>Cour Royal</i>,
+are reproduced in Pennsylvania and Maryland avenues,
+radiating from the east front of the Capitol. Its broad
+thoroughfares are among the principal attractions of
+Washington, and are the finest possessed by any city in
+the world. The avenues, twenty-one in number, radiate
+from principal centres and connect different parts of the
+city; the original number was thirteen, named for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">[Pg 532]</a></span>
+States constituting the Union at the time the Capital
+was laid out. The first in importance is Pennsylvania
+avenue; its width varies from one hundred and sixty to
+one hundred and eighty feet; its length is four and
+one-half miles, traversing the finest business portion
+of the city, as well as being the most popular and
+fashionable thoroughfare for driving. The War and
+Treasury departments, Washington Circle, and the
+President's House, are each located on this superb street,
+which, winding up and around Capitol Hill, finds its
+terminus on the banks of the Anacostia.</p>
+
+<p>The spaces at the intersection of the more important
+avenues form what are called <i>Circles</i>. Washington
+Circle, at the intersection of Pennsylvania and New
+Hampshire avenues, contains the equestrian statue of
+General Washington, which was ordered by Congress,
+and cannon donated for the purpose, in 1853. The
+great hero is represented at the crisis of the battle of
+Princeton; the horse seems shrinking from the storm
+of shot and shell and the fiery conflict confronting him;
+his rider exhibits that calm equanimity of bearing so
+eminently his characteristic. This statue was executed
+by Clark Mills, at a cost of fifty thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<p>At the western base of Capitol Hill stands the naval
+monument, termed in the resolutions of Congress, the
+"<i>Monument of Peace</i>." It was designed by Admiral
+Porter, and erected by subscriptions started by him among
+the officers, midshipmen and men of his fleet, immediately
+after the fall of Fort Fisher. The height of this monument
+is forty-four feet; it is built of Carrara marble
+and cost $44,000. The surmounting figures represent
+History recording the woes narrated by America,
+who holds a tablet in her hand on which is inscribed:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">[Pg 533]</a></span>
+<i>They died that their country might live.</i> This monument
+is exceedingly well executed, and was considered,
+in Rome, one of the finest ever sent to America.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette Square, comprising seven acres lying north
+of the President's House, is beautifully laid out with
+rustic seats, graveled walks, and adorned with a rare
+variety of trees and shrubbery. In the centre of this
+square stands an equestrian statue of General Andrew
+Jackson, by Clark Mills, originally contracted for by the
+friends and admirers of the General composing the
+Jackson Monument Association, who subscribed twelve
+thousand dollars towards its erection. Congress afterward
+granted them the brass guns and mortars captured
+by General Jackson at Pensacola. In 1850 an additional
+donation of guns was made; in 1852 another
+appropriation sufficient to complete the work was granted,
+and Congress assumed possession of the monument. The
+figure of the horse is weighted and poised without the
+aid of rods, as in the celebrated statues of Peter the
+Great, at St. Petersburg, and Charles I., at London.
+This was the first application of the principle, and resulted
+in the production of one of the most graceful and
+astonishingly beautiful works of its kind in existence.
+The statue is of colossal size, weighing fifteen tons, and
+was erected at a cost of $50,000.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scott Square</i>, lying north of the White House, contains
+a bronze statue of General Winfield Scott, made
+of cannon captured by the General during his Mexican
+campaign, and donated by Congress in 1867. The
+work was executed by Brown, of New York; with the
+pedestal, it is twenty-nine feet high, and cost $20,000.
+The General is represented in full uniform, mounted on
+his war-horse, surveying the field of battle.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">[Pg 534]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <i>Circle of Victory</i>, at the intersection of Massachusetts
+and Vermont avenues, contains a bronze
+equestrian statue of General George H. Thomas, of the
+Army of the Cumberland. The statue confronts the
+South, in the direction of the General's native hills of
+Virginia. On the site of this monument a salute of
+eight hundred guns was fired in commemoration of the
+capture of Petersburg and Richmond on the third of
+April, 1865; and, a few days later, five hundred guns
+were fired from the same spot in honor of General
+Lee's surrender and the fall of the Southern Confederacy.</p>
+
+<p>On East Capitol street, at a distance of about one mile
+from the Capitol, is a square comprising six and a
+half acres, beautifully laid out and adorned with trees,
+shrubbery and walks. In this enclosure a bronze group
+called <i>Emancipation</i> has been erected; Abraham Lincoln
+is represented holding in his right hand the proclamation
+which gave freedom to the negroes of the South.
+A slave kneels at his feet, with manacles broken, and in
+the act of rising as they fall from his hands. This
+monument is said to have been built exclusively of funds
+contributed by the negroes liberated by Lincoln's proclamation
+of January first, 1863. The first contribution
+of five hundred dollars was made, it is stated, by Charlotte
+Scott, formerly a slave in Virginia, out of her first
+earnings as a freed-woman, and consecrated by her, on
+hearing of President Lincoln's death, to aid in building
+a monument to his memory. The interesting memorial
+was unveiled with appropriate ceremonies, on the anniversary
+of his assassination, April fourteenth, 1876, the
+President and his Cabinet, foreign ministers, and a vast
+concourse of white and colored citizens being present.
+Including the pedestal of Virginia granite, the structure<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">[Pg 535]</a></span>
+is twenty-two feet in height, and cost $20,000. It was
+in this square, now called <i>Lincoln Square</i>, that, according
+to the founder's original plan of embellishment, a
+grand <i>Historic Column</i> was to have been erected, to
+serve as an itinerary column, from which all geographical
+distances within the boundaries of the United States
+should be calculated.</p>
+
+<p><i>McPherson Square</i>, on Vermont avenue, contains a
+bronze equestrian statue of General James Birdseye
+McPherson, who was killed near Atlanta, at the head
+of the Army of the Tennessee, in 1864. He is represented
+in full uniform, with field-glasses in hand, surveying
+the battle-ground. A vault was constructed
+beneath the statue, for the purpose of receiving his
+body, but the devoted opposition of the people prevented
+its removal from his native place.</p>
+
+<p>Farragut and Rawlins squares contain respectively
+colossal, but not equestrian statues of Admiral Farragut
+and General Rawlins.</p>
+
+<p>Mount Vernon Place, at the intersection of New York
+and Massachusetts avenues, is handsomely laid out and
+planted with trees; in the centre, occupying an elevated
+circular space, is a superb fountain of bronze.</p>
+
+<p>There are numerous smaller spaces at the intersection
+of various streets and avenues, called triangular reservations,
+all of which are highly adorned with trees, shrubs
+and beautiful small fountains.</p>
+
+<p>The Government Propagating Gardens cover an area
+of eighty acres on the banks of the Potomac, south of
+Washington's Monument. The Botanical Garden, an
+instructive place of public resort, lies at the foot of
+Capitol Hill, between Pennsylvania and Maryland avenues.
+North of the Conservatory is found the Bartholdi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">[Pg 536]</a></span>
+Fountain, which is supplied with water from the aqueduct,
+its highest stream reaching an altitude of sixty-five
+feet. This fountain is the work of Frederic Augustus
+Bartholdi, a French sculptor and pupil of Scheffer. It
+will be remembered by all who visited the National
+Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, where it was
+exhibited, and afterward purchased by Congress for the
+inadequate sum of six thousand dollars. The lower
+basin is twenty-six feet in diameter, and from its centre
+rises a pedestal bearing aquatic monsters and fishes
+spouting water; three female caryatides, eleven feet high,
+support a basin thirteen feet in diameter; a smaller basin
+above this is upheld by three infant Tritons, the whole
+being surmounted by a mural crown. Twelve lamps,
+arranged around the lower basin, and lighted by electricity,
+give the most beautiful effects of light and water.
+On the plaza in front of the Treasury Department, is
+another fine fountain, in the form of an immense granite
+urn, the <i>tassa</i> of which measures sixteen feet in diameter.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately in front of Washington city the Potomac
+expands into a broad, lake-like body of water, a mile
+and a quarter wide and at least eighteen feet deep. The
+Anacostia River, at its mouth, is almost the same width
+and fully as deep. Improving the navigation of the
+Potomac and the construction of a canal to the head
+waters of the Ohio River, were enterprises that began
+with the founding of the National Capital.</p>
+
+<p>In 1872, Congress appointed a board of officers with
+a view to the improvement of the channel of the river
+and water fronts of Washington and Georgetown, for
+commercial purposes, as well as the reclamation of the
+malaria-infected marshes opposite the city. These improvements
+will necessitate the rebuilding of Long<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">[Pg 537]</a></span>
+Bridge for railroad and ordinary traveling purposes, and
+reclaim more than a thousand acres of valuable land. It
+is proposed to remove the National Observatory and use
+the earth for filling up the marshes.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Navy Yard Bridge</i> crosses the Anacostia River,
+at the foot of Eleventh street, having supplanted the
+wooden structure built in 1819, over which Booth made
+his escape after the assassination of Lincoln.</p>
+
+<p>The various buildings occupied by the Executive and
+Legislative branches of the Government are worthy of
+especial notice. The <i>Capitol</i> is considered one of the
+largest and finest edifices of the kind in the world,
+and in point of durability of structure and costliness of
+material, it certainly has no superior. It stands on the
+west side of Capitol Hill, very near the centre of the
+city, and one mile distant from the Potomac River.
+The main or central building is three hundred and fifty
+two feet in length, with two wings or extensions, each
+having a front of one hundred and forty-three feet on
+the east and west, and a depth of two hundred and
+thirty-nine feet along the north and south <i>fa&ccedil;ades</i>, exclusive
+of the porticoes. The entire length of this great
+edifice is seven hundred and fifty feet; its greatest depth
+three hundred and twenty-four feet; the ground plan
+covering three and a half acres.</p>
+
+<p>The central and original Capitol building is of freestone,
+taken from the Government quarries at Aquia
+Creek, forty miles below the city, which were purchased
+for that purpose, by the Commissioners, in 1791. This
+building is now painted white, to correspond with the
+extensions, columns and porticoes of white marble. From
+the centre rises the great dome, designed by Walter, to
+replace the original one removed in 1856, after the ad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">[Pg 538]</a></span>ditions
+to the building had rendered it out of proportion.
+The apex is surmounted by a lantern fifty feet
+high, surrounded by a peristyle, and crowned by the
+bronze statue of Freedom executed by Crawford in
+1865. The height from the base line to the crest of this
+statue is three hundred and eight feet, making the dome
+of the Capitol rank fifth in height with the greatest
+structures of the kind in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The great dome is visible from every elevated point
+in the District for miles around, and from its windows,
+as far as the eye can reach, is extended a panorama of
+wooded hills, beautiful valleys, with the majestic cloud-capped
+spurs of the Blue Ridge raising their lofty heads
+in the distance. The eastern fa&ccedil;ade of the building
+looks out upon the extended plain of Capitol Hill, with
+its background of green hills reaching far beyond the
+Anacostia. On the north a broad valley extends, until
+it unites with the encircling hills of the city; on the
+south the majestic Potomac and Anacostia rivers are
+seen to meet and mingle their placid waters; while from
+the west are beheld the lawns and groves of the Botanic
+Garden, the Mall, and handsome grounds of the President's
+house, with Georgetown Heights and the glittering
+domes of the Observatory in the distance.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">EAST FRONT OF CAPITOL AT WASHINGTON.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_599.jpg" width="1024" height="640" alt="EAST FRONT OF CAPITOL AT WASHINGTON." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The main entrance, from the grand portico into the
+rotunda is filled by the celebrated bronze door modeled
+by Rogers, in Rome, 1858, and cast in bronze at Munich,
+by Miller, in 1860. On the panels of this door are
+portrayed, in <i>alto relievo</i>, the principal events in the life
+of Christopher Columbus, and the discovery of America.
+The key of the arch is adorned with a fine head of the
+great navigator; in the four corners of the casing are
+statuettes, representing Asia, Africa, Europe and America,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">[Pg 539]</a></span>
+with a border in relief of ancient armor, banners and
+heraldic designs emblematic of navigation and conquest.
+Bordering each leaf on the door are statuettes, sixteen in
+number, of his patrons and contemporaries; the nine
+panels bear <i>alto relievo</i> illustrations of the principal
+events in his life; while between the panels are a series
+of heads, representing the historians of the great discoverer
+and his followers. Altogether, this justly
+celebrated bronze door, besides being wonderful as a work
+of art, constitutes in itself a small volume of the most
+interesting and important events belonging to the history
+of our country.</p>
+
+<p>The rotunda into which the door leads is embellished
+with eight large historical paintings, by different artists.
+Four of these were executed by Trumbell, who served
+as aid-de-camp to Washington in 1775, and reproduced
+in his figures the likenesses of the actors in the scenes
+portrayed. In arranging the characters for the "Declaration
+of Independence," in which the Congress of 1776
+is represented in the act of signing that great instrument
+of American liberty, the artist conferred with Jefferson,
+the Author of the Declaration, and John Adams, both
+of whom were present and signers. The individual
+costumes, the furniture, and the hall itself, are represented
+with scrupulous fidelity, all of which tends to increase
+the interest inspired by this painting.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>National Library</i> was founded by act of Congress
+in 1800, and the following year, after the report of John
+Randolph, of Roanoke, had been submitted, setting forth
+the necessity for further legislation on the subject, a
+second act was passed, which placed it on a permanent
+basis. The number of volumes first contained in the
+library was three thousand, but appropriations were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">[Pg 540]</a></span>
+annually made by Congress to increase the number. In
+1814 the Capitol was burned by the British, and the
+library destroyed; a few months later, Thomas Jefferson
+offered the Government his private collection of 6,700
+volumes, among which were many rare and valuable
+works obtained in Europe, and these were purchased for
+the sum of $23,950. In 1866 the Smithsonian Library,
+containing forty thousand volumes, was added, and a
+year later, the <i>Peter Force</i> collection was purchased by
+Congress, for $100,000; constant additions have increased
+the number, until the library now contains nearly
+four hundred thousand bound volumes, and one hundred
+thousand pamphlets. It is enriched also by journals,
+manuscripts, and maps relating to the history and topography
+of the country; in respect to the latter, being
+only approached by the library in the British Museum.
+The Library halls occupy the principal floor of the entire
+west projection of the Capitol.</p>
+
+<p>In the <i>Vice President's Room</i> hangs the original painting
+of Washington, taken from life by Rembrandt Peale,
+and purchased by the Government in 1832, for the sum
+of two thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Senate Reception Room</i> is a beautiful and brilliant
+apartment, about sixty feet in length, with its vaulted
+and arched ceiling, divided into four sections, adorned
+with allegorical frescoes of <i>Prudence</i>, <i>Justice</i>, <i>Temperance</i>
+and <i>Strength</i>, executed by Brumidi, in 1856. The ceiling
+is heavily gilded throughout; the walls finished in
+stucco and gilt, with a base of Scagliola, imitating the
+marbles of Potomac and Tennessee. A finely executed
+fresco, in oil, by Brumidi, adorns the south wall, representing
+Washington in consultation with Jefferson and
+Hamilton, his Secretaries of State and Treasury.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">[Pg 541]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <i>President's Boom</i> is an equally magnificent apartment,
+with groined arches embellished with numerous
+allegorical figures in fresco, the decoration, by Brumidi,
+being, in general design, the same as in the private audience
+chamber of the Vatican at Rome. The work
+throughout is very fine, being richly decorated with
+arabesques on a groundwork of gilt; the luxurious furniture
+of the apartment is entirely in keeping with this
+high order of artistic finish.</p>
+
+<p>The old <i>Hall of the House of Representatives</i> is a
+magnificent apartment, designed and planned after the
+theatre at Athens, with fourteen Corinthian columns of
+variegated marble, forming a circular colonnade on the
+north. The bases of these columns are of freestone, the
+capitals of Carrara marble, designed and executed in Italy,
+after those in the temple of Jupiter Stator, at Rome;
+the paneled dome overhead is similar to that of the Pantheon.
+This venerable apartment was occupied by the
+House of Representatives for thirty-two years; its atmosphere
+must, in consequence, ever continue redolent
+with historic associations. On its walls, in the old days,
+hung the full-length portraits of Washington and
+Lafayette, presented by the latter on his last visit to
+this country; and the exact spot is pointed out where
+stood the desk of the venerable Ex-President, John
+Quincy Adams, when that aged patriot and senator
+was stricken by death. When, on the completion of the
+new, the old Hall was abandoned, in 1857, it was set
+apart, by Congress, as a <i>National Statuary Gallery</i>, and
+the President authorized to invite the different States
+to contribute statues, in bronze or marble, of such among
+their distinguished citizens as they might especially desire
+to honor, the number being limited to two from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">[Pg 542]</a></span>
+each State. These contributions have been coming in
+slowly from year to year, besides which, many valuable
+statues and paintings have been purchased and added,
+by the Government.</p>
+
+<p>The new <i>Hall of Representatives</i> is said to be the
+finest in the world; its length being one hundred and
+thirty-nine feet, width ninety-three, and height thirty-six
+feet, while the galleries will seat twenty-five hundred
+persons. The ceiling is of cast-iron, with panels gilded
+and filled with stained-glass centres, on which are represented
+the coat-of-arms of each of the different States.
+The walls are adorned with valuable historical paintings
+and frescoes.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Supreme Court Room</i>, formerly the old United
+States Senate Chamber, is a semicircular apartment,
+seventy-five feet in diameter; its height and greatest
+width being forty-five feet. The ceiling is formed by a
+flattened dome, ornamented with square caissons in stucco,
+with apertures for the admission of light. Supporting a
+gallery back of the Judges' seats extends a row of Ionic
+columns of Potomac marble, with capitals of white Italian
+marble, modeled after those in the Temple of Minerva.
+Along the western wall are marble brackets, each supporting
+the bust of a deceased Chief Justice.</p>
+
+<p>When occupied by the Senate, the Hall contained
+desks for sixty-four Senators. It was in this chamber
+that the Nation's purest and most profound statesmen
+assembled, and the great "Immortal Trio," Clay, Webster
+and Calhoun, made those wonderful forensic efforts
+which gave their names forever to fame and the admiration
+of posterity.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>New Senate Chamber</i>, first occupied in 1859, is a
+magnificent apartment, belonging to the new extension<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">[Pg 543]</a></span>
+of the Capitol, one hundred and thirteen feet in length
+by eighty feet in width, and thirty-six feet high. The
+Senators' desks are constructed of mahogany, and
+arranged in concentric semicircles around the apartment.
+The galleries rise and recede in tiers to the
+corridors of the second floor, and are capable of seating
+twelve thousand people.</p>
+
+<p>Immense iron girders and transverse pieces compose
+the ceiling, forming deep panels, each glazed with a
+symbolic centre piece; the walls are richly painted, the
+doors elaborately finished with bronze ornaments. From
+the lobby we pass into the <i>Senate Retiring Room</i>, handsomely
+furnished, and said to be the finest apartment of
+the kind in the world. The ceiling is composed of
+massive blocks of polished white marble, which form
+deep panels, resting upon four Corinthian columns, also
+of white Italian marble. Highly polished Tennessee
+marble lines the entire walls, in the panels of which are
+placed immense plate glass mirrors, enhancing the
+brilliancy and already striking effect of the whole.</p>
+
+<p>The limits of this chapter will not admit of further
+description of the numerous apartments gorgeously
+furnished; the palatial corridors beautifully designed;
+magnificent vestibules with fluted columns of marble;
+richly gilt paneled ceilings and tinted walls; grand
+stairways of marble and bronze, with the statues, busts,
+paintings and bronzes, which enrich the Capitol, many
+of them being masterpieces of art, and none devoid of
+merit. A detailed account of all would fill a small
+volume; we are compelled, therefore, to reluctantly leave
+the subject, and proceed to the description of the Public
+Buildings.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>President's House</i> is situated in the western part<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">[Pg 544]</a></span>
+of the city, distant one and a half miles from the Capitol.
+A premium of five hundred dollars was awarded James
+Hoban, architect, of South Carolina, for the plan, and
+the corner stone laid, with Masonic honors, October
+thirteenth, 1792. John Adams was the first presidential
+occupant; he took possession during the month of November,
+1800, after the Government offices had been removed
+to Washington. This building was burned by the British
+in 1814; the following year Congress authorized its
+restoration, committing the work to the original architect,
+Hoban, by whom it was completed in 1826, in all
+its details. It is built of freestone, one hundred and
+seventy feet in length, eighty-six in width, with grand
+porticoes on the north and south fronts, supported by
+Ionic columns. The main entrance is on the north, by
+a spacious vestibule handsomely frescoed. The <i>Blue
+Room</i>, in which the President receives, on both public
+and private occasions, is an oval-shaped apartment,
+finished in blue and gilt, with draperies and furniture
+of blue damask. Communicating with this is a second
+parlor called the <i>Green Room</i>, from the prevailing color
+of the furniture and hangings. In this apartment are
+found the portraits of Presidents Madison, Monroe,
+Harrison and Taylor. <i>The East Room</i>, which closes the
+suite, is a truly royal apartment, magnificently decorated
+in a style purely Grecian, the ceiling frescoed in oil,
+mantles of exquisite wood carving, immense mirrors in
+magnificent frames, with the richest furniture, and window
+drapery of the costliest lace and damask. A full
+length portrait of Washington adorns this apartment,
+purchased by Congress in 1803. When the Capitol was
+burned, in 1814, this painting was rescued from destruction
+by Mrs. Madison, who had it removed from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">[Pg 545]</a></span>
+frame and carried to a place of safety. A portrait of
+Martha, the wife of Washington, also hangs in this
+room, painted by Andrews in 1878.</p>
+
+<p>The numerous other apartments in the President's
+House exhibit the same lavish style of adorning, the
+furniture being constantly changed and renewed; but
+the vandal spirit of <i>change</i> has not, as yet, dared to lay
+its sacrilegious hand upon or to alter the construction of
+the house, which remains the same as when, almost a
+century ago, it was first occupied by the elder President
+Adams. It is not difficult, therefore, to evoke the spirit
+of the past while standing among these ancient apartments,
+halls and corridors, and behold in fancy the long
+line of true statesmen, incorruptible patriots and noble
+men, who have successively lived and moved among
+them, in the early days of the Republic. And it is to
+be devoutly hoped that the vanity and caprice of the
+rulers who, in these later years, are being cast into high
+places, will not prevail in the effort to have this venerable
+home of the Presidents, hallowed by the memories
+of the nation's past, cast aside, and another building,
+modern and meaningless, substituted in its stead.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately west of the President's House stands
+the <i>Department of State, War and Navy</i>, a vast and
+imposing structure in the Doric style, combining the
+massive proportions of the ancient with the elegance
+of modern architecture. The Diplomatic Reception
+Room is a magnificent apartment, decorated and furnished
+in the most sumptuous manner, with ebonized
+woods and gold brocade, after the Germanized Egyptian
+style. The portraits of Daniel Webster and Lord Ashburton,
+by Healy (purchased by Congress from the
+widow of Fletcher Webster, 1879), adorn the walls,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">[Pg 546]</a></span>
+and over the mantels are busts, in bronze, of Washington
+and Lafayette. In the Diplomatic Ante-room is
+seen a full-length portrait of the Bey of Tunis, sent by
+special envoy in 1865, with a letter of condolence to the
+Government, on the death of Lincoln. Above this
+apartment is the library, containing a valuable collection
+of works on diplomacy, and many objects of interest,
+including the original draft of the Declaration of Independence,
+with the desk on which it was written, presented
+to the Government by the heirs of James
+Coolidge, of Massachusetts, to whom it was presented
+by Thomas Jefferson. The original document, <i>signed</i>,
+is also here, together with the sword of Washington,
+purchased by Congress in 1880, and his commission as
+Commander-in-Chief; the staff of Franklin; original
+drafts of the laws of the United States, the Federal
+Constitution, and other valuable and interesting historic
+documents, from the foundation of the Government.
+The entire building contains one hundred and fifty
+apartments, and cost five million dollars.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<span class="caption">STATE, WAR AND NAVY DEPARTMENTS, WASHINGTON, D. C.</span>
+<img src="images/illus_609.jpg" width="1024" height="640" alt="STATE, WAR AND NAVY DEPARTMENTS, WASHINGTON, D. C." title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The <i>Treasury Department</i> is situated east of the
+President's House; it presents a most classic appearance,
+with its three stories in the pure Ionic style of architecture,
+upon a basement of rustic work, surmounted
+by an attic and balustrade. It has four fronts and
+principal entrances; the western front, consisting of
+a colonnade, after the style of the temple of Minerva,
+at Athens, is three hundred and thirty-six feet long,
+with thirty Ionic columns, and recessed porticoes on
+either end. This building contains the vaults in
+which the current funds and National Bank bonds of
+the Government are kept. The Secretary's office is
+a beautiful apartment, on the second floor. The walls
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">[Pg 547]</a></span>
+being formed of various kinds of highly polished marble.
+This building contains two hundred apartments,
+exclusive of the basement and attic, and cost six million
+dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Bureau of Engraving and Printing</i>, a branch of
+the Treasury Department, occupies a separate building,
+recently erected, at a cost of three hundred thousand
+dollars. It is a handsome structure, of pressed brick, in
+the Romanesque style, is entirely fireproof, and situated
+between the Agricultural Department and the Washington
+Monument.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Patent Office</i>, an immense building covering two
+squares, or two and three-fourths acres of ground (which
+in the original plan of the city had been set apart for
+the erection of a National Mausoleum, or church), is
+in the Doric style of architecture, after the Parthenon
+at Athens, and impresses all who behold it with the
+grandeur of its proportions. The Museum of Models,
+a collection of inventions, both native and foreign,
+patented by the Government, occupies the four immense
+halls on the second floor, and contains upwards of one
+hundred and fifty-five thousand models, which have
+accumulated since the fire of 1836. In December, of
+that year, the old building was destroyed, containing
+four thousand models, the accumulation of half a century.
+But for this calamity, the progress of mechanical
+arts in the United States could be traced back to the
+foundation of the Government. The south Hall of the
+Museum is a magnificent apartment, two hundred and
+forty-two feet long, sixty-three feet wide, and thirty
+feet high, decorated in the Pompeiian style, the entire
+structure of the room being in solid masonry. Among
+the historical relics contained here, are the uniform<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">[Pg 548]</a></span>
+of Washington, worn at the time he resigned his
+commission, and his sword, secretary, compass, and
+sleeping tent, with camp utensils for cooking, etc. The
+number and variety of models contained in these
+four large halls are almost bewildering, and afford
+material for hours of study. The cost of this immense
+structure was two million, seven hundred thousand, but
+the entire sum has been principally liquidated by the
+surplus funds received, which annually amount to at
+least two hundred thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>General Post Office</i> building is immediately opposite
+the Patent Office; it is a most imposing edifice,
+constructed of white marble, from the quarries of New
+York, and was built&mdash;the portion fronting on E street&mdash;in
+1839. The northern half of the square was afterward
+purchased by the Government, and the extension begun
+in 1855; the building, as now completed, being three
+hundred feet in length, by two hundred and four in
+depth, with a large courtyard in the centre, entered on
+the west front by a carriage way, where the mails are
+received and sent out. Above the basement, on every
+side of this noble structure, arise monolithic columns
+and pilasters, surmounted by handsomely wrought
+capitals, upon which rests a paneled cornice. The main
+entrance is adorned with Doric columns, and the ceiling,
+walls and floor finished with white marble. In the
+office of the Postmaster-General is a fine collection of
+photographs and crayons of those who have filled this
+position since the appointment of Samuel Osgood, by
+Washington, in 1789. The cost of this building was
+one million seven hundred thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Agricultural Building</i> is a large and handsome
+structure, built of pressed brick, in the <i>renaissance</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">[Pg 549]</a></span>
+style of architecture, with trimmings of brown stone.
+Immediately in front of the house is a flower garden,
+beautifully laid out, and planted with an almost countless
+variety of flowers; the remaining grounds adjacent
+to the building have been laid out as an <i>arboreture</i>, with
+walks and drives winding through forests of trees and
+shrubs, all of which have been planted according to the
+strictest botanical rules. The experimental grounds,
+occupying ten acres in the rear of the house, contain
+artificial lakes, rivers and swamps, for the cultivation of
+water and marsh plants. The building is handsomely
+finished and the various apartments and offices elegantly
+furnished, including a handsome library, thoroughly
+equipped laboratory, and an <i>Agricultural Museum</i>,
+which occupies the main building, and is replete with
+objects of interest and beauty too numerous to admit of
+description. The <i>Plant Houses</i> are immense conservatories,
+in which the fruits and flowers of every clime
+and country may be found <i>growing</i>. The main structure
+is three hundred and twenty feet long, by thirty wide,
+with a projecting wing giving one hundred and fifty feet
+additional. On the north bank of the Potomac is the
+<i>Naval Observatory</i>, one of the principal astronomical
+establishments in the world. The Observatory was
+founded in 1842, the location being selected by President
+Tyler. The site had been called "University
+Square," from the fact that it had been the cherished
+intention of Washington, from the foundation of the
+city, to urge the erection upon this spot of a <i>National
+University</i>. The central building of the Observatory
+was completed in 1844&mdash;a two-story building, with
+wings, and surmounted by a dome. The great telescope,
+purchased in 1873, cost forty-seven thousand dollars,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">[Pg 550]</a></span>
+and is the most powerful instrument in the world, the
+refracting glass being twenty-six inches; the focal
+length thirty-two and a half feet. The library contains
+six thousand volumes, a number of them very rare,
+dating back to 1482.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Army Medical Museum</i> was formerly Ford's
+Theatre, in which President Lincoln was assassinated on
+the fourteenth of April, 1865. The building was purchased
+a year later, by Congress, remodeled and converted
+to its present use. No trace has been left to indicate the
+exact location of the murder. The Chemical Laboratory,
+on the first floor, was the restaurant in which Booth took
+his last drink; among the relics and curiosities is a portion
+of the vertebrae taken from the neck of the assassin.
+The first floor is occupied by the record and pension
+division of the Surgeon General's office, and upon the
+registers are inscribed the names of three hundred thousand
+of the <i>dead</i>. The Museum is on the third floor,
+and contains about sixteen thousand medical, surgical,
+and anatomical specimens.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Government Printing Office</i> is a large four-story
+building, in which the printing of the two Houses of
+Congress and other Departments is done. In 1794 an
+appropriation of ten thousand dollars was made, and
+sufficed, for "firewood, stationery and printing; the
+amount required at the present time to meet the expenses
+of this department is two million five hundred thousand
+dollars per annum, showing the rapid advance of the
+country, in extent, population, and the prodigality of its
+representatives as well.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>United States Barracks</i>, formerly the <i>Arsenal</i>, is
+situated at the extreme southern point of the city. A
+Government Penitentiary was erected on the grounds in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">[Pg 551]</a></span>
+1826; in one of the lower cells was buried the body of
+Booth, and afterward those of the other conspirators. The
+Penitentiary was taken down in 1869, at which time the
+family of Booth was permitted to remove his body to
+Baltimore, where it was interred in the family burial
+lot at Druid Hill, the grave remaining unmarked. In
+front of the old buildings, the grounds, since the war,
+have been beautifully laid out, and contain a number of
+cannon captured by the Government forces in different
+conflicts. There is a brass gun with a ball shot into its
+muzzle at the battle of Gettysburg, and two captured
+Blakely guns, one of which bears the inscription: "Presented
+to the Sovereign State of South Carolina, by one
+of her citizens residing abroad, in commemoration of
+the twentieth of December, 1860." There are also
+British, French, and Mexican cannon, captured from
+those nations, some of them dated as far back as 1756.</p>
+
+<p>On the Anacostia, three-fourths of a mile from the
+Capitol, is the <i>Navy Yard</i>, formally established by act
+of Congress in 1804, and in those early days standing
+unrivaled, as it sent out such famous vessels as the
+Wasp, Argus, and Viper; and frigates, carrying 44 guns
+each, were built in its shops. But the gradual filling up
+of the channel in which ships of the line formerly
+anchored, and the increased facilities of other later established
+stations, have deprived the old yard of its importance
+as a naval constructing port, although it is still
+one of the most important for the manufacture of supplies.
+The <i>Marine Barracks</i>, organized in 1798, are
+but a short distance from the Navy Yard gate; the
+building is seven hundred feet in length, with accommodations
+for two hundred men. The Barracks were
+burned by the British in 1814, but were at once rebuilt.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">[Pg 552]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <i>Smithsonian Institute</i>, by name, is generally
+familiar, while comparatively few are acquainted with
+its origin, the design of its founder, his antecedents
+or history, all of which are peculiarly interesting,
+and deserving of a more extended notice than our
+sketch will permit. James Smithson was an Englishman,
+the son of the first Duke of Northumberland, and
+a grand nephew, on his mother's side, of Charles, the
+proud Duke of Somerset. Whether or not any secret
+romance was connected with his life, we are not informed;
+all that is known is, that he devoted himself to literature
+and science, was never married, and died at Genoa,
+Italy, in 1828, bequeathing his fortune to his nephew,
+Henry James Hungerford, during life; at his death to
+become the property of the United States; in the language
+of the will, "To found, at Washington, under
+the name of the Smithsonian Institute, an establishment
+for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men."
+The Government accepted the bequest, which was at its
+disposal as early as 1836, and the original fund, of upwards
+of five hundred and fifteen thousand dollars, was
+deposited in the Treasury. A little more than ten years
+later the Smithsonian Institute was organized, a board
+of Regents appointed, and the corner-stone laid, with
+masonic ceremonies, May the first, 1847. The building
+was completed in 1856, the accrued interest being mere
+than sufficient to cover all the expenses of its erection,
+and leaving a permanent fund of six hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars in the Treasury for its future maintenance.
+In less than a year after the close of the war
+the main building was partially destroyed by fire, together
+with the papers and reports of the Institute, and
+the personal effects of its founder. It was immediately<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">[Pg 553]</a></span>
+restored, however; but the Library, comprising a large
+collection of valuable scientific works, was removed to
+the Capitol. It would seem that this immense building,
+so generously endowed, could, and should, be made to
+advance "the increase and diffusion of knowledge
+among men," in a more direct and individual manner,
+by being devoted to educational purposes. But further
+than its use in conducting exchanges between the Government
+and scientific bodies at home and abroad, and
+the care of the National Museum, the Smithsonian Institute
+has contributed nothing toward "the advancement
+of knowledge among men," and those, generally, of
+the country whom it was especially intended to benefit.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>National Museum</i>, completed in 1879, is situated
+a very short distance east of the Institute, and covers
+nearly two and a half acres of ground. It is a handsome
+structure, of the modernized Romanesque style of architecture;
+having four entrances and eight lofty towers;
+the principal entrance being approached by granite steps,
+thirty-seven feet wide, to a richly tiled platform. Above
+the inscription plate on the globe of the nave, is an
+allegorical group representing Columbia as the patroness
+of Science and Industry. The whole is surmounted by
+a dome; the windows filled with double glass imported
+from Belgium; in fine, the entire building is externally
+and internally complete, being finished and furnished in
+the most costly and elegant manner. The large collections
+of the Museum in the Smithsonian Institute, are
+to be divided; objects of purely natural history being
+alone kept in the Institute, the second floor of which
+will be devoted to arch&aelig;ology, including the antiquities
+of the "Stone Age."</p>
+
+<p>South of the President's House, and but a short dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_554" id="Page_554">[Pg 554]</a></span>tance
+from the stone which marks the centre of the
+District stands the National Monument to the Father
+of his Country, designed by Mills. It was completed
+on Saturday, December sixth, 1884, by the setting of its
+marble cap-stone. The idea of this National Monument
+took definite shape in 1833, when the <i>Washington
+National Monument Association</i> was organized, composed
+of some of the most distinguished men of the
+country. The design was to build it by means of popular
+subscriptions, of individual sums, not to exceed one
+dollar each. In 1847 the collections amounted to
+$87,000, and with this sum it was determined to begin
+the work. On the Fourth of July, 1848 the corner
+stone of the monument was laid; in 1854, the funds of
+the <i>National Monument Association</i> were exhausted.
+The structure had then reached a height of one hundred
+and seventy feet, and during the succeeding twenty-four
+years only four feet were added to its altitude.
+August twenty-second, 1876, Congress passed an Act,
+creating a commission for its completion, and made the
+necessary appropriation, which was to be continued
+annually. Before resuming work on the monument, it
+was deemed best to strengthen the foundation by placing
+under the shaft an additional mass of concrete, one hundred
+and twenty-three feet, three inches beyond the old
+foundation. The weight of the mass then worked under
+was 32,176 tons. The total pressure on the foundation
+as it now stands is 80,378 tons.</p>
+
+<p>The monument is a marble obelisk, the marble having
+been brought from the quarries of the Beaver Dam
+Marble Company, Baltimore County, Maryland. The
+shaft, from the floor, is 555 feet, 4 inches high, being
+thirty feet, five inches higher than the spires of the great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">[Pg 555]</a></span>
+cathedral of Cologne. The present foundation is thirty-six
+feet, eight inches deep, making an aggregate height,
+from the bed of the foundation, of 592 feet, the loftiest
+work of ancient or modern times. The walls of the
+obelisk, at its base, are over fifteen feet thick, and at
+the 500 feet mark, where the pyramidal top begins,
+eighteen inches thick. The total cost of the monument
+has been $1,130,000. Within the obelisk is an elevator
+and a stairway. On the latter there are nine hundred
+steps, and about twenty minutes are required to make
+the descent.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Corcoran Art Gallery</i> is one of the most interesting
+and valued institutions belonging to the
+National Capitol, and the last that our limits will permit
+being described at length. The building stands on
+the corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth
+street, and is constructed of brick, in the Renaissance
+style of architecture, finished with freestone ornaments
+and a variety of beautiful carving. On the avenue
+front are four statues, in Carrara marble, executed by
+Ezekiel, in Rome, of <i>Phidias</i>, <i>Raphael</i>, <i>Michael Angelo</i>,
+and <i>Albert Durer</i>, representing respectively, sculpture,
+painting, architecture and engraving. In the vestibules
+and corridors are casts of ancient <i>bas reliefs</i>, with numerous
+antique busts and statues in marble. The <i>Hall
+of Bronzes</i> contains a very large and interesting collection
+of bronzes, armor, ceramic ware, etc. The Hall of
+<i>Antique Sculpture</i>, almost one hundred feet in length,
+contains casts of the most celebrated specimens of ancient
+sculpture. The <i>Main Picture Gallery</i> is also
+nearly one hundred feet long and fifty feet wide, with a
+collection of paintings ranking among the first of this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">[Pg 556]</a></span>
+country, and more than one hundred and fifteen in number.
+The <i>Octagon Chamber</i> contains the original Greek
+Slave, by Powers. In the <i>East Gallery</i> is displayed a
+valuable collection of portraits of distinguished Americans,
+painted by the best native artists; in the <i>West
+Gallery</i>, is a large number of paintings, historical, landscape
+and other subjects.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Corcoran Art Gallery</i> was presented to the city
+and country by W. W. Corcoran, Esq., in 1869. This
+magnificent gift, including the donor's private collection
+of paintings and statuary, cost three hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars, to which he added an endowment
+fund of nine hundred thousand dollars more. Mr.
+Corcoran has also erected and elegantly furnished, a large
+and beautiful building, called the <i>Louise Home</i>, at a cost
+of two hundred thousand dollars, with an endowment fund
+of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. <i>The Home</i>,
+the only institution of its kind in the entire country, is
+an asylum for ladies of education and refinement
+who have been reduced in fortune. The house is
+furnished in a style of subdued elegance, with every
+luxury and convenience to be found in the best
+appointed private residence; while the ladies are waited
+upon and treated with the same attention and respect as
+if they were each paying an extravagant rate of board.
+There are ample accommodations for fifty-five ladies,
+who must have reached the age of fifty-years, as a general
+rule, and who make their application for admission
+in writing. There is <i>no charge</i> for admission, nor expense
+of any kind, nor <i>limit</i> to the time of remaining at
+the <i>Louise Home</i>. This beautiful institution, in which
+charity is bestowed in so refined and delicate, yet magnificent
+a manner, has been erected and endowed by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">[Pg 557]</a></span>
+Founder <i>in memoriam</i> of a beloved wife and only daughter
+and child. It is but due to this great philanthropist,
+to mention here, that in addition to his gifts named
+above, the <i>National Medical College, of Columbian University</i>,
+was his gift, in 1864, and cost forty thousand dollars.
+The original grounds of <i>Oak Hill Cemetery</i>, comprising
+ten acres, were also donated by him, together with
+an endowment fund of one hundred and twenty thousand
+dollars; the grounds were incorporated by Congress in
+1840. It were fortunate for mankind if the number of
+such benefactors were greater, and the wisdom displayed
+by Mr. Corcoran oftener imitated by the rich, who, if
+they <i>give</i>, permit their good deeds only "<i>to live after
+them</i>," instead of planning, and directing with their own
+hands, the schemes of benevolence they desire to inaugurate
+for the benefit of their unfortunate fellow beings.</p>
+
+<p>There are many places of historical interest that might
+be described, as well as numerous Halls, Colleges, Hospitals,
+etc., but the limits of this paper will not permit.
+We shall only refer to the <i>Government Hospital for the
+Insane</i>, situated at the junction of the Potomac and
+Anacostia rivers, and one of the finest and largest institutions
+of the kind in the world. It is seven hundred
+and fifty feet in length by two hundred deep, containing
+five hundred single rooms, and accommodations for
+more than nine hundred patients. The <i>Deaf and Dumb
+Asylum and College</i> are also conspicuous among the
+Public Institutions, built in the pointed Gothic style,
+and costing the Government $350,000.</p>
+
+<p>During the late war Washington was converted into
+a vast fortress, and made the base of operations for the
+entire forces of the Union. The hills surrounding it were
+covered with the camps of soldiers, while its vast streets
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">[Pg 558]</a></span>
+and avenues hourly echoed the tread of moving troops,
+and the heavy crushing roll of artillery. At the close
+of the contest the city was found to have risen high upon
+the wave of revolution; a new element had been
+infused into its population, and the march of improvement
+had begun. In ten years the number of inhabitants
+had increased fifty thousand. With the continuance
+of peace, and the spirit of improvement and progress
+remaining unchecked, it may reasonably be predicted
+and confidently anticipated, that the close of the Nineteenth
+Century will find the Capital City of this great
+Republic approaching in splendor and importance the
+realization of the proudest hope and dream of magnificence
+ever cherished in the hearts of its worthy founders,
+and in <i>itself</i> a monument worthy of the immortal name
+of <span class="smcap">Washington</span>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_565" id="Page_565">[Pg 565]</a></span></p>
+<h3><i>TESTIMONIALS.</i></h3>
+
+<h2>COMMENDATIONS</h2>
+
+<h4>OF</h4>
+
+<h2>Peculiarities of American Cities.</h2>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4><i>Buffalo Sunday Times.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" is the title of the latest work of Captain
+Willard Glazier, whose numerous books show great versatility and vivacity.
+The work before us contains sketches of thirty-nine of the principal cities of
+the United States and Canada. It is replete with interest. The pages are not
+filled with a mass of dry statistics or mere description, but record the personal
+observations of the author, detailed in an easy, familiar style.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Hamilton (Canada) Tribune.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The "Peculiarities of American Cities" contains a chatty description of the
+leading American and Canadian cities. A bright, descriptive style gives
+piquancy to the work, which is a gazetteer without seeming to be so. The
+Canadian cities described are Montreal, Toronto, and Quebec, and the accounts
+given of them are accurate. This being so of our own land, the probability
+is strong that the accounts given of the American cities are so too.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Rock Island Union.</i></h4>
+
+<p>Captain Willard Glazier, whose war stories have proved so attractive, has
+turned his attention to another field, and proved that he can write entertainingly
+while imparting information to his readers of permanent reference
+value. His new book is entitled "Peculiarities of American Cities," and
+embodies the results of his personal observations and studies in the leading
+towns of the country. There are thirty-nine chapters, and each one is
+devoted to a different city, and may be said to be complete in itself. The
+classification is alphabetical, beginning with Albany and ending with Washington.
+The descriptive work has been well and faithfully done, and the
+prominent features of each city have received especial attention. This is the
+special point of the work&mdash;to show the distinct peculiarities and characteristics
+of our cities&mdash;and the charm lies in the fact that every city is treated in
+accordance with its local color, instead of in a stereotyped manner, as is
+usually the case. The book is a valuable one, and should be perused and
+studied by old and young.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_566" id="Page_566">[Pg 566]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4><i>Detroit Journal.</i></h4>
+
+<p>Under the title of "Peculiarities of American Cities," Captain Willard
+Glazier, the author of half a dozen successful volumes, has lately produced a
+very attractive book of nearly six hundred pages. It is written in a graceful
+style, as one would describe a trip through the country from East to West,
+including visits to the chief cities, and touching upon their most notable
+characteristics. The author gives his readers the salient and significant
+points, as they strike an observing man and a skilled writer, and in this he
+has been very successful.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Madison State Journal.</i></h4>
+
+<p>Captain Glazier is a noted American traveler. His canoe trip down the
+Mississippi and his extended horseback tour through the States made him
+quite famous at the time. The volume before us presents the peculiar features,
+favorite resorts, and distinguishing characteristics of the leading cities
+of America, including Canada. The author launches into his subject with
+directness, treating them with perspicuity and in an easy, flowing, graphic
+style, presenting a series of most admirable pen pictures. The book is practically
+invaluable in households where there are children and youth.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Chicago Tribune.</i></h4>
+
+<p>In this work Captain Glazier has entered upon a new field in literature,
+and his researches are at once unique and interesting. The first chapter
+opens with a visit to Albany, the quaint old Dutch city of the Hudson, and
+here at the outset the author discovers "peculiarities" without limit. Boston
+is next taken up, and then follow in succession thirty-seven of the leading
+cities of the United States and Canada. The book is a compendium of historical
+facts concerning the cities referred to which are not given in any
+other work with which we are acquainted, making this volume a valuable
+addition to any library.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Saginaw Courier.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a handsome and attractive volume,
+descriptive of the characteristics of many of the cities of North America, by
+one who seems to be thoroughly familiar with the subject, and who has
+developed an aptness in grasping the peculiarities of modern city life, as well
+as the power to graphically portray them. To those who may never be able
+to visit the places described, as well as to those who have seen them, the pen
+pictures will be both interesting and entertaining. The author gives his
+readers the salient and significant points as they strike an observant critic
+and a fascinating writer.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Racine Daily Times.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a work that will give to the person
+who has only money to stay at home an intelligent idea of how the great
+cities of the country look, and what their people do to gain a livelihood, and
+what objects of interest there are to be seen. Through the medium of this
+work one can wander through the streets of far-off places; he can watch the
+rush of the multitude and hear the roar of the industries that help to make
+our country the great land that it is. He can gaze upon the palaces of the
+rich or hurry through scenes where poverty is most pitiful and vice most
+hideous. It is a work that ought to be in every house.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_567" id="Page_567">[Pg 567]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4><i>Alton Democrat.</i></h4>
+
+<p>One of the most entertaining books is "Peculiarities of American Cities"
+by Captain Willard Glazier, whose pen has enraptured thousands by descriptions
+of battle scenes and heroic adventures. The book is almost a necessity,
+as it familiarizes one with scenes in travel and history. The author has
+the faculty of making his readers see what he has seen and feel the impressions
+which he has felt in the view. The style is easy and flowing, not
+complicated and wearisome, The great cities are described in a way which
+makes the reader familiar with them&mdash;their history, society, manners, customs,
+and everything relating to their past, present, and future. The book
+will be a companion of many a leisure hour.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Buffalo Courier.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The books written by Captain Willard Glazier have had a very wide, almost
+a phenomenal circulation; in myriads of volumes they have been distributed
+throughout the country. From the time when a very young man, and just
+after the war, in which he served, Captain Glazier published his first book,
+they have, until the one just out, been all founded on and descriptive of
+events and scenes of the Revolution and the Rebellion. Now, however, he
+has turned from the beaten path and taken an altogether different topic,
+as is clearly explained in the title of his new work, "Peculiarities of American
+Cities." There are thirty-nine chapters, in which as many different
+cities have their noteworthy characteristics set forth in a pleasing and very
+interesting style, with handsome illustrations.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Hamilton (Canada) Spectator.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a work by Captain Willard Glazier,
+who has earned some fame as a writer of books describing the incidents
+of the War of the Rebellion. The present work is a compilation of
+facts concerning thirty-nine of the principal cities of the continent, including
+Toronto, Quebec, and Montreal, and the information the work contains is
+brought down to recent date. The history, growth in commerce, progress in
+art and science, and architectural and physical characteristics of each city
+are treated of in a very interesting way. Few people who have traveled at
+all but have visited one or more of these cities, and will read the work with
+pleasure. Others will find it intensely interesting because it gives them in
+detail much they have often wanted to know of the cities of America.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>New York Herald.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The author talks of cities as he has seen them; describing their appearance,
+their public resorts, and the peculiarities which characterize them and their
+people. He leads the reader through the streets, into the public parks,
+museums, libraries, art galleries, churches, theatres, etc.; tells him of great
+business schemes, marts, and manufactories; sails to suburban pleasure
+resorts; describes the many avocations and ways of picking up a living
+which are peculiar to large cities and the phases of character in men and
+women which are to be found where men most do congregate. The book
+will prove to be an interesting and instructive one to those who have not
+seen the cities it describes, and interesting to those who have traveled
+as a review and comparison of views from an experienced traveler and
+chronicler.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_568" id="Page_568">[Pg 568]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4><i>Detroit Christian Herald.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" contains brief studies of the history,
+general features, and leading enterprises of thirty-nine cities of the United
+States and Canada. The author states in the preface that he has been a resident
+of one hundred cities, and feels qualified to write largely from personal
+observation and comparison. It is not a dry compendium of facts, but is
+enlivened by picturesque legends, striking incidents, and racy anecdotes.
+Though the author has attempted no exhaustive description of these prominent
+centres of interest, he has shown taste and judgment in selecting the
+things one would most like to know, and skill in weaving the facts into an
+entertaining form.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Davenport Democrat.</i></h4>
+
+<p>This is the fifth of a readable series of popular books by the soldier-author,
+Captain Willard Glazier. Many readers have become familiar with "Soldiers
+of the Saddle," "Capture, Prison-pen, and Escape," "Battles for the Union,"
+and "Heroes of Three Wars," and they will welcome the volume under
+notice as one of the most attractive of the list. Captain Glazier does not
+compile&mdash;he writes what he has seen. He has a trained eye, a facile pen, and
+a power of graphic description. "American Cities" is a work devoted to a
+pen-portraiture of thirty-nine cities, and those who have not or cannot visit
+these cities have in this book an easy and most fascinating way of acquainting
+themselves with their distinguishing characteristics. All readers ought
+to know something of our American cities, each of which has features
+peculiar to itself.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Syracuse Herald.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" is the title of a new book by Captain
+Willard Glazier, author of "Soldiers of the Saddle," "Battles for the Union,"
+and several other popular works. In its pages the favorite resorts, peculiar
+features, and distinguishing characteristics of the leading cities of
+America are described. Dry statistics are avoided, the facts which the general
+reader most desires being given in the style of graphic description for which
+the author is noted. The book not only contains a great deal of information in
+regard to America's principal cities as they exist to-day, but many important
+events in local history are cleverly worked in. The <i>Herald</i> feels safe in commending
+this book as both instructive and entertaining. It will be read with
+interest by those who have "been there," and seen for themselves, as well as
+by those who can at most see only in imagination the places treated.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Indianapolis Educational Weekly.</i></h4>
+
+<p>This book occupies a niche in the literature of the country peculiar to
+itself. It describes thirty-nine cities of America, including all the largest
+cities and some others which, though not quite so large, are rapidly growing,
+and seem destined to occupy positions of importance. Still other sketches
+possess peculiar interest for their historical associations. Of the latter class
+are the stories of Savannah, Charleston, and Richmond. It is said that
+Americans too often rush off to Europe without knowing that America possesses
+a Niagara Palls, Yosemite Valley, and Yellowstone National Park.
+The same may be said of our reading. Many books descriptive of European
+cities and places of interest are widely circulated and read. And if they are
+reliable they should be read. But America might, with profit, be studied
+more. This book offers a splendid opportunity to learn something of our
+American cities.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_569" id="Page_569">[Pg 569]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4><i>Altoona Times.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The reader will find a great abundance of useful information contained in
+a small compass and very pleasantly imparted in Captain Glazier's "Peculiarities
+of American Cities." Those who have little time to gather their
+information from more extended sources will find this a valuable work
+that will supply a vacant place in their library. It is certainly a book very
+much in advance of the volumes of like import that from time to time our
+people have been solicited to buy.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Boston Transcript.</i></h4>
+
+<p>Captain Glazier's style is particularly attractive, and the discursive, anecdotal
+way in which the author carries his readers over the continent, from
+one city to another, is charmingly interesting. He lands his reader, by the
+easiest method, in a city; and when he has got him there, strives to interest
+and make him happy by causing him to glean amusement and instruction
+from all he sees. Every page of the book is teeming with interest and information.
+Persons are made conversant with the chief characteristics and
+history of cities they may never hope to visit. The book has apparently
+been written principally for the purpose of presenting the truth about the
+various chief centres of trade in the country, and the writer has adopted a
+pleasant conversational style, more likely to leave the impression desired
+than all the histories and arid guide-books ever published. It is a delightful
+book, full of happy things.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Pittsburgh Sunday Globe.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities," by Willard Glazier, will be found disappointing
+to those who look for an ordinary re-hash of musty data
+about leading cities, as, aside from the numerous illustrations, which are far
+above the average book illustrations in accuracy, the work will be found to
+contain pleasantly written chapters on the industrial and social features of
+New York, Pittsburgh, Washington, Montreal, Portland, Savannah, Boston,
+Albany, Quebec, Omaha, Chicago, Buffalo, St. Louis, Hartford, Cleveland,
+Richmond, Providence, Baltimore, New Orleans, San Francisco, Cincinnati,
+Philadelphia, etc. The chapter on Pittsburgh embraces a summing up of its
+features as an iron, glass, and oil centre, while the descriptions of our people
+and the labor organizations, banking, and business interests are well-timed
+and as comprehensive as the limits of the work will permit. It will make a
+valuable addition to any library.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Fort Wayne Gazette.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The author gives his views concerning the history, character, or "peculiarities"
+of some forty prominent American cities. The subject is an interesting
+one, familiarizing the reader with what belongs particularly to his
+own country. Persons may visit a place frequently, yet know nothing in
+regard to its history or the events connected with it which make the same
+memorable. Such matters have been carefully collected by the author and
+properly arranged into a systematic narrative. The chapters are exceedingly
+entertaining aside from the information they convey. The author has the
+ability to present what he wishes to communicate in an admirable way, and is
+tedious in nothing he has written. We know of no work on this subject from
+which so much that is valuable can be obtained in so concise a form. It is a
+book that will never weary or lose in interest, and can be placed in the
+library among the valuable works.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_570" id="Page_570">[Pg 570]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4><i>Milwaukee Sentinel.</i></h4>
+
+<p>"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a book rather unique in character,
+and may be said to occupy a place somewhere between the regular
+guide-book and the volume of travels. As people who stay at home are not
+generally given to reading guide-books, and as volumes of travel
+embracing the same route as that gone over by our author are not common,
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" fills a niche that has hitherto been
+vacant, and meets a want not before satisfied. The writer takes up the
+most important cities of the United States and Canada in alphabetical
+order, beginning with Albany and ending with Washington, and gives a
+more or less extended description of each, commencing usually with a
+slight historical outline, particularly where it would be of general
+interest, as in the case of Boston, but devoting the greater part of his
+space to the treatment of their present condition. The natural
+advantages of each place are considered, its commerce and manufactures
+discussed, its public parks and buildings described, and illustrations
+of a number of the latter given.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>New York World.</i></h4>
+
+<p>To become well acquainted with the principal cities of the Union is not
+a matter of secondary importance, but should be one of the first duties
+of an American citizen. It is at once a source of pleasure and profit to
+know the points of interest in the various places; to be able to give an
+account of the commercial transactions, the people and customs; and, in
+fact, to know about other communities what you find it necessary to
+learn of your own. To the great majority of Americans the opportunity is
+not given of personally becoming acquainted with the various cities of
+import, and the only way we have of knowing the peculiarities of our
+sister cities is by the few scraps we read now and then in the
+newspapers. The want of some method by which to instruct the people in
+this matter has long been manifest, but what to do has often been asked
+and remained unanswered. Educators recommend the compilation of
+statistics of the various places, and many plans were suggested by which
+a knowledge of the subject could be diffused among the masses. It has
+finally been solved by Captain Willard Glazier, of whom the country has
+heard in civil and military life on many former occasions. Captain
+Glazier has traveled over the entire continent since the late war, and
+has become well acquainted with the principal cities, and the thought
+struck him to write a book on the points of interest he has visited in
+the various places. For a number of years he has been at the work, and
+finally gives to the public his latest literary effort, which he has
+appropriately entitled "Peculiarities of American Cities." The book is
+just what is needed in every public and private library in the country,
+and will awaken a deep interest in the citizens of each city on which
+the work treats. The public cannot fail to be interested in the work,
+for it treats on a live subject, and, furthermore, the author's style is
+far too pleasing to permit of any lack of interest. Captain Glazier is
+the author of a number of books, all of which have become popular, and
+we predict for this, his latest effort, the success which it merits.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<h2>POPULAR WORKS</h2>
+<h4>OF</h4>
+<h2>Captain Willard Glazier,<br />
+<span class="smcap">The Soldier-Author</span>.</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 15%;' />
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='right'>I.</td><td align='left'>Soldiers of the Saddle.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II.</td><td align='left'>Capture, Prison-Pen and Escape.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>III.</td><td align='left'>Battles for the Union.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IV.</td><td align='left'>Heroes of Three Wars.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>V.</td><td align='left'>Peculiarities of American Cities.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VI.</td><td align='left'>Down the Great River.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<hr style='width: 15%;' />
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Captain Glazier's works are growing more and more
+popular every day. Their delineations of <i>social</i>, military
+<i>and frontier</i> life , constantly varying scenes, and
+deeply interesting stories, combine to place their writer
+in the front rank of American authors.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 15%;' />
+
+<h3>SOLD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.</h3>
+
+<p class="center">PERSONS DESIRING AGENCIES FOR ANY OF CAPTAIN GLAZIER'S
+BOOKS SHOULD ADDRESS</p>
+
+<h4>THE PUBLISHERS.</h4>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 768px;">
+<img src="images/iendpaper.jpg" width="768" height="768" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class = "mynote">
+<h3>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</h3>
+
+<p>1. Images have been moved from the middle of a paragraph to the closest
+paragraph break.</p>
+
+<p>2. Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+
+<p>3. The following typographical errors have been corrected:</p>
+
+<p>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "Bath-on-the Hudson" corrected to "Bath-on-the-Hudson" (page 28)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "facades" corrected to "fa&ccedil;ades" (page 30)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "scarely" corrected to "scarcely" (page 168)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "Real" corrected to "R&egrave;al" (page 236)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "Situate" corrected to "Situated" (page 248)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "condemed" corrected to "condemned" (page 261)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "transferrred" corrected to "transferred" (page 261)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "pedestrains" corrected to "pedestrians" (page 312)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "possesesion" corrected to "possession" (page 358)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "establisment" corrected to "establishment" (page 438)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "granduer" corrected to "grandeur" (page 459)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "ignominously" corrected to "ignominiously" (page 464)<br />
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "excelence" corrected to "excellence" (page 523)<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>4. Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies
+in spelling, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been
+retained.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peculiarities of American Cities, by
+Willard Glazier
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+</body>
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+Project Gutenberg's Peculiarities of American Cities, by Willard Glazier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Peculiarities of American Cities
+
+Author: Willard Glazier
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2011 [EBook #35575]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PECULIARITIES OF AMERICAN CITIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Louise Hope and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Willard Glazier]
+
+
+
+
+ PECULIARITIES
+ OF
+ AMERICAN CITIES.
+
+ BY
+
+ CAPTAIN WILLARD GLAZIER,
+
+ AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF THE SADDLE," "CAPTURE, PRISON-PEN AND
+ ESCAPE," "BATTLES FOR THE UNION," "HEROES OF THREE WARS,"
+ "DOWN THE GREAT RIVER," ETC., ETC.
+
+
+ Illustrated.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ HUBBARD BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
+ No. 723 CHESTNUT STREET.
+ 1886.
+
+
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by
+ WILLARD GLAZIER,
+ In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
+
+
+
+
+ To her
+
+ WHO IS NEAREST AND DEAREST;
+ WHOSE HEART HAS ENCOURAGED;
+ WHOSE HAND HAS CONTRIBUTED TO THE
+ ILLUSTRATION AND EMBELLISHMENT
+ OF ALL MY LITERARY WORK,
+
+ This Volume
+ IS LOVINGLY INSCRIBED
+
+ BY
+
+ _THE AUTHOR_.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+It has occurred to the author very often that a volume presenting the
+peculiar features, favorite resorts and distinguishing characteristics,
+of the leading cities of America, would prove of interest to thousands
+who could, at best, see them only in imagination, and to others, who,
+having visited them, would like to compare notes with one who has made
+their PECULIARITIES a study for many years.
+
+A residence in more than a hundred cities, including nearly all that
+are introduced in this work, leads me to feel that I shall succeed in
+my purpose of giving to the public a book, without the necessity of
+marching in slow and solemn procession before my readers a monumental
+array of time-honored statistics; on the contrary, it will be my aim, in
+the following pages, to talk of cities as I have seen and found them in
+my walks, from day to day, with but slight reference to their origin and
+past history.
+
+ WILLARD GLAZIER.
+
+ 22 Jay Street,
+ ALBANY, _September 24, 1883_.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ Portrait of the Author (Steel) FRONTISPIECE.
+ PAGE
+ State Street and Capitol, Albany, N. Y. 34
+ Boston, as Viewed from the Bay 38
+ Soldiers' Monument at Buffalo, N. Y. 62
+ View of Baltimore, from Federal Hill 92
+ View of the Battery, Charleston, South Carolina 108
+ Garden at Mount Pleasant, opposite Charleston, S. C. 112
+ Custom House, Charleston, South Carolina 116
+ Magnolia Cemetery, Charleston, South Carolina 120
+ Public Square and Perry Monument, Cleveland, Ohio 150
+ Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 156
+ Bird's-eye View of Chicago, from the Lake Side 160
+ Burning of Chicago, the World's Greatest Conflagration 164
+ Grand Pacific Hotel, Chicago 170
+ Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 192
+ Harrisburg and Bridges over the Susquehanna 200
+ Jackson Square and Old Cathedral, New Orleans 274
+ Mardi Gras Festival, New Orleans 278
+ Bird's-eye View of New York 296
+ New York and Brooklyn Bridge 318
+ Pittsburg and its Rivers 336
+ Night Scene in Market Square, Portland, Maine 360
+ Old Independence Hall, Philadelphia 370
+ Masonic Temple, Philadelphia 378
+ Girard Avenue Bridge, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia 394
+ View of Providence, Rhode Island, from Prospect Terrace 400
+ Tabernacle and Temple, Salt Lake City 440
+ Seal Rocks from the Cliff House, near San Francisco 462
+ Levee and Great Bridge at St. Louis 492
+ Shaw's Garden at St. Louis, Missouri 502
+ University of Toronto, Canada 524
+ East Front of Capitol at Washington 538
+ State, War and Navy Departments, Washington, D. C. 546
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.--ALBANY.
+
+ From Boston to Albany.--Worcester and Pittsfield.--The Empire
+ State and its Capital.--Old Associations.--State Street.--
+ Sketch of Early History.--Killian Van Rensselaer.--Dutch
+ Emigration.--Old Fort Orange.--City Heights.--The Lumber
+ District.--Van Rensselaer Homestead.--The New Capitol.--
+ Military Bureau.--War Relics.--Letter of General Dix.--
+ Ellsworth and Lincoln Memorials.--Geological Rooms.--The
+ Cathedral.--Dudley Observatory.--Street Marketing.--Troy and
+ Cohoes.--Stove Works.--Paper Boats.--Grand Army Rooms.--Down
+ the Hudson. 25-37
+
+
+CHAPTER II.--BOSTON.
+
+ Geographical Location of Boston.--Ancient Names.--Etymology
+ of the Word Massachusetts.--Changes in the Peninsula.--Noted
+ Points of Interest.--Boston Common.--Old Elm.--Duel Under
+ its Branches.--Soldiers' Monument.--Fragmentary History.--
+ Courtship on the Common.--Faneuil Hall and Market.--Old State
+ House.--King's Chapel.--Brattle Square Church.--New State
+ House.--New Post Office.--Old South Church.--Birthplace of
+ Franklin.--"News Letter."--City Hall.--Custom House.--
+ Providence Railroad Station.--Places of General Interest. 38-56
+
+
+CHAPTER III.--BUFFALO.
+
+ The Niagara Frontier.--Unfortunate Fate of the Eries.--The
+ Battle of Doom.--Times of 1812.--Burning of Buffalo.--Early
+ Names.--Origin of Present Name.--Growth and Population.--
+ Railway Lines.--Queen of the Great Lakes.--Fort Porter and
+ Fort Erie.--International Bridge.--Iron Manufacture.--Danger
+ of the Niagara.--Forest Lawn Cemetery.--Decoration Day.--
+ The Spaulding Monument.--Parks and Boulevard.--Delaware
+ Avenue.--On the Terrace.--Elevator District.--Church and
+ Schools.--Grosvenor Library.--Historical Rooms.--Journalism.--
+ Public Buildings.--City Hall.--Dog-carts and their Attendants. 57-71
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.--BROOKLYN.
+
+ Brooklyn a Suburb of New York.--A City of Homes.--Public
+ Buildings.--Churches.--Henry Ward Beecher.--Thomas De
+ Witt Talmage.--Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D.--Justin D. Fulton,
+ D.D.--R. S. Storrs, D.D.--Navy Yard.--Atlantic Dock.--
+ Washington Park.--Prospect Park.--Greenwood Cemetery.--
+ Evergreen and Cyprus Hills Cemeteries.--Coney Island.--
+ Rockaway.--Staten Island.--Glen Island.--Future of Brooklyn. 72-84
+
+
+CHAPTER V.--BALTIMORE.
+
+ Position of Baltimore.--Streets.--Cathedral and Churches.--
+ Public Buildings.--Educational Institutions.--Art
+ Collections.--Charitable Institutions.--Monuments.--Railway
+ Tunnels.--Parks and Cemeteries.--Druid Hill Park.--Commerce
+ and Manufactures.--Foundation of the City.--Early History.--
+ Bonaparte-Patterson Marriage.--Storming of Baltimore in
+ 1814.--Maryland at the Breaking-out of the Rebellion.--Assault
+ on Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, in April, 1861.--Subsequent
+ Events during the War.--Baltimore Proves Herself Loyal.--
+ Re-union of Grand Army of the Republic in Baltimore,
+ September, 1882.--Old Differences Forgotten and Fraternal
+ Relations Established. 85-106
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.--CHARLESTON.
+
+ First Visit to Charleston.--Jail Yard.--Bombardment of the
+ City.--Roper Hospital.--Charleston During the War.--Secession
+ of South Carolina.--Attack and Surrender of Fort Sumter.--
+ Blockade of the Harbor.--Great Fire of 1861.--Capitulation
+ in 1865.--First Settlement of the City.--Battles of the
+ Revolution.--Nullification Act.--John C. Calhoun.--Population
+ of the City.--Commerce and Manufactures.--Charleston Harbor.--
+ "American Venice."--Battery.--Streets, Public Buildings and
+ Churches.--Scenery about Charleston.--Railways and Steamship
+ Lines.--An Ancient Church.--Magnolia Cemetery.--Drives near
+ the City.--Charleston Purified by Fire. 107-120
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.--CINCINNATI.
+
+ Founding of Cincinnati.--Rapid Increase of Population.--
+ Character of its Early Settlers.--Pro-slavery Sympathies.--
+ During the Rebellion.--Description of the City.--Smoke and
+ Soot--Suburbs.--"Fifth Avenue" of Cincinnati.--Streets,
+ Public Buildings, Private Art Galleries, Hotels, Churches
+ and Educational Institutions.--"Over the Rhine."--Hebrew
+ Population.--Liberal Religious Sentiment.--Commerce and
+ Manufacturing Interests.--Stock Yards and Pork-packing
+ Establishments.--Wine Making.--Covington and Newport
+ Suspension Bridge.--High Water.--Spring Grove Cemetery. 121-139
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.--CLEVELAND.
+
+ The "Western Reserve."--Character of Early Settlers.--
+ Fairport.--Richmond.--Early History of Cleveland.--Indians.--
+ Opening of Ohio and Portsmouth Canal.--Commerce in 1845.--
+ Cleveland in 1850.--First Railroad.--Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Cuyahoga "Flats" at Night.--The "Forest City."--
+ Streets and Avenues.--Monumental Park.--Public Buildings
+ and Churches.--Union Depot.--Water Rents.--Educational
+ Institutions.--Rocky River.--Approach to the City.--Freshet of
+ 1883.--Funeral of President Garfield.--Lake Side Cemetery.--
+ Site of the Garfield Monument. 140-156
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.--CHICAGO.
+
+ Topographical Situation of Chicago.--Meaning of the Name.--
+ Early History.--Massacre at Fort Dearborn.--Last of the Red
+ Men.--The Great Land Bubble.--Rapid Increase in Population
+ and Business.--The Canal.--First Railroad.--Status of
+ the City in 1871.--The Great Fire.--Its Origin, Progress and
+ Extent.--Heartrending Scenes.--Estimated Total Loss.--Help
+ from all Quarters.--Work of Reconstruction.--Second Fire.--
+ Its Public Buildings, Educational and Charitable Institutions,
+ Streets and Parks.--Its Waterworks.--Its Stock Yards.--Its
+ Suburbs.--Future of the City. 157-175
+
+
+CHAPTER X.--CHEYENNE.
+
+ Location of Cheyenne.--Founding of the City.--Lawlessness.--
+ Vigilance Committee.--Woman Suffrage.--Rapid Increase of
+ Population and Business.--A Reaction.--Stock Raising.--
+ Irrigation.--Mineral Resources.--Present Prospects. 176-181
+
+
+CHAPTER XI--DETROIT.
+
+ Detroit and Her Avenues of Approach.--Competing Lines.--
+ London in Canada.--The Strait and the Ferry.--Music on the
+ Waters.--The Home of the Algonquins.--Teusha-grondie.--
+ Wa-we-aw-to-nong.--Fort Ponchartrain and the Early French
+ Settlers.--The Red Cross of St. George.--Conspiracy of
+ Pontiac.--Battle of Bloody Run.--The Long Siege.--Detroit's
+ First American Flag.--Old Landmarks.--The Pontiac Tree.--
+ Devastation by Fire.--Site of the Modern City.--New City
+ Hall.--Public Library.--Mexican Antiquities. 182-193
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.--ERIE.
+
+ Decoration Day in Pennsylvania.--Lake Erie.--Natural
+ Advantages of Erie.--Her Harbor, Commerce and Manufactures.--
+ Streets and Public Buildings.--Soldiers' Monument.--Erie
+ Cemetery.--East and West Parks.--Perry's Victory. 194-198
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.--HARRISBURG.
+
+ A Historic Tree.--John Harris' Wild Adventure with the
+ Indians.--Harris Park.--History of Harrisburg.--Situation
+ and Surroundings.--State House.--State Library.--A Historic
+ Flag.--View from State House Dome.--Capitol Park.--Monument
+ to Soldiers of Mexican War.--Monument to Soldiers of Late
+ War.--Public Buildings.--Front Street.--Bridges over the
+ Susquehanna.--Mt. Kalmia Cemetery.--Present Advantages and
+ Future Prospects of Harrisburg. 199-206
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.--HARTFORD.
+
+ The City of Publishers.--Its Geographical Location.--The New
+ State House.--Mark Twain and the "None Such."--The "Heathen
+ Chinee."--Wadsworth Atheneum.--Charter Oak.--George H. Clark's
+ Poem.--Putnam's Hotel.--Asylum for Deaf Mutes.--The Sign
+ Language.--A Fragment of Witchcraftism.--Hartford
+ _Courant_.--The Connecticut. 207-215
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.--LANCASTER.
+
+ First Visit to Lancaster.--Eastern Pennsylvania.--Conestoga
+ River.--Early History of Lancaster.--Early Dutch Settlers.--
+ Manufactures.--Public Buildings.--Whit-Monday.--Home of
+ three Noted Persons.--James Buchanan, his Life and Death.--
+ Thaddeus Stevens and his Burial Place.--General Reynolds
+ and his Death.--"Cemetery City." 216-221
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.--MILWAUKEE.
+
+ Rapid Development of the Northwest.--The "West" Forty
+ Years Ago.--Milwaukee and its Commerce and Manufactures.--
+ Grain Elevators.--Harbor.--Divisions of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Northwestern National Asylum for Disabled
+ Soldiers.--German Population.--Influence and Results of German
+ Immigration.--Bank Riot in 1862.--Ancient Tumuli.--Mound
+ Builders.--Mounds Near Milwaukee.--Significance of Same.--
+ Early Traders.--Foundation of the City in 1835.--Excelling
+ Chicago in 1870.--Population and Commerce in 1880. 222-235
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII--MONTREAL.
+
+ Thousand Islands.--Long Sault Rapids.--Lachine Rapids.--
+ Victoria Bridge--Mont Real.--Early History of Montreal.--
+ Its Shipping Interests.--Quays.--Manufactures.--Population.--
+ Roman Catholic Supremacy.--Churches.--Nunneries.--Hospitals,
+ Colleges.--Streets.--Public Buildings.--Victoria Skating
+ Rink.--Sleighing.--Early Disasters.--Points of Interest.--
+ The "Canucks." 236-247
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.--NEWARK.
+
+ From New York to Newark.--Two Hundred Years Ago.--The
+ Pioneers.--Public Parks.--City of Churches.--The Canal.--
+ Sailing Up-Hill.--An Old Graveyard.--New Amsterdam and New
+ Netherlands.--The Dutch and English.--Adventurers from New
+ England.--The Indians.--Rate of Population.--Manufactures.--
+ Rank as a City. 248-255
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.--NEW HAVEN.
+
+ The City of Elms.--First Impressions.--A New England Sunday.--
+ A Sail on the Harbor.--Oyster Beds.--East Rock.--The Lonely
+ Denizen of the Bluff.--Romance of John Turner.--West Rock.--
+ The Judges' Cave.--Its Historical Association.--Escape of
+ the Judges.--Monument on the City Green.--Yale College.--Its
+ Stormy Infancy.--Battle on the Weathersfield Road.--Harvard,
+ the Fruit of the Struggle. 256-263
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.--NEW ORLEANS.
+
+ Locality of New Orleans.--The Mississippi.--The Old and the
+ New.--Ceded to Spain.--Creole Part in the American Revolution.
+ Retransferred to France.--Purchased by the United States.--
+ Creole Discontent.--Battle of New Orleans.--Increase of
+ Population.--The Levee.--Shipping.--Public Buildings,
+ Churches, Hospitals, Hotels and Places of Amusement.--
+ Streets.--Suburbs.--Public Squares and Parks.--Places
+ of Historic Interest.--Cemeteries.--French Market.--
+ Mardi-gras.--Climate and Productions.--New Orleans during
+ the Rebellion.--Chief Cotton Mart of the World.--Exports.--
+ Imports.--Future Prosperity of the City. 264-280
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.--NEW YORK.
+
+ Early History of New York.--During the Revolution.--Evacuation
+ Day.--Bowling Green.--Wall Street.--Stock Exchange.--
+ Jacob Little.--Daniel Drew.--Jay Cooke.--Rufus Hatch.--
+ The Vanderbilts.--Jay Gould.--Trinity Church.--John Jacob
+ Astor.--Post-Office.--City Hall and Court House.--James Gordon
+ Bennett.--Printing House Square.--Horace Greeley.--Broadway.--
+ Union Square.--Washington Square.--Fifth Avenue.--Madison
+ Square.--Cathedral.--Murray Hill.--Second Avenue.--Booth's
+ Theatre and Grand Opera House.--The Bowery.--Peter Cooper.--
+ Fourth Avenue.--Park Avenue.--Five Points and its Vicinity.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Tombs.--Central Park.--Water Front.--
+ Blackwell's Island.--Hell Gate.--Suspension Bridge.--Opening
+ Day.--Tragedy of Decoration Day.--New York of the Present and
+ Future. 281-318
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.--OMAHA.
+
+ Arrival in Omaha.--The Missouri River.--Position and
+ Appearance of the City.--Public Buildings.--History.--Land
+ Speculation.--Panic of 1857.--Discovery of Gold in Colorado.--
+ "Pike's Peak or Bust."--Sudden Revival of Business.--First
+ Railroad.--Union Pacific Railroad.--Population.--Commercial
+ and Manufacturing Interests.--Bridge over the Missouri.--
+ Union Pacific Depot--Prospects for the Future. 319-325
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.--OTTAWA.
+
+ Ottawa, the Seat of the Canadian Government.--History.--
+ Population.--Geographical Position.--Scenery.--Chaudiere
+ Falls.--Rideau Falls.--Ottawa River.--Lumber Business.--
+ Manufactures.--Steamboat and Railway Communications.--Moore's
+ Canadian Boat Song.--Description of the City.--Churches,
+ Nunneries, and Charitable Institutions.--Government
+ Buildings.--Rideau Hall.--Princess Louise and Marquis
+ of Lorne.--Ottawa's Proud Boast. 326-331
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.--PITTSBURG.
+
+ Pittsburg at Night.--A Pittsburg Fog.--Smoke.--Description of
+ the City.--The Oil Business.--Ohio River.--Public Buildings,
+ Educational and Charitable Institutions.--Glass Industry.--
+ Iron Foundries.--Fort Pitt Works--Casting a Monster Gun.--
+ American Iron Works.--Nail Works.--A City of Workers.--
+ A True Democracy.--Wages.--Character of Workmen.--Value of
+ Organization.--Knights of Labor.--Opposed to Strikes.--True
+ Relations of Capital and Labor.--Railroad Strike of 1877.--
+ Allegheny City.--Population of Pittsburg.--Early History.--
+ Braddock's Defeat.--Old Battle Ground.--Historic Relics.--
+ The Past and the Present. 332-347
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.--PORTLAND.
+
+ The Coast of Maine.--Early Settlements in Portland.--Troubles
+ with the Indians.--Destruction of the Town in 1690.--Destroyed
+ Again in 1703.--Subsequent Settlement and Growth.--During the
+ Revolution.--First Newspaper.--Portland Harbor.--Commercial
+ Facilities and Progress.--During the Rebellion.--Great Fire
+ of 1866.--Reconstruction.--Position of the City.--Streets.--
+ Munjoy Hill.--Maine General Hospital.--Eastern and Western
+ Promenades.--Longfellow's House.--Birthplace of the Poet.--
+ Market Square and Hall.--First Unitarian Church.--Lincoln
+ Park.--Eastern Cemetery.--Deering's Woods.--Commercial
+ Street.--Old-time Mansion.--Case's Bay and Islands.--
+ Cushing's Island.--Peak's Island.--Ling Island.--Little
+ Chebague Island.--Harpswell. 348-365
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.--PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ Early History.--William Penn.--The Revolution.--Declaration
+ of Independence.--First Railroad.--Riots.--Streets and
+ Houses.--Relics of the Past.--Independence Hall.--Carpenters'
+ Hall.--Blue Anchor.--Letitia Court.--Christ Church.--Old
+ Swedes' Church.--Benjamin Franklin.--Libraries.--Old Quaker
+ Almshouse.--Old Houses in Germantown.--Manufactures.--
+ Theatres.--Churches--Scientific Institutions.--Newspapers.--
+ Medical Colleges.--Schools.--Public Buildings.--
+ Penitentiary.--River Front.--Fairmount Park.--ZoA¶logical
+ Gardens.--Cemeteries.--Centennial Exhibition.--
+ Bi-Centennial.--Past, Present and Future of the City. 366-398
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.--PROVIDENCE.
+
+ Origin of the City.--Roger Williams.--Geographical Location
+ and Importance.--Topography of Providence.--The Cove.--
+ Railroad Connections.--Brown University.--Patriotism of Rhode
+ Island.--Soldiers' Monument.--The Roger Williams Park.--
+ Narragansett Bay.--Suburban Villages.--Points of Interest.--
+ Butter Exchange.--Lamplighting on a New Plan.--Jewelry
+ Manufactories. 399-404
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.--QUEBEC.
+
+ Appearance of Quebec.--Gibraltar of America.--Fortifications
+ and Walls.--The Walled City.--Churches, Nunneries and
+ Hospitals.--Views from the Cliff.--Upper Town.--Lower Town.--
+ Manufactures.--Public Buildings.--Plains of Abraham.--Falls of
+ Montmorenci.--Sledding on the "Cone."--History of Quebec.--
+ Capture of the City by the British.--Death of Generals Wolfe
+ and Montcalm.--Disaster under General Murray.--Ceding of
+ Canada, by France, to England.--Attack by American Forces
+ under Montgomery and Arnold.--Death of Montgomery.--Capital
+ of Lower Canada and of the Province of Quebec. 405-414
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.--READING.
+
+ Geographical Position and History of Reading.--Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Population, Streets, Churches and Public
+ Buildings.--Boating on the Schuylkill.--White Spot and the
+ View from its Summit.--Other Pleasure Resorts.--Decoration
+ Day.--Wealth Created by Industry. 415-420
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.--RICHMOND.
+
+ Arrival in Richmond.--Libby Prison.--Situation of the City.--
+ Historical Associations.--Early Settlement.--Attacked by
+ British Forces in the Revolution.--Monumental Church.--
+ St. John's Church.--State Capital.--Passage of the Ordinance
+ of Secession.--Richmond the Capital of the Confederate
+ States.--Military Expeditions against the City.--Evacuation
+ of Petersburg.--Surrender of the City.--Visit of President
+ Lincoln.--Historical Places.--Statues.--Rapid Recuperation
+ After the War.--Manufacturing and Commercial Interests.--
+ Streets and Public Buildings.--Population and Future
+ Prospects. 421-432
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.--SAINT PAUL.
+
+ Early History of Saint Paul.--Founding of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Roman Catholics.--Places of Resort.--Falls of
+ Minnehaha.--Carver's Cave.--Fountain Cave.--Commercial
+ Interests.--Present and Future Prospects. 433-487
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.--SALT LAKE CITY.
+
+ The Mormons.--Pilgrimage Across the Continent.--Site of Salt
+ Lake City.--A People of Workers.--Spread of Mormons through
+ other Territories.--City of the Saints.--Streets.--Fruit and
+ Shade Trees.--Irrigation.--The Tabernacle.--Residences of
+ the late Brigham Young.--Museum.--Public Buildings.--Warm
+ and Hot Springs.--Number and Character of Population.--
+ Barter System before Completion of Railroad.--Mormons and
+ Gentiles.--Present Advantages and Future Prospects of Salt
+ Lake City. 438-447
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.--SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ San Francisco.--The Golden State.--San Francisco Bay.--Golden
+ Gate.--Conquest of California by Fremont, 1848.--Discovery of
+ Gold.--Rush to the Mines, 1849.--"Forty-niners."--Great Rise
+ in Provisions and Wages.--Miners Homeward Bound.--Dissipation
+ and Vice in the City.--Vigilance Committee.--Great Influx of
+ Miners in 1850.--Immense Gold Yield.--Climate.--Earthquakes.--
+ Productions.--Irrigation.--Streets and Buildings.--Churches.--
+ Lone Mountain Cemetery.--Cliff House.--Seal Rock.--Theatres.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Chinese Theatres.--Joss Houses.--Emigration
+ Companies.--The Chinese Question.--Cheap Labor.--"The Chinese
+ Must Go."--Present Population and Commerce of San Francisco.--
+ Exports.--Manufactures.--Cosmopolitan Nature of Inhabitants. 448-472
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.--SAVANNAH.
+
+ First Visit to Savannah.--Camp Davidson.--The City During
+ the War.--An Escaped Prisoner.--Recapture and Final
+ Escape.--A "City of Refuge."--Savannah by Night.--Position
+ of the City.--Streets and Public Squares.--Forsyth Park.--
+ Monuments.--Commerce.--View from the Wharves.--Railroads.--
+ Founding of the City.--Revolutionary History.--Death of
+ Pulaski.--Secession.--Approach of Sherman.--Investment of
+ the City by Union Troops.--Recuperation After the War.--
+ Climate.--Colored Population.--Bonaventure, Thunderbolt,
+ and Other Suburban Resorts. 473-486
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.--SPRINGFIELD.
+
+ Valley of the Connecticut.--Location of Springfield.--
+ The United States Armory.--Springfield Library.--Origin
+ of the Present Library System.--The Wayland Celebration.--
+ Settlement of Springfield.--Indian Hostilities.--Days of
+ Witchcraft.--Trial of Hugh Parsons.--Hope Daggett.--
+ Springfield "Republican." 487-491
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.--ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Approach to St. Louis.--Bridge Over the Mississippi.--View
+ of the City.--Material Resources of Missouri.--Early History
+ of St. Louis.--Increase of Population.--Manufacturing and
+ Commercial Interests.--Locality.--Description of St. Louis
+ in 1842.--Resemblance to Philadelphia.--Public Buildings.--
+ Streets.--Parks.--Fair Week.--Educational and Charitable
+ Institutions.--Hotels.--Mississippi River.--St. Louis During
+ the Rebellion.--Peculiar Characteristics.--The Future of the
+ City. 492-510
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII--SYRACUSE.
+
+ Glimpses on the Rail.--Schenectady.--Valley of the Mohawk.--
+ "Lover's Leap."--Rome and its Doctor.--Oneida Stone.--The
+ Lo Race.--Oneida Community.--The City of Salt.--The Six
+ Nations.--The Onondagas.--Traditions of Red Americans.--
+ Hiawatha.--Sacrifice of White Dogs.--Ceremonies.--The Lost
+ Tribes of Israel.--Witches and Wizards.--A Jules Verne
+ Story.--The Salt Wells of Salina.--Lake Onondaga.--Indian
+ Knowledge of Salt Wells.--"Over the Hills and Far Away."--
+ A Castle.--Steam Canal Boats.--Adieux.--Westward Ho! 511-521
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII--TORONTO.
+
+ Situation of Toronto.--The Bay.--History.--Rebellion of
+ 1837.--Fenian Invasion of 1866.--Population.--General
+ Appearance.--Sleighing.--Streets.--Railways.--Commerce.--
+ Manufactures.--Schools and Colleges.--Queen Park.--
+ Churches.--Benevolent Institutions.--Halls and Other
+ Public Buildings.--Hotels.--Newspapers.--General
+ Characteristics and Progress. 522-527
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.--WASHINGTON.
+
+ Situation of the National Capital.--Site Selected by
+ Washington.--Statues of General Andrew Jackson, Scott,
+ McPherson, Rawlins.--Lincoln Emancipation Group.--Navy Yard
+ Bridge.--Capitol Building.--The White House.--Department
+ of State, War and Navy.--The Treasury Department.--Patent
+ Office.--Post Office Department.--Agricultural Building.--
+ Army Medical Museum.--Government Printing Office.--United
+ States Barracks.--Smithsonian Institute.--National Museum.--
+ The Washington Monument.--Corcoran Art Gallery.--National
+ Medical College.--Deaf and Dumb Asylum.--Increase of
+ Population.--Washington's Future Greatness. 528-558
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ALBANY.
+
+ From Boston to Albany.--Worcester and Pittsfield.--The Empire
+ State and its Capital.--Old Associations.--State Street.--Sketch
+ of Early History.--Killian Van Rensselaer.--Dutch Emigration.--
+ Old Fort Orange.--City Heights.--The Lumber District.--Van
+ Rensselaer Homestead.--The New Capitol.--Military Bureau.--
+ War Relics.--Letter of General Dix.--Ellsworth and Lincoln
+ Memorials.--Geological Rooms.--The Cathedral.--Dudley
+ Observatory.--Street Marketing.--Troy and Cohoes.--Stove
+ Works.--Paper Boats.--Grand Army Rooms.--Down the Hudson.
+
+
+An exceedingly cold day was February fourth, 1875, the day which marked
+our journey from Boston to Albany. My inclination to step outside our
+car and tip my hat to the various familiar places along the route was
+suddenly checked by a gust of cutting, freezing, zero-stinging air. A
+ride of between one and two hours brought us to Worcester, a stirring
+town of about forty thousand inhabitants. Worcester is noted principally
+for its cotton factories, and as a political center in Eastern
+Massachusetts.
+
+Springfield, Westfield and Pittsfield follow in succession along the
+route, in central and Western Massachusetts, the first of which has been
+made the subject of a special chapter in this book. The last I remember
+chiefly as the place where, in the summer of 1866, I took my first steps
+in a new enterprise. Pittsfield has large cotton mills, is a summer
+resort, and is the nearest point, by rail, to the Shaker community at
+Lebanon, five miles distant. At Westfield the Mount Holyoke Railroad
+joins the main line, and semi-annually conveys the daughters of the land
+to the famous _Holyoke Female Seminary_.
+
+Leaving Pittsfield we soon reached the State line between New York and
+Massachusetts. I sometimes think that after a residence in almost every
+State of the Union, I ought to feel no greater attraction for my native
+State than any other, yet I cannot repress a sentiment of stronger
+affection for good, grand old New York than any other in the united
+sisterhood. The Empire State has indeed a charm for me, and a congenial
+breeze, I imagine, always awaits me at its boundary.
+
+A ride of another hour brings to view the church spires of Albany, and
+with them a long line of thrilling memories come rushing, like many
+waters, to my mind. Here, in 1859, I entered the State Normal School;
+here I resolved to enter the army; and here the first edition of my
+first book was published, in the autumn of 1865. The work, therefore, of
+presenting this chapter upon the peculiar features of the Capital City
+of New York, may be regarded as one of the most agreeable duties I have
+to perform in the preparation of these pages.
+
+The traveler now entering Albany from the east crosses the Hudson on a
+beautiful iron railroad bridge, which, in the steady march of
+improvements, has succeeded the old-time ferry boat. He is landed at the
+commodious stone building of the New York Central and Hudson River
+Railroad, which is conveniently sandwiched between the Delavan House and
+Stanwix Hall, two large, well known and well conducted hotels.
+
+My first night in a city and a hotel was spent here, at the old Adams
+House, located at that time on Broadway just opposite the Delavan. I was
+awakened in the morning by the roll and rattle of vehicles, and the
+usual din and confusion of a city street. The contrast to my quiet home
+in the Valley of the St. Lawrence was so marked, I can never forget the
+impression I then received, and as I walked up State street toward the
+old Capitol, I almost fancied that such a street might be a fit road to
+Paradise. Albany was the gate through which I entered the world, and to
+my boyish vision the view it disclosed was very wide, and the grand
+possibilities that lay in the dim distance seemed manifold. It is the
+oldest city, save Jamestown, Va., in the Union, having been settled in
+the very babyhood of the seventeenth century, somewhere about 1612 or
+1614. It was originally, until the year 1661, only a trading post on the
+frontier, the entire region of country to the westward being unexplored
+and unknown, except as the "far west." The red warriors of the Mohegans,
+Senecas, Mohawks and the remaining bands of the "Six Nations" held
+undisputed possession of the soil, and kindled their council fires and
+danced their "corn dances" in peace, unmolested as yet by the aggressive
+pale-faces.
+
+The baptismal name of the embryo city of Albany was Scho-negh-ta-da, an
+Indian word meaning "over the plains." The name was afterwards
+transferred to the outlying suburban town now known as Schenectady. An
+immense tract of land bordering the Hudson for twenty-four miles, and
+reaching back from the river three times that distance, included Albany
+within its jurisdiction, and was originally owned by a rich Dutch
+merchant, one Killian Van Rensselaer, from Amsterdam. The land was
+purchased from the Indians for the merest trifle, after the usual
+fashion of white cupidity when dealing with Indian generosity and
+ignorance. Emigrants were sent over from the old country to people this
+wide domain, and thus the first white colony was established, which
+subsequently grew into sufficient importance to become the Capital city
+of the Empire State.
+
+Before the purchase of Killian Van Rensselaer, a fort was built
+somewhere on what is now known as Broadway, and was named Fort Orange,
+in honor of the Prince of Orange, who was at that time patroon of New
+Netherlands, as New York was at first called. Old Fort Orange afterwards
+went by various names, among which were Rensselaerwyck, Beaverwyck and
+Williamstadt. In 1664 the sovereignty of the tract passed into the hands
+of the English, and was named Albany, in compliment to the Duke of
+Albany. In 1686 the young city aspired to a city charter, and its first
+mayor, Peter Schuyler, was then elected. In 1807 it became the Capital
+of the State. As an item of interest, it may be mentioned that the first
+vessel which ascended the river as far as Albany was the yacht Half
+Moon, Captain Hendrick Hudson commanding.
+
+Albany, like ancient Rome, sits upon her many hills, and the views
+obtained from the city heights are beautiful in the extreme. The
+Helderbergs and the Catskill ranges loom blue and beautiful towards the
+south, Troy and the Green Mountains of Vermont can be seen from the
+north, while beyond the river, Bath-on-the-Hudson and the misty hill
+tops further away, rim the horizon's distant verge. The city has a
+large trade in lumber, and that portion of it which is known as the
+"lumber district" is devoted almost exclusively to this branch. One may
+walk, of a summer's day, along the smooth and winding road between the
+river and the canal, for two miles or more, and encounter nothing save
+the tasteful cottage-like offices, done in Gothic architecture, of the
+merchant princes in this trade, sandwiched between huge piles of lumber,
+rising white and high in the sun, and giving out resinous, piney odors.
+Not far from this vicinity stands the old Van Rensselaer homestead,
+guarded by a few primeval forest trees that have survived the wreck of
+time and still keep their ancient watch and ward. The old house, I have
+been told, is now deserted of all save an elderly lady, one of the last
+of the descendants of the long and ancient line of Van Rensselaer.
+Numerous points of interest dot the city in all directions, from limit
+to limit, and claim the attention of the stranger. Among the most
+prominent of these is, of course, the new Capitol building now in
+process of construction at the head of State street. A very pretty model
+of the structure is on exhibition in a small wooden building standing at
+the entrance to the grounds, which gives, I should judge, a clever idea
+of what the future monumental pile is to be like. Its height is very
+imposing, and the tall towers and minarets which rise from its roof will
+give it an appearance of still greater grandeur. It is built of granite
+quarried from Maine and New Hampshire, and is in the form of a
+parallelogram, enclosing an open court. Had I a sufficient knowledge of
+architecture to enable me to talk of orders, of pilasters, columns,
+entablatures and facades, I might perhaps give my readers a clearer
+idea of the magnificence of this new structure, which will stand without
+a rival, in this country at least, and may even dare to compete with
+some of the marvellous splendors of the old world.
+
+The Old Capitol and the State Library stand just in front of the new
+building, and obscure the view from the foot of State street. The Senate
+and Assembly chambers in the old building have an antiquated air, with
+their straight-backed chairs upholstered in green and red, and the rough
+stairways leading to the cupola, through an unfurnished attic, are
+suggestive of accident. In this cupola, once upon a time, in the year
+1832, a certain Mr. Weaver, tired of life and its turmoil, swung himself
+out of it on a rope. So the cupola has its bit of romance. In this
+neighborhood, on State street, above the Library, is located the Bureau
+of Military Statistics, which is well worth a visit from every New
+Yorker who takes a pride in the military glory of his native State. One
+is greeted at the entrance with a host of mementos of our recent civil
+war, which bring back a flood of patriotic memories. Here is a
+collection of nine hundred battle flags, all belonging to the State,
+most of them torn and tattered in hard service, and inscribed with the
+names of historic fields into which they went fresh and bright, and out
+of which they came smoked and begrimed, and torn with the conflict of
+battle. Here are old canteens which have furnished solace to true
+comrades on many occasions of mutual hardship. Here, too, is the Lincoln
+collection, with its sad reminders of the nation's loved and murdered
+President; and in a corner of the same room the Ellsworth collection is
+displayed from a glass case. His gun and the Zouave suit worn by him at
+the time of his death hang side by side, and there, too, is the flag
+which, with impetuous bravery, he tore down from the top of the Marshall
+House at Alexandria, Virginia. In the same case hangs the picture of his
+avenger, Captain Brownell, and the rifle with which he shot Jackson. In
+another part of the room may be seen the original letter of Governor,
+then Secretary, Dix, which afterwards became so famous, and which
+created, in a great measure, the wave of popularity that carried him
+into the gubernatorial chair.
+
+The letter reads as follows:--
+
+ "TREASURY DEPARTMENT,
+ January, 29th, 1861.
+
+"Tell Lieutenant Caldwell to arrest Captain Breshwood, assume command of
+the cutter, and obey the order I gave through you. If Captain Breshwood,
+after arrest, undertakes to interfere with the command of the cutter,
+tell Lieutenant Caldwell to consider him as a mutineer and treat him
+accordingly. If any one attempts to haul down the American flag, shoot
+him on the spot.
+
+ "JOHN A. DIX, _Secretary of the Treasury_."
+
+The captured office chairs used by Jeff. Davis, in Richmond, the lock
+from John Brown's prison door at Harper's Ferry, pieces of plate from
+the monitors off Charleston, torpedoes from James River, the bell of the
+old guard-house at Fort Fisher, captured slave chains, miniature pontoon
+bridges, draft boxes and captured Rebel shoes, may be mentioned as a few
+among the many curiosities of this military bureau. Here, too, may be
+seen the pardon, from Lincoln, for Roswell Mclntire, taken from his dead
+body at the battle of Five Forks; and near by hangs the picture of
+Sergeant Amos Humiston, of the 154th New York Regiment, who was
+identified by means of the picture of his three children, found clasped
+in his hand as he lay dead on the field of Gettysburg. In this room,
+also, is the Jamestown, New York, flag, made by the ladies of that place
+in six hours after the attack on Sumter, and which was displayed from
+the office of the Jamestown _Journal_. Mr. Daly, the polite janitor of
+the building, is always happy to receive visitors, and will show them
+every courtesy.
+
+The Geological Rooms, on State street, are also well worthy the time and
+attention of the visitor. Large collections of the various kinds of rock
+which underlie the soil of our country are here on exhibition, as, also,
+the coral formations and geological curiosities of all ages. In an upper
+room towers the mammoth Cohoes mastodon, whose skeleton reaches from
+floor to ceiling. This monster of a former age was accidentally
+discovered at that place by parties who were excavating for a building.
+In these rooms, also, there are huge jaws of whales, which enable one to
+better understand the disposition of the Bible whales, and how easy it
+must have been for them to gulp down two or three Jonahs, if one little
+Jonah should fail to appease the delicate appetite of such sportive
+fishes. I couldn't help thinking of the lost races that must have
+peopled the earth when this old world was young--when these fossils were
+undergoing formation, and these mastodons made the ground tremble
+beneath their tread.
+
+Where are these peoples now, and where their unrevealed histories? Shall
+we never know more of them than Runic stones and mysterious mounds can
+unfold? These reminders of the things that once had an existence but
+have now vanished from the face of the earth, and well nigh from the
+memory of men--these things are full of suggestion, to say the least,
+and are quite apt to correct any undue vanity which may take possession
+of us, or any large idea of future fame. We may, perhaps, create a
+ripple in the surface of remembrance which marks the place where our
+human existence went out, and which, at the furthest, may last a few
+hundred years. But who can hope for more than that, or hoping, can
+reasonably expect to find the wish realized? "There are more things in
+heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in our philosophy."
+
+The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, on Eagle street, is one of
+the finest church structures in Albany. It is built of brown freestone,
+in the Gothic style of architecture, and its two towers are each two
+hundred-and-eighty feet in height. Its cost was six hundred thousand
+dollars. The interior decorations are beautiful, and the rich stained
+glass windows are the gifts of sister societies. On Easter mornings the
+Cathedral is sure to be crowded by people of all sects and creeds,
+brought there to witness the joyous Easter services which terminate the
+long fast of Lent.
+
+About a mile and a half from the city, on Patroon's Hill, is situated
+the Dudley Observatory, where on clear summer nights Albanians come to
+gaze at the stars and the moon, through the large Observatory
+refractor. The structure is built in the form of a cross, eighty-six
+feet long and seventy feet deep.
+
+One of the first peculiarities which attracts the attention of the
+non-resident of Albany is the appearance of the business portion of
+State street, in the forenoon, from eight o'clock until twelve. Any time
+between these hours the street, from the lower end of Capitol Park down
+to Pearl street, is transformed into a vast market-place. Meat-wagons,
+vegetable carts, restaurants on wheels, and all sorts of huckstering
+establishments, are backed up to the sidewalk, on either side, blocking
+the way and so filling the wide avenue that there is barely room for the
+street-car in its passage up and down the hill. The descendants of
+Killian Van Rensselaer and the aristocratic Ten Eycks and Van Woerts, of
+Albany, should exhibit enterprise enough, I think, to erect a city
+market and spare State street this spectacle.
+
+ [Illustration: STATE STREET AND CAPITOL, ALBANY, NEW YORK.]
+
+The manufacturing interest of Albany consists largely of stove works, in
+which department it competes with its near neighbor, Troy. This
+flourishing city, of about forty-eight thousand souls, is seven miles
+distant from Albany, up the river, and is in manifold communication with
+it by railroads on both sides of the Hudson, as well as by street
+railway. Steam cars run between Albany and Troy half hourly, during the
+day and far into the night, and one always encounters a stream of people
+between these two places, whose current sets both ways, at all times and
+seasons. Troy is at the head of navigation on the Hudson and
+communicates by street car with Cohoes, Lansingburg and Waterford.
+Cohoes is a place of great natural beauty, and the Cataract Falls of
+the Mohawk River at that place add an element of wild grandeur to the
+scenery. One of the large, rocky islands in the river, known as Simmons'
+Island, is a popular resort for picnic excursions, and is a delightful
+place in summer, with its groves of forest trees, and the pleasant noise
+of waters around its base. The place seems haunted by an atmosphere of
+Indian legend, and one could well imagine the departed warriors of the
+lost tribes of the Mohawk treading these wild forest paths, and making
+eloquent "talks" before their red brothers gathered around the council
+fire.
+
+The Mohawk and Hudson rivers unite at Troy, and seek a common passage to
+the sea. Mrs. Willard's Seminary for young ladies is located in this
+city, and is a standard institution of learning. Many of the streets of
+Troy are remarkably clean and finely shaded, and handsome residences and
+business blocks adorn them. The city is also a headquarters for
+Spiritualism in this section of the country. The Spiritualistic Society
+has, I am told, a flourishing, progressive Lyceum, which supersedes,
+with them, the orthodox Sunday school, and the exercises, consisting in
+part of marches and recitations, are conducted in a spirited and
+interesting manner.
+
+Foundries for hollow-ware and stoves constitute the leading branch of
+manufacture in the city of Troy. To one not familiar with the process by
+which iron is shaped into the various articles of common use among us, a
+visit to the foundries of Troy or Albany would be full of interest and
+instruction. Piles of yellow sand are lying in the long buildings used
+as foundries, while on either side the room workmen are busily engaged
+fashioning the wet sand into moulds for the reception of the melted
+iron. Originally the sand is of a bright yellow color, but it soon
+becomes a dingy brown, by repeated use in cooling the liquid metal.
+
+Each moulder has his "floor," or special amount of room allotted him for
+work, and here, during the forenoon, and up to three or four o'clock in
+the afternoon, he is very busy indeed, preparing for the "pouring"
+operation. Pig iron, thrown into a huge cauldron or boiler, and melted
+to a white heat, is then poured, from a kettle lined with clay, into the
+sand-moulds, and in a remarkably short space of time the greenish-white
+liquid which you saw flowing into a tiny, black aperture is shaken out
+of the sand by the workmen, having been transformed into portions of
+stoves. These go to the polishing room, and thence to the finishing
+apartment, where the detached pieces are hammered together, with
+deafening noise.
+
+Troy rejoices also in a paper boat manufactory--the boats being made
+especially for racing and feats of skill. They find sale principally in
+foreign markets, and at stated seasons divide the attention of the
+English with the "Derby." The boats are made of layers of brown paper
+put together with shellac.
+
+There is a large society of Grand Army men in Albany, one Post numbering
+five or six hundred members. Their rooms are tastefully decorated, and
+hung with patriotic pictures, which make the blood thrill anew, as in
+the days of '61. A miniature fort occupies the centre of the room, and
+emblematic cannon and crossed swords are to be seen in conspicuous
+places.
+
+A trip down the Hudson, in summer, from Albany to New York, is said to
+afford some of the finest scenery in the world, not excepting the
+famous sail on the castled Rhine; and the large river boats which leave
+Albany wharf daily, for our American London, are, indeed, floating
+palaces. The capital city of the Empire State is not, therefore, without
+its attractions, despite the fact that it was settled by the Dutch, and
+that a sort of Rip Van Winkle sleep seems, at times, to have fastened
+itself upon the drowsy spirit of Albanian enterprise.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BOSTON.
+
+ Geographical Location of Boston.--Ancient Names.--Etymology
+ of the Word Massachusetts.--Changes in the Peninsula.--Noted
+ Points of Interest.--Boston Common.--Old Elm.--Duel Under its
+ Branches.--Soldiers' Monument.--Fragmentary History.--Courtship
+ on the Common.--Faneuil Hall and Market.--Old State House.--
+ King's Chapel.--Brattle Square Church.--New State House.--
+ New Post Office.--Old South Church.--Birthplace of Franklin.--
+ "News Letter."--City Hall.--Custom House.--Providence Railroad
+ Station.--Places of General Interest.
+
+
+Boston sits like a queen at the head of her harbor on the Massachusetts
+coast, and wears her crown of past and present glory with an easy and
+self-satisfied grace. Her commercial importance is large; her ships
+float on many seas; and she rejoices now in the same uncompromising
+spirit of independence which controlled the actions of the celebrated
+"Tea Party" in the pioneer days of '76. Her safe harbor is one of the
+best on the Atlantic seaboard, and is dotted with over a hundred
+islands. On some of these, garrisoned forts look grimly seaward.
+
+Boston is built on a peninsula about four miles in circumference, and to
+this fact may be attributed the origin of her first name, Shawmutt, that
+word signifying in the Indian vocabulary a peninsula. Its second name,
+Tremount, took its rise from the three peaks of Beacon Hill, prominently
+seen from Charlestown by the first settlers there. Many of the colonists
+were from old Boston, in Lincolnshire, England, and on the seventh of
+September, 1630, this name supplanted the first two.
+
+ [Illustration: BOSTON, AS VIEWED FROM THE BAY.]
+
+In this connection may be given the etymology of the word Massachusetts,
+which is somewhat curious. It is said that the red Sachem who governed
+in this part of the country had his seat on a hill about two leagues
+south of Boston. It lay in the shape of an Indian arrow's head, which in
+their language was called Mos. Wetuset, pronounced _Wechuset_, was also
+their name for a hill, and the Sachem's seat was therefore named
+Mosentuset, which a slight variation changed into the name afterwards
+received by the colony. Boston, as the centre of this colony, began from
+the first to assume the importance of the first city of New England. Its
+history belongs not only to itself, but to the country at large, as the
+pioneer city in the grand struggle for constitutional and political
+liberty. A large majority of the old landmarks which connected it with
+the stormy days of the past, and stood as monuments of its primeval
+history, are now obliterated by time and the steady march of
+improvements. The face of the country is changed. The three peaks of
+Beacon Hill, which once lifted themselves to the height of a hundred and
+thirty feet above the sea, are now cut down into insignificant knolls.
+The waters of the "black bay" which swelled around its base have receded
+to give place to the encroachments of the city. Made lands, laid out in
+streets and set thick with dwellings, supplant the mud flats formerly
+covered by the tide. Thousands of acres which were once the bed of the
+harbor are now densely populated.
+
+The house on Harrison avenue where the writer is at present domiciled is
+located on the spot which once was occupied by one of the best wharves
+in the city. The largest ocean craft moored to this wharf, on account of
+the great depth of water flowing around it. The land has steadily
+encroached on the water, until the peninsula that was is a peninsula no
+longer, and its former geographical outlines have dropped out of sight
+in the whirl and rush of the populous and growing city. A few old
+landmarks of the past, however, still remain, linking the _now_ and the
+_then_, and among the most prominent of these are Faneuil Hall, the Old
+South Church, which was founded in 1660, King's Chapel, the Old Granary
+Burying-ground, Brattle Square Church, quite recently demolished, the
+old State House, and Boston Common. The Common antedates nearly all
+other special features of the city, and is the pride of Bostonians. Here
+juvenile Boston comes in winter to enjoy the exciting exercise of
+"coasting," and woe to the unwary foot passenger who may chance to
+collide with the long sleds full of noisy boys which shoot like black
+streaks from the head of Beacon street Mall, down the diagonal length of
+the Common, to the junction of Boylston and Tremont streets. This winter
+(1874-5), owing to several unfortunate accidents to passers-by across
+the snowy roads of the coasters, elevated bridges have been erected, to
+meet the wants of the people without interfering with the rights of the
+boys. The Common was originally a fifty-acre lot belonging to a Mr.
+Blackstone. This was in 1633. It was designed as a cow pasture and
+training ground, and was sold to the people of Boston the next year,
+1634, for thirty pounds. The city was taxed for this purpose to the
+amount of not less than five shillings for each inhabitant. Mr.
+Blackstone afterwards removed to Cumberland, Rhode Island, where he
+died, in the spring of 1675. It is said that John Hancock's cows were
+pastured on the Common in the days of the Revolution. On the tenth of
+May, 1830, the city authorities forbade the use of the Common for cows,
+at which time it was inclosed by a two-rail fence. The handsome iron
+paling which now surrounds the historic area has long since taken the
+place of the ancient fence.
+
+Perhaps the most noticeable, certainly the most famous object on Boston
+Common, is the Great Tree, or Old Elm, which stands in a hollow of rich
+soil near a permanent pond of water, not far from the centre of the
+enclosure. It is of unknown age. It was probably over a hundred years
+old in 1722. Governor Winthrop came to Boston in 1630, but before that
+period the tree probably had its existence. It antedates the arrival of
+the first settlers, and it seems not unlikely that the Indian Shawmutt
+smoked the pipe of peace under its pendent branches. In 1844 its height
+was given at seventy-two and a half feet--girth, one foot above the
+ground, twenty-two and a half feet. The storms of over two centuries
+have vented their fury upon it and destroyed its graceful outlines. But
+in its age and decrepitude it has been tenderly nursed and partially
+rejuvenated. Broken limbs, torn off by violent gales, have been replaced
+by means of iron clamps, and such skill as tree doctors may use. In the
+last century a hollow orifice in its trunk was covered with canvas and
+its edges protected by a mixture of clay and other substances. Later, in
+1854, Mr. J. V. C. Smith, Mayor of the city, placed around it an iron
+fence bearing the following inscription:--
+
+ "THE OLD ELM."
+
+ "This tree has been standing here for an unknown period. It is
+ believed to have existed before the settlement of Boston, being
+ full-grown in 1722. Exhibited marks of old age in 1792, and was
+ nearly destroyed by a storm in 1832. Protected by an iron
+ inclosure in 1854."
+
+What a long array of exciting events has this tree witnessed! In the
+stirring days of the Revolution the British army was encamped around it.
+In 1812 the patriot army occupied the same place, in protecting the town
+against the invasion of a foreign foe. Tumultuous crowds have here
+assembled on election and Independence days, and its sturdy branches
+have faced alike the anger of the elements and the wrath of man. Public
+executions have taken place under its shadow, and witches have dangled
+from its branches in death's last agonies. Here, in 1740, Rev. George
+Whitfield preached his farewell sermon to an audience of thirty thousand
+people; and here, also, at an earlier date, old Matoonas, of the Nipmuck
+tribe, was shot to death by the dusky warriors of Sagamore John, on a
+charge of committing the first murder in Massachusetts Colony. An
+incident of still more romantic interest belongs to the history of the
+Old Elm. On July third, 1728, this spot was the scene of a mortal combat
+between two young men belonging to the upper circle of Boston society.
+The cause of dispute was the possession of an unknown fair one. The
+names of the young men were Benjamin Woodbridge and Henry Phillips, both
+about twenty years old. The time was evening, the weapons rapiers, and
+Woodbridge was fatally dispatched by a thrust from the rapier of his
+antagonist. Phillips fled to a British ship of war lying in the harbor,
+and was borne by fair breezes to English shores. He did not long survive
+his opponent, however, dying, it is said, of despair, shortly after his
+arrival in England.
+
+Frog Pond, or Fountain Pond, near the Old Elm, has been transformed from
+a low, marshy spot of stagnant water, to the clear sheet which is now
+the delight of the boys. October twenty-fifth, 1848, the water from
+Cochituate Lake was introduced through this pond, and in honor of the
+occasion a large procession marched through the principal streets of the
+city to the Common. Addresses, hymns, prayers, and songs, were the order
+of the day, and when the pure water of the lake leaped through the
+fountain gate, the ringing of bells and boom of cannon attested the joy
+of the people.
+
+Near the Old Elm and the Frog Pond, on Flagstaff Hill, the corner-stone
+of a Soldiers' Monument was laid, September eighteenth, 1871. Some idea
+of the style of the monument may be gathered from the following
+description:--"Upon a granite platform will rest the plinth, in the form
+of a Greek cross, with four panels, in which will be inserted
+bas-reliefs representing the Sanitary Commission, the Navy, the
+Departure for the War and the Return. At each of the four corners will
+be a statue, of heroic size, representing Peace, History, the Army, and
+the Navy. The die upon the plinth will also be richly sculptured, and
+upon it, surrounding the shaft in alto-relievo, will be four allegorical
+figures representing the North, South, East and West. The shaft is to be
+an elegant Doric column, the whole to be surmounted by a colossal statue
+of America resting on a hemisphere, guarded by four figures of the
+American eagle, with outspread wings. 'America' will hold in her left
+hand the national standard, and in her right she will support a sheathed
+sword, and wreaths for the victors. The extreme height of the monument
+will be ninety feet. The artist is Martin Millmore, of Boston."
+
+In the year 1668, a certain Mr. Dunton visited Boston, and wrote the
+following letter to his friends in England. It will serve to show the
+custom of Bostonians on training day, and recall some of the scenes
+which transpired over two hundred years ago on the historic Common. "It
+is a custom here," he says, "for all that can bear arms to go out on a
+training day. I thought a pike was best for a young soldier, so I
+carried a pike; 'twas the first time I ever was in arms. Having come
+into the field, the Captain called us into line to go to prayer, and
+then prayed himself, and when the exercise was done the Captain likewise
+concluded with a prayer. Solemn prayer upon a field, on training day, I
+never knew but in New England, where it seems it is a common custom.
+About three o'clock, our exercises and prayers being over, we had a very
+noble dinner, to which all the clergymen were invited."
+
+In 1640, Arthur Perry was Town Drummer for all public purposes. There
+being no meeting-house bell in town, he called the congregation together
+with his drum. "He joined the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company in
+that capacity, for which yearly service he received five pounds. The
+second additional musical instrument was a clarionet, performed on by a
+tall, strapping fellow with but one eye, who headed the Ancient and
+Honorable a few strides." The first band of music used in Boston was in
+1790, at the funeral of Colonel Joseph Jackson. Yearly, for a period of
+between two and three hundred years, this military company has appeared
+on the Common, to be received by the Governor of the State, with his
+aides, who appointed the new commissions for the year to come and
+received those for the year just past. Their anniversary occurs on the
+first Monday in June.
+
+The Brewer Fountain, the Deer Park and the Tremont and Beacon Street
+Malls complete the list of conspicuous attractions on the Common. The
+Beacon Street Mall is perhaps the finest, being heavily shaded by
+thickly-set rows of American elms. A particular portion of this mall is
+described as the scene of at least _one_ courtship, and how many more
+may have transpired in the neighborhood history or tradition tells us
+not!
+
+The "Autocrat of the Breakfast-table" loved the schoolmistress who
+partook of her daily food at the same board with himself and listened
+quietly to his wise morning talks, with only an occasional sensible
+reply. The schoolmistress returned his passion, but the young Autocrat,
+uncertain of his fate, rashly determined that if she said him "nay" to
+this most important question of his life, he would take passage in the
+next steamer bound for Liverpool, and never look upon her face again.
+The fateful hour which was to decide his fate approached, and the
+Autocrat proposed a walk. They took the direction of the Beacon Street
+Mall, and what happened next his own charming pen-picture best
+describes:
+
+"It was on the Common that we were walking. The _mall_ or boulevard of
+our Common, you know, has various branches leading from it in different
+directions. One of these runs down from opposite Joy street, southward,
+across the length of the whole Common, to Boylston street. We called it
+the long path, and were fond of it.
+
+"I felt very weak indeed (though of a tolerably robust habit) as we came
+opposite the head of this path on that morning. I think I tried to speak
+twice without making myself distinctly audible. At last I got out the
+question:--'Will you take the long path with me?'
+
+"'Certainly,' said the schoolmistress, 'with much pleasure.'
+
+"'Think,' I said, 'before you answer; if you take the long path with me
+now, I shall interpret it that we are to part no more!' The
+schoolmistress stepped back with a sudden movement, as if an arrow had
+struck her.
+
+"One of the long, granite blocks used as seats was hard by, the one you
+may still see close by the Ginko tree. 'Pray, sit down,' I said.
+
+"'No, no,' she answered softly, 'I will walk the _long path_ with you.'"
+
+Propositions to convert the Common into public thoroughfares have ever
+met with stout resistance from "we the people"--the Commoners of
+Boston--and only this winter a meeting was held in Faneuil Hall for the
+purpose of protesting against this causeless desecration. The occasion
+of the meeting was a clique movement to have a street-car track run
+through the sacred ground. One of the speakers--a workingman--waxed
+eloquent on the theme of the "poor man's park, where in summer a soiled
+son of labor might buy a cent apple and lounge at his ease under the
+shady trees."
+
+In 1734, by vote of the town, a South End and North End Market were
+established. Before this the people were supplied with meats and
+vegetables at their own doors. In 1740, Peter Faneuil offered to build a
+market-house at his own expense, and present it to the town. His
+proposition was carried by seven majority. Faneuil Hall, the "Cradle of
+Liberty," was first built two stories high, forty feet wide, and one
+hundred feet in length. It was nearly destroyed by fire in 1761, and in
+1805 it was enlarged to eighty feet in width and twenty feet greater
+elevation. "The Hall is never let for money," but is at the disposal of
+the people whenever a sufficient number of persons, complying with
+certain regulations, ask to have it opened. The city charter of Boston
+contains a provision forbidding the sale or lease of this Hall. For a
+period of over eighty years--from the time of its erection until
+1822--all town meetings were held within its walls. It is "peculiarly
+fitted for popular assemblies, possessing admirable acoustic
+properties."
+
+The capacity of the Hall is increased by the absence of all seats on the
+floor--the gallery only being provided with these conveniences.
+Portraits cover the walls. Healy's picture of Webster replying to Hayne
+hangs in heavy gilt, back of the rostrum. Paintings of the two Adamses,
+of General Warren and Commodore Preble, of Edward Everett and Governor
+Andrew, adorn other portions of the Hall. Nor are Washington and Lincoln
+forgotten. The pictured faces of these noble patriots of the past seem
+to shed a mysterious influence around, and silently plead the cause of
+right and of justice. The words which echoed from this rostrum in the
+days before the Revolution still ring down from the past, touching the
+present with a living power whenever liberty needs a champion or the
+people an advocate.
+
+Faneuil Hall Market, or Quincy Market, as it is popularly called, grew
+out of a recommendation by Mayor Quincy, in 1823. Two years later the
+corner-stone was laid, and in 1827 the building was completed. It is
+five hundred and thirty-five feet long, fifty feet wide, and two stories
+high. Its site was reclaimed from the tide waters, and one hundred and
+fifty thousand dollars were expended in its erection.
+
+The capital for its construction was managed in such a judicious way
+that not only the market was built, but six new streets were opened and
+a seventh enlarged, without a cent of city tax or a dollar's increase of
+the city's debt.
+
+The Old State House was located on the site of the first public market,
+at the head or western end of State street. It was commenced with a
+bequest of five hundred pounds from Robert Keayne, the first commander
+of the "Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company." It was known as the
+Town House, and was erected about the year 1670. The present Old State
+House was built in 1748, on the same site. Its vicinity is historic. The
+square in State street below the Old State House, was the scene of the
+Boston massacre, March fifth, 1770. "The funeral of the victims of the
+massacre was attended by an immense concourse of people from all parts
+of New England." About the same year also, in front of this Town House,
+occurred the famous battle of the broom, between a fencing master just
+arrived from England and Goff, the regicide. This English fencer erected
+an elevated platform in front of the Town House and paraded, sword in
+hand, for three days, challenging all America for a trial of his skill.
+At this time three of the judges who signed the death warrant for
+beheading Charles the First, of England, had escaped to Boston, and were
+concealed by the people of Massachusetts and Connecticut. Their names
+were Goff, Whalley and Dixwell, for whom, dead or alive, Parliament
+offered one hundred pounds each. The fencing master made such a stir
+about his skill that Goff, hearing of it at his place of concealment in
+the woods of Hadley, came to Boston and confronted the wordy hero. His
+sword was a birch broom, his shield a white oak cheese slung from his
+arm in a napkin. After he had soaked his broom in a mud-puddle he
+mounted the platform for battle. The fencing master ordered him off, but
+Goff stood his ground and neatly parried the first thrust of the
+braggart. The battle then commenced in earnest, and the cheese three
+times received the sword of the fencing master. Before it could be
+withdrawn, Goff each time daubed the face of his antagonist with the
+muddy broom, amid the huzzas of the crowd which had gathered from all
+quarters to witness the contest. At the third lunge into the huge cheese
+the swordsman threw aside his small blade, and, unsheathing a
+broadsword, rushed furiously upon Goff.
+
+"Stop, sir!" exclaimed Goff; "hitherto, you see, I have only played with
+you, and have not attempted to hurt you, but if you come at me with the
+broadsword, know that I will certainly take your life!"
+
+"Who can you be?" replied the other; "you are either Goff, Whalley or
+the devil, for there was no other man in England could beat me!"
+
+Goff immediately retired, amid the plaudits of the crowd, and the
+subdued fencing master slunk away with chagrin.
+
+The interior arrangement of the Old State House has been entirely
+remodeled, and is now used exclusively for business.
+
+King's Chapel, at the corner of Tremont and School streets, is another
+noteworthy point of interest. The corner-stone was laid in 1750, and
+four years were occupied in its construction, the stone for the building
+material being imported. Its church-yard was Boston's first
+burial-ground, and some of the tombstones date back as far as 1658. Mr.
+Isaac Johnson, one of the founders of Boston, is said to have here found
+his last resting place. John Winthrop, his son and grandson--all
+governors of Connecticut, lay in the same family tomb in this yard. Four
+pastors of the "First Church of Christ in Boston" are also buried here.
+The body of General Joseph Warren was placed in King's Chapel before it
+was re-interred at Cambridge, and "dust to dust" has been pronounced
+over many other distinguished men at this stone church. The edifice is
+constructed in a peculiar way, with Doric columns of gray stone, and is
+sure to attract the attention of the stranger. It was the first
+Episcopal, as well as the first Unitarian church in Boston, and its
+pulpit is now the exponent of Unitarian doctrine, added to the Church of
+England service.
+
+Going down Washington street towards Charlestown, we come to the famous
+Brattle Square, and its church, which once consecrated the spot. Here
+Edward Everett preached to his listening flock, and here, on July
+thirtieth, 1871, Dr. S. K. Lothrop pronounced the last sermon within its
+walls. Its ancient bell has ceased to ring, and the old-fashioned pulpit
+echoes no more to the tread of distinguished men.
+
+The first Brattle Square Church was built in 1699. It was torn down in
+1772, and the next year rebuilt on the same site, the dedication taking
+place July twenty-fifth.
+
+On the night of March sixteenth, 1776, the British under Lord Howe were
+encamped in this neighborhood, some of the regiments using Brattle
+Square Church as a barrack. A cannon ball, fired from Cambridge, where
+the American army was then stationed, struck the church, and was
+afterwards built into the wall of the historic edifice, above the porch.
+On the next night ten thousand of Lord Howe's troops embarked from
+Boston. In 1871 the building was sold by the society, and a handsome
+granite block now takes its place.
+
+The new State House on Beacon street is one of the most prominent
+geographical points in all Boston, and the view from its cupola is
+second only to that obtained from the glorious height of Bunker Hill
+monument. Its gilded dome is a conspicuous object far and near, and
+glitters in the sunlight like veritable gold. The land on which the
+State House stands was bought by the town from Governor Hancock's heirs,
+and given to the State. The corner-stone was laid July fourth, 1793, the
+ceremony being conducted by the Freemasons, Paul Revere, as Grand
+Master, at their head. The massive stone was drawn to its place by
+fifteen white horses, that being the number then of the States in the
+Union. Ex-Governor Samuel Adams delivered the address. The Legislature
+first convened in the new State House in January, 1798. In 1852 it was
+greatly enlarged, and in 1867 the interior was entirely remodeled.
+Chantry's statue of Washington, the statues of Webster and Mann, busts
+of Adams, Lincoln and Sumner, and that beautiful piece of art in marble,
+the full-length statue of Governor Andrew, in the Doric Hall--all
+attract the attention of the visitor. In this rotunda there are also
+copies of the tombstones of the Washington family of Brington Parish,
+England, presented by Charles Sumner, and the torn and soiled
+battle-flags of Massachusetts regiments, hanging in glass cases. In the
+Hall of Representatives and the Senate Chamber, relics of the past are
+scattered about, and the walls are adorned with portraits of
+distinguished men. The eastern wing of the State House is occupied with
+the State Library Large numbers of visitors yearly throng the building
+and climb the circular stairways for the fine view of Boston to be
+obtained from the cupola.
+
+The new Post Office is accounted one of the finest public buildings in
+New England. It has a frontage on Devonshire street, of over two hundred
+feet and occupies the entire square between Milk and Water streets. It
+was several years in building, being occupied this winter for the first
+time since the great fire. Its cost was something like three millions of
+dollars. Its style of architecture is grand in the extreme. Groups of
+statuary ornament the central projections of the building, and orders of
+pilasters, columns, entablatures and balustrades add to it their elegant
+finish. Its roof is an elaboration of the Louvre and Mansard styles, and
+the interior arrangement cannot be surpassed for beauty or convenience.
+It has three street facades, from one of which a broad staircase leads
+to the four upper stories. On these floors are located important public
+offices. The Post Office corridor is twelve feet in height and extends
+across two sides of the immense building. At the time of the great fire
+of 1872 this structure was receiving its roof, and became a barrier
+against the onward sweep of the flames. The massive granite walls were
+cracked and split, but they effectually stopped the work of the fire
+fiend.
+
+In the heart of the city, at the corner of Milk and Washington streets,
+stands one of the most famous buildings in Boston, and perhaps the most
+celebrated house of religious worship in the United States. It was
+founded in 1669, and received the name of the Old South Church. The
+first building was made of cedar, and stood for sixty years. In 1729 it
+was taken down, and the present building erected on the same spot. The
+interior arrangement is described as having been exceedingly quaint,
+with its pulpit sounding board, its high, square pews, and double tier
+of galleries. During the Revolution it was frequently used for public
+meetings, and Faneuil Hall assemblies adjourned to the Old South
+whenever the size of the crowd demanded it. Here the celebrated "Tea
+Party" held their meetings, and discussed the measures which resulted in
+consigning the British tea, together with the hated tax, to the bottom
+of Boston Harbor. Here Joseph Warren delivered his famous oration on the
+Boston Massacre, drawing tears from the eyes of even the British
+soldiery, sent there to intimidate him. In 1775 the edifice was occupied
+by the British as a place for cavalry drill, and a grog-shop was
+established in one of the galleries. In 1782 the building was put in
+repair, and has stood without further change until the present time,
+nearly a hundred years. In 1872 it was occupied as a Post Office, and
+has only been vacated this winter. Its day of religious service is
+doubtless over. It will probably be used for business purposes, but
+never again as a society sanctuary.
+
+Opposite the south front of the Old South Church, on Milk street, stood
+the house in which Benjamin Franklin was born. Here, on the seventeenth
+of January, 1706, the great philosopher was ushered into existence, and
+on the same day was christened at the Old South. When he was ten years
+old, he worked with his father in a candle manufactory, on the corner of
+Union and Hanover streets, at the sign of the Blue Bell. He was
+afterwards printer's devil for his brother James, and at eighteen
+established the fourth newspaper printed in this country. It was
+entitled "The New England Courant."
+
+The first newspaper of Boston was also the first in the colonies, and
+was printed on a half sheet of Pot paper, in small pica. It was entitled
+"The Boston News Letter. Published, by authority, from Monday, April
+seventeenth, to Monday, April twenty-fourth, 1704." John Campbell, a
+Scotchman and bookseller, was proprietor.
+
+Now the Boston press stands in the front rank of the world's journalism,
+and is commodiously accommodated; as the elegant buildings of the
+_Transcript_, _Globe_, _Journal_, _Herald_ and other papers, testify.
+The _Advertiser_ is the oldest daily paper in the city.
+
+It is impossible to properly describe Boston within the limits of so
+short a chapter, and only a glance at a few other points of interest
+will therefore be given.
+
+The City Hall, on School street, is on the site of the house of Isaac
+Johnson, who lived here in 1630, and who has been styled the founder of
+Boston. The corner-stone of the new building was laid December
+twenty-second, 1672. It is of Concord granite, and is in the finest
+style of modern architecture. Here, under the arching roof of the French
+dome, the fire-alarm telegraph centres, and the sentinel who stands
+guard at this important point never leaves his post, night or day. The
+mysterious signal, though touched in the city's remotest rim, is
+instantly obeyed, and in less time than it takes to tell it the brave
+firemen are rushing to the rescue. A fine bronze statue of Benjamin
+Franklin stands in the inclosure in front of the building.
+
+The Custom House, on State street, is built of granite, even to the
+roof. It is constructed in the form of a Greek cross, and is surrounded
+by thirty-two granite columns, a little over five feet in diameter. The
+site was reclaimed from the tide waters, and the massive building rests
+upon about three thousand piles. Over a million dollars were expended in
+its erection.
+
+The Old Granary Burying-ground, once a part of the Common, received its
+name from a public granary which formerly stood within its limits. Some
+of the most distinguished dust in history is consigned to its keeping.
+Paul Revere, Peter Faneuil, Samuel Adams, John Hancock, the victims of
+the Boston Massacre, the parents of Franklin, the first Mayor of Boston,
+and a long list of other names famed in their day and ours, lie buried
+within this ancient ground. Near by, between the Common and the Granary
+Cemetery, stands the celebrated Park Street Church, of which W. H. H.
+Murray, the brilliant writer and preacher, was, until lately, the
+pastor. It used to be known as "brimstone corner." This winter we
+attended Park Street Church on the same day with the _brunette_ monarch,
+Kalakaua and suite.
+
+One of the most commodious and elegant stations in New England, or this
+country, is that of the Boston and Providence Railroad. It is about
+eight hundred feet in length, and is built of brick, with two shades of
+sandstone. The track house is seven hundred feet long, covering five
+tracks, and has a span of one hundred and twenty-five feet. Its cost is
+somewhere in the neighborhood of six hundred thousand dollars. The
+interior arrangement is quite novel in style. The waiting-rooms open out
+of an immense central apartment with a balcony reaching around the
+entire inner circumference. Theatre tickets, flower and cigar stands, a
+billiard room and a barber shop, are some of the special features of the
+station. Refreshment rooms and dressing rooms, in oak and crimson, are
+also an integral part of the building.
+
+Hundreds of interesting places in this singular and devious city of
+Boston must go unnoticed in these pages. The beautiful Tremont Temple
+and its Sunday temperance lectures; Music Hall, with its big organ of
+six thousand pipes, through one of which Henry Ward Beecher is said to
+have crawled, before its erection; the Parker House, one of the crack
+hotels of the city; the Revere House, where all the distinguished people
+stop, with its special suite of rooms upholstered in blue satin, where
+King Kalakaua smoked his cigars in peace; the beneficent Public Library;
+the Boston AthenA|um, home of art; the Boston Theatre, the new and
+elegant Globe Theatre, and the suburban limits, including Charlestown
+and famous Bunker Hill, Cambridge and Harvard University, Mt. Auburn,
+Dorchester Heights, Roxbury and East Boston, which was formerly known as
+Noddle's Island, and where now the Cunard line of steamers arrive and
+depart--all these tempt my pen to linger within their charmed
+localities. But it is a temptation to be resisted. When, after many
+weeks' sojourn in the intellectual "Hub," I was at last seated in the
+outward bound train, ticketed for the west, a regret, born of pleasant
+associations and a taste of Boston atmosphere, took possession of me.
+The farewells I uttered held an undertone of pain. But the train sped
+onward, unheeding, and the city of the harbor seemed to dissolve and
+disappear in the smoke of her thousand chimneys, like a dream of the
+night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+BUFFALO.
+
+ The Niagara Frontier.--Unfortunate Fate of the Eries.--The
+ Battle of Doom.--Times of 1812.--Burning of Buffalo.--Early
+ Names.--Origin of Present Name.--Growth and Population.--
+ Railway Lines.--Queen of the Great Lakes.--Fort Porter and Fort
+ Erie.--International Bridge.--Iron Manufacture.--Danger of the
+ Niagara.--Forest Lawn Cemetery.--Decoration Day.--The Spaulding
+ Monument.--Parks and Boulevard.--Delaware Avenue.--On the
+ Terrace.--Elevator District.--Church and Schools.--Grosvenor
+ Library.--Historical Rooms.--Journalism.--Public Buildings.--
+ City Hall.--Dog-carts and their Attendants.
+
+
+Buffalo is a kind of half-way house between the East and the West--if
+anything may be called west this side of the Mississippi River--and it
+partakes of the characteristics of both sections. It was once the chief
+trading post on the Niagara frontier, and its vicinity has been the
+scene of many a hotly contested battle between dusky races now forever
+lost to this part of the world, and almost forgotten of history. Long
+ago, the Eries, or the Cat Nation, lived on the southern shores of the
+same lake whose waters now lap the wharves of Buffalo. They left it the
+heritage of their name, and that is all.
+
+The race, in its lack of calculation, did not greatly differ from many
+isolated instances of the paler race of mankind around us now; for it
+died of a too o'erreaching ambition. Jealous of the distant fame of the
+Five Nations, the Eries set out to surprise and conquer them in deadly
+battle, and themselves met the fate they had meant for the Iroquois.
+They were exterminated; and few returned to the squaws in their lonely
+wigwams, to tell the tale of doom.
+
+The noble race of Senecas succeeded the Cat Nation on the shores of Lake
+Erie, and after them, from across the great seas, came the dominant,
+pushing, civilizing Anglo-Saxons.
+
+When the war of 1812 broke out, Buffalo was an exceedingly infant city,
+and did not promise well at all. Nobody would have then predicted her
+importance of to-day. Later, in 1813, the battle of Black Rock was
+fought, and while a few old soldiers made a determined stand against the
+onset of the solid British phalanx, most of the raw recruits fled down
+Niagara street in a regular Bull Run panic, chased by the pursuing foe.
+The village was then fired by the enemy, and every building except one
+was burned to the ground. The description of the suffering and flight of
+women and children, during that harrowing time, draws largely on the
+sympathies of the reader, and sounds strangely similar to the newspaper
+accounts of the burning of Western and Pennsylvania towns, of more
+recent occurrence.
+
+But, though Buffalo was destroyed by fire, it shortly evinced all the
+power of the fabled phoenix, and rose from its ashes to a grander
+future than its early settlers ever dreamed of prophesying for it. The
+young city, however, suffered in its first days from a multiplicity of
+names, struggling under no less than three. The Indians named it
+Te-osah-wa, or "Place of Basswood;" the Holland Land Company dragged the
+Dutch name of New Amsterdam across the ocean and endeavored to drop it
+at the foot of Lake Erie; and finally, it took its present name of
+Buffalo, from the frequent visits of the American Bison to a salt
+spring which welled up about three miles out of the village, on Buffalo
+creek.
+
+I think Buffalonians have reason to be grateful that the last name
+proved more tenacious than the other two. Think of the "Queen City" of
+the most Eastern West being overshadowed by the tiled-roof name of New
+Amsterdam!
+
+It was not until 1822, on the completion of the Erie Canal, that Buffalo
+began the rapid advance towards prosperity that now marks its growth,
+the muster-roll of its population, at this writing, numbering the round
+figures of one hundred and sixty-one thousand. It now rejoices in
+business streets three and four miles long--full-fledged two-thirds of
+the distance, and the remainder embryonic. The harbor-front, facing the
+ship canal and the Lake, bristles with the tall tops of huge grain
+elevators--a whole village of them. A network of railroad lines, and the
+commerce of the great Lakes, have combined to build up and carry on a
+vast business at this point, and to make it a station of much importance
+between the East and the West. The rails of the New York Central, the
+Great Western, the Lake Shore, and the Buffalo and Philadelphia roads,
+besides many other lines, all centre here, carrying their tide of human
+freight, mainly westward, and transporting the cereals of the great
+grain regions in exchange for the manufactured products of less favored
+localities. When the representative of New York or New England wishes to
+go west, he finds his most direct route by rail, via Buffalo; or, if he
+desires a most charming water trip, he embarks, also via Buffalo, on one
+of the handsome propellers which ply the Lakes between this city and
+Chicago, and steaming down the length of Lake Erie, up through the
+narrower St. Clair and the broad Huron, he passes the wooded shores of
+Mackinac's beautiful island, surmounted by its old fort, and entering
+Lake Michigan, in due time is landed on the breezy Milwaukee banks, or
+is set down within that maelstrom of business, named Chicago. Indeed,
+after Chicago, Buffalo is the ranking city of the Lakes, and is said to
+cover more territory than almost any city in the country outside the
+great metropolis--the distance, from limit to limit, averaging seven and
+eight miles. Its suburban drives and places of summer resort, owing to
+the superior water localities of this region, are much out of the usual
+line. Niagara River, famous the world over, allures the daring boatman
+from Fort Porter onward, and the wonderful Falls themselves are only
+eighteen miles beyond that. Fort Porter, about two miles out from the
+heart of the city, is located just at the point where Niagara River
+leaves the lake in its mad race to the Falls. Here the banks are high
+and command a wide water prospect. Away to the westward the blue lake
+and the blue sky seem to meet and blend together as one; and in the
+opposite direction the rushing river spreads out like another lake,
+towards Squaw Island and Black Rock. One or more companies of United
+States Regulars are stationed here, and the barracks and officers'
+quarters surround a square inclosure, which is used as a parade ground.
+Graveled walks are laid out around it, and a grassy foot-path leads from
+the soldiers' quarters to the site of the old Fort on the brow of a
+gentle elevation just beyond. The Fort was built for frontier defence,
+in 1812, and the interior, now grass-grown and unused, is so deep that
+the roof of the stone structure, once appropriated as a magazine, is
+nearly on a level with the high ground at your feet. During our last
+war the building was occupied as a place of confinement for Rebel
+prisoners. It is now in a state of advanced collapse, and the battered
+walls and open windows expose to view the ruin within. A small, square
+outhouse, near one of the embrasures higher up, which was used for
+firing hot shot, is still intact. Field pieces, pointing grimly towards
+the Lake, and little heaps of cannon balls lying near, bring freshly to
+mind the nation's last war days, when "the winding rivers ran red" with
+the mingled blood of comrade and foe. The sunset gun boomed over the
+waters while we lingered at the old Fort, and the fading glow of day
+bridged the river with arches of crimson and gold.
+
+Diagonally opposite from this point, one looks across into the Queen's
+dominions, where lies the little village of Fort Erie, historic as the
+place from which the British crossed to our shores on the night
+preceding the burning of Buffalo.
+
+At Black Rock, about two miles below Fort Porter, the great
+International Railroad Bridge, a mile in length, spans the mighty river,
+having superseded the old-time ferry. This bridge is the connecting link
+on the Grand Trunk Road, between Canada and the States.
+
+Near its terminus, on the American side, are located the immense
+malleable iron works of Pratt & Letchworth, said to be the largest
+manufactory of the kind in the world. Their goods certainly find a
+world-wide market, taking in New England and the Pacific coast, Mexico,
+England and Australia. A pretty picture of the country seat of Mr.
+Letchworth, at Portage, New York, may be seen at the Historical Rooms.
+It is named Glen Iris, and is surrounded by handsome grounds, groves
+and fountains.
+
+Boating on the Niagara is much in vogue here, notwithstanding the rapid
+current and the dreadful certainty of the Falls in case of accident. The
+keeper of a boat house at Black Rock, opposite Squaw Island, told me
+that the proportion of accidents on the river was frightfully large--far
+greater than ever got into the public prints.
+
+ [Illustration: SOLDIERS' MONUMENT AT BUFFALO, NEW YORK.]
+
+Forest Lawn Cemetery--Buffalo's city of the dead--is one of the
+loveliest burial places between Brooklyn and Chicago. It is picturesque
+with hill and dale and grove, not to mention a large artificial lake
+lapped in one of its grassy hollows, and a winding, wide and
+rocky-bedded creek running through it. The name of the creek is spelled
+S-c-a-j-a-q-u-a-d-a and pronounced Kon-joc'-e-ta. The Pratt monument, in
+a remote portion of the grounds, is perhaps the handsomest in the
+cemetery. It looks like a gothic gateway with fluted pillars of Italian
+marbles. A sculptured image of a child of one of the Fargos--of the
+famous Wells, Fargo & Co.--rests under a glass case on the lap of earth
+which marks her grave. The head is peculiarly noble, reminding one of
+that of the Belvidere Apollo. It is said to be a truthful likeness.
+Decoration Day at Forest Lawn was a picture long to be remembered. On a
+little knoll under the trees at the entrance to the grounds the military
+and civic processions assembled to listen to the eloquent words of Rev.
+Mr. Barrett, of Rochester. When the brief address was concluded, and the
+band music and singing were over, we followed the committees of
+decoration to the scattered graves of the patriot dead, and witnessed
+the strewing of flowers upon their sacred dust. A hushed circle above
+the mound of earth, a few fitly-spoken words from one of their number
+who knew the soldier-hero, and the floral tributes were tenderly placed
+above the sleeper's head. Thus, oh heroes, shall your memory be kept
+forever green! The flowers were wrought into every symbolic shape by
+which the language of affection could be translated. Crowns, and
+crosses, and stars, and anchors of hope, spoke their love and solace.
+The graves of the Confederate dead were also decorated, and side by
+side, under a common mantle of flowers, the Blue and the Gray received
+alike the benediction of the hour.
+
+ "Then beautiful flowers strew,
+ This sweet memorial day,
+ With tears and love for the Blue,
+ And pity for the fallen Gray."
+
+At Forest Lawn, also, on the historic seventeenth of June--the Bunker
+Hill Centennial--a monument was dedicated to the memory of nine
+Spauldings who fought at that battle, one hundred years before. The
+granite cenotaph was erected by E. G. Spaulding, of Buffalo, descended
+from the same blood with the heroic nine. The names of the list
+inscribed on the Western front of the monument were headed by that of
+his grandfather, Levi Spaulding, who was captain of the ninth company,
+third regiment, under Colonel Reed, of the New Hampshire troops, engaged
+on that day.
+
+ "For bright and green the memory still
+ Of those who stood on Bunker Hill,
+ And nobly met the battle shock,
+ Firm as their native granite rock."
+
+Speeches reviving Revolutionary memories, and fresh descriptions of the
+Bunker Hill contest, were in order. There was a semi-military
+procession, and the interest felt in the occasion was general. A grand
+reception at Mr. Spaulding's residence in the evening, concluded the
+patriotic anniversary.
+
+The large park adjoining Forest Lawn is plentiful in attractions,
+including the delights of boating on the Konjoceta and loitering in the
+shadowy coolness of the primeval woods. In addition to these, Buffalo is
+completing a grand boulevard system which encircles half the City,
+beginning at what is called the Front, in the neighborhood of Fort
+Porter, and making the circuit of the outskirts through Bidwell and
+Lincoln and Humboldt parkways to the intersection of Genesee street with
+the Parade, on the opposite arc of the circle. One is sure to find cool
+breezes along this drive, though the day be the hottest of the season.
+Indeed, the summer heats are, at all times, shorn of their fervor in
+this Queen City of the Lakes, and its climatic advantages are,
+therefore, superior.
+
+Delaware Avenue is the leading street of Buffalo for private residences,
+and here much of the aristocracy do congregate. It is about three miles
+long, and double rows of shade trees line either side. Fast driving on
+this avenue is licensed by city authority, and racing down its gentle
+incline is much in vogue. In winter, when sleighing is good, this is
+carried to greater excess, and the snowy road is black with flying
+vehicles. Main street, the principal business thoroughfare of the city,
+at least for retail trade, is wide, well paved and straight, and is
+built up with substantial business blocks. Its sister thoroughfare on
+the east, Washington street, towards the lower end as it approaches the
+lake, degenerates into manufacturing, and the buzz of machinery and
+incessant din of hammers break in on the maiden meditations of the
+passive sight-seer.
+
+As one approaches the Terrace, which is an elbow of blocks at one end
+and a diagonal at the other, one is confronted by a confusion of cross
+streets, which look as if they had been gotten up expressly to
+demoralize one's points of compass. They all look out on Buffalo harbor
+and the sea-wall beyond. Ohio street, following the bend of the harbor,
+is the great elevator district of the greatest grain mart in the world.
+Here, when business is at high tide, between two and three million
+bushels of grain per day are transferred by these giant monsters with
+high heads. The business places of this department of Buffalo enterprise
+are located principally on Central Wharf, in this vicinity, which fronts
+the harbor and which is crowded with offices two tiers deep.
+
+Along the wharf the very air is charged with bustle and activity.
+Vessels of all descriptions are arriving and departing at all hours, and
+the commerce of the great lakes pours its flood tide into Buffalo
+through this gateway.
+
+As for churches and schools, the city overflows with them. It is
+sprinkled in all directions with handsome religious edifices, like
+interrogation points, in stone and brick, asking the questions of a
+higher life. And there are thirty-six public schools, besides the State
+Normal, the Central, and the Buffalo Female Academy. This last is under
+the able guidance of Dr. Chester. But even these do not complete the
+list, as I understand there are numerous other private institutions of
+learning.
+
+In one of the triangular pieces of ground where the three streets of
+Niagara, Erie and Church make their entrance into Main street, stands
+the picturesque structure of St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral. It is
+built of brown stone, and the creeping ivy nearly covers one end of it,
+from the crosses and minarets at the pinnacle to the trailing vines on
+the ground. The gray, gothic edifice of St. Joseph's Romish Cathedral,
+fronting on Franklin street, is also very large, and the interior is
+rich in architectural design.
+
+As for the immeasurable realm of books, Buffalo furnishes her children
+access to this, through her libraries. Chiefest among them is the
+Grosvenor, which has a bit of history all by itself. It was founded by a
+retired merchant of New York, who had lived in Buffalo during the
+earliest infancy of the city, and whose property had been destroyed when
+the then frontier village was fired by the British and Indians, in
+retaliation for the burning of Newark. This generous gentleman also left
+thirty thousand dollars to found a reference library for the High School
+of New York City. His will provided a legacy of ten thousand for
+Buffalo, to be applied towards a fire-proof building for a library, and
+the sum of thirty thousand, the interest of which was to be used for the
+purchase of books. The building fund having been on interest ever since,
+now amounts to twenty-eight thousand, and in addition the city has
+donated what is known as the Mohawk street property, used at present for
+police purposes, which will sell for an amount sufficiently large,
+together with the deposit already on hand, to erect a handsome building.
+The library is now located over the Buffalo Savings Bank, facing a
+pleasant little park between Washington and Main streets.
+
+In 1870 the interest had more than doubled the donation, and the
+Trustees then commenced the work of making the library a living
+institution. After a great deal of trouble, they at last secured the
+services of Alexander J. Sheldon, who was willing, without any certain
+compensation, to undertake the task of organizing and superintending the
+library. Mr. Sheldon, who is an expert in books, is native to the city,
+and from boyhood has been connected with this line of business. The
+first year of his hard labor at the Grosvenor was rewarded by the large
+sum of five hundred dollars! It was well for the institution, however,
+that Mr. Sheldon was not dependent on his salary for support. He entered
+into the work with an enthusiasm which surmounted all difficulties, and
+which has brought the library to its present state of progress, making
+it a credit to the city of Buffalo.
+
+The large reading room is neatly fitted up with black walnut cases, nine
+feet in length, and eight feet high, opening on both sides, and capable
+of holding eight or nine hundred average volumes. There are about thirty
+of these cases in the room, with reading tables and easy chairs
+interspersed between them. The style of alcove and arrangement, which
+was also Mr. Sheldon's suggestion, produces a very handsome effect. The
+cases stand on black walnut platforms six inches in height, and are
+surmounted by a pretty cornice. The shelves are interchangeable, and are
+of such moderate height that the necessity for step-ladders is entirely
+avoided. There are also dummy volumes, made to resemble books and
+properly titled, which, if their mission is to deceive the uninitiated,
+certainly accomplish that task. The number of volumes has now
+accumulated to about eighteen thousand, and includes the choicest works
+in art, science, literature and the professions. The fiction department
+comprehends all the recognized standard works, but the mass of worthless
+novels, which pass current in some of our circulating libraries, is
+unhesitatingly excluded. The bindings are nearly all morocco, with gilt
+or marbled tops, and the back of each book, as it is added to the
+library, is given a coat of white shellac varnish, which prevents it, in
+a great degree, from fading, and renders it easy of renovation.
+
+The small ante-room which is used by the librarian and committeemen
+contains several hundred volumes on bibliography, which is a very
+important feature of such an institution. The rooms in summer are
+breezy, from the lake winds, and in winter are heated by steam
+radiators. A heavy cocoa matting deadens all sound on the floors, and
+absolute quiet is thus secured. Thanks to the efforts of Mr. Sheldon,
+the Grosvenor is undoubtedly the best library for a student west of the
+Hudson.
+
+The Historical Rooms deserve notice as one of the salient points of
+Buffalo, and though the Society is young and not by any means wealthy,
+yet it is fairly started on its road to distinction. It was founded in
+1862, and subsists principally by donations, as it is yet too poor to
+make purchases of books or relics. The Rooms are located at the corner
+of Main and Court streets, nearly opposite the ancient site of the old
+Eagle Tavern. A picture of this hotel as it looked fifty years ago may
+be seen among their collection. A huge gilt eagle surmounted the main
+entrance, and an enclosed porch, or what looks like it, at one end of
+the building, bore the inscription "_Coach Office_," in large letters
+over the doorway. Here also is the noble looking portrait of Red Jacket,
+the great Seneca Chief, together with the grand-daughter of Red Jacket's
+second wife--Nancy Stevenson--taken at sixteen. This bright-eyed, brown
+maiden married an Indian named Hiram Dennis, and was still living in
+1872. Belts of wampum, war hatchets and pipes of peace, besides numerous
+pictures, in oil, of celebrated red warriors, are among the Indian
+mementoes connected with Buffalo's early history. The war of 1812 also
+contributes its scattered waifs to keep alive the memory of that time.
+The sword of Major-General Brown, worn at the battle of Sackett's
+Harbor, and a piece of timber from Perry's ship, on which is traced the
+legend "We have met the enemy and they are ours," are among the
+heirlooms of history. Here, too, is a Mexican lance from the field of
+Monterey, and the clarionette used in Buffalo's first band of music,
+whose strains helped swell the chorus during the triumphal march of
+Lafayette through her streets in 1824. A representation of the first
+boat on the Erie Canal, named "Chief Engineer of Rome," looks quaint
+enough. The walls of the large apartment devoted to historical
+collections are covered with pictures of Buffalo's prominent men, and at
+one end of the room hangs a handsome portrait of Millard Fillmore, set
+in heavy gilt. Their list of books and directories is also quite large.
+The story of a city's growth is always one of deep interest, and the
+generations of future years will, no doubt, be grateful for these
+landmarks of their early history.
+
+Journalism in Buffalo rides on the top wave, and her leading papers have
+achieved an enviable fame. Eight dailies swell the list, four of which
+are German, besides ten weeklies and seven monthly papers. The history
+of the _Commercial Advertiser_ dates back to October, 1811. It was
+issued at that time, under the name of the _Buffalo Gazette_, by the
+Salisbury brothers, from Canandaigua. With the exception of a paper at
+Batavia, begun in 1807, the _Gazette_ was the only paper published at
+that time in Western New York. It afterwards changed its name to the
+_Buffalo Patriot_, and since 1836 it has been issued as the _Daily
+Commercial Advertiser_. The _Courier_ and _Commercial_ are the ranking
+papers of the city, in point of influence.
+
+Buffalo doesn't seem to be ambitious of display in her public buildings,
+judging from the quality of those already on hand. The new City Hall,
+however, is a noble exception to the general rule. It is built of Maine
+granite, in the form of a double Roman cross, and the tower, which is
+two hundred and forty-five feet high, is surmounted by four pieces of
+statuary. Its estimated cost is over two millions of dollars.
+
+St. James' Hall and the Academy of Music are the chief places of
+amusement in the city, the latter place being conducted by the Meech
+brothers, two young gentlemen of acknowledged ability. Many noted stars
+of the stage whose names have blazed forth in histrionic glory have here
+made their first conquests, before applauding audiences. The stock
+company is unusually good, Ben Rogers, stage manager and first comedian,
+being a host in himself.
+
+The fire department of the city is said to be exceedingly efficient, and
+the police system has gained a reputation for thorough work which ought
+to be the terror of the criminal class. It embraces a body of mounted
+police, a corps of detectives and of patrolmen, besides the regular
+force stationed at the harbor.
+
+Among the minor peculiarities of Buffalo may be mentioned the
+superabundance of dog carts to be seen in her streets; not the
+conventional kind that goes rolling down Fifth Avenue, among the
+bewildering array of splendid equipages--coupes, landaus, landaulets,
+drags and what not--that daily make their way to Central Park; not any
+of these; but the original dog cart, with the dog attached. He is to be
+seen in all the varieties of the species, from a muddy yellow to the
+fierce-looking mastiff. He is usually harnessed in company with a
+collapsed old woman or a cadaverous looking little boy, and he carries
+all kinds of mixed freight, from an ash barrel to a load of sticks. The
+undercurrent of Buffalo society does not seem to look upon the dog in a
+purely ornamental light.
+
+This chapter on a place so fertile in suggestion might be prolonged
+indefinitely; but we are gazing westward, along a line of cities whose
+terminus does not end until it reaches the Golden Gate and the most
+famous centre of population on the Pacific coast. Our steps are bent
+toward that far-off goal, and we must say good-bye to the ancient land
+of the Eries and the former haunts of the buffalo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+BROOKLYN.
+
+ Brooklyn a Suburb of New York.--A City of Homes.--Public
+ Buildings.--Churches.--Henry Ward Beecher.--Thomas De Witt
+ Talmage.--Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D.--Justin D. Fulton, D.D.--
+ R. S. Storrs, D.D.--Navy Yard.--Atlantic Dock.--Washington
+ Park.--Prospect Park.--Greenwood Cemetery.--Evergreen and
+ Cyprus Hills Cemeteries.--Coney Island.--Rockaway.--Staten
+ Island.--Glen Island.--Future of Brooklyn.
+
+
+New York holds such supremacy over the other cities of the United States
+that she almost overshadows Brooklyn, which lies so near her as to be
+separated only by the narrow channel of the East River. Yet Brooklyn in
+any other locality would be a city of the first importance, ranking, as
+she does, the third in the Union as to size and population, and
+numbering not less than six hundred thousand inhabitants. Practically
+New York and Brooklyn are but one city, with identical commercial
+interests, and a great deal else in common. Many of the most prominent
+business men of the former city find their homes in the latter; and by
+means of the numerous ferries and the great Suspension Bridge there is a
+constant interchange of people between them. The time may come when they
+will be united under one municipal government; though, no doubt, many of
+the older residents of Brooklyn, who have helped to build her up to her
+present extent and prosperity, would object to losing her name and
+identity. But should such a union ever take place, there will be at once
+created, next to London, the largest city of the world, with a
+population of not less than two millions of people.
+
+Brooklyn is situated on the west end of Long Island, and overlooks both
+the East River and the Bay. It extends nearly eight miles from north to
+south, and is about four miles from east to west. Its business is not so
+extended or so important as that of New York, nor, as a rule, are its
+business edifices so imposing, though some of them present a very fine
+appearance. It is, in fact, a great suburb of the metropolitan city,
+composed more largely of dwellings than of commercial houses. Its
+business men, each morning, make an exodus across the East River to Wall
+street, or Broadway, or other streets of New York, and then return at
+night. It is, in fact, a great city of homes, all of them comfortable
+and many of them elegant. There is no squalor, such as is found in Mott
+or Baxter streets and the Five Points and their neighborhood, in its
+sister city. Handsome mansions, tasteful cottages and plain but neat
+rows of dwellings are found everywhere, and the streets are beautifully
+shaded by avenues of trees.
+
+The public buildings of Brooklyn worthy of notice are few, compared to
+those of New York. Fulton street is its principal thoroughfare, and
+contains occasional handsome edifices. The City Hall, on an open square
+at the junction of Fulton court and Joraleman street, is a fine, white
+marble building, in Ionic style, with six columns supporting the roof of
+the portico. It is surmounted by a tower one hundred and fifty-three
+feet in height. Just back of this, to the southeast, and facing toward
+Fulton street, is the County Court House, with a white marble front, a
+Corinthian portico, and an iron dome one hundred and four feet high.
+Beside the Court House, to the westward, stands the Municipal Building,
+also of marble, four stories in height, with a mansard roof, and a tower
+at each corner. The Post Office is in Washington street, north of the
+City Hall. The Long Island Historical Society has a fine edifice at the
+corner of Clinton and Pierrepont streets, and possesses a large library
+and collection of curiosities. The Academy of Design, on Montague
+street, has a handsome exterior; opposite is the Mercantile Library, a
+striking Gothic structure, containing two reading rooms and a library of
+forty-eight thousand volumes. The building of the Young Men's Christian
+Association is on Fulton street, at the corner of Gallatin Place, and
+contains a library and free reading room. The Penitentiary is an immense
+stone structure on Nostrand avenue, near the city limits. The County
+Jail, in Raymond street, is constructed of red sandstone, in castellated
+Gothic style. The Long Island College Hospital is an imposing building,
+surrounded by extensive grounds, on Henry street near Pacific.
+
+Brooklyn is, preeminently, the City of Churches, of which she is said to
+contain not less than one hundred. She has secured the services of the
+most eminent clergymen in the country, and thousands of people each year
+make a pilgrimage thither, for the sole purpose of listening to some one
+or other of those whom they have long admired and appreciated at a
+distance. Most prominent among all these clergymen is Henry Ward
+Beecher, who has been the pastor of Plymouth Church ever since its
+organization in 1847. Mr. Beecher came of a noted family, his father,
+Rev. Lyman Beecher, being one of the theological lights of his day and
+generation, while his brothers and sisters have all distinguished
+themselves in some way. The author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was his
+sister, Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, while all of his brothers are, like
+himself, in the ministry.
+
+Mr. Beecher's popularity has been unparalleled. Besides the hundreds who
+listen to him every Sunday, each sermon is reported in full and read by
+thousands of people throughout the country. He has been a leader of
+liberal thought in the Protestant churches; and it is largely due to his
+bold and advanced utterances that the church in which he holds communion
+has taken a long step ahead of the position which it occupied early in
+the present century.
+
+Plymouth Church is a plain edifice, in Orange street, near Hicks. It has
+a large seating capacity, yet every Sunday it is filled. A goodly
+proportion of the audience is composed of strangers, who are not
+permitted to take seats until the pewholders are provided for. These
+visitors stand in long rows at each of the doors, the rows sometimes
+extending out upon the sidewalk, waiting their turns to be seated. Ten
+minutes before the hour of service they are conducted to seats, and the
+pewholders who come after that time must take their chances with the
+rest. On pleasant Sundays every seat is occupied, and the aisles and
+vestibules are crowded.
+
+Mr. Beecher occupies no pulpit, in the strict sense of the word. In
+front of the organ and choir is a platform, upon which are three chairs
+and three small tables, or stands. On one of the latter is a Bible, and
+on the others a profusion of flowers. One realizes in this church the
+grandeur of congregational singing, which is led here by a choir of one
+hundred voices, and accompanied by a magnificent organ. When the entire
+congregation join in some familiar hymn, the singing is exceedingly
+impressive. Mr. Beecher, albeit his reputation is that of a sensational
+preacher, makes little attempt at sensationalism in his manner of
+delivery. He reads well and speaks well, with a clear, distinct
+enunciation, which is heard in every part of his church. He talks
+directly to his point, using plain but forcible language, his sermons
+sparkling with original thought and brilliant language, all based upon a
+foundation of plain, practical common sense. He has great dramatic
+power, yet manifests it in so unstudied a manner that it is never
+offensive. He imitates the voice and manner of the man of whom he is
+speaking; the maudlin condition of the drunkard, the whine of the
+beggar, the sanctimoniousness of the hypocrite; and keeps his audience
+interested and on the alert. The Friday evening lectures are also
+features of this church, and are conducted without formality, yet in a
+decorous manner.
+
+The Brooklyn preacher who is a rival of Beecher, in the popular
+estimation, is Thomas De Witt Talmage, whose church is in Schermerhorn
+street, and known as the Tabernacle. It is built in Gothic style,
+semi-circular in form, like an opera house, and is capable of seating
+5,000 persons. It is the largest Protestant place of worship in the
+United States, yet every Sunday it is filled nearly, if not quite, to
+its utmost capacity.
+
+Talmage was born at Bound Brook, New Jersey, in 1832. After graduating
+at the Theological Seminary, at New Brunswick, he preached in
+Belleville, New Jersey; Syracuse, New York; and Philadelphia, until
+1869, when he came to Brooklyn to be pastor of the Central Presbyterian
+Church. Within a year he had become the acknowledged rival of Beecher.
+His church was crowded, and in 1870 a large amphitheatre, called the
+Brooklyn Tabernacle, capable of seating four thousand persons, was
+built. This building was destroyed by fire in 1872, and while it was
+being rebuilt in its present size and form, Talmage preached in the
+Academy of Music, to immense crowds. The great organ used in the Boston
+Coliseum, during the Musical Peace Jubilee, accompanies the singing at
+the Tabernacle, which is principally congregational, though a choir of
+four male singers give one or more voluntaries. The singing was led by
+Arbuckle, the celebrated cornetist, but he died in May, 1883, and was
+buried on the day of the opening of the Suspension Bridge.
+
+In 1879, Talmage visited Great Britain, and made a most successful
+lecture tour, receiving from five to six hundred dollars for each
+lecture, and netting about fifty thousand dollars for the tour. In this
+country he has not been so popular as a lecturer as Beecher. He is a
+tall, angular man, with dark hair, red whiskers, light complexion, large
+mouth and blue eyes. His pulpit is merely a platform, about thirty feet
+in length, built in front of the organ, between the pipes and the
+performer; and back and forth on this he paces while delivering his
+sermon, frequently making forcible gestures, which have caused him to be
+caricatured as a contortionist or gymnast. He is fluent in his style,
+with much originality of expression, yet with a certain drawl in the
+middle of his sentences, and snarl at their end, which renders his
+elocution not entirely pleasing. He carries his audience with him
+through the heights and depths of his oratory, now provoking to smiles,
+again affecting to tears.
+
+Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D., has been pastor of the Lafayette Avenue
+Presbyterian Church since 1860. He was born at Aurora, New York, on
+January tenth, 1822, and preached in Market street church, in New York
+City, from 1853 to 1860. The church edifice where he now ministers is
+one of the most spacious and complete, in all its arrangements, in
+either New York or Brooklyn, having seats for two thousand people, while
+the Sabbath-school hall will accommodate one thousand.
+
+Dr. Cuyler, during the thirty-seven years of his ministry, has delivered
+five thousand three hundred and forty discourses, and a multitude of
+platform addresses. He has received four thousand and forty-one persons
+into church membership, of whom about one-half have been on confession
+of faith. He has published several volumes and over two thousand
+articles in the leading religious newspapers. The present membership of
+the Lafayette Avenue Church is nineteen hundred and twenty persons. His
+congregations are very large on every Sunday, and he is an untiring
+pastor, especially zealous for temperance. He preaches the old orthodox
+gospel, with no "modern improvements." His discourses are able and
+eloquent, while his chief aim in the pulpit is to reach the heart.
+
+Justin D. Fulton, D.D., is still another eminent clergyman of Brooklyn.
+He was born in 1828, in Sherburne, Madison County, New York, and
+literally worked his way through college and to the ministry. He began
+his public life in St. Louis, where he was engaged as editor of the
+_Gospel Banner_. Preaching in the Tabernacle Baptist Church of that
+city, he delivered the first Free-state sermon ever heard in St. Louis.
+He also put his anti-slavery sentiments into his paper, and was shortly
+deposed from his position as editor because he would not believe
+slavery to be right and defend it. From St. Louis he went to Sandusky,
+Ohio, preaching there a short period; and from thence, in 1859, to
+Albany, New York, where he became pastor of the Tabernacle Church. In
+1863 he received a call from the Tremont Temple Church of Boston, and
+labored with that church for ten years, increasing its membership from
+fifty to one thousand. In 1873, he became pastor of the Hanson Place
+Church, of Brooklyn, leaving it, however, in 1875, to organize the
+Centennial Baptist Church, in the same city. His popularity as a
+preacher became so great that it was presently found necessary to seek a
+larger place of worship. Therefore, in 1879, the Rink was purchased, for
+much less than its original cost, and was consecrated as a People's
+Church. The Rink is an immense edifice, capable of seating nearly six
+thousand persons.
+
+Dr. Fulton is an able writer, having published a number of volumes, the
+most prominent among which is "The Roman Catholic Element in America."
+In the old days of slavery he was a most able and eloquent anti-slavery
+advocate, and as such created strong prejudice against himself in
+certain quarters. He preached the funeral sermon of Colonel Ellsworth,
+in Tweddle Hall, Albany, in which he said that the war must go on until
+the musket should be put in the hands of the black man, and he was
+permitted to prove his manhood on the battle field. This drew down upon
+him the denunciation of the conservative press; but he was appointed
+Chaplain of Governor Morgan's staff, and served in hospital and camp. He
+is no less famous as an advocate of temperance, and devotes much of his
+energies to work in this field.
+
+In person, Dr. Fulton is tall, stout, finely formed, with black whiskers
+and moustache, and a somewhat bald forehead. His manner in the pulpit is
+full of earnestness and impetuosity. He sometimes overwhelms his
+audience with a whirlwind of words. He has strong magnetic and nervous
+power, while he impresses his listeners with his sincerity and candor.
+He makes frequent and expressive gestures, and combines in his oratory
+the carefulness of art with the fire of genius. In belief he is
+thoroughly orthodox, having no leanings toward the so-called
+"liberality" of many popular clergymen.
+
+R. S. Storrs, D.D., is pastor of the Church of the Pilgrims, at the
+corner of Remsen and Henry streets. He is one of the most noted
+clergymen of the city, and was selected to assist in the opening of the
+New York and Brooklyn Suspension Bridge, making one of the addresses of
+the occasion.
+
+The Unitarian Church of the Saviour, at the corner of Pierrepont street
+and Monroe Place, is an elaborate Gothic edifice, as is also St. Ann's
+Episcopal Church, at the corner of Clinton and Livingston streets. The
+Roman Catholic Church of St. Charles Borromeo, in Sidney Place, is
+famous for its music. The Dutch Reformed Church, in Pierrepont street,
+is of brown stone, in the richest Corinthian style, and the interior
+elaborately finished.
+
+The United States Navy Yard is one of the features of Brooklyn, and is
+the chief naval station of the country. It is on the south shore of
+Wallabout Bay, and contains forty-five acres. The yard is inclosed by a
+high brick wall, and contains numerous foundries, workshops and
+storehouses. Vessels of every kind used by the navy may be seen at
+almost any time at the yard, and it has also a large and varied
+collection of trophies taken in war and relics of earlier times, which
+prove of interest to the visitor.
+
+At the other extremity of Brooklyn, a mile below South Ferry, is the
+Atlantic Dock, which covers an area of forty-two and one-half acres, and
+deserves special attention. It is surrounded by piers of solid granite,
+upon which are spacious warehouses.
+
+In the heart of the city, a little south of the Navy Yard, between
+Myrtle and DeKalb avenues, is Washington Park, or old Fort Greene. It is
+on an elevated plateau, contains thirty acres, and commands extensive
+views. Its name of Fort Greene dates back to the time of the Revolution,
+when it was the seat of extensive fortifications.
+
+The special pride of Brooklyn is Prospect Park, one of the finest in
+America, where art and the landscape gardener have assisted rather than
+thwarted nature in her efforts to produce beauty. It is situated on an
+elevated ridge on the southeastern borders of the city, and from certain
+localities commands broad views of Brooklyn, New York, the inner and
+outer harbor, and the Jersey shore. It contains five hundred and fifty
+acres, which embrace broad, green lawns, grassy slopes, groves, wooded
+hills, beautiful with ferns and wild flowers, lakes and rocky dells. It
+contains eight miles of drives, four miles of bridle paths, and eleven
+miles of walks. At the main entrance, on Flatbush avenue, is a large,
+circular open place known as the Plaza, paved with stone and bordered by
+grassy mounds. A fountain of novel design furnishes the welcome sound of
+splashing, trickling water, and not far distant from it is a bronze
+statue of President Lincoln. Within the Park, on an eminence overlooking
+the cottages and dell, is a monument, erected in 1877, to the memory of
+John Howard Payne, author of "Home, Sweet Home."
+
+On Gowanus Heights, overlooking Gowanus Bay, in the southern portion of
+Brooklyn, is situated Greenwood Cemetery, one of the most beautiful
+"cities of the dead" in the world. It was laid out in 1842, and contains
+over five hundred acres. At least two hundred thousand interments have
+been made in it. It is a perfect wilderness of beauty. The surface of
+the ground is uneven, and hills and valleys, grassy slopes, beautiful
+little lakes with fountains playing in their midst, overshadowing trees,
+a profusion of brilliant flowers, and the white or gray gleam of a
+thousand monuments, varied and beautiful in design, all unite in forming
+an exquisite spot for the resting place of the dead, which is a fitting
+embodiment and expression of the loving remembrance in which they
+continue to be held by the living. Among the many elegant and expensive
+monuments which this cemetery contains, not one will attract more
+attention for its beauty and elaborateness than that erected to
+Charlotte Canda, a young French girl, whose fortune was expended in the
+marble pile above her grave. The main entrance to Greenwood, near Fifth
+Avenue and Twenty-third street, has a magnificent gateway in the pointed
+Gothic style, and opens upon a most enchanting landscape. On an
+elevation to the right of this entrance, within this cemetery, is
+obtained an extensive view of Brooklyn and the bay. The cemetery
+contains nineteen miles of carriage roads, and seventeen miles of
+footpaths.
+
+Four miles to the eastward of Greenwood are the cemeteries of the
+Evergreen and Cypress Hills, both beautiful spots, and the latter
+especially celebrated as containing the grave of a large number of
+soldiers of the late war.
+
+Radiating from Brooklyn, in almost every direction, are routes leading
+to some of the most frequented pleasure resorts of the country. On the
+southern coast of Long Island, just east of the Narrows, is Coney
+Island, four and a half miles long, with a firm, gently-sloping beach.
+The island is divided into four distinct places of resort: Coney Island
+Point, or Morton's, at the west end, the oldest of the four; West
+Brighton Beach, or Cable's, where there is an iron pier one thousand
+feet long, extending out into the ocean, and an observatory three
+hundred feet high; Brighton Beach, connecting with West Brighton by a
+wide drive and promenade, known as the Concourse; and Manhattan Beach,
+the most fashionable resort on the island. At the latter place are two
+vast hotels, and an amphitheatre, with three thousand five hundred
+seats, upon the beach, for the accommodation of those who wish to watch
+the bathers.
+
+Rockaway Beach is to the westward of Coney Island, and is about four
+miles long, with surf bathing on one side and still bathing on the
+other. A colossal tubular iron pier, twelve hundred feet long, extends
+out into the ocean, affording a landing for steamboats.
+
+Staten Island, the western boundary of the Narrows, is a sort of earthly
+paradise, which separates the Lower Bay from the Upper. It is a
+beautiful island, having an area of nearly sixty square miles, and
+rising boldly from the waters of the bays. It commands extensive views
+over harbor and ocean, and is a favorite summer home or place of
+temporary resort.
+
+Along the shores of the Sound are many places for summer rest and
+recreation. Glen Island, lying in the East River, is a famous and
+attractive picnicing spot for both New Yorkers and Brooklynites.
+
+Brooklyn is a beautiful and an extensive city, a fitting suburb of the
+metropolis. The additional facilities for transit between the two cities
+afforded by the completion of the Suspension Bridge will tend to her
+material advantage, drawing thither a still larger class of people to
+make their homes in its quiet suburban streets and avenues, out of the
+noise and whirl of the great city. Her prosperity must keep pace with
+that of her elder sister, and so close is the bond of common interest
+between them, that whatever benefits one must benefit the other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+BALTIMORE.
+
+ Position of Baltimore.--Streets.--Cathedral and Churches.--
+ Public Buildings.--Educational Institutions.--Art Collections.--
+ Charitable Institutions.--Monuments.--Railway Tunnels.--Parks
+ and Cemeteries.--Druid Hill Park.--Commerce and Manufactures.--
+ Foundation of the City.--Early History.--Bonaparte-Patterson
+ Marriage.--Storming of Baltimore in 1814.--Maryland at the
+ Breaking-out of the Rebellion.--Assault on Sixth Massachusetts
+ Regiment, in April, 1861.--Subsequent Events during the War.--
+ Baltimore Proves Herself Loyal.--Re-union of Grand Army of
+ the Republic in Baltimore, September, 1882.--Old Differences
+ Forgotten and Fraternal Relations Established.
+
+
+The first in commercial and manufacturing importance of all southern
+cities is Baltimore, situated on the north branch of the Patapsco River,
+fourteen miles from its entrance into the Chesapeake Bay, and one
+hundred and ninety-eight miles from the Atlantic. It embraces an area of
+nearly twelve square miles, about one-half of which is built up solidly
+with residences and business houses. The city is divided into East and
+West Baltimore, by Jones' Falls, a small stream running nearly north and
+south, and spanned by numerous bridges. The northwest branch of the
+Patapsco also runs up into the heart of the city, forming a basin, into
+which small vessels can enter. The outer harbor, or main branch of the
+Patapsco, is accessible to the largest ships. The harbor is a safe and
+capacious one, capable of furnishing anchorage to a thousand vessels. At
+the point of the peninsula separating the two branches of the river is
+situated Fort McHenry, which defends the entrance, and which was
+unsuccessfully bombarded by the British fleet in the War of 1812.
+
+The general appearance of the city is striking and picturesque. It is
+regularly laid out, the streets for the most part crossing one another
+at right angles, but there is sufficient diversity to prevent sameness.
+Thus while the main part of the city is laid out with streets running
+north and south, crossed by others running east and west, large sections
+show streets running diagonally to the points of the compass. The
+surface of the ground upon which the city is built is undulating, and
+its streets are moderately wide. Baltimore street, running east and
+west, is the main business thoroughfare, containing the principal retail
+stores and hotels. North Charles street is the most fashionable
+promenade, while Mount Vernon Place, and the vicinity of the Monument
+and Broadway are favorite resorts.
+
+The city abounds in handsome edifices. A generation ago, the Catholic
+Cathedral, at the corner of Mulberry and Cathedral streets--a large
+granite edifice in the form of a cross, one hundred and ninety feet
+long, one hundred and seventy-seven feet at the arms of the cross, and
+surmounted by a dome one hundred and twenty-seven feet high--was the
+especial pride and boast of Baltimoreans. At its west end are two tall
+towers with Saracenic cupolas, resembling the minarets of a Mohammedan
+mosque. It contains one of the largest organs in America, and two
+valuable paintings, "The Descent from the Cross," the gift of Louis XVI,
+and "St. Louis burying his officers and soldiers slain before Tunis,"
+presented by Charles X, of France. Now other buildings are found equally
+as magnificent. The Roman Catholic churches of St. Alphonsus, at the
+corner of Saratoga and Park Streets, and of St. Vincent de Paul, in
+North Front Street, are fine in architectural design and interior
+decorations. The Unitarian Church, at the corner of North Charles and
+Franklin streets, is a handsome edifice, faced by a colonnade composed
+of four Tuscan columns and two pilasters, which form arcades, and
+containing five bronze entrance doors. Grace Church, Episcopal, at the
+corner of Monument and Park streets, and Emmanuel Church, also
+Episcopal, at the corner of Reed and Cathedral streets, are handsome
+gothic structures, the former of red and the latter of gray sandstone.
+Christ's and St. Peter's Episcopal churches, the one at the corner of
+St. Paul and Chase streets, and the other at the corner of Druid Hill
+avenue and Lanvale street, are both of marble. The Eutaw Place Baptist
+Church, at the corner of Eutaw and Dolphin streets, has a beautiful
+marble spire one hundred and eighty-six feet high. The First
+Presbyterian Church, at the corner of Park and Madison streets, has a
+spire two hundred and sixty-eight feet high, with side towers,
+respectively seventy-eight and one hundred and twenty-eight feet in
+height, and is the most elaborate specimen of Lancet-Gothic architecture
+in the country. The Westminster, at the corner of Green and Fayette
+streets, contains the grave and monument of Edgar Allan Poe. Mount
+Vernon Church, which fronts Washington Monument, at the corner of
+Charles and Monument streets, and is in the most aristocratic residence
+quarter of Baltimore, is built of green serpentine stone, with buff Ohio
+and red Connecticut sandstone, and has eighteen polished columns of
+Aberdeen granite. The Hebrew Synagogue, in Lloyd street near Baltimore
+street, is a large and handsome edifice.
+
+The City Hall, filling the entire square bounded by Holliday, Lexington,
+North and Fayette streets, built of marble, in the Renaissance style,
+was completed in 1875, and is one of the finest municipal edifices in
+the United States. It is four stories in height, with a French roof, and
+an iron dome two hundred and sixty feet high, with a balcony elevated
+two hundred and fifty feet above the sidewalk, from which a magnificent
+view of the city may be obtained. The Masonic Temple, in Charles street,
+near Saratoga, is a handsome building, completed in 1870, at a cost of
+$200,000. The Exchange, in Gay street, between Second and Lombard
+streets, is an extensive structure, surmounted by an immense dome, one
+hundred and fifteen feet high, and fifty-three feet in diameter, which
+overarches a spacious and brilliantly frescoed rotunda. Six Ionic
+columns, the shafts of which are single blocks of Italian marble, form
+colonnades on the east and west sides. It contains the United States
+Custom House, Post Office, Merchants' Bank, and a fine, large
+reading-room. The Corn and Flour Exchange, the Rialto Building, Odd
+Fellows' Hall, Y. M. C. A. Building, are all modern and elegant
+structures. The Merchant's Shot Tower, which stands at the corner of
+Front and Fayette streets, is two hundred and sixteen feet high, and
+from sixty to twenty feet in diameter, and is one of the landmarks of
+the city. One million, one hundred thousand bricks were used in its
+construction.
+
+Peabody Institute faces Washington monument, on the south, and was
+founded and endowed by George Peabody, the eminent American-born London
+banker, for the diffusion of knowledge among the people. It contains a
+free library of fifty-eight thousand volumes, a conservatory of music,
+lecture hall, and a Department of Art, which includes art collections
+and an art school. The AthenA|um, at the corner of Saratoga and St. Paul
+streets, contains the Merchants' Library, with twenty-six thousand
+volumes, the Baltimore Library, with fifteen thousand volumes, and the
+collections of the Maryland Historical Society, comprising a library of
+ten thousand volumes, numerous historical relics, and fine pictures and
+statuary. The Johns Hopkins University, which was endowed with over
+three millions of dollars, by Johns Hopkins, a wealthy citizen of
+Baltimore, who died in 1873, has a temporary location at the corner of
+Howard street and Druid Hill avenue, but will probably be permanently
+located at Clifton, two miles from the city on the Harford road. The
+Johns Hopkins Hospital, to be connected with the Medical Department of
+the Johns Hopkins University, and endowed with over two millions of
+dollars by the same generous testator, is in process of construction at
+the corner of Broadway and Monument street, and will be the finest
+building of its kind in America. The Maryland Institute is a vast
+structure at the corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets, and is
+designed for the promotion of the mechanical arts. The main hall is two
+hundred and fifty feet long, and in it is held an annual exhibition of
+the products of American mechanical industry. It contains a library of
+fourteen thousand volumes, a lecture room, and a school of design. The
+first floor is used as a market. The Academy of Science, in Mulberry
+street, opposite Cathedral street, has a fine museum of natural history,
+embracing a rich collection of birds and minerals, and including a
+complete representation of the flora and fauna of Maryland.
+
+Not only is Baltimore noted for free educational institutions, but for
+her art collections as well. Annual exhibitions of American paintings
+are held in the AthenA|um, and the Academy of Art and Science contains a
+fine collection of paintings, engravings and casts. The private art
+gallery of William T. Walters, of No. 65 Mount Vernon Place, is one of
+the finest in America.
+
+There are numerous charitable institutions in the city, prominent among
+which are the Hospital for the Insane, in East Monument street;
+Institution for the Instruction of the Blind, in North avenue near
+Charles street; State Insane Asylum, a massive pile of granite
+buildings, near Catonsville, six miles from the city; Bay View Asylum,
+an almshouse, on a commanding eminence near the outskirts of the city,
+on the Philadelphia road; Mount Hope Hospital, conducted by the Sisters
+of Charity, on North avenue, corner of Bolton street; Episcopal Church
+Home, in Broadway near Baltimore street; Sheppard Asylum for the Insane,
+founded by Moses Sheppard, a wealthy Quaker, situated on a commanding
+site near Towsontown, seven miles from the city, and Mount Hope Retreat
+for the insane and sick, four miles from the city, on the Reistertown
+road.
+
+But her monuments are the special pride of Baltimore, and from them she
+derives her name of "The Monumental City." Chief among them is
+Washington Monument, whose construction was authorized by the
+Legislature in 1809, the land being donated for the purpose by Colonel
+John Eager Howard. The site is one hundred feet above tide-water, in
+Mount Vernon Place, at the intersection of Monument and Washington
+streets. It is a Doric shaft rising one hundred and seventy-six and
+one-half feet, from a base fifty feet square by thirty-five feet in
+height, and is surmounted by a colossal figure of Washington, fifteen
+feet high, the whole rising more than three hundred feet above the level
+of the river. It is built of brick, cased with white marble, and cost
+$200,000. From the balcony at the head of the shaft, reached by a
+winding stairs within, a most extensive view of the city, harbor and
+surrounding country may be obtained. Battle Monument stands in Battle
+Square, at the intersection of Calvert and Fayette streets, and is
+commemorative of those who fell defending the city when it was attacked
+by the British in 1814. A square base, twenty feet high, with a pedestal
+ornamented at four corners by a sculptured griffin, has on each front an
+Egyptian door, on which are appropriate inscriptions and basso relievo
+decorations illustrating certain incidents in the battle. A fascial
+column eighteen feet in height rises above the base, surrounded by bands
+on which are inscribed the names of those who fell. The column is
+surmounted by a female figure in marble, emblematic of the city of
+Baltimore. The Poe Monument, raised in memory of Baltimore's poet, Edgar
+Allan Poe, stands in the churchyard of Westminster Presbyterian Church,
+at the corner of Green and Fayette streets. The Wildey Monument has a
+plain marble pediment and shaft, surmounted by a group representing
+Charity protecting orphans, and has been raised in honor of Thomas
+Wildey, the founder of the order of Odd Fellows in the United States. It
+is on Broadway near Baltimore street. The Wells and McComas Monument, at
+the corner of Gay and Monument streets, perpetuates the memory of two
+boys bearing those names, who shot General Ross, the British Commander,
+on September twelfth, 1814.
+
+The railway tunnels, by which the railroads on the north side of the
+city are connected with tide water at Canton, are among the wonders of
+Baltimore. That of the Baltimore and Potomac Road is second in length
+only to the Hoosac Tunnel, in America, it being 6969 feet long, while
+the Union tunnel is half the length. They were completed in 1873, at a
+cost of four million, five hundred thousand dollars. Previous to their
+construction, passengers and freight were transferred through the city
+by means of horses and mules attached to the cars.
+
+Federal Hill is a commanding eminence on the south side of the river
+basin, and from it extensive views are obtained of the city and harbor.
+It was occupied by Union troops during the civil war, and now contains a
+United States Signal Station. It has been purchased by the city for a
+park. Greenmount Cemetery, in the northern part of the city, and Loudon
+Park Cemetery, both have imposing entrances and contain handsome
+monuments. Patterson Park, at the east end of Baltimore street, contains
+seventy acres handsomely laid out, and commanding extensive views.
+
+ [Illustration: VIEW OF BALTIMORE FROM FEDERAL HILL.]
+
+The people of the present day can scarcely comprehend the grand scale on
+which landscape gardening was attempted a hundred or more years ago. The
+landed gentry, themselves or their fathers immigrants from England,
+considered a well-kept park, like those of the immense English estates,
+an essential to an American one. To this day may be seen traces of their
+efforts in this direction, in stately avenues of venerable trees, which
+the iconoclastic hand of modern progress has considerately spared. In
+some rare instances whole estates have remained untouched, and have
+become public property, and their beauties thus perpetuated. Bonaventure
+Cemetery, near Savannah, is a notable instance of this, where a
+magnificently planned Southern plantation has been transferred from
+private to public hands, and its valuable trees remain, though the hand
+of art, in attempting to improve, has rather marred the majestic beauty
+of the place. Lemon Hill, the nucleus of Fairmount Park, in
+Philadelphia, was, in revolutionary times, the estate of Robert Morris,
+and though the landscape gardener has been almost ruthless in his
+improvements (?), he has been considerate enough to spare some of the
+century-old trees. To the same private enterprise, love of the
+picturesque and appreciation of beauty, Baltimore is indebted for Druid
+Hill Park, in the northern suburbs of the city. Colonel Nicholas Rogers,
+a soldier of the Revolution and a gentleman of taste and leisure, when
+the war was over, retired to his country residence, a little distance
+from Baltimore, then a city of some ten thousand inhabitants, and
+devoted the remainder of his life to improving and adorning its
+extensive grounds. He seemed a thorough master of landscape gardening,
+and all his plans were most carefully matured, so that the trees are
+most artistically grouped and alternated with lawns; dense masses of
+foliage are broken into by bays and avenues, and beautiful vistas
+secured in various directions. Also in the selection of his trees a
+careful consideration was had of their autumn foliage, so that fine
+contrasts of color should be produced at that season of the year. The
+result of all this care and labor was one of the most charming and
+enchanting private parks which the country afforded. It contained an
+area of nearly five hundred acres.
+
+When Colonel Rogers died, his son, Lloyd N. Rogers, who seemed to have
+inherited only in part the tastes of his father, devoted himself solely
+to the cultivation of fruit, doing nothing to add to or preserve the
+beauty of his domain, but, on the other hand, allowing it to fall into
+neglect and decay. However, the harm that he wrought was only negative,
+for he did nothing to mar it, and preserved, with jealous care, the
+grand old trees which his father had planted, and with unremitting
+vigilance warded off interlopers and depredators. The estate was
+secluded from the outside world by fringes of woodland, and though the
+city had gradually crept to within a quarter of a mile, few people knew
+anything of its beauties. When, therefore, the Commission appointed to
+select the site for a new park decided upon Druid Hill as the most
+available for that purpose, it was absolutely necessary to detail its
+advantages. Mr. Rogers reluctantly consented to accept one thousand
+dollars an acre for his estate, and it became city property.
+Subsequently, other small pieces of adjoining property were bought, and
+Druid Lake and grounds were finally added, and the people of Baltimore
+found themselves in the possession of a park embracing an area of six
+hundred and eighty acres, which needed not to be created, but only to be
+improved, to be one of the most beautiful in the country.
+
+There has been but little attempt at architectural decoration. A costly
+and imposing gateway, a Moorish music stand, bright with many colors, a
+boat-house crowning a little island in a miniature lake, a pretty bridge
+and a Moorish arch thrown across a ravine, a few handsome fountains,
+and, finally, the old mansion, renovated and enlarged, standing out
+against the densely-wooded hill from which the park takes its
+name--these are about all which have been attempted in that line. The
+surface of the Park is gently undulating, with occasional bold
+eminences from which fine views may be obtained of the city and
+surrounding country. Its special attractions are its secluded walks,
+well-kept drives and tree-arched bridle-paths, its smooth, velvety turf,
+and the venerable beauty of its trees, which are the oldest of those of
+any park in the country. Its glades and dells have been left as nature
+made them, having been spared the artificial touches of the landscape
+gardener; and its little trickling springs and cool, secluded brooks,
+have a sylvan, rustic beauty which is surpassingly delightful.
+
+The future care and improvement of the Park are well provided for. About
+the time that it became a matter of public interest, the charter for the
+first line of street passenger railways was granted, and this charter
+stipulated that one-fifth of the gross receipts of the road, or one cent
+for each passenger carried, should be paid to the city, to constitute a
+Park Fund. This amount, small at first, but gradually increasing until
+it now amounts to more than a hundred thousand dollars annually, was
+devoted first to paying the interest on the Park bonds, and finally to
+the preservation and improvement of the Park. The Park Commissioners,
+who receive no pay for their services, have most judiciously
+administered the fund entrusted to their care.
+
+The foreign and coasting trade of Baltimore are both extensive. Two
+lines of steamships leave the port weekly for Europe, and she commands a
+large share of the trade of the West and Northwest. Her shipments to
+Europe are principally grain, tobacco, cotton, petroleum and provisions.
+The city contains rolling mills, iron works, nail factories, locomotive
+works, cotton factories and other industrial establishments, numbering
+more than two thousand in all. The rich copper ores of Lake Superior are
+chiefly worked here, and nearly four thousand tons of refined copper are
+produced annually. The smelting works in Canton, a southern suburb of
+the city, employ one thousand men. There are also extensive flouring
+mills, while oysters, fruit and vegetables, to the value of five million
+dollars, are canned annually. Five hundred thousand hides are also
+annually made into leather and sent to New England. Baltimore oysters
+are renowned as being among the best the Atlantic seaboard produces, and
+no one should think of visiting the city without testing them. The
+Chesapeake oyster beds are apparently exhaustless, and supply plants for
+beds all along the coast.
+
+Although the first settlements in Maryland were made early in the
+seventeenth century, the present site of Baltimore was not chosen until
+1729, and in 1745 the town was named Baltimore, in honor of Lord
+Baltimore, a Catholic, to whom the patent of the province of Maryland
+had been originally made out. In 1782 the first regular communication
+with Philadelphia, by means of a line of stage coaches, was established,
+and Baltimore was chartered as a city in 1787, having at that time a
+population of twenty thousand, which, by 1850, had increased to nearly
+two hundred thousand; and, according to the census of 1880, the
+population was 332,190 inhabitants. In 1780 the city became a port of
+entry, and in 1782 the first pavement was laid in Baltimore street.
+
+In 1803 Baltimore became the scene of a romance which is even yet
+remembered with interest. Jerome Bonaparte, the youngest brother of
+Napoleon, born in Ajaccio, November fifteenth, 1784, found himself, in
+the year just mentioned, while cruising off the West Indies, on account
+of the war between France and England, compelled to take refuge in New
+York. Being introduced into the best society of that and neighboring
+cities, he made the acquaintance of Miss Elizabeth Patterson, daughter
+of a merchant of Baltimore. The manner of their introduction was
+peculiar. In a crowded saloon the button of young Bonaparte's coat
+caught in the dress of a young lady, and as it took a little time to
+disengage it, the future King of Westphalia had opportunity to see that
+the lady was young, surpassingly beautiful and charming. This interview,
+by some who knew the lady and who were acquainted with her ambition,
+thought to be not entirely accidental, resulted, on the twenty-seventh
+of December of the same year, in a marriage between the two, the
+bridegroom being but nineteen years of age. Being summoned back to
+France by his Imperial brother, he was quickly followed by his young
+wife, who, however, was not permitted to land in France, and retired to
+England, where she shortly afterwards gave birth to a son, whom she
+named Jerome, after his father. Napoleon annulled the marriage, on the
+ground that it had been made contrary to French law, which stipulates
+that the consent of parents must be gained in order to legalize a
+marriage. Jerome was compelled, after he succeeded to the Westphalian
+crown, to marry Sophia Dorothea, daughter of King Frederick I, of
+Wurtemburg. Madame Patterson, as she was called to the day of her death,
+though she maintained her title to the name of Bonaparte, having an
+utter scorn for America and its democratic institutions, spent much of
+her life in Europe, where at first her beauty, and to the last her wit
+and charming manners, secured her admission to the most exclusive
+salons, and a sort of acknowledgment of her claims. She never saw her
+husband again, save on one occasion, when she came face to face with him
+in a European picture-gallery.
+
+Madame Patterson's aristocratic prejudices were greatly shocked when her
+son married a most estimable American lady, the mother's ambition
+seeking for him an alliance among the royal or at least noble families
+of the Old World. During the reign of Napoleon III, the Pope recognized
+the first marriage of Jerome Bonaparte, and the Emperor, who had taken
+offence at his cousin, the son of Jerome by his princess wife, also
+legitimatized the son, and took him into his service. Madame Patterson
+lived to be nearly a hundred years old, having spent her last days in
+her native city, and dying but a few years ago. Her son Jerome survived
+her not many years, leaving two sons, who are known as the
+Patterson-Bonapartes.
+
+In December, 1814, Baltimore was made the object of attack by the
+British forces, then at war with the United States. On the eleventh of
+that month the fleet reached the mouth of the Patapsco, and on the next
+day six thousand men landed at North Point, and proceeded, under command
+of General Ross, toward the city. An army of over three thousand men met
+them and kept them in check, in order to gain time to put the forts and
+batteries of Baltimore in proper condition for defence. A battle was
+fought, and the Americans defeated, with considerable loss. Among the
+killed and wounded, which numbered one hundred and three, were many of
+the most prominent citizens of Baltimore. The next morning the British
+advanced to the entrenchments about two miles from the city, and at the
+same time a vigorous attack was made by the fleet, upon Fort McHenry, at
+the entrance of the harbor. The fort was vigorously bombarded during the
+next twenty-four hours, but without visible effect. The troops which had
+landed, after hovering at a respectful distance from the city, until the
+evening of the thirtieth, then retired to their shipping, and set sail
+down the river, leaving behind them their commander, General Ross, who
+had been killed in the battle of the twelfth. It was during the siege of
+Baltimore, while the British fleet lay off Fort McHenry, and the bombs
+were raining upon it, that Philip Barton Key wrote the "Star Spangled
+Banner."
+
+From 1814 to 1861, nearly half a century, Baltimore had nothing to do
+but develop her resources and extend her commerce, which she did so well
+and so thoroughly, that in 1860 her inhabitants numbered more than
+212,000, and she stood in the front rank as a manufacturing and
+commercial town.
+
+At the inauguration of President Lincoln, in 1861, the sentiments of the
+people assimilated rather with those of Virginia and the South, than
+with those of Pennsylvania and the North. Had it not, by its
+geographical position, been so completely in the power of the Federal
+government, Maryland would probably have seceded with Virginia. Great
+excitement was aroused by the attack on Fort Sumter, and the State was
+with difficulty made to retain her old position in the Union. The only
+line of railway from the north and east to Washington passed through
+Baltimore, and when, on the fifteenth of April, the President made his
+call for seventy-five thousand men, it was necessary that, in reaching
+the seat of war, they should pass through that city. Apprehensions were
+felt that they might be disturbed, but the Marshal of Police, on the
+eighteenth of April, maintained perfect order in the city, and summarily
+quieted all attempts at riot. He also received from the State Rights
+Association a most solemn pledge that the Federal troops should not be
+interfered with. The Mayor issued a proclamation invoking all good
+citizens to uphold and maintain the peace and good order of the city.
+
+On the nineteenth, the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, the first to
+respond to the President's call, arrived, by the Philadelphia and
+Baltimore Railroad. A crowd of two or three thousand persons had
+gathered at the depot early in the day, to witness their arrival. Soon
+after eleven o'clock in the morning twenty-nine cars arrived from
+Philadelphia, filled with soldiers. Horses were attached to the cars,
+which were driven along Pratt street to the Camden station. The
+multitude hooted and yelled after the first six cars, but did not
+otherwise molest them. The horses becoming frightened by the uproar,
+were detached from the seventh car, which moved without their aid nearly
+to Gay street, where a body of laborers were removing the cobblestones
+from the bed of the street, in order to repair it. Some thirty or forty
+men had followed the car to this point, cheering for President Davis and
+the Southern Confederacy, and applying contemptuous and insulting
+epithets to the troops. The latter received these taunts in perfect
+silence; and when the horses were again attached, and the car commenced
+moving off, a proposition was made to stone it. Almost instantly, acting
+on the suggestion, nearly every window was smashed by projectiles
+snatched from the street. The eighth car was treated in a like manner.
+The ninth car was suffered to pass unmolested, as it was apparently
+empty. When the tenth car approached, after an ineffectual attempt to
+tear up the track, it was heaped with paving stones, and a cartload of
+sand dumped upon them, and four or five large anchors, dragged from the
+sidewalk, completed the barricade. Progress was impossible, and the car
+returned to the President Street Depot.
+
+Two-thirds of the cars still remained, filled with troops, besides
+others loaded with ammunition and baggage. Mayor Brown hastened to the
+depot, in order to prevent any disturbance. The troops were ordered to
+leave the cars and form into line. While forming they were surrounded by
+a dense mass of people, who impeded their march, threw great quantities
+of stones, and knocked down and severely injured two soldiers.
+
+Marching through the city, from the President Street Depot to the Pratt
+Street Bridge, they were pursued by the excited crowd, who continued to
+throw stones, and even fired muskets at them. When they reached Gay
+street, where the track had been torn up, they were again violently
+assaulted by a fresh mob, and a number knocked down and wounded. At the
+corner of South and Pratt streets a man fired a pistol into the ranks of
+the military, when those in the rear ranks immediately wheeled and fired
+upon their assailants, wounding several. The guns of the wounded
+soldiers were seized, and fired upon the ranks, killing two soldiers.
+Reaching Calvert street, the troops succeeded in checking their pursuers
+by a rapid fire, and were not again seriously molested until they
+reached Howard street, where still another mob had assembled.
+
+The police did their utmost to protect the troops from assault, but
+were pressed back by the excited crowd. The soldiers left the Camden
+station about half-past twelve o'clock, and a body of infantry, about
+one hundred and fifty strong, from one of the Northern States, which had
+arrived meantime, next attracted the malevolence of the crowd. The
+excitement was now intense. A man displayed the flag of the Confederate
+States, and a general panic ensued. As many as twenty shots were fired,
+happily without injury to any one, and cobblestones fell like hail. At
+last the soldiers gained refuge in the cars. Other troops, by order of
+Governor Hicks, were sent back to the borders of the State, and the
+military was called out and quiet restored, by evening. Nine citizens of
+Baltimore had been killed, and many wounded; while twenty-five wounded
+Massachusetts troops were sent to the Washington Hospital, and their
+dead numbered two.
+
+Thus Baltimore shares with Charleston the doubtful honor of being first
+in the great civil war which devastated the country and sent desolation
+to many thousand homes, both north and south. Charleston fired the first
+gun, and Baltimore shed the first blood.
+
+During the succeeding night, a report reaching the city that more
+Northern troops were on their way southward, the bridge at Canton, the
+two bridges between Cockeysville and Ashland, also the bridges over
+Little Gunpowder and Bush rivers were destroyed, by order of the
+authorities of Baltimore. Upon a representation of the matter to
+President Lincoln, he ordered that "no more troops should be brought
+through Baltimore, if, in a military point of view, and without
+interruption or opposition, they can be marched around Baltimore." The
+transmission of mails, and removal of provisions from the city, were
+suspended, by the order of the Mayor and Board of Police. Four car-loads
+of military stores and equipments, sufficient to furnish a thousand men,
+belonging to the Government, were thus detained. On the twenty-fourth of
+the month the city had the appearance of a military camp. Twenty-five
+thousand volunteers had enlisted, and four hundred picked men left the
+city for the Relay House, on the Baltimore and Ohio Road, for the
+purpose of seizing and protecting that point, in order to cut off
+communications with Washington by that route.
+
+For a week an unparalleled excitement prevailed in Baltimore, which was
+succeeded by a counter-revolution, when the volunteer militia were
+dismissed, and a large number of troops landed at Fort McHenry and
+shipped for Washington, from Locust Point. On the fifth of May General
+Butler removed a portion of his troops to Baltimore, and they were
+permitted to enter and remain in the city without disturbance. As they
+proceeded on their way to Federal Hill, they were even greeted with
+cheers, while ladies at windows and doors waved their handkerchiefs and
+applauded. On the sixteenth of May the passenger trains between
+Baltimore and Washington resumed their regular trips. On the
+twenty-seventh of June, Marshal of Police Kane was arrested and escorted
+to Fort McHenry, on the charge of being at the head of an unlawful
+combination of men organized for resistance to the laws of the United
+States and the State of Maryland. On the first of July the Commissioners
+of Police were arrested, for having acted unlawfully. On the sixteenth
+of July General Dix was put in command of the troops stationed at
+Baltimore, and the city thenceforth remained tranquil. At the fall
+elections a full vote was cast, which resulted in the Union candidates
+receiving a very large majority. At the meeting of the Legislature, it
+appropriated seven thousand dollars for the relief of the families of
+the Massachusetts troops killed and wounded at Baltimore on April
+nineteenth.
+
+On June thirtieth, 1863, Major General Schenck, in command at Baltimore,
+put that city and Maryland under martial law. The value of merchandise
+exported that year from Baltimore was $8,054,112, and her imports during
+the same time were $4,098,189, showing that although on the borderland
+of strife, her commerce was in an exceedingly healthy condition. During
+July a number of her citizens were arrested, on a charge of being
+disloyal to the government. On the Fourth of July all citizens were
+required by the Commander to show their colors, from ten o'clock A.M.
+to six o'clock, P.M.; an absence of the national flag being considered
+tantamount to a confession of disloyalty. In 1864 the State adopted a
+new Constitution, which conferred freedom upon the slaves within her
+borders, and in November a Freedman's Bureau was established by Major
+General Wallace, having its headquarters at Baltimore.
+
+The following year saw the close of the war, and Baltimore, which had
+not suffered like her sister cities at the South, her port being free
+from blockade, but had rather witnessed increased prosperity arising
+from the demands of the war, continued her prosperous career. Although
+many violent disunionists had found their homes within the city, the
+popular sentiment had grown strongly in favor of the North, and
+Baltimore had come to see that she had little to lose and much to gain
+by the reestablishment of the Union.
+
+The bitterness of the old war times has passed away, and, as if to
+emphasize this fact, the Grand Army of the Republic was invited to hold
+a reunion in Baltimore in September, 1882. Accepting the invitation, her
+citizens vied with each other in honoring the veterans of the war, and
+made their visit a regular ovation. Of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment,
+who had passed through Baltimore on that fateful day in April,
+twenty-one years before, and who suffered from the fury of an ungoverned
+mob, only one member attended the reunion, Captain C. P. Lord, a
+resident of Vineland, New Jersey. He was lionized on every hand.
+
+This Grand Army reunion had many pleasant and amusing features. Here men
+met each other again who had last parted on the battlefield or in a
+Southern prison. Here the dead seemed to come to life, and the lost were
+found. Many officers and soldiers of the Confederate army were also
+present, and it was as satisfactory as curious, as more than once
+happened during this occasion, to have two men meet and clasp hands in a
+cordial greeting, as one of them said to the other, "The last time we
+met I tried to put a bullet hole through you on a battlefield;" or, "I
+took you prisoner when I saw you last;" or, "This empty sleeve, or these
+crutches, I must thank you for."
+
+The gathering was one which will long be remembered by Union and
+Confederate soldiers, and by the citizens of Baltimore as well. It was
+the inauguration of an era of good feeling between the North and the
+South. All personal and sectional enmity had died out, and this
+gathering joined those who had represented, on one side the North and on
+the other the South, in that great intestine struggle which is now so
+long past, and the terror of which, thank God, is being gradually
+obliterated by time from our memories, in new fraternal bonds, which are
+a good augury for the preservation of our Union. When soldiers who
+suffered so much at each other's hands, who were stirred by all the evil
+passions which war develops, and who bore the brunt of the conflict,
+offering all, if need be, as a sacrifice on the altar of the cause they
+had espoused, can so forget the past, and shaking hands over the chasm
+which divided them, look forward to a happy and concordant future,
+surely civilians should be willing to bury the hatred and prejudice
+which has so embittered the past, and live only for a common country,
+made of many parts whose interests are identical.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHARLESTON.
+
+ First Visit to Charleston.--Jail Yard.--Bombardment of the
+ City.--Roper Hospital.--Charleston During the War.--Secession of
+ South Carolina.--Attack and Surrender of Fort Sumter.--Blockade
+ of the Harbor.--Great Fire of 1861.--Capitulation in 1865.--
+ First Settlement of the City.--Battles of the Revolution.--
+ Nullification Act.--John C. Calhoun.--Population of the City.--
+ Commerce and Manufactures.--Charleston Harbor.--"American
+ Venice."--Battery.--Streets, Public Buildings and Churches.--
+ Scenery about Charleston.--Railways and Steamship Lines.--An
+ Ancient Church.--Magnolia Cemetery.--Drives near the City.--
+ Charleston Purified by Fire.
+
+
+My first introduction to the city of Charleston can scarcely be said to
+have been under propitious circumstances. True, a retinue of troops
+conducted my companions and myself, with military pomp, to our quarters
+in the city. But these quarters, instead of being any one of its fine
+hotels, were none other than the Charleston Jail Yard, for the year was
+1864, and we were prisoners of war.
+
+After a varied experience of prison life at Richmond, Danville, Macon
+and Savannah, I had been sent, with a number of others, to Charleston,
+South Carolina, to be placed under the fire of our batteries, which were
+then bombarding the city. We had received more humane treatment at
+Savannah than at any previous place of detention; therefore it was with
+a sinking of the heart that we found ourselves, when we arrived at our
+destination, thrown into the jail yard at Charleston, which was the
+grand receptacle of all Union prisoners in that city. The jail was a
+large octagonal building, four stories high, surmounted by a lofty
+tower. A workhouse and a gallows also occupied the yard. The jail
+building was for the accommodation of criminals, military prisoners, and
+Federal and Rebel deserters, all of whom at least had the advantage of
+shelter from sun and storm. The war prisoners were permitted the use of
+the yard only, which was in the most filthy condition conceivable,
+having been long used as a prison-pen, without receiving any cleaning or
+purification whatever. The only shelter afforded us were the remnants of
+a few tents, which had been cut to pieces, more or less, by former
+prisoners, to make themselves clothing.
+
+This jail yard was in the southeastern portion of the city, and
+apparently directly under the fire of our batteries on Morris Island.
+But though the shells came screaming over our heads, and proved a
+subject of interest, discussion, and even mathematical calculation among
+the prisoners, who were thankful for anything which should take their
+minds, even momentarily, from the misery which they endured, so
+carefully were they aimed, not to do us mischief, that though they
+exploded all about us--in front, behind, and on either side--not one of
+them fell within the prison enclosure. The scene at night was of
+peculiar beauty. These messengers of death presented the spectacle of
+magnificent fireworks, and every explosion sounded as the voice of a
+friend to us, assuring us that the great Northern army was still
+exerting itself to crush out the rebellion and open our prison doors and
+set us free.
+
+ [Illustration: VIEW ON THE BATTERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.]
+
+Reaching Charleston and its jail yard September twelfth, 1864, on the
+twenty-ninth I was transferred to the Roper Hospital, having given my
+parole that I would not attempt to escape. The quarters here were so
+much more comfortable that it was almost like a transition from hell to
+heaven. Leaving behind me the filthiness of the jail yard, and my bed
+there on the chill, bare ground, where I had protection against neither
+heat nor cold, storm nor sunshine, to be permitted the freedom of the
+beautiful garden of the hospital, and to sleep even upon the hard floor
+of the piazza, were luxuries before unenjoyed in my experience of
+southern prisons. And here the Sisters of Charity, those angels among
+women, did what they could to alleviate the sufferings of the sick, and
+to add to the comfort of us all. Their ministrations were bestowed
+indiscriminately on Rebels and Federals, with a charity as broad and
+boundless as true religion.
+
+On October fifth we were ordered to leave Charleston, and were sent, in
+the foulest of cattle cars, to Columbia, the Capital of the State. We
+left Charleston without a regret. It was the breeding place of the
+rankest treason, the cradle of the Rebellion, and the scene of untold
+cruelties to Union prisoners. At the time of our brief visit to the
+city, it was undergoing all the horrors of an actual siege. About
+one-third of its territory had been destroyed by fire during the early
+part of the war, caused by shells thrown from the Union batteries on
+Morris Island. This portion of the city was deserted by all its
+inhabitants save the negroes, who, during every brief cessation in the
+bombardment, flocked in and took possession, rent free, to scatter as
+quickly when one or more of them had been killed by the sudden
+appearance and explosion of shells in this quarter. The balance of the
+city was forsaken by non-combatants, and the blockade had put an end to
+all her commerce. The quiet industries of peace had given place to all
+the turmoil of war. Her streets were filled with military, while the
+boom of the distant batteries, the whiz of the flying shells, and the
+noise of their explosion, were daily and familiar sounds.
+
+During the four years of the war, Charleston was one of the chief points
+of Federal attack, though it remained in possession of the Confederate
+forces until the beginning of 1865. These were four terrible years to
+the city. Yet her sufferings she had brought upon herself. The first
+open and public movement in favor of the dissolution of the Union was
+made in that city. South Carolina was the first to call a State
+convention, and to secede from the Union. This convention was held at
+Columbia, the Capital of the State, but was adjourned to Charleston,
+where the Ordinance of Secession was unanimously passed on the twentieth
+of December, 1860. Fort Sumter, which was one of the largest forts in
+Charleston, a massive fortress of solid masonry, standing on an island
+commanding the principal entrance, at the mouth of Charleston Harbor,
+was in command of Major Robert Anderson, with a garrison of eighty men.
+On the twenty-seventh of December he ran up the stars and stripes.
+Governor Pickens immediately demanded a surrender of the fort, which was
+promptly refused. Early on Friday morning, April twelfth, 1861, the
+initial gun of the terrible four years' war was fired by the Rebel
+forces from the howitzer battery on James Island, west of Sumter. Fort
+Moultrie, on Sullivan Island, on the northeast, the gun battery at
+Cumming's Point, the northwest extremity of Morris Island, and other
+batteries and fortifications which the Confederates had seized and
+appropriated to their own use, all followed in a deadly rain of shells
+upon Sumter. The firing was kept up for thirty-five hours, and Sumter
+made a vigorous defence, until the quarters were entirely burned, the
+main gates destroyed by fire, the supplies exhausted, and the magazine
+surrounded by flames, when Major Anderson accepted the terms of
+capitulation offered by General Beauregard.
+
+Upon the surrender of the Fort, which was received as a good omen by the
+South, troops began to pour into the city, so that by the sixteenth of
+the same month as many as ten thousand had arrived. The blockade of the
+port was commenced on the tenth of May, and continued until the close of
+the war. In the latter part of 1861 an attempt was made by the Federal
+government to seal up the channel of the harbor with sunken ships, to
+prevent the egress of privateers. On the twenty-first of December
+seventeen vessels were sunk, in three or four rows, across the channel.
+But this attempt at blockade proved a failure. The current washed some
+of them away, and many passages in a water front of six miles were left
+unobserved, and more vessels ran the blockade and reached the city, than
+at any other southern port.
+
+On the tenth of December, 1861, a fire broke out in the city, which
+destroyed nearly all its public buildings, banks and insurance offices,
+and several churches, besides many dwellings, reducing thousands to
+homelessness and the extremity of want. The loss occasioned by this
+conflagration was estimated at ten millions of dollars.
+
+In 1863, the women, children and other non-combatants were ordered out
+of the city, and free transportation, food and lodgings were furnished
+those unable to pay for them. Morris Island had been captured by the
+Federal Army, who used it as a point of attack against Sumter and the
+city. Its shells had wrought destruction in all parts of the city,
+especially in its lower portions. On February seventeenth, 1865,
+Charleston, which had withstood all attacks from the seaward,
+capitulated to the Union forces, Columbia having been captured by
+Sherman.
+
+The history of Charleston goes back to earliest colonial times. In 1671
+a few persons located themselves on Ashley River, at Old Charleston. But
+in 1680 this settlement was abandoned, and the foundations of the
+present city laid, several miles nearer the sea. The whole country, up
+to 1671, between the thirtieth and thirty-sixth parallel of latitude,
+was called Carolina, having received the name in honor of Charles IX, of
+France. In that year the division was made between the Northern and
+Southern provinces. In 1685 the young settlement received a considerable
+influx of French Huguenot refugees.
+
+During the early part of the eighteenth century the war of Queen Anne
+against France and Spain greatly disturbed the young colony; and a
+little later the Indians threatened its existence. All the inhabitants
+of the region took refuge at Charleston, which was vigorously defended.
+
+In 1700, the same year that Kidd was captured and taken to England, no
+less then seven pirates were secured, and executed at Charleston.
+Subsequently others shared the same fate.
+
+ [Illustration: GARDEN AT MOUNT PLEASANT, OPPOSITE CHARLESTON, SOUTH
+ CAROLINA.]
+
+South Carolina was among the foremost of the American colonies to strike
+for independence. On the twenty-eighth of June, 1776, Charleston was
+attacked by the British, an attempt being made to destroy the
+military works on Sullivan's Island. But Colonel Moultrie, in honor of
+whom the fort was subsequently named, made a gallant defence and
+repulsed them. In 1779 they made a second attack upon the city, this
+time approaching it by land, but were again compelled to retreat. Sir
+Henry Clinton, with seven or eight thousand men, opened his batteries
+upon Charleston on the second of April, 1780. Fort Moultrie, on
+Sullivan's Island, was compelled to surrender on the fourteenth, and the
+city yielded on May eleventh. The British retained possession of the
+city until the close of the war.
+
+Charleston took a prominent part in the passage of the nullification act
+by the State, which maintained that any one of the States might set
+aside or nullify any act of Congress which it deemed unconstitutional or
+oppressive. The occasion of this nullification act was the Tariff Laws
+of 1828, which were not considered favorable to the Southern States. A
+convention of the State declared them null and void, and made
+preparations to resist their execution. John C. Calhoun, who was at that
+time Vice-President under Andrew Jackson, resigned his office, became a
+leader in the nullification movement, and was the father of the doctrine
+of State Sovereignty, the legitimate outcome of the principles of which
+was the late attempt to dissolve the Union.
+
+The population of Charleston in 1800 was 18,711; in 1850, 42,985
+inhabitants; in 1860, 40,519; in 1870, 48,956; and in 1880, 50,000
+inhabitants. It has not made so rapid a growth as other cities, even in
+the South, but is, nevertheless, a prosperous town, with large
+commercial, and since the war, large manufacturing interests. It is one
+of the chief shipping ports for cotton, and also exports rice, lumber,
+naval stores and fertilizers. Immense beds of marl were discovered in
+the vicinity of the city in 1868, and now the manufacture of fertilizers
+from marl and phosphate is one of its principal industries. There are
+also flour and rice mills, carriage and wagon factories and machine
+shops. The city is learning that the surest foundation stone for its
+future prosperity is its manufacturing interests; and, probably, the
+political battle of 1861, could it be fought over again to-day, in that
+city, would find the nullifiers largely in the minority. The city which
+was so marred and blemished during its long state of siege, has been
+rebuilt, and all traces of the fratricidal conflict removed; and though
+Charleston would not be true to her traditions if she did not still
+cherish a strong Southern sentiment, the years which have passed since
+the cessation of hostilities have done much toward softening the
+asperities of feeling on both sides.
+
+As a seaboard city, Charleston is most favorably situated. It has an
+excellent harbor, seven miles in length, with an average width of two
+miles, landlocked on all sides, except an entrance about a mile in
+width. This entrance is blocked by a bar, which, however, serves both as
+a bulwark and a breakwater. Of its two passages, its best gives
+twenty-two feet in depth at flood tide, and sixteen feet at ebb.
+
+The harbor of Charleston is impregnable, as the Union troops learned to
+their cost during the late war. Standing directly in the channel are
+forts Ripley and Sumter. On a point extending out into the strait,
+between the two, is Fort Johnson. Directly in front of the city, one
+mile distant from it, is Castle Pinckney, covering the crest of a mud
+shoal, and facing the entrance. Sullivan's Island, a long, low, gray
+stretch of an island, dotted here and there by clumps of palmettoes,
+lies on the north of the entrance of the harbor, with Fort Moultrie on
+its extreme southern point, as a doorkeeper to the harbor. On the
+southern side is Morris Island, long, low and gray also, with tufts of
+pines instead of palmettoes, and with batteries at intervals along its
+whole sea front, Fort Wagner standing near its northern end. Sullivan's
+Island, the scene of fierce conflict during the Revolution, and later,
+during the Rebellion, is to-day the Long Branch or Coney Island of South
+Carolina, containing many beautiful cottages and fine drives, and
+furnishing good sea bathing. The village occupies the point extending
+into the harbor.
+
+As one approaches Charleston from the sea, the name which has been
+applied to it, of the "American Venice," seems not inappropriate. The
+shores are low, and the city seems to rise out of the water. It is built
+something after the manner of New York, on a long and narrow peninsula,
+formed by the Cooper and Ashley rivers, which unite in front of the
+city. It has, like New York, its Battery, occupying the extreme point of
+the peninsula, its outlook commanding the entire harbor, bristling with
+fortifications, so harmless in time of peace, so terrible in war. The
+Battery contains plots of thin clover, neatly fenced and shelled
+promenades, a long, solid stone quay, which forms the finest sea-walk in
+the United States, and has a background of the finest residences in the
+city, three storied, and faced with verandahs. The dwelling-houses
+throughout the city are mostly of brick or wood, and have large open
+grounds around them, ornamented with trees, shrubbery, vines and
+flowers. The city is laid out with tolerable regularity, the streets
+generally crossing each other at right angles. King street, running
+north and south, is the fashionable promenade, containing the leading
+retail stores. Meeting street, nearly parallel with King, contains the
+jobbing and wholesale stores. Broad street, the banks, brokers' and
+insurance offices. Meeting street, below Broad, Rutledge street, and the
+west end of Wentworth street, contain fine private residences.
+
+The City Hall, an imposing building, standing in an open square, the
+Court House, the Police Headquarters, and the venerable St. Michael's
+Church (Episcopal), all stand at the intersection of Broad and Meeting
+streets. St. Michael's was built in 1752, after designs by a pupil of
+Sir Christopher Wren. The view from the belfry is very fine, embracing
+the far stretch of sea and shore, the shipping, fortresses of the
+harbor, and near at hand buildings as ancient as the church itself. It
+is the church of the poem--a favorite with elocutionists--"How he saved
+St. Michael." Says the poem, in one of its stanzas, its spire rose
+
+ "High over the lesser steeples, tipped with a golden ball
+ That hung like a radiant planet caught in its earthward fall,
+ First glimpse of home to the sailor who made the harbor round,
+ And last slow fading vision, dear, to the outward bound."
+
+Next in interest among the churches of Charleston is St. Philip's
+Episcopal Church, in Church street, near Queen. The building itself is
+not so venerable as St. Michael's, though its church establishment is
+older. The view from the steeple is fine; but its chief interest centres
+in the churchyard, where lie some of South Carolina's most illustrious
+dead. In one portion of the churchyard is the tomb of John C. Calhoun,
+consisting of a plain granite slab, supported by brick walls, and
+bearing the simple inscription "Calhoun." The ruins of St. Finbar's
+Cathedral (Roman Catholic) stand at the corner of Broad and Friend
+streets. The building, which was one of the costliest edifices of
+Charleston, was destroyed by the great fire of 1861, and the walls,
+turrets and niches still standing are exceedingly picturesque. Other
+handsome church edifices abound. The old Huguenot Church, at the corner
+of Church and Queen streets has its walls lined with quaint and elegant
+mural entablatures.
+
+ [Illustration: CUSTOM HOUSE, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.]
+
+The Post Office, at the foot of Broad street, is a venerable structure,
+dating back to the colonial period, the original material for its
+construction having being brought from England in 1761. It received
+considerable damage during the war, but has since been renovated.
+
+The new United States Custom House, which, when completed, will be the
+finest edifice in the city, is of white marble, in very elegant
+Corinthian style, and is situated south of the market wharf, on Cooper
+River.
+
+The old Orphan House of Charleston is one of the most famous
+institutions in the country. It stands in spacious grounds between
+Calhoun and Vanderbuist streets, and a statue of William Pitt, erected
+during the Revolution, stands in the centre of the grounds. John Charles
+Fremont, the conqueror of California, and once a candidate for the
+Presidency, and C.C. Memminger, Secretary of the Treasury of the
+Confederate States, were both educated here. The Charleston Library, at
+the corner of Broad and Church streets, founded in 1748, and the College
+of Charleston, located in the square bounded by George, Green, College
+and St. Philip streets, and founded in 1788, are both spacious and
+commodious buildings.
+
+One of the most characteristic sights of Charleston is to be seen
+between six and nine o'clock in the morning, in and about market Hall,
+in Meeting street, near the Bay. The Hall is a fine building in temple
+form, with a lofty portico in front, and a row of long, low sheds in the
+rear.
+
+There is nothing picturesque in the country around about Charleston. On
+the contrary, it is low, flat and uninteresting. Looking across the
+Ashley River, which is more than a quarter of a mile wide here, there is
+on the opposite side a long, low line of nearly dead level, with
+occasional sparse pine forests, interspersed with fields of open sand.
+There are no palmettoes, but here and there are gigantic oaks, hung with
+pendants of gray Spanish moss, and occasional green spikes of the
+Spanish bayonet. The view across the Cooper is very similar. Large
+extents of country in the neighborhood of Charleston, especially that
+lying along the streams, and stretching for many miles inland, are low
+and swampy. The region is sparsely settled, and furnishes no thriving
+agricultural or manufacturing population, which, seeking a market or a
+port for its productions, and wanting supplies in return, helps to build
+up the city. Several railways connecting with the North, West and South
+centre here; and she is also connected, by means of steamship lines,
+with the principal Atlantic seaports and some European ones. She is also
+the centre of a great lumber region, and annually exports many million
+feet of lumber.
+
+There are few points of interest about the city. Besides Sullivan's
+Island, Mount Pleasant, on the northern shore of the harbor, so named,
+probably, because the land is sufficiently high to escape being a swamp,
+is a favorite picnic resort. The antiquarian will find interest in the
+old Church of St. James, about fifteen miles from Charleston, on Goose
+Creek. It is secluded in the very heart of the pine forest, entirely
+isolated from habitations, and is approached by a road scarcely more
+than a bridle-path. The church was built in 1711, and the royal arms of
+England, which are emblazoned over the pulpit, saved it from destruction
+during the Revolutionary War. On the walls and altars are tablets in
+memory of the early members of the organization, one dated 1711, and
+another 1717. The pews are square and high, the pulpit or reading desk
+exceedingly small, and the floor is of stone. On the other side of the
+road, a short distance from this church, is a farm known as The Oaks,
+approached by a magnificent avenue, a quarter of a mile in length, of
+those trees, believed to be nearly two hundred years old. They are
+exceedingly large, and form a continuous archway over the road, their
+branches festooned with long fringes of gray moss, which soften and
+conceal the ravages of age.
+
+Magnolia Cemetery lies just outside the city, on its northern boundary.
+It is beautified by live oaks and magnolias, and contains, among other
+fine monuments, those of Colonel William Washington, of Revolutionary
+fame, Hugh Legare and Dr. Gilmore Simms, the novelist. The roads leading
+out of the city by the Cooper and Ashley rivers afford attractive
+drives. What the scenery lacks in grandeur and picturesqueness is made
+up in beauty by the abundance of lovely foliage, composed of pines,
+oaks, magnolias, myrtles and jasmines, exhibiting a tropical
+luxuriance.
+
+On the twenty-seventh of April, 1838, Charleston was visited by a fire
+which proved exceedingly disastrous. Nearly one-half the city was swept
+by the flames, which raged for twenty-eight hours, and were finally
+averted only by the blowing up of buildings in their path. There were
+1158 buildings destroyed, involving a loss of three millions of dollars.
+The most shocking feature of the catastrophe was that, in the
+carelessness of handling the gunpowder in blowing up these buildings,
+four of the most prominent citizens were killed, and several others
+injured. The fire of 1861 exceeded this in destructiveness, and to it
+were added the terrific effects of a four years' besiegement. So that it
+can be truly said that Charleston has been purified by fire. She is
+to-day fully recovered from the effects, and as prosperous as her
+geographical position will permit.
+
+ [Illustration: MAGNOLIA CEMETERY, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+CINCINNATI.
+
+ Founding of Cincinnati.--Rapid Increase of Population.--
+ Character of its Early Settlers.--Pro-slavery Sympathies.--
+ During the Rebellion.--Description of the City.--Smoke and
+ Soot.--Suburbs.--"Fifth Avenue" of Cincinnati.--Streets,
+ Public Buildings, Private Art Galleries, Hotels, Churches
+ and Educational Institutions.--"Over the Rhine."--Hebrew
+ Population.--Liberal Religious Sentiment.--Commerce and
+ Manufacturing Interests.--Stock Yards and Pork-packing
+ Establishments.--Wine Making.--Covington and Newport
+ Suspension Bridge.--High Water.--Spring Grove Cemetery.
+
+
+Cincinnati, whether we consider what its past history has been, or
+whether we regard it as it is to-day, is probably the most
+matter-of-fact and prosaic of all our western cities. A generation ago
+it derived its chief importance from the pork-packing business, in
+which, though it once stood at the head, it is now completely distanced
+by Chicago. Its extensive factories and foundries give it material
+wealth, while its geographical situation guarantees its commercial
+importance. Unlike most of the towns and cities of this western world,
+no interesting historical associations cling around its site. The
+Indians seem to have been troublesome and treacherous here, as
+elsewhere; but the records tell no stories of famous wars, terrible
+massacres, or hairbreadth escapes. In all the uninteresting accumulation
+of dry facts and statistics regarding the founding and subsequent growth
+of the city, there is just one exceptional romance.
+
+In early times three settlements were made along the banks of the Ohio
+River, on what is now the southern boundary of the State of Ohio. The
+first was at Columbia, at the mouth of the Little Miami River, in
+November, 1788, on ten thousand acres, purchased by Major Benjamin
+Stites, from Judge Symmes. The second settlement was commenced but a
+month later, on the north bank of the Ohio River, opposite the mouth of
+the Licking River, Matthias Denman, of New Jersey, being the leading
+spirit in the new undertaking, he having purchased about eight hundred
+acres, also from Judge Symmes, for an equivalent of fifteen pence an
+acre. Judge Symmes himself directed the third settlement, which was
+founded in February, 1789, and gave it the name of North Bend, from the
+fact that it was the most northern bend of the Ohio River, below the
+mouth of the great Kanawha.
+
+A spirit of rivalry existed between these three settlements, which lay
+but a few miles apart. Each one regarded itself as the future great city
+of the west. In the beginning, Columbia took the lead; but North Bend
+presently gained the advantage, as the troops detailed by General Harmer
+for the protection of the settlers in the Miami Valley landed there,
+through the influence of Judge Symmes. This detachment soon took its
+departure for Louisville, and was succeeded by another, under Ensign
+Luce, who was at liberty to select the spot, for the erection of a
+substantial block-house, which seemed to him best calculated to afford
+protection to the Miami settlers. He put up temporary quarters at North
+Bend, sufficient for the security of his troops, and began to look for a
+suitable site on which to build the block-house. While he was leisurely
+pursuing this occupation, he was attracted by a pair of beautiful black
+eyes, whose owner was apparently not indifferent to his attentions. This
+woman was the wife of one of the settlers at the Bend, who, when he
+perceived the condition of affairs, thought best to remove her out of
+danger, and at once proceeded to take up his residence at Cincinnati.
+The gallant commander, still ostensibly engaged in locating his
+block-house, felt immediately impelled to go to Cincinnati, on a tour of
+inspection. He was forcibly struck by the superior advantages offered by
+that town, over all other points on the river, for a military station.
+In spite of remonstrance from the Judge, the troops were, accordingly,
+removed, and the erection of a block-house commenced at once. The
+settlers at the Bend, who at that time outnumbered those of the more
+favored place, finding their protection gone, gave up their land and
+followed the soldiers, and ere long the town was almost deserted. In the
+course of the ensuing summer, Major Doughty arrived at Cincinnati, with
+troops from Fort Harmer, and established Fort Washington, which was made
+the most important and extensive military station in the northwest
+territory. North Bend still continued its existence as a town, and was
+finally honored by becoming the home of General Wm. H. Harrison, ninth
+President of the United States, and there still rest his mortal remains.
+Farms now occupy the place where Columbia once stood.
+
+The unsettled condition of the frontier prevented Cincinnati from making
+a rapid growth in its early years. In 1800, twelve years after the first
+colonist landed on the shore of the Ohio opposite the Licking River,
+there were but 750 inhabitants. In 1814 the town was incorporated as a
+city. In 1820 its inhabitants numbered 9,602, and in 1830, 16,230. About
+this time the Miami Canal was built, running through the western portion
+of the State of Ohio, and connecting Cincinnati with Lake Erie at
+Toledo. This gave an impetus to trade, and during the next ten years the
+population increased nearly three hundred per cent., numbering in 1840,
+46,382 inhabitants. In 1850 it had again more than doubled, amounting to
+115,436. In 1860 the number was 161,044; in 1870, 216,239; while
+according to the United States census returns of 1880 the population in
+that year was 255,708.
+
+The career of Cincinnati will not compare in brilliancy with that of
+Chicago. It has not displayed the same energy and activity. Outwardly,
+it has not made the most of its superior natural advantages, and
+intellectually, although it boasts some of the most readable and
+successful newspapers in the country, it has fallen behind other cities.
+Settled originally by emigrants from Pennsylvania and New Jersey,
+descendants of Germans, Swedes and Danes, its inhabitants were plodders
+rather than pushers. They lacked the practical and mental activity of
+New Englanders and New Yorkers. By habits of industry and economy they
+were sure to accumulate wealth; but they cared little for outward
+display, and less for educational and intellectual advancement. The
+churches met better support than the schools, "book learning" being held
+in small estimation by this stolid yet thrifty race. They patterned
+their city after Philadelphia, the most magnificent city their eyes had
+ever beheld, and anything more splendid than which their imaginations
+were powerless to depict; called their streets Walnut, Spruce and Vine,
+and felt that they should be commended for having built them up with a
+view to substantiality rather than to display.
+
+Yankee capital and enterprise, in the course of time, found their way to
+Cincinnati, to build up its factories and stimulate public improvements.
+But, on the line between freedom and slavery, its population largely
+southern by immigration or descent, and by sympathy, Cincinnati up to
+the time of the war was more a southern than a northern city. Her
+leading families were connected by marriage with Kentucky, Virginia and
+Maryland; many of her leading men had immigrated from those States; and
+her aristocracy scorned the northern element which had helped to build
+up the city, and repudiated all its tendencies.
+
+Public sentiment had been, from its earliest history, intensely
+pro-slavery. In 1836 a mob broke into and destroyed the office of the
+_Philanthropist_, an anti-slavery paper, published by James G. Birney,
+scattered the type, and threw the press into the river, having
+previously resolved that no "abolition paper" should be either
+"published or distributed" in the town. In 1841 the office of the same
+paper was again raided and destroyed, and a frenzied mob, numbering at
+one time as many as fifteen hundred men, engaged in a riot against the
+negro residents in the city, until, to secure their safety, it was found
+necessary to incarcerate the latter, to the number of 250 to 300, in the
+county jail. Houses were broken into and furniture destroyed, several
+persons killed, and twenty or thirty more or less seriously wounded. Yet
+at this very period, Salmon Portland Chase, the future statesman and
+financier, but then an obscure young lawyer, was living in Cincinnati,
+and was already planning the beginnings of that Liberty party which,
+after many vicissitudes, and under a different name, finally
+accomplished the abolition of slavery; and in this same city, but ten
+years later, Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
+
+When the war began, Cincinnati found itself in an anomalous position.
+Geographically it was on the side of the north, while to a large extent
+its social and business relations allied it with the south. Many of the
+leading families furnished adherents to the southern cause; but the
+masses of the people, notably the Germans, who had already become an
+important factor in its population, were stirred by the spirit of
+patriotism, and casting aside once for all their conservatism, they
+identified themselves with the cause of the Union. Trade was greatly
+disturbed. The old profitable relations with the south were broken up
+for the time being, but Cincinnati did not find herself a loser. Army
+contractors made fortunes, and the business of supplying gunboats,
+military stores and provisions to the army gave employment to immense
+numbers, and stimulated all branches of trade. From this period
+Cincinnati dates her new life. Heretofore she had stagnated in all but a
+business sense. With the steady increase of her population came a new
+element. Southern supineness and Middle State stolidity were aroused and
+shaken out of themselves, when slavery no longer exerted its baleful
+influence over the country and the city. Fresh life was infused into her
+people, and the war marked the dawn of a new era for the city, an era in
+which public spirit took a prominent place.
+
+The name, Cincinnati, was bestowed upon the city at its foundation, as
+tradition has it, by General St. Clair, who called it after the society
+of that name, of which himself and General Hamilton were both members.
+The county was subsequently named in honor of General Hamilton. The
+young town barely escaped the name of Losantiville, a word of original
+etymology, compounded by a pedantic schoolmaster, who, wishing to
+indicate the position of the future city as opposite the mouth of the
+Licking River, united _os_, mouth, _anti_, against or opposite to, and
+_ville_, as meaning city, prefacing the whole with L, the initial letter
+of Licking; hence "Losantiville." But the name, although accepted for
+several months, was not permanently adopted.
+
+Cincinnati is nearly in the centre of the great valley of the Ohio,
+being only fifty-eight miles nearer Cairo, at its junction with the
+Mississippi, than to its head waters at Pittsburg. It occupies the half
+circle formed by an outward curve of the river, which bends continually
+in one direction or another. The plateau upon which the business part of
+the city is built is sixty feet above the low-water mark of the river.
+Back of this is a terrace some fifty feet higher yet, graded to an easy
+slope, the whole shut in by an amphitheatre of what appears to be hills,
+though when one mounts to their summits he finds himself on an
+undulating table-land, four or five hundred feet above the river, which
+extends backward into the country. The river flows through a wide and
+deep ravine, which the raging floods have, in the long ages since they
+began their course, cut for themselves, through an elevated region of
+country. In the remote west these ravines, chiseled through the solid
+rocks, are bordered by steep precipices; on the Ohio the yielding soil
+has been washed away in a gradual slope, leaving the graceful outlines
+of hills.
+
+The city proper is occupied by stores, offices, public buildings,
+factories, foundries, and the dwelling houses of the poorer and middle
+classes, over all which hangs a pall of smoke, caused by the bituminous
+coal used as fuel in the city. Cleanliness in either person or in dress
+is almost an impossibility. Hands and faces become grimy, and clean
+collars and light-hued garments are perceptibly coated with a thin layer
+of soot. Clothes hung out in the weekly wash acquire a permanent yellow
+hue which no bleaching can remove. The smoke of hundreds of factories,
+locomotives and steamboats arises and unites to form this dismal pall,
+which obscures the sunlight, and gives a sickly cast to the moonbeams.
+
+But beyond the city, on the magnificent amphitheatre of hills which
+encircle it, are half a dozen beautiful suburbs, where the homes of
+Cincinnati's merchant princes and millionaires are found, as elegant as
+wealth combined with art can make them, surrounded by enchanting
+scenery, and commanding extensive views over the city and surrounding
+country. Cincinnati has no Fifth Avenue like New York, but it has its
+Mount Auburn, its Walnut Hills, its Price's Hill, its Clifton and its
+Avondale, which are as much superior to Fifth Avenue as the country is
+superior to the city, and as space is preferable to narrowness. As far
+as the eye can reach, on these billowed outlines of hills and valleys,
+elegant cottages, tasteful villas, and substantial mansions, surrounded
+by a paradise of grass, gardens, lawns, and tree-shaded roads, are
+clustered. Each little suburb has its own corporation, and its own
+municipal government, while even its mayor and aldermen may do daily
+business in the large city below it.
+
+In the city itself Pearl street is noted for its wholesale trade, and
+for the uniform elegance of its buildings. Third street, between Main
+and Vine, contains the banking, brokering, and insurance offices. Fourth
+street is the fashionable promenade and business street. Freeman street,
+in the neighborhood of Lincoln Park, is also a favorite promenade. Both
+the East and West Ends contain many fine residences. Along Front street,
+at the foot of Main, is the public landing, an open space one thousand
+feet long and four hundred and twenty-five feet wide. The city has a
+frontage of ten miles on the river, and extends back three miles.
+
+The United States Government building, occupying the square bounded by
+Main and Walnut, and Fifth and Sixth streets, and accommodating the
+Custom House, Post Office, and United States Courts; the County Court
+House, in Main street, near Canal street; the City buildings occupying
+an entire square on Plum street, between Eighth and Ninth; the Chamber
+of Commerce, on Fourth street between Main and Walnut; and the Masonic
+Temple, at the corner of Third and Walnut streets, are among the most
+imposing buildings of the city. The Exposition buildings, in Elm street,
+fronting Washington Park, cover three and one-half acres of ground, and
+have seven acres of space for exhibiting. The Exhibition opens annually,
+during the first week in September, and closes the first week in
+October. The Springer Music Hall will seat 5,000 persons, and contains
+one of the largest organs in the world, having more pipes, but fewer
+speaking stops, than the famous Boston organ. Pike's Opera House, in
+Fourth street, between Vine and Walnut, is a very handsome building.
+Cincinnati is noted for its appreciation and encouragement of fine
+music. The Emery Arcade, said to be the largest in America, extends
+from Vine to Race street, between Fourth and Fifth. The roof is of
+glass, and in it are shops of various kinds, and the Hotel Emery.
+
+The late Henry Probasco, on Clifton Heights, and Joseph Longworth, on
+Walnut Hills, each had very fine private art galleries, to which
+visitors were courteously admitted, and the city itself occupies a high
+standard in art matters. The Tyler-Davidson fountain, in Fifth street,
+between Vine and Walnut, the gift of Mr. Probasco, exhibits a series of
+basins, one above another, the shaft ornamented by figures, and the
+whole surmounted by a gigantic female figure, from whose outstretched
+hands the water rains down in fine spray. The fountain was cast in
+Munich, and cost nearly $200,000.
+
+The Burnet House has been, for more than a quarter of a century, the
+principal hotel in Cincinnati. The Grand Hotel is newer and more
+elegant. The Gibson House is large and centrally located. There are
+various opera houses, theatres, variety and concert halls, a gymnasium,
+a Floating Bath, and Zoological Gardens, with a collection of birds and
+animals, among the best in the country.
+
+St. Peter's Cathedral (Roman Catholic), in Plum street, between Seventh
+and Eighth, is the finest religious edifice in the city. Its altar of
+Carrara marble was carved in Genoa, and its altar-piece, "St. Peter
+Delivered," by Murillo, a work of art of world-wide reputation. Many of
+the Protestant churches are elegant, and some of them actually
+magnificent. The Hebrew Synagogue on Plum street, opposite the
+Cathedral, and the Hebrew Temple, at the corner of Eighth and Mound
+streets, both handsome edifices, one in Moorish and the other in Gothic
+style, have each of them brilliant interiors.
+
+Among the educational institutions of Cincinnati are the University of
+Cincinnati, having in connection with it a School of Design and a Law
+School, St. Xavier's College (Jesuit); Wesleyan Female College; Seminary
+of Mount St. Mary's, a famous Roman Catholic College; Lane Theological
+Seminary, of which Dr. Lyman Beecher was once president, and where Henry
+Ward Beecher once studied theology for three years; several medical
+colleges, and scientific, classical and mechanical institutes.
+
+A number of parks surround the city, furnishing fine pleasure grounds,
+and containing magnificent views of the river and its shores.
+
+More than a third of the residents of Cincinnati are of German birth or
+descent. Besides being scattered all through the city, they also occupy
+a quarter exclusively their own, on the north of the Miami Canal, which
+they have named "the Rhine." "Over the Rhine," one seems to have left
+America entirely, and to have entered, as by magic, the Fatherland. The
+German tongue is the only one spoken, and all signs and placards are in
+German. There are German schools, churches and places of amusement. The
+beer gardens will especially recall Germany to the mind of the tourist.
+The Grand Arbeiter and Turner Halls are distinctive features of this
+quarter of the city, and specially worthy of a visit.
+
+The Jews also constitute a proportion of the inhabitants, respectable
+both as to numbers and character; and, what is worthy of remark, there
+is an unwonted harmony between Christians and Hebrews, so that an
+exchange of pulpits between them has been among the actual facts of the
+past. Dr. Max Lilienthal, one of the most eloquent and learned rabbis of
+the country, presides over one of the Jewish congregations, and has
+preached to Christian audiences; and Mr. Mayo, the Unitarian clergyman,
+has spoken by invitation in the synagogues. The Jews of the city are
+noted for their intelligence, public spirit and liberality, and are
+represented in the municipal government, and on the boards of public and
+charitable institutions. Quite as worthy of note is the fact that the
+Young Men's Christian Association of Cincinnati is not influenced by
+that spirit of narrow bigotry which in certain other cities of the Union
+excludes Unitarians from fellowship.
+
+The venerable Archbishop Purcell, who for half a century had been at the
+head of the Roman Catholic Church in this diocese, was a man of genial
+manners, sincerely beloved by all. But the closing days of his life were
+sadly clouded by a gigantic financial failure, amounting to several
+millions of dollars, with which he was connected. As heavily as the blow
+has fallen upon many of his flock, the only blame they impute to the
+dead prelate is that of most faulty judgment and general incapacity in
+financial affairs. The most singular part of it all was that the
+difficulties should have remained so long undiscovered, until such an
+immense amount of property was involved.
+
+Cincinnati's commerce is very extended, and so are her manufacturing
+interests. Steamboats from all points on the Mississippi and the Ohio
+lay up at her levee, which extends five or six miles around the bank of
+the river in front of the city. The traveler may take his ticket for St.
+Paul, New Orleans, Pittsburg, high up the Red River, or any intervening
+point. The staple article of trade is pork, though she exports wine,
+flour, iron, machinery, whisky, paper and books. In addition to the
+water ways, a large number of railways, connecting the city with every
+section of the country, centres here.
+
+The stock yards of Cincinnati are on an extended scale, though not
+equaling those of Chicago. The Union Railroad's Stock Yards, comprising
+fifty acres on Spring Grove avenue, have accommodations for 25,000 hogs,
+10,000 sheep, and 5,000 cattle. In the pork packing establishments,
+thousands of hogs from the farms of Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, are
+slaughtered daily. In a single establishment fifty men will slaughter
+and dispose of 1,500 hogs a day. Each man has his own special line of
+work, the labor being divided among pen-men, knockers-down, stickers,
+scalders, bristle-snatchers, scrapers, shavers, hangers or "gamble-men,"
+gutters, hose-boys, slide-boys, splitters, cutters with their
+attendants, weighers, cleavers, knife-men, ham-trimmers,
+shoulder-trimmers, packers, salters, weighers and branders, lard-men,
+bookkeepers, porters and laborers, of whom fifty will unitedly dispose
+of a hog once in every twenty seconds. The old saying is that it takes
+nine tailors to make a man, but it takes fifty men, belonging to all the
+professions named above, to make one complete butcher. The work is
+accomplished so rapidly that the creature has no time to realize what
+has happened to him, before the different portions of his dissected body
+are slipping down wooden pipes, each to its appropriate apartment below,
+to be finally disposed of.
+
+Nowhere east of the Rocky Mountains are grapes cultivated to such an
+extent, and such quantities of wine manufactured, as on the southern
+slopes of the hills which hem in the city of Cincinnati. This business
+is mostly engaged in by Germans, who make excellent wine, which has
+acquired a world-wide celebrity. But the grape-rot, which has especially
+affected the Catawbas, from which the best wine is produced, has of late
+years rather checked the industry. Some of the wine cellars of
+Cincinnati are famous, not only for the quantity of native wine which
+they contain, but for its quality as well.
+
+Looking across the river, which at low water is, perhaps, a third of a
+mile wide, to the Kentucky side, one sees, on the right bank of the
+Licking River, the city of Covington, a mass of black factories and tall
+chimneys, from which dense smoke is always ascending, and spreading out
+over the valley. On the left or opposite bank of the Licking is Newport,
+the two towns connected by a suspension bridge. Covington is also
+connected with Cincinnati by a suspension bridge, 1,057 feet long from
+tower to tower, its entire length 2,252 feet, and elevated by two iron
+cables above the river, at low water, one hundred feet. Its weight is
+600 tons, but it is estimated that it will sustain a weight of 16,000
+tons, and is one of the finest structures of its kind in the world. This
+bridge was nine years in construction, and cost nearly two millions of
+dollars. There are also two pier railroad bridges across the Ohio at
+Cincinnati.
+
+Along the summit of the steep levee, close to the line of stores, there
+is a row of massive posts, three feet thick and twenty feet high, and
+forty or fifty feet above the usual low water mark. The stranger will be
+puzzled to imagine their use. But let him visit the city during the
+spring freshet, and he will speedily discover their purpose. The
+swelling of the river at that period brings the steamboats face to face
+with the warehouses on the levee, and they are secured to these huge
+posts by means of strong cables, to prevent them being swept down the
+stream by the mighty rush of waters. The usual difference between the
+high and low water mark of the Ohio River at Cincinnati is about forty
+feet, though a flood has been known to mark a much higher figure than
+that. When this occurs, which it does once or twice in a generation, the
+overflowing water carries desolation to all the lower parts of the city.
+The ground floors of houses are submerged, cellars filled, merchandise
+damaged or destroyed. People betake themselves to the upper stories, and
+make their way about the streets in boats.
+
+The latest and most disastrous flood on record was that of 1883, when,
+on February fifteenth, the river indicated sixty-six feet and four
+inches above low water mark. Furious rain storms throughout the Ohio
+Valley had swollen all the streams to an unprecedented height, and
+caused terrible disaster to all the towns and cities on the shores of
+the Ohio River. For seven miles along the water front of Cincinnati the
+water overflowed valuable property, reaching from two to eight blocks
+into the city, so that the great suspension bridge, entrance to which is
+from the top of the decline, could not be reached except in boats. A
+thousand firms were washed out. In Mill Creek Valley are the large
+manufacturing establishments, which employ over thirty thousand men,
+women, and children, and these were all cut off by water. Twelve wards
+in the city, and seven townships in the country, were more or less
+affected by the flood. The entire population of the flooded city
+districts is nearly 130,000, and one quarter of these, exclusive of
+business interests, were sufferers by the flood, their houses being
+either under water or totally destroyed. The waterworks were stopped,
+and the city was left in darkness by the submergence of the gasworks.
+
+On Tuesday, February thirteenth, although the flood had not yet reached
+its height, the freight depot of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad was
+undermined by the bursting of a culvert under it, and fell into the
+surrounding water, carrying with it, to certain death, several people.
+More than twenty railroad tracks were submerged, some of them to a depth
+of twelve feet, so that nearly all communication was cut off. Policemen
+patrolled the streets in boats. The churches were thrown open to receive
+the homeless, and nearly every organization in the city, from the
+Chamber of Commerce to the ladies' sewing societies, entered upon the
+work of relieving the sufferers. Contributions poured in most liberally
+from abroad, the Free Masons of Cleveland alone shipping twelve large
+boats, with a generous supply of stores. Before relief could come to
+them, many persons suffered severely, from both cold and hunger. They
+were rescued from their flooded homes by the aid of skiffs, some of them
+with barely enough clothing to conceal their nakedness.
+
+It is estimated that eight square miles of Cincinnati were under water,
+five of which were in the Mill Creek Valley. Provisions became scarce,
+and commanded high prices. Newport, on the Kentucky shore, was in even a
+more deplorable condition than Cincinnati. Supplies became entirely
+exhausted, and on the night of the fourteenth, fifteen thousand people
+there were without fuel or provisions.
+
+On the sixteenth of February the waters had begun to subside, and
+gradually regained their normal level, making more apparent, as the
+flood decreased, the ruin and desolation which had attended it. A vast
+deposit of mud was left upon the streets, many premises had been
+undermined by the sucking currents, malaria haunted the wet cellars, the
+destruction of merchandise was found to be very heavy indeed, while
+thousands of men were compelled to remain out of employment until the
+factories and mills could be put in working condition. The great flood
+of 1883 will long be remembered by the citizens of Cincinnati.
+
+The breaking up of the ice in the river, in the spring, is also a time
+of great peril to property. There is usually more or less rise in the
+river at that period, with a swifter current, and the floating blocks
+sometimes drag boats away from their moorings, and crush them to either
+partial or utter destruction. The Ohio River, known to the French as _La
+Belle Riviere_, so called because of its high and picturesque banks, is,
+like the Mississippi, a capricious stream, and neither life nor property
+is always safe upon its bosom or along its shores.
+
+The pride of Cincinnati is Spring Grove Cemetery, five miles northwest
+of the city, which is one of the most beautiful in the West. It is in
+the valley of Mill Creek, and is approached by a handsome avenue, one
+hundred feet wide. It contains six hundred acres, well wooded, and so
+laid out as to present the appearance of a park. The boundaries of the
+lots are indicated by sunken stone posts at each corner, there being
+neither railing, fence, nor hedge within the cemetery, to define these
+lots. The graves are leveled off, even with the ground, and the
+monuments are remarkable, for their variety and good taste. The Dexter
+mausoleum, which represents a Gothic chapel, will attract special
+attention; while one of the principal objects in the cemetery is the
+bronze statue of a soldier, cast in Munich, and erected in 1864, to the
+memory of the Ohio volunteer soldiers who died during the War.
+
+In spite of many changes for the better since the war, Cincinnati still
+retains her distinctive character. She has taken long strides in the
+direction of intellectual development, and has now numerous and
+extensive public libraries, of which any city might be proud. The
+theatres and other places of amusement, which, not long since, were
+represented by shaky buildings, third-rate talent and a general dearth
+of attractions, and patronized more largely by the river men than by any
+other single class, have risen to take rank among the best in the
+country. But she is still a city noted for her wealth; for her solid
+business enterprises and scrupulous honesty, rather than for that spirit
+of speculation in which, in other cities, fortunes are quickly made, and
+even more quickly lost. Her prosperity has a solid foundation in her
+factories, her foundries, her mills and engine shops. A man, to be
+successful in Cincinnati, must know how to _make_ and to _do_, as well
+as how to buy and sell. Men have risen from the humblest ranks by dint
+of industry and energy alone, while they were yet young, to be the
+masters of princely fortunes. Even a newspaper publisher in that city, a
+few years since, estimated his property at five millions of dollars, an
+instance which, probably, has not a parallel in the civilized world.
+Nicholas Longworth died worth twelve millions of dollars, and her
+living millionaires are to be counted by hundreds.
+
+Cincinnati stands in the front rank of the manufacturing cities of
+America, and the secret of her financial success is that she has made
+what the people of Ohio and other States needed and were sure to buy.
+Receiving their products in return, and turning these to account, her
+merchants have made a double profit. As long as the Ohio River sweeps by
+the city's front, and as long as the smoke of her factories and her
+foundries ascends to heaven and obscures the fair face thereof, and
+corn, transformed into pork, is sent away in such quantities to the
+Eastern cities and to Europe; so long as the cotton of the South, the
+hay of the blue grass region, and the grain of the North and West, find
+a market on her shores, her prosperity is secure; and the Queen City of
+the West, as she proudly styles herself, will go on increasing in
+population and in prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CLEVELAND.
+
+ The "Western Reserve."--Character of Early Settlers.--
+ Fairport.--Richmond.--Early History of Cleveland.--Indians.--
+ Opening of Ohio and Portsmouth Canal.--Commerce in 1845.--
+ Cleveland in 1850--First Railroad.--Manufacturing Interests.--
+ Cuyahoga "Flats" at Night.--The "Forest City."--Streets and
+ Avenues.--Monumental Park.--Public Buildings and Churches.--
+ Union Depot.--Water Rents.--Educational Institutions.--Rocky
+ River.--Approach to the City.--Freshet of 1883.--Funeral of
+ President Garfield.--Lake Side Cemetery.--Site of the Garfield
+ Monument.
+
+
+In early colonial times, out of utter ignorance of the boundless
+territory extending westward, the first American Colonies were chartered
+by the Kings of England with permission to extend westward indefinitely.
+After the close of the Revolutionary War, while negotiations were in
+progress in regard to the final treaty of peace with the United States,
+which was ultimately signed at Paris on November thirtieth, 1782, Mr.
+Oswald, the British Commissioner, proposed the Ohio River as the western
+boundary of the young nation, and had it not been for the firmness and
+persistence of John Adams, one of the American Commissioners, who
+insisted upon the right of the United Colonies to the territory as far
+westward as the Mississippi, it is probable that the rich section of
+country between these two rivers would still have formed a portion of
+the British dominions, or have been the source of subsequent contention
+and expense. When the Colonies had become independent States, many of
+them claimed the right of soil and jurisdiction over large portions of
+western unappropriated land originally embraced in their charters.
+Congress urged upon these States to cede these lands to the general
+government, for the benefit of all. They all yielded to this request,
+except Connecticut, who retained a small tract of land in the
+northeastern portion of the present State of Ohio, which was
+subsequently divided up five counties in length along the lake, with an
+average width of two counties. The lower boundary of this tract of land
+was 40A deg. 22' north latitude, and it extended from the Pennsylvania line
+on the east, one hundred and twenty miles westward, to a line running
+north and south, a little west of the present location of Sandusky City.
+This tract of land was called the "Western Reserve of Connecticut."
+
+In 1801 Connecticut ceded all her jurisdictional claims over the
+territory, but it continues to be known, to this day, as the
+"Connecticut Reserve," the "Western Reserve," or simply as the
+"Reserve." This "Western Reserve" is like a little piece of New England
+in a mosaic, representing many sections and many peoples. It is a
+peculiarity of the Anglo-Saxon race, that in emigrating it usually moves
+along parallels of latitude, and rarely diverges much either northward
+or southward. We find to the eastward of Ohio, Connecticut, and Rhode
+Island, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and
+Virginia, and all of these States have contributed to her population.
+Thus, below the Reserve, the people are largely from Pennsylvania; still
+further south, from Maryland and Virginia; and the lower section of the
+State is allied more by kindred and sympathy with the South than with
+the North. But on the Western Reserve, the cosmopolitan character of the
+inhabitants is at once lost. It is New England in descent and ideas. The
+little white meeting house, and the little red school house not far off,
+both as bare and homely as a stern Puritan race could conceive of, were
+everywhere met in the early days of its settlement, after the log cabin
+epoch had passed away. Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont furnished
+the principal immigrants, and they built their neat and thrifty little
+New England towns over again, and maintained their New England
+sturdiness and simplicity.
+
+The inhabitants of the Reserve have been, and are still, noted for their
+thrift, their intelligence and their superior culture. That section has
+furnished many distinguished public men, and one President, to the
+country. It was, in the old slavery days, spoken of contemptuously as
+"the hotbed of abolitionism," and gave both Giddings and Wade to fight
+the battle against Southern dominion in the United States Congress. Here
+Garfield was born, and here he is buried. Howells, the novelist, was a
+native of the Reserve, and passed his life until early manhood in its
+northeasternmost county.
+
+The northern shores of the Reserve are washed by Lake Erie, one of the
+shallowest, most treacherous and least picturesque of the chain of lakes
+which form our northern boundary. It embraces the "Great Divide" between
+the north and the south, its waters flowing to the sea by both the St.
+Lawrence and the Mississippi. Summit and Portage counties, by their
+names, indicate the locality of this Divide.
+
+Very early in the present century, the sturdy New England pioneers,
+looking for a suitable harbor upon the lake, discovered the mouth of
+Grand River, about thirty-five miles northeast of the Cuyahoga River;
+and in 1803, two miles up this river, the first warehouse on the lake
+was built.
+
+In 1812 the town of Fairport, at the mouth of this river, was laid out,
+and was destined by its founders to be the future great lake city of
+Ohio. It had one of the best harbors on the lake, if not the best, well
+defended from storms, and easy of access, so that vessels entered it
+without difficulty when they could not make other ports. The water was
+deep enough for any large craft, and in the course of time the
+government expended a considerable sum of money in improving the harbor.
+A line of boats was speedily established between Fairport and Buffalo,
+which in those railroadless days were liberally patronized. Nearly all
+the lake steamers bound for other ports stopped there, and its business
+constantly increased. A lighthouse was built, and its future prosperity
+seemed assured.
+
+During the great period of land speculation, between 1830 and 1840, the
+town of Richmond was laid out on the opposite bank of the Grand River,
+by wealthy eastern capitalists, who established their homes there, and
+transported to the infant city the wealth, magnificence and luxurious
+social customs of the east. During their brief reign, they gave
+entertainments such as were not equaled in that section of the country
+for many long years afterwards. A large village was built and a
+steamboat was owned there.
+
+Meantime, a little town had been growing up on the banks of the
+Cuyahoga. The first permanent settlement had been made as early as
+1796, and named Cleveland, in honor of General Moses Cleveland, of
+Canterbury, Connecticut. At that period the nearest white settlement was
+Conneaut, on the east, and another at the mouth of the River Raisin, to
+the west. Immigration at that period did not march steadily westward,
+each new settlement being in close proximity to an older one, but it
+took sudden jumps over wide extents of territory, so that for many years
+isolated families or small neighborhoods were far apart. Each little
+settlement had to be sufficient unto itself, since, to reach any other
+involved a long, difficult and often dangerous journey. Up to nearly
+1800 each house in Cleveland had its own hand grist-mill standing in the
+chimney-corner, in which the flour or meal for the family consumption
+was slowly and laboriously ground each day. In the spring of 1799
+Wheeler W. Williams and Major Wyatt erected the first grist and saw mill
+on the Reserve, at Newburg, a few miles above the mouth of the Cuyahoga.
+
+The first ball ever given in Cleveland was on the Fourth of July, 1801,
+in a log cabin, the company numbering thirty, of both sexes. The first
+militia muster was held at Doane's Corners, on the sixteenth of June,
+1806. The spot is now incorporated in the city of Cleveland. Never
+before had been so many whites collected together in this region as on
+this occasion, which was one of general excitement. The militia
+consisted of about fifty privates, with the usual complement of
+officers, but a surveying party and a number of strangers were present
+and added to the spectators.
+
+In the beginning of the century the Indians were in the habit of meeting
+every autumn, at Cleveland, piling their canoes up at the mouth of the
+Cuyahoga, and scattering into the interior of the country, which
+constituted their great winter hunting ground. In the spring they
+returned, disposed of their furs, and entering their canoes, departed up
+the lake for their villages, in the region of Sandusky and Maumee, where
+they raised their crops of corn and potatoes. Many local names are of
+Indian origin; Cuyahoga means "crooked river." Geauga, the name of an
+adjoining county, signifies "raccoon." Their encampment on going and
+returning was usually on the west bank of the river, and in their
+drinking bouts, in which they occasionally indulged, they were sometimes
+quarrelsome and dangerous, but do not seem, on the whole, to have given
+the settlers much trouble. On the twenty-sixth of June, 1812, an Indian
+named McMic was hanged for murder, on the public square of Cleveland.
+There were fears that the Indians would rally to his rescue, and a large
+number of citizens from Cuyahoga and adjoining counties, armed
+themselves and attended the execution, prepared for any outbreak. The
+Indians remained peaceable, but the prisoner, at the last moment,
+refused to ascend the scaffold. Finally, his scruples were overcome by a
+pint of whisky, which he swallowed with satisfaction before yielding to
+the inevitable.
+
+In 1813 Cleveland became a depot for supplies and troops during the war,
+and a permanent garrison was established here, a small stockade having
+been erected on the lake bank, at the foot of Ontario street. The return
+of peace was celebrated in true American style. The cannon which was
+fired in honor of the occasion was supplied with powder by one Uncle
+Abram, who carried an open pail of the explosive material on his arm.
+Another citizen bore a lighted stick with which to touch off the gun.
+In the excitement, the latter swung his stick in the air; a spark fell
+into Uncle Abram's powder, and that worthy, whether from astonishment or
+some other cause, suddenly sprang twenty feet into the air, his ascent
+being accompanied by a deafening report. When he came down again, his
+clothing was singed off, and he vociferously protested that he was dead.
+But the multitude refused to take his word for it, and it was not a
+great while before he had completely recovered from the accident.
+
+The Ohio Canal, which connects Lake Erie at this point with the Ohio
+River at Portsmouth, was completed in 1834, and from that date her
+prosperity seems to have been established. She was incorporated a city
+in 1836. About this time the great western land bubble burst, and with
+it the hopes of Fairport and Richmond. The latter city speedily
+disappeared from the face of the earth, and its name from the map. Its
+houses were taken up bodily and removed to adjacent towns. Boats still
+continued to stop at Fairport, but they began to stop more frequently at
+Cleveland, and while the business of the former point was at a
+standstill, that of the latter continued to increase. In 1840 its
+population was over 6,000, and its supremacy fairly established. In 1850
+Fairport was still a little hamlet, the boats passing her far out in the
+lake without giving her so much as a nod of recognition; while the
+wharves of Cleveland were lined with shipping, and her population did
+not fall far short of 20,000.
+
+Besides the Cleveland and Portsmouth Canal, which opened up a line of
+traffic with the south and southwest, communication was also had with
+the East, by means of canal to Pittsburg and to New York, and the lakes
+were a highway, not only to the East but to the North and West.
+Cleveland became the great mart of the grain-growing country. Its harbor
+was extended and improved by the erection of piers each side of the
+mouth of the river, two hundred feet apart, and extending out several
+hundred feet into the lake, furnishing effective break-waters, and ample
+room for the loading and unloading of vessels. A lighthouse was erected
+at the end of each pier, and one already stood upon the cliff.
+
+In 1845 the number of vessels which arrived by lake was 2,136; and of
+these 927 were steamers. The tonnage then owned at that port amounted to
+13,493, and the number of vessels of all kinds eighty-five. The total
+value of exports and imports by the lake for that year was over
+$9,000,000. Cleveland occupied a small region on the cliff at the mouth
+of the Cuyahoga. Ontario street was filled with boarding-houses and
+private residences. Euclid avenue and Prospect street extended for a few
+squares, and were then lost in the country. The flats through which the
+river wound its devious way were occupied as pastures for the cows of
+persons living in the heart of the city. The business portion of the
+town was contained, for the most part, in the two squares on Superior
+street, west of Ontario. Ohio City was a separate corporation, a
+straggling, dilapidated town, looking like a country village, on the
+western bank of the Cuyahoga, connected with Cleveland by means of
+drawbridges.
+
+In the fall of 1852 the first whistle of the locomotive was heard down
+by the river side, in the city of Cleveland. It started the city into
+new life, and woke all the farmers within the sound of its hoarse
+screech into renewed energy. That fall and winter there was a butter
+famine in all that region. The market being opened to New York, butter
+went suddenly up from eight and ten cents a pound, to twelve, sixteen,
+and then to twenty cents. Buyers could afford to pay no such fancy price
+for an article which might be dispensed with; and producers were equally
+unwilling to put upon their own tables anything which would yield them
+such a handsome profit on selling. And so many families, not only of
+mechanics, but of farmers as well, went without butter that winter; the
+latter happy in receiving, first twenty, then twenty-two, and finally
+twenty-five cents per pound for the products of their dairies.
+
+This first railroad gave the city a fresh start, and presently others
+found their terminus here. Population and business have both steadily
+increased since then, until in 1880 the former was 160,142, and its
+commerce immense, especially with Canada and the mining regions of Lake
+Superior. Since 1860 the city has rapidly developed in the direction of
+manufacturing industries. The headquarters of the giant monopoly, known
+as the Standard Oil Company, Cleveland is the first city of the world in
+the production of refined petroleum. The old pasture grounds of the cows
+of 1850 are now completely occupied by oil refineries and manufacturing
+establishments; and the river, which but a generation ago flowed
+peaceful and placid through green fields, is now almost choked with
+barges, tugs and immense rafts. Looking down upon the Cuyahoga Flats,
+from the heights of what was once Ohio City, but is now known as the
+West Side of Cleveland itself, the view, though far from beautiful, is a
+very interesting one. There are copper smelting, iron rolling, and iron
+manufacturing works, lumber yards, paper mills, breweries, flour mills,
+nail works, pork-packing establishments, and the multitudinous
+industries of a great manufacturing city, which depends upon these
+industries largely for its prosperity. The scene at night, from this
+same elevated position, is picturesque in the extreme. The whole valley
+shows a black background, lit up with a thousand points of light from
+factories, foundries and steamboats, which are multiplied into two
+thousand as they are reflected in the waters of the Cuyahoga, which
+looks like a silver ribbon flowing through the blackness.
+
+Cleveland is acknowledged to be the most beautiful city of the many
+which are found upon the shores of the great lakes. It stands on a high
+bluff overlooking Lake Erie. It is laid out, for the most part, with
+parallel streets, crossed by others at right angles; and even in the
+heart of the city nearly every house has its little side and front yard
+filled with shrubbery and shaded by trees, a large majority of the
+latter being elms. The great number of these trees fairly entitle
+Cleveland to be known as the "Forest City." The streets are very wide,
+and the principal ones are paved.
+
+The main business thoroughfare and fashionable promenade is Superior
+street, which is one hundred and thirty-two feet wide, and lined with
+handsome hotels and retail stores. From the foot of this street, and on
+a level with it, was completed, in 1878, a great stone viaduct,
+connecting the East Side with the West Side, reaching the latter at the
+junction of Pearl and Detroit streets. This roadway is 3,211 feet long,
+and cost $2,200,000. Some years before a bridge had been constructed in
+the same locality, at a sufficient elevation to permit the passage
+under it of various craft; but even at this height there was quite a
+descent to reach it, and an equal ascent on leaving it on the other
+side. The drawbridge near the mouth of the river was totally inadequate
+to meet the needs of business, and was often open for long periods of
+time while vessels were passing through.
+
+Ontario, Bank, Water, Mervin and River streets and Euclid avenue are
+other important business streets on the East Side. Detroit, Pearl and
+Lorain are the principal thoroughfares on the West Side.
+
+Monument Park is a square ten acres in extent, in the centre of the
+city, crossed by Superior and Ontario streets. It is divided by these
+streets into four sections and is shaded by fine trees. In the southeast
+section stands a monument to Commodore Perry, the hero of the battle of
+Lake Erie, erected in 1860, at a cost of $8,000. It contains a colossal
+statue of the Commodore, in Italian marble, standing on a pedestal of
+Rhode Island granite, the entire monument being about twenty feet in
+height. In front of the pedestal is a marble medallion, representing
+Perry in a small boat passing from the Lawrence to the Niagara, in the
+heat of battle. In the southwest corner of the Park is a pool and
+cascade, and in the northwest a handsome fountain. In this park was
+erected the large catafalque under which the casket containing the
+remains of the late President Garfield was laid in state until and
+during the grand public funeral, after which it was taken to the
+cemetery. This park is surrounded by very handsome churches and public
+buildings, among which latter are the Custom House, Post Office, Federal
+Courts, County Court House and City Hall, all magnificent edifices.
+Case Hall, near the park, contains a concert hall capable of seating
+fifteen hundred persons, a library, reading room, and the rooms of the
+Cleveland Library Association. The Opera House, a new and handsome
+building, is on Euclid avenue. There are, besides, an Academy of Music
+and the Globe Theatre and several minor theatres.
+
+ [Illustration: PUBLIC SQUARE AND PERRY MONUMENT, CLEVELAND, OHIO.]
+
+The business portion of Euclid avenue extends from the Park to Erie
+street, beyond which it is lined with handsome residences, elegant
+cottages and superb villas, the grounds around each being more and more
+extensive as it approaches the country. It is one of the finest avenues
+in the world, and is not less than ten miles in length, embracing during
+its course several suburbs which a generation since were remote from the
+city, and are now considerably surprised to find themselves brought so
+near it. Euclid avenue crosses the other streets diagonally, and was
+evidently one of the original roads leading into the city before it
+attained its present dimensions. The majority of the streets are
+parallel with the lake front, which pursues a course from the northeast
+to the southwest. But Euclid avenue runs directly eastward for about
+three miles, to Doane's Corners, one of the historic spots in the
+neighborhood of Cleveland, and then turns to the northeast, following
+nearly parallel to the course of the lake. Prospect street runs parallel
+to Euclid avenue, and is only second to it in the beauty and elegance of
+its residences. St. Clair street is also a favorite suburban avenue,
+extending parallel to the lake, a little distance from it, far out into
+the country, and containing many handsome residences.
+
+Newburg, once three miles from the city, and the site of the first saw
+and grist mill on the Reserve, is now included as a suburb of
+Cleveland, and contains extensive iron manufactories.
+
+The Union Depot, erected in 1866, is one of the finest and largest in
+the country. It is built on the shore of the lake, below the bluff, and
+near the mouth of the Cuyahoga. Streets more or less steeply graded
+furnish access to it for carriages and vehicles of all descriptions,
+while a long flight of massive stone steps conduct the pedestrian
+directly to the summit of the cliff, where horse-cars, leading by
+various routes to all quarters of the city, are waiting for him. All the
+railroads leading out of the city centre here. In the keystone over the
+main entrance of the depot is a bas relief portrait of Mr. Amasa Stone,
+under whose supervision it was built. Similar portraits of Grant and
+Lincoln are found upon keystones at either end of the building.
+
+The waterworks stand near the lake, west of the river, and by means of a
+tunnel extending some six thousand feet out under the lake, pure water,
+forced by two powerful engines into a large reservoir upon the cliff, is
+supplied to the entire city. This reservoir is a popular resort for
+pleasure seekers, and furnishes a fine view of the city, lake and
+surrounding country.
+
+Cleveland enjoys superior educational facilities. Her schools are not
+excelled by any in the country, and she has, besides, several large
+libraries. The Western Reserve College, until recently located at
+Hudson, a small village about twenty miles to the southeast, has been,
+within the last few years, removed to this city. The Medical College, a
+branch of the Western Reserve College, founded in 1843, occupies an
+imposing building at the corner of Erie and St. Clair streets. Near this
+college, on the shore of the lake, stands the extensive United States
+Marine Hospital, surrounded by grounds nine acres in extent, beautifully
+laid out and well kept.
+
+There are a number of parks and gardens in the suburbs of Cleveland, one
+of the most extensive having been a donation to the city by Mr. Wade,
+one of her millionaires. The favorite drive, however, next to the
+avenue, is across the Cuyahoga and seven miles westward to Rocky River,
+which flows into the lake through a narrow gorge between perpendicular
+cliffs which project themselves boldly into the lake. Here a park has
+been laid out, and all that art can do has been done to add to the
+natural beauties of the place. From this point a distant view of the
+city may be obtained, its spires pointing to the sky out of a billow of
+green. To the west is Black River Point, with its rocky promontories,
+and on the north stretches out an unbroken expanse of water, with here
+and there the long black trail of a steamer floating in the air, its
+wake like a white line upon the water; or white specks of sails dotting
+the horizon. The coast between Cleveland and Rocky River is high and
+precipitous, the emerging streams rushing into the lake by means of
+rapids and waterfalls. On this inhospitable coast, which affords no
+landing for even a small boat, more than one frail bark came to grief in
+the early days of the white man's possession of the land, and nearly all
+its living freight found a watery grave. In 1806 a man by the name of
+Hunter, his wife and child, a colored man named Ben, and a small colored
+boy, were driven by a squall upon these rocks. They climbed up as far as
+possible, the surge constantly beating over them, and finally they died,
+one after the other, from exposure and hunger, and after five days only
+the man Ben was rescued alive. A similar occurrence transpired the
+following spring. Of the eighteen deaths which took place at Cleveland
+during the first twelve years after its settlement, eleven were caused
+by drowning.
+
+Twenty or thirty years ago nothing more desolate or devoid of beauty can
+be imagined than was the lake and river approach to Cleveland. The cars
+ran along the foot of the cliff, while the space between the tracks and
+the table land upon which the city is built was given up to rubbish and
+neglect. Little huts, the size of organ boxes, were perched here and
+there, swarming with dirty, half-clad children and untidy women, and
+festooned with clothes-lines, from which dangled a motley array of
+garments. Blackness, dirt and decay were visible everywhere; and the
+vestibule of the most beautiful city in America presented to the visitor
+the opposite extreme of repulsiveness. But now all this is changed; one
+enters the Forest City through a continuous park. Coming from the east,
+the waves of the beautiful inland sea almost wash the tracks. On the
+left the steep slope is covered by green grass, shrubbery and trees, the
+line broken here and there, perhaps, by private grounds no less
+beautiful, while the United States Marine Hospital crowns the cliff, at
+Erie street, with its ample and well-kept grounds. Reaching the depot
+the traveler at once ascends the cliff, and avoids the necessary
+ugliness of the immense railroad yard, with its gridiron of tracks. Even
+the river, once so unsightly, presents to view the ceaseless movements
+of multifarious business, all of which indicate the prosperity and
+thriving industry of the city.
+
+It is a peculiarity of western cities that they give so much thought and
+spend so much money in public improvements, and especially those which
+are merely decorative. Cleveland is in no wise behind the rest. No city
+in the east, though many of them boast extensive and expensive public
+parks, bestows so much thought, labor and money, to make her general
+appearance beautiful and attractive to the stranger. If first
+impressions count for much, as it is said they do, then Cleveland has
+proved herself wise. She possesses many natural advantages of position.
+She is not in a slough, like Chicago, being built on a gravelly plain
+about one hundred feet above the lake. Nor is she subject to inundation,
+like Cincinnati, most of her business sites and residences being far
+above the water. The Cuyahoga River sometimes, however, does damage to
+the manufacturing establishments along its shores. In February, 1883, a
+freshet occurred, which raised the river ten feet above its ordinary
+level, and flooded all its valley. Enormous quantities of lumber and
+shingles were washed from the lumber yards. The Valley Railroad was
+several feet under water; paper mills, furnaces and other property
+submerged nearly to the top of the first story. The Infirmary Farm,
+further up the river, was under water, and the damage of the flood was
+estimated at not less than a million dollars. The water was higher than
+at any period since 1859, when a similar disaster occurred.
+
+All eyes were turned towards Cleveland, when, in September, 1881, a
+mournful cortege proceeded thither, accompanying the remains of the
+murdered Chief Magistrate. A mighty concourse of people assembled in the
+park to assist at the last sad rites, and then the funeral procession
+passed out the beautiful Euclid avenue to Lake View Cemetery, where the
+casket was deposited in a vault prepared for it, and was guarded by
+soldiers night and day; and there, on a spot overlooking the lake, and
+surrounded by a lovely country, varied by hill and dale, cultivated
+farms and elegant suburban residences, all that is mortal of James Abram
+Garfield has found its last resting-place, while his memory lives in
+fifty millions of hearts, and his fame is immortal. The youngest son of
+his mother, and she a widow, reared in poverty and obscurity, by dint of
+his unswerving integrity and overmastering intellect, he rose to occupy
+the highest position which man can accord to his fellow man, that of
+being the chosen head of a free, intelligent and powerful people. Cut
+off as he was, in the prime of his life, a nation mourned her dead, and
+Lake View Cemetery is to-day a spot of national interest. It is five
+miles from the city, contains three hundred acres, and lies two hundred
+and fifty feet above the level of the lake. It commands extensive views,
+and though opened as late as 1870, is already very beautiful. It was
+here that Garfield expressed his desire to be buried. Here, on a knoll
+commanding one of the finest views the cemetery affords, his tomb will
+be eventually constructed, and a monument reared to him, as a mark of
+the nation's appreciation of his character and sorrow at his untimely
+death.
+
+ [Illustration: EUCLID AVENUE, CLEVELAND, OHIO.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+CHICAGO.
+
+ Topographical Situation of Chicago.--Meaning of the Name.--Early
+ History.--Massacre at Fort Dearborn.--Last of the Red Men.--The
+ Great Land Bubble.--Rapid Increase in Population and Business.--
+ The Canal.--First Railroad.--Status of the City in 1871.--The
+ Great Fire.--Its Origin, Progress and Extent.--Heartrending
+ Scenes.--Estimated Total Loss.--Help from all Quarters.--
+ Work of Reconstruction.--Second Fire.--Its Public Buildings,
+ Educational and Charitable Institutions, Streets and Parks.--Its
+ Waterworks.--Its Stock Yards.--Its Suburbs.--Future of the City.
+
+
+"See two things in the United States, if nothing else--see Niagara and
+Chicago," said Richard Cobden, the English statesman, to Goldwin Smith,
+on the eve of the departure of the latter to America. And truly, if one
+would obtain a proper sense of America's wonders and achievements, then
+Niagara and Chicago may be accepted as respectively the highest types of
+each. Niagara remains the same yesterday, to-day and forever. But if it
+were a desirable thing to see Chicago at the time of the visit referred
+to, how much more so is it to-day, when, Phoenix-like, she has arisen
+from her own ashes, turning that which seemed an overwhelming disaster
+into positive blessing; drawing her fire-singed robes proudly about her,
+crowning herself with the diadem of her own matchless achievements, and
+sitting beside her inland sea, the queenliest city of them all.
+
+Situated upon a flat and relatively low tract of country, Chicago is yet
+upon one of the highest plane elevations of our continent. Lake
+Michigan represents the headwaters of the great chain of American lakes,
+through which, in connection with the St. Lawrence, much of the rainfall
+of that city finds its way to the Atlantic; while through the canal to
+the Illinois River, its sewage is borne to the Gulf of Mexico. Perhaps
+no more hopeless site could have been selected for a city than that
+seemed half a century ago. A bayou or arm of the lake penetrated the
+land for half a mile or more, but a sand-bar across its mouth prevented
+the ingress of all but the smallest craft. This bayou, called by
+courtesy the Chicago River, separated into two branches, the course of
+one of which was in a northerly direction, and of the other in a
+southerly one. The land was barely on a level with the lake, and at
+portions of the year was a vast morass, some parts of it being entirely
+under water. Teams struggled helplessly through the black ooze of its
+prairies, and a carriage would sink three or four feet in mud and mire
+within two miles of where the court house now stands. Sometimes in this
+slough a board would be set up, with a rude inscription: "No bottom
+here." But American enterprise has found a bottom and reared a city, the
+history of whose seemingly magical building almost rivals the tales of
+the Arabian Nights.
+
+Chicago is an Indian word, signifying the widely-varying titles of a
+king or deity, and a skunk or wild onion. In its early history, while
+drainage it had none, and its water supply was mere surface water, foul
+with all the accumulated impurities of the soil, and while from the
+lagoon, which lay stagnant for twelve or fifteen miles, a horrible,
+sickening stench constantly arose, the latter appellations seemed
+singularly appropriate, and no doubt originated in these conditions.
+But since the city has been purified by fire, and its sanitary
+conditions made such as they should be, it has earned its right to the
+nobler titles.
+
+The first white visitors to the site of Chicago were Joliet and
+Marquette, who arrived in August, 1673. The year following his first
+visit Pere Marquette returned and erected a rude church. Later the
+French seem to have built a fort on the spot, but no traces of it now
+remain. Very early in the nineteenth century John Kinzie, an Indian
+trader, and agent of the American Fur Company, having traded with the
+Indians at this point for some time, probably influenced the government
+to build a fort here. Accordingly, in 1804, Fort Dearborn was built and
+garrisoned with about fifty men and three pieces of artillery. Mr.
+Kinzie removed his family to the place the same year.
+
+In 1812, Fort Dearborn was the scene of a bloody Indian massacre.
+Captain Hull, then in command of the fort, having placed too great
+confidence in the professions of fidelity of the Pottawatomie tribe, and
+trusting to an escort of that tribe to convey the soldiers and
+inhabitants of the fort to Fort Wayne, saw his entire party either
+killed or taken prisoners, and found himself a prisoner. The fort stood
+at the head of Michigan avenue, below its intersection with Lake street.
+Abandoned and destroyed at this period, it was rebuilt in 1816, and
+finally demolished in 1856.
+
+For four years the place was deserted by the whites, and even the fur
+traders did not care to visit it. In 1818 two families had established
+themselves upon the spot. In 1820 some dozen houses represented the
+future city, and in 1827 a government agent reported the place as a
+collection of pens and kennels, inhabited by squatters, "a miserable
+race of men, hardly equal to the Indians." The population numbered
+seventy in 1830. In 1832 there were six hundred people in the miserable
+little town. In September, 1833, the United States purchased of the
+Indians 20,000,000 acres of land in the northwest, the latter pledging
+themselves to remove twenty days' journey west of the Mississippi. Seven
+thousand redskins attended the making of this treaty, which was ratified
+by the chiefs in a large tent on the bank of the river. A year later
+four thousand Indians returned to receive an annuity of $30,000 worth of
+goods. The distribution of these goods was the occasion of, first, a
+fierce scramble, followed by a bloody fight, in which several Indians
+were killed and others wounded; the scene closing by a wild debauch, so
+that on the following morning few of the recipients were any better off
+for the property which had been given them. Similar scenes, with similar
+results, were enacted in 1835. But that was the last Chicago saw of the
+red men. In September, a train of forty wagons, each drawn by four oxen,
+conveyed away on their far westward march the children and effects of
+the Pottawatomies, while the squaws and braves walked beside them. It
+took them twenty days to reach the Mississippi, and twenty days longer
+it took them to attain a point which can now be reached from Chicago in
+fifteen hours.
+
+ [Illustration: BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF CHICAGO, FROM THE LAKE SIDE.]
+
+In 1827, Major Long, a government agent sent to visit the place, spoke
+of the site as "affording no inducements to the settler, the whole
+amount of trade on the lake not exceeding the cargoes of five or six
+schooners, even at the time when the garrison received its supplies from
+the Mackinac." In 1833 the tide of immigration began. At the end of
+that year there were fifty families floundering in the Chicago mud. In
+1834 there were nearly two thousand inhabitants of the town, and at the
+close of 1835 more than three thousand. In 1835-6 Chicago became the
+headquarters of a great land speculation. Multitudes of towns sprang up
+in every direction, on paper. The country was wild with excitement. Even
+eastern capitalists were seized with the mania, and fortunes were made
+and lost in this wild gambling in prospective cities. The bubble shortly
+burst, resulting in great business depression. The State was bankrupt,
+and Chicago languished. But not for long. Turning from the frenzy of
+speculation, its inhabitants wisely gave their attention to developing
+legitimate business interests. The United States had, in 1833, spent
+$30,000 in dredging out the Chicago River, and in the spring of 1834 a
+most timely freshet had swept away the bar at the mouth of the river,
+making it accessible for the largest craft. In 1838 a venturesome trader
+shipped from that port seventy-eight bushels of wheat. In 1839 four
+thousand bushels were sent. In 1842 the amount of wheat exported arose
+all at once from forty thousand bushels to nearly six hundred thousand
+bushels. In 1839 three thousand cattle were driven across the prairies,
+and sent to the eastern market; and every year thereafter showed a
+surprising increase. Yet with all this accumulating commerce, the
+streets of the city were still quagmires, and many a farmer came to
+grief with his load of grain within what is now city limits. Before
+there was a railroad begun or a canal finished, Chicago exported two and
+a quarter millions of bushels of grain in a year, and sent back on the
+wagons which brought it loads of merchandise.
+
+The Illinois River is connected with the Chicago River, and through that
+to Lake Michigan, by a canal which enters it at La Salle, ninety-six
+miles from Chicago. This canal was begun in 1836 and completed in 1848.
+It gave a fresh impetus to the youthful western town, and established
+its future prosperity. Connected as it already was with the east by the
+magnificent lake and river system of our northern borders, this canal
+opened up communication with the south and west, and made Chicago the
+portal, so to speak, between the different sections of our country.
+
+In 1849 the first railroad had approached within ten miles of the city.
+In 1852 direct communication with the east was gained by the completion
+of the Michigan Central and Michigan Southern railroads, while more than
+one western railroad was projected, and some of them were in actual
+progress of construction. To-day, Illinois and its adjoining States are
+literally gridironed with iron roads, nearly all of which centre at
+Chicago. In 1857 there were living beside the still stagnant waters of
+the Chicago River one hundred thousand people.
+
+In 1871 Chicago was the fourth city of the country, claiming a
+population of 334,000 persons. By a _chef d'ouvre_ of engineering, the
+waters of the river had been turned backward, and made to carry away its
+sewage to fertilize the shores of the Illinois and the Mississippi. The
+streets had been drained, hollow places filled up, and their grade had
+been gradually raised, until it stood twelve feet higher than at first.
+Some of the buildings were raised at once to the latest established
+grade, and others remained as they had been built. The consequence was
+that the plank sidewalks became a series of stairs, adapting themselves
+to the buildings which they fronted. The principal streets were paved
+with stone or with the Nicholson pavement. The triple river was spanned
+by no less than seventeen drawbridges, while two tunnels afforded
+uninterrupted travel between the opposite sides. Efficient waterworks
+had been constructed to provide pure water for the use of the city. The
+total trade for the year previous to the great fire was estimated at
+$400,000,000. Its grain trade had reached such enormous proportions that
+seventeen large elevators, with an aggregate capacity of 11,580,000
+bushels were required for its accommodation. Eighteen banks were in
+operation, with an aggregate capital of $10,000,000 and with nearly
+$17,000,000 of deposits. The city was beginning to give its attention
+largely to manufactures, and its lumber trade had grown into something
+almost fabulous. Miles of lumber yards extended along one of the forks
+of the river, and its harbor was sometimes choked with arriving lumber
+vessels. In a single day, three or four years before the fire, a
+favorable wind blew into port no less than two hundred and eighteen
+vessels loaded with lumber. One hundred passenger and one hundred and
+twenty freight trains arrived and departed daily; and seventy-five
+vessels unloaded and loaded at her wharves every twenty-four hours.
+
+Chicago _Redivivus_ should bear upon her shield a cow rampant. On the
+evening of the eighth of October, 1871, Mrs. Scully's cow kicked herself
+into history, and Chicago into ruin and desolation. Chicago is divided
+by the river and its branches into three different sections, known as
+the north, south and west sides. The principal business portion of the
+city is on the south side, and along the margins of the lake and
+streams. The "burnt district," which even yet the Chicagoan will outline
+to the visitor with peculiar pride, was confined almost wholly to the
+south and north sides.
+
+On the evening of October seventh a planing mill had caught fire on the
+west side, and the conflagration had spread over a territory embracing
+about twenty acres, destroying a million dollars' worth of property.
+This fire, terrible as it seemed, probably saved the west side from
+destruction on that fatal night of the eighth, imposing as it did a
+broad banner of desolation, when the flames essayed to leap across the
+river.
+
+At about nine o'clock in the evening of Sunday, October eighth, 1871, a
+cow kicked over a lantern among loose, dry hay, in a stable at or near
+the corner of Jefferson and DeKoven streets, on the west side. There had
+been no rain of any consequence for fourteen weeks, and roofs and wooden
+buildings were as dry as tinder. There was a strong wind blowing from
+the southwest, and before the engines could reach the spot, half a dozen
+adjoining buildings were wrapped in flames. The buildings of that
+quarter were mostly of wood, and there were several lumber yards along
+the margin of the river. The flames swept through these with resistless
+fury, and then made a bold and sudden leap across the river into the
+very heart of the business portion of the south side. Many of the
+buildings here also were of wood, while the wooden sidewalks, and wooden
+block pavements, the latter filled with an inflammable composition,
+seemed constructed especially to aid and hasten the work of the flames.
+The fire marched steadily toward the north and east, destroying
+everything in its course. Even fireproof buildings seemed to melt down
+as it touched them.
+
+ [Illustration: BURNING OF CHICAGO. THE WORLD'S GREATEST
+ CONFLAGRATION.]
+
+The wind increased to a gale, and all night long the fire wrought its
+terrible will, like a devouring demon; and at sunrise it had already
+leaped the narrow barrier of the river, and was devastating the northern
+side, sweeping away block after block of the wooden structures which
+occupied to a large extent that quarter of the city. The flames seized
+upon the shipping in the river, and when it left it only blackened hulls
+remained. The water supply, upon which the city had founded hopes in
+case of such extremity, failed. The walls of the buildings, weakened by
+the overpowering heat, had fallen in upon the engines, and hope was
+quenched in that quarter.
+
+The flames spread southward as far as Taylor street, and to the
+northward they only paused when, at Fullerton avenue, the broad prairie
+lay before them, and there was nothing more to burn. The track of the
+fire was nearly five miles in length, running north and south, and
+averaged a mile in width. It continued from nine o'clock on Sunday night
+until daybreak Tuesday morning, and then nothing was left of all the
+business portion of Chicago, save a vast blackened field on which the
+flames still smouldered, with piles of rubbish, formed by fallen
+buildings, and here and there portions of walls still standing. Every
+bank, insurance office, hotel, theatre, railroad depot, law office,
+newspaper office, most of the churches, all but one of the wholesale
+stores, and many of the warehouses and retail stores, six elevators,
+fifty vessels, and sixteen thousand dwellings, including many elegant
+mansions, besides numberless humble homes, were destroyed; two hundred
+persons killed, and a hundred thousand people suddenly found themselves
+homeless and penniless, without food to eat or clothes to wear.
+
+The scenes accompanying the fire were terrible and heart-rending. They
+were a mingling of the horrible and grotesque, the tragic and the
+ridiculous, such as was probably never witnessed before on so grand a
+scale, and we trust will never be repeated; and over it all the smoke
+hung like a pall, stifling and blinding, and the flames cast a baleful
+glare, which lit up the scene and made it seem like a literal inferno.
+
+The fire spread with a rapidity which baffled all attempts to check it.
+Many made a feeble effort to save their household goods, an effort which
+was too often futile, while others barely escaped with their lives, clad
+only in their scant night garments. The streets were filled with a
+frantic multitude; vehicles of every description, laden with movable
+property; men, women and children, some of them burdened with their
+belongings, and others nearly naked, forgetful of all but the terrible
+danger of the hour, all wild with the insanity born of fear, and all
+fleeing from the pursuing demon which pressed on behind them, and whose
+hot breath scorched their garments and singed their hair. Many took
+refuge in the river or the lake; but the hissing flames stooped down and
+licked the water, and the poor victims were made to feel the tortures of
+a double death. Very few of these escaped with their lives.
+
+The progress of the flames was so swift that many were overwhelmed by
+the crumbling walls of their houses or workshops before they had time to
+escape, and found in them a fiery tomb. Others were suffocated by the
+smoke. Children were separated from parents, and young and old sought
+safety wherever they could find it, and a mad panic reigned everywhere.
+Many saloons were thrown open, and whisky flowed freely, and the
+turbulent riot of drunkenness was added, to increase the confusion and
+despair of the dreadful night. Sneak thieves and larger depredators
+found spoil on every hand. In this terrible calamity each one seemed to
+throw off his mask, and become what he really was--the brave man, the
+noble gentleman, the selfish coward, the bully or the thief.
+
+A single leaf of a quarto Bible, charred around its edges, was all that
+was left of the immense stock of the Western News Company. It contained
+the first chapter of the Lamentations of Jeremiah, which begins with the
+following words: "How doth the city sit solitary that was full of
+people! how is she become as a widow! she that was great among the
+nations, and princess among the provinces, how is she become tributary!
+She weepeth sore in the night, and her tears are on her cheeks: among
+all her lovers she hath none to comfort her."
+
+The amount lost by the insurance companies, American and foreign, by the
+Chicago fire, was $88,634,133. More than 2,200 acres were swept by the
+flames in the space of thirty hours. The value of buildings alone
+consumed was estimated at $75,000,000, while their contents were at
+least as much more. The total loss probably was not much less than
+$200,000,000.
+
+No sooner had the news of the dreadful calamity gone abroad to the
+world, than the spirit of generosity prompted efficient aid from all
+quarters. St. Louis, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Cleveland, New York, Boston,
+Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Montreal, cities and towns in the north,
+south, east and west, sent generous, and some of them princely,
+donations. Even China forwarded $1,290. By December first the public
+cash donations had reached $2,508,000. The naked were clothed, the
+hungry fed, the homeless housed in at least temporary quarters, and
+Chicago set herself to the task of reconstruction.
+
+The smouldering ruins were yet glowing with heat, and the smoke was
+still ascending here and there, when, on Wednesday morning, the work of
+regeneration began. Within a month, five or six thousand temporary
+tenements had been erected. Meantime the foundations for the permanent
+structures were being laid, on a scale far surpassing those of the past.
+In a year not a trace of the fire remained.
+
+Nearly three years later, on July fourteenth, 1874, another great fire
+swept over the devoted city, destroying eighteen blocks, or sixty acres,
+in the heart of the city, and about $4,000,000 worth of property. Over
+six hundred houses were consumed, but by far the larger number were mere
+wooden shanties.
+
+To-day Chicago counts her great fire as one of her chief blessings. The
+city is entirely rebuilt, but not with rickety wooden structures, the
+previous plenitude of which had rendered her so easy a prey to the
+devouring element. Solid, substantial, handsome, and in many instances
+magnificent, the stranger can scarcely realize that these blocks of
+buildings are not the growth of a century, or of a generation even, but
+have sprung from the ground almost in a night. The new Chicago is
+surpassingly beautiful and grand. The visitor will walk through squares
+and squares of streets, each teeming with life and commercial activity,
+and bearing no trace, save in increased elegance, of the disaster of
+little more than a decade ago; and is forced to the conclusion that, for
+courage and enterprise, Chicago has proved herself unsurpassed by any
+city in the world.
+
+Chicago has a water frontage of thirty-eight miles, of which twenty-four
+are improved, without including the lake front, where an outer harbor is
+in process of construction. The rivers are now spanned by thirty-five
+drawbridges, while a tunnel, 1,608 feet long, with a descent of
+forty-five feet, connects the south and west sides of Washington street,
+and another tunnel, with a total length of 1,854 feet, connects the
+north and south sides on the line of La Salle street.
+
+State street, on the south side, is the Broadway of Chicago. Randolph
+street is famous for its magnificent buildings, among which are the city
+and the county halls. Washington street is one of the fashionable
+promenades, lined with retail stores, though Dearborn street closely
+rivals it. The United States Custom House and Post Office, a magnificent
+structure, costing upward of $5,000,000, occupies the square bounded by
+Clark, Adams, Jackson and Dearborn streets. The Chamber of Commerce, a
+spacious and imposing building, with elaborate interior decorations, is
+at the corner of Washington and La Salle streets, opposite City Hall
+Square. Its ceiling is frescoed with allegorical pictures representing
+the trade of the city, the great fire and the rebuilding. The Union
+Depot, in Van Buren street, at the head of La Salle, is among the finest
+buildings of the city. The Exposition Building is a vast ornate
+structure of iron and glass, occupying the lake front, extending from
+Monroe to Jackson street, and with a front of eight hundred feet on
+Michigan avenue. The centre of the edifice is surmounted by a dome one
+hundred and sixty feet high and sixty feet in diameter. Annual
+expositions of the art and industry of the city are held here every
+autumn.
+
+Among the hotels of Chicago the Palmer House takes the lead. This house
+was destroyed by the fire, but has been rebuilt with a magnitude and
+elaborateness far exceeding its former self, and constituting it one of
+the finest, if not the finest, in the world. It is entirely fireproof,
+being constructed only of incombustible materials, brick, stone, iron,
+marble and cement. It has three fronts, on State and Monroe streets and
+Wabash avenue, and the building and furnishing cost $3,500,000. It is
+kept on both the American and European plans, and continually
+accommodates from six hundred to one thousand guests. The Grand Pacific
+Hotel is but little inferior to the Palmer House. It occupies half the
+block bounded by Jackson, Clark, Adams and La Salle streets. The Sherman
+and Tremont Houses are fine hotels and centrally located.
+
+There are about three hundred churches in Chicago, including those
+untouched by fire and those which have been since rebuilt. The great
+Tabernacle, on Monroe street, where Messrs. Moody and Sankey held their
+meetings, is used for sacred concerts and other religious gatherings,
+and will seat ten thousand persons.
+
+In literary and educational institutions Chicago holds a foremost place.
+Its common schools are among the best in the country, with large,
+handsome, convenient and well-ventilated buildings. The University of
+Chicago, founded by the late Stephen A. Douglas, occupies a beautiful
+site overlooking the lake, and boasts the largest telescope in America.
+It has a Public Library containing 60,000 volumes. The Academy of
+Sciences lost a valuable collection of 38,000 specimens in the fire, but
+has erected a new building and is slowly gathering a new museum and
+library. There are three Theological Seminaries, and three Medical
+Colleges, three hospitals, and a large number of charitable institutions
+within the city. The fire department is most efficiently organized, and
+its annual expenses are scarcely less than $1,000,000.
+
+ [Illustration: GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL, CHICAGO.]
+
+Chicago has the most extensive system of parks and boulevards of any
+city in the United States. Lincoln Park, lying upon the lake to the
+northward, contains 310 acres, and served, during the great fire, as a
+place of refuge for thousands of people driven thither by the raging
+element. The Lake Shore Drive, the great north side boulevard, extends
+from Pine street to Lake View, and is one of the finest drives in the
+world. Humboldt Park, Central Park and Douglas Park extend along the
+western boundaries of the city, are large, contain lakes, ponds, walks,
+drives, fountains and statuary, and are connected with each other by
+wide and elaborately ornamented boulevards. The great South Parks are
+approached on the north by Drexel and Grant Boulevards. Drexel Boulevard
+is devoted exclusively to pleasure, all traffic over it being forbidden.
+The most southerly of the two south parks extends upwards of a mile and
+a half along the shore of the lake. Union Park is located in the very
+centre of the residence portion of the west side.
+
+Whatever Chicago accomplishes is on so gigantic a scale that strangers
+almost hold their breath in astonishment. Among the titanic achievements
+of this youthful giant are the waterworks, which supply pure drinking
+water to its six hundred thousand population. The water supply is by
+means of a tunnel sent out under Lake Michigan for a distance of two
+miles, the water being forced by numerous engines into an immense
+standpipe, 154 feet high. The works are situated at the foot of Chicago
+avenue. In tunneling under the lake, excavations went on simultaneously
+at the land end and two miles out in the lake; and so accurate were the
+calculations that when the two tunnels met in the centre, they were
+found to be but seven and one-half inches out of the line, and there was
+a variation of but three inches in the horizontal measurements. This
+tunnel, which is made of iron, protected by heavy masonry, is large
+enough for a canoe to pass through it when it is but partially filled
+with water, it being nine feet in diameter. The exit at the lake end of
+the tunnel is protected by a breakwater, and securely anchored to its
+place by means of heavy stones. Storms never affect it, save sometimes
+to produce a light tremor; and even large fields of ice, which grate by
+it with a fearful, crunching noise, have thus far failed to shake its
+foundations.
+
+Chicago ships a considerable portion of her grain in the shape of flour,
+there being extensive flouring mills in the city. The present annual
+export of flour is probably not less than 3,000,000 barrels. Chicagoans
+have also found it possible to pack fifteen or twenty bushels of corn in
+a single barrel. "The corn crop," remarks Mr. Ruggles, "is condensed and
+reduced in bulk by feeding it into an animal form, more portable. The
+hog eats the corn, and Europe eats the hog. Corn thus becomes incarnate,
+for what is a hog but fifteen or twenty bushels of corn on four legs?"
+The business of pork-packing has attained enormous proportions in
+Chicago. It has entirely superseded Cincinnati, the former "Porkopolis,"
+in this branch of trade. Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Indianapolis
+and Milwaukee do not together furnish a total number of head slaughtered
+equal to that of Chicago.
+
+The stock yards, just outside the city limits on the southwest, are the
+largest in the world. They cover hundreds of acres, and constitute what
+has been styled "The Great Bovine City of the World." This bovine city
+is regularly laid out in streets and alleys crossing each other at right
+angles. The principal street is called Broadway, and it is a mile long
+and seventy-five feet wide. On either side are the cattle pens, and it
+is divided by a light fence into three paths, so that herds of cattle
+can pass one another without wrangling, and leave an unobstructed road
+for the drovers. These yards are connected with all the railroads in the
+west centering in Chicago. The company have twenty-five miles of track.
+A cattle train stops along the street of pens; the side of each car is
+removed, and the living freight pass over a declining bridge into clean,
+planked inclosures, where food and water is quickly furnished them. A
+large and comfortable hotel furnishes accommodation for their owners;
+there is a Cattle Exchange, a spacious and elegant edifice; a bank
+solely for the cattle-men's use; and a telegraph office, which reports
+the price of beef, pork and mutton from all parts of the world. The
+present capacity of the yards is 25,000 head of cattle, 100,000 hogs,
+22,000 sheep, and 1,200 horses. A town of five thousand inhabitants has
+grown up in the immediate vicinity of these stock yards.
+
+In some of the yards not less than five hundred beeves are slaughtered
+daily. Much of this beef is sent in refrigerator cars to the Atlantic
+cities, while enormous quantities are cooked and packed in cans and sent
+all over the world.
+
+Suburban towns have spread out from Chicago, in every direction, over
+the prairie. South Chicago, one of the principal of these, is twelve
+miles to the southward, at the mouth of the Calumet river, and has a
+large amount of capital invested in iron and steel works. The sloughy
+morasses which still exist between the parent city and its thrifty
+offshoots are fast being filled up, and bridged over with pavements, so
+that the mud, which a generation ago was the chief distinguishing
+feature of Chicago and its vicinity, but which is now confined to
+outlying sections, will soon be a thing of the past. Chicago is itself
+extending rapidly in all directions, and numberless suburban streets are
+lined with pretty cottages, whose rural surroundings have given to the
+city its appropriate name of "The Garden City."
+
+Taking its past as a criterion, who shall dare to predict the future of
+Chicago? It has by no means come to a stand-still, but is to-day
+increasing its population, developing its resources, and extending its
+commercial enterprises to a degree that is scarcely credible, save as
+one is faced by actual facts and figures. These miles of streets, filled
+with the incessant roar of business; these lofty temples, magnificent
+warehouses and elegant residences; these public institutions of
+learning; this gigantic commerce, this high degree of civilization; all
+of which have been attained by older cities after a prolonged struggle
+with adversity, are here the creations and accumulations of less than
+two generations. Up the Chicago River, where considerably less than a
+century ago the Indian paddled his solitary canoe, and John Jacob Astor
+annually sent his single small schooner to bring provisions to the
+garrison and to take away his furs, there swarms a fleet of vessels of
+all descriptions, bringing goods from, and sending them to, every
+quarter of the world. Where, no later than 1834, a grand wolf hunt was
+held, and one bear and forty wolf scalps were the trophies of the day,
+the bears of the Stock Exchange alone rage and howl, and the only wolves
+are human ones. Chicago is a great and a magnificent city, embodying
+more perfectly than any other in the world the possibilities of
+accomplishment of the Anglo-Saxon race, given its best conditions of
+freedom, independence and intelligence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+CHEYENNE.
+
+ Location of Cheyenne.--Founding of the City.--Lawlessness.--
+ Vigilance Committee.--Woman Suffrage.--Rapid Increase of
+ Population and Business.--A Reaction.--Stock Raising.--
+ Irrigation.--Mineral Resources.--Present Prospects.
+
+
+Cheyenne is the half-way house, on the Union Pacific Railroad, between
+the civilization of the East and that of the West. It is situated on
+Crow Creek, a branch of the South Platte River, just at the foot of the
+Rocky Mountains. A few miles away to the westward the ascent of the
+Black Hills begins, the road ascending over the rugged granite hills,
+and winding in and out of miles of snow sheds. It is five hundred and
+sixteen miles from Omaha, and has an elevation of more than six thousand
+feet above the sea, being one thousand more than Denver, and with an
+atmosphere proportionately rarer and dryer.
+
+The city is a child of the Pacific Railroad, being, during the building
+of that road, its winter terminus. When it was found that Cheyenne was
+probably to become an important railroad point, there was a grand influx
+of roughs, of all classes and of both sexes, to the spot. Habitations
+sprang up as if by magic, and were of the rudest construction, some of
+them being mere dug-outs in the sand hills. Town lots ran up to fabulous
+prices. The first city government was organized in August, 1867, and the
+first newspaper, the _Cheyenne Leader_, published on the nineteenth day
+of the following month. On the thirtieth of November, 1867, the track
+layers reached the city limits, and were greeted by music and a grand
+demonstration on the part of the people. The first passenger train
+arrived the next day.
+
+In the winter of 1868 Cheyenne contained not less than six thousand
+inhabitants. Lawlessness was the order of the day, and gambling,
+drinking and shooting were the favorite recreations. Knock-downs and
+robberies were matters of course, and murders of too frequent occurrence
+to cause special excitement. During these early days of its history the
+young city acquired two names, both of which were exceedingly
+suggestive, not to say appropriate. Its rapid growth fastened upon it
+the name of "Magic City of the Plains;" the desperate character of its
+inhabitants, that of "Hell on Wheels."
+
+When the city was but six months old, the patience of the order-loving
+people was tried beyond endurance. A Vigilance Committee was formed, and
+justice came swift and sure, without the intervening and delaying
+processes of the law. Its first public demonstration occurred in the
+following manner. Three men had been arrested on January tenth, 1868,
+charged with stealing $900, and put under bonds to appear at court. On
+the morning of the day after their arrest they were found on Eddy
+street, walking abreast and tied together, with a placard attached to
+them, bearing the following inscription, in conspicuous lettering: "$900
+stole; $500 returned; thieves, F. S. Clair, W. Grier, E. D. Brownville.
+City authorities, please not interfere until 10 o'clock A. M. Next case
+goes up a tree. Beware of Vigilance Committee." During that year no less
+than twelve desperadoes were hung and shot, and five sent to the
+penitentiary, through the agency of the Vigilance Committee. The
+condition of affairs was at once materially improved.
+
+In 1871 the Territorial Legislature passed a bill giving universal
+suffrage, without distinction of sex. The ladies at once made use of
+their newly-acquired political right, with an earnestness and
+universality entirely unexpected by those who had conferred its exercise
+upon them. In their capacity as grand jurors, they closed every gambling
+saloon and brothel in the city, put restrictions upon the liquor
+traffic, brought criminals to justice who had heretofore defied the law,
+and, in brief, made a clean sweep of the city, raising its social and
+moral standard. Women of all classes voted, and, strange to say, even
+the worst women voted for law and order. Political parties found it
+necessary to put up men with a good moral record, as well as those
+politically sound, for the women would not vote for a bad man. All
+classes recognized the good results of woman suffrage, and all
+opposition to it was speedily overcome.
+
+Cheyenne is now one of the best governed and most orderly cities in the
+country; and every Governor of the Territory, whatever his political
+complexion, has given his unqualified testimony in favor of women at the
+polls. Women not only deposit their ballots unmolested, but are treated
+with the utmost courtesy, and the polling places are made comfortable,
+and even elegant, for their reception. It is no uncommon thing for
+husband and wife to vote opposing tickets, but no divisions or even
+disturbances in families have resulted, thus far.
+
+On the first of July, 1867, there was but one house in Cheyenne,
+standing on what is now Eddy street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth
+streets, built of logs, smoothly plastered outside and in, and owned by
+Judge J. R. Whitehead. Six months thereafter there were no less than
+three thousand houses in the city. The first lots were offered for sale
+in July, 1867, at one hundred and fifty dollars. Thirty days afterward
+they sold at one thousand dollars each, and in two or three months later
+for two thousand five hundred and three thousand dollars. Stores were
+erected with marvelous rapidity, in its early history, a good-sized and
+comparatively substantial warehouse being put up in forty-eight hours.
+The business of the first six months was enormous, single houses making
+sales of from ten thousand to thirty thousand dollars per month. In two
+months after the Post-Office was established, it averaged twenty-six
+hundred letters a day.
+
+As the railroad progressed westward across the mountains, and finally
+reached the Pacific, Cheyenne suffered a reaction from its sudden and
+wonderful prosperity. The road took much of its business with it, and
+the town fell dead. But the discovery of gold in the Black Hills gave a
+fresh impetus to its business interests. It is also located in the midst
+of a great stock-raising region, and is surrounded by ranches of
+stock-men engaged in raising cattle, horses and sheep for market. The
+cattle and horses find sustenance the year round in the native grasses,
+and Cheyenne is the natural centre and trading post of these ranch-men.
+Each year the business increases, and the shipments from the city become
+larger. Wool is becoming an important export, being produced in great
+quantities on the large sheep farms.
+
+The railroad has constructed extensive machine and repair shops at
+Cheyenne, which furnish employment for a large number of workmen. The
+rickety structures of its early days are fast giving place to
+substantial brick buildings. There is a fine Court House and Jail, a
+City Hall, Opera House, and several Public School buildings. In
+proportion to its population, Cheyenne has now more substantial and
+handsome business houses than any other western city.
+
+Stock raising is the only agricultural pursuit for which Wyoming is
+adapted. The soil about Cheyenne is barren, and in no way suited for
+farming purposes. The rainfall during the year is very slight, and it
+has been found necessary to resort to irrigation. Therefore, ditches run
+through the streets, supplying water for the gardens throughout the
+city, and, by means of this irrigation, what was once a desert is
+becoming green with trees and shrubbery.
+
+The mineral resources of Wyoming are very rich. Silver and gold are both
+found in the ranges of hills and mountains to the north and west. Moss
+agates, opals, topaz, garnets, amethysts, onyx and jasper have all been
+found in the immediate neighborhood of Cheyenne, and some of the
+specimens are exceedingly beautiful.
+
+The high elevation of the city gives it a delightful climate. The
+winters are mild, and the summers free from excessive heat.
+
+Cheyenne has a special niche in my memory, since, in making my horseback
+journey from the Atlantic to the Pacific, in 1876, it was the last place
+at which I dined before entering the Black Hills and falling into the
+hands of the treacherous Arrapahoes.
+
+The rapid growth which Cheyenne made at the beginning of her existence,
+and the feverish activity of her business enterprises, have given place
+long since to a slower but more healthy life and development. Her trade
+interests are being placed on a firmer foundation, and when the
+resources of the surrounding country are utilized to the fullest
+advantage of the city, its prosperity will be assured.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+DETROIT.
+
+ Detroit and Her Avenues of Approach.--Competing Lines.--London
+ in Canada.--The Strait and the Ferry.--Music on the Waters.--The
+ Home of the Algonquins.--Teusha-grondie.--Wa-we-aw-to-nong.--
+ Fort Ponchartrain and the Early French Settlers.--The Red
+ Cross of St. George.--Conspiracy of Pontiac.--Battle of Bloody
+ Run.--The Long Siege.--Detroit's First American Flag.--Old
+ Landmarks.--The Pontiac Tree.--Devastation by Fire.--Site of
+ the Modern City.--New City Hall.--Public Library.--Mexican
+ Antiquities.
+
+
+Four lines of railway leading westward from Niagara, place Buffalo and
+Detroit _en rapport_ with each other, through their connecting steel
+rails, and compete for the patronage of the traveler. In addition to
+this, there are not less than two lines by water, thus affording the
+tourist--if he develops a desire to tempt the waves of Old Erie--ample
+scope for his choice. The Lake Shore route takes one through a
+continuous succession of ever-changing landscapes on the southern shore
+of Lake Erie, and skirts the two great States of Ohio and Pennsylvania
+before reaching Michigan. It is, perhaps, the preferable route by rail,
+looking at it from a purely A|sthetic standpoint. The Great Western Road
+crosses, at Suspension Bridge, the famous chasm cut by Niagara, in its
+recession from Ontario, and gives a faint conception, as seen in the
+distance, of the glorious Falls themselves. The roar and rush of
+water--at the rate of twenty-five million tons per minute--is borne
+down the deeply-cut channel, and clouds of spray are visible from the
+car windows. Below the bridge the swift drifts and eddies can be seen
+foaming on their way to the whirlpool, a mile and a half further down.
+This route also takes the traveler through London, Canada, a quaint old
+English town of twenty thousand inhabitants, on the Thames River. The
+place is brimming over with localities the names of which, carried in
+the affections of her settlers across the ocean, serve as reminders of
+the old London left forever behind them on Britannia's Isle.
+Blackfriar's Bridge and Westminster Bridge both cross the new Thames,
+and Kensington and Covent Garden market belong also to the transplanted
+nomenclature. On Saturdays the great square in the heart of the town is
+filled with marketers and hucksters of all descriptions, and every kind
+of merchandise, from a feather bed to a table knife, is there bought and
+sold. Squaws and Indians and quaintly dressed women commingle with the
+crowd and sell their various wares. The scene is very picturesque, and
+wears an atmosphere of being a hundred years old.
+
+The Grand Trunk Road--the most northerly of the three routes leading
+through Canada--has nothing except its easy-going time to recommend it
+to favor. The traveler on this road stands a fair chance of missing his
+connecting links in the great railway chain which interthreads the
+continent east and west, or of being delayed for hours at a time by
+running off the rails. The Canada Southern is a newly completed road,
+and is said to be the most direct and shortest of all the competing
+lines. This route follows the windings of the northern shore of Lake
+Erie, just opposite from the Lake Shore Road on the southern side, and
+the shifting landscapes are perhaps quite as full of natural beauty.
+
+Detroit, the fair "City of the Strait," spreads itself along the river
+front for miles, and the approach from Windsor, on the opposite shore,
+is suggestive of the pictured lagoons of Venice, Queen of the Adriatic.
+The Detroit River, or strait, is one of the most beautiful water avenues
+west of the Hudson. It is from half a mile to a mile wide, is always of
+a clear green color, and is never troubled by sand bars or anything
+which might affect its navigation. It has an average depth of
+twenty-five feet at the wharves and perhaps forty or fifty feet in the
+centre of the river bed. No floods disturb its calm flow or change the
+pervading green of its waters. It is, with reason, the pride of the
+city, and the ferry boats of the several lines plying between Detroit
+and Windsor are of the most attractive type. In summer a corps of
+musicians are engaged for the regular trips, and are considered as
+indispensable to the boat's outfit as the captain or pilot. Their syren
+strains entice the lounger at the wharf, and he may ride all day, if he
+chooses, for the sum of ten cents. Whole families spend the day on the
+river, in this way, taking their dinner in baskets, as they would go to
+a picnic. The people of Detroit, perhaps, inherit the pleasure-loving
+characteristics of their French ancestors, or at least they do not seem
+to have their minds exclusively concentrated on the struggle after the
+almighty dollar.
+
+Detroit, as the principal mart of the Peninsular State--the nucleus
+which gradually crystallized into the heart of Michigan--has an early
+history of thrilling interest; the site of the present populous city of
+a hundred and twenty thousand souls was long ago, in the shadowy years
+of its Indian lore, the home of a dusky tribe of the Algonquin family--a
+race which was once as populous and widespread as the waves of the
+ocean.
+
+In 1610 the first white man who set foot on these wild and unexplored
+shores found it occupied by the clustered wigwams of a peaceful Indian
+village named _Teushagrondie_.
+
+ "Beside that broad but gentle tide
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Whose waters creep along the shore
+ Ere long to swell Niagara's roar,
+ Here, quiet, stood an Indian village;
+ Unknown its origin or date;
+ Algonquin huts and rustic tillage,
+ Where stands the City of the Strait.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ From dark antiquity it came,
+ In myths and dreamy ages cast."
+
+Another of its ancient names was "Wa-we-aw-to-nong," meaning _round by_,
+in allusion to its circuitous way of approach.
+
+ "No savage home, however rare,
+ If told in legend or in song,
+ Could with that charming spot compare,
+ The lovely Wa-we-aw-to-nong."
+
+In 1679, the _Griffin_, under La Salle--the first vessel that ever
+sailed these inland seas--anchored off the group of islands at the
+entrance to Detroit River. Peaceful Indian tribes were scattered along
+the banks, and the white man was received with friendly overtures.
+
+In 1701, La Motte Cadillac founded Detroit. He erected a military fort
+on the site of the future city, which he named after his French patron,
+_Pontchartrain_. It was surrounded by a strong stockade of wooden
+pickets, with bastions at each angle. A few log huts with thatched
+roofs of straw and grass were built within the enclosure, and as the
+number of settlers increased the stockade was enlarged, until it
+included about a hundred houses closely crowded together. The streets
+were very narrow, with the exception of a wide carriage road or
+boulevard which encircled the town just within the palisades. The object
+of the establishment of this military post was to aid in securing to the
+French the large fur trade of the northwest, and it was also a point
+from whence the early Jesuit fathers extended their missionary labors.
+
+The little military colony was the centre of the settlement, and the
+Canadian dwellings were scattered up and down the banks above and below
+the fort for miles. The river almost washed the foot of the
+stockade--Woodbridge street being at that time the margin of the
+water--and three large Indian villages were within the limits of the
+settlement. Below the fort were the lodges of the Pottawattomies, on the
+eastern shore dwelt the Wyandots, and higher up Pontiac and the Ottawas
+had pitched their wigwams.
+
+Fort Pontchartrain remained in the possession of the French until 1760,
+when, by the fall of Quebec, it fell into the hands of the British, and
+was surrendered to Major Robert Rogers on the twelfth of September. The
+Red Cross of St. George now supplanted the _Fleur-de-lis_ of France, and
+the change to British rule was ill relished by the surrounding Indian
+tribes, who had been the firm friends and allies of the French. The well
+known Pontiac conspiracy grew out of this change of administration, and
+a general massacre of the whites was determined upon. Pontiac, chief of
+the Ottawas, was the leading spirit of the bloody plot, and so well
+laid were his plans that ten out of the thirteen posts which were
+simultaneously attacked fell before their savage onsets. The post at
+Detroit, at that time under command of Major Gladwyn, was only saved
+through the timely betrayal of Pontiac's plot, by Catherine, a beautiful
+Ojibway girl, who dwelt in the village of the Pottawattomies, and who
+had become much attached to Major Gladwyn, of the Fort. The day before
+the intended massacre she brought him a pair of moccasins which she had
+made for him, and then revealed the intended surprise of Pontiac. The
+garrison and occupants of the fort were supported by two small vessels,
+the Beaver and the Gladwyn, which lay anchored in the river.
+
+On the morning of May sixth, 1763, a large flotilla of birch canoes,
+filled with warriors lying flat on their faces, crossed the river above
+the Port, landing just beyond the banks of Bloody Run, or Parent's
+Creek, as it was then called. About ten o'clock, sixty chiefs, with
+Pontiac at their head, marched to the Port and demanded admittance. It
+was granted, but all preparation was made on the part of Gladwyn to
+repel the first sign of treachery. Every soldier was armed to the teeth,
+and the eagle eye of Gladwyn watched every movement of Pontiac, as that
+brave made a speech of mock friendship. When the savages discovered the
+failure of their plans, their disappointed rage knew no bounds, and
+after passing out of the gates of the Fort, their mad thirst for blood
+was only glutted by massacres of isolated families, and the tomahawk and
+scalping knife sealed the doom of many an unhappy victim who that day
+crossed the path of Pontiac's warriors.
+
+From this hour Detroit was in a state of siege, and for eleven long
+months the siege continued. Bravely the little band at the Fort held out
+until reinforcements arrived--Captain Dalzell, with a force of three
+hundred regulars, coming to their aid. A few days afterwards--at two
+o'clock on the morning of July thirty-first--an attack was made on the
+Indians, who were stationed along the banks of Parent's Creek, about a
+mile and a half from the Fort. The troops neared the narrow, wooden
+bridge which spanned the creek, when suddenly, in the gloom of night,
+the Indian war-whoop burst on their ears, and a blaze of leaden death
+followed. Captain Dalzell rushed to the front across the bridge, leading
+his men forward, but their foes were not to be seen.
+
+Bewildered in the gloom, the English troops were obliged to fall back to
+the fort and wait for daylight before renewing the attack. Hundreds of
+Indians lay in ambuscade along the river, whither the soldiers were
+obliged to pass on their way to the Fort, and the creek ran red with
+their blood. The waters of the little stream, after this crimson
+baptism, were re-christened with the name of Bloody Run. The survivors
+entered the Fort next morning with a loss of seventy killed and forty
+wounded.
+
+During the war of the Revolution, Detroit was subjected to greater
+annoyance from Indian tribes than before, but this was the only way in
+which the war affected it. Through the treaty of Greenville, made by
+General Wayne with the red men, in August, 1795, Detroit and all the
+region of the northwest became the property of the United States, and in
+1796 Captain Porter, from General Wayne's army, took possession of the
+post, and flung to the breeze the first American banner that ever
+floated over the soil of the Peninsular State.
+
+"Pontiac's Grate" was the eastern entrance to the town, and occupies the
+site of the old United States Court House. In 1763, a rude chapel stood
+on the north side of St. Ann street--nearly in the middle of the present
+Jefferson avenue--while opposite was a large military garden, in the
+centre of which stood a block house, where all the councils with the
+Indians were held. These were the only public buildings in the town.
+
+The "Pontiac Tree," behind which many a soldier took shelter on the
+night of the bloody battle at Parent's Creek, and whose bark is fabled
+to have been thickly pierced with bullets, stood as an old landmark for
+years, on the site of the ancient field of conflict, and many a stirring
+legend is told of it.
+
+On June eleventh, 1805--just five months after Michigan was organized as
+a territory--Detroit was laid in ruins by a wholesale conflagration,
+which left only two houses unharmed. An act of Congress was passed for
+her relief, and thus, through baptisms of fire and blood, and through
+tribulation, has she arisen to her present proud estate. The stranger
+landing on these shores now is struck with the handsome general
+appearance of the city--its clean, wide streets, varying in width from
+fifty to two hundred feet--its elegant business blocks and pervading air
+of enterprise. The ground on which the city stands rises gradually from
+the river to an elevation of thirty or forty feet, thus affording both a
+commanding prospect and excellent drainage. Detroit is an authorized
+port of entry, and is about seven miles distant from Lake St. Clair and
+eighteen miles from Lake Erie. Ship and boat building has been an
+extensive branch of business here, and in 1859 there were nine steam saw
+mills located in the city, sawing forty million feet of lumber annually.
+There are also works for smelting copper ore two miles below the city,
+or rather within that suburban portion of the city known as Hamtramck.
+
+Among the first objects of interest which attract the stranger's
+attention are the new City Hall and the Soldiers' Monument. The City
+Hall, fronting on one side of the square known as the Campus Martius, is
+a structure of which any city in the land might be proud. It is built of
+Cleveland sandstone, and faces on four streets,--being two hundred feet
+long on Woodward avenue and Griswold street, with a width of ninety feet
+on Fort street and Michigan avenue.
+
+It is built in the style of the Italian renaissance, with Mansard roof
+and a tower rising from the centre of the building, adorned at its four
+corners with colossal figures fourteen feet high, representing
+"_Justice_," "_Industry_," "_Arts_," and "_Commerce_." Its height from
+the ground to the top of the tower is a hundred and eighty feet, and the
+three ample stories above the basement furnish accommodation to the city
+and county offices, in addition to the Circuit and Recorder's Courts.
+The walls are frescoed, the floors laid in mosaics of colored marbles,
+and the Council Chamber and other public rooms are furnished with black
+walnut chairs and desks, and paneled in oak. With these exceptions,
+there is no woodwork about the immense building. Everything, from
+basement to dome, is brick and iron and stone. Even the floors are built
+in delicate arches of brick and iron, and iron staircases follow the
+windings of the tower to its dizzy top. It is reckoned fireproof. The
+exterior is curiously carved, and two large fountains adorn the
+inclosing grounds. The estimated cost of the building is about six
+hundred thousand dollars.
+
+From the airy outlook of the City Hall Tower, Detroit appears like a
+vast wheel, many of whose streets diverge like spokes from this common
+centre, reaching outward until they touch, or seem to touch, the wooded
+rim of the distant horizon. The hub of this immense wheel is the
+triangular open space called the Campus Martius, and the Soldiers'
+Monument, occupying the centre of the Campus Martius, is also the centre
+of this imaginary hub. Michigan avenue--one of the long arms of the
+wheel--loses itself in the western distance, and is called the Chicago
+road. Woodward avenue leads into the interior, toward Pontiac, and
+Gratiot avenue goes in the direction of Port Huron. Fort street, in yet
+another direction, guides the eye to Fort Wayne and the steeples of
+Sandwich, four miles away. Toward the southern or river side of the
+city, the resemblance to the wheel is nearly lost, and one sees nothing
+but compact squares of blocks, cut by streets crossing each other at
+right angles and running parallel and perpendicular to the river.
+Between the Campus Martius and Grand Circus Park there are half a dozen
+or more short streets, which form a group by themselves, and break in
+somewhat on the symmetry of the larger wheel, without destroying it.
+This point gives the best view of Detroit to be obtained anywhere about
+the city.
+
+The Soldiers' Monument is a handsome granite structure, fifty-five feet
+in height, the material of which was quarried from the granite beds of
+Westerly, Rhode Island, and modeled into shape under the superintending
+genius of Randolph Rogers, of Rome, Italy. It is surmounted by a massive
+allegorical statue, in bronze, of Michigan, and figures of the soldier
+and sailor, in the same material, adorn the four projections of the
+monument; while bronze eagles with spread wings are perched on smaller
+pedestals in the intermediate spaces. Large medallions, also in bronze,
+with the busts of Grant, Lincoln, Sherman and Farragut, in low relief,
+cover the four sides of the main shaft, and higher up the following
+inscription is imprinted against the white background of granite:--
+
+ "ERECTED BY THE PEOPLE OF MICHIGAN
+ IN HONOR OF THE MARTYRS WHO FELL
+ AND THE HEROES WHO FOUGHT
+ IN DEFENCE OF LIBERTY AND UNION."
+
+The bronzes and ornaments were imported from the celebrated foundry at
+Munich, Bavaria, and the cost of the monument--donated exclusively by
+private subscription--amounted to fifty-eight thousand dollars. The
+unveiling of the statue took place April ninth, 1872.
+
+Another feature of the city is the Public Library, founded in March,
+1865, and at present occupying the old Capitol, until the new and
+elegant Library building now in process of construction is completed.
+
+ [Illustration: WOODWARD AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN.]
+
+Beginning entirely without funds, ten years ago, it can now exhibit a
+muster roll of twenty-five thousand volumes, and is fairly started on
+the high road to fortune. There is a kind of poetic justice in the fact
+that its principal source of revenue accrues from county fines and
+penalties. Here is a knotty question for the divinity doctors, for in
+this case, at least, good is born of evil. The library is under the
+control of the Board of Education, and was given an existence from the
+State constitution. Some very rare volumes of Mexican antiquities have
+recently been purchased from England by the School Board and added to
+the library, at a cost of four hundred dollars. They contain a pictorial
+and hieroglyphic history of the Aztec races occupying Mexico when Cortes
+came over from a foreign shore with his Spanish galleons. The earliest
+date goes back to 1324, and the strange figures in the centre of the
+page are surrounded by devices indicating cycles of thirteen years, four
+of which made a great cycle, or a period of fifty-two years. The deeds
+of the Aztec king, _Tenuch_, and his successors, are here recorded, and
+through the efforts of an English nobleman who devoted his life to these
+researches, we have the translation rendered for us.
+
+The city has a scientific association, two years old, and also a
+Historical Society, in which her citizens manifest considerable pride.
+
+Detroit has been called, with reason, one of the most beautiful cities
+of the West. Transformed from the ancient _Teushagrondie_ into the
+present populous "City of the Strait," she sits like a happy princess,
+serene, on the banks of her broad river, guarding the gates of St.
+Clair. Backed by a State whose resources are second to none in the
+Union, emerging from an early history of bloody struggle and battle,
+rising like the fabled Phoenix, from the ashes of an apparent ruin,
+contributing her best blood and treasure to the war for liberty and
+union, she may well be proud of her past record, her present progress,
+her advancement toward a high civilization and her assured position.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ERIE.
+
+ Decoration Day in Pennsylvania.--Lake Erie.--Natural Advantages
+ of Erie.--Her Harbor, Commerce, and Manufactures.--Streets and
+ Public Buildings.--Soldiers' Monument.--Erie Cemetery.--East and
+ West Parks.--Perry's Victory.
+
+
+I took my fourth ride from Buffalo westward, on the Lake Shore Road, on
+the afternoon of May twenty-ninth, 1875, the day set apart that year by
+the patriotic citizens of Pennsylvania, for the decoration of her
+soldiers' graves. Passing the State line or boundary between New York
+and Pennsylvania, a little beyond Dunkirk, an unusually large assemblage
+of citizens and soldiers, with bouquets and a great profusion of
+flowers, at nearly every station, betokened the earnest patriotism of
+the old Keystone State. Pennsylvania will never be behind her sister
+States in doing honor to the brave men who gave up their lives while
+fighting her battles; and the demonstrations of each Decoration Day are
+evidences that she will not soon forget their deeds, or their claim upon
+her deepest gratitude.
+
+A beautiful sight opens to the view of the tourist as he turns his eye
+toward the broad, blue expanse of the lake, which may be seen at
+intervals from the car windows, from Buffalo to Toledo. The mind is
+quite naturally occupied with grand commercial schemes, on viewing such
+wonderful facilities for the promotion of enterprise. We have here, in
+Lake Erie, the connecting link in a chain of fresh-water oceans, which
+stretch from the Atlantic, westward, almost to the Rocky Mountains. Our
+internal prosperity is largely due to this great chain of lakes, which
+secure and facilitate cheap transportation, and have made possible the
+great inland cities, the pride of our Middle States.
+
+Erie is an intermediate point between Buffalo and Cleveland, and having
+a most excellent harbor, would seem destined to take rank among the
+first cities of America. But by that inscrutable law which, seemingly
+beyond reason, governs and controls the foundation and growth of cities
+and towns, natural advantages do not always seem to count; and as a
+large fish swallows a smaller one, so has Erie been dwarfed by her older
+rivals, who, getting an earlier foothold upon the shore of the lake,
+have absorbed its trade, and continued to maintain the advantage they at
+first secured. An increase of commerce on Lake Erie will undoubtedly
+throw a share to the city of Erie, and thus she may eventually succeed
+in occupying the position to which her harbor and railroads entitle her.
+
+Erie is on the lake, about midway of the brief stretch of shore which
+the narrow section of Western Pennsylvania, jutting up between New York
+and Ohio, secures to that State. It is her only lake town of any
+importance, is a port of entry, and has a population of nearly thirty
+thousand inhabitants. The harbor is the largest and best on Lake Erie.
+It is about four miles in length, one mile in width, and in depth
+varying from nine to twenty-five feet, thus permitting access to the
+largest lake vessels. It is formed by an island four miles in length,
+which lies in front of the city, and which, from its name of Presque
+Isle, indicates that within the memory of man it has been a peninsula.
+The bay is known as Presque Isle Bay. It is protected by a breakwater,
+and three lighthouses guard the entrance. Several large docks, furnished
+with railroad tracks, permit the transfer of merchandise to take place
+directly between the vessels and the cars. The terminus of the
+Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, and connected by the Lake Shore Railroad
+with all important points in the east and west, the city is fast
+developing into a strong commercial centre. A canal connecting with
+Beaver River, a tributary of the Ohio, facilitates commerce in the
+western section of Pennsylvania, and furnishes extensive water-power, of
+which various kinds of mills avail themselves. These mills and the many
+factories and foundries of the city--for Erie is a manufacturing town of
+considerable importance--produce iron ware, cars, machinery, organs,
+furniture, brass, leather, boots and shoes, and send them, by the
+various methods of transportation, to markets in the States and Canada.
+The great forest and mining regions of Pennsylvania find, at Erie, an
+outlet for their lumber, coal and iron ore; while the numerous
+productive farms which lie in the vicinity of the lake send quantities
+of grain to be shipped at this port.
+
+The city is built upon an elevated bluff, commanding an extensive view
+of the lake. It is regularly laid out, with broad streets crossing each
+other at right angles, and its general appearance is prosperous and
+pleasing. In the centre of the city are the Parks, two finely shaded
+inclosures, intersected by State street, and surrounded by handsome
+buildings. A Soldiers' Monument stands in one of them, erected to
+commemorate the memory of the brave men who fell in the War of the
+Rebellion. It is surmounted by two bronze statues of heroic size. There
+are also two handsome fountains within the Park inclosure. Near by is
+the classic structure used as a Court House. The Custom House is erected
+in a substantial style, near the shores of the lake. A new Opera House
+is also one of the features of the city. The Union Depot is an immense
+building, nearly five hundred feet in length, in the Romanesque style,
+two stories in height and surmounted by a cupola forty feet high. State
+street is the principal business thoroughfare.
+
+The Erie Cemetery, on the south side, is one of the most beautiful in
+the country. It is on a bluff overlooking the city and the lake, and
+comprises seventy-five acres, in which tree-shaded walks, elegant
+drives, velvet turf, running water, masses of shrubbery and brilliant
+flowers, together with the plain white headstones and the elaborate
+monuments which mark the resting-places of the dead, are united in a
+harmonious effect, which is most satisfactory to the beholder. Erie is
+very proud of this cemetery, and spares no pains to perfect it, while
+every year adds to its beauty.
+
+East and West Parks lie, as their names indicate, in opposite directions
+within the city, and are beautiful breathing places where its citizens
+resort for rest and recreation. Art has joined with nature in rendering
+these places attractive, and their trees, shrubbery, lawns, walks and
+drives, and general picturesqueness, combine to make them very charming
+spots.
+
+Erie has historical associations which render her of interest to one who
+would gather facts concerning his country. Lake Erie was the scene of a
+naval engagement between the British and Americans, on September tenth,
+1813, in which the latter were victorious. Commodore Perry, in command
+of the American fleet, sailed from this port on the memorable day, and
+when the engagement was concluded, brought thither his prizes. Several
+of his ships sunk in Lawrence Bay, and in fair weather the hull of the
+Niagara is still visible.
+
+The development of Western Pennsylvania is contributing more and more,
+as the years go by, to the prosperity of Erie. Her exceptionally fine
+harbor is already beginning to be recognized by commerce, and though the
+city may never rival Cleveland or Buffalo, the time may come when Erie
+will take rank as only second to them on Lake Erie, in commercial
+importance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+HARRISBURG.
+
+ A Historic Tree.--John Harris' Wild Adventure with the
+ Indians.--Harris Park.--History of Harrisburg.--Situation
+ and Surroundings.--State House.--State Library.--A Historic
+ Flag.--View from State House Dome.--Capitol Park.--Monument
+ to Soldiers of Mexican War.--Monument to Soldiers of Late
+ War.--Public Buildings.--Front Street.--Bridges over the
+ Susquehanna.--Mt. Kalmia Cemetery.--Present Advantages and
+ Future Prospects of Harrisburg.
+
+
+A century and a half ago, John Harris, seeking traffic with the red men
+of the Susquehanna, built a rude hut, dug a well, and thereby began a
+work which, taken up by his son, led to the founding of the Capital City
+of Pennsylvania, a city destined to take rank among the first of a great
+State. The stump of an old tree, in a beautiful little park which skirts
+the Susquehanna, on a line parallel with Front street, marks the scene
+of an early adventure of Harris with the Indians, and tells the stranger
+of his birth and death. About 1718 or 1719, Harris, who had settled at
+this point on the Susquehanna, as a trader, was visited by a predatory
+band of Indians returning from the "Patowmark," who made an exchange of
+goods with him, for rum. Becoming drunken and riotous, he finally
+refused them any more liquor, when they seized him and bound him to a
+tree, dancing around their captive, until he thought his last day had
+come. His negro servant, however, summoned some friendly Shawnees from
+the opposite side of the river, who, after a slight struggle with the
+drunken Indians, rescued Harris from his bonds and probably from a death
+by torture. The stump referred to is that of the historical tree, which
+was a gigantic mulberry, eleven feet seven inches in circumference. Here
+also is the grave of Harris, which is surrounded by a strong iron fence,
+and a young mulberry tree has been planted, by one of his descendants,
+to take the place of the one whose trunk alone stands as a monument of
+the past.
+
+During the summer months this romantic spot is the favorite resort of
+the boys and girls of the neighborhood, and whenever the weather is
+favorable, a large troop of juveniles may be seen spinning their tops,
+rolling their hoops and playing at croquet on the lawn. What a contrast
+is here unfolded to the imagination, as we stand at the grave of the
+venerable pioneer, and contemplate the wonderful change that has
+characterized the progress of events during the past hundred years. But
+little more than a century ago there was a solitary trader with his
+family upon the borders of a great river in the wilderness. His goods
+were brought on a pack-horse, and his ferry was a row boat. To-day a
+thriving, beautiful city takes the place of the log cabin; children
+sport where once the treacherous Indian sought the life of the hardy
+frontiersman; the river is spanned by wonderful bridges; and a hundred
+railroad trains pass through its streets in the course of twenty-four
+hours.
+
+Harrisburg was laid out by John Harris, Jr., the son of the pioneer, in
+1785; it was incorporated as a borough in 1791; became the State Capital
+in 1812; and received a city charter in 1860. Its population in 1880
+numbered more than thirty thousand persons.
+
+ [Illustration: HARRISBURG AND BRIDGES OVER THE SUSQUEHANNA.]
+
+Harrisburg is most picturesquely situated, on the Susquehanna River,
+at the eastern gateway of the Alleghenies. The river is here a mile
+wide, shallow at most seasons of the year, but capable of becoming a
+turbulent torrent, carrying destruction along its banks. On the opposite
+side of the river to the south are the Conestoga Hills; while to the
+northward are the bold and craggy outlines of the Kittatinny or Blue
+Mountains. But five miles away is the gap in these mountains through
+which the Susquehanna forces its way, and the summits of these sentinels
+are plainly visible. Although on the very threshold of the mountainous
+region of Pennsylvania, the pastoral beauty of landscape which
+characterizes eastern Pennsylvania creeps up to meet the ruggedness
+which predominates beyond; and the two are here blended with most
+charming results; the softness of the one half veiling the ruggedness of
+the other; while the picturesqueness of each is heightened by contrast.
+
+The handsomest and most noticeable building of Harrisburg is the State
+House, which is conspicuously placed on an eminence near the centre of
+the city. It is T-shaped, having a front of one hundred and eighty feet
+by eighty in depth, and with an extension of one hundred and five feet
+by fifty-four feet. It is built of brick, and is three stories high,
+including the basement. A large circular portico, sustained by six Ionic
+columns, fronts the main entrance. The building is surmounted by a dome,
+reaching an altitude of one hundred and eight feet. A State Library,
+with accommodation for one hundred thousand volumes, and possessing at
+the present time thirty thousand volumes, is one of the features of the
+Capitol. This library contains a number of portraits, curiosities and
+art treasures, prominent among which are two small portraits of
+Columbus and Americus Vespucius, the work of a celebrated Florentine
+artist; a picture of the event already narrated in the life of John
+Harris; and a reflecting telescope, purchased by Benjamin Franklin, and
+through which was taken the first observation in the western hemisphere,
+of the transit of Venus.
+
+In the Flag Room of the State House, where are preserved the
+Pennsylvania State flags used by the different regimental organizations
+in the war for the Union, is a flag captured by the Confederates at
+Gettysburg, and afterwards recaptured in the baggage of Jefferson Davis.
+We find the following brief account of the capture of this flag in the
+"Harrisburg Visitors' Guide," prepared by Mr. J. R. Orwig, Assistant
+State Librarian, to whom we are indebted for favors in our literary
+work. "It was on the evening of the first day; all the color guard were
+killed, the last being Corporal Joseph Gutelius, of Mifflinburg, Union
+County. When surrounded, and almost alone, he was commanded to surrender
+the flag. His mute reply was to enfold it in his arms, and he was
+instantly shot dead through its silken folds." He lies buried at
+Gettysburg.
+
+The view from the State House dome is exceptionally grand. I stood on
+that eminence one bright morning, during the early part of my sojourn at
+Harrisburg, in the spring of 1877. To eastward is a picturesque, rolling
+country, varied by hill and dale, field and woodland, with villages or
+isolated farmhouses nestling here and there in their midst, the
+brilliant green tint of the foreground melting imperceptibly away into
+the soft purple haze of the far distance. In front of the city to the
+westward lies the broad river, gleaming like a ribbon of silver in the
+sunlight, dotted with emerald islands, and winding away to the
+southeast, between sloping banks and rocky crags, until it at last loses
+itself in the misty horizon. To the northward is distinctly seen the gap
+in the mountains through which the river approaches the city. The bold
+and abrupt outlines of the mountains are plainly traced, and the scenery
+in this region is exceptionally grand. Immediately surrounding the State
+House is the city, spread out with its labyrinth of streets, its
+factories and furnaces, its stately public buildings, and its elegant
+private residences, presenting a panorama fair to look upon, and
+evidencing the prosperity and industry of its people. To obtain a view
+from this dome is well worth a visit to Harrisburg.
+
+The State House is surrounded by Capitol Park, embracing thirteen acres,
+and inclosed by an iron fence. These grounds gently slope from the
+centre, and are ornamented with stately trees, beautiful shrubbery and
+flowers and closely-shorn greensward. The site was set apart for its
+present purpose before Harrisburg was a city, by John Harris, its
+public-spirited founder. Fine views are obtained from it of the suburb
+of East Harrisburg and the Reservoir, Mt. Kalmia Cemetery, the tower of
+the new State Arsenal, and the dome of the State Insane Asylum. The
+prominent feature of this park, next to the State House, is, however,
+the beautiful monument erected to the memory of the soldiers who fell in
+the Mexican War. It is one hundred and five feet high, with a sub-base
+of granite, a base proper, with buttresses at each corner surmounted by
+eagles, and a Corinthian column of Maryland marble, surmounted by a
+statue of Victory, the latter executed at Rome, of fine Italian marble.
+The sides of the base are paneled, and contain the names of the
+different battles of the Mexican War. The monument is surrounded by an
+inclosure constructed of muskets used by the United States soldiers in
+Mexico. In front of the monument are a number of guns, trophies of the
+Mexican war, and several others presented by General Lafayette.
+
+Another monument, at the intersection of State and Second streets, is in
+its design purely antique, being founded on the proportions of the pair
+of obelisks at the gate of Memphis, and of that which stands in the
+Place Vendome at Paris. It contains the following inscription: "To the
+Soldiers of Dauphin County, who gave their lives for the life of the
+Union, in the war for the suppression of the Rebellion, 1861-5. Erected
+by their fellow-citizens, 1869."
+
+In East Harrisburg, or "Allison's Hill," as it is called, will be seen
+Brant's private residence, built in the style of the Elizabethan period,
+the massive stone Catholic Convent, and St. Genevieve's Academy. On
+State street is Grace M. E. Church, one of the most costly and beautiful
+churches in the State. Not far away is St. Patrick's Pro-Cathedral. The
+State Lunatic Asylum is a vast and imposing edifice, a mile and a half
+north of the city.
+
+Front street, which overlooks the river, is the favorite promenade of
+the city. Here may be seen the broad river, with its craft and numerous
+islands, the villages on the opposite shore, and the delightful
+landscape beyond. Here the citizens often congregate on fine evenings,
+to watch the sunset views, which are especially fine from this point. On
+the ridge opposite, is Fort Washington and the line of defenses erected
+in 1863, in expectation of an invasion of the Southern army. Front
+street is by far the finest street in the city, containing the most
+imposing residences, being bordered by trees, and forming a most
+attractive drive. From State street to Paxton, it presents an almost
+unbroken range of palatial buildings of brick, stone, marble or granite.
+On this street is found the residence of the Governor, presented to the
+State by the citizens of Harrisburg, in 1864, as the Executive Mansion.
+A more desirable location for a residence can scarcely be imagined than
+that of Hon. J. D. Cameron, on the southeast corner of State and Front
+streets, overlooking the Susquehanna. Near the corner of Front street
+and Washington avenue is the old "Harris Mansion," originally erected in
+1766, by John Harris, and remaining in the Harris family until 1840, but
+now the home of Hon. Simon Cameron.
+
+The Market street bridge spans the river, resting midway on Forster's
+Island, the western end being an ancient structure, dating back to 1812,
+while the eastern end, having once been destroyed by flood, and once by
+fire, was rebuilt in modern style in 1866. The second bridge across the
+river is at the head of Mulberry street, but it is used for trains
+alone. This bridge is also divided by Forster's Island. It has once been
+destroyed by fire, and was entirely remodeled in 1856.
+
+Mt. Kalmia Cemetery is a charming resting-place of the dead, on the
+heights overlooking the city. Its natural beauties are many, and they
+have been enhanced by art. It is reached from East State street.
+
+Harrisburg has extensive iron manufactories, and is the centre of six
+important railways. More than one hundred passenger trains arrive and
+depart daily, and few cities have a greater number of transient
+visitors. It is one of the most prosperous cities of the Commonwealth;
+situated in a fertile valley, in view of some of the grandest scenery in
+America, with railroads, canals and macadamized roads, diverging in all
+directions, and connecting it with every section of the country; with
+important business interests, and an intelligent, industrious and
+prosperous population; the political centre of one of the chief States
+of the Union; it has much to congratulate itself upon in the present,
+and more to hope for from the future. Another decade will see vastly
+increased business interests, and a population nearly if not quite
+double that of to-day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HARTFORD.
+
+ The City of Publishers.--Its Geographical Location.--The New
+ State House.--Mark Twain and the "None Such."--The "Heathen
+ Chinee."--Wadsworth Atheneum.--Charter Oak.--George H. Clark's
+ Poem.--Putnam's Hotel.--Asylum for Deaf Mutes.--The Sign
+ Language.--A Fragment of Witchcraftism.--Hartford _Courant_.--
+ The Connecticut River.
+
+
+Having decided to pitch our tents in Hartford, we moved from New Haven
+by rail, on the afternoon of September eighth, 1874. A hot, dusty day it
+was, indeed, with mercury at ninety-two in the shade, and dust enough to
+enable passengers of the rollicking order to inscribe monograms on the
+backs of their unsuspecting neighbors.
+
+The distance, according to recent time tables, is one dollar, or an hour
+and fifteen minutes. The scenery encountered on this route is less
+varied than that from New York to New Haven, and yet there is much to
+interest the careful observer. The only town of any importance between
+these rival cities is Meriden, an enterprising city of twenty thousand
+souls, standing midway between them.
+
+Hartford, the capital of nutmegdom, is the second city of Connecticut,
+having, as shown by the last census, a population of thirty-seven
+thousand. Pleasantly situated on the Connecticut River, and enjoying now
+the advantage of exclusive legislation for the State, Hartford is
+destined to become one of the most important cities of New England.
+
+Authors, artists and publishers have ever found Hartford a fruitful
+field for the development of brains and enterprise. It is, perhaps, not
+exaggeration to say that in no other city of the United States of the
+same size is there so large a proportion of the population devoted to
+literature. The American and Hartford Publishing Companies, the firms of
+Burr, Scranton, Worthington, Dustin, Gilman and Company, and many others
+of less note, are located here.
+
+The new State House, now in process of erection, is destined to be one
+of the finest buildings in the country. The site commands a view of the
+city and its surroundings for many miles. Among the objects of interest
+to be found here are the residence of "Mark Twain" and the State Insane
+Asylum. "Mark's" house is at the end of Farmington avenue, on a little
+eminence, at the foot of which flows a nameless stream.
+
+Its style of construction is so unlike the average house that it has won
+for itself the characteristic title of "The None Such."
+
+It is still in the hands of the architect, and will probably not be
+ready for occupancy before November. If this building is not regarded as
+a marvel, then I will confess that, after nearly twenty years of travel,
+I have yet to learn the meaning of that term as applied to architecture.
+The plat of ground on which the house and adjacent buildings stand was
+selected and purchased by Mrs. "Twain"--so said the gentlemanly
+architect who replied to our inquiries. As the genial "Mark" desires the
+maximum quantity of light, his apartments are so arranged as to give him
+the sun all day. The bricks of the outer walls of the house are painted
+in three colors, making the general effect decidedly fantastic.
+
+Taking it all in all, I have nowhere seen a more curious study in
+architecture, and hope, for the satisfaction of its eccentric owner,
+that it will quite meet his expectations.
+
+The Celestials, or representatives from China, are now so often seen,
+from California eastward to New England, that they have ceased to be
+considered objects of special interest in any part of the United States.
+I have met them more or less in my journeyings during the last two
+years, and have often wondered if others see their strange
+characteristics from the same standpoint that I do. To me, Ah Sin is
+ingenious, enterprising, economical, and the essence of quiet good
+humor.
+
+Opposite my quarters here in Hartford are two of these odd-looking
+Chinamen, whom I will, for convenience, name Ching Wing Shing and Chang
+Boomerang.
+
+My rooms being directly opposite the store of Boomerang and Company, an
+excellent opportunity is afforded me for witnessing their varied devices
+to invite trade and entertain their customers. Although only tea and
+coffee are advertised, Chang's store will be found, on close inspection,
+to strongly resemble the "Old Curiosity Shop," described by Dickens,
+there being a small assortment of everything in their line, from tea and
+coffee to watermelons.
+
+Chang and Ching invariably wear a smile upon their "childlike and bland"
+features. School children passing that way seem to take pleasure in
+teasing these mild-mannered China merchants, and unfortunate indeed is
+the firm of Boomerang and Company, if their backs are turned on their
+youthful tormenters; for these mischievous urchins seem to think it no
+crime to pilfer anything owned or presided over by their pig-tailed
+neighbors. Should Chang or Ching discover their sportive enemies gliding
+away with the tempting fruits of their stands, it is useless to pursue,
+for a troop of juvenile confederates will rush into the store the moment
+it is vacated and help themselves to whatever may please their fancy.
+
+
+THE WADSWORTH ATHENEUM.
+
+While taking a stroll down Main street the other day my attention was
+arrested by a three-story brownstone building, standing on the east side
+and back some distance from the street. I had only to glance at the
+large, bold lettering across its front to be told that it was the
+Wadsworth Atheneum. Deciding to take a look at the interior of this
+receptacle of antiquities, I soon made the acquaintance of W. J.
+Fletcher, the gentlemanly assistant librarian of the Watkins Library,
+who seemed to take an especial pleasure in showing me everything of
+interest, and who spared no pains in explaining everything about which I
+had a question to ask.
+
+There were so many curiosities of ancient as well as modern pattern,
+that it would be impossible to notice all in a work of this magnitude,
+and hence I shall content myself with presenting a few subjects which,
+to me at least, were of striking interest. Stepping into the Historical
+Rooms my attention was first called to the stump of the famous Charter
+Oak, which will ever form an interesting chapter in Connecticut history.
+A very comfortable seat or arm-chair has been moulded from this aged
+relic, and while sitting within its venerable arms, I copied the
+following poem by George H. Clark, the manuscript of which is framed and
+hung up over the chair. I cannot endorse the sentiment of the poet, but
+will record his lines.
+
+ September 10th, 1858.
+
+DEAR SIR:--You seem to take so much interest in my lines on the
+destruction of the old oak, that I have thought you might be pleased
+with a copy in the author's handwriting, and accordingly inclose one.
+Yours,
+
+ GEO. H. CLARK.
+
+
+THE OAK.
+
+ 1. "Yes--blot the last sad vestige out--
+ Burn all the useless wood;
+ Root up the stump, that none may know
+ Where the dead monarch stood.
+ Let traffic's inauspicious din
+ Here run its daily round,
+ And break the solemn memories
+ Of this once holy ground.
+
+ 2. "Your fathers, long the hallowed spot
+ Have kept with jealous care,
+ That worshippers from many lands
+ Might pay their homage there;
+ You spurn the loved memento now,
+ Forget the tyrant's yoke,
+ And lend Oblivion aid to gorge
+ Our cherished Charter Oak.
+
+ 3. "'Tis well, when all our household gods
+ For paltry gain are sold,
+ That e'en their altars should be razed
+ And sacrificed for gold.
+ Then tear the strong, tenacious roots,
+ With vandal hands, away,
+ And pour within that sacred crypt
+ The garish light of day.
+
+ 4. "Let crowds unconscious tread the soil
+ By Wordsworth sanctified,
+ Let Mammon bring, to crown the hill,
+ Its retinue of pride,
+ Destroy the patriot pilgrim's shrine,
+ His idols overthrow,
+ Till o'er the ruin grimly stalks
+ The ghost of long ago.
+
+ 5. "So may the muse of coming time
+ Indignant speak of them
+ Who Freedom's brightest jewel rent
+ From her proud diadem,--
+ And lash with her contemptuous scorn
+ The man who gave the stroke
+ That desecrates the place where stood
+ The brave old Charter Oak."
+
+It appears to me that no more sensible thing could have been done after
+the tree fell to the ground, August twenty-first, 1859, than to preserve
+it here, where it will outlive, by centuries, its rapid decay in an open
+field, exposed to sun and storm. Thousands may now see the famous oak
+that otherwise might never know its location or history. It stood on the
+grounds formerly owned by Samuel Wordsworth, near Charter Oak Avenue,
+and its top having been blown down and broken during a violent storm, it
+was afterwards dug up and taken to the Historical Rooms of the Wadsworth
+Atheneum.
+
+After occupying two hours in looking through the Historical Department,
+we came to a corner of the room devoted to an exhibition of the relics
+identified with the history of General Israel Putnam, the Revolutionary
+patriot, who was commander-in-chief of the American forces engaged at
+the battle of Bunker Hill.
+
+Connecticut takes a lively interest in anything that pertains to her
+favorite hero, and we were engaged not less than half an hour in an
+examination of the various articles impersonating "Old Put." Most
+Americans are familiar with the story of his early life and adventures,
+but I think few are aware of the fact that at one time he was a country
+landlord. Here at the Atheneum they have the very sign-board that
+attracted the traveler to "Putnam's Hotel." A life-size portrait of the
+gallant General Wolfe, who was slain while leading his army against
+Quebec, is painted on the board, which is three feet long by two and a
+half wide. Imagine now, the hero of a hundred battles and adventures,
+performing the duties of "mine host"--at once hostler, bartender and
+perhaps table girl in the dining room.
+
+The character of the man who had the ability to rise from the position
+of an humble farmer and inn-keeper to that of Senior Major-General of
+the United States armies, is an index to the character of the American
+people. Often on the battle-field were the titled nobility of Great
+Britain compelled to fly before the crushing blows of this sturdy
+yeoman, who, leaving his plow in the furrow, rushed to the field of
+danger and glory. Casting aside the habiliments of the farmer, he
+buckled on his armor and dared to lead where the bravest dared to
+follow. Israel Putman
+
+ "Sleeps the sleep that knows not breaking,"
+
+but his glorious deeds will never be forgotten while the blessings of
+liberty are appreciated by the descendants of that galaxy of devoted
+patriots who rallied around the standard of George Washington.
+
+The Deaf and Dumb Institute, situated on Asylum Hill, is the oldest
+institution of the kind in the United States, having been established in
+1817, by Rev. F. H. Gallaudet, a noble and generous philanthropist, who
+devoted his life and fortune to the elevation and enlightenment of the
+afflicted. A monument recently erected to his memory, in front of the
+Institute, attests the regard in which he is still held by those who
+revere him as their benefactor.
+
+It was my pleasure, while in Hartford, to attend a lecture in the sign
+language, by Professor D. E. Bartlett, who is reputed to be the oldest
+teacher living, and who commenced work at this institute forty years
+ago. I shall never forget my emotions as I eagerly watched sign and
+gesture, and at the same time noted its effect upon the features of each
+face in his attentive audience. What a noble mission, to thus lead these
+children of silence from the prison darkness of ignorance into the
+beautiful light of knowledge? May those who devote their lives to such a
+cause reap the rich reward which their benevolence deserves!
+
+In 1652 Hartford had the _honor_ of executing the first witch ever heard
+of in America. Her name was Mrs. Greensmith. She was accused in the
+indictment of practicing evil things on the body of Ann Cole, which did
+not appear to be true; but a certain Rev. Mr. Stone and other ministers
+swore that Greensmith had confessed to them that the devil possessed
+her, and the righteous court hung her on their indictment.
+
+What would that court have done with the spiritual manifestations rife
+in these parts to-day? It is a bitter sarcasm on our Plymouth Rock
+progenitors that, having fled from the old country on account of
+religious persecution, they should inaugurate their freedom to worship
+God on the shores of the new world by hanging witches!
+
+The leading paper of the city is the Hartford _Courant_, which is ably
+edited by General Joseph R. Hawley, and is a powerful political organ
+throughout New England. General Hawley distinguished himself during the
+late war as a brave officer, entering the army as captain and rising to
+the rank of brigadier general. The _Courant_, like its soldier-editor,
+may always be found fighting in the van.
+
+The Connecticut River at Hartford is about a quarter of a mile wide, and
+sweeps onward in a swift current, through sinuous banks, until it
+mingles with the waters of the Sound at Saybrook. The valley through
+which this river seeks a passage to the sea is one of the loveliest to
+be found anywhere, and gazing down upon it from the surrounding heights,
+as it lies veiled in blue distance, is like looking upon a dream of
+Arcadia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+LANCASTER.
+
+ First Visit to Lancaster.--Eastern Pennsylvania.--Conestoga
+ River.--Early History of Lancaster.--Early Dutch Settlers.--
+ Manufactures.--Public Buildings.--Whit-Monday.--Home of three
+ Noted Persons.--James Buchanan, his Life and Death.--Thaddeus
+ Stevens and his Burial Place.--General Reynolds and his
+ Death.--"Cemetery City."
+
+
+My first visit to Lancaster was made on a bright morning in the early
+part of April, 1877. We rode out of the West Philadelphia Depot in the
+eight o'clock accommodation, which we were told would make sixty-five
+stops in a short journey of seventy-three miles. I did not count the
+stations, but should have no hesitancy in fully indorsing my informant.
+The frequency of the halts gave us an excellent opportunity to explore
+the surrounding country, and reminded one of street-car experiences in
+metropolitan cities, where one is brought to a stand at every crossing.
+Eastern Pennsylvania is beyond question the finest section of the State;
+and the tourist who sojourns at Bryn Mawr, Downingtown, Bird-in-Hand,
+and many of their sister villages, will see abundant evidences of the
+wealth and prosperity of an industrious people. The country is
+sufficiently rolling to be picturesque, without any of the ruggedness
+which characterizes the central and western portions of the State.
+Sometimes from the car windows the roofs and spires of several villages
+may be seen in different directions, while substantial farmhouses with
+their commodious out-buildings, are on every hand. The land is brought
+to a high state of cultivation, and the entire region seems almost like
+an extensive park.
+
+Lancaster, the county-seat of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, is
+situated on the Conestoga River, seventy-three miles from Philadelphia.
+This river, which is a tributary of the Susquehanna, is made navigable
+by nine locks and slack-water pools, from Lancaster to its mouth at Safe
+Harbor, eighteen miles distant. Considerable trade is brought to the
+city by its means; while Tidewater Canal opens up navigable
+communication to Baltimore, by way of Port Deposit. Lancaster was, from
+1799 to 1812, the seat of the State government; it was incorporated in
+1818, and was at one time the principal inland town of Pennsylvania. The
+oldest turnpike in the United States terminates at Lancaster, connecting
+that city with Philadelphia. It has now something more than twenty-five
+thousand inhabitants, largely descended from the early Dutch settlers,
+whose names are still borne, and whose language, corrupted into
+"Pennsylvania Dutch," is still a most familiar one in that region.
+
+The city is principally a manufacturing one, producing locomotives,
+axes, carriages and cotton goods, and being particularly celebrated for
+its rifles. It has many fine buildings, both public and private. The
+Court House and County Prison will both attract attention, the former
+being in the Corinthian and the latter in the Norman style of
+architecture. Fulton Hall, near the Market-place, is a large edifice
+used for public assemblies. Franklin and Marshall College, organized in
+1853 by the union of Marshall College with the old Franklin College,
+founded in 1787, is found on James street, and possesses a library of
+thirteen thousand volumes. It has a large number of both daily and
+weekly newspapers, and not less than fifteen churches.
+
+Whit-Monday is by far the greatest social holiday with the Germans of
+Lancaster city and county, and, as such, is the scene of general
+festivities among the city folk and a large influx of country visitors.
+On the return of this day in Lancaster, the venders of beer, peanuts,
+colored lemonade and pop-corn are stationed at every corner, and are
+unusually clamorous and busy. The pic-nics, shows and flying horses are
+well patronized; but I am told that the scene in the public square is
+not so animated as in former days, when soap venders and the razor strop
+man monopolized the attention of the rustic lads and lasses. Public
+ceremonies have no apparent place in the observance of this anniversary.
+
+Lancaster is noted for having been the residence of three persons who
+have played an important part in the affairs of the nation: James
+Buchanan, our fifteenth President; Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, the champion
+of the slave; and General Reynolds, the gallant soldier, who fell at
+Gettysburg. These all sleep their last sleep within the city limits.
+James Buchanan, though born in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, made his
+home at Lancaster during all the years of his statesmanship, finding at
+Wheatland, his country residence, in the vicinity of the city,
+relaxation from the cares of public life. Born in 1791, in 1814 he was
+elected a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. In 1820
+he was elected Congressman, holding that position until 1831, when he
+was appointed ambassador to Russia. In 1834 he was made Senator; in 1845
+Secretary of State under President Polk, and Ambassador to England in
+1854. In 1856 he was elected President of the United States, the close
+of his administration being signalized by the secession of South
+Carolina, and the incipient steps of the Rebellion. He died at his home
+at Wheatland, in Lancaster, on June first, 1868.
+
+The remains of Thaddeus Stevens, for so many years one of the most
+fearless champions of the anti-slavery cause in Congress, lie buried in
+"Schreiner's Cemetery," in a quiet and retired corner at the side
+furthest from its entrance on West Chestnut street. An exceedingly plain
+stone, with a simple but expressive inscription, tells the stranger the
+date of his birth and death, and the reasons which led him to request
+that his remains should be laid in this, the most unpretentious cemetery
+I have ever seen within the limits of any city. The word Stevens is
+clearly cut in large letters on the west end of the stone. On the
+opposite end I noticed a gilt star. On the north side is the following
+inscription:--
+
+ "THADDEUS STEVENS,
+ BORN AT DANVILLE, CALEDONIA CO., VERMONT,
+ APRIL 4TH, 1792.
+ DIED AT WASHINGTON, D. C,
+ AUGUST 11TH, 1868."
+
+On the south side of the monument are found these words:--
+
+ "I repose in this quiet and secluded spot,
+ Not from any natural preference for solitude,
+ But finding other cemeteries limited as to race,
+ By charter rules,
+ I have chosen this that I might illustrate in my death
+ The principles which I advocated through a long life:
+ Equality of man before his Creator."
+
+General Reynolds was among the first to fall at the battle of
+Gettysburg. On the evening of June thirtieth, 1863, while commanding the
+First, Third and Eleventh Corps of the Army of the Potomac, he encamped
+near the village of Emmetsburg, Maryland. He was ordered by General
+Meade to move early in the morning, with his First and Third Corps, in
+the direction of Gettysburg. The Third Cavalry Division, under General
+John Buford, was attacked on Wednesday morning, on the Chambersburg
+pike, about two miles west of the village, by the vanguard of the Rebel
+army, which, however, were driven back upon their reserves, but advanced
+again and, with greatly augmented numbers, drove the Union troops before
+them. General Wadsworth, hearing the sound of the conflict, came up with
+his men and seized the range of hills in the direction of Chambersburg,
+overlooking the battle ground from the northwest. While Wadsworth was
+getting into position, Reynolds rode forward, unattended, to gain an
+idea of the position and numbers of the enemy. He discovered a heavy
+force not far distant, in a grove, and, while reconnoitring through his
+field-glass, one of the enemy's sharpshooters took aim at him, with
+fatal effect. He fell to the ground, never to rise again. He was a brave
+and dauntless soldier, who had already won such distinction on the
+battlefield that few were entrusted with as heavy responsibilities as
+he. Had his life been prolonged, no doubt he would have been promoted
+still higher, and his name might have been written among those of the
+successful generals of the war. His ashes repose at Lancaster, where due
+honor is done them.
+
+Lancaster might not inappropriately be called the Cemetery City, for
+every principal street seems to lead to a cemetery. Here, in these
+cities of the dead, lie those who have passed away for many generations
+back. Numerous venerable stones record, in Dutch, the names and virtues
+of Herrs and Fraus who lived and died in the last century, while more
+modern tombstones and monuments are erected over the later dead. Few
+places are more interesting to one who would study a people and their
+history, than an old graveyard; and few cities furnish the visitor more
+numerous or better opportunities than Lancaster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MILWAUKEE.
+
+ Rapid Development of the Northwest.--The "West" Forty Years
+ Ago.--Milwaukee and its Commerce and Manufactures.--Grain
+ Elevators.--Harbor.--Divisions of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Northwestern National Asylum for Disabled
+ Soldiers.--German Population.--Influence and Results of German
+ Immigration.--Bank Riot in 1862.--Ancient Tumuli.--Mound
+ Builders.--Mounds Near Milwaukee.--Significance of Same.--Early
+ Traders.--Foundation of the City in 1835.--Excelling Chicago in
+ 1870.--Population and Commerce in 1880.
+
+
+There is no more astonishing fact connected with the history of our
+country than the rapid settlement of the Northwest, the development of
+its vast agricultural and mineral resources, and the almost magical
+growth of towns and cities along the margins of its lakes and rivers. A
+person who has not passed middle age can remember when the "West"
+indicated Indiana and Illinois, which were reached by the emigrant after
+many days of weary travel in his own rude-covered wagon, and before
+starting on his journey to which he bade kindred and friends a solemn
+adieu, scarcely hoping to meet them again in this world. Then the
+present great trade centres of the west were mere villages, with
+ambitious aspirations, it is true, but contending for a successful
+future against fearful odds. A man who has reached threescore and ten
+can remember when most of these towns and cities had no existence save
+as Indian trading posts, and when most of the country west of the
+Mississippi was as yet unexplored and regarded either as a desert waste
+or a howling wilderness. Only the brave Jesuit missionaries had at that
+period dared the perils of something even more dangerous than a frontier
+life, and established missions throughout the Northwest, on the sites of
+what are to-day thriving towns.
+
+But the genius and daring of the Anglo-Saxon race have changed all this.
+Civilization has impressed itself so deeply on our Northwestern
+territory, that were it, by any unfortunate contingency, destroyed or
+removed to-day, it would take longer time to obliterate its footprints
+than it has required to make them.
+
+Among the cities of the West remarkable for rapid growth, Milwaukee, on
+the western bank of Lake Michigan, is especially prominent. First
+settled in 1835, and not chartered as a city until 1846, she has made
+such rapid strides in both population and commerce, that in 1880 her
+inhabitants numbered 115,578, and in 1870 she claimed the rank of the
+fourth city in the Union in marine commerce, a rank which she has since
+lost, not by any backward steps on her own part, but because of the
+sudden and astonishing development of other cities.
+
+A rival of Chicago, Milwaukee shares with that city the commerce of the
+lakes, and is connected by steamboats with many points on the opposite
+side of Lake Michigan and with more distant ports. She is the lake
+terminus of a large number of railroads which drain an agricultural
+region of great extent and fertility; while her nearness to the copper
+mines of Lake Superior and the inexhaustible iron mines distant but from
+forty to fifty miles to the northward, contribute to make her a
+manufacturing centre. A single establishment for the manufacture of
+railroad iron was established, at a cost of a million of dollars. She
+has other iron works, and manufactures machinery, agricultural
+implements, car wheels and steam boilers, large quantities of tobacco
+and cigars; furnishes the Northwest with furniture, and has extensive
+pork packing establishments, while the products of her flouring mills
+and lager beer breweries find markets in every quarter of the United
+States, and have a reputation all their own. The rolling mill of the
+North Chicago Rolling Mill Company is one of the most extensive in the
+West.
+
+As a grain depot, Milwaukee takes high rank. There are six immense
+elevators within the limits of the city, with a united capacity of
+3,450,000 bushels; the largest one, the grain elevator of the Milwaukee
+and St. Paul Railroad, being one of the largest on the continent, and
+having a storage capacity of 1,500,000 bushels. The flour mills of E.
+Sanderson & Company have a daily capacity of one thousand barrels of
+flour.
+
+The harbor of Milwaukee is the best on the south or west shore of Lake
+Michigan. It is formed by the mouth of the Milwaukee River, and the
+largest lake boat can ascend it for two miles, to the heart of the city,
+at which point the Menomonee River unites with the Milwaukee. The course
+of the Milwaukee River is nearly due south, while that of the Menomonee
+is nearly due west; and by these two rivers and their united stream
+after their junction, the city is divided into three very nearly equal
+districts, which are severally known as the East, being that portion of
+the city between the Milwaukee River and Lake Michigan; the West, that
+portion included between the two rivers; and the South, or the territory
+south of them both. The city embraces an area of seventeen square miles,
+and is laid out with the regularity characteristic of western cities.
+The business quarter lies in a sort of hollow in the neighborhood of the
+two rivers, whose shores are lined with wharves. The East and West
+portions of the city are chiefly occupied by residences, the former
+being upon a high bluff, overlooking the lake, and the latter upon a
+still higher bluff west of the river.
+
+Milwaukee is known as the "Cream City of the Lakes," this name being
+derived from the cream-colored brick of which many of the buildings are
+constructed. It gives to the streets a peculiarly light and cheerful
+aspect. The whole architectural appearance of the city is one of
+primness rather than of grandeur, which might not inappropriately
+suggest for it the name of the "Quaker City of the West." The residence
+streets are shaded by avenues of trees, which add to the cheerful beauty
+of the town. The principal hotels and retail stores are found upon East
+Water street, Wisconsin street and Second avenue, which are all three
+wide and handsome thoroughfares. The United States Custom House stands
+on the corner of Wisconsin and Milwaukee streets, and is the finest
+public building in the city. It is of Athens stone, and contains the
+Post Office and United States Courts. The County Court House is also a
+striking edifice. The Opera House, used for theatrical purposes, is
+worthy of mention; while the Academy of Music, which was erected in
+1864, by the German Musical Society, at a cost of $65,000, has an
+elegant auditorium, seating two thousand three hundred persons. The
+Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. John, and the new Baptist Church, are
+fine church edifices, but the finest which the city contains is the
+Immanual Presbyterian Church. A Free Public Library possesses a
+collection of fourteen thousand volumes, and a well-supplied reading
+room. Several banking houses have imposing buildings. The most prominent
+among the educational institutions of the city is the Milwaukee Female
+College, which was finished in 1873. There are three Orphan Asylums, a
+Home for the Friendless, and two Hospitals. One of the chief points of
+interest to the visitor is the Northwestern National Asylum for disabled
+soldiers, which furnishes excellent accommodation for from seven hundred
+to eight hundred inmates. It is an immense brick edifice, located three
+miles from the city, in the midst of grounds four hundred and
+twenty-five acres in extent, more than half of which is under
+cultivation, and the remainder laid out as a park. The institution has a
+reading room, and a library of two thousand five hundred volumes, for
+the use and benefit of its patriot guests.
+
+No one who visits Milwaukee can fail to be struck with the semi-foreign
+appearance of the city. Breweries are multiplied throughout its streets,
+lager beer saloons abound, beer gardens, with their flowers and music
+and cleanly arbor-shaded tables, attract the tired and thirsty in
+various quarters. German music halls, gasthausen, and restaurants are
+found everywhere, and German signs are manifest over many doors. One
+hears German spoken upon the streets quite as often as English, and
+Teuton influence upon the political and social life of the city is
+everywhere seen and felt. Germans constitute nearly one-half the entire
+population of Milwaukee, and have impressed their character upon the
+people and the city itself in other ways than socially. Steady-going
+plodders, with their love for music and flowers, they have yet no keen
+taste for display, and every time choose the substantial rather than the
+ornamental. Milwaukee is a sort of rendezvous for the Scandinavian
+emigrants, who are pouring in like a mighty tide to fill up the States
+of Wisconsin and Minnesota. Danes and Swedes, and especially Norwegians,
+stop here, and it may be, linger for a longer or shorter period, before
+they strike out into the, to them, unknown country which is to be their
+future home. Domestic service is largely supplied by the Norwegians, who
+prove themselves honest, industrious and capable.
+
+This mighty influx of the Germanic and Scandinavian races into our
+Northwest is certain to produce a permanent impression upon the social
+condition of those States. Yet our system of government is adapted to
+the successful management of such immigration. It cannot, perhaps, do so
+much with the immigrants themselves. Many of them intelligent, but more
+of them ignorant and stupid, they remain foreign in their habits and
+ideas to the end of their lives. But it makes citizens of their sons,
+trains them up with an understanding of democratic institutions, gives
+them an education, for the most part, forces them to acquire our
+language, and instead of making them a separate class, recognizes them
+as an undivided part of the whole population. In brief, it Americanizes
+them, and though habits and traits of character and race still cling to
+them in some degree, their original nationality is soon lost in the
+great cosmopolitan tide of civilized humanity which swells and surges
+around them. Different races intermarry and blend, and form a composite
+of personnel and character which is fast becoming individualized and
+recognized as the type of the true American. After a few generations but
+little remains save the patronymic to remind the descendants of these
+immigrants of their original descent.
+
+Wherever the German race has settled it has taken substantial prosperity
+with it. The members of that race have proved themselves honest,
+industrious, and preeminently loyal. To the "Dutch" St. Louis owed her
+own modified loyalty during the late civil war. The German element of
+Cincinnati also turned the tide of popular sentiment in favor of the
+North, and secured for that city, during war times, an immunity from
+disturbance, and a prosperity unexampled during her previous history.
+They bring with them not only thrift, but an appreciation for the
+refining arts which is not found in any other class of immigrants. The
+German quarter of a city may nearly always be discovered by the
+abundance of flowers in windows and balconies, and growing thriftily in
+secluded courts. The German better appreciates his beer when sipped in
+the midst of natural beauties, and to the sound of music. To this
+music-loving characteristic of her German population Milwaukee owes her
+finest music hall, the Academy of Music already described. They are not
+quick of thought, but even their stolidity, when it is offset and
+modified by the almost supernatural sharpness and quickness of wit of
+other nationalities which also look to America as a refuge from
+oppression, produces a useful counter-balance, and the offspring of the
+two will be apt to possess stability of character with intellectual
+alertness. The Germans have their faults, undoubtedly, but they are less
+obnoxious than those of some other classes of immigrants, and when
+modified often become virtues.
+
+Milwaukee, since her existence as a city, has had a comparatively
+uneventful history. She has not been ravaged by flood, like Cincinnati,
+nor by fire, like Chicago, nor by pestilence, like Memphis, nor by
+famine, like many cities in the old world. She has moved on in the even
+tenor of her way, increasing her commerce and adding to her industries,
+perfecting her school system and enlarging her own domain. The only
+disturbance which is recorded against her in the chronicles of her
+existence, occurred in June, 1862, when there was a riot, in consequence
+of the rejection, by the bankers of Milwaukee, of the notes of most of
+the banks of the State. The banks of Wisconsin being governed, at that
+time, by a free banking law, modeled, in a great measure, after that of
+New York, had purchased largely the bonds of different Southern States,
+and deposited them with the State Comptroller as a security for their
+issues, the bonds of said States usually being lower than those of the
+Northern States. When the Southern States withdrew from the Union there
+was, in consequence, a rapid reduction of the value of these securities,
+and an equally rapid depreciation of the value of the bank notes based
+upon them. Their issues were finally curtailed, occasioning severe loss
+and great bitterness of feeling on the part of those who held them. The
+riot consequent on this state of affairs resulted in a considerable
+destruction of property, though no lives were lost. It was finally
+quelled by the State authorities.
+
+Of the original inhabitants of Wisconsin, we have no knowledge whatever.
+The only traces they have left of their existence are numerous ancient
+mounds or tumuli, which are scattered at various points all over the
+State. Their antiquity is attested by the fact that trees of four
+hundred years' growth are found standing upon them. Discoveries in the
+Lake Superior copper regions, of mines which had once been worked, over
+which trees of a like age were growing, seem to indicate that the same
+people raised the mounds and worked the mines. In all probability their
+antiquity extends further backward than this. The Indians, improperly
+called the aborigines, have no traditions concerning the construction of
+these mounds, which are evidently none of their handiwork, but belong to
+a race which has been supplanted and disappeared from the globe. The
+similarity of these mounds to those discovered in Central America leads
+to the conclusion that they were both the work of one and the same race;
+but whether they were constructed as tombs or as places for altars,
+there is a division of opinion. Those in Central America were evidently
+once surmounted by temples or places of worship and sacrifice.
+
+These mounds vary in size, shape and height. At Prairie du Chien one of
+the largest of these tumuli was leveled to furnish a site for Fort
+Crawford. It was circular in form, having a base of some two hundred
+feet, and was twenty feet high. The circular form is the most common in
+those mounds, although there are many different shapes. Some appear like
+wells, inclosing an open space; others like breastworks with angles;
+still others have a space through them, as if they formed a sort of
+gateway. On the dividing ridge between the Mississippi and Wisconsin
+rivers mounds are found in the form of birds with their wings and tails
+spread; of deer, rabbits and other animals. One even bears a marked
+resemblance to an elephant. There are also a few mounds representing a
+man lying on his face. They are three or four feet high at the highest
+points, rounding over the sides.
+
+One of the most singular characteristics of these mounds is that they
+seem invariably to be composed of earth brought from a greater or less
+distance. The surface of the surrounding ground usually comes up to the
+base of the mound in a smooth level, when it does not already possess a
+natural elevation; but there is no evidence of the ground anywhere in
+the neighborhood having been disturbed to furnish the earth for their
+construction. In some instances the soil of these tumuli is of an
+actually different character, the like of which has not been discovered
+within several miles of the mounds.
+
+These antiquities constitute the only mementos and annals transmitted to
+us, of the mysterious race which once peopled our western territory, and
+extended as far east as the shores of the Ohio, as far north as the
+great lakes, and westward and southward to Central America. It seems a
+pity that no systematic effort has been made to perpetuate them, if not
+for the benefit of future generations whose interest and curiosity
+should be excited at beholding them, at least out of a consideration for
+the unknown race whose work they are, and as enduring monuments to whose
+numbers and industry they have remained up to the present time, when all
+else has perished. The plow, the hoe and the spade, those iconoclastic
+weapons of civilization, are fast effacing them from the surface of the
+country. When the plow once breaks the sod which has covered them and
+preserved their form, the wind and rain each lend speedy assistance to
+the work of destruction, and but a few years will elapse before most of
+them will have disappeared altogether, and the places which have known
+them for untold centuries will know them no more forever.
+
+It is a fact worthy of mention that these mounds have most frequently
+been found on sites selected for modern towns and cities, as though
+ancients and moderns alike had instinctively chosen for their abiding
+places those localities most favored by nature for the uses of man.
+Numerous earthworks about Milwaukee attest the favor in which the
+locality of that city was held by this pre-historic race. These works
+extend from Kinnickinnic Creek, near the "Indian Fields," where they are
+most abundant, to a point six miles above the city. They occupy high
+grounds near but not in immediate proximity to the lake and streams, and
+are most varied in their form, while many are of large extent. They are
+chiefly from one hundred to four hundred feet in diameter, and represent
+turtles, lizards, birds, the otter and buffalo, while a number have the
+form of a war club. Occasionally, a mound is elevated so as to overlook
+or command many others, as though it was a sort of high or superior
+altar for the observance of religious or sacrificial rites. Milwaukee is
+to be commended for her failure to manifest that spirit of modern
+vandalism which, in other sections, has sacrificed the relics of a
+by-gone age and people to the fancied utility of civilization. The
+Forest Home Cemetery incloses a number of these mounds, and so they are
+preserved for the benefit of the antiquary and curiosity seeker. We
+trust she will continue to cherish sacredly these few monuments left as
+the sole legacy of the ancient inhabitants of the West.
+
+The early Indian name of the river upon which the city of Milwaukee now
+stands was Mellcoki. So says one tradition. Another gives the name as
+Man-a-wau-kee, from the name of a valuable medicinal root known as
+Man-wau; hence, the land or place of the Man-wau. Still another gives
+the Indian name as Me-ne-wau-kee---a rich or beautiful land. The Indians
+had a village on the site of the present city. The Milwaukee tribe were
+troublesome and difficult to manage. About the first trader who ventured
+to establish a post among them was Alexander Laframboise, who came from
+Mackinaw and located on the spot previous to or about 1785. This trading
+post, having been mismanaged, was discontinued about 1800, and another
+soon took its place. A succession of trading posts and fur stations
+followed, until about 1818, when Solomon Juneau, a Frenchman,
+established himself there permanently, with a little colony of
+half-breeds, who built themselves log cabins on the banks of the stream,
+two miles from the lake, near the junction of the Menomonee. Below them,
+on the river flats, where now extend the business streets of the city,
+the low marshy ground was overgrown by tall reeds and rushes, while away
+back from the river stretched the boundless prairie. The place was
+known, thenceforth, as Juneau's Settlement. This settlement gradually
+attracted, first, other traders, and finally immigrants. In 1825 it was
+still nothing more than a trading station, but ten years later it had
+become a settlement and called itself a town, taking the name of
+Milwaukee, from the river upon which it was built.
+
+Chicago had already begun her marvelous growth, and was at that very
+time extending herself to extraordinary dimensions--on paper. The little
+town of Milwaukee had then no thought of rivalry, but was content to
+plod along for eleven years more before it received its city charter. By
+1850 its growth had been remarkable, and it numbered more than twenty
+thousand inhabitants. In 1860 it had more than doubled this population,
+recording over forty-five thousand inhabitants, and in 1870 it had
+almost doubled again, the census reporting more than seventy-one
+thousand persons for that year. In the same year Milwaukee received
+18,466,167 bushels of wheat, actually exceeding Chicago by about a
+million of bushels. The shipments of wheat the same year were 16,027,780
+bushels, and of flour 1,225,340 barrels. Her exports for that year also
+included butter, hops, lumber, wool and shingles, of all which
+commodities she shipped immense quantities. From 1870 to 1880 the
+increase of population and commerce was equally astonishing, while her
+manufactures had grown in like proportion.
+
+The vast lumber regions to the northwest help to build up her business;
+new towns which spring up throughout the State become tributary to her;
+and the farms which are multiplying in that fertile region send a share
+of their products to find a gateway through her to the eastern markets
+and to Europe. She divides with Chicago the trade which, by means of the
+great lakes and the great railway trunk lines, is busy going to and fro
+in the land, from east to west and from west to east. When the Northern
+Pacific Railway furnishes a continuous route of travel and freight
+between Lake Superior and the Northern Pacific States, the business of
+Milwaukee will be naturally augmented. But her future prosperity depends
+largely upon the prosperity of the agricultural population which
+surrounds her, which fills her elevators and warehouses, and furnishes
+freight for her boats with its products, and has need of her
+manufactures in return. And thus we see illustrated the fundamental
+principle of political economy, that that which concerns one must
+concern all; that one class or section of people cannot suffer without
+affecting in some degree all classes and sections. All are
+interdependent, and all must stand or fall together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+MONTREAL.
+
+ Thousand Islands.--Long Sault Rapids.--Lachine Rapids.--Victoria
+ Bridge.--Mont Real.--Early History of Montreal.--Its Shipping
+ Interests.--Quays.--Manufactures.--Population.--Roman Catholic
+ Supremacy.--Churches.--Nunneries.--Hospitals.--Colleges.--
+ Streets.--Public Buildings.--Victoria Skating Rink.--
+ Sleighing.--Early Disasters.--Points of Interest.--The
+ "Canucks."
+
+
+The traveler who visits Montreal should, if possible, make his approach
+to that city by a descent of the St. Lawrence River, that he may become
+acquainted with some of the most beautiful scenery in America. Leaving
+Kingston, at the outlet of Lake Ontario, he will wind his way through
+the mazes of the Thousand Islands, which will seem to him as if
+belonging to an enchanted country. These islands, situated at the head
+of the St. Lawrence, extend down the river for a distance of thirty
+miles, and are innumerable and of every size and shape. Wolf Island,
+about fifteen miles in length, is the largest; while some of the
+smallest seem like mere flower-pots rising out of the water, with but a
+single plant. They are most picturesque in appearance, their rocky
+foundations being veiled and softened by the trees and shrubbery which
+cover them. In past ages mythology would have made these islands the
+sacred abodes of the gods, and peopled their woods and dells with nymphs
+and fauns, while the intervening channels would have been presided over
+by naiads. A little more than a generation ago, a single inhabitant, a
+freebooter, who levied toll upon the passers up and down the river, and
+who concealed his ill-gotten booty in his numerous lurking-places in the
+islands, turned this terrestrial paradise into a pirate's den. To-day
+the Thousand Islands have become famous summer resorts for the denizens
+of our northern cities; and large and small are studded with attractive
+cottages and imposing villas; while nature, already so beautiful in its
+wild state, has been trained into the tamer beauty of modern landscape
+gardening.
+
+Beyond the islands the majestic St. Lawrence rolls on until it reaches
+the rapids, celebrated in song by Thomas Moore. Here the river narrows,
+and the current rushes impetuously over and between the rocks which jut
+from its bottom; while the pilot, with watchfulness and skill, guides
+the boat through the treacherous channel, and lands her safely in the
+smoother waters beyond. These rapids are known as the Long Sault Rapids,
+and are nine miles in length. A raft will drift this whole distance in
+forty minutes. The passage of boats down these rapids was considered
+impossible until 1840, when the famous Indian pilot, Teronhiahere, after
+watching the course of rafts down the stream, attempted it, and
+discovered a safe channel for steamboats. Many of the pilots are still
+Indians, who exhibit great skill and courage in the undertaking. There
+has never yet been a fatal accident in shooting these rapids. The
+Cornwall Canal, eleven miles long, permits vessels to go around the
+rapids in ascending the river.
+
+The Lachine Rapids, nine miles above Montreal, although the shortest,
+are the most dangerous. It is easy enough to descend these rapids, if
+one is not particular as to results; but it is difficult enough to
+descend them safely. The faint-hearted had better commit themselves to
+the more placid waters of the canal, or take to the railroad. But to the
+brave traveler there is a certain exhilaration in thus toying with and
+conquering danger. The rapids fairly passed, one can distinguish the
+long line and graceful archways of the Victoria Bridge, and the towers
+and spires of Montreal.
+
+Montreal is on an island thirty-two miles in length, and with a width at
+its widest of ten miles. It is at the junction of the St. Lawrence and
+Ottawa, both of them noble rivers, and is connected with the mainland by
+two bridges, one of them spanning the Ottawa by a series of immense
+arches; and the other, the Victoria bridge, thrown across the St.
+Lawrence. The length of the latter bridge is nearly two miles. It rests
+upon twenty-three piers and two abutments of solid masonry, the central
+span being three hundred and thirty feet long. Its total cost was about
+$6,300,000. It was formally opened to the public by the Prince of Wales,
+on the occasion of his visit to America during the summer of 1860. The
+railway track runs through an iron tube, twenty-two feet high and
+sixteen feet wide. The river rolls nearly a hundred feet below, in
+summer a sweeping flood, and in winter a sort of glacier, the ice masses
+piled and heaped upon one another, as they have been upheaved or hurled
+in the contentions between the current and the frost-king.
+
+The city of Montreal is distinctly outlined against Mount Royal or Mont
+Real, which rises back of it, its edifices showing dark and gray, except
+where the sun catches its numerous tin roofs, making them glitter like
+burnished steel. It takes its name from Mont Real, the mountain already
+referred to, which closes it in on one side, and rises seven hundred and
+fifty feet above the river. Its eastern suburb, still known as
+Hochelaga, was the site of an Indian village when it was discovered, in
+1535, by Jacques Cartier, and this explorer it was who gave the name to
+the mountain. In 1642, just one hundred and fifty years after the
+discovery of America, it was settled by the French, retaining its Indian
+name for a century later, when that appellation was replaced by the
+French one of "Ville Marie." In 1761 the city came into the possession
+of the British, and received its present name. In 1775 it was captured
+by the Americans under General Montgomery, and held by them until the
+following summer.
+
+Montreal was, under both French and British rule, an outpost of Quebec
+until 1832, when it became a separate port. The shallower parts of the
+river being deepened above Quebec, Montreal became accessible to boats
+drawing from nineteen to twenty-two feet of water. It is now the chief
+shipping port of Canada. It is five hundred miles from the sea, and
+ninety miles above tidewater; and being at the head of ship navigation
+of the St. Lawrence, and at the foot of the great chain of inland lakes,
+rivers and canals which connect it with the very centre of the American
+continent, its commerce is very important. At the confluence of the
+Ottawa with the St. Lawrence, it is also the outlet of a vast lumber
+country. It feels, however, the serious disadvantage of being, for five
+months in the year, blockaded, and made, to all intents and purposes, an
+inland city, by the closing of navigation during the winter. Then, by
+means of the Grand Trunk and other railways, it becomes tributary to
+Portland, Maine, and finds, at that city, a port for its commerce. Its
+two miles of quays, including the locks and stone-cut wharves of the
+Lachine Canal, all built of solid limestone, would do credit to any city
+in the world; while a broad wall or esplanade extends between these
+quays and the houses which overlook the river. Montreal takes a front
+rank in its manufacturing interests, which embrace all kinds of
+agricultural and mechanical implements, steam engines, printing types,
+India-rubber shoes, paper, furniture, woolens, cordage and flour. In
+1874 its exports were valued at over twenty-two millions of dollars.
+
+The population of Montreal in 1779 was only about seven thousand
+inhabitants. In 1861 it had increased to 70,323; and in 1871 the census
+returns made the population 115,926. Of these inhabitants, probably more
+than one-half are Roman Catholics, representing a great variety of
+nationalities, among which, however, French Canadians and Irish
+predominate. The Catholics were, at first, under French dominion, in
+exclusive possession of the city, and the different religious societies
+gained vast wealth. Ever since Canada has passed into the hands of
+England they still hold their own, and exercise an influence over the
+people, and display a magnificence in their edifices and appointments,
+unknown in other sections of America.
+
+No city of the same size in the United States has such splendid
+churches. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of Notre Dame, fronting on the
+Place d'Armes, is the largest on the continent. It is two hundred and
+forty-one feet in length, by one hundred and thirty-five feet in width,
+and is capable of seating more than ten thousand persons. It is a
+massive structure, built of stone, in the Gothic style with a tower at
+each corner, and one in the middle of each flank, numbering six in all.
+The towers on the main front are two hundred and twelve feet high, and
+furnish to visitors a magnificent view of the city. In one of these
+towers is a fine chime of bells, the largest of which, the "Gros
+Bourdon," weighs twenty-nine thousand four hundred pounds. But as large
+as is this cathedral, it will be surpassed in size by the Cathedral of
+St. Peter, now in process of erection at the corner of Dorchester and
+Cemetery streets, and built after the general plan of St. Peter's at
+Rome. This cathedral will be three hundred feet long by two hundred and
+twenty-five feet wide at the transepts, and will be surmounted by five
+domes, the largest of which will be two hundred and fifty feet in
+height, supported on four piers and thirty-two Corinthian columns. The
+vestibule alone will be two hundred feet long by thirty feet wide, and
+will be fronted by a portico, surmounted by colossal statues of the
+Apostles. It will, when completed, be by far the finest and largest
+church edifice in America. St Patrick's Church at the west end of
+Lagauchere street, is noticeable for its handsome Gothic windows of
+stained glass, and will seat five thousand persons. The Church of the
+Gesu, in Blewry street, has the finest interior in the city, the vast
+nave, seventy-five feet in height, being bordered by rich composite
+columns, and the walls and ceilings beautifully frescoed.
+
+The Roman Catholic churches undoubtedly exceed in size and number those
+of the Protestants, though some of the latter are worthy of note. Christ
+Church Cathedral--Episcopal, in St. Catherine street, is the most
+perfect specimen of English Gothic architecture in America. It is built
+of rough Montreal stone, with Caen stone facings, cruciform, and
+surmounted by a spire two hundred and twenty-four feet high. St.
+Andrew's Church--Presbyterian, in Radegonde street, is a fine specimen
+of Gothic architecture, being an imitation, on a reduced scale, of
+Salisbury Cathedral. Zion Church--Independent, in Radegonde street, near
+Victoria Square, was the scene of the riot and loss of life on the
+occasion of Gavazzi's lecture in 1852.
+
+Like Quebec, Montreal is famous for its nunneries. The Gray Nunnery,
+founded in 1692, for the care of lunatics and children, is situated in
+Dorchester street. This nunnery owns Nun's Island, in Lake St. Louis,
+above Montreal, once an Indian burial ground, but now in a high state of
+cultivation. In Notre Dame street, near the Place d'Armes, is the Black
+or Congregational Nunnery, which dates from 1659, and is devoted to the
+education of girls. At Hochelaga is the Convent of the Holy Name of
+Mary. The Hotel Dieu, founded in 1644, for the cure of the sick, and St.
+Patrick's Hospital, are both under the charge of the Sisters of St.
+Joseph. The Christian Brothers have control of numerous schools, and
+render material aid to morality and religion. The Seminary of St.
+Sulspice is a large and stately building, devoted to the education of
+Catholic priests. Nuns and priests are familiar objects upon the
+streets, and not always a welcome sight to the Protestant eye;
+nevertheless, the good works in which they engage are numerous and not
+to be undervalued.
+
+The number of hospitals, scientific institutions, libraries,
+reading-rooms, schools and universities of Montreal is remarkable. Many
+of them are under Catholic control, and all are worthy of a highly
+civilized and prosperous community. First among the educational
+institutions of the city is McGill College, founded by a bequest of the
+Hon. James McGill, in 1811, and erected into a university, by royal
+charter, in 1821. It is beautifully situated at the base of Mount Royal,
+and, besides a large corps of able professors, possesses one of the
+finest museums in the country.
+
+Montreal is a beautiful city. Its public buildings are constructed of
+solid stone, in which a handsome limestone, found in the neighborhood,
+predominates. Its churches, banks, hospitals and colleges are all
+edifices of which to be proud. Its private dwellings are, a majority of
+them, substantially built, while many of the roofs, cupolas and spires
+are covered with metal, which, seen at a distance, glitters in the sun.
+The most elegant private residences are found upon the slope of Mont
+Real, surrounded by ample grounds containing fine lawns, trees and
+shrubbery. From these hillside residences the scenery is most lovely,
+looking over a panorama of city, river and country, with the blue tops
+of the mountain ranges of New York, Vermont and New Hampshire plainly
+perceptible on clear days.
+
+St. Paul street is the chief commercial thoroughfare, and extends nearly
+parallel to the river, but a square or two back from it, the whole
+length of the city. Commissioner street faces the quays and monopolizes
+much of the wholesale trade. McGill, St. James and Notre Dame are also
+important business streets. Great St. James and Notre Dame streets are
+the fashionable promenades, while Catherine, Dorchester and Sherbrook
+streets contain the finest private residences. At the intersection of
+McGill and St. James streets, in a small public square, called Victoria
+Square, is a fountain and a bronze statue of Queen Victoria. A number of
+fine buildings surround this square, prominent among which are the
+Albert buildings and the beautiful Gothic structure of the Young Men's
+Christian Association.
+
+Bontecour's Market, a spacious stone edifice in the Doric style, is one
+of the handsomest buildings in the city. It fronts the river at the
+corner of St. Paul and Water streets, is three stories high, surmounted
+by a dome, from which the view is exceptionally fine. The new City Hall,
+at the head of Jacques Cartier Square, containing the offices of the
+various civil and corporate functionaries, is an elegant structure,
+spacious and perfect in all its appointments. The Court House, in Notre
+Dame street, is three hundred feet long by one hundred and twenty-five
+feet wide, in the Doric style, and erected at a cost of over three
+hundred thousand dollars. It includes a law library of six thousand
+volumes. Back of it is the Champs de Mars, a fine military parade
+ground. The Custom House is between St. Paul street and the river, on
+the site of an old market-place, and is a massive structure with a fine
+tower. The Post Office is an elegant building near the Place d'Armes, in
+great St. James street. In the Place d'Armes, is the Bank of Montreal
+and the City Bank, Masonic Hall, the headquarters of the Masons of
+Canada, and several other of the principal banks of the city. Mechanics'
+Institute, in great St. James street, though plain externally, has an
+elaborately decorated lecture room. The principal hotels are the
+Windsor, in Dorchester street, one of the finest of its kind in America;
+the St. Lawrence, in Great St. James street; the Ottawa House, corner of
+St. James and Notre Dame streets; Montreal House, in Custom House
+Square; the Richelieu Hotel, and the Albion.
+
+One of the principal points of attraction in both winter and summer is
+the Victoria Skating Rink, in Dominion Square. This extensive building
+is used during the milder months of the year for horticultural shows,
+concerts and miscellaneous gatherings. In the winter the doors of this
+place are thronged with a crowd of sleighs and sleigh drivers, while
+inside, skaters and spectators form a living, moving panorama, pleasant
+to look upon. The place is lighted by gas, and men and women, old and
+young, with a plentiful sprinkling of children, on skates, are
+practicing all sorts of gyrations. The ladies are prettily and
+appropriately dressed in skating costumes, and some of them are
+proficient in the art of skating. The spectators sit or stand on a
+raised ledge around the ice parallelogram, while the skaters dart off,
+singly or in pairs, executing quadrilles, waltzes, curves, straight
+lines, letters, labyrinths, and every conceivable figure. Now and then
+some one comes to grief in the surging, moving throng; but is quickly on
+his or her feet again, the ice and water shaken off, and the zigzag
+resumed. Children skate; boys and girls; ladies and gentlemen, and even
+dignified military officers. Some skate well, some medium, some
+shockingly ill; but all skate, or essay to do so. It is the grand
+Montrealese pastime, and though the ice is sloppy, and the air chill and
+heavy with moisture, everybody has a good time.
+
+There is one other amusement of the public, and that is sleighing. The
+winter in the latitude of Montreal is long and cold, and sometimes the
+snow falls to a depth of several feet, lying upon the ground for
+months. When winter settles down upon the city, the river freezes over,
+leaving the island an island no longer, but making it part and parcel of
+the surrounding continent. Then the people wrap themselves in furs and
+betake themselves to their sleighs, and glide swiftly along the
+well-beaten roads, between the white drifts. Vehicles of every
+description, from the most elegant appointed sleigh down to the rough
+box sled, are seen upon the road, and the jingle of bells is everywhere
+heard, as the sledges follow, pass and repass one another on the snowy
+track. Ladies closely wrapped in furs and veils, and their cavaliers in
+fur caps with flaps brought closely around ears and chin, alike bid
+defiance to the temperature, which is not infrequently in the
+neighborhood of zero; and the blood seems to course more quickly for the
+keenness of the atmosphere.
+
+During its long history, Montreal has had disasters as well as
+successes. Something over a hundred years after its founding as a French
+colony it was nearly destroyed by fire, and a little later it became a
+favorite point of attack during the two American wars. But to-day it is
+the most thriving city of the British provinces. It has pushed its
+railway communications with great energy, and so long as peace is
+maintained between Canada and the United States it will continue to
+prosper. In the event of war, the city lies in an exposed position, and
+during the winter its only outlet, by rail to Portland, would be cut
+off.
+
+The Nelson Monument in Jacques Cartier Square, and near it the old
+Government House, will prove objects of interest to the visitor, though
+the former is in somewhat of a dilapidated condition. The city is
+supplied with water by works which are situated a mile or so above it,
+in the midst of beautiful scenery. Mount Royal Cemetery is two miles
+from the city, on the northern slope of the mountain. One of the most
+beautiful views in the neighborhood of Montreal is the famous around the
+mountain drive, nine miles in length, and passing by Mount Royal Park.
+
+First settled by the French, their descendants, the French Canadians,
+form a considerable proportion of the population of Montreal. But
+whatever they may have been in the past, they have degenerated into an
+illiterate, unenterprising people. The English, Irish and Scotch, who
+during the past century have been emigrating to Canada in such numbers,
+have monopolized most of the business, and have rescued Montreal, as
+well as Lower Canada generally, from a stagnation which was sure to
+creep upon it if left in the hands of the descendants of the early
+French settlers. Arcadian innocence and simplicity have developed, or
+rather degenerated, into indolence, stolidity and ignorance. The priests
+do the thinking for these people, who, apparently have few ambitions in
+life beyond meeting its daily wants. Thus, though the streets of
+Montreal still bear the old names, and though its architecture still
+retains much of the quaintness which it early assumed, the business is
+largely in the hands of the Anglo-Saxons and Celts, who are its later
+settlers; and English pluck, Irish industry, Scotch thrift and American
+push, are all brought into marked contrast with the sluggishness and
+lethargy of the "Canucks." The names over the principal business houses
+are either English, Scotch or Irish; and the sympathies of the
+intelligent people are entirely in harmony with the government under
+which they live.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+NEWARK.
+
+ From New York to Newark.--Two Hundred Years Ago.--The
+ Pioneers.--Public Parks.--City of Churches.--The Canal.--
+ Sailing Up-Hill.--An Old Graveyard.--New Amsterdam and New
+ Netherlands.--The Dutch and English.--Adventurers from New
+ England.--The Indians.--Rate of Population.--Manufactures.--
+ Rank as a City.
+
+
+Nine miles, in a westerly direction, from New York, on a lovely morning
+in the early autumn of 1880, by the comfortable cars of that most
+perfect of all railways, the "Pennsylvania," brought our little party to
+Newark, which I had often heard spoken of as the leading commercial and
+manufacturing city of New Jersey.
+
+Situated in the northeastern corner of the State, on the west bank of
+the Passaic, three miles from its entrance into Newark Bay--the city of
+Newark occupies the most delightful spot in a State famed for its
+beauty. In our short journey from New York we passed over broad, level
+meadows, bearing some resemblance to a western prairie. The Passaic and
+the Hackensack rivers traverse these prairie-like meadows, while rising
+abruptly in the distance you behold the historic Bergen Heights.
+
+Disembarking at the conveniently located Market Street Depot, we sought
+and found a temporary home, and then lost no time in gratifying our
+native curiosity, by exploring the city and learning something of its
+origin and history.
+
+Newark is over two hundred years old, and yet is regularly laid out; its
+wide and well paved streets are adorned and shaded with grand old
+elms--some of them coeval with the founding of the city. Its chief
+business thoroughfare, Broad street, running north and south, through
+the central part of the city, has many fine business blocks, and a finer
+avenue cannot be found than the south end of Broad street, lined with
+wide-spreading elms, and extending, apparently, into infinitude. One
+peculiarity that absorbed my attention, was the vast number of
+manufacturing establishments here, located, for the most part, outside
+of the central streets, and these are doubtless the source of her
+prosperity.
+
+About two hundred years ago Newark was an obscure hamlet of some sixty
+odd settlers. Since that time it has grown into a city of one hundred
+and thirty thousand inhabitants. The handful of original settlers were,
+for the most part, upright, earnest and sturdy mechanics, of Anglo-Saxon
+blood, and they laid the foundation of what is now one of the most
+important cities of the Union, ranking, indeed, among the foremost of
+the world's industrial bee-hives--a monster workshop, whose skilled
+labor cannot well be surpassed anywhere. They called their village after
+the old English town of Newark-on-Trent; and Newark-on Passaic has now
+grown into a city ten times greater than its ancient namesake.
+
+The public parks possess a startling interest to the stranger visiting
+Newark for the first time. Seldom have I found so many, and of such
+extent, in a city that measures only five miles long, by five broad.
+Possessed of such breathing places, a town must of necessity be healthy,
+and I accordingly found this strongly indicated in the faces of all I
+met, more especially of the blooming young maidens and their mammas. We
+are told that when the first settlers purchased the site of Newark and
+its surrounding lands, of the native Indians, and laid out their embryo
+city, they wisely reserved certain tracts for public purposes, and that
+most of these still exist as ornaments of the city. Besides those set
+apart for churches and graveyards, the principal reservations were the
+"Training-place," the "Market-place," and the "Watering-place." The
+Training-place is now Military Park, on the east side of Broad street,
+near its centre; and the Market-place is now Washington Park. These and
+several others in various parts of this favored city, form delightful
+retreats from the sun's rays--shaded by majestic elms--a veritable _rus
+in urbe_. The suburbs also are passing beautiful, extending to Orange on
+the west, and to within a mile of Elizabeth on the south--both busy
+towns.
+
+Like Brooklyn, Newark may be called a city of churches, and its
+enlightened and industrious citizens are a church-going people. The
+Reformed Dutch Church dates from 1663; and the First Presbyterian from
+1667. These were the parent churches, and their progeny are manifold and
+prosperous, as noted in the exceptionally high standard of morality that
+generally characterizes the peaceful workers in this hive of industry.
+
+I was especially struck with the canal which flows under Broad street,
+and the ingenuity displayed in surmounting a hill that crosses it, by
+the barges navigating its waters. Here it may be almost said that among
+their numberless other inventions, the inhabitants of Newark have
+discovered the art of sailing up a hill! Instead of a lock, by which
+similar difficulties of inland navigation are usually overcome, the
+barges are drawn in a cradle up an inclined plane, by means of a
+stationary steam engine placed at the top of the hill, where the canal
+recommences, and the barges are re-launched to continue their course
+westward.
+
+In my rambles down Broad street, on its well-paved sidewalk, flanked by
+flourishing stores, in which every commodity, from a five hundred dollar
+chronometer down to a ten cent pair of men's socks, is presented for
+sale, I stopped at an arched gateway on my right, my attention being
+arrested by a patch of green sward behind it. The gate stood invitingly
+open, and passing through, I found myself in a venerable and disused
+graveyard.
+
+"This is the oldest of the city graveyards," said an elderly gentleman,
+to whom I addressed myself for information, "and is of the same age as
+the city itself. It is the resting-place of many of the original
+inhabitants. The first church of Newark stood here, and around, you will
+observe, are tombs, bearing dates of two centuries ago." Such, I found,
+on investigation, to be the case. These old stones--most of their
+inscriptions now undecipherable,--were erected to commemorate the dead
+colonists' names and virtues, more than one hundred years before
+Washington was born, or they had dreamed of casting off the authority of
+mother England. I reflected: what was Newark like in those far-away
+days, two hundred years ago? How did she compare with Newark in the year
+of grace 1880?
+
+In 1608 Henry Hudson descended the noble river which bears his name, and
+the settlement of _New Amsterdam_ by the Hollanders soon followed. Next,
+_New Netherlands_ was added to the territory of the Dutchmen, then a
+great maritime people. Down to the beginning of the seventeenth century
+the colonization of New Netherlands, on the western banks of the Hudson,
+had made but little progress. It was all a wilderness, peopled only by
+Indians. The white man had scarcely penetrated its fertile valleys. The
+story is told, however, that some of Hudson's hardy crew had sailed in
+their boats through the _Kill-von-Kule_, at the north of what is now
+Staten Island, and passed northward into the Passaic River. The
+enterprising Dutch traders were no doubt fully cognizant of the
+boundless possibilities of the country, whose fairest spot was destined
+to form the site of the city of Newark.
+
+But these Dutchmen were only lawless adventurers. By right of discovery,
+a priority of title to all the lands in North America was claimed by
+England, who declared war upon Holland and all her reputed possessions.
+_New Amsterdam_ and the province of _New Netherlands_ were among the
+first to succumb, and in 1664 England obtained complete command of the
+Atlantic coast. _New Amsterdam_ then became _New York_, in honor of the
+Duke of York, brother of King Charles II; and _New Netherlands_ became
+_New Jersey_, in compliment to the Countess of Jersey, a court favorite.
+To this conquest by England we owe our English tongue, for had the
+Hollanders vanquished the English, and retained possession, we should
+doubtless all be speaking "low Dutch" to-day, instead of English. But
+this is a digression.
+
+Colonization rapidly followed when the phlegmatic Dutchmen were turned
+out, and the first English governor of the province of New Jersey
+inaugurated a very liberal form of government. This induced many
+adventurers from New England to unite their fortunes with the colonists
+of New Jersey. Under the leadership of the enterprising Captain Treat,
+these New Englanders proceeded to select a site for their new town. They
+soon found a spot exactly suited to their wishes; a fertile soil,
+beautiful woodlands, and a navigable stream; while away to the eastward
+was a wide and sheltered bay.
+
+In May, 1666, about thirty families, John Treat being their captain,
+laid the foundation of Newark. A conference was held with the Indians,
+which resulted satisfactorily to all. They transferred the land to the
+white men, and received in payment for what now constitutes the county
+of Essex, "Fifty double-hands of powder, one hundred bars of lead,
+twenty axes, twenty coats, ten guns, twenty pistols, ten kettles, ten
+swords, four blankets, four barrels of beer, two pairs of breeches,
+fifty knives, twenty hoes, eight hundred and fifty fathoms of wampum,
+two ankers of liquor, or something equivalent; and three troopers'
+coats, with the ornaments thereon."
+
+A few years later a second purchase was made, by which the limits of the
+city they were building were extended westward to the top of Orange
+Hill, the equivalent being "two guns, three coats and thirteen cans of
+rum."
+
+For many years, Newark grew and prospered. In 1681 she was the "most
+compact town in the province, with a population of 500." In 1713 Queen
+Anne granted a charter of incorporation, thus making the township of
+Newark a body politic, which continued in force until the Revolution.
+With the successful close of the war, Newark entered on a new and
+prosperous era, and the population increased very largely. In 1795
+bridges were built over the Passaic and the Hackensack. In 1810 the
+population is given as 6,000, and in 1830 it had increased to 11,000.
+From this date its rate of progress has been very rapid, and at the
+present time Newark ranks as the thirteenth city of the Union in
+population.
+
+I cannot conclude this chapter without a few words on the manufactures
+of Newark. The early settlers were, as we have said, in the main,
+mechanics and artisans, and from this circumstance the growth of the
+city lay in the direction of manufactures. Newark, to-day, is among the
+foremost cities of the Union in intelligent industry. So early as 1676
+efforts were made to promote the introduction of manufactures. The
+nearness of the city to New York, the chief market in the Union, with
+shipping facilities to every quarter of the globe; with the great iron
+and coal fields easy of access, and a thrifty and industrious people,
+Newark drew to her mills and factories abundant capital and skilled
+workmen. She has contributed more useful inventions to industrial
+progress than any other American city. The Newark Industrial Exposition
+was originated in 1872, for the purpose of holding an annual exhibition
+of her local manufactures. The enterprise met with signal success. We
+have counted no less than four hundred distinct manufactories in
+operation in this extraordinary city, a list of which would occupy too
+much of our space. Hardware, tools, machinery, jewelry, leather, hats,
+and trunks seem to predominate. Of the last-named indispensable article,
+Newark has the most extensive manufactory in the world, 7,000 trunks per
+week, or about 365,000 yearly being produced here. It is said that in
+the manufacture of the best steam fire-engines, Newark ranks first. The
+number of persons finding employment in the factories is about 25,000,
+and the amount of wages paid weekly averages $250,000, or about
+$13,000,000 per year. The annual value of the productions of all her
+manufactories amounts to about $60,000,000.
+
+Thus it is seen that Newark has developed into one of the principal
+producing cities of the United States, the value of her diversified
+manufactured products making her, in this respect, the third, if not the
+second city of the Union.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+NEW HAVEN.
+
+ The City of Elms.--First Impressions.--A New England Sunday.--
+ A Sail on the Harbor.--Oyster Beds.--East Rock.--The Lonely
+ Denizen of the Bluff.--Romance of John Turner.--West Rock.--
+ The Judges' Cave.--Its Historical Association.--Escape of the
+ Judges.--Monument on the City Green.--Yale College.--Its Stormy
+ Infancy.--Battle on the Weathersfield Road.--Harvard, the Fruit
+ of the Struggle.
+
+
+Leaving New York by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, we
+found ourselves, at the end of a three hours' ride, in New Haven, the
+beautiful "City of Elms."
+
+Everything here bears the impress of New England, with the special
+peculiarities of Connecticut, land of smart sayings and of the
+proverbial wooden nutmegs and oak hams. Stepping from the cars, my ears
+were first saluted by the salutations of two genial Yankees, one of
+whom, I inferred from the conversation, had just arrived from
+Bridgeport, and the other at the depot had awaited his coming.
+Compliments were passed by the latter, who saluted his friend with--
+
+"Well, old boy, where have you been all summer? I see you have got your
+dust full of eyes."
+
+The reply to this salute was in entire harmony with the interrogation,
+and both walked away from the station, amusing each other with odd
+maxims and witty retorts.
+
+It being our intention to remain several weeks in New Haven, we decided
+to take up our abode at a private house, and with this object in view
+we started in pursuit of suitable accommodations. It was soon discovered
+that in the matter of board we were competing with "Old Yale," students
+always being preferred, owing to the prospect of permanency.
+
+A reconnoissance of several hours, during which we saw more stately elms
+than I ever expect to see again in so short a period, brought us to 66
+Chapel street, where we were pleasantly lodged, with an excellent table,
+and favored with a Yankee landlord from the classic banks of the Rhine.
+
+Universal quiet on the streets, and an inexhaustible supply of brown
+bread and beans at the breakfast table, was an unmistakable evidence
+that we had reached a New England Sunday. After breakfast, the weather
+being fine, I was invited to accompany some young gentlemen in a sail
+down the harbor. Being uncertain as to the propriety of such a
+proceeding on the seventh day, I was promptly assured that the Blue Laws
+of Connecticut would not be outraged in case I had taken a generous
+ration of brown bread and beans before starting.
+
+A ride of half an hour, with but little wind in our sails, carried us
+down through the oyster beds, to a point nearly opposite the lighthouse
+at the mouth of the harbor. A novel sight, in my judgment, is a
+multitude of oyster plantations staked out in such a manner as to show
+the proprietor of each particular section his exact limit or boundary.
+
+To those of my readers who are familiar with hop-growing regions, I
+would say that an oyster farm is not unlike a hop field which seems to
+have been suddenly inundated by water, leaving only the tops of the
+poles above the surface. Oyster raising is one of the leading features
+of New Haven enterprise, and the Fair Haven oysters, in particular, are
+regarded among the best that are cultivated on the Atlantic coast. On
+our return trip up the harbor the tide was going out, and as the water
+was extremely shallow in many places, and also very clear, we could see
+oysters and their less palatable neighbors, clams, in great abundance. I
+was strongly tempted to make substantial preparation for an oyster
+dinner, but on being informed that such a course would be equivalent to
+staking out claims in a strange water-melon patch, I concluded to
+desist, and contented myself with seeing more oysters in half an hour
+than I had seen in all my life before.
+
+
+EAST ROCK.
+
+One of the famous places of resort in the neighborhood of New Haven is
+East Rock, an abrupt pile of red-brown trap rock, lifting itself up from
+the plain to a height of four hundred feet. The summit of this
+monumental pile spreads out in a wide plateau of twenty-five or thirty
+acres, sloping gradually back towards the meadow lands which border the
+winding Quinnipiac River. It is owned and occupied by a somewhat
+eccentric individual, rejoicing in the name of Milton Stuart, who
+related to me the story of his life in this strange locality since
+taking up his abode here, some twenty years ago. On being told that I
+would commit to paper some account of my wanderings about New Haven, he
+seemed to take an especial pleasure in showing me his grounds and
+telling me everything of interest concerning them.
+
+With ready courtesy he pointed out a heap of stones on the western
+slope of the bluff, which he said was all that remained of a hut
+formerly occupied by one John Turner, who made a hermit of himself on
+this rock, years ago, all because the lady of his love refused to become
+Mrs. Turner. He met her while teaching in the South--so the story
+ran--and all his energies seemed to be paralyzed by her refusal to
+listen to his suit. He came to East Rock and built this wretched hovel
+of stone, where he lived in solitude, and where one morning in that long
+ago, he was found dead on the floor of his hovel. How many romances like
+this lie about us unseen, under the every-day occurrences of life!
+
+
+WEST ROCK
+
+is a continuation of the precipitous bluff of which East Rock is one
+extremity, and is about a mile further up the valley. It is not so high
+nor so imposing as East Rock, and the view from its wooded top fades
+into tameness beside the remote ocean distance and the flash of city
+spires to be seen from East Rock. But it makes up in historical interest
+what it may lack in other attractions; for here, about a quarter of a
+mile from its southernmost point, is located the "Judge's Cave," famous
+as the hiding-place of the regicides who tried and sentenced King
+Charles the First, in the seventeenth century.
+
+On the restoration of Charles II to the throne of his father, three of
+the high court which had condemned the first Charles wisely left England
+for the shores of the New World. Their names were Goffe, Whalley and
+Dixwell. Whalley was a lieutenant-general, Dixwell was a colonel, and
+Goffe a major-general. These noted army officers arrived at Boston, from
+England, July twenty-seventh, 1660, and first made their home in
+Cambridge. Finding that place unsafe, they afterwards went to New Haven.
+
+The next year news came from England that thirty-nine of the regicide
+judges were condemned, and ten already executed, as traitors. An order
+from the king was sent to the Colonial governors of Massachusetts and
+Connecticut, for the arrest of the judges. They were thus compelled to
+fly for their lives, and sought refuge in the cave on West Rock, which
+afterwards bore their name. Here they lived concealed for some time,
+being supplied with food by Richard Sperry, who lived about a mile west
+of the cave. The food was tied up in a cloth and laid on a stump near
+by, from which the judges could take it unobserved.
+
+One night they beheld the blazing eyes of a catamount or panther,
+peering in upon them at their cave, and were so frightened that they
+fled in haste to the house of Mr. Sperry, and could not again be induced
+to return. Several large boulders, from twenty to thirty feet in height,
+thrown together, doubtless, by some volcanic convulsions, unite to form
+the cave.
+
+Dixwell afterwards lived in New Haven, under an assumed name, and the
+graves of all three may now be seen, at one side of Centre Church, on
+the City Green.
+
+The following inscription is on a marble slab over the ashes of Dixwell,
+erected by his descendants in 1849:--
+
+ "Here rests the remains of John Dixwell, Esq., of the Priory of
+ Folkestone, in the county of Kent, England. Of a family long
+ prominent in Kent and Warwickshire, and himself possessing large
+ estates and much influence in his county, he espoused the popular
+ cause in the revolution of 1640. Between 1640 and 1660 he was
+ Colonel in the Army, an active member of four parliaments, and
+ thrice in the Council of State; and one of the High Court which
+ tried and condemned King Charles the First. At the restoration of
+ the monarchy he was compelled to leave his country, and after a
+ brief residence in Germany, came to New Haven, and here lived in
+ seclusion, but enjoying the esteem and friendship of its most
+ worthy citizens, till his death in 1688-9."
+
+The little brown headstone which first marked his resting place bore
+only his initials and the date of his death:--
+
+ "J. D. Esq.
+
+ Deceased March Y^e 18th in Y^e 82^D Year of his age 1688/9."
+
+That was all--his name being suppressed, at his request.
+
+The headstones of Goffe and Whalley are marked in the same obscure way.
+
+Yale College adds largely to the importance of New Haven, and the
+elegant new College buildings now in process of erection, built of brown
+freestone, cannot well be surpassed in style of architecture. "Old Yale"
+was originally a small school, established in Saybrook by Rev. Thomas
+Peters, who lived at that place, and who bequeathed his library to the
+school at his death. It soon acquired the title of the "Illustrious
+School," and about the year 1700 was given a charter of incorporation
+from the General Assembly, making it a college.
+
+It was named Yale, after its greatest benefactor, who was at that time
+governor of one of the West India islands. The historian, Dr. Samuel
+Peters, who wrote nearly a hundred years ago, said that Greek, Latin,
+Geography, History and Logic were well taught in this seminary, but it
+suffered for want of tutors in the Hebrew, French and Spanish languages.
+He remarks, incidentally, that "oratory, music and _politeness_ are
+equally neglected here and in the Colony." The students, numbering at
+that time one hundred and eighty, were allowed two hours' play with the
+foot ball every day, and were seated at four tables in the large dining
+room. This ancient historian says the college was built of wood, was one
+hundred and sixty feet long and three stories high, besides garrets. In
+1754 another building, of brick, one hundred feet long, with double
+rooms and a double front, was added. About 1760 a chapel and library
+were erected, which was described as being "very elegant." The "elegant"
+structure of a hundred years ago will soon be discarded for the new one
+of brown freestone.
+
+In the year 1717 the seminary was removed from Saybrook to New Haven,
+but it had a hard time in getting there. A vote was passed to remove the
+college from Saybrook, because, as the historian says, Saybrook was
+suspected of being too much in sympathy with the Church of England and
+not sufficiently alienated from the mother country. But there was a
+division in the vote, the Hartford ballot being in favor of removing the
+college to Weathersfield, while the New Haven party declared in behalf
+of their own city. A small battle grew out of this split between the
+Weathersfield and New Haven factions. Hartford, in order to carry its
+vote into execution, prepared teams, boats and a mob, and privately set
+off for Saybrook, seizing upon the college apparatus, library and
+students, which they carried to Weathersfield.
+
+This redoubled the jealousy of the "saints" at New Haven, who thereupon
+determined to fulfill their vote, and accordingly, having collected a
+mob, they set out for Weathersfield, where they seized by surprise the
+students and library. On the road to New Haven they were overtaken by
+the Hartford faction, who, after an inglorious battle, were obliged to
+retire with only part of the library and part of the students. From this
+affair sprang the two colleges, Yale and Harvard.
+
+The Massachusetts Bay people acted the part of peacemakers, and settled
+the difficulty between these two hostile factions, which resulted
+finally in placing the college at New Haven. So it seems our Puritan
+ancestors had their little disputations then, much as our Alabama and
+Arkansas brothers do now.
+
+What a flaming head-line that college battle doubtless furnished the
+bulletin boards and colonial press of 1717! Imagine a column beginning
+with this:--
+
+ _Sharp Fight on the Weathersfield Road!_
+
+ _Large Captures of Students!_
+
+ _New Haven Victorious!_
+
+But out of revenge for the victory, the sons of Hartford were not sent
+to Yale College to be educated. No, rather than go to Yale they went
+much further away, at greater expense, and where fewer educational
+advantages could be obtained. What were such disadvantages, however,
+compared to the satisfaction of standing by their party and ignoring the
+New Haven vote?
+
+But old Yale grew and flourished, despite the stormy days of its
+childhood, and has now a world-wide reputation. Many distinguished men
+of letters call her "Alma Mater," and in all their wanderings carry her
+memory green in their hearts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+NEW ORLEANS.
+
+ Locality of New Orleans.--The Mississippi.--The Old and the
+ New.--Ceded to Spain.--Creole Part in the American Revolution.--
+ Retransferred to France.--Purchased by the United States.--
+ Creole Discontent.--Battle of New Orleans.--Increase of
+ Population.--The Levee.--Shipping.--Public Buildings, Churches,
+ Hospitals, Hotels and Places of Amusement.--Streets.--Suburbs.--
+ Public Squares and Parks.--Places of Historic Interest.--
+ Cemeteries.--French Market.--Mardi-gras.--Climate and
+ Productions.--New Orleans during the Rebellion.--Chief Cotton
+ Mart of the World.--Exports.--Imports.--Future Prosperity of
+ the City.
+
+
+As the traveler proceeds down the Mississippi, from its source to its
+mouth, a unique phenomenon strikes his attention. The river seems to
+grow higher as he descends. The bluffs, which on one side or the other
+rise prominently along its banks in its upper waters, grow less bold,
+and finally disappear as he progresses southward. And if it should be
+the season of high water, he will find himself, as he nears New Orleans,
+gliding down a river which is higher than its bordering land, and which
+is restrained in its penchant for destruction, by massive dykes, or
+levees, as they are termed in this section.
+
+New Orleans, the commercial metropolis of Louisiana, known as the
+"Crescent City," is situated on the eastern, or, more correctly
+speaking, the northern bank of the Mississippi River, which here, after
+running northward several miles, takes a turn to the eastward.
+Originally built in the form of a crescent, around this bend in the
+river, it has at the present time extended itself so far up stream that
+its shore line is now more in the shape of a letter S. It is one hundred
+and twelve miles from the mouth of the Mississippi, 1,200 miles south of
+St. Louis, and 1,438 miles southwest of Washington. The city limits
+embrace an area of nearly 150 square miles, but the city proper is a
+little more than twelve miles long and three miles wide. It is built on
+alluvial soil, the ground falling off toward Lake Pontchartrain, which
+is five miles distant to the northward, so that portions of the city are
+four feet lower than the high water level of the river. The city is
+protected from inundation by a levee, twenty-six miles in length,
+fifteen feet wide and fourteen feet high. The streets are drained into
+canals, from which the water is raised by means of steam pumps, with a
+daily capacity of 42,000,000 gallons, which elevates it sufficiently to
+carry it off to Lake Pontchartrain.
+
+The geological history of this section of the country is extremely
+interesting. The whole region south of New Orleans is made land, having
+been brought down from the Rocky Mountains and the western plains, by
+that tireless builder, the Mississippi, which has heaped it up, grain by
+grain, probably changing the entire course of its lower waters in doing
+so, filling up old channels and wearing itself new ones, until it
+finally extends its delta, like an outstretched hand, far out into the
+waters of the Gulf of Mexico. The river has a history and a romance, all
+its own, beginning with the time when French and Spanish, alike, were
+searching for the "Hidden River"--that mysterious stream which,
+according to Indian tradition, "flowed to the land from which the sweet
+winds of the southwest brought them health and happiness, and where
+there was neither snow nor ice," and which was known by so many
+different names--and ending with the construction of the gigantic
+jetties, which have given depth and permanence to the channels of its
+delta.
+
+The visitor finds the city very unlike northern towns with which he has
+been familiar. To the Creole quarter especially there is a foreign look,
+which is intensified by the frequent sound of foreign speech. It is as
+if one had stepped into some old-world town, and left America, with its
+newness and its harshness of speech, far behind. But it is not so far
+away, either. It is only around the corner, or, at best, a few squares
+off. New Orleans of the nineteenth century jostles New Orleans of the
+eighteenth on every hand. It has seized upon the old streets, with their
+quaint French and Spanish names, and carried them to an extent never
+dreamed of by those who originally planned them. It has reared modern
+structures beside those hoary with age, and set down the post common
+school building and the heretical Protestant church beside the venerable
+convent and the solemn cathedral.
+
+The main streets describe a curve, running parallel to the river, and
+present an unbroken line from the upper to the lower limits of the city,
+a distance of about twelve miles. The cross streets run for the most
+part at right angles from the Mississippi River, with greater regularity
+than might be expected from the curved outline of the river banks. Many
+of the streets are well paved, and some of them are shelled; but many
+are unpaved, and, from the nature of the soil, exceedingly muddy in wet
+weather, and intolerably dusty in dry. The city is surrounded by cypress
+swamps, and its locality and environments render it very unhealthy,
+especially during the summer season. Yet, notwithstanding its
+insalubrity, it is constantly increasing in population and business
+importance. Certain sanitary precautions, adopted in later years, have
+somewhat improved its condition.
+
+New Orleans has a history extending further back than that of most
+southern towns. While others were making their first feeble struggles
+for existence with their treacherous foes, the red-skins, New Orleans
+was stirred by discontent and insurrection. In 1690, d'Iberville, in the
+name of France, founded the province of Louisiana, and Old Biloxi, at
+the mouth of the Lost River, as the Mississippi was still termed, was
+made the capital. The choice of site proved a disastrous one, and the
+seat of government was moved to New Biloxi, further up the river.
+Meantime, Bienville, his younger brother, laid out a little
+parallelogram of streets and ditches on a crescent-shaped shore of the
+river, in the midst of cypress swamps and willow jungles. A colony of
+fifty persons, many of them galley slaves, formed this new settlement.
+Houses were built, a fort added, and the little town received its
+present name, in honor of the Regent of France, the Duke of Orleans. In
+the same year John Law sent eight hundred men from La Rochelle. They had
+no sooner landed than they scattered to the four winds, a number of
+Germans among them alone remaining in or near the promised city. Amid
+many discouragements the town prospered, and when, one after another,
+three cargoes of women were sent out from the old country, to furnish
+wives for the new settlers, their content was complete. Thus many of the
+proudest aristocrats of New Orleans trace their descent from these
+"_Filles de Casette_," as they were called, each one being endowed with
+a small chest of property.
+
+Here the French Creoles were born, and lived a wild, unrestrained life,
+valorous but uneducated, and became such men and women as one would
+expect to find in a military outpost so far from the civilized world.
+For sixty-three years the little colony struggled for life, enduring
+floods and famines, and the terrors of Indian warfare, when, in 1762,
+the province of Louisiana was transferred by an unprincipled king to
+Spain. The news did not reach the remote American settlement until 1764.
+It was hardly to be expected that a colony so separated by time and
+distance from the mother country should be intensely loyal, but the
+people felt themselves to be French and French only, and they resented
+this unwitting transfer of their allegiance as an unendurable grievance.
+
+The Spanish Governor, Ulloa, did not land in New Orleans until two years
+later; and though he showed himself to be a man of great discretion, and
+inclined to adopt a conciliatory policy, the people made the little town
+so hot for him, that in two more years he was glad to return to Spain.
+They sent a memorial after him, which, being a most unique document, is
+worth recording, in substance. Says a recent historian, Mr. George W.
+Cable:--
+
+"It enumerated real wrongs, for which France and Spain, but not Ulloa,
+were to blame. Again, with these it mingled such charges against the
+banished Governor as--that he had a chapel in his own house; that he
+absented himself from the French churches; that he inclosed a fourth of
+the public common to pasture his private horses; that he sent to Havana
+for a wet nurse; that he ordered the abandonment of a brick-yard near
+the town, on account of its pools of putrid water; that he removed
+leprous children from the town to the inhospitable settlement at the
+mouth of the river; that he forbade the public whipping of slaves in the
+town; that masters had to go six miles to get a negro flogged; that he
+had landed in New Orleans during a thunder and rain storm, and under
+other ill omens; that he claimed to be king of the colony; that he
+offended the people with evidences of sordid avarice; and that he added
+to these crimes--as the text has it--'many others, equally just and
+terrible!'"
+
+In 1769 the colony was in open revolt, and was considering the project
+of forming a republic. But the arrival of a Spanish fleet of twenty-four
+sail checked their aspirations towards independence, and paralyzed their
+efforts, and they yielded without a struggle.
+
+In 1768 New Orleans was a town of 3,200 persons, a third of whom were
+black slaves. After the establishment of Spanish rule, although the
+population was thoroughly Creole, and opposed to the presence of English
+traders, the government at first winked at their appearance, and finally
+openly tolerated them, so that English boats supplied the planters with
+goods and slaves, and English warehouses moored upon the river opposite
+the town disposed of merchandise.
+
+In 1776, at the breaking out of the American Revolution, the Creole and
+Anglo-American came into active relations with each other, a relation
+which has since qualified every public question in Louisiana. The
+British traders were suddenly cut off from communication, and French
+merchants commanded the trade of the Mississippi. Americans followed
+close after the French, and the tide of immigration became Anglo-Saxon.
+France was openly supporting the American colonies in their rebellion
+against England, and in 1779 Spain declared war against Great Britain,
+so that the sympathies of the Creoles were led, by every tie, to the
+rebels. Galvez, then Governor of Louisiana, and also son of the Viceroy
+of Mexico, a young man, brave, talented and sagacious, who had adopted a
+most liberal policy in his administration, discovered that the British
+were planning the surprise of New Orleans. Making hasty but efficient
+preparations, with a little army of 1,430 men, and with a miniature gun
+fleet of but ten guns, he marched, on the twenty-second of August, 1779,
+against the British forts on the Mississippi. On the seventh of
+September, Fort Bute, on Bayou Manchac, yielded to the first assault of
+the Creole Militia. The Fort of Baton Rouge was garrisoned by five
+hundred men with thirteen heavy guns. On the twenty-first of September,
+after an engagement of ten hours, Galvez reached the fort. Its
+capitulation included the surrender of Fort Panmure, a place which, by
+its position, would have been very difficult of assault. In the
+Mississippi and Manchac, four English schooners, a brig and two cutters
+were captured. On the fourteenth of the following March, Galvez, with an
+army of two thousand men, having set sail down the Mississippi, captured
+Fort Charlotte, on the Mobile River. On the eighth of May, 1781,
+Pensacola, with a garrison of eight hundred men, and the whole of West
+Florida, surrendered to Galvez. One of the rewards bestowed upon her
+Governor for his valorous achievements was the Captain-generalship of
+Louisiana and West Florida. He never returned to New Orleans, however,
+and four years later succeeded his father as Viceroy of Mexico. Thus,
+while Andrew Jackson was yet a child, New Orleans was defended from
+British conquest by this gallant Spanish soldier.
+
+In 1803 Louisiana was transferred to France by Spain, and great was the
+rejoicing of the Creole colonists, who, during the forty years of their
+Spanish domination, had never forgotten their French origin. But their
+joy was quickly turned to bitterness by the news which speedily
+followed, that Louisiana had been sold, by Napoleon I, to the United
+States. The younger generation, and those who had a clear apprehension
+of all in the way of prosperity which this change might mean to them,
+were quickly reconciled, and set about the business of life with renewed
+interest. But to the French Creoles, as a class, who, during their long
+alienation had still at heart been thoroughly French, to become a part
+of a republic, and that republic English in its origin, was intensely
+distasteful. This was the deluge indeed, which Providence had not kindly
+stayed until after their time. They withdrew into a little community of
+their own, and refused companionship with such as sacrificed their caste
+by accepting the situation, and adapting themselves to it. But in spite
+of these disaffected persons, the prosperity of the city dated from that
+time. Its population increased, and its commerce made its first small
+beginnings.
+
+New Orleans was incorporated as a city in 1804, having then a population
+of about 8,000 inhabitants. In 1812 the first steamboat was put upon the
+Mississippi, though it was not until several years later that, after a
+period of experiment and disaster, success was attained with them. Yet
+without steamboats the development of the great Mississippi Valley, and
+the creation of the extended cities upon its banks, would have been
+well-nigh impossible. Its winding course, its swift current, its
+shifting channel, and the snags which line its bottom, make navigation
+by other craft than steamboats well-nigh impossible. Canoes, batteaux
+and flat-boats might make the voyage down the river with tolerable speed
+and safety, but to return against the current was a difficult thing to
+do; and a trip from St. Louis or Louisville to New Orleans and return
+required months. Where, then, would have been the mighty commerce of the
+West, but for the timely invention of the steam engine, and its
+application to water craft?
+
+On January eighth, 1815, New Orleans was successfully defended against
+the British by General Jackson, who threw up a strong line of defences
+around the city, protected by batteries, and who, with a force of
+scarcely six thousand men, defeated fifteen thousand British, under Sir
+Edward Packenham, the enemy sustaining a loss of seven hundred killed,
+fourteen hundred wounded, and five hundred taken prisoners, while the
+American loss was but seven men killed and six wounded. The old battle
+field is still retained as a historic spot. It is four and one-half
+miles south of Canal street, washed by the waters of the Mississippi,
+and extends backward about a mile, to the cedar swamps. A marble
+monument, seventy feet in height, and yet unfinished, commemorative of
+the victory, overlooks the ground. In the southwest corner of the field
+is a national cemetery.
+
+The old city bears the impress of the two nations to which it at
+different times belonged. Many of the streets still retain the old
+French and Spanish names, as, for instance, Tchapitoulas, Baronne,
+Perdido, Toulouse, Bourbon and Burgundy streets. There are still, here
+and there, the old houses, sandwiched in between those of a later
+generation--quaint, dilapidated, and picturesque. Sometimes they are
+rickety, wooden structures, with overhanging porticoes, and with windows
+and doors all out of perpendicular, and ready to crumble to ruin with
+age. Others are massive stone or brick structures, with great arched
+doorways, and paved floors, worn by the feet of many generations,
+dilapidated and heavy, and possessing no beauty save that which is lent
+them by time.
+
+The city is made up of strange compounds, which even yet, after the
+lapse of more than three-quarters of a century since it became an
+American city, do not perfectly assimilate. Spanish, French, Italians,
+Mexicans and Indians, Creoles, West Indians, Negroes and Mulattoes of
+every shade, from shiny black to a faint creamy hue, Southerners who
+have forgotten their foreign blood, Northerners, Westerners, Germans,
+Irish and Scandinavians, all come together here, and jostle one another
+in the busy pursuits of life. The levee at New Orleans represents all
+spoken languages; and the popular levee clerk must have a knowledge of
+multitudinous tongues, which would have secured him a high and
+authoritative position at Babel. The Romish devotee, the mild-faced
+"sister," in her ugly black habiliments and picturesque head-gear, the
+disciple of Confucius, the descendant of the New England Puritan, the
+dusky savage, who still looks to the Great Spirit as the giver of all
+life and light, the modern skeptic, and the black devotee of Voodoo, all
+meet and pass and repass each other. All nationalities, all religions,
+all civilizations, meet and mingle to make up this city, which,
+upholding the cross to indicate its religion, still, in its municipal
+character, accepts the Mohammedan symbol of the crescent. Added to the
+throng which comes and goes upon the levee, merchants, clerks, hotel
+runners, hackmen, stevedores, and river men of all grades, keep up a
+general motion and excitement, while piled upon the platforms which
+serve as a connecting link between the water-craft and the shore, are
+packages of merchandise in every conceivable shape, cotton bales seeming
+to be most numerous.
+
+Along the river front are congregated hundreds of steamers, and
+thousands of nondescript boats, among them numerous barges and
+flat-boats, thickly interspersed with ships of the largest size, from
+whose masts float the colors of every nation in the civilized world. New
+Orleans is emphatically a commercial town, depending in only a small
+degree, for her success, upon manufactures.
+
+ [Illustration: JACKSON SQUARE AND OLD CATHEDRAL, NEW ORLEANS.]
+
+New Orleans is not a handsome city, architecturally speaking, though it
+has a number of fine buildings. Its situation is such that it could
+never become imposing, under the most favorable circumstances. The
+Custom House, a magnificent structure, built of Quincy granite, is, next
+to the Capitol at Washington, the largest building in the United States.
+It occupies an entire square, its main front being on Canal street, the
+broadest and handsomest thoroughfare in the city. The Post Office
+occupies its basement, and is one of the most commodious in the country.
+The State House is located on St. Louis street, between Royal and
+Chartres streets, and was known, until 1874, as the St. Louis Hotel. The
+old dining hall is one of the most beautiful rooms in the country,
+and the great inner circle of the dome is richly frescoed, with
+allegorical scenes and busts of eminent Americans. The United States
+Branch Mint, at the corner of Esplanade and Decatur streets, is an
+imposing building, in the Ionian style. The City Hall, at the
+intersection of St. Charles and Lafayette streets, is the most artistic
+of the public buildings of the city. It is of white marble, in the Ionic
+style, with a wide and high flight of granite steps, leading to a
+beautiful portico. The old Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Louis is the
+most interesting church edifice in New Orleans. It stands in Chartres
+street, on the east side of Jackson Square. The foundations were laid in
+1793, and the building completed in 1794, by Don Andre Almonaster,
+perpetual _regidor_ of the province. It was altered and enlarged in
+1850. The paintings in the roof of the building are by Canova and Rossi.
+The old Ursuline Convent, in Conde street, a quaint and venerable
+building, erected in 1787, during the reign of Carlos III, by Don Andre
+Almonaster, is one of the most interesting relics of the early Church
+history of New Orleans. It is now occupied as a residence by the Bishop.
+
+The Charity Hospital, on Common street, was founded in 1784, has stood
+on its present site since 1832, and is one of the most famous
+institutions of the kind in the country. Roman Catholic churches,
+schools, hospitals and asylums abound, some of them dating back for
+nearly or quite a century.
+
+The St. Charles Hotel is one of the institutions of New Orleans, and one
+of the largest and finest hotels in the United States. It occupies half
+a square, and is bounded by St. Charles, Gravior and Common streets. The
+city has a French opera house, an academy of music, and several
+theatres and halls. Like those of St. Louis, its inhabitants are
+passionately fond of gayety, and places of amusement are well
+patronized. Sunday, as in all Catholic cities, is devoted to recreation,
+and the inhabitants, in their holiday garments, give themselves up to
+enjoyment. Theatres, concert rooms and beer gardens are filled with
+pleasure-seekers.
+
+Canal street, the main business thoroughfare and promenade of New
+Orleans, is nearly two hundred feet wide, and has a grass plot
+twenty-five feet wide, in the centre, bordered on each side by trees.
+Claiborne, Rampart, St. Charles and Esplanade streets are similarly
+embellished. They all contain many fine stores and handsome residences.
+Royal, Rampart and Esplanade streets are the principal promenades of the
+French quarter. The favorite drives are out the Shell Road to Lake
+Pontchartrain, and out a similar road to Carrollton. The lake is about
+five miles north of the city, forty miles long and twenty-four wide, and
+is famous for its fish and game. Cypress swamps, the trees covered with
+the long, gray Spanish moss peculiar to the latitude, lie between the
+lake and the city, and render the drive in that direction an interesting
+one.
+
+Carrollton, in the north suburbs, has many fine public gardens and
+private residences. On the opposite shore of the river is Algiers, where
+there are extensive dry docks and ship-yards. A little further up the
+river, on the same side, is Gretna, where, during Spanish rule, lay
+moored two large floating English warehouses, fitted up with counters
+and shelves, and stocked with assorted merchandise.
+
+New Orleans has a few small, tastefully laid out squares, among which
+are Jackson, Lafayette, Douglass, Annunciation and Tivoli Circle. The
+City Park, near the northeast boundary, contains one hundred and fifty
+acres, which are tastefully laid out, but which is little frequented.
+Jackson Square has a historic interest, it having been the old Place
+d'Armes of colonial times. It was here that Ulloa landed in that
+ill-omened thunder storm, and here that public meetings were held and
+the colony's small armies gathered together. The inclosure, though
+small, is adorned with beautiful trees and shrubbery, and shell-strewn
+paths, and in the centre stands Mills' equestrian statue of General
+Jackson.
+
+The city is not without other objects of historic interest. During the
+Indian wars barracks arose on either side of the Place d'Armes, and in
+1758 other barracks were added, a part of whose ruin still stands, in
+the neighborhood of Barracks street. Then there is the battle field,
+already referred to, and many buildings belonging to a past century,
+some of which have distinctive historic associations. Near Jackson
+Square is the site of the oldest Capuchin Monastery in the United
+States. Sailing down the Mississippi, the voyager will reach a portion
+of the stream which flows almost directly south. Here is a point in the
+river which bears the name, to this day, of the English Turn. Up the
+mouth of the Mississippi sailed one day, in the seventeenth century, a
+proud English vessel, bent on exploration and acquisition of territory
+to England. Threading for a hundred miles the comparatively direct
+course of the stream, it had then made two abrupt right-angled turns,
+when, coming around a third point, in advance of it, it saw a French
+ship, armed and equipped, and bearing down stream under full sail. The
+English ship was given to understand that the Mississippi was "no
+thoroughfare" for boats of its nationality, and commanded to turn and
+retrace its course, which it reluctantly, but no less surely did. Hence
+the name "English Turn."
+
+The Cemeteries of New Orleans are most peculiar in their arrangement and
+modes of interment. The ground is filled with water up to within two or
+three feet of the surface, and the tombs are all above ground. A great
+majority of them are also placed one above another. Each "oven," as it
+is called, is just large enough to admit a coffin, and is hermetically
+sealed when the funeral rites are over. A marble tablet is usually
+placed upon the brick opening. Some of the structures are, however,
+costly and beautiful, being made of marble, granite or iron. There are
+thirty-three cemeteries in and near the city, and of these the Cypress
+Grove and Greenwood are best worth visiting.
+
+The most picturesque and characteristic feature of New Orleans is the
+French Market, on the Levee, near Jackson Square. The gathering begins
+at break of day on week-days and a little later on Sunday morning, and
+comprises people of every nationality represented in the city. French is
+the prevailing language, but it will be heard in every variety, from the
+pure Parisian to the childish jargon of the negroes.
+
+Mardi-Gras, or Shrove Tuesday, is observed in New Orleans by peculiar
+rites and ceremonies. Rex, King of the Carnival, takes possession of the
+city, and passes through the streets, accompanied by a large retinue,
+his staff and courtiers robed in Oriental splendor. The city gives
+itself up to mirth and gayety, with an abandon only paralleled by that
+witnessed in Italy on the same occasion; and the day is concluded by
+receptions, tableaux and balls.
+
+ [Illustration: NIGHT PARADE OF THE MYSTIC CREW--MARDI-GRAS FESTIVAL,
+ NEW ORLEANS.]
+
+New Orleans boasts a semi-tropical climate, being situated in latitude
+29 deg. 58' north. The summers are oppressively hot, but the winters are
+mild and pleasant, with just sufficient frost to kill any germs of
+disease engendered by her unhealthful situation. Semi-tropical fruits,
+such as the orange, banana, fig and pine-apple, grow readily in her
+gardens, where are also cultivated many of the productions of the
+temperate zone. The neighboring country is clothed with a rich and
+luxuriant semi-tropical vegetation, and forests of perennial green, in
+which the cypress and live-oak predominate.
+
+New Orleans had a population, in 1820, of 27,000. In 1850 it had
+increased to 116,375, and in 1860 to 168,675. In common with other
+cities of the South, New Orleans suffered in her business interests
+severely during the war of the Rebellion. Louisiana having seceded from
+the Union in 1861, New Orleans was closely blockaded by the Federal
+fleet, and on April twenty-fourth, 1862, the defences near the mouth of
+the river were forced by Commodore Farragut, in command of an expedition
+of gunboats. On the surrender of the city General B. F. Butler was
+appointed its military Governor, and held possession of it until the
+close of the war. Its commerce was entirely destroyed during that
+period, its business interests crushed, and many of its leading men
+impoverished, and, in addition, the State was disturbed by intestine
+troubles, which kept affairs in an unsettled condition. New Orleans did
+not rally as quickly as St. Louis from the effects of the war.
+Nevertheless, in 1870 its population had increased to 191,418, and in
+1874 the value of its exports, including rice, flour, pork, tobacco,
+sugar, etc., but excepting cotton, were estimated at $93,715,710. Its
+imports the same year were valued at more than $14,000,000. It is the
+chief cotton mart of the world, and its wharves are lined with ships
+which bear this commodity to every quarter of the globe. In the amount
+and value of its exports, it ranks second only to New York, though its
+imports are not in the same proportion, which always speaks well for the
+business prosperity of a city. The census of 1880 gave it a population
+of 216,140, showing that its progress still continues. No longer cursed
+by the presence of the "peculiar institution," its former slave marts
+turned into commercial depots or abolished altogether, and its
+population numbering to a greater degree every year the industrious
+class, New Orleans will do more in the future than maintain her present
+prosperity; she will build up new industries, and originate new schemes
+of advancement; so that she is certain to continue her present supremacy
+over her sister cities in the South.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+NEW YORK.
+
+ Early History of New York.--During the Revolution.--
+ Evacuation Day.--Bowling Green.--Wall Street.--Stock Exchange.--
+ Jacob Little.--Daniel Drew.--Jay Cooke.--Rufus Hatch.--The
+ Vanderbilts.--Jay Gould.--Trinity Church.--John Jacob Astor.--
+ Post-Office.--City Hall and Court House.--James Gordon
+ Bennett.--Printing House Square.--Horace Greeley.--Broadway.--
+ Union Square.--Washington Square.--Fifth Avenue.--Madison
+ Square.--Cathedral.--Murray Hill.--Second Avenue.--Booth's
+ Theatre and Grand Opera House.--The Bowery.--Peter Cooper.--
+ Fourth Avenue.--Park Avenue.--Five Points and its Vicinity.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Tombs.--Central Park.--Water Front.--
+ Blackwell's Island.--Hell Gate.--Suspension Bridge.--Opening
+ Day.--Tragedy of Decoration Day.--New York of the Present and
+ Future.
+
+
+Less than three hundred years ago the narrow strip of territory now
+occupied by what its wide-awake and self-asserting citizens delight to
+term "The Metropolis of the New World," was a broken and rugged
+wilderness, which the foot of white man had never trod, not, at least,
+within the memory of its then oldest inhabitants, a few half-naked
+savages of the Manhattan tribe, from whom the island derives its name of
+Manhattan. In 1609 Henry Hudson, an English navigator in the service of
+the Dutch East India Company, landed near the present site of the
+Battery, securing, by right of discovery, the territory to the States of
+the Netherlands. Dutch traders soon followed, and in 1614 a small fort
+and four houses were erected in the neighborhood of what is now Bowling
+Green. The infant metropolis was christened New Amsterdam, and Peter
+Minuits sent out, in 1626, as its first Governor. He purchased the
+island from its native owners, for goods, about twenty-four dollars in
+value. Minuits was recalled in 1631, his successors being Wonter Von
+Twiller, 1633; William Krift, 1638; and Peter Stuyvesant, 1647. In 1644
+a fence was built nearly along the line of what is now Wall street, and
+in 1653 palisades and breastworks, protected by a ditch, were added
+along this line. These palisades remained in existence until near the
+beginning of the present century.
+
+Peter Stuyvesant was the last of the Dutch Governors. In 1664 Charles
+II, of England, gave the territory to his brother James, Duke of York,
+and an expedition was sent out under the command of Colonel Richard
+Nicholls, to take possession of it. The fort was easily captured, and
+the name of the settlement changed to New York. In 1673 the town was
+recaptured by the Dutch, who again changed its name to New Orange; but
+the following year it was restored to the English by treaty.
+
+In 1689 Jacob Leister instituted an insurrection against the unpopular
+administration of Nicholls, which he easily overthrew, and strengthened
+the fort by a battery of six guns outside its walls. This was the origin
+of the "Battery." In 1691 he was arrested and convicted on a charge of
+treason and murder, condemned to death, and executed.
+
+Negro slavery was introduced into New York at an early period, and in
+the year 1741 the alleged discovery of a plot of the slaves to burn the
+city and murder the whites resulted in twenty negroes being hanged, a
+lesser number being burned at the stake, and seventy-five being
+transported.
+
+From the very first the mass of citizens of New York took an active part
+in the struggle for independence. In 1765 the "Sons of Liberty" were
+organized to resist the Stamp Act; in 1770 a meeting of three thousand
+citizens resolved not to submit to this oppression; and in 1773 a
+Vigilance Committee was formed to resist the landing of the tea, by
+whom, in the following year, a tea-laden vessel was sent back to
+England, while eighteen chests of tea were thrown overboard from
+another. On the eighteenth of September, 1776, as a result of the
+disastrous defeat of the American troops, under General Washington, on
+Long Island, New York fell into the hands of the British, who held it
+until the twenty-sixth of November, 1783, when they evacuated it. The
+day is still annually celebrated, under the name of "Evacuation Day."
+
+From 1784 to 1797 New York was the Capital of the State, and from 1785
+to 1790 the seat of government of the United States. The adoption of the
+National Constitution was celebrated in grand style in 1788; and on
+April thirtieth, 1789, Washington was inaugurated at the City Hall, as
+the first President of the United States.
+
+In 1791 the city was visited by yellow fever. In 1795 and 1798 it
+reappeared, with added violence, over two thousand persons falling
+victims to it during the latter year. It made visits at intervals until
+1805, after which it did not reappear until 1819. It came again in 1822
+and 1823, occasioning considerable alarm, but since then its visits in
+an epidemic form have ceased.
+
+In 1820 the surveying and laying out of Manhattan Island north of
+Houston street, after ten years of labor, was completed. The opening of
+the Erie Canal, in 1825, gave the city a fresh impetus on the road to
+prosperity. The first steam ferry between New York and Jersey City was
+started in 1812. In 1825 the city was first lighted by gas; while the
+great Croton Aqueduct, through which it receives its immense water
+supply, was not completed until 1842.
+
+In December, 1835, the most disastrous fire ever known in the city
+destroyed over $18,000,000 worth of property. In July, 1845, a second
+conflagration consumed property to the amount of $5,000,000. Both these
+great fires were in the very heart of the business portion of the city.
+
+In July, 1853, an industrial exhibition was opened, with striking
+ceremonies, in a so-called Crystal Palace, on Reservoir Square. This
+building, in the form of a Greek cross, was made almost wholly of iron
+and glass, being three hundred and sixty-five feet in length each way,
+with a dome one hundred and twenty-three feet high. The flooring covered
+nearly six acres of ground. This structure was destroyed by fire in
+1858.
+
+New York has been the scene of several sanguinary riots within the past
+half century. In 1849, when Macready, the English tragedian, attempted
+to play a second engagement at the Astor Place Opera House, the friends
+of Forrest attacked the building, resulting in calling out of the
+military, the killing of thirty-two persons, and wounding of thirty-six
+others. In July, 1863, a mob, made up of the poorer classes of the
+population, rose in fierce opposition to the draft rendered necessary by
+the requisition for troops by the general government. For several days
+this mob was in practical possession of the city, and it was dispersed
+only by a free use of military force. This mob resulted in the death of
+one thousand persons, and the destruction of $1,500,000 worth of
+property. In 1871 a collision occurred between a procession of Irish
+Orangemen, who were commemorating the Battle of the Boyne, and their
+Catholic fellow-countrymen, during which sixty-two persons lost their
+lives.
+
+The summer of 1871 was made memorable by the discovery that the most
+stupendous frauds upon the public treasury had been carried on for
+several years, by certain city officials, some of whom had been
+extraordinarily popular. A mass meeting, called at Cooper Institute on
+the fourth of September, appointed a committee of seventy-six to take
+measures for securing better government for the city. The elections in
+November following resulted in a complete sweeping out of the obnoxious
+officials, many of whom were subsequently prosecuted, convicted and
+imprisoned, or obliged to fly the country.
+
+New York City, the greater portion of which lies on Manhattan Island, is
+situated at the mouth of the Hudson River, some eighteen miles from the
+Atlantic Ocean. Its extreme length north from the Battery is sixteen
+miles, while the average breadth of the island is one and three-fifths
+of a mile. The city has an area of about 27,000 acres, of which 14,000
+are on Manhattan Island, and about 12,000 on the main land; while the
+remainder is in the East River and the Bay, and includes Ward's,
+Blackwell's, Randall's, Governor's Ellis', and Bedloe's Islands. It is
+bounded on the north by the town of Yonkers; on the east by the Bronx
+and East Rivers; on the south by the Bay; and on the west by the Hudson
+River. Manhattan Island is separated on the north, from the main land,
+by Spuyten Duyvel Creek and Harlem River, both names recalling the Dutch
+origin of the city.
+
+The more ancient portion of New York, from Fourteenth street to the
+Battery, is laid out somewhat irregularly. As far north as Central Park,
+five miles from the Battery, it is quite compactly built. Various
+localities in the more northern and less densely built-up part of the
+island are known by different names; as Yorkville, near Eighty-sixth
+street; and Harlem, in the vicinity of One-hundred-and-twenty-fifth
+street, on the eastern side; and Bloomingdale and Manhattanville,
+opposite them, on the western. North of Manhattanville, near
+One-hundred-and-fiftieth street, is Carmansville, and a mile and a half
+further north are Washington Heights; while Inwood lies at the extreme
+northwestern point of the island. All these are places of interest, and
+offer numerous attractions to the visitor.
+
+That part of New York lying on the mainland, comprising the twenty-third
+and twenty-fourth wards, was added to it in 1874, and contains many
+thriving towns and villages. Prominent among them is Morrisania, with
+avenues running north and south, and streets crossing them at right
+angles, and numbered in continuation of those of Manhattan Island.
+Numerous other towns, with a host of beautiful country residences, are
+scattered over the high and rolling land of which this late addition to
+the area of the city is composed; but with the exception of Morrisania
+it has not yet been regularly laid out for building purposes. The whole
+country in this section of the city, with a romantic natural beauty, to
+which wealth and artistic taste have largely contributed, is a perfect
+paradise of picturesqueness.
+
+The foreigner who visits New York usually approaches it from the lower
+bay, through the "Narrows," a strait lying between Staten Island on the
+left and Long Island on the right. From the heights of the former, a
+beautiful island, rising green and bold from the water's edge, frown the
+massive battlements of Fort Wadsworth and Fort Tompkins; while on the
+latter is Fort Hamilton; and in the midst of the water, gloomy and
+barren, is Fort Lafayette, famous as a political prison during the late
+war. New York Bay is one of the most beautiful, if not _the_ most
+beautiful, in the world. Staten Island rises abruptly on one shore, with
+hills and valleys, green fields and trees, villages and villas; and on
+the other shore are the wood-crowned bluffs of Long Island. Within the
+bay Ellis' Island is near the Jersey shore; Bedloe's Island is not far
+from its centre, and is the selected site of the colossal statue of
+Liberty which France has presented to New York; while Governor's Island,
+the largest of the three, lies to the right, between New York and
+Brooklyn. Each island is fortified, the latter containing Castle William
+and old Fort Columbus.
+
+The bay is dotted with the shipping of every nation. Ocean steamers are
+setting out on their long journeys, or just returning from foreign
+shores. The finest steamboats and ferry boats in the world dart hither
+and thither, like water spiders on the surface of a glassy pool. Tugs,
+oyster boats, and sailing vessels of every size and description, are all
+represented. It is a moving panorama of water craft. As the city is
+approached, gradually, from the distant haze which broods over it, is
+evolved the forms of towers, spires, and roofs, and all its varied and
+picturesque outlines. The city presents a beautiful view from the bay.
+It rises gradually from the water's edge, some portions of it to a
+considerable elevation. A prominent feature in its outline is the
+graceful, tapering spire of Trinity Church, while higher still rises the
+clock-tower of the Tribune building. Other towers, spires and domes,
+break the monotony of roofs and walls. Approaching the mouth of the East
+River, the most striking objects are the massive towers of the
+Suspension Bridge, one on either shore, while between them is the
+bridge, swung upon what seem at a distance like the merest cobwebs.
+
+At the extreme southern end of Manhattan Island is the Battery, already
+referred to, a park of several acres, protected by a granite sea wall.
+It presents a beautiful stretch of green turf, fine trees and wide
+pathways. On its southwest border is Castle Garden, a circular brick
+structure, which has a history of its own. It was originally constructed
+for a fort, and was afterwards converted into a summer garden. A great
+ball, to Marquis Lafayette, was given in it in 1824; and General Jackson
+in 1832, and President Tyler in 1843, held public receptions there. Then
+it was turned into a concert hall, and is chiefly famous, as such, as
+being the place where Jenny Lind made her first appearance in America.
+It is now an emigrant depot, and on days of the arrival of emigrant
+ships, it is very entertaining to watch the troops of emigrants, with
+their quaint gait, unfamiliar language, and strange, un-American faces,
+passing out of its portals, and making their first entrance into their
+new life on the western continent.
+
+Just east of the Battery is Whitehall, the terminus of numerous omnibus
+and car lines, and the location of the Staten Island, South and Hamilton
+ferries. There, too, is the depot of the elevated railways, which extend
+in four lines, two on the eastern side and two on the western, the
+entire length of the city. The Corn Exchange, an imposing building, is
+at the upper end of Whitehall. At the junction of Whitehall with
+Broadway is a pretty, old-fashioned square, shaded with trees, and
+surrounded by an iron fence, called Bowling Green. This was the
+aristocratic quarter of the city in its early days. No. 1 Broadway,
+known as the "old Kennedy House," was built in 1760, and has been,
+successively, the residence and headquarters of Lords Conwallis and
+Howe, General Sir Henry Clinton and General Washington, while Talleyrand
+lived there during his stay in America. Benedict Arnold concocted his
+treasonable projects at No. 5 Broadway. At No. 11 General Gates had his
+headquarters. A few of the old buildings still remain, but they have
+many of them already given way to more modern and more pretentious
+structures. The posts of the iron fence around Bowling Green were once
+surmounted by balls, but they were knocked off and used for cannon balls
+during the Revolution. An equestrian statue of King George III, which
+once ornamented the Square, was melted up during the same period, and
+furnished material for forty-two thousand bullets.
+
+The stranger in New York sometimes wonders why its principal business
+street is called Broadway, since there are many others which are quite
+as broad, some of them even broader. But if he will visit the extreme
+southern portion of the city, he will quickly comprehend. The old
+streets are narrow, being scarcely more than mere alleys, with pavements
+barely broad enough for two to walk abreast, so that Broadway, when
+originally laid out, seemed a magnificent thoroughfare.
+
+As already described, Wall street formed the northern boundary of the
+young colonial city. In that early day, as now, wealth and fashion
+sought to avoid the more plebeian business streets, and so withdrew to
+the neighborhood of this northern boundary, and established, first their
+residences, and then their commercial houses. Wall street then became
+what it has since remained, the monetary centre of the city, only that
+now it is more than that; it is the great monetary centre of the entire
+country. On it and the blocks leading from it, all embraced in
+comparatively a few acres, are probably stored more gold and silver than
+in all the rest of the United States put together, while the business
+interests represented extend to every section, not only of the
+continent, but of the world.
+
+Nowhere else in America are there such and so many magnificent buildings
+as in this section of the city. The streets are narrow, and overshadowed
+as they are by edifices six or more stories in height, seem to be
+dwarfed into mere alley-ways. Nearly every building is worthy of being
+called a temple or a palace. White marble and brown stone, with every
+style of architecture, abound. The United States Sub-Treasury Building,
+at the corner of Wall and Nassau streets, is a stately white marble
+structure in the Doric style, occupying the site of the old Federal
+Hall, in which Washington delivered his first inaugural address.
+Opposite is the white marble palace, in the style of the Renaissance,
+known as the Drexel Building. A little further down the street, at the
+corner of William, is the United States Custom House, formerly the
+Merchants' Exchange, built of granite. It has a portico supported by
+twelve massive columns, and its rotunda in the interior is supported by
+eight columns of Italian marble, the Corinthian capitals of which were
+carved in Italy. Opposite this building is the handsome structure of the
+Bank of New York. Banks, and bankers' and brokers' offices fill the
+street, and are crowded into the side streets.
+
+On Broad street, a short distance below Wall, is the Stock Exchange, a
+handsome, but not large building, which in point of interest towers over
+all others in the locality. Here are daily exacted the comedies and
+tragedies of financial life, and here fortunes are made and fortunes
+lost by that system of gigantic gambling which has come to be known as
+"dealing in stocks." The operations of the Stock Exchange and Gold Room
+concern the whole country, both financially and industrially. Here is
+the true governmental centre, rather than at Washington. Wall and Broad
+streets dictate to Congress what the laws of the country concerning
+finance shall be, and Congress obeys. The Bankers' Association holds the
+menace over the government that if their interests are not consulted,
+they will bring ruin upon the country; and it is in their power to
+execute the threat. This power was illustrated on the twenty-fourth of.
+September, 1869, a day memorable as Black Friday in the history of Wall
+street. By a small but strong combination of bears, gold was made to
+fall in seventeen minutes, from 1.60 to 1.30, after a sale of
+$50,000,000 had been effected, and thousands of men, from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific, were ruined. Money was locked up, and could not be
+obtained even at a premium of one hundred per cent. This was the
+forerunner of the panic which came four years later, in 1873. Then the
+Union Trust Company failed, carrying with it Jay Cooke, Fisk and Hatch,
+Henry Clews, Howe and Macy, and other houses. For the first time during
+its existence the Stock Exchange was closed. Without its closing, not a
+merchant or banker could have survived. With its doors shut no contract
+could be completed nor stocks transferred, and it gave people time,
+which was absolutely needed, to do what they could; or else universal
+and overwhelming ruin would have swept over the country. As it was, not
+less than twenty thousand firms went under, and the stringency of the
+times was felt throughout the nation, depressing business and checking
+industry, until Congress took measures for its relief.
+
+The names of Jacob Little, Leonard W. Jerome, Daniel Drew, Jay Cooke,
+Augustus Schell, Rufus Hatch, James Fisk, Jr., Jay Gould, Commodore
+Vanderbilt, Wm. H. Vanderbilt, and others, are permanently associated
+with Wall street. Jacob Little was known as the "Great Bear of Wall
+street." He originated the daring, dashing style of business in stocks,
+and was always identified with the bears. Meeting many reverses, he died
+at last, comparatively poor, the Southern Rebellion having swept away
+his little remaining fortune.
+
+Leonard W. Jerome was at one time financially the rival of Vanderbilt
+and Drew, with a fortune estimated at from six to ten millions. He
+assumed an unequaled style of magnificence in living; but reverses came,
+and his splendid property on Madison Square, including residence, costly
+stables and private theatre, passed into the hands of the Union League
+Club, and was occupied by them until they went to their new quarters in
+Fifth Avenue. He himself is now forgotten, although a man scarcely past
+the prime of life; but his name is perpetuated in the Jerome Race
+Course.
+
+Daniel Drew came to New York a poor boy, and, by persistent industry and
+business capacity, worked his way up to the highest round of the
+commercial ladder. In 1838 Drew put an opposition boat upon the Hudson,
+with fare at one dollar to Albany; and shortly afterward established the
+People's Line, which has been so successful. The panic of 1873 affected
+him seriously, but he staved off failure until 1875. He died in 1879,
+leaving next to nothing of the millions he had made during his lifetime.
+St. Paul's Church, in Fourth avenue; the Methodist Church at Carmel,
+Putnam County, New York, his native place; and Drew Theological
+Seminary, are monuments of his munificence while money was at his
+command.
+
+Jay Cooke, having been already tolerably successful in business, amassed
+his millions by negotiating the war loan. He was regarded as one of the
+most prominent and safe financiers in the country; but in 1873 his
+failure was complete, and he has not since been heard of in financial
+circles.
+
+Rufus Hatch is one of the successful stock operators of New York.
+Beginning life with nothing, and meeting reverses as well as successes,
+he is now known as one of the boldest and most gigantic of street
+operators.
+
+The name of James Fisk, Jr., is associated with that of the Erie
+Railroad. He commenced life as a peddler. In 1868 he was appointed
+Comptroller of the Erie Road, and immediately set about building up the
+fortunes of that corporation. He appeared on Wall street as an assistant
+of Daniel Drew; made himself master of the Narragansett Steamship
+Company, and changed the condition of its affairs from disaster to
+success. He was one of the conspirators on Black Friday of 1869. He
+purchased the Opera House and the Fifth Avenue Theatre, finding them
+both good investments. He was shot by Edward S. Stokes, both himself
+and Stokes having become entangled with a woman named Helen Josephine
+Mansfield. After his death his supposed great private fortune dwindled
+into a comparatively small amount.
+
+Commodore Vanderbilt also started in life a penniless boy, and became,
+eventually, the great King of Wall street. He built up the Harlem River
+Railroad, originated gigantic enterprises; sent a line of steamships
+across the ocean; gained control of the Hudson River Railroad and other
+roads; and died in 1877, worth not far from $100,000,000, the bulk of
+which he left to his eldest son, William H. Vanderbilt. The Vanderbilt
+name has lost none of its lustre in the hands of the second generation.
+In less than ten years, after a career of unequaled brilliancy in the
+financial world, William H. Vanderbilt retired, with a fortune probably
+double that of his father.
+
+Jay Gould also achieved success from small beginnings. He was in company
+with Fisk in the control of the Erie Railroad, and an associate in
+bringing about the disasters of Black Friday. Soon after the death of
+Greeley he secured a controlling interest in the New York _Tribune_. He
+is still a power in Wall street, and a great railroad magnate.
+
+Broad street still has historical associations clinging about it. At the
+corner of Broad and Pearl streets is the famous De Lancy House, built
+early in the last century by Stephen De Lancy, a Huguenot refugee from
+Normandy. In this house, on the evening of November twenty-fifth, 1783,
+Washington and his staff, with Governor Clinton, celebrated the
+evacuation of the city by the British troops, and a few days later
+Washington bade his officers farewell, before departing for Annapolis to
+resign his commission. The house, having passed through successive
+stages of degeneration, had at one time sunk so low as to have become a
+German tenement house, with a lager beer saloon on the third floor. It
+has recently been renovated, and has again put on an air of
+respectability. It still bears upon it the words: "Washington's
+Headquarters." All about it are, here and there, the relics of the past,
+in the shape of houses which once were homes of the gentility, in
+colonial times.
+
+Pearl street is said to have been originally a cow-path, and it is
+certainly crooked enough to justify such an origin. It is the locality
+of the Cotton Exchange and the cotton brokers.
+
+On Broadway, at the head of Wall street, is Trinity Church, whose spire
+was, until a recent period, the highest in the city, being two hundred
+and eighty-four feet in height. In the early days, when the aristocracy
+were seeking the select neighborhood of Wall street, this church
+corporation established itself upon the utmost northern confines of the
+city. Its original edifice was destroyed by fire, and the present one
+was erected in 1846. It is of brown stone, in pure gothic architecture,
+and one of the most beautiful in New York. In the rich carving of the
+exterior numerous birds have built their nests. It has stained glass
+windows, and the finest chime of bells in America. Within the church is
+a costly reredos in memory of John Jacob Astor. A venerable graveyard
+lies to its north, where repose the remains of Alexander Hamilton,
+Captain Lawrence, of the Chesapeake, Robert Fulton, and the unfortunate
+Charlotte Temple. Some of the headstones, brown and crumbling with age,
+and bearing grotesque carved effigies of angels, date back for more than
+a century. In the northeast corner is a stately monument erected to the
+memory of the patriots who died in British prisons in New York during
+the Revolution. Trinity Parish is the oldest in the city, and fabulously
+wealthy, the corporation having been granted, by Queen Anne, in 1705, a
+large tract of land west of Broadway, extending as far north as
+Christopher street, known as the "Queen's Farm." The land, at that time
+remote from the city, now embraces some of its most valuable business
+portions. It is all leased of Trinity Church by the occupants, and the
+church, when the leases expire, becomes possessed of the buildings and
+improvements upon the ground, and is thus constantly augmenting its
+wealth. The claims of the Jans Anneke heirs involve this vast estate. It
+has three chapels, one of which, St. Paul's, is a few blocks above, on
+the corner of Broadway and Vesey streets, and is surrounded by a
+graveyard almost as ancient as that of Trinity.
+
+At the northwest corner of Vesey street and Broadway is the Astor House,
+which, when it was built, something more than a generation ago, was a
+marvel of size and splendor, though it is now thrown in the shade by
+more modern structures. John Jacob Astor, its builder, was born near
+Heidelberg, in Germany, in 1765, and came penniless to the new world, to
+seek his fortune. After serving as a clerk, he then engaged in a small
+way in the fur business, which eventually grew to the proportions of the
+American Fur Company, and brought to its founder a large fortune, though
+no one outside his family ever knew its exact amount. He settled most of
+his affairs before his death, selling the Astor House to his son
+William, for the consideration of one dollar. Much of his property was
+in real estate, which constantly increased in value. He died in 1848,
+and his senior son being an imbecile, William B. Astor, the younger
+brother, inherited most of his father's fortune. The son became vastly
+richer than his father, dying in 1875, leaving behind him a fortune of
+$50,000,000, which was mostly bequeathed to his eldest son, John Jacob,
+who is now the head of the house.
+
+ [Illustration: BIRDS-EYE VIEW OF NEW YORK.]
+
+The Post Office stands opposite the Astor House, on the east side of
+Broadway, at the southern extremity of City Hall Park. It is a massive
+structure, of Doric and Renaissance architecture, four stories in
+height, beside a Mansard roof, costing $7,000,000.
+
+Half a century ago the City Hall Park was the chief park of New York,
+and the elegance and aristocracy of the city gathered around it. The
+City Hall stands in the park, and back of it is the new Court House,
+still unfinished, a massive edifice in Corinthian style, which, when
+completed, will have a dome two hundred and ten feet above the sidewalk.
+
+On the western side of Broadway, opposite St. Paul's, is the splendid
+building of the New York _Herald_. The _Herald_ is the representative
+newspaper of New York, and is probably the most enterprising sheet in
+the world. James Gordon Bennett, its founder, was born in Scotland in
+1795, and came to America in 1819. After various literary ventures, he
+decided to establish a paper which should embody his ideal of a
+metropolitan journal. On the sixth of May, 1855, the first number of the
+New York _Herald_ was issued, being then a small penny sheet. Mr.
+Bennett was editor, reporter and correspondent. He was his own
+compositor and errand boy, mailed his papers and kept his accounts. His
+rule, from the very first, was never to run a dollar in debt. He
+succeeded in establishing a paper which has no parallel in history,
+while, since his death, his son's enterprise has still further increased
+its scope and popularity. Young Bennett, the present proprietor of the
+_Herald_, named after his father, was trained especially for the duties
+which were to devolve upon him. He is thoroughly at home in French,
+German, Italian and Scotch. He is a skilled engineer, and can run either
+the engines or presses of his establishment. He is a practical printer,
+and can also telegraph with skill and accuracy. He gives strict personal
+supervision to the affairs of his immense establishment, which yields
+him a yearly income equaling that of a merchant prince.
+
+Extending from the _Herald_ Building northward, on the eastern side of
+City Hall Park, is what is known as Printing House Square, including the
+offices of the principal daily and weekly papers. The magnificent
+granite structure of the _Staats Zeitung_ faces this square on the
+north. The immense _Tribune_ Building, nine stories high, with its tall
+clock tower, flanks it on the east, on Nassau street. The _Sun_ modestly
+nestles in the shadow of the _Tribune_. The _Times_ Building is found on
+Park Row, where also is the _World_ office. _Truth_ lurks in a basement
+on Nassau street. But a square or two below is the _Evening Post_
+Building, where the venerable poet Bryant labored at his editorial
+duties for so many years. A statue of Franklin occupies a small open
+triangular space in the midst of the square.
+
+Horace Greeley's name is inseparably associated with that of the
+_Tribune_, which he founded. Honest and single-minded, he wielded a
+mighty influence, and his paper was a great political power in the
+country. He often made enemies by his honesty and straight-forwardness;
+but both enemies and friends respected him. In 1872 the Liberal
+Republican and Democratic parties nominated him as their choice for
+President. Believing that he could rally around him men of all parties
+who desired to see reform in political methods, he accepted the
+nomination; and was attacked so bitterly by those whom he had supposed
+to be his friends, and met such overwhelming defeat in the contest,
+that, taken with the death of his wife within a week of the election, he
+was crushed completely, his reason left him, and before the end of a
+month he died a broken-hearted man.
+
+North of the City Hall Park, on the corner of Chambers street, is the
+old wholesale house of A. T. Stewart, now devoted to other purposes, and
+having two stories added to its top. Here, a generation ago, the belles
+of New York City came to do their shopping, it having been originally
+built for the retail trade, as a few years later they flocked to the new
+retail store on Broadway, between Ninth and Tenth. The name of A. T.
+Stewart is no longer heard in New York, save in connection with the
+past. It was a power in its day and generation. Few men had more to do
+with Wall street than Stewart, and his mercantile business was carried
+on in the Wall street style. He "cornered" goods, "sold short," "loaded
+the market," and "bought long." Having emigrated from the north of
+Ireland, he first opened business in a small way, himself and wife
+living in one room over their store. Beginning at the very lowest round
+of the ladder, he worked with the fixed resolution of becoming the first
+merchant in the land. He always lived within his income, and never
+bought a dollar's worth of merchandise that he could not pay cash for.
+In the days of his prosperity he built for himself and wife a marble
+palace, at the corner of Fifth avenue and Thirty-fourth street, the most
+finely-finished and elegantly-furnished residence in the country. He
+died in 1876, worth, probably, $50,000,000. The theft of his remains
+from the graveyard of St. Mark's Church, at Ninth street and Second
+avenue, was the nine days' wonder of the time; and the vault prepared
+for their reception, in the fine Cathedral at Garden City, Long Island,
+remains empty.
+
+Broadway, almost from the Battery, is bordered by magnificent
+structures. The lower end of this thoroughfare is devoted principally to
+insurance, bankers' and brokers', railway and other offices, and to the
+wholesale trade. Above Canal street the retail stores begin to appear at
+intervals, and as one approaches Ninth street ladies multiply on the
+western pavement. From Ninth street up, the retail trade monopolizes the
+street, and on pleasant afternoons the pavement is filled with elegantly
+dressed ladies who are out shopping. At Tenth street Broadway makes a
+bend to the westward, and on the eastern side of the way, facing
+obliquely down the thoroughfare, is Grace Church and parsonage, both
+elegant structures. Grace Church is a fashionable place of worship, and
+the scene of the most exclusive weddings and funerals of the city.
+
+Union Square is reached at Fourteenth street. It is oval in form, with
+beautiful green turf, trees and walks, and contains a fine fountain in
+the centre, a colossal bronze statue of Washington on a granite
+pedestal, and statues of Hamilton and Lafayette. Along its northern end
+is a wide plaza for military parades and popular assemblies. Union
+Square was once a fashionable residence quarter, but it is now occupied
+almost wholly by business. At Twenty-third street, Broadway runs
+diagonally across Fifth avenue, touching the southwestern corner of
+Madison Square--not so very long since the most genteel locality in New
+York, but now, like Union Square, becoming occupied by hotels and
+business houses.
+
+Fifth Avenue, the most splendid avenue in America, makes a beginning at
+Washington Square, a lovely public park embowered in trees, which was
+once Potters' Field, the pauper burying ground, and where one hundred
+thousand bodies lie buried. New York University and Dr. Hutton's Church
+face the square on the east. The southern side is given up to business,
+but the north and west are still occupied by handsome private
+residences. Fifth Avenue is a continuous line of palatial hotels,
+gorgeous club-houses, brownstone mansions and magnificent churches. No
+plebeian horse cars are permitted to disturb its well-bred quiet, and
+the rumble of elegant equipages is alone heard upon its Belgian
+pavement.
+
+Business is already invading the lower portion of the avenue, piano
+warehouses being especially prominent. On Madison Square are the Fifth
+Avenue Hotel and the Hoffman House. Opposite the latter house is a
+monument erected to General Worth, a hero of the Mexican war.
+Delmonico's and the Cafe Brunswick, rival restaurants, occupy opposite
+corners of Twenty-sixth street. The Stevens House is an elegant family
+hotel on Fifth Avenue and Twenty-seventh street, running to Broadway. At
+Twenty-ninth street is the Congregational Church, a stately granite
+edifice; and on the same street, just east of the Avenue, is the Church
+of the Transfiguration, popularly known as "the little church around the
+corner," a name bestowed on it by a neighboring clergyman, who, refusing
+to bury an actor from his own church, referred the applicant to this. At
+the corner of Thirty-fourth street is the Stewart marble palace already
+referred to. From Forty-first to Forty-second streets is the
+distributing reservoir of the Croton Water-works, with walls of massive
+masonry in the Egyptian style. The Crystal Palace of 1853 occupied this
+square. The Avenue has at this place ascended to a considerable
+elevation, and the locality, embracing several streets and avenues, is
+known as Murray Hill, the most wealthy and exclusive quarter of the
+city. At Forty-third street is the Jewish Temple Emanuel, the finest
+specimen of Moorish architecture in the country.
+
+Occupying the block between Fiftieth and Fifty-first streets is the
+Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Patrick, commenced in 1858, and with the
+towers still incomplete. It is of white marble, in decorated Gothic
+style; and the largest and handsomest church in the country. It is
+elaborately carved, the numerous rose windows seeming almost like lace
+work. When completed it will have two spires, ornamented with
+buttresses, niches with statues, and pinnacles, and three hundred and
+twenty-eight feet in height. The interior is as beautiful as a dream. It
+is entirely of white marble. Massive pillars with elaborately carved
+capitals support the arched roof, while the light is softened and
+subdued by beautiful stained-glass windows. The building is in such
+perfect proportion that one does not realize its immense size until he
+descries the priest at the altar, so far away as to seem a mere child.
+
+But eight squares away is Central Park, the great breathing-place of the
+city. Looking back, down the Avenue, from the entrance to the Park,
+there is seen a forest of spires rising from magnificent churches which
+we have had no space to mention, and blocks upon blocks of palatial
+residences, the homes of the millionaires of the city. The eastern side
+of Fifth Avenue, facing the Park for a number of blocks, is occupied by
+elegant private residences.
+
+Madison Avenue starts from Madison Square, running through to
+Forty-second street. It, with parallel avenues and places, shares the
+prestige of Fifth Avenue, as being the aristocratic quarter of the city.
+
+Fourteenth street, once a fashionable thoroughfare, is now fast being
+occupied by large retail stores.
+
+The avenues, commencing at First, and numbering as high as Eleventh, run
+north and south, parallel to Fifth Avenue, already described. They are
+supplemented on the eastern side, at the widest part of the island, by
+avenues A, B, C, and D. Most of these avenues commence on the eastern
+side at Houston street, the northern boundary of the city in the early
+part of the present century. On the western side, with the exception of
+Fifth and Sixth, they commence but little below Fourteenth street. They
+are mostly devoted to retail trade, and, on seeing their miles of
+stores, one wonders where, even in a great city like New York, all the
+people come from who support them.
+
+Second Avenue is almost the only exception among the avenues. Early in
+the century it was what Fifth Avenue has become to-day, the fashionable
+residence avenue; and even yet some of the old Knickerbocker families
+cling to it, living in their roomy, old-fashioned houses, and
+maintaining an exclusive society, while they look down with disdain upon
+the parvenues of Fifth avenue. Stuyvesant Square, intersected by Second
+avenue, and bounded on the east by Livingston Place, and on the west by
+Rutherford Place, is one of the quarters of the _ancient regime_. Here
+still live the Rutherfords and the Stuyvesants. Here is the residence of
+Hamilton Fish and William M. Evarts. St. George Church, with the largest
+seating capacity of any church in the city, faces this square.
+
+Booth's Theatre is on the corner of Sixth avenue and Twenty-third
+street. It is the most magnificent place of amusement in America; built
+in the Renaissance style, with a Mansard roof. Opposite is the Masonic
+Temple, in Ionic and Doric architecture. At the corner of Eighth avenue
+and Twenty-third street is the Grand Opera House, once owned by James
+Fisk, Jr.
+
+New York is at once spendthrift and parsimonious in the naming of her
+streets. Thus, she sometimes repeats a name more than once, and again,
+bestows two or three names upon the same street. There is a Broadway, an
+East Broadway, a West Broadway, and a Broad street. There is Greenwich
+avenue and Greenwich street. There are two Pearl streets. There is a
+Park avenue, a Park street, a Park row, and a Park place. On the other
+hand, Chatham becomes East Broadway east of Bowery; Dey street is
+transformed into John street east of Broadway; Cortlandt becomes Maiden
+Lane at the same dividing line; and other streets are in like manner
+metamorphosed. Fourth Avenue, beginning at the Battery as Pearl street,
+changes to the Bowery at Franklin Square. At Eighth street, without any
+change in its direction, it becomes Fourth Avenue; from Thirty-fourth to
+Forty-second streets it is Park Avenue, and then relapses into Fourth
+Avenue again. This is one of the most interesting avenues in the city;
+as Pearl street, its windings and its business occupations have been
+referred to.
+
+Bowery has a character all its own. It takes its name from Peter
+Stuyvesant's "Bowerie Farm," through which it passes. In it is probably
+represented every civilized nation on the globe. It is unqualifiedly a
+democratic street. While Fifth Avenue represents one extreme of city
+life, the Bowery represents the other. Here are the streets and shops of
+the working classes, consisting of dry and fancy goods, cigar shops,
+lager beer saloons, shoe stores, confectionery stores, pawnbrokers'
+shops, and ready-made clothing, plentifully besprinkled with variety and
+concert saloons and beer gardens. There are no elegant store fronts or
+marble stores here. The buildings are plain brick edifices, three or
+four stories in height, the upper stories occupied by the families of
+the merchants, or as tenement houses. The Germans visit the beer gardens
+with their wives and families, to listen to what is sometimes excellent
+music, and to drink beer. The concert saloons are, some of them, the
+resorts of the lowest of both sexes. Near Canal street is the site of
+the old Bowery Theatre, which, having been thrice destroyed by fire, has
+been thrice rebuilt, the last time, quite recently, and is now known as
+Thalia Theatre. A generation and a half ago the gamins of New York
+reigned supreme in the pit. Now that they have been relegated to the
+gallery, they still criticise the performance with the frankness and
+originality of expression characteristic of the "Bowery boys" of old.
+One should visit the Bowery at night, when the workmen and shop girls,
+having finished their daily labor, are out for recreation and amusement.
+Then he will gain an idea of one phase of city life and people which he
+would not obtain otherwise.
+
+At Seventh street, where Third avenue branches off, looking down the
+Bowery, and occupying the entire block to Eighth street, is Cooper
+Institute, containing a free library, free reading-room, free schools of
+art, telegraphy and science, and a hall and lecture room. Peter Cooper
+was one of the representative men of New York. Acquiring a large fortune
+by strictly honorable methods, he devoted a generous portion of it to
+charitable objects, and this Institute is one of the lasting monuments
+of his generosity. He was a true philanthropist, a man of broad thought
+and kindly impulses, whose name was honored by all classes of the
+community. He died in April, 1883, at a ripe old age.
+
+Occupying the block between Third Avenue and the Bowery, which is now
+dignified by the name of Fourth avenue, is the Bible House, the largest
+structure of its kind in the world, except that of London. Here the
+Bible is printed in almost every known language, and here are
+congregated the offices of the various religious societies of the city
+and country. The Young Men's Christian Association and Academy of Design
+occupy opposite corners at Twenty-third street, on the west side of the
+avenue. The exterior of the latter is copied from a famous palace in
+Venice, and it is peculiar as well as beautiful in its appearance. From
+Thirty-second to Thirty-third streets is the immense structure intended
+by A. T. Stewart as the crowning charitable object of his life, to be,
+perhaps, in some sort, an atonement for injustice of which he may have
+been guilty toward the working classes. It was designed as a hotel for
+working women, but in its very plan indicated how little its founder
+understood the nature or needs of that class. At its completion, after
+his death, it did not take many weeks to demonstrate that working women
+preferred a place more home-like, and fettered by less restrictions than
+this palace-prison; and so the edifice was turned into an ordinary
+hotel.
+
+Park avenue commences at Thirty-fourth street, being built over the
+track of the Fourth avenue car line. In the centre of this avenue, over
+the tunnels, are little spaces inclosed by iron fences, and containing a
+profusion of shrubbery and flowers. The avenue abounds in elegant
+churches and equally fine residences. At Forty-second street is the
+Grand Central Depot, seven hundred feet in length, its exterior
+imposing, and with corner and central towers surmounted by domes. At
+Sixty-ninth street, between Fourth and Lexington avenues, is the new
+Normal College, an ecclesiastical-looking building, the most complete of
+its kind in America.
+
+Retracing our steps to near the foot of Bowery, we come to Chatham
+street, where the Jews reign supreme, and which is the vestibule of the
+worst quarter of the city. Passing along a pavement festooned with
+cheap, ready-made clothing, one comes to Baxter street, and from thence
+to the Five Points, once the most infamous locality of New York. Here, a
+generation ago, a respectable man took his life in his hands, who
+attempted to pass through this quarter, even in broad daylight. It was
+the abode of thieves, burglars, garotters, murderers and prostitutes.
+Hundreds of families were huddled together in tumble-down tenement
+houses, living in such filth and with such an utter lack of decency as
+is scarcely to be credited. But home missionaries visited the quarter,
+established mission-schools and a house of industry, tore down the
+disgraceful tenement-houses and built better ones in their place; and
+to-day the old Bowery, Cow Bay and Murderers' Alley are known only in
+name. The Five Points is at the crossing of Baxter, Worth and Parker
+streets, and is really five points no longer, the carrying through of
+Worth street to the Bowery, forming an additional point. The locality is
+still dreadful enough, with all its improvements. Drunken men, depraved
+women, and swarms of half-clad children fill the neighborhood, and even
+the "improved tenement houses," as viewed from the outside, seem but
+sorry abodes for human beings. This is the heart of a wretched quarter,
+which extends westward to Broadway, and almost indefinitely in other
+directions. Mott, Mulberry, Baxter, Centre, Elm and Crosby streets are
+all densely populated, containing numberless tenement houses. It is
+possible to walk through some of these streets and never hear a word of
+English. Mulberry and Crosby streets are especially the homes of
+Italians, who on Sunday mornings pour out of the tenements upon the
+pavement and street below in such throngs that a stranger can scarcely
+elbow his way through. The Chinese have taken possession of the lower
+part of Mott street, and established laundries, groceries, tea-houses,
+lodging-houses, and opium-smoking dens. The latter are already
+attracting the attention of the public, and a feeble effort has been
+made by the city government to put a check upon their evil influence.
+These streets are a festering sore in the very heart of the city, and
+require attention.
+
+The Tombs, the city prison, famous in the criminal history of New York,
+is located in the midst of this quarter, on Centre street, occupying an
+entire block. It is a gloomy building, constructed of granite, in
+imitation of an Egyptian temple. Within these forbidding walls is the
+Tombs Police Court, where, early each morning, petty cases are disposed
+of by the magistrate upon the bench; and here prisoners are kept
+awaiting trial. Eleven cells of special strength and security are for
+murderers awaiting trial or punishment. There is also a special
+department for women. In the inner quadrangle of the building murderers
+are made to suffer the utmost penalty of the law, and the last act of
+many a tragedy which has excited and horrified the public has been
+performed here.
+
+It will be a relief to turn from the gloom and wretchedness of the Tombs
+to the sunshine and freedom of New York's great breathing place. Central
+Park contains eight hundred and forty-three acres, and embraces an area
+extending from Fifth to Eighth avenues, and from Fifty-ninth to
+One-hundred-and-tenth streets. Originally, it was a desolate stretch of
+country in the suburbs of the city, varied by rocks and marshes, and
+dotted by the hovels of Irish and Dutch squatters, its most picturesque
+features being their goats, which picked up a scant living among the
+rubbish with which it was covered. Its whole extent is now covered with
+a heavy sod, planted with trees and shrubbery, and furnishes many miles
+of drives and walks. Every day in the year it has numerous visitors, but
+on Sunday, one must fairly elbow one's way through the crowds. In the
+southeast corner are the Zoological Gardens and the old State Arsenal;
+the Metropolitan Museum of Art, recently opened, is north of Belvidere,
+on the east side of the Park. The Egyptian Obelisk stands on an eminence
+west of the museum. Winding paths conduct the visitor to the Mall, a
+stately avenue shaded by double rows of elms, and ornamented at
+intervals with bronze statues of celebrated American and European
+statesmen and poets; also a number of groups which are especially fine.
+The Terrace is at the northern terminus of the Mall, and leads by a
+flight of broad, stone stairs to Central Lake, the prettiest body of
+water in the Park, dotted by gondolas. A fountain, with immense granite
+basins, and a colossal statue of the Angel of Bethesda, stands between
+the terrace and the lake. Beyond the lake is the Ramble, consisting of
+winding, shaded paths, and covering thirty-six acres of sloping hills.
+From the tower at Belvidere, a magnificent piece of architecture, in the
+Norman style, may be obtained a fine bird's-eye view of the Park. Just
+above Belvidere are the two reservoirs of the water works, extending as
+far north as Ninety-sixth street. Beyond that the Park is less
+embellished by art, and is richer in natural beauties. From the eminence
+upon which stands the old Block House, on the northern border of the
+Park, a magnificent and extensive view may be obtained of the hills
+which bound in the landscape, and including High Bridge.
+
+One should visit the water front of New York, which circles the city on
+three sides, to gain an idea of its immense commerce. A river wall of
+solid masonry has been commenced, which, when completed, will make the
+American metropolis equal to London and Liverpool in this respect. A
+perfect forest of masts lines the wharves, representing every kind of
+craft, and almost every nation that sails the seas. Twice a week
+European steamships leave from the foot of Canal street; while from
+various points along the wharves, indicated by handsome ferry or
+shipping houses, boats go and come, to and from every port on the river
+or on the Atlantic coast. At Desbrosses and Cortlandt streets ferries
+connect with Jersey City. South, Wall and Fulton ferries give access to
+Brooklyn; while other ferries convey passengers to other points on the
+rivers and bay.
+
+Passing up the East River, with the ship-thronged wharves and docks of
+New York on one hand, and the Brooklyn Navy Yard on the other, the
+visitor soon obtains a view of Blackwell's, Ward's and Randall's
+islands. Blackwell's Island is at the foot of Forty-sixth street, and is
+one hundred and twenty acres in extent. Upon it are located the
+Almshouse, Female Lunatic Asylum, Penitentiary, Work House, Blind
+Asylum, Charity, Smallpox and Typhus Fever hospitals. These buildings
+are all constructed of granite, quarried from the island by convicts.
+They are plain but substantial in appearance.
+
+Leaving Blackwell's Island, the boat passes cautiously through the
+swirling waters of Hell Gate, once the terror of all sailors, but now
+robbed of most of its horrors. It was originally a collection of rocks
+in mid channel, which, as the tides swept in and out, caused the waters
+to rush in a succession of whirlpools and rapids. But a few years ago
+United States engineers undertook and accomplished a gigantic
+excavation, directly under these threatening rocks and reefs. When it
+was completed a grand explosion, effected by means of connecting wires,
+blew up these dangerous obstructions, and left a comparatively clear and
+safe channel for vessels. The few remaining rocks which this explosion
+failed to disturb are being removed, and with its dangers, much of the
+romantic interest which attached to Hell Gate will pass away.
+
+Ward's Island, embracing two hundred acres, and containing the Male
+Lunatic Asylum, the Emigrant Hospital, and the Inebriate Asylum, divides
+the Harlem from the East River. Randall's Island is separated from
+Ward's Island by a narrow channel, and is the last of the group. It
+contains the Idiot Asylum, the House of Refuge, the Infant Hospital,
+Nurseries, and other charities provided by the city for destitute
+children.
+
+The visitor in New York should, if possible, make an excursion to High
+Bridge, a magnificent structure by which the Croton Aqueduct is carried
+across Harlem River. It is built of granite, and spans the entire width
+of valley and river, from cliff to cliff. It is composed of eight
+arches, each with a span of eighty feet, and with an elevation of a
+hundred feet clear from the surface of the river. The water is led over
+the bridge, a distance of fourteen hundred and fifty feet, in immense
+iron pipes, six feet in diameter. Above these pipes is a pathway for
+pedestrians. At One-hundred-and-sixty-ninth street, a little below the
+High Bridge, is the site of the elegant mansion of Colonel Roger Morris,
+and the head-quarters of General Washington during active operations in
+this portion of the island. The situation is one of picturesque and
+historic interest.
+
+Rising grandly above all the shipping of the East River, on both its
+sides, are the massive towers of the Suspension Bridge, connecting the
+sister cities of New York and Brooklyn. Ponderous cables swing in a
+single grand sweep from tower to tower, supporting the bridge in its
+place. It does not seem very much elevated above the river, and you feel
+that a certain majestic sailing vessel which is bearing down upon it
+will bring the top of her masts in contact with it. But she sails
+proudly beneath the structure, never bowing her head, and there is
+plenty of room and to spare; for the bridge is one hundred and
+thirty-five feet above high water mark. The distance from tower to tower
+is one thousand five hundred and ninety-five feet, while the entire
+length of the bridge, from Park Place to its terminus, on the heights in
+Brooklyn, is six thousand feet, or a little more than a mile. Its width
+is eighty-five feet, affording space for two railways, besides two
+double carriageways, and one foot-path. It was commenced in 1871, and
+cost $15,000,000. Its formal opening took place on May twenty-fourth,
+1883. The day was a rarely beautiful one, and was observed as a general
+holiday by the people of both cities. President Arthur and his Cabinet,
+the governors of New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island, with many other
+distinguished persons, were among the guests, while the honors of the
+occasion were done by the Mayors of New York and Brooklyn. Every street
+in the neighborhood of the bridge was packed with a dense throng of
+spectators, while windows, balconies and roofs were filled with curious
+sight seers.
+
+Shortly after noon the procession moved down Broadway, and a little
+after one o'clock the President and other distinguished guests entered
+the gateway of the bridge, preceded by the Seventh Regiment, the
+procession headed by a company of mounted policemen, while Cappa's band
+played "Hail to the Chief." When the party reached the New York tower,
+they were met by President Kingsley of the bridge trustees, and there
+were introductions and welcomes, and the march was resumed. At the
+Brooklyn tower Mayor Low met the President, and the Seventy-third
+Regiment presented arms. In announcement of the fact that the bridge was
+crossed, cannons thundered forth salutes, the steam whistles of vessels
+and factories screamed, bells rang, and deafening cheers went up from
+the watching multitude. The further ceremonies of the day took place in
+a pavilion on the Brooklyn end, when Mr. William E. Kingsley, the
+President of the Bridge Association, Mayor Low, of Brooklyn, Mayor Edson
+of New York, Hon. Abram S. Hewitt and Rev. B. S. Storrs, made able
+addresses. A reception was tendered in the evening, at the Academy of
+Music, by the City of Brooklyn, to the President and the Governor of the
+State, previous to which there was a fine display of fireworks from the
+bridge.
+
+During all the excitement of the day, while cannon thundered and the
+multitude cheered, an invalid sat alone in his house on Columbia
+Heights, and regarded from afar the completion of his toil of years.
+John A. Roebling, the elder of the two Roeblings, first conceived and
+planned the bridge which connects New York and Brooklyn. He had built
+the chief suspension bridges in the country, and to him was intrusted
+the task of putting his own plans into tangible form. While testing and
+perfecting his surveys, his foot was crushed between the planking of a
+pier; lockjaw supervened, and the man who had designed the bridge lost
+his life in its service. He was succeeded by his son, Colonel Washington
+A. Roebling, who was equally qualified for the undertaking. He labored
+with zeal, giving personal superintendence to his workmen, until in the
+caissons he contracted a mysterious disease, which had proved fatal to
+several men in his employ. From that period he was confined to his home,
+a hopeless invalid, his intellect apparently quickened as his physical
+system was enfeebled. He has never seen the structure, save as it stands
+from a distance; but from his sick-room he has directed and watched over
+the progress of the enterprise, his active assistant being his wife, of
+whom Mayor Edson, in his address on the occasion, spoke in the following
+terms: "With this bridge will ever be coupled the thought of one,
+through the subtle alembic of whose brain, and by whose facile fingers,
+communication was maintained between the directing power of its
+construction and the obedient agencies of its execution. It is thus an
+everlasting monument to the self-sacrificing devotion of woman." After
+the conclusion of the address, the President and his Cabinet, the
+Governor, and hundreds of others, paid their respects to Colonel
+Roebling, and did honor to the man the completion of whose work they
+were celebrating. After it was over Roebling replied, to the suggestion
+that he must be happy, "I am satisfied."
+
+The great bridge was opened to the public at midnight, and the waiting
+throng, which even at that hour numbered about twenty thousand persons,
+were permitted to enter the gates and cross the structure. A
+representative of the New York _Herald_ was the first to pay the toll of
+one cent demanded, and the first to begin the passage across. With the
+completion of this bridge the continent is entirely spanned, and one may
+visit, dry shod and without the use of ferry boats, every city from the
+Atlantic to the Golden Gate.
+
+But the great bridge was not to be consecrated to the use of the public
+without a baptism of blood. On Decoration Day, which occurred the
+seventh day after the opening of the bridge, there was a grand military
+parade in New York, reviewed by President Arthur from a stand in Madison
+Square, and impressive ceremonies at the various cemeteries in Brooklyn.
+From early morning a steady stream of pedestrians poured each way,
+across the bridge. About four o'clock in the afternoon there came a lock
+in the crowd, just at the top of the stairs on the New York side,
+leading down to the concrete roadway Men, women and children were wedged
+together in a jam, created by the fearful pressure of two opposing
+crowds, extending to either end of the bridge. Some one stumbled and
+fell on the stairs. The terrible pressure prevented him or her from
+rising, and others fell over the obstacle thus placed in the pathway.
+Those immediately behind were hopelessly forced on over them. A panic
+ensued. Women screamed and wrung their hands; children cried and called
+pitifully for "help!" Men shouted themselves hoarse, swore and fought. A
+hundred hats and bonnets were afterwards found upon the spot, trampled
+into shapelessness. Clothes were torn off, and many emerged from the
+crush in only their undergarments. Parents held their children aloft to
+keep them from being trampled upon. Hundreds of men climbed with
+difficulty on the beams running over the railroads, and dropping down
+were caught by those in the carriage-way beneath. A number of women also
+escaped in that manner.
+
+At last, after almost superhuman efforts, the crowd was pressed back
+sufficiently to gather up the prostrate bodies, which were taken to the
+roadway below, and ranged along the wall, waiting for ambulances to
+convey them away. Twelve persons were found dead, some of them bruised,
+discolored, and covered with blood, and others apparently suffocated to
+death. The list of injured was very much larger--how much will probably
+never be known, since many, assisted by their friends, returned to their
+homes without reporting their hurts. The dead and wounded were most of
+them conveyed to the City Hall Police Station, and were there claimed by
+their friends; and the day which had begun so joyously ended in gloom.
+
+New York is one of the most wonderful products of our wonderful western
+civilization. It is itself a world in epitome. Thoroughly cosmopolitan
+in its character, almost every nationality is represented within its
+boundaries, and almost every tongue spoken. It is the great monetary,
+scientific, artistic and intellectual centre of the western world.
+Containing much that is evil, it also abounds with more that is good. It
+is well governed. Its sanitary arrangements are such as to make it
+peculiarly free from epidemic diseases. The record of its crimes is
+undoubtedly a long one; but when the number of its inhabitants is
+considered, it will be found to show an average comparing favorably with
+other cities. Thousands of happy homes are found throughout its length
+and breadth. Hundreds of good and charitable enterprises are originated
+and fostered within its limits, and grow, some of them, to gigantic
+proportions, reaching out strong arms to the uttermost confines of the
+country and even of the world, comforting the afflicted, lifting up the
+degraded, and shedding the light of truth in dark places. It is already
+a great city, a wonderful city. But what it is to-day is only the
+beginning of what those who live fifty years hence will behold it. There
+is still space upon Manhattan Island for twice or thrice its present
+population and business; and the no distant future will undoubtedly see
+this space fully occupied, while it is among the possibilities that New
+York will become, in point of inhabitants and commercial interests, the
+first city in the world.
+
+ [Illustration: NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN BRIDGE.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+OMAHA.
+
+ Arrival in Omaha.--The Missouri River.--Position and Appearance
+ of the City.--Public Buildings.--History.--Land Speculation.--
+ Panic of 1857.--Discovery of Gold in Colorado.--"Pike's Peak
+ or Bust."--Sudden Revival of Business.--First Railroad.--Union
+ Pacific Railroad.--Population.--Commercial and Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Bridge over the Missouri.--Union Pacific Depot.--
+ Prospects for the Future.
+
+
+On the afternoon of October twenty-first, 1876, I sat in the saddle upon
+the eastern bank of the Missouri River, opposite Omaha, Nebraska, having
+that day accomplished a horseback journey of twenty-two miles, on my way
+from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Paul Revere, the faithful horse who
+had borne me all the way from Boston, declined entering the ferry boat,
+it being his firm conviction that rivers should either be crossed by
+bridges or forded. At last, being gently coerced, the horse reluctantly
+consented, and the muddy current of the river was soon crossed. At three
+o'clock I entered the city of Omaha, the half-way house across the
+continent, it having been a little more than five months since I dashed
+out of the surf, my horse's hoofs wet and dripping with the brine of the
+Atlantic.
+
+Omaha lies on the eastern boundary of Nebraska, opposite Council Bluffs,
+on the western bank of the Missouri River, a turbulent stream, which is
+never satisfied with its position, but is constantly shifting and
+changing, and making for itself new channels. A bottom land about three
+miles wide stretches out between Omaha and Council Bluffs, and through
+this the Missouri rolls, a swift, muddy stream, slowly but surely
+carrying the Rocky Mountains down to the Mississippi, which, in its
+turn, deposits them in the Gulf of Mexico, and helps to extend our Gulf
+coast. The Missouri vibrates like a pendulum, from one side of this
+bottom land to the other; now being near one city, and then near the
+other. At the period of my visit its current washed the front of Omaha,
+leaving Council Bluffs some distance off on the opposite side; but it
+was already beginning its backward swing. Thus the boundary line between
+Nebraska and Iowa is being continually shifted, and one State is
+augmented in territory at the expense of the other.
+
+Omaha is built in part upon the low bottom lands which border the river,
+and which may at any time be menaced by the swollen and angry stream,
+unless precautions are taken, in the building of high and substantial
+stone levees along the river front. The town lies also in part upon the
+table lands beyond, and is extending to the bluffs which rise still
+further away. Its business is chiefly confined to the lower portion,
+where magnificent blocks attest the prosperity of the city. Streets of
+substantial dwellings, and numerous most elegant private residences,
+with large and handsomely ornamented grounds, are discovered as one
+passes through the city. A striking edifice, of Cincinnati freestone,
+four stories high, is occupied as a Post Office and Court House. Its
+High School building is one of the finest in the country. When the State
+Government was, in 1866, removed from Omaha to Lincoln, the Legislature
+donated the Square and Capitol Building at the former place for High
+School purposes. The old Capitol was demolished, and a magnificent
+school building erected on its site, at a cost of $250,000, while other
+fine school edifices, aggregating in cost about $150,000 more, were
+erected in other sections of the city. The High School building is on
+the summit of a hill, overlooking a large extent of country, and has a
+spire one hundred and eighty-five feet high. The Depot of the Union
+Pacific Railroad is also a noteworthy edifice.
+
+Omaha was first laid out in 1853, and thus named, after a now nearly
+extinct tribe of Indians. The first house was built, and the first ferry
+established in that year; and a year later the first brick-kiln was
+burned, and the first newspaper--the Omaha Arrow--established. Where
+Turner Hall now stands, in 1854 was dug the first grave, for an old
+squaw of the Omaha tribe who had been left by her kindred to die.
+Whittier's description of the growth of western cities seems
+particularly applicable to Omaha:--
+
+ "Behind the squaw's light birch canoe
+ The steamer smokes and raves,
+ And city lots are staked for sale
+ Above old Indian graves."
+
+The first Legislature of Nebraska convened in Omaha in the winter of
+1854-5; and in 1856 the Capital was definitely located in that city, and
+the erection of the capitol building commenced. For a year or two there
+was a great land-boom, and city property and "corner lots" were held at
+fabulous prices. But in 1857 a crash came, and for a time the infant
+town was prostrated. However, in 1859 the discovery of gold in Colorado
+gave it a fresh impetus. The miners who marched in a perpetual caravan
+across the plains, in white-topped wagons, marked "Pike's Peak or bust,"
+made Omaha their final starting-point, taking in at that place supplies
+for their long journey. Two years previous all who could get away from
+the apparently doomed town had gone to other sections, to begin anew the
+fight for fortune. Only those remained who were too poor to go, but
+these were now in luck. Fortune came to them, instead of their being
+compelled to undertake an ignis fatuus chase after her. At that time the
+business men of the city laid the foundations of their wealth and
+prosperity.
+
+In 1857 the town was incorporated as a city; but up to 1867 its only
+means of communication with the east was by stage-coach, across Iowa,
+and by steamers on the Missouri, which latter ceased running in winter.
+In 1865 the population of the town was but four thousand five hundred
+persons. In 1867 the first train of cars arrived in the city, on the
+Chicago and Northwestern Railroad. It was not long before other
+railroads, one after another, made it their western terminus, and its
+prosperity was established. Then came the Union Pacific Railroad, which
+started on its long journey across the plains and mountains from this
+point. The trade to the Pacific coast thus necessarily passed through
+Omaha, which became a gateway on the route, while many travelers and
+emigrants paused to breathe and rest before proceeding further, and to
+take in large quantities of supplies. In 1875 its population had
+increased to twenty thousand inhabitants, and in 1880 had run up to
+thirty thousand.
+
+Strange as it may seem, the building of the Union Pacific Railroad has
+diminished rather than increased the local trade of the city. In
+overland times single houses sometimes traded as much as three million
+dollars' worth in a year; but the railroad has so dispersed and
+distributed business, that now none reach even half that amount. The
+city, however, does an immense manufacturing business. Within its limits
+is located the largest smelting works in America, employing nearly two
+hundred men, and doing an annual business of probably not less than five
+millions of dollars. One distillery alone, in 1875, the year previous to
+my visit, paid the government a tax of $316,000; while there are
+extensive breweries, linseed-oil works, steam-engine works, and
+pork-packing establishments. The engine shops, car-works and foundry of
+the Union Pacific Road occupy, with the round-house, about thirty acres
+of land, on the bottom adjoining the table land upon which the city is
+built. Over one million dollars is paid out annually in these
+establishments, for manual labor alone, without including payments for
+merchandise and supplies. A notable industry is the manufacture of
+brick, over five millions being turned out annually from the four
+brick-yards of Omaha. The city is also the headquarters of the Army of
+the Platte, which annually distributes nearly a million of dollars.
+
+The first postmaster of Omaha used his hat for a post office, and
+carried around the mail matter in that receptacle wherever he went,
+delivering it by chance to its owners. Twenty years later the city
+possessed the finest government building west of the Mississippi, while
+the post office receipts are to-day upwards of a million dollars
+annually. Hides, buffalo robes, and furs, to the value of one hundred
+and fifty thousand dollars, are annually collected and shipped from
+Omaha; while two hundred and fifty thousand dollars is the extent in a
+single year of the sewing machine business. The Pacific Railroad ships
+from Omaha vast quantities of grain to the Salt Lake Valley, and brings
+back in return supplies of Utah fruit, fresh and dried. The first
+shipment of fruit, made in 1871, amounted to three hundred pounds. In
+four years the quantity had increased to nine hundred thousand pounds,
+and is still greater to-day. The Grand Central Hotel was the finest
+hotel between Chicago and San Francisco, having been erected in 1873, at
+a cost of three hundred thousand dollars; but it was destroyed by fire
+in 1878.
+
+The visitor to Omaha will probably reach that city by means of the great
+bridge across the Missouri River. This bridge is two thousand seven
+hundred and fifty feet long, with eleven spans, each span two hundred
+and fifty feet in width, and elevated fifty feet above high water mark.
+One stone masonry abutment, and eleven piers, each with two cast iron
+columns, support this bridge. Its construction was commenced in
+February, 1869, and completed in 1872, during most of which time not
+less than five hundred men were employed upon it. Each column was sunk
+in the bed of the river until a solid foundation was reached. One column
+penetrated the earth eighty-two feet below low water, before it rested
+on the bed-rock. The approach to the bridge from the Council Bluffs side
+is by means of a gradually ascending embankment, one mile and a half in
+length. This bridge was constructed at a cost of two million six hundred
+and fifty thousand dollars, and brings an annual revenue of about four
+hundred thousand dollars. It is now, by act of Congress, considered a
+part of the Union Pacific Railroad, making the eastern terminus of that
+road really at Council Bluffs. Its total length, including its necessary
+approaches by embankment on the eastern shore, and by lengthy
+tressel-work on the western shore is nine thousand nine hundred and
+fifty feet, or nearly two miles.
+
+The old depot grounds of the Union Pacific Railroad were on the bank of
+the river, directly under the present bridge. In order to complete the
+connection between the bridge and the road, a branch line, seven
+thousand feet in length, was laid down directly through the city, and a
+new, spacious and most commodious depot constructed, on higher ground.
+And from this depot the westward-bound traveler takes his departure for
+that western empire toward the setting sun, and may, perhaps, continue
+his journey until he has reached and passed the Golden Gate, and only
+the solemn immensity of the ocean lies before him.
+
+Situated midway of the American continent, on a navigable river, which
+drains the northwest, and opens communication with the east and south; a
+prominent point on the great road which clasps a continent and unites
+the Atlantic with the Pacific; and at the same time a terminus for
+lesser roads which open up to it the trade and commerce of the interior;
+and on the borders of two states rich in agricultural and mineral
+wealth, and settled by a thrifty, intelligent and enterprising people;
+Omaha can scarcely fail to become the greatest city west of St. Louis.
+Founded but a generation ago, its business is already stupendous, though
+it is really but a beginning of what it promises to be in the future. As
+Iowa, Nebraska, and the States and Territories still further to the
+northwest, become more thickly settled, with their resources developed,
+it will form their natural commercial centre, to which they will look
+for supplies, and where they will find a market or a port for their
+produce and manufactures. With such an outlook, who will dare to limit
+Omaha's possibilities in the future, or say that any flight of the
+imagination really exceeds what the actuality may prove?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+OTTAWA.
+
+ Ottawa, the seat of the Canadian Government.--History.--
+ Population.--Geographical Position.--Scenery.--Chaudiere
+ Falls.--Rideau Falls.--Ottawa River.--Lumber Business.--
+ Manufactures.--Steamboat and Railway Communications.--Moore's
+ Canadian Boat Song.--Description of the City.--Churches,
+ Nunneries, and Charitable Institutions.--Government Buildings.--
+ Rideau Hall.--Princess Louise and Marquis of Lorne.--Ottawa's
+ Proud Boast.
+
+
+Ottawa was, in 1858, selected by Queen Victoria as the seat of the
+Canadian Government. When, in 1867, the British North American
+Possessions were reconstructed into the Dominion of Canada, Ottawa
+continued to be the Capital city. It was originally called Bytown, after
+Colonel By, of the Royal Engineers, who was, in 1827, commissioned to
+construct the Rideau Canal, and who laid out the town. In 1854 it was
+incorporated as a city, and its name changed to Ottawa, from the river
+upon which it stands. Since that time it has increased rapidly in
+population and importance, and has at the present time not far from
+twenty-five thousand inhabitants. It is situated on the south bank of
+the Ottawa River, at the mouth of the Rideau, one hundred and twenty-six
+miles above Montreal. The scenery around it is most magnificent, and is
+scarcely surpassed by any in Canada. At the west end of the city the
+Ottawa rushes, in a magnificent cataract, over a ragged ledge, two
+hundred feet wide and forty feet high, in what is known as the Chaudiere
+Falls. Chaudiere signifies caldron, and in the seething caldron of
+waters at the base of the falls a sounding line three hundred feet in
+length has not touched bottom. Immediately below the falls is a
+suspension bridge, from which a most satisfactory view can be obtained.
+At the northeast end of the city the Rideau tumbles, in two cataracts,
+into the Ottawa. These cataracts are very picturesque, but are exceeded
+in grandeur by the Chaudiere. The Des Chenes Rapids, having a fall of
+nine feet, are found about eight miles above Ottawa.
+
+The Ottawa River is, next to the St. Lawrence, the largest stream in
+Canada. Rising in the range of mountains which forms the watershed
+between Hudson Bay and the great lakes, it runs in a southeasterly
+direction for about six hundred miles before it empties into the St.
+Lawrence. It has two mouths, which form the island upon which Montreal
+is situated. The entire region drained by it and its tributaries
+measures eighty thousand square miles. These tributaries and the Ottawa
+itself form highways for, probably, the largest lumber trade in the
+world. The clearing of great tracts of country by the lumbermen has
+opened the way for agriculturists; and numerous thriving settlements are
+found upon and near their banks, all of which look to Ottawa as their
+business centre. As these settlements increase in number and size, the
+prosperity of Ottawa will multiply in proportion. The navigation of the
+river has been much improved by engineering, especially for the
+transportation of lumber, dams and slides having been constructed for
+its passage over rapids and falls.
+
+This immense supply of lumber is, much of it, arrested at Ottawa, where
+the almost unequaled water power is utilized in saw-mills, which furnish
+the city its principal employment, and from which issue yearly almost
+incredible quantities of sawed lumber. There are also flour mills, and
+manufactories of iron castings, mill machinery, and agricultural
+implements, which give it commercial importance, and a sound basis of
+prosperity.
+
+Ottawa is connected by steamer with Montreal, and by the Rideau Canal
+with Lake Ontario at Kingston, while the Grand Trunk Railway sends a
+branch line from Prescott. The Ottawa River is navigable for one hundred
+and eighty-eight miles above the city, by steamers of the Union
+Navigation Company, but there are numerous portages around falls and
+rapids. The last stopping place of the steamer is Mattawa, a remote port
+of the Hudson Bay Company. Beyond that outpost of civilization there is
+nothing but unexplored and unbroken wilderness. Moore's Canadian boat
+song makes mention of the Ottawa River:--
+
+ "Soon as the woods on shore look dim,
+ We'll sing, at St. Ann's, our parting hymn.
+
+ "Ottawa's tide, this trembling moon
+ Shall see us afloat on thy waters soon."
+
+Ottawa is divided into Upper and Lower Town by the Rideau Canal, which
+contains eight massive locks within the city limits, and is crossed by
+two bridges, one of stone and iron, and the other of stone alone. The
+streets of the city are wide and regular. Sparks street is the
+fashionable promenade, containing the principal retail stores. Sussex is
+also a prominent business street. The principal hotels are the Russell
+House, near the Parliament Buildings; Windsor House, in the Upper Town;
+and the Albion, on Court House Square.
+
+The most prominent church edifice in the city is the Roman Catholic
+Cathedral of Notre Dame, which is of stone, with double spires two
+hundred feet in height. The interior is very fine, and contains as an
+altar piece Murillo's "Flight into Egypt." St. Patrick's, Roman
+Catholic, and St. Andrew's, Presbyterian, are also striking churches. At
+the corner of Bolton and Sussex streets is the imposing stone building
+of the Grey Nunnery, while the group of buildings belonging to the Black
+Nunnery is to the eastward of Cartier Square. There are, besides, in the
+city, two convents, two hospitals, three orphan asylums, and a Magdalen
+asylum, all under the control of the Roman Catholics. The Ottawa
+University is also a Roman Catholic institution, and has a large
+building in Wilbrod street. The Ladies' College, in Albert street, is a
+Protestant school.
+
+But all these structures sink into insignificance when compared to the
+Government Buildings, which constitute the most prominent feature of the
+city of Ottawa. They are situated on an eminence known as Barrack Hill,
+which rises one hundred and fifty feet above the river, and were erected
+at a cost of about four millions of dollars. They form three sides of a
+vast quadrangle, which occupies nearly four acres. The Parliament House
+is on the south side or front of the quadrangle, and is four hundred and
+seventy-two feet long, and the same number of feet deep, from the front
+of the main tower, to the rear of the library. The Departmental
+Buildings run north from this main structure, forming the east and west
+sides of the quadrangle. The eastern side is five hundred and eighteen
+feet long, by two hundred and fifty-three feet deep, and the western
+side is two hundred and eleven feet long, by two hundred and
+seventy-seven feet deep. These latter buildings contain the various
+government bureaus, in the west block being also found the model room
+of the Patent Office, and the Post Office. The entire structure is of
+cream-colored sandstone, with arches and doors of red Potsdam sandstone,
+and the external ornamental work of this sandstone. Its architecture is
+in the Italian-Gothic style. Green and purple slates cover the roof, and
+the pinnacles are ornamented with elaborate iron trellis work. The
+columns and arches of the legislative chambers are of marble. These
+chambers are capacious and richly finished, and have stained glass
+windows. The Chamber of Commons is reached by an entrance to the left of
+the main entrance, under the central tower, and the marble of its
+columns and arches is beautiful. The Senate Hall, which is entered from
+the right of the main entrance, contains the vice-regal canopy and
+throne, and a portrait of Queen Victoria. There are also full-length
+portraits, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, of George III, and Queen Charlotte.
+The Library is a circular structure, on the north front of the
+Parliament House, with a dome ninety feet high, and contains about forty
+thousand volumes. A massive stone wall incloses the fourth side of the
+quadrangle, and the inclosure is laid out with tree-shaded walks.
+
+Rideau Hall, the official residence of the Governor General, is in New
+Edinburgh, a suburban town on the opposite side of the Rideau River,
+connected with Ottawa by a bridge. Rideau Hall has been for several
+years past the home of the Marquis of Lorne, Governor General of the
+Dominion of Canada, and the Princess Louise, fourth daughter of Queen
+Victoria. The love which the Canadians bear their Queen was most loyally
+manifested on the arrival of the Governor General and the Princess, his
+wife. Every honor was shown the Marquis which was due his official and
+hereditary rank; but the most extravagant marks of affection and
+veneration were lavished upon the Princess, who was regarded as a
+representative of her mother. Whenever she proceeded through the
+Dominion, her progress was a triumphal procession. The people crowded to
+catch but a glimpse of her face, or to hear the tones of her voice. She
+is described as an extremely affable lady, the beauty of Her Majesty's
+family, caring less for the traditions and observances of royalty than
+her imperial mother, with great native shrewdness and marked ability as
+an artist. She has traveled extensively throughout the dominion of
+Canada, having reached its extreme western limit, and crossed the United
+States from the Atlantic to the Pacific. It is said she does not greatly
+admire Canada, and proposes to spend as little time at Ottawa as
+possible, regarding the somewhat primitive society there as almost
+semi-barbaric. But when she returns permanently to the island of her
+birth she will go with greatly enlarged views, and a knowledge of the
+world, and especially of the people of the new world, which ought to
+constitute her an efficient counsellor in affairs of state.
+
+The Marquis of Lorne, Governor General of Canada, is described as an
+extremely handsome gentleman of the Scotch type, with large literary
+attainments, and with a desire to conciliate the people over whom he has
+been sent to rule. For many generations to come it will undoubtedly be
+Ottawa's highest boast that it has numbered among its citizens the son
+of one of the proudest nobles of the British realm, and a princess of
+the blood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+PITTSBURG.
+
+ Pittsburg at Night.--A Pittsburg Fog.--Smoke.--Description of
+ the City.--The Oil Business.--Ohio River.--Public Buildings,
+ Educational and Charitable Institutions.--Glass Industry.--
+ Iron Foundries.--Fort Pitt Works.--Casting a Monster Gun.--
+ American Iron Works.--Nail Works.--A City of Workers.--
+ A True Democracy.--Wages.--Character of Workmen.--Value of
+ Organization.--Knights of Labor.--Opposed to Strikes.--True
+ Relations of Capital and Labor.--Railroad Strike of 1877.--
+ Allegheny City.--Population of Pittsburg.--Early History--
+ Braddock's Defeat.--Old Battle Ground.--Historic Relics.--
+ The Past and the Present.
+
+
+By all means make your first approach to Pittsburg in the night time,
+and you will behold a spectacle which has not a parallel on this
+continent. Darkness gives the city and its surroundings a
+picturesqueness which they wholly lack by daylight. It lies low down in
+a hollow of encompassing hills, gleaming with a thousand points of
+light, which are reflected from the rivers, whose waters glimmer, it may
+be, in the faint moonlight, and catch and reflect the shadows as well.
+Around the city's edge, and on the sides of the hills which encircle it
+like a gloomy amphitheatre, their outlines rising dark against the sky,
+through numberless apertures, fiery lights stream forth, looking angrily
+and fiercely up toward the heavens, while over all these settles a heavy
+pall of smoke. It is as though one had reached the outer edge of the
+infernal regions, and saw before him the great furnace of Pandemonium
+with all the lids lifted. The scene is so strange and weird that it
+will live in the memory forever. One pictures, as he beholds it, the
+tortured spirits writhing in agony, their sinewy limbs convulsed, and
+the very air oppressive with pain and rage.
+
+But the scene is illusive. This is the domain of Vulcan, not of Pluto.
+Here, in this gigantic workshop, in the midst of the materials of his
+labor, the god of fire, having left his ancient home on Olympus, and
+established himself in this newer world, stretches himself beside his
+forge, and sleeps the peaceful sleep which is the reward of honest
+industry. Right at his doorway are mountains of coal to keep a perpetual
+fire upon his altar; within the reach of his outstretched grasp are
+rivers of coal oil; and a little further away great stores of iron for
+him to forge and weld, and shape into a thousand forms; and at his feet
+is the shining river, an impetuous Mercury, ever ready to do his
+bidding. Grecian mythology never conceived of an abode so fitting for
+the son of Zeus as that which he has selected for himself on this
+western hemisphere. And his ancient tasks were child's play compared
+with the mighty ones he has undertaken to-day.
+
+Failing a night approach, the traveler should reach the Iron City on a
+dismal day in autumn, when the air is heavy with moisture, and the very
+atmosphere looks dark. All romance has disappeared. In this nineteenth
+century the gods of mythology find no place in daylight. There is only a
+very busy city shrouded in gloom. The buildings, whatever their original
+material and color, are smoked to a uniform, dirty drab; the smoke
+sinks, and mingling with the moisture in the air, becomes of a
+consistency which may almost be felt as well as seen. Under a drab sky a
+drab twilight hangs over the town, and the gas-lights, which are left
+burning at mid-day, shine out of the murkiness with a dull, reddish
+glare. Then is Pittsburg herself. Such days as these are her especial
+boast, and in their frequency and dismalness, in all the world she has
+no rival.
+
+In truth, Pittsburg is a smoky, dismal city, at her best. At her worst,
+nothing darker, dingier or more dispiriting can be imagined. The city is
+in the heart of the soft coal region; and the smoke from her dwellings,
+stores, factories, foundries and steamboats, uniting, settles in a cloud
+over the narrow valley in which she is built, until the very sun looks
+coppery through the sooty haze. According to a circular of the Pittsburg
+Board of Trade, about twenty per cent., or one-fifth, of all the coal
+used in the factories and dwellings of the city escapes into the air in
+the form of smoke, being the finer and lighter particles of carbon of
+the coal, which, set free by fire, escapes unconsumed with the gases.
+The consequences of several thousand bushels of coal in the air at one
+and the same time may be imagined. But her inhabitants do not seem to
+mind it; and the doctors hold that this smoke, from the carbon, sulphur
+and iodine contained in it, is highly favorable to lung and cutaneous
+diseases, and is the sure death of malaria and its attendant fevers. And
+certainly, whatever the cause may be, Pittsburg is one of the healthiest
+cities in the United States. Her inhabitants are all too busy to reflect
+upon the inconvenience or uncomeliness of this smoke. Work is the object
+of life with them. It occupies them from morning until night, from the
+cradle to the grave, only on Sundays, when, for the most part, the
+furnaces are idle, and the forges are silent. For Pittsburg, settled by
+Irish-Scotch Presbyterians, is a great Sunday-keeping day. Save on this
+day her business men do not stop for rest or recreation, nor do they
+"retire" from business. They die with the harness on, and die, perhaps,
+all the sooner for having worn it so continuously and so long.
+
+Pittsburg is not a beautiful city. That stands to reason, with the heavy
+pall of smoke which constantly overhangs her. But she lacks beauty in
+other respects. She is substantially and compactly built, and contains
+some handsome edifices; but she lacks the architectural magnificence of
+some of her sister cities; while her suburbs present all that is
+unsightly and forbidding in appearance, the original beauties of nature
+having been ruthlessly sacrificed to utility.
+
+Pittsburg is situated in western Pennsylvania, in a narrow valley at the
+confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, and at the head of
+the Ohio, and is surrounded by hills rising to the height of four or
+five hundred feet. These hills once possessed rounded outlines, with
+sufficient exceptional abruptness to lend them variety and
+picturesqueness. But they have been leveled down, cut into, sliced off,
+and ruthlessly marred and mutilated, until not a trace of their original
+outlines remain. Great black coal cars crawl up and down their sides,
+and plunge into unexpected and mysterious openings, their sudden
+disappearance lending, even in daylight, an air of mystery and diablerie
+to the region. Railroad tracks gridiron the ground everywhere, debris of
+all sorts lies in heaps, and is scattered over the earth, and huts and
+hovels are perched here and there, in every available spot. There is no
+verdure--nothing but mud and coal, the one yellow the other black. And
+on the edge of the city are the unpicturesque outlines of factories and
+foundries, their tall chimneys belching forth columns of inky blackness,
+which roll and whirl in fantastic shapes, and finally lose themselves in
+the general murkiness above.
+
+The tranquil Monongahela comes up from the south, alive with barges and
+tug boats; while the swifter current of the Allegheny bears from the oil
+regions, at the north, slight-built barges with their freights of crude
+petroleum. Oil is not infrequently poured upon the troubled waters, when
+one of these barges sinks, and its freight, liberated from the open
+tanks, refuses to sink with it, and spreads itself out on the surface of
+the stream.
+
+The oil fever was sorely felt in Pittsburg, and it was a form of malaria
+against which the smoke-laden atmosphere was no protection. During the
+early years of the great oil speculation the city was in a perpetual
+state of excitement. Men talked oil upon the streets, in the cars and
+counting-houses, and no doubt thought of oil in church. Wells and
+barrels of petroleum, and shares of oil stock were the things most often
+mentioned. And though that was nearly twenty years ago, and the oil
+speculation has settled into a safe and legitimate pursuit, Pittsburg is
+still the greatest oil mart in the world. By the means of Oil Creek and
+the Allegheny, the oil which is to supply all markets is first shipped
+to Pittsburg, passes through the refineries there, and is then exported.
+
+ [Illustration: PITTSBURGH AND ITS RIVERS.]
+
+The Ohio River makes its beginning here, and in all but the season of
+low water the wharves of the city are lined with boats, barges and tugs,
+destined for every mentionable point on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.
+The Ohio River is here, as all along its course, an uncertain and
+capricious stream. Sometimes, in spring, or early summer, it creeps up
+its banks and looks menacingly at the city. At other times it seems to
+become weary of bearing the boats, heavily laden with merchandise, to
+their destined ports, and so takes a nap, as it were. The last time we
+beheld this water-course its bed was lying nearly bare and dry, while a
+small, sluggish creek, a few feet, or at most, a few yards wide, crept
+along the bottom, small barges being towed down stream by horses, which
+waded in the water. The giant was resting.
+
+The public buildings and churches of Pittsburg are, some of them, of
+fine appearance, while the Mercantile Library is an institution to be
+proud of, being both handsome and spacious, and containing a fine
+library and well-supplied reading room. The city boasts of universities,
+colleges, hospitals, and asylums, and the Convent of the Sisters of
+Mercy is the oldest house of the order in America. There are also two
+theatres, an Opera House, an Academy of Music, and several public halls.
+
+But it is not any of these which has made the city what she is, or to
+which she will point with the greatest pride. The crowning glory of
+Pittsburg is her monster iron and glass works. One-half the glass
+produced in all the United States comes from Pittsburg. This important
+business was first established here in 1787, by Albert Gallatin, and it
+has increased since then to giant proportions. Probably, not less than
+one hundred millions of bottles and vials are annually produced here,
+besides large quantities of window glass. The best wine bottles in
+America are made here, though they are inferior to those of French
+manufacture. A great number of flint-glass works turn out the best
+flint glass produced in the country.
+
+In addition to these glass works--which, though they employ thousands of
+workmen, represent but a fraction of the city's industries--there are
+rolling mills, foundries, potteries, oil refineries, and factories of
+machinery. All these works are rendered possible by the coal which
+abounds in measureless quantities in the immediate neighborhood of the
+city. All the hills which rise from the river back of Pittsburg have a
+thick stratum of bituminous coal running through them, which can be
+mined without shafts, or any of the usual accessories of mining. All
+that is to be done is to shovel the coal out of the hill-side, convey it
+in cars or by means of an inclined plane to the factory or foundry door,
+and dump it, ready for use. In fact, these hills are but immense coal
+cellars, ready filled for the convenience of the Pittsburg
+manufacturers. True, in shoveling the coal out of the hill-side, the
+excavations finally become galleries, running one, two or three miles
+directly into the earth. But there is neither ascent nor descent; no
+lowering of miners or mules in great buckets down a deep and narrow
+shaft, no elevating of coal through the same means. It is all like a
+great cellar, divided into rooms, the ceilings supported by arches of
+the coal itself. Each miner works a separate room, and when the room is
+finished, and that part of the mine exhausted the arches are knocked
+away, pillars of large upright logs substituted, the coal removed, and
+the hill left to settle gradually down, until the logs are crushed and
+flattened.
+
+The "Great Pittsburg Coal Seam" is from four to twelve feet thick, about
+three hundred feet above the water's edge, and about one hundred feet
+from the average summit of the hills. It is bituminous coal which has
+been pressed solid by the great mass of earth above it. The thicker the
+mass and the greater the pressure, the better the coal. It has been
+estimated as covering eight and a half millions of acres, and that it
+would take the entire product of the gold mines of California for one
+thousand years to buy this one seam. When we remember the numerous other
+coal mines, anthracite as well as bituminous, found within the limits of
+the State of Pennsylvania, we are fairly stupefied in trying to
+comprehend the mineral wealth of that State.
+
+The coal mined in the rooms in these long galleries is conveyed in a
+mule-drawn car to the mouth of the gallery, and if to be used by the
+foundries at the foot of the hill, is simply sent to its destination
+down an inclined plane. Probably not less than ten thousand men are
+employed in these coal mines in and near Pittsburg, adding a population
+not far from fifty thousand to that region. Pittsburg herself consumes
+one-third of the coal produced, and a large proportion of the rest is
+shipped down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, some of it as far as New
+Orleans.
+
+The monster iron works of Pittsburg consume large quantities of this
+coal, and it is the abundance and convenience of the latter material
+which have made the former possible. No other city begins to compare
+with Pittsburg in the number and variety of her factories. Down by the
+banks of the swift-flowing Allegheny most of the great foundries are to
+be discovered. The Fort Pitt Works are on a gigantic scale. Here are
+cast those monsters of artillery known as the twenty-inch gun. Not by
+any means a gun twenty inches in length, but a gun with a bore twenty
+inches in diameter, so accurate that it does not vary one-hundredth
+part of an inch from the true line in its whole length. The ball for
+this gun weighs one thousand and eighty pounds, and costs a hundred and
+sixty-five dollars. The gun itself weighs sixty tons, and costs fifty
+thousand dollars, and yet one of these giants is cast every day, and the
+operation is performed with the utmost composure and absence of
+confusion. The mould is an enormous structure of iron and sand, weighing
+forty tons, and to adjust this properly is the most difficult and
+delicate work in the foundry. When it is all ready, three streams of
+molten iron, from as many furnaces, flow through curved troughs and pour
+their fiery cataracts into the mould. These streams run for twenty
+minutes, and then, the mould being full, the furnaces from which they
+flow are closed with a piece of clay. Left to itself, the gun would be
+thirty days in cooling, but this process is expedited to eighteen days,
+by means of cold water constantly flowing in and out of the bore. While
+it is still hot, the great gun is lifted out of the pit, swung across
+the foundry to the turning shop, the end shaven off, the outside turned
+smooth, and the inside hollowed out, with an almost miraculous
+precision. The weight of the gun is thus reduced twenty tons.
+
+The American Iron Works employ two thousand five hundred hands, and
+cover seventeen acres. They have a coal mine at their back door, and an
+iron mine on Lake Superior, and they make any and every difficult iron
+thing the country requires. Nothing is too ponderous, nothing too
+delicate and exact, to be produced. The nail works of the city are well
+worth seeing. In them a thousand nails a minute are manufactured, each
+nail being headed by a blow on cold iron. The noise arising from this
+work can only be described as deafening. In one nail factory two hundred
+different kinds of nails, tacks and brads are manufactured. The
+productions of these different factories and foundries amount in the
+aggregate to an almost incredible number and value, and embrace
+everything made of iron which can be used by man.
+
+George F. Thurston, writing of Pittsburg, says, it has "thirty-five
+miles of factories in daily operation, twisted up into a compact tangle;
+all belching forth smoke; all glowing with fire; all swarming with
+workmen; all echoing with the clank of machinery. Actual measurement
+shows that there are, in the limits of what is known as Pittsburg,
+nearly thirty-five miles of manufactories of iron, of steel, of cotton,
+and of brass alone, not mentioning manufactories of other materials. In
+a distance of thirty-five and one-half miles of streets, there are four
+hundred and seventy-eight manufactories of iron, steel, cotton, brass,
+oil, glass, copper and wood, occupying less than four hundred feet each;
+for a measurement of the ground shows that these factories are so
+contiguous in their positions upon the various streets of the city, that
+if placed in a continuous row, they would reach thirty-five miles, and
+each factory have less than the average front stated. This is
+"manufacturing Pittsburg." In four years the sale and consumption of pig
+iron alone was one-fourth the whole immense production of the United
+States; and through the Ohio and Mississippi rivers and their
+tributaries, its people control the shipment of goods, without breaking
+bulk, over twelve thousand miles of water transportation, and are thus
+enabled to deliver the products of their thrift in nearly four hundred
+counties in the territory of fifteen States. There is no city of its
+size in the country which has so large a banking capital as Pittsburg.
+The Bank of Pittsburg, it is said, is the only bank in the Union that
+never suspended specie payments.
+
+Pittsburg is a city of workers. From the proprietors of these extensive
+works, down to the youngest apprentices, all are busy; and perhaps the
+higher up in the scale the harder the work and the greater the worry. A
+man who carries upon his shoulders the responsibility of an
+establishment whose business amounts to millions of dollars in a year;
+who must oversee all departments of labor; accurately adjust the buying
+of the crude materials and the scale of wages on the one hand, with the
+price of the manufactured article on the other, so that the profit shall
+be on the right side; and who at the same time shall keep himself posted
+as to all which bears any relation to his business, has no time for
+leisure or social pleasures, and must even stint his hours of necessary
+rest.
+
+Pittsburg illustrates more clearly than any other city in America the
+outcome of democratic institutions. There are no classes here except the
+industrious classes; and no ranks in society save those which have been
+created by industry. The mammoth establishments, some of them perhaps in
+the hands of the grandsons of their founders, have grown from small
+beginnings, fostered in their growth by industry and thrift. The great
+proprietor of to-day, it may have been, was the "boss" of yesterday, and
+the journeyman of a few years ago, having ascended the ladder from the
+lowest round of apprenticeship. Industry and sobriety are the main aids
+to success.
+
+The wages paid are good, for the most part, varying according to the
+quality of the employment, some of them being exceedingly liberal. The
+character of the workmen is gradually improving, though it has not yet
+reached the standard which it should attain. Many are intelligent,
+devoting their spare time to self-improvement, and especially to a
+comprehension of the relations of capital and labor, which so intimately
+concern them, and which they, more than any other class of citizens,
+except employers, need to understand, in order that they may not only
+maintain their own rights, but may avoid encroaching on the rights of
+others.
+
+Too many workmen, however, have no comprehension of the dignity of their
+own position. They live only for present enjoyment, spend their money
+foolishly, not to say wickedly, and on every holiday give themselves up
+to that curse of the workingman--strong drink. While this class is such
+a considerable one, the entire ranks of working men must be the
+sufferers. And while ignorance as well as vice has been so prevalent
+among them, it is not to be wondered at that they have been constantly
+undervalued, and almost as constantly oppressed.
+
+The prosperity of the country depends upon the prosperity of the masses.
+With all the money in the hands of a few, there are only the personal
+wants of a few to be supplied. With wages high, work is more plentiful,
+and everybody prospers. The gains of a large manufacturing
+establishment, divided, by means of fair profit and just wages, between
+employers and employed, instead of being hoarded up by one man, make one
+hundred persons to eat where there would otherwise be but one; one
+hundred people to buy the productions of the looms and forges of the
+country, instead of only one; one hundred people, each having a little
+which they spend at home, instead of one man, who hoards his wealth, or
+takes it to Europe to dispose of it. It means all the difference between
+good and bad times, between a prosperous country, where all are
+comfortable and happy, and a country of a few millionaires and many
+paupers.
+
+No description of Pittsburg would be complete without a reference to the
+Knights of Labor, which has taken the place of the old trades unions and
+guilds. While the latter were in existence, that city was often the
+scene of violent and disastrous strikes. The great railroad strike of
+1877, in which a number of lives were lost, and millions of dollars'
+worth of property destroyed, culminated at Pittsburg, and for days the
+city was stricken with panic. The cause of this strike was the decision
+of the railroad corporation to reduce to one dollar a day the wages of a
+certain class of its employees, which were already too low. The cause of
+these strikers was just, but their methods were reprehensible. The
+institution and spread of the Knights of Labor has rendered such another
+strike an impossibility, as that Order, which has a large membership
+among the workmen of Pittsburg, aims to settle, as far as possible, the
+difficulties between employers and employees by arbitration; and its
+spread will, we trust, if it does not pass under the control of
+demagogues, eventually result in a better understanding between capital
+and labor, and in a recognition of the fact that their real interests
+are identical.
+
+Pittsburg has no park or public pleasure ground. Its people are too busy
+to think about such things, or to use them if it had them. On Saturday
+nights its theatres and variety halls are crowded, to listen to
+entertainments which are not always of the best. When its people wish
+to visit a public park, they must cross to Allegheny City, on the west
+bank of the Allegheny River, where there is a park embracing a hundred
+acres, containing a monument to Humboldt, and ornamented with small
+lakes. The Soldiers' Monument, erected to the memory of four thousand
+men of Allegheny County who lost their lives in the war of the
+Rebellion, is also in this latter city, on a lofty hill near the river,
+in the eastern part of the city. Many of the handsome residences of
+Pittsburg's merchants and manufacturers are to be seen in this city,
+which is also famous for its manufacturing interests, and is connected
+with Pittsburg by five bridges. Birmingham is a flourishing suburb on
+the opposite bank of the Monongahela River, containing important glass
+and iron manufactories.
+
+The present population of Pittsburg is 156,381 inhabitants. The first
+settlement upon the site of the city was in 1754, when a French trading
+post was established and named Fort Duquesne. On July ninth, 1755,
+General Braddock, in command of two thousand British troops, accompanied
+by Colonel Washington with eight hundred Virginians, marched toward Fort
+Duquesne with the intention of capturing it. When within a few miles of
+the fort, they were surprised by a large party of French and Indians in
+ambush, and Braddock, who angrily disregarded Washington's advice, saw
+his troops slaughtered by an invisible enemy. The English and colonists
+lost seven hundred and seventy-seven men, killed and wounded, while the
+enemy's loss was scarcely fifty. Braddock himself was mortally wounded,
+and died upon the battle field, and in order that his remains might not
+be disturbed, Washington buried him in the road, and ordered the wagons
+in their retreat to drive over his grave. Washington himself escaped
+unhurt, though he had two horses shot under him, and had four bullets
+sent through his clothes. An Indian who was engaged in this battle
+afterwards said that he had seventeen fair fires at Washington during
+the engagement, but was unable to wound him.
+
+In 1758, Fort Duquesne was abandoned by the French, and immediately
+occupied by the English, who changed its name to Fort Pitt, in honor of
+William Pitt. As a town its settlement dates from 1765. In 1804 it was
+incorporated as a borough, and in 1816 chartered as a city. Its
+population in 1840, was a little more than 20,000. In 1845 a great part
+of the city was destroyed by fire, but was quickly rebuilt, its
+prosperity remaining unchecked.
+
+A little less than ten miles from Pittsburg is the village called
+Braddock's Field, which, in the names of its streets, perpetuates the
+old historic associations. The ancient Indian trail which led to the
+river is still preserved, and the two shallow ravines in which the
+French and Indians lay concealed when they surprised Braddock's troops
+are still there, though denuded of the dense growth of hazel bushes
+which at that period served the purpose of an ambush. From an old oak in
+this neighborhood many bullets have been pried out by persevering relic
+hunters; while in the adjacent gardens the annual spring plowing
+invariably turns up mementoes of that historic event, in the shape of
+bullets, arrow heads, and even bayonets. A sword with a name engraved
+upon it has also been found.
+
+The Pennsylvania Railroad now crosses the location of the thickest of
+the fight, and at the time of its construction a considerable number of
+human bones were dug up and reinterred, the place of the later interment
+being surrounded by a rough fence of common rails. Children now play
+where once the forces of their nation engaged in deadly warfare. The
+hillside, which was then pierced by bullets, is now perforated near its
+summit by large openings, through which emerge car-loads of coal. Thus
+the present and the past strike hands across the century, and modern
+civilization, with its implements of industry and its appliances of
+commerce, supersedes and obliterates the traces of savagery, and of the
+deadly enmity of man toward man. The sword is turned into the plowshare,
+and peace triumphs over bloodshed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+PORTLAND.
+
+ The Coast of Maine.--Early Settlements in Portland.--Troubles
+ with the Indians.--Destruction of the Town in 1690.--Destroyed
+ Again in 1703.--Subsequent Settlement and Growth.--During the
+ Revolution.--First Newspaper.--Portland Harbor.--Commercial
+ Facilities and Progress.--During the Rebellion.--Great Fire
+ of 1866.--Reconstruction.--Position of the city.--Streets.--
+ Munjoy Hill.--Maine General Hospital.--Eastern and Western
+ Promenades.--Longfellow's House.--Birthplace of the Poet.--
+ Market Square and Hall.--First Unitarian Church.--Lincoln
+ Park.--Eastern Cemetery.--Deering's Woods.--Commercial
+ Street.--Old-time Mansion.--Case's Bay and Islands.--Cushing's
+ Island.--Peak's Island.--Long Island.--Little Chebague Island.--
+ Harpswell.
+
+
+The hungry ocean has gnawed and ravaged the New England coast, until
+along almost its entire length it is worn into ragged edges, forming
+islands, capes, promontories, bold headlands, peninsulas, bays, inlets
+and coves. In this coast are united the grand, the picturesque and the
+beautiful. Soft masses of foliage are in close juxtaposition with rugged
+rocks and dashing surf. Violet turf sweeps down to meet the sands washed
+up by the sea. Bays cut deeply into the land, forming safe harbors, and
+emerald islands innumerable dot their surface.
+
+In 1632 George Cleve and Richard Tucker landed on the beach of a
+peninsula, jutting out into a broad and deep bay, and sheltered from the
+ocean by a promontory at the south, now known as Cape Elizabeth, and by
+a guard of islands which clasped hands around it. Here Cleve built, of
+logs, the first house on the site of what is now the city of Portland.
+After a time other colonists came, devoting themselves to fishing and
+buying furs of the Indians. When the people of this distant colony
+wanted to go to Boston, they rode horseback along the beach, which
+formed the original highway. The settlement was first known as Casco,
+but its name was changed to Falmouth in 1668, though a portion of it,
+where Portland now stands, continued to be known as Casco Rock. In 1675
+there were but forty families in the town, and the Rock was still almost
+covered by a dense forest. In that year the Indians, who had long borne
+grievous wrongs at the hands of the settlers with patient endurance,
+arose, under King Philip, to avenge them. The inhabitants of Falmouth
+were either killed or carried into captivity, and the little town was
+wiped out of existence.
+
+Three years later Fort Royal, the largest fortification on the coast,
+was erected on a rocky eminence, near the present foot of India street,
+where the round-house of the Grand Trunk Railway now stands, and
+settlers began to return. A party of French Huguenots settled there,
+mills were set up, roads cut into the forest, and trade established
+between Falmouth and Massachusetts towns. The little settlement existed
+under varying fortunes until 1690, when the French and Indians, after a
+few days' siege, captured the fort, destroyed the town, and carried the
+commanding officer and his garrison captives to Quebec. The war
+continued until 1698, during which time the place was only known as
+"deserted Casco." In 1703 the war broke out again, and what few
+inhabitants had straggled back were killed, and the place remained
+desolate until 1715, when the re-settlement began. Three years later
+twenty families had banded themselves together for mutual defence,
+clustering about the foot of India street, and eastward along the beach.
+The second meeting-house of the town was erected at the corner of India
+and Middle streets, where Rev. Thomas Smith, in 1727, commenced his
+ministry, which extended over a period of sixty-eight years.
+
+The town was incorporated in 1718, and at that time the Neck above Clay
+Cove was all forest and swamp. A brook flowed into the Cove, crossed by
+bridges at Fore and Middle streets. The old bridge at Middle street
+remained until early in the present century. The trails stretching out
+into the forest gradually grew into streets, and the three principal
+ones were named Fore, Middle and Back streets. The name of the latter
+was, late in the century, changed to Congress street.
+
+After a period of sixty years of steady growth, the town had extended
+only as far westward as Centre street, and the upper portion of the Neck
+was still covered with woods. The Indians gave the town little trouble
+after 1725, having made peace in that year, and gradually dwindled away,
+and emigrated to Canada. In 1755 it was no longer a frontier post. Its
+population had increased to nearly 3,000 inhabitants, commerce had been
+established, and the town was a most peaceful and a prosperous one. At
+the commencement of the Revolution 2,555 tons of shipping were owned in
+Falmouth.
+
+When the colonies began to resist the encroachments of England, Falmouth
+took a prominent and patriotic stand. In October, 1775, Captain Henry
+Mowatt, with a fleet of five vessels, opened his batteries on the town,
+and, firing the houses, laid it in ashes. Over four hundred buildings
+were destroyed, leaving only one hundred standing. The place was again
+deserted, the people seeking safety in the interior.
+
+On January first, the _Falmouth Gazette and Weekly Advertiser_, the
+first newspaper of the town, was published by Benjamin Titcomb and
+Thomas B. Waite. In 1786 the town was divided, the Neck receiving the
+name of Portland, having at that time a population of about two
+thousand. In 1793 wharves were extended into the harbor. In 1806, its
+commercial business and general prosperity were unexampled in New
+England. The duties collected at the Custom House reached, in that year,
+$342,809, having increased from $8,109 in 1790. But in 1807, the embargo
+which followed the non-intercourse policy of 1806 resulted in the
+suspension of commerce and the temporary ruin of the shipping interests.
+Commercial houses were prostrated, and great distress prevailed. The
+harbor was empty, and grass grew upon the wharves. In the war of 1812
+privateers were fitted out here, some of which damaged the enemy, while
+others were captured. After the peace of 1815 commerce revived but
+slowly, and the population as slowly increased.
+
+In March, 1820, Maine was separated from Massachusetts, and admitted
+into the Union as a State; and Portland became its capital. In 1832 the
+capital was removed to Augusta. In 1828 the first steamboat anchored in
+the harbor of Portland, having arrived from New York to run as a
+passenger boat between Portland and Boston. The Portland Steam Packet
+Company was organized in 1844, and has continued in successful operation
+ever since.
+
+Portland has one of the deepest and best harbors in the world, with a
+depth of forty feet at low tide. Its surroundings are exceptionally
+favorable for a commercial city, and were it not for its geographical
+location, it being so far north of the great areas of population, it
+would undoubtedly have gained a prominence over most of the Atlantic
+cities. But Boston and New York drew all but the provincial trade and
+commerce, and with a sparsely settled country at its back, there was
+little to build up Portland and give it great prosperity. In 1850 the
+Cumberland and Oxford Canal, connecting the waters of Sebago Lake with
+Portland Harbor, was completed. This was not a great enterprise,
+certainly, as compared with modern undertakings; but the Portlanders
+thought a good deal of it at the time. Between 1840 and 1846, the city
+endured another season of depression. Railroads had given to Boston much
+of the business that had formerly found a natural outlet through
+Portland; but in the latter year a railroad was planned to Canada,
+which, when completed, in 1853, brought it into connection with the
+cities of the British provinces, and with the vast grain-growing regions
+of the west. A winter line of steamers to Liverpool followed, and the
+rapidly increasing commerce of the city soon resulted in the
+construction of a wide business avenue, extending a mile in length,
+along the whole water front of the city. This new street was called
+Commercial, and became the locality of heavy wholesale trade. Closely
+following, came the opening up of railroads to all sections of the
+State, and the establishment of steamboat lines along the coast, as far
+as the Lower Provinces. Trade that had hitherto gone to Boston was thus
+reclaimed, new manufacturing establishments sprung up, and an era of
+prosperity seemed fairly inaugurated.
+
+Portland manifested her patriotism during the war of the Rebellion,
+contributing 5,000 men to the army, of whom four hundred and twenty-one
+returned. In June, 1863, the United States Revenue cutter, Caleb
+Cushing, having been captured by Rebels, and pursued by the officials of
+the city, and becoming becalmed near the Green Islands, was blown up by
+her captors, the latter taking to the boats, only to be captured and
+sent to Fort Preble as prisoners of war.
+
+On the fourth of July, 1866, a fire-cracker, carelessly thrown in a boat
+builder's shop, on Commercial, near the foot of High street, resulted in
+a fire which laid in ruins more than half the city of Portland. The fire
+commenced about five o'clock in the afternoon. The sparks soon
+communicated with Brown's Sugar House, and thence, spreading out like a
+fan, swept diagonally across the city, destroying everything in its
+track, until a space one and one-half miles long, by one and one-fourth
+miles broad, was so completely devastated that only a forest of
+tottering walls and blackened chimneys remained, and it was difficult to
+trace even the streets. The fire was fanned into such a fury by a gale
+which was blowing at the time, that the efforts of the firemen were
+without avail, and the work of destruction was only stayed when, as a
+last resort, buildings in its path were blown up before the flames had
+reached them. The entire business portion, embracing one-half the city,
+was destroyed. Every bank and newspaper office, every lawyer's office,
+many stores, churches, public buildings and private residences were
+swept away. Fireproof structures, which were hastily filled with
+valuables, in the belief that they would withstand the flames, crumbled
+to the earth, as though melted by the intense heat. Only one building
+on Middle street stood unscathed, though the flames swept around it in a
+fiery sea. The fire did not burn itself out until early in the morning
+of the following day, when it paused at the foot of Mountjoy Hill. When
+morning came, the inhabitants looked with terror and dismay upon fifteen
+hundred buildings in ashes, fifty-eight streets and courts desolated,
+ten thousand people homeless, and $10,000,000 worth of property
+destroyed.
+
+The work of succor and reconstruction immediately began. The churches
+were thrown open to shelter the homeless; Mountjoy Hill was speedily
+transformed into a village of tents; barracks were built; contributions
+of food, clothing and money poured in from near and far; the old streets
+were widened and straightened, and new ones opened; and before the year
+had closed many substantial buildings and blocks had been completed, and
+others were in process of erection. The new Portland has arisen from the
+ruins of the old, more stately, more beautiful and more substantial than
+before; and after the lapse of so many years, the evil which the fire
+wrought is forgotten, and only the good is manifest. Railroads have
+since been built, and travel and commerce is each year increasing. The
+population of Portland in 1880 was 33,810.
+
+The approach to Portland is more beautiful, even, than that to New York.
+The city is built upon a small peninsula rising out of Casco Bay, to a
+mean central elevation of more than one hundred feet. This peninsula
+projects from the main land in a northeast direction, and is about three
+miles long, by an average breadth of three-fourths of a mile. An arm of
+the Bay, called Fore River, divides it on the south from Cape
+Elizabeth, and forms an inner harbor of more than six hundred acres in
+extent, and with an average depth, at high water, of thirty feet.
+Vessels of the largest size can anchor in the main harbor, in forty feet
+of water at low tide. The waters of the Back Cove separate it on the
+north from the shores of Deering, and form another inner basin, of large
+extent and considerable depth.
+
+At the northeasternmost extremity of the Neck, Munjoy Hill rises to a
+height of one hundred and sixty-one feet, and commands a beautiful view
+of the city, bay, adjacent islands and the ocean beyond. At the
+southwestern extremity is Bramhall's Hill, rising to one hundred and
+seventy-five feet and commanding city, bay, forests, fields, villages
+and mountains. The land sinks somewhat between these two elevations, but
+its lowest point still rises fifty-seven feet above high tide. The
+elevation of its site, and the beauty of its scenery and surroundings,
+are fast attracting the attention of tourists, and drawing to the city
+hosts of summer visitors.
+
+The peninsula is covered with a network of streets and lanes, containing
+an aggregate length of fifty miles, while it has thirty wharves to
+accommodate the commerce of the port. Congress street, the main
+thoroughfare of the city, is three miles in length, and extends from
+Bramhall to Munjoy. Running parallel to it for a part of its length, on
+the southern slope, are Middle street, a business street, devoted
+principally to the wholesale and retail trade; Fore street, the ancient
+water street of the city, but now devoted to miscellaneous trade; and
+Commercial street, which commands the harbor, and is principally devoted
+to large wholesale business. At the west end there are other streets
+between Congress and Commercial, including Spring, Danforth and York.
+Cumberland, Oxford, supplemented on its western end by Portland,
+Lincoln, along the shore of Back Cove, also supplemented on its western
+end by Kennebec street, are on the northern slope of Congress street.
+The cross streets are numerous. India street, at the eastern end, was
+the early site of population and business; Franklin and Beal streets are
+the only ones running straight across the peninsula, from water to
+water; Exchange street, devoted to banks, brokers' offices and insurance
+agencies, and High and State streets, occupied by private residences,
+are the principal ones. There is partially completed around the entire
+city a Marginal Way, one hundred feet in width, and nearly five miles in
+length.
+
+Munjoy Hill is a suburb, which is almost a distinct village, being
+occupied by residences of the middle class, who have their own schools,
+churches, and places of business. From its summit, at early morning, one
+may see the sun rising out of the ocean, in the midst of emerald
+islands. On this hill, in 1690, Lieutenant Thaddeus Clark, with thirteen
+men, was shot by Indians in ambush, the hill being then covered with
+forest. On the same hill, in 1717, Lieutenant-Governor Dammer made a
+treaty with the Indians, which secured a peace for many years; and in
+1775 Colonel Thompson captured Captain Mowatt, in revenge for which the
+latter subsequently burned the city. In 1808 the third and last
+execution for murder took place here; and in 1866 here arose the village
+of tents after the great conflagration. The Observatory, built in 1807,
+is upon Munjoy, having been erected for the purpose of signaling
+shipping approaching the harbor. It is eighty-two feet high, and from
+it one can obtain the best view of the city and its surroundings. Casco
+Bay lies to the northeast, dotted with islands. To the eastward, four
+miles distant, beyond its barrier of islands, the Atlantic keeps up the
+never-ending music of its waves. To the southward is the city, with the
+harbor and the shipping beyond. Far away to the northeast is Mount
+Washington, faintly outlined upon the horizon, prominent in the distant
+range of mountains. Adjoining the Observatory is the Congress street
+Methodist Episcopal Church, a beautiful edifice, its slender, graceful
+spire being a most conspicuous object from the harbor and the sea, and
+rising to the greatest height of any in the city.
+
+The western end, including Bramhall Hill, is the fashionable quarter;
+and having been spared in the conflagration of 1866, many ancient
+mansions remain, surrounded by newer and more elegant residences. The
+houses are in the midst of well-kept lawns and gardens, and the streets
+are shaded by stately elms, some of them of venerable age. The views
+through these avenues of trees, through some of the streets leading down
+to the water, are delightful beyond description, the overarching foliage
+framing in glimpses of water, fields, distant hills and blue sky. At
+evening, from Bramhall's Hill, one looks over a beautiful and varied
+landscape, brightened by the glow of sunset on the western sky. The
+Maine General Hospital stands on Bramhall Hill, an imposing edifice, and
+one of the most prominent features of the city.
+
+The Western Promenade, a wide avenue planted with rows of trees, runs
+along the brow of Bramhall's Hill. The hill is named after George
+Bramhall, who in 1680 bought a tract of four hundred acres, and made
+himself a home in the wilderness. Nine years later he was killed at the
+foot of the hill, in a fight with the Indians. From the summit of the
+hill may be seen the waters of Fore River on the one hand, and of Back
+Cove on the other. Beyond is a wide stretch of field and forest, broken
+by villages and farmhouses, with the spires of Gorham in view, and far
+away, behind them, Ossipee Mountain, fifty-five miles distant, in New
+Hampshire. To the east is the church of Standish, Maine, and Chocorue
+Peak rising behind it; Mount Carrigain, sixty-three miles away, the line
+of the Saddleback in Sebago, and far beyond, the sun-capped summits of
+the White Mountains.
+
+The Eastern Promenade is on Munjoy's Hill, and commands views equally
+beautiful.
+
+The Preble House is in Congress street, shaded by four magnificent elms,
+which have survived from the days of the Preble Mansion. Next to it,
+sitting back from the street, and also shaded by elms, is the first
+brick house built in Portland. It was begun in 1785, by General Peleg
+Wadsworth, and finished the following year, by his son-in-law, Stephen
+Longfellow. It is known as the Longfellow House, but it is not the place
+where the poet was born. He lived here in his youth, and frequently
+visited the house in later days; and it is still in the possession of
+his family. But Henry Wadsworth Longfellow first saw the light on
+February twenty-seventh, 1807, in an old-fashioned wooden house, at the
+corner of Fore and Hancock streets. The sea at that period flowed up to
+the road opposite the house, which commanded a fine view of the harbor.
+New-made land crowds it further away, and the trains of the Grand Trunk
+Railway run where the tide once ebbed and flowed. Not far off is the
+site of the first house ever built in Portland, by George Cleves, in
+1632.
+
+Nathaniel P. Willis was also born in Portland, but a little more than a
+month earlier than Longfellow. Both his father and his grandfather had
+been publishers, the latter having been apprenticed in the same printing
+office with Benjamin Franklin. Sarah Payson Willis, subsequently Mrs.
+James Parton, still better known as Fanny Fern, a sister of the poet,
+was also a native of Portland. John Neal, born in Portland August
+twenty-fifth, 1793, was a man well known as a poet, novelist and
+journalist. Seba Smith, author of the Jack Downing Papers, Mrs. E. Oakes
+Smith, Mrs. Elizabeth Oakes Allen, Nathaniel Deering, Rev. Elijah
+Kellogg, Mrs. Ann S. Stephens, Mrs. Margaret J. M. Sweat, and other
+well-known authors, have been either natives of or residents in
+Portland. General Neal Dow, who served in the late war, and so famous as
+an advocate of prohibition, finds his home in Portland, at the corner of
+Congress and Dow streets. William Pitt Fessenden, late Senator and
+Secretary of the Treasury, claimed Portland as his home.
+
+Market Square is in the heart of the city, surrounded by stores, hotels,
+halls, and places of amusement. Military Hall stands almost in-the
+centre of the square, and was built in 1825, as a town hall and market
+place. The building contains a history in itself. Here, before the city
+charter was obtained, in 1832, town meetings were held, and subsequently
+it was the headquarters of the city government. Military companies had
+and still have their armories here; and it has been the place of many
+exciting political meetings. In it Garrison uttered his anathemas
+against slavery, and Stephen A. Foster was assaulted by a brutal
+pro-slavery mob. Sumner, Fessenden, and other great orators, have
+poured forth their eloquence within its hall, and parties have been made
+and unmade. On holidays Market Square is crowded with an animated
+throng, and at night, when peddlers and mountebanks take their stands
+and display their wares by the light of flaming torches, the scene is
+especially picturesque.
+
+On Congress street, not far from Market Square, is the First Parish
+(Unitarian) Church, which was rebuilt in 1825, on the site which the old
+church had occupied since 1740. This church is remarkable for its long
+pastorates, there having been but four pastors from 1727 to 1864, a
+period of one hundred and thirty-seven years. The present pastor is the
+Rev. Dr. Thomas Hill, ex-President of Harvard College.
+
+Lincoln Park is a public square, bounded by Congress, Franklin, Federal
+and Pearl streets. It contains a little less than two and one-half
+acres, in the middle of which is a fountain. This park is in the centre
+of the district swept by the conflagration of 1866, and looking on every
+side, not a building meets the eye which was erected previous to that
+year.
+
+The largest and most costly church in Portland is the Cathedral of the
+Immaculate Conception, fronting on Cumberland street. It is one hundred
+and ninety-six feet in length, by one hundred in width, with a spire
+rising in the air two hundred and thirty-six feet. It is of brick, and
+is imposing only on account of its size. Its interior, however, is
+finished and decorated in a style surpassed by few churches in the
+country.
+
+ [Illustration: NIGHT SCENE IN MARKET SQUARE, PORTLAND, MAINE.]
+
+The Eastern Cemetery, on Congress street, is the oldest graveyard in
+Portland. For two hundred years it was the common burial ground of the
+settlement, and here, probably, all the early colonists sleep their
+last sleep, though their graves are forgotten. The oldest tombstone
+which the yard seems to contain is that of Mrs. Mary Green, who died in
+1717. On the opposite side of the yard, near Mountford street, are the
+monuments erected to the memory of William Burroughs, of the United
+States Brig Enterprise, and Samuel Blythe, of His Majesty's Brig Boxer,
+who fought and died together, on September fifth, 1813, and were buried
+here. Lieut. Kerwin Waters, of the Enterprise, wounded in the same
+action, lies beside them. Of him Longfellow sung:--
+
+ "I remember the sea fight far away,
+ How it thundered o'er the tide!
+ And the dead captains, as they lay
+ In their graves o'erlooking the tranquil bay,
+ Where they in battle died."
+
+There is a white marble monument to Commodore Preble, and the death of
+Lieutenant Henry Wadsworth, uncle of the poet Longfellow, who fell
+before Tripoli in 1804, is also commemorated here.
+
+Congress Square, at the junction of Fore street, has an elevated
+position, and is surrounded by churches of various denominations. From
+Congress street, near its junction with Mellen street, the visitor can
+look off to Deering's Woods, which rise on the borders of a creek,
+running in from Back Cove. This tract of woodland has come into
+possession of the city, and will be preserved as a park. Longfellow
+sings of
+
+ "The breezy dome of groves,
+ The shadows of Deering's Woods."
+
+Again:--
+
+ "And Deering's Woods are fresh and fair,
+ And with joy that is almost pain
+ My heart goes back to wander there,
+ And among the dreams of the days that were
+ I find my lost youth again."
+
+The reservoir of the Portland Water Works is at the junction of Bramhall
+and Brackett streets. It has an area of 100,000 square feet, with a
+capacity of 12,000,000 gallons, and is supplied with water from Lake
+Sebago, seventeen miles distant.
+
+The extensive premises of the Grand Trunk Railway lie at the foot of
+India street, where are wharves for the great freight business between
+Canada and Europe, and whence the Dominion and Beaver Line of
+steamships, every fortnight, from November to May, send ships to
+Liverpool. The scene during the winter season is a busy one, and the
+amount of freight handled and shipped is immense. Then begins Commercial
+street, the modern business avenue of the city, which runs its whole
+water front, with a railroad track in the middle of it. On this street
+is the old family mansion of the widow of Brigadier Preble, built in
+1786, on the site of his father's house, destroyed by fire in 1775. It
+then occupied a beautiful and retired locality, looking out upon the
+harbor, and surrounded by ample grounds. But now it is strangely out of
+keeping with its neighbors. Opposite it now stands the grain elevator of
+the Grand Trunk Railway, having been built in 1875, with a capacity of
+200,000 bushels. All around are wholesale shipping and commission
+houses, and wharves for ocean steamships extend up and down the shore.
+
+When Captain John Smith, famous in the early history of Virginia, and
+the first tourist who ever visited Maine, made his famous summer trip
+thither, in 1614, he described the place as follows:--"Westward of
+Kennebec is the country of Ancocisco, in the bottom of a deep bay full
+of many great isles, which divide it into many great harbors." Ancocisco
+was very soon abbreviated to Casco, and the bay is still filled with
+many great isles. Casco Bay, extending from Cape Elizabeth, on the
+west, to Cape Small Point, on the east, a distance of about eighteen
+miles, with a width of, perhaps, twelve miles, contains more islands
+than any other body of water of like extent in the whole United States.
+It is a popular belief that these islands number three hundred and
+sixty-five--one for every day in the year; but a regard for truth
+compels us to state, that of the named and unnamed islands and islets,
+there are only one hundred and twenty-two, while a few insignificant
+rocks and reefs would not swell the number to one hundred and forty.
+These islands are divided into three ranges, the Inner, Middle and
+Outer. The Inner range contains twenty islands; the Middle range,
+twenty-four; and the Outer range, seventy-eight. Besides these islands,
+the shore is very much broken, and extends out into the bay in
+picturesque points or fringes, the creeks, inlets and tidal rivers
+extending far inland. In this bay was discovered, by a mariner named
+Joselyn, in 1639, a triton or merman, and the first sea serpent of the
+coast. Seals breed and sport on a ledge in the inner bay, off the shore
+of Falmouth, and its waters abound with edible fish and sea-fowl.
+
+Ferry boats convey an endless stream of pleasure-seekers to the
+different islands, during the summer season. Cushing's Island lies at
+the mouth of Portland Harbor, forming one shore of the ship channel. Its
+southern shore presents a rocky and precipitous front, culminating in a
+bold bluff nearly one hundred and fifty feet high, known as White Head.
+The island looks out upon the harbor from smiling fields and low,
+tree-bordered beaches. It furnishes good opportunities for fishing and
+bathing, and is fast becoming a popular summer resort. It is five miles
+in circumference, and commands magnificent sea views.
+
+Peak's Island is separated from Cushing's Island by White Head Passage,
+and with the latter forms an effectual barrier to the ocean. Like it, it
+presents a bold front to the sea, and smiles upon the bay. It is about a
+mile and a half long, by a mile and a quarter wide, and rises gradually
+to a central elevation of, perhaps, one hundred feet, commanding
+extensive views of the ocean and harbor, and of the mountains, eighty
+miles away. It is one of the most beautiful of all the islands of Casco
+Bay, and has a resident population of three hundred and seventy persons,
+who are largely descendants of the first settlers.
+
+Long Island lies northeast of Peak's Island, and is separated from it by
+Hussey's Sound. It has an area of three hundred and twelve acres,
+presenting a long, ragged line of shore to the sea. Its population was,
+in 1880, two hundred and fifty-two, the men being engaged in fishing and
+farming.
+
+Little Chebague lies inside of Long Island, and is connected with Great
+Chebague by a sand bar, dry at low water. A hotel and several summer
+cottages stand upon the island, and it is an attractive place.
+
+Harpswell is a long peninsula, about fourteen miles down the bay, and is
+much resorted to by picnic parties. To the eastward lies Bailey's
+Island, one of the most beautiful of the bay, and to the northward is
+Orr's Island, the scene of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel, "The Pearl of
+Orr's Island." Rising between Bailey's Island and Small Point Harbor is
+the Elm Island of Rev. Elijah Kellogg's stories. Whittier has written a
+poem entitled "The Dead Ship of Harpswell," in which he describes a
+spectre ship which never reaches the land, and is a sure omen of
+death:--
+
+ "In vain o'er Harpswell's neck the star
+ Of evening guides her in,
+ In vain for her the lamps are lit
+ Within thy town, Seguin!
+ In vain the harbor boat shall hail,
+ In vain the pilot call;
+ No hand shall reef her spectral sail,
+ Or let her anchor fall."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ Early History.--William Penn.--The Revolution.--Declaration of
+ Independence.--First Railroad.--Riots--Streets and Houses.--
+ Relics of the Past.--Independence Hall.--Carpenters' Hall.--
+ Blue Anchor.--Letitia Court.--Christ Church.--Old Swedes'
+ Church.--Benjamin Franklin.--Libraries.--Old Quaker Almshouse.--
+ Old Houses in Germantown.--Manufactures.--Theatres.--Churches.--
+ Scientific Institutions.--Newspapers.--Medical Colleges.--
+ Schools.--Public Buildings.--Penitentiary.--River Front.--
+ Fairmount Park.--Zoological Gardens.--Cemeteries.--Centennial
+ Exhibition.--Bi-Centennial.--Past, Present and Future of the
+ City.
+
+
+In the year 1610, Lord Thomas de la War, on his voyage from England to
+Virginia, entered what is now Delaware Bay, and discovered the river
+flowing into it, to which he also gave his name. The Dutch made a prior
+claim to the discovery of the land which bordered this river, and
+retained possession for a time. But there were difficulties in
+maintaining their settlements, and in 1638 the Swedes sent out a colony
+from Stockholm, and established a footing on the west bank of the river,
+afterwards known as Pennsylvania. The Dutch at New York, however, would
+not submit to this arrangement, and under Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of
+Manhattan, demanded the surrender of their fort--now called Trinity
+Fort--which was yielded. The Dutch authority lasted for a short time
+only. In 1664 the English captured Manhattan and expelled the Dutch, and
+in the same year an expedition under Sir Robert Carr came to the
+Delaware, fired two broadsides into Trinity Fort, landed storming
+parties, assaulted the fort, killed three Dutchmen, wounded ten, and in
+triumph raised the flag of England, which was thereafter supreme on the
+Delaware for nine years.
+
+In 1672 the Dutch tried their strength again, and summoned the English
+fort at Staten Island to surrender. This summons was complied with, and
+the English of New York swore allegiance to the Prince of Orange. The
+people upon the banks of the Delaware soon accommodated themselves to
+the change of masters, and welcomed the Dutch. But this was their last
+appearance upon the Delaware. In the next year, 1673, their settlements
+in America were all ceded, through the fortune of war, to Great Britain,
+and this territory once more passed under the English flag.
+
+About this time the name of William Penn enters into American history.
+The British Government being largely indebted to his father, Admiral
+William Penn, the son found little difficulty in obtaining a grant for a
+large tract of land in America, upon which to found a colony. This was
+in 1681. He immediately sent out to his wooded possessions, which he
+named Pennsylvania, his cousin, Captain William Markham, who had been a
+soldier, with a commission to be Deputy Governor, and with instructions
+to inform the European inhabitants already settled there of the change
+in government, promising them liberal laws. Markham was also to convey a
+message of peace to the Indians, in the name of their new "proprietor."
+He was soon followed by three commissioners, who had power to settle the
+colony, and among other things, to layout a principal city, to be the
+capital of the province, which William Penn, who was a member of the
+Society of Friends, directed should be called Philadelphia--a Greek
+compound signifying "brotherly love." He himself arrived on the great
+territory of which he was sole proprietor in 1682, and found the plans
+of the city and province to his satisfaction. He at once convened an
+Assembly, and the three counties of Philadelphia, Bucks, and Chester
+were created, and proper laws passed for their government.
+
+In less than two years, however, Penn was obliged to return to England,
+and shortly after, in 1692, the British Government took possession of
+the colony, and placed it under the jurisdiction of the Governor of New
+York. But in 1694, the government was restored to Penn, and Markham was
+again made Lieutenant-Governor. Penn, himself, did not return to America
+until 1699. He found his capital very considerably improved. Instead of
+the wilderness he had left, fifteen years before, there were streets,
+houses, elegant stores, warehouses, and shipping on the river. The
+population was estimated at four thousand five hundred persons. His
+visit was, however, brief. In 1701, he set sail again for England,
+intending to return in a few months, but this intention was never
+carried out. In 1708, his pecuniary embarrassments were so great, that
+he was arrested for debt in London, and thrown into the Fleet Prison,
+where he continued for nine years. In 1712 his health and mind gave way,
+and during six years he lingered as an imbecile, childish and gentle in
+his manners, the sad wreck of a strong mind. He died in July, 1718.
+
+The government of Pennsylvania was administered for a time by his widow,
+and subsequently went into the hands of his children and their
+descendants, as proprietors. They usually delegated the administration
+to lieutenant-governors, though they sometimes exercised their
+authority in person, until the American Revolution put an end to all the
+colonial governments.
+
+The history of Philadelphia during the period of the Revolution is
+largely connected with that of the whole country. At a large meeting
+held in the State House in Philadelphia, in April, 1768, it was resolved
+to cease all importations from the mother country, in consequence of the
+exorbitant taxes levied upon them. In 1773, the British East India
+Company being determined to export tea to America, a second meeting was
+called at the State House, at which it was patriotically resolved that
+"Parliament had no right to tax the Americans, without their consent,"
+and that "any one who would receive or sell the tea sent out to America
+would be denounced as an enemy to his country."
+
+The ship Polly, Captain Ryers, was to bring the tea to Philadelphia.
+Handbills, purporting to be issued by the "committee for tarring and
+feathering," were printed and distributed among the citizens. They were
+addressed to the Delaware pilots and to Captain Ryers himself, warning
+the former of the danger they would incur if they piloted the tea ship
+up the river, whilst Captain Ryers was threatened with the application
+of tar and feathers if he attempted to land the tea.
+
+Christmas Day, 1773, the Polly arrived. A committee of citizens went on
+board, told Captain Ryers the danger he was in, and requested him to
+accompany them to the State House. Here the largest meeting was
+assembled that had ever been held in the city. This meeting resolved
+that the tea on board the Polly _should not be landed_, and that it
+should be carried back to England immediately. The captain signified his
+willingness to comply with the resolution, and in two hours after, the
+Polly, with her freight of tea, hoisted sail and went down the river.
+
+In September, 1774, the first Congress, composed of delegates from
+eleven Colonies, met at Carpenters' Hall, on Chestnut street,
+Philadelphia, to consider the condition of the Colonies, in their
+relation to the mother country. This Congress resolved that all
+importations from Great Britain or her dependencies should cease.
+Committees of "inspection and observation," were appointed, which
+exercised absolute authority to punish all persons infringing the order
+of Congress.
+
+On April twenty-fourth, 1775, news of the battles of Concord and
+Lexington reached the city. A meeting was immediately called, by sound
+of gong and bell, at the State House. Eight thousand persons assembled,
+who resolved that they would "associate together, to defend with arms
+their property, liberty and lives." Troops were at once raised, forts
+and batteries built on the Delaware, floating batteries, gunboats and
+ships-of-war constructed, with all the speed possible, and _chevaux de
+frize_ sunk in the river, to prevent the passage of British ships. In
+May, 1776, the English Frigate Roebuck, and Sloop-of-war Liverpool,
+attempting to force their way up the river, the Americans opened fire on
+them, and a regular naval action took place. The British managed to
+escape, and retired to their cruising ground, at the entrance of the
+bay.
+
+ [Illustration: OLD INDEPENDENCE HALL, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+On July second, 1776, Congress, sitting at the State House, resolved in
+favor of the severance of all connection between the American Colonies
+and Great Britain, and independence of that power. On July third and
+fourth, the form of the declaration of independence was debated, and
+adopted on the latter day. July eighth, the Declaration was read to the
+people in the State House yard, and received with acclamations, and
+evidences of a stern determination to defend their independence with
+their lives. The King's Arms were at once torn down from the court room
+in the State House, and burned by the people. Bells were rung and
+bonfires lighted, the old State House bell fulfilling the command
+inscribed upon it, when it was cast, twenty years before: "Proclaim
+Liberty throughout the land, unto all the inhabitants thereof."
+
+In September, 1777, the British army, under General Lord Howe, entered
+Philadelphia. October fourth, Washington attacked it at Germantown, and
+although he did not win a victory, compelled the British commander to
+respect him. The English remained in possession of the city, but the
+Americans held the country around. The Philadelphians having closed the
+Delaware by the _chevaux de frize_, the royal army was in effect hemmed
+in and cut off from communication with the British fleet, which had
+entered the Delaware, but was prevented from approaching the city by the
+American forts and batteries. It had brought but a moderate supply of
+stores, and as these diminished, the troops suffered from scarcity of
+food.
+
+On November twenty-sixth, British frigates and transports arrived at the
+wharves of the city, to the great joy of the royal troops and of the
+inhabitants, provisions having become very scarce and famine threatened.
+Beef sold at five dollars a pound, and potatoes at four dollars a
+bushel, hard money. The British army remained in Philadelphia until June
+eighteenth, 1778, about nine months from its first occupation of the
+city. During that time the officers gave themselves up to enjoyment.
+They amused themselves with the theatre, with balls, parties,
+cock-fights and gambling: and a grand fete was celebrated in honor of
+their commander, Lord Howe. This fete, in the style of a tournament of
+chivalry, took place in the lower part of the city, and while it was in
+progress the Americans in considerable force made an attack upon the
+lines north of the city, set fire to the abattis, and brought out the
+entire body of the royal troops to repel the attack.
+
+Upon the evacuation of the city, in June, General Benedict Arnold was
+immediately sent with a small force to occupy it. He remained in
+military command for several months. It was discovered by many that he
+had become largely involved in certain speculating transactions, and the
+shame of the discovery stimulated the traitorous intentions which
+finally carried him over to the British army.
+
+After the inauguration of Washington as President of the new republic,
+it was determined by Congress that Philadelphia should be the seat of
+the United States government for the ensuing ten years, after which it
+should be removed to Washington City. The scheme of the Federal
+Constitution was framed and adopted in September, 1787, by the
+Convention sitting at the State House, with George Washington as
+President. The final adoption of the Constitution of the United States
+of America was celebrated in Philadelphia on the Fourth of July, 1788 by
+a magnificent procession.
+
+The principal officers of Congress removed their residences to
+Philadelphia in the latter part of 1790. At that period Washington lived
+in Market street near Sixth, in a plain two-story brick house, which had
+been the residence of Lord Howe during the British occupation of the
+city. The locality is now occupied, if I mistake not, by the mammoth
+clothing house of Wanamaker & Brown. John Adams, Vice-President, lived
+in the Hamilton mansion at Bush Hill; and Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of
+State, at 174 Market street, between Fourth and Fifth, on the south
+side. Congress assembled for the transaction of business on State House
+Square.
+
+During the stay of the Federal government in Philadelphia, Washington
+and Adams were inaugurated as President and Vice President (March
+fourth, 1797), in the chamber of the House of Representatives.
+
+In 1793, 1797, and 1798, a fearful epidemic of the yellow fever, visited
+Philadelphia and created great alarm, the mortality being dreadful.
+
+The removal of the Federal government to Washington, in 1800, deprived
+Philadelphia of the prominence she had enjoyed as the Capital of the
+nation. In the year 1808 steamboats began to ply regularly on the
+Delaware River. During the war which commenced in 1812 between the
+United States and Great Britain, Philadelphia maintained her loyalty,
+and fulfilled her duty to the country. Several volunteer companies were
+formed, and there was an engagement in July, 1813, between British war
+vessels and the United States gunboat flotilla on the Delaware, in which
+the Philadelphians proved themselves brave and patriotic.
+
+The first railroad, running from Philadelphia to Germantown, was built
+in 1832. The Pennsylvania Railroad was projected in 1845, and chartered
+in the following year.
+
+In 1834 a spirit of riot and disorder which passed over the United
+States, reached Philadelphia, and led to disturbances between whites and
+blacks. The houses of colored people were broken into, a meeting-house
+torn down, and many other outrages committed. Again, in 1835 attacks
+were made on the blacks, and houses burned. In 1838 all friends of the
+abolition of slavery were violently attacked, and much damage done to
+property in the city.
+
+But the most terrible riots which Philadelphia has known occurred in
+1844. A meeting of the Native American party was attacked and dispersed.
+The "Natives" rallied to a market house on Washington street, where they
+were again attacked, and fire-arms used on both sides. Houses were
+broken into and set on fire. The Roman Catholic churches of Saint
+Michael and Saint Augustine, and a female Catholic seminary, were
+burned, and many buildings sacked and destroyed. All the Catholic
+churches were in great danger of sharing the same fate. A large number
+of persons were killed on both sides. On July fourth, of the same year,
+the Native Americans had a very large and showy procession through the
+streets of the city. On Sunday, July seventh, the church of Saint Philip
+de Neri, in Southwark, was broken into by the mob. In clearing the
+streets, the soldiers and the people came into collision. The former
+fired into the crowd, and several persons were killed, and others
+wounded. This occurrence caused intense excitement. The soldiers were
+attacked with cannon and with musketry, and they responded with
+artillery and with musketry. The rioters had four pieces, which were
+worked by sailors. The battle continued during the night of the seventh
+and the morning of the eighth of July. Two soldiers were killed, and
+several wounded. Of the citizens seven were killed, and many wounded.
+This was the most sanguinary riot, and the last of any importance, which
+ever occurred in Philadelphia.
+
+Philadelphia possesses many characteristic features which distinguish
+her from her sister cities. The visitor will be at first struck by the
+extreme regularity of the streets, and the look of primness which
+invests them. They are laid out at right angles, the only notable
+exceptions being those roads, now dignified by the name of avenues,
+which usually led from the infant city into the then adjacent country.
+These avenues, of which Passyunk, Germantown and Ridge are the principal
+ones, are irregular in their course, but take a generally diagonal
+direction; the first southwest, and the other two northwest. The houses
+are mostly of brick, with white marble facings and steps, and white
+wooden shutters to the first story. The streets running east and west,
+from the Delaware to the Schuylkill, are, in the original city, with few
+exceptions named after trees. Thus Cedar, Pine, Spruce, Locust, Walnut,
+Chestnut, Filbert, Mulberry, Cherry, Sassafras and Vine. Cedar became
+South street, and Sassafras and Mulberry became Race and Arch, the
+latter so named because in the early days of the city Front street
+spanned it by an arch. Callowhill street was originally Gallowhill
+street, the word indicating its derivation. The houses on these streets
+are numbered from the Delaware, beginning a new hundred with every
+street. Thus all houses between Front and Second streets are numbered in
+the first hundred, and at Second street a new hundred begins; the even
+numbers being on the southern side, and the odd ones on the northern
+side of the street. The streets running parallel to the river are
+numbered from the river, beginning with Front, then Second, Third, and
+so on, until the furthest western limit of the city is reached. Market
+street, originally called High street, runs between Chestnut and
+Filbert, dividing the city into north and south. The houses on the
+streets crossing Market begin their numbers at that street, running both
+north and south, each street representing an additional hundred. With
+this naming of streets and numbering of houses, no stranger can ever
+lose himself in Philadelphia. The name and number of street and house
+will always tell him just where he is. Thus if he finds himself at 836
+North Sixth street, he knows he is eight squares north of Market street,
+and six squares west of the Delaware River.
+
+The original city was bounded by the Delaware River on the east, and the
+Schuylkill on the west, and extended north and south half a mile on
+either side of Market street. Even before the present century it had
+outgrown its original limits in a northerly and southerly direction, and
+a number of suburbs had sprung up around it, each of which had its own
+corporation. The names of these suburbs were, most of them, borrowed
+from London. Southwark faced the river to the south; Moyamensing was
+just west of Southwark; Spring Garden, Kensington, Northern Liberties,
+Germantown, Roxborough, and Frankford were on the north, and West
+Philadelphia west of the Schuylkill. In 1854 these suburbs, so long
+divided from the "city" merely by geographical lines, were incorporated
+with it; and the City of Philadelphia was made to embrace the entire
+county of Philadelphia--a territory twenty-three miles long, with an
+area of nearly one hundred and thirty square miles. It thus became in
+size the largest city in the country, while it stands only second in
+population.
+
+The old city was laid out with great economy as to space, the streets
+being as narrow as though land were really scarce in the new country
+when it was planned. Market street extends from the Delaware westward--a
+broad, handsome avenue, occupied principally by wholesale stores. It is
+indebted, both for its name and width, to the market houses, which from
+an early date to as late as 1860, if not later, occupied the centre of
+the street; long, low, unsightly structures, thronged early in the
+morning, and especially on market days, with buyers and sellers, while
+market wagons lined the sides of the street. The same kind of structures
+still occupy certain localities of Second, Callowhill, Spring Garden and
+Bainbridge streets. But those in Market street have disappeared, and
+substantial and handsome market buildings have been erected on or near
+the street, instead of in its centre.
+
+A century ago the business of Philadelphia was confined principally to
+Front street, from Walnut to Arch. Now Second street presents the most
+extended length of retail stores in the country, and business has spread
+both north and south almost indefinitely, and is fast creeping westward.
+Market street presents a double line of business houses, from river to
+river. Chestnut, the fashionable promenade and locality of the finest
+hotels and retail stores, is invaded by business beyond Broad, and Arch
+street beyond Tenth; while Eighth street, even more than Chestnut the
+resort of shoppers, is, for many squares, built up by large and handsome
+retail stores. Broad street, lying between Thirteenth and Fifteenth, is
+the handsomest avenue in Philadelphia. It is fifteen miles in length,
+and one hundred and thirteen feet in width, and contains many of the
+finest public buildings and private residences in the city. Ridgway
+Library, the Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Horticultural Hall, Academy of Music,
+Broad Street Theatre, Union League Club House, Masonic Temple, Academy
+of Fine Arts, besides some of the most elegant religious edifices, are
+located on this street.
+
+At the intersection of Broad and Market, where were once four little
+squares left in the original plan of the city, and known as Penn Square,
+are being constructed the vast Public Buildings of the city. They are of
+white marble, four hundred and eighty-six and one-half feet long by four
+hundred and seventy feet wide, and four stories high, covering an area
+of four and one-half acres, not including a large court in the centre.
+The central tower will, when completed, be four hundred and fifty feet
+high, and the total cost of the buildings over ten millions of dollars.
+This building presents a most imposing appearance, whether viewed from
+Market or Broad streets. The Masonic Temple, just to the north, is one
+of the handsomest of its kind in America. It is a solid granite
+structure, in the Norman style, most elaborately ornamented, and with a
+tower two hundred and thirty feet high. Its interior is finished in a
+costly manner, and after the several styles of architecture. The Academy
+of Music is one of the largest opera houses in America, being capable of
+seating three thousand persons.
+
+ [Illustration: MASONIC TEMPLE, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+Third street is the banking and financial centre of Philadelphia; on
+Walnut street are found the greatest proportion of insurance offices;
+South street is the cheap retail street, and is crowded with shoppers,
+especially on market days, and the Jews reign here supreme.
+Bainbridge street (once Shippen) east of Broad represents the squalor
+and crime of the city. "Old clo'" and second-hand stores of all
+descriptions alternate with low drinking places, and occupy forlorn and
+tumble-down tenements. All races and colors, and both sexes mingle here,
+and the man who sighs for missionary work need go no further than this
+quarter.
+
+Chestnut street is, next to Broad, the handsomest in the city. The
+buildings are all of comparatively recent construction, and are many of
+them handsome and costly. On Market street the past century still
+manifests itself in quaint houses of two or three stories in height,
+sometimes built of alternate black and red bricks, and occasionally with
+queer dormer windows, wedged in between more stately and more modern
+neighbors. It will be some time before the street becomes thoroughly
+modernized, and we can scarcely wish that it may become so, for the city
+would thus lose much of its quaint interest.
+
+One of the characteristics of Philadelphia which strikes the traveler is
+that it wears an old-time air, far more so than Boston or New York.
+Boston cannot straighten her originally crooked streets, but her thought
+and spirit are entirely of the nineteenth century. New York is intensely
+modern, the few relics of the past which still remain contrasting and
+emphasizing still more strongly the life and bustle and business of
+to-day. Philadelphia is a quiet city. Its people do not rush hither and
+thither, as though but one day remained in which to accomplish a life
+work. They take time to walk, to eat, to sleep, and to attend to their
+business. In brief, they take life far more easily and slowly than
+their metropolitan neighbors. They do not enter into wild speculative
+schemes; they have no such Stock Exchange, where bulls and bears roar
+and paw the ground, or where they may make or lose fortunes in less time
+than it takes to eat one's dinner. They are a steady, plodding people,
+accumulating handsome fortunes in solid, legitimate ways. There is
+little of the rustle and roar of the elder city; save for the continual
+ring and rattle of the street cars, which cross the city in every
+direction, many of its quarters are as quiet as a country village. Its
+early Quaker settlers have stamped it with the quiet and placidity which
+is the leading trait of their sect; and though the Quaker garb is seen
+less and less often upon the streets, the early stamp seems to have been
+indelible.
+
+Philadelphia retains more of the old customs, old houses, and, perhaps,
+old laws, than any other city in the country. The Quaker City lawyer
+carries his brief in a green bag, as the benches of the Inner Temple
+used to do in Penn's time. The baker cuts a tally before the door each
+morning, just as the old English baker used to do three centuries ago.
+After a death has occurred in it, a house is put into mourning, having
+the shutters bowed and tied with black ribbon, not to be opened for at
+least a year. There are laws (seldom executed, it is true, but still
+upon the statute-books), against profanity and Sabbath-breaking, and
+even regulating the dress of women.
+
+Some of the streets of Philadelphia bear strongly the marks of the past.
+Those, especially, near the river, which were built up in the early
+days, have not yet been entirely renovated; while some ancient buildings
+of historic interest have been preserved with jealous care. First and
+foremost among the latter is Independence Hall, occupying the square
+upon Chestnut street between Fifth and Sixth streets--no doubt,
+considered an imposing edifice at the time of its erection, but now
+overshadowed by the business palaces which surround it. It was here that
+the second Colonial Congress met; here that the Declaration of
+Independence was adopted; and here that the United States Congress
+assembled, until the seat of the General Government was removed to
+Washington, in 1800. In Congress Hall, in the second story of this
+building, Washington delivered his Farewell Address. The building is now
+preserved with great care. The hall where the Declaration of
+Independence was signed is decorated with portraits of the signers, and
+contains, among other objects of interest, as before stated, the bell
+which pealed out freedom to all.
+
+Next in historic importance is Carpenters' Hall, between Third and
+Fourth streets. The first Continental Congress met here, and here the
+first words pointing toward a collision with the mother country were
+spoken in Philadelphia.
+
+When William Penn made his first visit to Philadelphia, on October
+twenty-fourth, 1682, he set foot upon his new possessions at the Blue
+Anchor Landing, at the mouth of Dock Creek, in the vicinity of what is
+now the corner of Front and Dock streets. Here stood the Blue Anchor
+Inn, the first house built within the ancient limits of the city. Then,
+and long afterwards, Dock Creek was a considerable stream, running
+through the heart of the town. But, in course of time, the water became
+offensive, from the drainage of the city, and it was finally arched
+over, and turned into a sewer. The winding of Dock street is accounted
+for by the fact that it follows the former course of the creek. Sloops
+once anchored and discharged their cargoes where now stands Girard Bank,
+on Third street, below Chestnut.
+
+Between Chestnut and Market streets, Second and Front, is found Letitia
+street, where long stood the first brick house built in the Province,
+erected for the use of Penn himself, and named after his daughter
+Letitia. He directed that it should "be pitched in the middle of the
+platt of the town, facing the harbor." The bricks, wooden carvings and
+other materials, were imported from England. At the time of its
+construction a forest swept down to the river in front, forming a
+natural park, where deer ranged at will. Letitia House became a lager
+beer saloon, the front painted with foaming pots of beer. But business
+interests claimed the site and the old house was removed and carefully
+re-erected in Fairmount Park.
+
+The old Slate Roof House, long one of the ancient landmarks, on Second
+street below Chestnut, the residence of William Penn on his second visit
+to this country, during which visit John, his only "American" son was
+born, and where other noted persons lived and died, or at least visited,
+was removed in 1867, to make room for the Commercial Exchange.
+
+Not far off, on Second street, north of Market, is Christ's Church,
+occupying the site of the first church erected by the followers of Penn.
+The present edifice was begun in 1727. Washington's coach and four used
+to draw up proudly before it each Sabbath, and himself and Lady
+Washington, Lord Howe, Cornwallis, Benedict Arnold, Andre, Benjamin
+Franklin, De Chastellux, the Madisons, the Lees, Patrick Henry and
+others whose names have become incorporated in American history, have
+worshiped here. In the aisles are buried various persons, great men in
+their day, but forgotten now. The chime of bells in the lofty tower is
+the oldest in America, and were cast in London. This chime joined the
+State House bell on that memorable Fourth of July, when the latter
+proclaimed liberty throughout the land. Just opposite this church is a
+small street, opening into Second street, its eastern end closed by a
+tall block of warehouses. This street contained Stephen Girard's stores
+and houses.
+
+The great elm tree, at Kensington, under which Penn made his famous
+treaty with the Indians, remained until 1800, when it was blown down. An
+insignificant stone now marks the spot, being inclosed by a fence, and
+surrounded by stone and lumber yards. An elm overshadows it--possibly, a
+lineal descendant of the historic tree.
+
+There is an older religious edifice in Philadelphia than Christ's
+Church. It is the old Swedes' Church, erected in 1697, not far from
+Front and Christian streets, by early Swedish missionaries. Though
+insignificant, compared with modern churches, it was regarded as a
+magnificent structure by the Quakers, Swedes and Indians, who first
+beheld it. The inside carvings, bell and communion service, were a gift
+of the Swedish king. In the graveyard which surrounds it are found the
+dead of nearly two centuries ago, some of the slate-stones over the
+older graves having been imported from the mother country. Here sleeps
+Sven Schute and his descendants, once, under Swedish dominion, lords of
+all the land on which Philadelphia now stands. None of his name now
+lives. Here lie buried, forgotten, Bengtossens, Peterssens, and Bonds.
+Wilson, the ornithologist, was a frequent attendant at this church,
+early in the present century, and he lies in the church yard, having
+been buried there by his own request, as it was "a silent, shady place,
+where the birds would be apt to come and sing over his grave." The
+English sparrows have built their nests above it.
+
+An ancient house possessing special historic interest stands on Front
+street, a few doors above Dock. It is built of glazed black bricks, with
+a hipped roof, and, though it was a place of note in its day, occupied
+by one generation after another of the ruling Quakers, it has now
+degenerated into a workingmen's coffee-house. To it the Friends
+conducted Franklin on his return from England. War was not yet declared,
+but there were mutterings in the distance; all awaited Franklin's
+counsels, sitting silently, as is their wont, waiting for the spirit to
+move to utterance, when Franklin stood up and cried out: "To arms, my
+friends, to arms!"
+
+Franklin has left many associations in the city of his adoption. As a
+boy of seventeen he trudged up High, now Market street, munching one
+roll, with another under his arm, friendless and unknown. Even his
+future wife smiled in ridicule as he passed by. To-day statues are
+erected to his memory, and institutions named after him. The
+Philadelphia Library, the oldest and richest in the city, claims him as
+one of its original founders. In 1729, the Junto, a little association
+of tradesmen of which Franklin was a member, used to meet in the chamber
+of a little house in Pewter-platter alley, to exchange their books.
+Franklin suggested that there should be a small annual subscription, in
+order to increase the stock. To-day the library contains many thousand
+volumes, with many rare and valuable manuscripts and pamphlets. This
+library contains Penn's desk and clock, John Penn's cabinet, and a
+colossal bust of Minerva which overlooked the deliberations of the
+Continental Congress. In an old graveyard at the corner of Fifth and
+Arch, a section of iron railing in the stone wall which surrounds it
+permits the passer to view the plain marble slab which covers the
+remains of Franklin and his wife.
+
+Speaking of libraries, the Apprentices' Library, on the opposite corner
+of Fifth and Arch, overlooks Franklin's grave. It was established by the
+Quakers, and dates back to 1783. The apprentice system has died out, and
+the library is almost forgotten.
+
+As late as 1876, stood the old Quaker Almshouse, on Willings alley,
+between Third and Fourth streets, of which Longfellow gives this
+description in his poem, "Evangeline:"--
+
+ "Then in the suburbs it stood, in the midst of meadows and
+ woodlands;--
+ Now the city surrounds it; but still with its gateway and wicket,
+ Meek in the midst of splendor, its humble walls seem to echo
+ Softly the words of the Lord: 'The poor ye always have with you.'"
+
+Here Evangeline came when the pestilence fell on the city, when--
+
+ "Distant and soft on her ear fell the chimes from the belfry of
+ Christ Church,
+ While intermingled with these, across the meadows were wafted
+ Sounds of psalms that were sung by the Swedes in their church at
+ Wicaco."
+
+And here Evangeline found Gabriel. The ancient building is now leveled,
+and only the poem remains.
+
+Germantown, now incorporated in Philadelphia, is rich in historic
+associations. Stenton, a country seat near Germantown, was for
+generations the centre of the social life of the Quakers. It was built
+in 1731, by James Logan, and was finished with secret passages and
+underground ways, to be used in case of attack by Indians and others.
+The Chew House at Germantown was, during the Revolution, used by Colonel
+Musgrove and six companies, for a long time. The old Johnson House had
+its hall door, which is still preserved, riddled by cannon. In many
+private lawns and gardens of that suburb royalists and rebels sleep
+peacefully side by side. A house, now quaint in its antiquity, at the
+intersection of Main street and West Walnut lane, was used during the
+Revolution as a hospital and amputating room. The old Wistar House,
+built in 1744, played a part in the events of the last century, and
+contains furniture which once belonged to Franklin and Count Zinzendorf.
+There is a room filled with relics of early times.
+
+In 1755 the corner stone of Pennsylvania Hospital was laid. This
+corner stone having been recently uncovered, in making alterations
+to the building, the following inscription, of which Franklin was
+the author, was discovered: "In the Year of Christ, MDCCLV, George
+the Second happily reigning (for he sought the happiness of his
+people)--Philadelphia flourishing (for its inhabitants were public
+spirited)--This Building, By the Bounty of the Government, and of many
+private persons, was piously founded For the Relief of the Sick and
+Miserable. May the God of Mercies Bless the undertaking!"
+
+A noticeable and commendable feature of Philadelphia is its many
+workingmen's homes. In New York the middle classes, whose incomes are
+but moderate, are compelled to seek residences in cheap flats and
+tenement houses, or else go into the country, at the daily expense of
+car or ferry rides. But in Philadelphia flats are unknown, and tenement
+life--several families crowded under a single roof--confined almost
+entirely to the more wretched quarters of the city. There are streets
+upon streets of comfortable and neat dwellings, marble-faced and
+marble-stepped, with their prim white shutters, two or three stories in
+height, and containing from six to nine rooms, with all the conveniences
+of gas, bath-room and water, which are either rented at moderate rates
+or owned outright by single families, who may possibly rent out a room
+or two to lodgers. Philadelphia may have less elegant public and
+business edifices than New York, but her dwelling houses stand as far
+more desirable monuments to the prosperity of a people than the splendor
+united with the squalor of the metropolis.
+
+The manufactures of Philadelphia furnish the foundation of her
+prosperity. Her iron foundries produce more than one-third of the
+manufactured iron of the country, and number among them some of the
+largest in America. The Port Richmond Iron Works of I. P. Morris &
+Company cover, with their various buildings, five acres of ground. The
+Baldwin Locomotive Works, on Broad street, founded in 1831, employ a
+large force of men. It takes eighteen hundred men one day to complete
+and make ready for service a single locomotive; yet these works turn out
+three hundred locomotives a year. Some of the largest men-of-war in the
+world have also been built at the navy yards in Philadelphia and League
+Island. Among them is the old Pennsylvania, of one hundred and twenty
+guns. Besides her iron works there are many mills and factories. Miles
+of carpet, of superior quality, are woven every day, besides immense
+quantities of other woolen and cotton goods and shoes. Her retail
+stores, taken as a whole, will not compare in size and elegance with
+those of New York, though there are two or three exceptions to this
+rule.
+
+The headquarters of the Pennsylvania Railroad is at Philadelphia, and
+there is a grand depot on Broad street, near Market, which is palatial
+in its appointments.
+
+Of her places of amusement, the Academy of Music ranks first in size.
+There are numerous theatres, among which the Walnut Street Theatre is
+the oldest, and the Arch Street Theatre the most elegantly finished and
+furnished, and the best managed. With these and other places of
+amusement, are associated the names of all the prominent musicians,
+actors and actresses of the past and present. The Academy of Music was
+not built when Jenny Lind visited this country, but it was ready for
+occupancy only a few years later; and has witnessed the triumphs of many
+a prima donna, now forgotten by the public, which then worshiped her.
+Forrest began his theatrical career in Philadelphia; and the names of
+noted tragedians and comedians who have come and gone upon her boards
+are legion.
+
+Of churches Philadelphia has many, and beautiful ones. On three corners
+of Broad and Arch streets tall and slender spires point heavenward,
+rising from three of the most costly churches in the city. Surpassing
+them all, however, is the Roman Catholic Cathedral of Saint Peter and
+Saint Paul, on Logan Square. It is of red sandstone, in the Corinthian
+style, and is surmounted by a dome two hundred and ten feet high. The
+interior is cruciform and richly frescoed. The altar piece is by
+Brumidi.
+
+Also, fronting on Logan Square, at the corner of Nineteenth and Race
+streets, is the Academy of Natural Sciences, containing a library of
+twenty-six thousand volumes, and most extensive, valuable and
+interesting collections in zoology, ornithology, geology, mineralogy,
+conchology, ethnology, archA|ology and botany. The museum contains over
+two hundred and fifty thousand specimens, and Agassiz pronounced it one
+of the finest natural science collections in the world. It also contains
+a perfect skeleton of a whale, a complete ancient saurian, twenty-five
+feet long, and the fossil remains of a second saurian so much larger
+than the first that it fed upon it.
+
+Franklin Institute is devoted to science and the mechanical arts, and
+contains a library of fifteen thousand volumes. The Mercantile Library
+occupies a stately edifice, on Tenth street below Market, and contains
+over fifty thousand volumes, exclusive of periodicals and papers. On an
+average, five hundred books are loaned daily, from this institution.
+
+The newspapers of Philadelphia rank second only to those of New York.
+The _Ledger_ has a magnificent building at the corner of Sixth and
+Chestnut, complete in all its appointments, from engine rooms, in the
+basement, to type-setting rooms in the top story. The _Times_ building,
+at the corner of Eighth and Chestnut, is also very fine. The _Public
+Record_ building, newly finished, on Chestnut street above Ninth, near
+the new Post Office, surpasses all others. It represents the profits of
+a daily penny paper, giving news in a condensed form, to meet the wants
+of a working and busy public.
+
+Philadelphia once represented the literary centre of the country. It
+took the lead in periodic literature half a century ago, and claimed, as
+residents, some of the most brilliant novelists, essayists and poets of
+the day. But the glory of that age has departed. The _Continent_, a
+weekly magazine, sought to revive the prestige of the city, but soon
+removed to New York, where it died.
+
+The Medical Colleges of Philadelphia have long stood in the front rank,
+and have attracted students from all parts of the country. A Woman's
+Medical College is in successful operation, with a fine hospital
+connected with it.
+
+Philadelphia has an educational system embracing schools of different
+grades, and a High School. But it pays its teachers less salaries than
+most of the other cities, and the standard of the schools is not so high
+as it should be, in consequence. Girard College should not be
+overlooked, while speaking of educational institutions. Architecturally,
+it is a magnificent marble building, in Grecian style. It is located
+near the Schuylkill River, on Girard avenue. When Girard selected the
+location for his proposed college, it was so far out in the country,
+that he never thought the city would creep up to it. But to-day the
+college is inclosed by it, and its high stone walls block many a street,
+to the inconvenience of the people of the neighborhood. It was
+established for the practical education of orphan boys, and one of the
+provisions of its founder--himself a free thinker--was, that no
+religious instruction should be imparted to the pupils, and no clergyman
+be permitted to enter its doors; a provision which is widely
+interpreted, to the effect that no sectarian bias is given in the
+college.
+
+The United States Mint, located on Chestnut street, above Thirteenth, is
+copied from a Grecian temple at Athens. It contains a very valuable
+collection of coins, embracing those of almost every period of the world
+and every nation. The Custom House is an imitation of the Pantheon at
+Athens. The new Post Office is on Ninth street, extending from Chestnut
+to Market. It is a spacious granite structure, in the Renaissance style,
+four stories in height, with an iron dome, and when completed will cost
+about four millions of dollars.
+
+On the opposite corner from the Post Office is the Continentel Hotel, a
+spacious structure which, when erected, was the largest of its kind in
+the country. It is now exceeded in size by several other hotels in other
+cities, but it is noted for the elegance and excellence of the
+entertainment it offers its guests. Girard Hotel is immediately
+opposite, and ranks second only to the Continental.
+
+The Eastern Penitentiary is on Fairmount avenue, on what was once known
+as Cherry Hill. In it is practiced the plan of solitary confinement for
+prisoners. When Dickens paid his first visit to America, more than forty
+years ago, he visited this prison, and was so moved to pity by the
+solitude of its inmates, that he wrote a touching account of one of the
+prisoners, in whom he was especially interested. But this very prisoner,
+when he was set at liberty, soon committed another crime which sent him
+back to his silent and solitary cell, and every subsequent release was
+followed by a subsequent crime and subsequent imprisonment. Finally,
+when Dickens had been in his grave for years, the old man, still hale
+and hearty, but bearing the marks of age, was once more set free.
+Attention was attracted to him by the newspapers, as having been the
+prison hero of Dickens. The public became interested in him, and an
+effort was made to place him beyond the temptation of crime, so that he
+might go down to his grave a free man. But before many months had
+elapsed, life in the outer world became irksome to him, and he returned,
+by his well-beaten path, back to the penitentiary. He was very proud of
+the notice which Dickens had bestowed upon him, and it seemed to more
+than compensate for the loss of his liberty.
+
+When Penn visited Philadelphia, in its infant days, he wished to
+preserve the bluff overlooking the Delaware, to be forever used as a
+public park and promenade. But the traffic of Front street now rattles
+where he would have had green trees and grass. Philadelphia has no
+pleasant outlook upon the river, to correspond with the Battery of New
+York. The wharves are lined with craft of every description, and the
+flags of many nations are to be seen in her harbor; but commerce creeps
+down to the very shores, and Delaware avenue, which faces the river, is
+dirty and crowded with traffic. Seen from the river the city makes a
+pleasing outline against the sky, with its many spires and domes.
+Smith's Island and Windmill Island lie opposite the city, a short
+distance away, and Camden is on the New Jersey shore. Ferry boats
+continually ply across the Delaware, carrying to and fro the travelers
+of a continent.
+
+Philadelphia is not without its public breathing places, where the
+residents of its narrow streets may enjoy fine trees and green grass.
+When the city was first planned, four squares, of about seven acres
+each, were reserved in its four quarters, two each side of Market
+street, and are now known as Washington, Franklin, Logan and
+Rittenhouse Squares. Washington Square is at Sixth and Walnut, and was
+once a Potters' Field. Many soldiers, victims of the smallpox and camp
+fever, were buried there during the Revolution. Franklin Square, at
+Sixth and Race was also once a burying, ground. A fountain now occupies
+its centre. At Eighteenth and Race is Logan Square, where in 1864 was
+held the great Sanitary Fair. The entire square was roofed over and
+boarded up, the trunks of the trees standing as pillars in the aisles of
+the large building. Its companion, Rittenhouse Square, at Eighteenth and
+Walnut streets, is the centre of the aristocratic quarter of the city.
+It is surrounded by most elegant mansions and costly churches.
+Independence Square lies back of Independence Hall.
+
+There are a few other smaller and newer squares scattered throughout the
+city, but its great pride is Fairmount Park, which is unsurpassed in its
+natural advantages by any park in the world. This park contains nearly
+three thousand acres, embracing eleven miles in length along the
+Schuylkill and Wissahickon rivers. The nucleus of this park was the
+waterworks and reservoir, the former situated on the Schuylkill, in the
+northwestern part of the city, and the latter on a natural elevation
+close by, from which the entire park takes its name, while a small tract
+of land between the two was included in the original park. There was
+added the beautiful estate of Lemon Hill, once the country seat of
+Robert Morris, with the strip along the Schuylkill which led to it. In
+course of time Egglesfield, Belmont, Lansdowne and George's Hill, on the
+opposite side of the river, were added, either by gift or purchase, and
+eventually the tract of land on the eastern bank, extending from Lemon
+Hill to the Wissahickon, and along both banks of the latter as far as
+Chestnut Hill. This park, besides the beautiful river and romantic
+stream which it incloses, includes hills and valleys, charming ravines
+and picturesque rocks.
+
+While the city has gained much, the true lover of nature has lost
+something, by the conversion of this tract of land into a park. While it
+was still private property, nature was at her loveliest. Wild flowers
+blossomed in the dells, and little streams gurgled and tumbled over
+stones down the ravines, while vines and foliage softened the rugged
+outlines of the rocky hillsides. But the landscape gardener has been
+there. The dells are converted into gentle slopes; the wild flowers and
+ferns which beautified them have given place to green sward; one of the
+prettiest of the brooks has been converted into a sewer and covered
+over. The Wissahickon, once the most delightful of wild and wayward
+streams, is now, for a considerable part of its way, imprisoned between
+banks as straight and unpicturesque as those of a canal. The pretty
+country lanes have been obliterated, and the trees which overshadowed
+them have disappeared. Primness and stableness is now the rule. Art has
+sought to improve nature, and has almost obliterated it, instead. Yet
+even the landscape gardener cannot succeed in making the Schuylkill
+entirely unattractive; and velvet turf and trees waving in the wind,
+even though the latter be pruned into a tiresome regularity, are always
+more grateful than the cobble stones and brick pavements of the city
+streets, and thousands every day seek rest or recreation at Fairmount.
+
+Belmont Mansion is now a restaurant. Solitude, a villa built in 1785 by
+John Penn, grandson of William Penn, and the cottage of Tom Moore, not
+far from Belmont where he spent some months during his visit to
+America, are among the attractions of the park.
+
+ [Illustration: GIRARD AVENUE BRIDGE--FAIRMOUNT PARK, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+The Zoological Gardens are included in the park, and are situated on the
+western bank of the Schuylkill, opposite Lemon Hill. Here is found the
+finest collection of European and American animals in America, and the
+daily concourse of visitors is very great. The several bridges which
+span the Schuylkill are very picturesque. In the winter, when the river
+at Fairmount, above the dam, is frozen over, the ice is covered with
+skaters, and the bank is thronged with spectators.
+
+Laurel Hill, one of the most beautiful cemeteries of the country,
+adjoins Fairmount Park, and is inclosed by it, seeming to make it a part
+of the park. Mount Vernon Cemetery is nearly opposite Woodlands, in West
+Philadelphia, and contains the Drexel Mausoleum, the costliest in
+America.
+
+Fairmount was the site of the Centennial Exhibition in 1876, and
+numerous and costly buildings were erected there. Of these many were
+removed at once at the close of the Exhibition. The main building, a
+mammoth structure, covering eleven acres, was retained for several years
+for a permanent exhibition building, but was removed in 1883. Memorial
+Hall, erected by the State, at a cost of $1,500,000, standing on an
+elevated terrace between George's Hill and the river, and used as an art
+gallery during the Exhibition, still remains, and is designed for a
+permanent art and industrial collection. North of Memorial Hall stands
+the Horticultural Building, a picturesque structure, in the Mooresque
+style. It is a conservatory, filled with tropical and other plants, and
+is surrounded by thirty-five acres devoted to horticultural purposes.
+
+In October, 1882, Philadelphia celebrated her Bi-centennial, and
+commemorated the landing of Penn, who first stepped upon her shores two
+hundred years before. This Bi-centennial lasted for three days, which
+were celebrated, the first as "Landing Day," the second as "Trades'
+Day," and the third as "Festival Day." On the first day, October
+twenty-fourth, the State House bell rang two hundred times, and the
+chimes of the churches were rung. The ship Welcome, which two hundred
+years before had conveyed Penn to our shores, made a second arrival, and
+a mimic Penn again visited the Blue Anchor, still standing to receive
+him, held treaty with the Indians, and then paraded through the city,
+followed by a large and brilliant procession, which presented the
+harmless anachronism of the Proprietor of two hundred years ago
+hob-nobbing with the city officials and others of the nineteenth
+century. On the second day the different trades and manufacturing
+interests made a great display. In the evening Pennsylvania history was
+represented by ten tableaux; eleven tableaux presented the illustrious
+women of history; and ten tableaux gave the principal scenes in the
+Romayana, the great poem of India. The display of this night pageant was
+gorgeous and beautiful beyond anything ever before seen in this country.
+On the third day the morning was devoted to a parade of Knights Templar,
+and the evening to a reception at the Academy of Music and Horticultural
+Hall. A musical festival was held during the day; also a naval regatta
+upon the Schuylkill, a bicycle meet at Fairmount, and archery contests
+at Agricultural Hall. During the entire three days Philadelphia held
+holiday. Her streets and pavements were crowded with throngs of people
+from the country, and elevated seats along the principal streets were
+constantly filled, at high prices.
+
+If William Penn could really, in person, have stepped upon the scene,
+and beheld the city of his planning as it is to-day, he would
+undoubtedly be astonished beyond expression. In magnitude it must exceed
+his wildest dreams; in commercial and manufacturing enterprises its
+progress reads like some fable of the east. He would look almost in vain
+for his country residence upon the Delaware, once surrounded by noble
+forests, and we fear he would scorn the Blue Anchor and all its present
+associations. Time works wonders. Nearly a million people now find their
+homes where, in 1683, one year after Penn's arrival, there were but one
+hundred houses. In 1684 the population of Philadelphia was estimated at
+2,500. In 1800 it had increased to 41,220. In 1850 it was 121,376. From
+this period to 1860, its growth was almost marvelous, at the latter
+period its inhabitants numbering 565,529. The census of 1880 gave it a
+population of 846,984.
+
+The residents of Philadelphia include every nationality and class of
+people. The Quakers are in a small minority, though they have done much
+to mould the character of the city. Irish and Germans predominate among
+foreigners. Italians, French, Spanish, and Chinese are not so numerous
+as in New York. The society of the Quaker City bears the reputation of
+great exclusiveness. While culture will admit to the charmed circle in
+Boston, and money buys a ready passport to social recognition in New
+York, in Philadelphia the door is closed to all pretensions except those
+of family. Boston asks "How much do you know?" New York, "How much are
+you worth?" but in Philadelphia the question is, "Who was your
+grandfather?"
+
+Philadelphia ranks fourth in commerce among the cities of the Union. As
+a manufacturing city it occupies the very front rank. With the
+inexhaustible coal and iron fields of Pennsylvania at its back, her
+manufacturing interests are certain to grow in extent and importance,
+maintaining the ascendency they have already gained. Its prosperity has
+a firm basis. Like all large cities, there is squalor, misery and crime
+within its borders; but the proportion is smaller than in some other
+cities, and the aggregate amount of domestic content, owing to its many
+comfortable homes, much greater. Thus Philadelphia offers an example, in
+more than one direction, which might be emulated by her sister cities.
+What she will have become when her tri-centennial comes around, who
+shall dare to predict?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+PROVIDENCE.
+
+ Origin of the City.--Roger Williams.--Geographical Location and
+ Importance.--Topography of Providence.--The Cove.--Railroad
+ Connections.--Brown University.--Patriotism of Rhode Island.--
+ Soldiers' Monument.--The Roger Williams Park.--Narragansett
+ Bay.--Suburban Villages.--Points of Interest.--Butter
+ Exchange.--Lamplighting on a New Plan.--Jewelry Manufactories.
+
+
+In the year 1630, Roger Williams, a clergyman, persecuted and banished
+from Massachusetts on account of his peculiar religious views, came to
+Rhode Island and laid the foundation of a city, naming it Providence, in
+gratitude for his deliverance from persecution. This renowned pioneer
+not only laid the corner stone of a great and growing city, but
+ineffaceably stamped his character upon all her institutions, public and
+private.
+
+Providence is the second city of New England in respect to wealth and
+population. It is pleasantly located at the head of Narragansett Bay,
+thirty-five miles from the ocean. Its commercial advantages are
+unsurpassed, and as a manufacturing town it ranks among the first in the
+Atlantic States. The city is divided into two unequal portions by a
+narrow arm of the Bay, which terminates near the geographical centre of
+the town, in a beautiful elliptical sheet of water, about one mile in
+circumference, called the cove, or basin. This basin is inclosed by a
+handsome granite wall, capped by a substantial and ornamental iron
+fence, and is surrounded by a green about eighty feet in width, filled
+with a variety of beautiful and thrifty shade trees.
+
+The eastern portion of the city rises from the water, in some places
+gradually, in others quite abruptly, to the height of more than two
+hundred feet. This elevated land is occupied by elegant private mansions
+surrounded with numerous shade trees and ornamental gardens, making one
+of the most delightful and desirable places for residence to be found in
+any city.
+
+The western portion of the city rises very gradually until it reaches an
+elevation of about seventy-five feet, when it spreads out into a level
+plain, extending a considerable distance to the southwest. The northern
+portion, recently annexed to the city, is more sparsely populated, and
+portions of it are quite rural in appearance and abounding in hills,
+numerous springs and small streams of water.
+
+Providence is about forty-three miles from Boston, the same distance
+from Worcester, ninety miles from Hartford, fifty miles from Stonington,
+and twenty miles from Fall River, with each of which places it is
+connected by numerous daily trains. It also has railroad connections
+with New Bedford and southern Massachusetts, with Fitchburg, and thence
+with Vermont and New Hampshire. There is now in process of construction
+another route to Northern Connecticut, Springfield and the west. It is
+also closely connected with Newport, and other places on Narragansett
+Bay, by steamboats.
+
+ [Illustration: VIEW OF PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, FROM PROSPECT
+ TERRACE.]
+
+Brown University is one of the distinguishing features of Providence,
+and, as an institution of learning, stands in the front rank of American
+colleges. Founded more than one hundred years since, this college has
+come down from the past, hand in hand with Yale and Harvard. Among the
+renowned graduates of Brown University may be mentioned Charles Sumner,
+the great statesman, the devoted patriot, the champion of the negro,
+whose fame and good works will live while freedom is the heritage of the
+American people.
+
+President Wayland, of this institution, was the originator of the public
+Library System of New England--a system whose wonderful power for good
+is markedly on the increase.
+
+During the war no State of the whole sisterhood evinced more patriotism
+than little Rhode Island, and Providence was largely represented in the
+Union army. A Soldiers' Monument stands in the triangular space near the
+Boston and Providence Railroad Depot, inscribed with the names of Rhode
+Island soldiers who were killed in battle. The Monument is surmounted by
+a statue in bronze of the Goddess of Liberty, and in niches of the
+granite pillar below this figure each arm of the service is represented
+by soldiers in bronze. The work is finely executed, and it is one of the
+first objects which attracts the attention of the stranger. The
+Artilleryman stands behind his cannon in grim silence; representatives
+of the infantry, the cavalry and the marine arms of the service are his
+coadjutors, and the entire group is sternly suggestive of war's sad
+havoc.
+
+About a mile and a half from the heart of the city, along a beautiful
+McAdamized road leading to Pawtuxet, is situated the Roger Williams
+Park, a tract of land containing about thirteen hundred acres, which was
+bequeathed to the city by a descendant of Roger Williams, in
+consideration of five hundred dollars, to be raised by the Providence
+people, for the erection of a monument to the city's illustrious
+founder. The sum to be appropriated for that purpose was equivalent to
+twenty-six hundred dollars at the present time.
+
+The embryo park is yet a wilderness, unreclaimed, and primeval
+forest-trees fill the wide enclosure. The ground is undulating with hill
+and dale, and pleasant driveways under the dark pines and hemlocks are
+already laid out.
+
+The memory of Roger Williams is held in great veneration by the citizens
+of Providence, and he is ranked with William Penn in the category of
+noble pioneers. Plenty of eulogistic essays and poems have been written
+concerning him, and his great love of liberty, exemplified in his life,
+is a matter of history. The following fragment of verse, by Francis
+Whipple, one of Rhode Island's poets, places the memory of the two
+heroes side by side:--
+
+ "When warlike fame, as morning mist shall fly,
+ And blood-stained glory as a meteor die,
+ When all the dross is known and cast away,
+ And the pure gold alone allowed to stay,
+ Two names will stand, the pride of virtuous men,
+ Our Roger Williams and good William Penn."
+
+Many of the suburbs of Providence are of some note as places of summer
+resort. The coast scenery along Narragansett Bay is full of charming
+water-pictures, and numerous rocky islands may be seen, on which are
+erected little white cottages, for summer occupation. The islands are
+sometimes connected with the shore by foot-bridges, but often the only
+means of communication with land is by boat.
+
+Nayatt Point, six miles distant from Providence by rail, is, as its name
+implies, a jutting point of land, reaching out into the bay, where
+beautiful drives along the beach and through the neighboring groves,
+added to the salt sea air, are the chief summer attractions. Rocky
+Point, directly opposite Nayatt, is famous for its clam bakes, and on
+moonlight nights in summer, excursion parties from Nayatt, Barrington or
+Warren, glide over the smooth waters of the bay to this lovely spot. The
+red glow of Rocky Point Light can be seen through the night, for miles
+and miles along the coast and down the bay.
+
+Westminster street is the principal avenue of Providence, and is
+handsomely built up with substantial and elegant business blocks. A very
+large hostelry, to be called the Narragansett Hotel, is in process of
+erection at the corner of Dorrance and Broad streets. Just back of this
+building, the new Providence Opera House, a structure of recent date,
+furnished with all the modern appliances for the stage, opens its doors
+to lovers of the histrionic art. The What-Cheer building, the Arcade,
+and the Butler Exchange are all well known business centres. The last
+named place owes its existence to a clause in a Scotchman's will. A
+large inheritance was left to a gentleman in Providence, with a
+stipulation that a certain amount of its yearly income should be used in
+the erection of public buildings in the city. The Butler Exchange is one
+of the children of this proviso.
+
+A recent improvement in Providence is that of lighting the city lamps by
+means of electricity. Only one person is required to light the streets
+of the entire city. A single turn of the screw which commands the
+network of wires leading to the lamp posts, sets every gas jet, far and
+near, aflame, in one instantaneous blaze. It is a marvelous advance on
+the old way of doing things, and will greatly lessen the expenditures of
+the city.
+
+Providence is justly celebrated for its manufacture of jewelry. The
+largest establishments of the kind in New England are in operation here,
+and the work turned out is of the most skillful pattern. A visit to the
+lapidary establishments is full of interest. A shining array of precious
+stones, from the white brilliance of the diamond, to the mottled moss
+agate, greets the bewildered gaze, and skillful workmen are deftly
+transforming them into the beautiful gems which shine in the jeweler's
+window.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+QUEBEC.
+
+ Appearance of Quebec.--Gibraltar of America.--Fortifications and
+ Walls.--The Walled City.--Churches, Nunneries and Hospitals.--
+ Views from the Cliff.--Upper Town.--Lower Town.--Manufactures.--
+ Public Buildings.--Plains of Abraham.--Falls of Montmorenci.--
+ Sledding on the "Cone."--History of Quebec.--Capture of the
+ City by the British.--Death of Generals Wolfe and Montcalm.--
+ Disaster under General Murray.--Ceding of Canada, by France,
+ to England.--Attack by American Forces under Montgomery and
+ Arnold.--Death of Montgomery.--Capital of Lower Canada and of
+ the Province of Quebec.
+
+
+Of all the cities and towns on the American continent, not one wears
+such an Old-World expression as Quebec. Not even St. Augustine, in
+Florida, with its narrow streets, and quaint, overhanging balconies, so
+takes the traveler back to a past age, as that fortified city on the
+lower St. Lawrence. It is not French in any modern sense. But the city
+and its inhabitants belong to a France now passed away, the France of
+St. Louis, the _fleur-de-lis_, and a dominant priesthood. An offshoot
+from such a France, now blotted out and forgotten in the crowding of
+events during the last century, it has remained oblivious of all the
+changes in the parent country, and not even British rule, and the
+infusion of Anglo-Saxon and Celtic blood have been able to more than
+partially obliterate its early characteristics.
+
+Quebec is situated at the confluence of the St. Charles River with the
+St. Lawrence, on the northern side of a point of land which projects
+between these two rivers. This point ends in an abrupt headland, three
+hundred and thirty-three feet above the level of the river; and its
+precipitous sides, crowned with an almost impregnable fortress, have won
+for it the name of the "Gibraltar of America." The most elevated part of
+this promontory is called Cape Diamond, since at one time numerous
+quartz crystals were found there; and upon this is placed the citadel,
+occupying forty acres. From the citadel a line of wall runs towards the
+St. Charles River, until it reaches the brow of the bluff. Continuing
+around this bluff towards the St. Lawrence, it finally completes a
+circle of nearly three miles in circumference, by again connecting with
+the citadel. This encircling wall originally had five gates, but four of
+these were removed some time ago. They are now being replaced by more
+ornamental ones. The old St. Louis Gate, opening upon the street of that
+name, is being replaced by the Kent Gate, in honor of Queen Victoria's
+father, who spent the summer of 1791 near Quebec. Dufferin Gate is being
+erected on St. Patrick street; Palace and Hope gates are to be replaced
+by castellated gates; while a light iron bridge is to occupy the site of
+the Prescott Gate.
+
+The old city is contained within this walled inclosure, and here, in the
+narrow, tortuous, mediA|val streets, are the stately churches, venerable
+convents, and other edifices, many of them dating back to the period of
+the French occupation of the city. The houses are tall, with narrow
+windows and irregular gables, two or three stories high, and roofed,
+like the public buildings, with shining tin. A very large part of the
+city within the walls is, however, taken up with the buildings and
+grounds of the great religious corporations. Monks, priests, and nuns,
+seemingly belonging to another age and another civilization than our
+own, are jostled in the street by officers whose dress and manners are
+those of the nineteenth century. French is quite as frequently heard as
+English; and everywhere the old and the new, the past century and the
+present, seem inextricably mingled. The past has, however, set its
+ineffaceable stamp upon the city and its people. There is none of the
+hurry and push of most American cities, seen even, to a degree, in
+Montreal. To-day seems long enough for its duties and its pleasures, and
+to-morrow is left to take care of itself. Even the public buildings have
+the stamp of antiquity upon them, and are, in consequence, interesting,
+though few of them are architecturally beautiful.
+
+The churches of Quebec have none of the grandeur of those of Montreal.
+Most prominent among them is the Anglican Cathedral, a plain, gray stone
+edifice in St. Ann street. The Basilica of Quebec, formerly the
+Cathedral, is capable of seating four thousand persons, and with a plain
+exterior, contains some invaluable art treasures in the form of original
+paintings by Vandyke, Caracci, Halle and others. The remains of
+Champlain, the founder and first governor of Quebec, lie within the
+Basilica. The Ursuline Convent is in Garden street, north of Market
+Square, and is composed of a group of buildings surrounded by beautiful
+grounds. It was founded in 1639, originally for the education of Indian
+girls, and is now devoted to the education of girls of the white race.
+The remains of Montcalm are buried within the convent grounds, in an
+excavation made by the bursting of a shell, during the engagement in
+which he lost his life. The Gray Nunnery, the Black Nunnery, and Hotel
+Dieu with its convent and hospital, under the charge of the Sisters of
+the Sacred Blood, of Dieppe, are among the Roman Catholic religious
+institutions of the city. In the hospital of the Hotel Dieu ten thousand
+patients are gratuitously cared for annually.
+
+Durham Terrace lies along the edge of the cliff overlooking the St.
+Lawrence. It occupies the site of the old chateau of St. Louis, built by
+Champlain in 1620, and destroyed by fire in 1834. The outlook from this
+terrace is one of the finest in the world; though the view from the
+Grand Battery is conceded to be even finer. Looking down from an
+elevation of nearly three hundred and fifty feet, the lower town, the
+majestic St. Lawrence and the smaller stream of St. Charles rolling away
+in the distance, and a vast stretch of country varied by hills and
+plains, woodlands and mountains, are spread out before the spectator,
+making one of the most beautiful pictures of which it is possible to
+conceive.
+
+The walled city, with the suburbs of St. Louis and St. John between the
+walls to the eastward, and the Plains of Abraham to the westward, is
+known as the upper town. The lower town is reached from the upper by the
+Cote de la Montagne, or Mountain street, a very steep and winding
+street, and lies below the cliff, principally to the northward, though
+it encircles the base of the promontory. Here, in the lower town, is the
+business portion of the city, with all its modern additions. The narrow
+strand between the cliff and the rivers is occupied by breweries,
+distilleries, manufactories, and numerous ship-yards; while the many
+coves of the St. Lawrence, from Champlain street to Cape Rouge, are
+filled with acres of vast lumber rafts. Quebec is one of the greatest
+lumber and timber markets in America, supplying all the seaboard cities
+of the United States. It also builds many ships, and produces sawed
+lumber, boots and shoes, furniture, iron ware and machinery.
+
+The Custom House occupies the extreme point between the St. Lawrence and
+St. Charles rivers. It is Doric in architecture, surmounted by a dome,
+and has a columned facade reached by an imposing flight of steps. The
+Marine Hospital, built in imitation of the Temple of the Muses on the
+banks of the Ilissus, is situated near the St. Charles River. The Marine
+and Emigrants' Hospital is not far away. The General Hospital, an
+immense cluster of buildings further up the river, was founded in 1693,
+and is in charge of the nuns of St. Augustine.
+
+The Plains of Abraham, lying back of Quebec, near the St. Lawrence, and
+the scene of the famous encounter between the forces of Wolfe and
+Montcalm, are fast being encroached upon by suburban residences, large
+conventual establishments, and churches. The Martello towers are four
+circular stone structures, erected upon the Plains to defend the
+approaches of the city. On the plains, near the St. Foye road, is a
+monument composed of a handsome iron column, surmounted by a bronze
+statue of Bellona, presented by Prince Napoleon, and erected in 1854, to
+commemorate the victory won by the Chevalier de Leris over General
+Murray, in 1760. The Mount Hermon Cemetery, beautifully laid out on the
+edge of the precipice which overhangs the St. Lawrence, lies about three
+miles out, on the St. Louis road.
+
+It is imperative upon the stranger, in Quebec, to visit the Falls of
+Montmorenci, eight miles distant, and among the most beautiful in
+America. A volume of water fifty feet wide makes a leap of two hundred
+and fifty feet, down a sheer rock face, into a boiling and turbulent
+basin. During the winter the spray which is continually flying from this
+cataract congeals and falls like snow, until it builds up an eminence
+which is known as the Cone. This Cone, in favorable seasons, sometimes
+reaches an altitude of one hundred and twenty feet. To visit the Falls
+in sleighs, over the frozen river, and to ride down the Cone on
+hand-sleds, or "toboggins," as they are locally called, is considered
+the very climax of enjoyment by the inhabitants of Quebec. The Cone is
+in the form of a sugar loaf, quite as white and almost as firm. Up its
+steep sides the pleasure seekers toil with their sleds, and then glide
+from the top, impelled by the steepness alone, rushing down the slope
+with fearful velocity, and sometimes out on the ice of the river for
+hundreds of yards, until the force is spent. The interior of the Cone is
+not unfrequently hollowed out in the shape of a room, and a bar is set
+up, for the benefit of thirsty pleasure seekers.
+
+About a mile above Montmorenci Falls are the Natural Steps, a series of
+ledges cut in the limestone rock by the action of the river, each step
+about a foot in height, and as regular in its formation as though it was
+the work of man.
+
+There are points of interest nearer Quebec, among which are the Isle of
+Orleans, a beautiful and romantic place, laid out with charming drives,
+and reached by ferry; _Chateau Bigot_, an antique and massive ruin,
+standing at the foot of the Charlesbourg mountain; and still further
+away, Lorette, an ancient village of the Huron Indians.
+
+Quebec, the oldest city in British America, was settled in 1608, the
+spot having been visited by Cartier, in 1534. Its history is an
+exceedingly interesting and varied one. Twenty-one years after its
+founding it was seized by the British, who did not restore it to France
+until 1632. In 1690 and in 1711 the British made unsuccessful maritime
+assaults upon it It continued to be the centre of French trade and
+civilization, and of the Roman Catholic missions in North America,
+until, in 1759, it fell into the hands of the British. The Fleur-de-lis
+fluttered from the citadel of Quebec for two hundred and twenty years,
+with the exception of the three years from 1629 to 1632, when Sir David
+Kirke placed the fortification in the hands of England.
+
+In 1759, during the Seven Years' War, the English, under General Wolfe,
+attacked the city and bombarded it. An attempt had been previously made
+to land British troops at Montmorenci, which had been frustrated by
+Montcalm, resulting in a loss of five hundred men. But on the occasion
+of the present attack Wolfe had conceived the idea of landing his troops
+above the town. He pushed his fleet stealthily up the river, under the
+brow of the frowning precipice and beneath the very shadow of the
+fortifications. Passing above the city, he effected a landing where the
+acclivity was a little less steep than at other places, and the troops
+dragged themselves up, and actually brought with them several pieces of
+ordnance. All this was under cover of night; and when day dawned the
+British army with its artillery was found in line of battle on the
+Plains of Abraham. Wolfe had eight thousand men, while the French troops
+numbered ten thousand. Montcalm believed he could easily drive the
+British into the river or compel them to surrender, and so threw the
+whole force of his attack upon the English right, which rested on the
+river. But in the French army were only five battalions of French
+soldiers, the balance being Indians and Canadians. The French right,
+composed of these undisciplined troops, was easily routed and the French
+left was ultimately broken. Five days later the British were in complete
+possession of Quebec. But before this victory was fairly assured to the
+English troops, both the French and English armies had lost their
+commanders.
+
+The spot where Wolfe fell in the memorable battle of September
+thirteenth, 1759, is marked by an unpretending column. A monument was
+shipped from Paris, to commemorate the death of Montcalm, but it never
+reached Quebec, the vessel which conveyed it having been lost at sea. A
+lengthy inscription upon this monument, after giving the Marquis de
+Montcalm's name and many titles, and depicting in glowing words his
+character and his brilliant achievements as a soldier, says: "Having
+with various artifices long baffled a great enemy, headed by an expert
+and intrepid commander, and a fleet furnished with all warlike stores,
+compelled at length to an engagement, he fell--in the first rank--in the
+first onset, warm with those hopes of religion which he had always
+cherished, to the inexpressible loss of his own army, and not without
+the regret of the enemy's, September fourteenth, 1759, of his age
+forty-eight. His weeping countrymen deposited the remains of their
+excellent General in a grave which a fallen bomb in bursting had
+excavated for him, recommending them to the generous faith of their
+enemies." Whether the "generous faith" of their friends was equally to
+be trusted each one must judge for himself; for in the chapel of the
+Ursuline Convent of Quebec, among the curiosities exhibited to the
+visitor, is the skull of the Marquis de Montcalm.
+
+In April, of the following year, the British very nearly lost what Wolfe
+had gained for them. General Murray went out to the Plains of Abraham,
+with three thousand men, to meet the French, under Chevalier de Leris,
+losing no less than one thousand men, and all his guns, which numbered
+twenty, and being compelled to retreat within the walls. The arrival of
+a British squadron brought him timely relief, and compelled the French
+to retreat, with the loss of all their artillery. The treaty of peace
+made between Louis Fifteenth and England, in 1763, ceded the whole of
+the French Canadian possessions to the British. In December, 1775,
+during the war of the Revolution, a small American force, under General
+Montgomery, made an attack upon the fortress, but was repulsed with the
+loss of their commander and seven hundred men. Arnold preceded
+Montgomery, making an astonishing march, and enduring untold perils, by
+the Kennebec and Chaudiere. Following the course pursued by Wolfe, he
+placed his troops upon the Plains of Abraham; but when Montgomery joined
+him, from Montreal, it was found they had no heavy artillery, and the
+only alternatives were, to retreat, or to carry the place by storm.
+Deciding on the latter course, two columns, headed by Arnold and
+Montgomery, rushed forward. The latter carried the intrenchment, and was
+proceeding toward a second work, when he and the officers who followed
+him were swept down before a gun loaded with grape. Arnold was carried
+from the field, wounded, and the attempt on Quebec was a most disastrous
+failure.
+
+Quebec remained the chief city of Canada until the western settlements
+were erected into a separate Province, as Canada West, when it became
+the Capital of Canada East. In 1867, the British North American
+Provinces were united, in the Dominion of Canada. Canada East, or Lower
+Canada, as a Province, took the name of the city, and the city of Quebec
+became the Capital of the Province. The population of Quebec was, in
+1871, 58,699, of whom a large proportion are descendants of the early
+French settlers, though many English, Scotch and Irish, have domiciled
+themselves within it, and form, really, its most enterprising and
+energetic citizens.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+READING.
+
+ Geographical Position and History of Reading.--Manufacturing
+ Interests.--Population, Streets, Churches and Public
+ Buildings.--Boating on the Schuylkill.--White Spot and the
+ View from its Summit.--Other Pleasure Resorts.--Decoration
+ Day.--Wealth Created by Industry.
+
+
+Reading, the seat of Justice of Berks County, Pennsylvania, is
+beautifully situated near the junction of the Tulpehocken with the
+Schuylkill River, and is midway between Philadelphia and Harrisburg, on
+the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. It was named after the ancient
+borough of Reading, a prominent market town of Berkshire, England, which
+it is said to resemble in some of its geographical surroundings.
+Attention was first called to Reading in the fall of 1748, by the agents
+of Richard and Thomas Penn, who represented it as "a new town with great
+natural advantages, and destined to become a prosperous place." It was
+incorporated as a borough in 1783, and as a city in 1847. The original
+settlers were principally Germans, who gave character to the town, both
+in language and customs. For many years the German tongue was almost
+exclusively spoken, and it is still used in social intercourse and
+religious worship by more than one-half the present population.
+
+The manufacturing interests of Reading are second to no city of like
+population in the United States; while it is the third city in
+Pennsylvania in its manufactures, Pittsburg and Philadelphia alone
+exceeding it. Among these manufactures the working of iron holds the
+first rank. Much of the ore is obtained from Penn's Mountain, on the
+east of the town. Rolling mills, machine shops, car shops, furnaces,
+foundries, cotton mills and hat factories, from their number and extent,
+establish beyond question the claim of Reading to be considered one of
+the first manufacturing towns of America. The shops of the Philadelphia
+and Reading Railroad alone employ two thousand men. From an early hour
+in the morning the eastern bank of the Schuylkill rings out the
+discordant music of numberless factories, betokening the enterprise of
+her productive industries.
+
+Reading has, at the present time, a population numbering not far from
+fifty thousand. It is delightfully situated on an elevated and ascending
+plain, which rises to the eastward into Penn's Mountain, and to the
+southward into the Neversink Mountain. The city is abundantly supplied
+with pure water, by streams flowing from these mountains. It is
+surrounded by a rich farming country, which looks to it for supplies.
+The streets cross each other at right angles, and the chief hotels and
+stores are built around Penn's Square, which occupies the centre of the
+city. It contains thirty-one churches, most prominent among which is
+Trinity, German Lutheran, an antique building with a spire two hundred
+and ten feet in height. Christ Church, Episcopal, is a handsome Gothic
+edifice of more recent date, and with a spire nearly as high. The Grand
+Opera House and Mishler's Academy of Music furnish amusements for the
+pleasure-seekers of the city.
+
+The Schuylkill River is one of the most charmingly picturesque in
+America. Taking its rise among the rocky heights of the Blue Ridge,
+when it reaches Reading it has left all the ruggedness of the mountain
+region behind, and flows between gently sloping banks, which, though
+sometimes rising in the background to considerable elevations, never
+lose their softness of outline and their pastoral beauty. One evening we
+strolled down to this river, and took a most delightful boat ride from
+the Lancaster bridge to the dam opposite the White House and Neversink.
+Two boats were placed at the disposal of our party. It was a lovely May
+evening, the air soft and warm, yet with all the freshness of spring. We
+glided down the stream, the trees upon the banks overhanging the water,
+and catching reflections of themselves in its depths. Our downward
+progress was easy and pleasant. The current aided our efforts, while the
+tranquil waters, rippled only by a passing boat, offered no resistance
+to us in our course. When we turned and headed up stream, we found it
+quite another matter. Then we had to bring all our energies and wills to
+aid us in the labor of rowing. This is something that a man is apt to
+discover many times in his life, that, in both material and moral
+matters, it is easier to float with the current than to make headway
+against it.
+
+A call from Mr. W. H. Zeller, of the Reading _Eagle_, paid me early one
+day, before the sun was up, was an indication that that gentleman was
+ready to pilot me to "White Spot," the famous resort of Reading.
+Starting as soon as possible, we walked up Franklin street, crossed
+Perkiomen avenue, and took a "bee line" for our destination. Up and up
+and up we walked, ran and jumped, over gulches and stones, and from log
+to log, halting occasionally for breath, and to discuss the city and
+landscape at our feet. It was but half-past five o'clock when we reached
+the goal of our walk. Taking in a view from its elevated heights, I felt
+that my visit to Reading would have given me a very indefinite idea of
+its natural beauties, had I not seen it from this point. White Spot is
+upon Penn's Mountain, one thousand feet above the river. I would but
+mislead the imagination of the reader, were I to attempt to convey a
+faithful impression of the magnificent panorama which, for a while,
+almost bewildered me. But let him imagine, if he can, a vast girdle of
+far-off, misty, blue hills, faintly defined by the horizon; against them
+to the north and west jut rows of towering but withal gently sloping
+mountains, purple, black, or darkly blue, just as each drifting cloud
+shadows them; within these encircling hills and mountains scatter the
+loveliest landscape features of which the human mind can conceive; green
+meadows, wooded hills, enchanting groves, dotted here and there with the
+most charming irregularity; farmhouses and farms, in themselves a little
+Arcadia; roads diverging from a common centre, and winding about until
+in the distance they look like the tiny trail which a child's stick
+makes in the sand; a clear, silvery river, looking in the sunshine like
+liquid light, reproducing on its mirrored surface the wonderful beauty
+which clothes either bank, studded with green isles that "blossom as the
+rose," spanned by splendid bridges as delicate in their appearance as
+lace work or filigree, yet supporting thousands of tons daily; in the
+heart of all a city, whose factories, furnaces, churches, majestic
+public buildings, handsome private residences, and attractive suburbs
+betoken prosperity, intelligence, culture, wealth and constant
+improvement; over the whole throw that peculiar _couleur de rose_ with
+which the heart in its happiest moments paints all it loves, and he will
+have a faint conception of the aspect of Reading and its surroundings as
+seen from White Spot.
+
+After resting on the summit, and taking in, to the full, this
+magnificent view, we returned to the city by the way of Mineral Spring,
+another delightful resort, which lies surrounded by charming natural
+beauties, about a mile and a half east of Reading. White House Hotel, a
+mile and a half to the southeast, on the Neversink Mountain, three
+hundred feet above the river, is still another favorite visiting place,
+from which a fine view of the city and surrounding country may be
+obtained, though not equal to that of White Spot.
+
+I was particularly fortunate in finding myself still in Reading on
+Decoration Day, that day which has become a national holiday, and is
+universally observed throughout the northern States. The occurrence of
+this anniversary is hailed by the "Boys in Blue" as affording a blessed
+opportunity for doing honor to their dead comrades, and renewing their
+devotion to the flag which they followed through a four years' war for
+the preservation of the Union. Reading manifested her patriotism by a
+parade of all her civic and military organizations, and by invitation I
+was permitted to participate in the decoration exercises, at the Charles
+Evans Cemetery. The people of Reading are truly loyal, as industrious
+and order-loving people are sure to be. The perpetuation of the Union
+means to them the protection of their homes and the encouragement of
+their industries.
+
+Although the manufacturing interests of Philadelphia and Pittsburg are
+exceedingly large--those of the latter without parallel on the
+continent, if, in the world--a visit to Reading is, nevertheless,
+desirable, for one who would gain a comprehensive idea of the industries
+of Pennsylvania. The city is not a large one, but it is almost wholly a
+city of workers. With the great coal and iron regions of the State at
+its back, their products brought to it by river, railroad and canal, its
+manufacturing enterprises are multiplied in numbers, and are almost
+Cyclopean in their proportions. Here the brawn of the country, with
+giant strength united with surprising skill, hammers and fashions the
+various devices of an advanced civilization, which its brain has already
+imagined and planned. Here wealth is created by the sturdy strokes of
+industry, and the permanent prosperity of the State secured.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+RICHMOND.
+
+ Arrival in Richmond.--Libby Prison.--Situation of the City.--
+ Historical Associations.--Early Settlement.--Attacked by
+ British Forces in the Revolution.--Monumental Church.--St.
+ John's Church.--State Capital.--Passage of the Ordinance
+ of Secession.--Richmond the Capital of the Confederate
+ States.--Military Expeditions against the City.--Evacuation
+ of Petersburg.--Surrender of the City.--Visit of President
+ Lincoln.--Historical Places.--Statues.--Rapid Recuperation
+ After the War.--Manufacturing and Commercial Interests.--
+ Streets and Public Buildings.--Population and Future
+ Prospects.
+
+
+On the morning of October twenty-third, 1863, a large company of Union
+prisoners, including the author, made an entry into Richmond, which was
+the reverse of triumphant, we having been, four days before, made
+prisoners of war in the cavalry fight at New Baltimore, in Northern
+Virginia. A brief stay in Warrenton jail, a forced march on a hot day,
+for a distance of thirty miles, to Culpepper, and then a transfer by
+march and rail, landed us at last at Libby Prison, Richmond. The
+"chivalry" and the descendants of the F. F. V's did not impress us very
+favorably, as we marched from the depot, through some of the principal
+streets, to the James River. Contemptuous epithets were bestowed freely
+upon us, while the female portion of the community was even more bitter
+in its expressions of hatred, and a troop of boys followed in our rear,
+hooting and yelling like young demoniacs.
+
+Libby Prison was situated at the corner of Fourteenth and Cary streets,
+and was an old, dilapidated three-story brick structure, which still
+bore upon its northwest corner the sign "Libby & Son, Ship Chandlers and
+Grocers." The windows were small and protected by iron bars. The story
+of my stay in this prison-house I have recorded in "Capture, Prison-Pen
+and Escape." It was my abiding place until the seventh of the following
+May, when, in a filthy, rough box-car, a number of prisoners, including
+myself, were shipped to Danville. It is needless to say that my
+prolonged stay in Richmond did not materially alter or improve my
+impressions in regard to the city. True, our view of the city from our
+prison windows was limited, but memories only of suffering, privation
+and unnecessary barbarity, prompted by the cruel nature of those who had
+us in charge, are associated with it. The city was at that time the
+heart and centre of the then Southern Confederacy, the seat of the Rebel
+government, the rendezvous of troops, and the hatching place of treason
+and rebellion.
+
+Yet one who views Richmond at the present day, unbiased by the untoward
+circumstances which threw their baleful influence over us, will see much
+to admire in and about the city. It is situated on the north bank of the
+James River, about one hundred miles by water from Chesapeake Bay, and
+the same distance a little west of south of Washington. It is built upon
+several eminences, the principal ones being Shockoe and Richmond hills,
+separated by Shockoe Creek. Like so many other Southern cities, its
+residences are surrounded by gardens, in which are grass plots,
+shrubbery and flowers; and in the business quarter are many substantial
+edifices.
+
+The Richmond of to-day is very different from the Richmond of war times.
+The loyal city has been literally reconstructed upon the ruins of the
+rebellious one. There are few cities around which so many historical
+associations cluster, as around Richmond. It is on the site of a
+settlement made as early as 1611, by Sir Thomas Dale, and in honor of
+Prince Henry called Henrico, from which the county afterwards took its
+name. An early historical account says it contained three streets of
+framed houses, a church, storehouses and warehouses. It was protected by
+ditches and palisades, and no less than five rude forts. Two miles below
+the city a settlement had been made two years previously. In 1644-5 the
+Assembly of Virginia ordered a fort to be erected at the falls of the
+James River, to be called "Forte Charles." In 1676 war was declared
+against the Indians, and bloody encounters took place between the
+aborigines and their white neighbors. Bloody Run, near Richmond, is so
+named, according to tradition, on account of a sanguinary battle which
+one Bacon had there with the Indians; though it is stated on other
+authority that its name originated from the battle in which Hill was
+defeated and Totopotomoi slain.
+
+In 1677 certain privileges were granted Captain William Byrd, upon the
+condition that he should settle fifty able-bodied and well armed men in
+the vicinity of the Falls, to act as a protection to the frontier
+against the Indians. Richmond was established by law as a town in May,
+1742, in the reign of George II, on land belonging to Colonel William
+Byrd, who died two years later. The present Exchange Hotel is near the
+locality of a warehouse owned by that gentleman. In 1779 the capital of
+the State was removed to Richmond, from Williamsburg, the latter, its
+former capital, being in too assailable a position. In 1781 the traitor
+Arnold invested the city with a British force. As soon as he arrived he
+sent a force, under Colonel Simcoe, to destroy the cannon foundry above
+the town. After burning some public and private buildings, and a large
+quantity of tobacco, the British forces left Richmond, encamping for one
+night at Four Mile Creek. The village at that time contained not more
+than eighteen hundred inhabitants, one-half of whom were slaves. In 1789
+it contained about three hundred houses. At that period all the
+principal merchants were Scotch and Scotch-Irish. Paulding describes the
+inhabitants as "a race of most ancient and respectable planters, having
+estates in the country, who chose it for their residence, for the sake
+of social enjoyments. They formed a society now seldom to be met with in
+any of our cities. A society of people not exclusively monopolized by
+money-making pursuits, but of liberal education, liberal habits of
+thinking and acting; and possessing both leisure and inclination to
+cultivate those feelings and pursue those objects which exalt our nature
+rather than increase our fortune." In 1788, a convention met in the
+city, to ratify the Federal Constitution.
+
+At the corner of Broad and Thirteenth streets stands the Monumental
+Church, in commemoration of a terrible calamity which once befell the
+city. On the twenty-sixth of December, 1811, a play entitled "The
+Bleeding Nun" was being performed in the little theatre of the city, and
+proved such a great attraction that the house was crowded, not less than
+six hundred people being present on the eventful night. Just before the
+conclusion of the play the scenery caught fire, and in a few minutes the
+whole building was wrapped in flames. The fire falling from the ceiling
+upon the performers was the first notification the audience had of what
+was transpiring. A scene of the wildest confusion ensued. There was but
+one door through which the entire audience, composed of men, women and
+children, could make its exit. The fire flashed from one portion of the
+interior to another, catching on the garments of the frantic people. All
+pressed in a wild panic toward the door. People jumped and were pushed
+out of the windows. Many were rescued with their clothing literally
+burned off from them, and no less than sixty-nine persons perished in
+the flames, among them George W. Smith, Governor of the State, and many
+other prominent men and women. A great funeral was held in the Baptist
+meeting-house, and the entire population of the city attended, as
+mourners. The remains of the unfortunates were interred beneath a mural
+tablet which is now in the vestibule of the church that was subsequently
+erected on the site of the theatre.
+
+St. John's Church, on Church Hill, at the corner of Broad and
+Twenty-fourth streets, dates back to ante-Revolutionary times, and in it
+was held, in 1775, the Virginia Convention, in which Patrick Henry made
+his famous speech, containing the words "Give me liberty or give me
+death!" It was subsequently the place of meeting of the Convention
+which, in 1788, ratified the Federal Constitution. Among the members of
+this Convention were James Madison, John Marshall, James Monroe, Patrick
+Henry, George Nicholas, George Mason, Edmund Randolph, Pendleton and
+Wythe. Rarely has any occasion in a single State presented such a list
+of illustrious names as we find here. This church is a plain,
+unpretending edifice, built in the style of a century ago, to which has
+been added a modern spire.
+
+The State Capitol stands on the summit of Shockoe Hill, in the centre of
+a park of eight acres. It is of Graeco-Composite style of architecture,
+with a portico of Ionic columns, planned after that of the _Maison
+cassee_ at Nismes, in France, the plan being furnished by Thomas
+Jefferson. Beneath a lofty dome in the centre of the building is
+Houdon's celebrated statue of Washington, of marble, life size,
+representing him clad in the uniform of a revolutionary general. Near
+by, in a niche in the wall, is a marble bust of Lafayette. This building
+has been the scene of many noted political gatherings. In it, on January
+seventh, 1861, was read Governor Letcher's message to the Legislature,
+in which he declared it was "monstrous to see a government like ours
+destroyed merely because men cannot agree about a domestic institution."
+Nevertheless, on the seventeenth of the same month, the Capitol Building
+witnessed the unanimous passage of the following resolution:--
+
+ "_Resolved_, That if all efforts to reconcile the unhappy
+ differences between sections of our country shall prove abortive,
+ then every consideration of honor and interest demands that
+ Virginia shall unite her destinies with her sister slaveholding
+ States."
+
+And on the thirteenth of February, the same edifice saw a State
+Convention meet within its walls; on the sixteenth of April, Governor
+Letcher refused the requisition of the Secretary of War for troops to
+assist in putting down the Rebellion in South Carolina; and the next day
+the Ordinance of Secession was passed, two months having been given to
+an active discussion of its expediency, pro and con. The Confederate
+flag, with eight stars, was raised from the dome of the Capitol, and the
+Custom House, which stands on Main street, between Tenth and Eleventh,
+had the gilt sign on its portico, "United States Court," removed. A
+citizen writing from Richmond, on April twenty-fifth, says: "Our
+beautiful city presents the appearance of an armed camp. Where all these
+soldiers come from, in such a state of preparation, I cannot imagine.
+Every train pours in its multitude of volunteers, but I am not as much
+surprised at the number as at the apparent discipline of the country
+companies. * * But the war spirit is not confined to the men nor to the
+white population. The ladies are not only preparing comforts for the
+soldiers, but arming and practicing themselves. Companies of boys, also,
+from ten to fourteen years of age, fully armed and well drilled, are
+preparing for the fray. In Petersburg, three hundred free negroes
+offered their services, either to fight under white officers, or to
+ditch and dig, or any kind of labor. An equal number in this city and
+across the river, in Chesterfield, have volunteered in like manner."
+
+A resolution was passed by the Convention inviting the Southern
+Confederacy to make Richmond the seat of government. The Ordinance of
+Secession having been submitted to the people, the vote in the city
+stood twenty-four hundred in favor and twenty-four against, being less
+than half the vote polled at the Presidential election in November
+previous. Richmond became a general rendezvous for troops.
+
+The Confederate Congress met in Richmond, in the hall of the House of
+Delegates, on the twentieth of July, 1861, and the seat of government
+continued there until the taking of the city marked the fall of the
+Confederacy. A school-house in the vicinity of the rear of Monumental
+Church, was at that time known as Brockenburg House, and was the
+residence of Jefferson Davis, president of the Southern Confederacy. Two
+tobacco warehouses, under their former titles of Libby & Son and Castle
+Thunder, together with Belle Isle, were military prisons during the war,
+and in the former of these, as already narrated, the writer was confined
+for several months.
+
+About the middle of May, 1862, the Federal forces having passed Yorktown
+and Williamsburg, began to move directly upon Richmond. Consternation
+seized the city, all who could get away packed up everything and fled
+southward. Even President Davis took his family and hastened to North
+Carolina. It was resolved to destroy the city by conflagration as soon
+as the Union troops reached it. The Federal army was, however, compelled
+to abandon the Peninsula, and Richmond was safe for the time being. On
+February twenty-ninth, 1864, General Kilpatrick, with his division of
+cavalry, commenced his march upon the city, and came within six miles,
+when he was compelled to withdraw to Mechanicsburg. The next day he made
+a second attempt, advancing by the Westham or river road, but was
+confronted by superior forces, and again compelled to fall back, and
+shortly after he returned down the Peninsula.
+
+From the beginning of the war Richmond had been the objective point of a
+series of formidable expeditions for its capture, under Generals
+McDowell, McClellan, Burnside, Hooker, Meade and Grant. The strong
+earthworks which were drawn around the city for its protection still
+remain as mementoes of the great struggle. On July thirtieth, 1864, the
+Union forces advanced as far as Petersburg, and after destroying one
+fort, were repulsed. It was not until April second, 1865, that the Rebel
+forces were obliged to surrender that outpost, and on the following day,
+General Weitzel, with his troops, entered the city of Richmond.
+
+President Davis was attending church at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, at
+the corner of Grace and Ninth streets, when a messenger brought him a
+dispatch from General Lee, announcing that Petersburg was about to be
+evacuated. The officers of the Southern Confederacy stood not on the
+order of their going, but went at once. Jefferson Davis took his family
+and left the city immediately. The Rebel authorities took with them what
+stores and treasures they could convey away, burned what they had to
+leave behind, and set fire to the warehouses, public buildings, and
+bridges across the James River. The flames communicated to adjacent
+structures, and it was thought the entire city would be destroyed. A
+large portion of its business section was thus laid waste; the number of
+buildings destroyed being estimated at one thousand, and the entire loss
+at eight millions of dollars.
+
+On the fourth of April, President Lincoln reached Richmond, and entered
+the house which had but two days before been occupied by Jefferson
+Davis, but which was now the headquarters of General Weitzel. He came
+unattended, and walked up from the river into the city, without parade,
+as any ordinary citizen might have done. The news of his presence soon
+spread, and the colored people flocked around him, with strong
+demonstrations of joy. "God bless you, Massa Linkum!" was heard on every
+hand, while the tears rolled down the cheeks of some, and others danced
+for joy. And here, perhaps all unconsciously, the second father of his
+country emulated the first. It is told of Washington, that, a colored
+man having bowed to him, he returned the bow with stately courtesy.
+Being remonstrated with for bowing to a colored person, he replied that
+he did not wish to be outdone in politeness by a negro. At Richmond a
+colored man bowed to Lincoln, with the salutation, "May de good Lord
+bless you, President Linkum!" Lincoln returned the bow with cordiality,
+evidently, like Washington, determined not to be outdone in politeness
+by a negro. But that bow not only indicated the noble nature of the man
+who recognized a humanity broader than a color line, and over whom
+already hung the dark shadow of martyrdom; but it also was a foretoken
+of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution and the Civil Rights
+act, which so quickly followed the quelling of the Rebellion.
+
+In the soldiers' section of the Hollywood Cemetery, in the western
+limits of the city, overlooking the James River, are the graves of
+hundreds of Confederate dead, from the midst of which rises a monumental
+pyramid of rough stone. In the same cemetery, on a hill at its southern
+extremity, a monument marks the resting-place of President Monroe.
+General J. E. B. Stuart, commander of Lee's cavalry, is also buried
+here.
+
+The Tredegar Iron Works, which are still in active operation, and whose
+buildings cover thirteen acres of ground, were the great cannon
+manufactory of the Confederacy. Several battle fields and national
+cemeteries are within a few hours' drive of the city. The old African
+Church, a long, low building in Branch street, near Monumental Church,
+is famous as a place of political meetings, both before and during the
+war.
+
+Crawford's equestrian statue of Washington, in the esplanade leading
+from the Governor's house to the Capitol Square, will recall the early
+days of the Republic. The statue is of bronze, representing a horse and
+rider of colossal size, the horse thrown back partly upon its haunches,
+on a massive granite pedestal, and around it are grouped bronze figures
+of Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, George Mason, Thomas
+Nelson, and Andrew Lewis, all illustrious sons of Virginia. In the
+Capitol Square, north of the Capitol Building, is Foley's statue of
+General "Stonewall" Jackson, of heroic size, on a granite pedestal, and
+near it a life-size marble statue of Henry Clay. In the State Library,
+which contains forty thousand volumes, are many historical portraits.
+
+Richmond has rapidly recuperated since the war. Her streets have been
+rebuilt, and, in common with many other Southern cities, she has, since
+the abolition of slavery, and the consequent elevation of labor and
+attraction of Northern enterprise and capital, developed many industrial
+interests. The Gallego and Haxall flour mills are among the largest in
+the world. It has a large number of cotton, and a still larger number of
+tobacco factories; and contains also forges, furnaces, paper mills, and
+machine shops. Its chief exports are, however, tobacco and flour.
+Richmond owes its present flourishing condition to its river facilities,
+and the immense water power supplied by the falls. It is alike the
+manufacturing and the commercial metropolis of the State. Vessels
+drawing ten feet of water can come within a mile of the centre of the
+city, those drawing fifteen feet, to three miles below. A canal around
+the falls gives river navigation two hundred miles further into the
+interior. Steamboat lines connect it with the principal Atlantic cities,
+and railroads and canals open up communication with the North, South,
+and West.
+
+The city is regularly laid out, the streets crossing each other at right
+angles. Those parallel with the river are named alphabetically, A street
+being on the river. The cross streets are named numerically. The
+principal thoroughfare is Main or E street, which is the centre of
+business. The fashionable quarter is on Shockoe Hill, in the western
+part of the city, where are also the chief public edifices. The
+Penitentiary is in the western suburbs facing the river, and is a
+massive structure three hundred feet long and one hundred and ten feet
+deep. The Almshouse is one of the finest buildings in the city. There
+are a large number of churches, thirteen colleges, and an orphan asylum.
+Five bridges across the James River connect it with Spring Hill and
+Manchester, the latter a pretty town containing two cotton mills.
+
+The population of Richmond, by the census of 1880, was 63,803, which
+showed an increase of more than ten thousand persons in ten years.
+Unlike Charleston, S. C., it is surrounded by a populous rural region,
+whose products find a market here, and whose population look largely to
+the city for their supplies. It will never attain the commercial
+consequence of Savannah or of Norfolk, but as the centre of the tobacco
+region, and the seat of large manufacturing interests, it will always
+possess a certain importance and prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+SAINT PAUL.
+
+ Early History of Saint Paul.--Founding of the City.--Public
+ Buildings.--Roman Catholics.--Places of Resort.--Falls of
+ Minnehaha.--Carver's Cave.--Fountain Cave.--Commercial
+ Interests.--Present and Future Prospects.
+
+
+The first white man who ever visited the locality where Saint Paul now
+stands, was Father Hennepin, who made a voyage of discovery up the
+Mississippi, above the Falls of Saint Anthony, in 1680. But for more
+than a century and a half after his visit the entire section of country
+remained practically in the possession of the Indians. Eighty-six years
+afterwards Jonathan Carver made a treaty with the Dakotas, and in 1837
+the United States made a treaty with the Sioux, throwing the land open
+to settlement.
+
+The first building in Saint Paul was erected in 1838, but for a number
+of years afterwards it remained merely an Indian trading-post. In 1841 a
+mission was established on the spot by the Jesuits, and a log chapel
+dedicated to Saint Paul, from which the city afterwards took its name.
+
+The land upon which Saint Paul is built was purchased in 1849, at the
+government price of one dollar and twenty-five cents an acre. The same
+year the town was made the capital of the State, while it was yet a
+hamlet of a few log huts. Four years later it had nearly four thousand
+inhabitants, with handsome public buildings, good hotels, stores, mills,
+factories, and other constituents of a prosperous town. In 1846 the
+town had but ten inhabitants. In 1856 it had ten thousand. Steamers were
+coming and going; loads of immigrants were arriving; drays and teams
+were driving hither and thither; carpenters and masons were hard at
+work; yet could not put up houses fast enough; shops and dwellings were
+starting out of the ground, as if by magic. In 1880 the population had
+increased to fifty thousand, and was steadily and rapidly multiplying.
+
+Saint Paul originally occupied the western bank of the Mississippi, but
+has now extended to the eastern bank as well. It is divided into a lower
+and upper town, the former lying on the low shore between the bluff and
+the river, and containing the wholesale houses, shipping houses and
+factories. The latter occupies no less than four plateaus rising one
+above another, in a semicircle around the bend of the river, the first
+plateau being nearly a hundred feet in height. Here are the retail
+stores, public buildings, churches and private residences. The streets
+in the central portions of the city cross one another at right angles,
+but become irregular as they approach the boundaries. They are graded
+and paved and lighted by gas. Two bridges connect the opposite shores of
+the river, and horse cars traverse all sections of the city. Its general
+appearance is pleasing in the extreme. Many of the houses are built of
+blue limestone, which is found underlying one of the terraces in great
+quantities.
+
+The State Capitol building is now in process of construction, and will,
+when completed, be a very handsome edifice, occupying an entire square.
+The United States Custom House, an opera house, a large number of
+handsome churches, and several public school buildings are among the
+objects worthy of note in the city.
+
+Although Saint Paul is settled largely by people from New England and
+New York State, the Roman Catholics still hold an important place in the
+city. The first to take possession of the spot, they will be the last to
+relax their hold. They have a number of large and handsomely finished
+church edifices, and have established an orphan asylum. There is also a
+Protestant orphan asylum, and three free hospitals.
+
+The city boasts an Academy of Sciences, which has a very full museum, a
+Historical Society and a Library Association, each of the latter having
+fine libraries.
+
+Saint Paul is in the midst of a charming and romantic country, and the
+throngs of people who seek a transient home within its borders during
+the heat of summer find abundance of delightful drives and places for
+picnics and excursions. White Bear Lake and Bald Eagle Lake, but a short
+distance away by rail, furnish boating, fishing and bathing for pleasure
+seekers, as well as most enchanting scenery for the lovers of nature.
+The city park is but two miles away, on the shores of Lake Como, and is
+also an attractive place.
+
+All lovers of the romantic should thank Longfellow that by means of his
+exquisite poem of Hiawatha he has rescued the beautiful Falls of
+Minnehaha, meaning in the Dakota language "laughing water," from being
+known as Brown's Falls, a name which some utilitarian egotist had
+bestowed upon it. From a high bank, covered with shrubbery, the clear,
+silvery stream makes a sudden leap of about fifty feet into the chasm
+beneath. A veil of mist rises before the falls, and the sun shining upon
+it spans the cataract with a rainbow.
+
+On the eastern side of the city, in Dayton Bluff, near the river, is
+Carver's Cave, so named after Jonathan Carver, already referred to, who,
+in this cave, in May, 1767, made his treaty with the Indians, by which
+he secured a large tract of land. The cave contains a lake large enough
+to have a boat upon it.
+
+Two miles above Saint Paul, on a beautiful clear stream that flows into
+the Mississippi, is Fountain Cave, a most wonderful and interesting
+production of nature. It seems to have been formed by the action of the
+stream which finds an outlet through it. It has an arched entrance with
+a vaulted roof, the entrance being twenty feet in height by twenty-five
+in width, while roof, sides and floor are of pure white sandstone. This
+cave contains a number of chambers, the largest being one hundred feet
+in length by twenty-five feet in width, and twenty feet in height. The
+cave has been penetrated for a thousand feet or more, and still has
+unexplored recesses.
+
+Saint Paul stands at the head of navigation of the Mississippi River,
+the Falls and Rapids of Saint Anthony, a short distance above,
+effectually barring the further upward progress of craft from below,
+though above the falls small steamboats thread the waters of the
+youthful Mississippi to the furthest outposts of civilization. At this
+point the immense grain fields of the northwest find an outlet for their
+annual products, and to this point comes the merchandise which must
+supply the needs of an already large and constantly increasing
+agricultural, mining and lumbering population. Numerous railroads
+connect it, not only with the great trade centres of the east and south,
+but with a hundred thriving towns and villages in Minnesota and
+Wisconsin, who look to it for supplies; and when the Northern Pacific
+is completed, the entire northwest will be brought into communication
+with Saint Paul, and as the Mississippi will share with the lakes the
+transportation of produce, manufactures and ores of an inexhaustible but
+now scarcely populated region, Saint Paul will derive immense advantages
+from this gigantic enterprise.
+
+Saint Paul is already a town of the greatest importance on the Upper
+Mississippi. Her streets teem with business, and boats of all
+descriptions lie at her wharves. Already a populous city, what she is
+to-day is but the beginning of what the future will behold her. A
+generation hence she will count her inhabitants by hundreds where now
+she counts them by tens; her business will have increased in like
+proportion; and in the no distant future she will be known as the great
+metropolis of the Northwest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+SALT LAKE CITY.
+
+ The Mormons.--Pilgrimage Across the Continent.--Site of Salt
+ Lake City.--A People of Workers.--Spread of Mormons through
+ other Territories.--City of the Saints.--Streets.--Fruit and
+ Shade Trees.--Irrigation.--The Tabernacle.--Residences of the
+ late Brigham Young.--Museum.--Public Buildings.--Warm and Hot
+ Springs.--Number and Character of Population.--Barter System
+ before Completion of Railroad.--Mormons and Gentiles.--Present
+ Advantages and Future Prospects of Salt Lake City.
+
+
+Of all the cities which have sprung into being and grown and prospered,
+since the discovery of the American continent, there is not one with
+which is associated so much interest, and which attracts such universal
+curiosity as Salt Lake City. From the time of the so-called discovery of
+the Book of Mormon, in 1827, by Joseph Smith, through all the wanderings
+of the adherents of Mormonism, beginning with the organization of the
+"Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints," in Manchester, New York,
+including its removal to Kirtland, Ohio, and the establishment of a
+branch church in Jackson County, Missouri; its transplanting to Nauvoo,
+Illinois; the temporary sojourn of its adherents in Iowa; and the final
+exodus, in 1847, over the then almost unknown and unexplored plains and
+mountains of the great west, until they reached the Land of Promise,
+lying between the Wasatch Range and the Sierra Nevadas, and there
+settled themselves permanently, to build up literally a "Kingdom of
+Christ upon the earth," the Mormons have been in more senses than one a
+peculiar people. They have been unpleasantly peculiar in their advocacy
+and practice of polygamy, and during their early sojourn at Salt Lake,
+in their defiance of the United States Government. In some other
+respects they have challenged the admiration of the world, and have set
+patterns in industry, and in a system of government, which seems to
+consider the well-being of all, both of which might be imitated to
+advantage by the "Gentiles" who affect to despise them.
+
+After a weary pilgrimage through a wilderness far greater than that
+traversed by the Israelites in days of old, the Mormons found their
+Canaan in an immense valley, from four thousand to six thousand feet
+above the level of the sea, and walled in by mountain ranges which
+seemed to furnish natural barriers against the incroachments of an
+antagonistic civilization. This valley, the geologist said, was the
+bottom of a great, pre-historic sea, which by some mighty convulsion of
+nature had been lifted up from its original level, and its outlet cut
+off, and, like the Caspian Sea and others, was left to shrink by
+evaporation. In the deepest depression of this valley still remained all
+that was left of this ancient inland ocean, reduced now to seventy-five
+miles in length and thirty in breadth, with an average depth of but
+eight feet. Still holding in solution a large proportion of the salts of
+the greater sea, its waters form one of the purest and most concentrated
+brines in the world, containing twenty-two per cent of chloride of
+sodium, slightly mixed with other salts. All through the valley of the
+Great Salt Lake there are salt and alkaline deposits, evidencing the
+former presence of water. The valley seemed barren and uninviting; yet
+in it, as offering a refuge from the persecutions which they had
+suffered in the east, the Mormons decided to establish their church and
+build their homes. They found the soil, barren as it looked, would grow
+grass, grain and fruits; and though the climate is changeable, the
+winter cold, with deep snows, and the heat of summer intense, they had
+faith to believe that they could endure whatever natural disadvantages
+they could not overcome, and that they should in time receive the reward
+of their piety and industry.
+
+Their chief town and ecclesiastical capital was located on the eastern
+bank of the river Jordan, between Lake Utah, a beautiful body of fresh
+water lying to the southward, and Great Salt Lake, lying twenty miles to
+the northward. The new settlement was eleven hundred miles west of the
+Mississippi, and six hundred and fifty miles east-northeast of the then
+scarcely heard of city of San Francisco. Its site extended close up to
+the base of the great mountains on the north, while to the southward its
+view spread over more than a hundred miles of plain, with a range of
+rugged mountain peaks, snow-capped and bold, lying beyond. A grander
+outlook could scarcely be imagined.
+
+In the laying out of the city the fact was kept in view that it was for
+a people of workers, each one of whom must be self-sustaining. In truth,
+the great success of these people is due to the fact that no class of
+drones has been recognized and provided for. All, from the highest to
+the lowest, were expected to work, church officials as well as laymen;
+and prosperity has attended industry, as it always does. The wilderness
+and solitary place were glad for them, and the desert was made to
+rejoice and blossom as the rose; and a mighty nation within a nation has
+been built up in the valley of Utah, protected by its mountain
+fastnesses. The Mormons have become a strong and prosperous people, and
+have not only possessed themselves of Utah, but have sent out colonies
+to Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Wyoming, Idaho and Arizona, which have
+prospered and increased, until they now practically control those
+Territories.
+
+ [Illustration: MORMON TEMPLE AND TABERNACLE, SALT LAKE CITY.]
+
+It is not my province to speak of the Mormons from either a religious or
+political standpoint. Their material prosperity one cannot fail to see,
+and a truthful historian must note it. The "City of the Saints," as Salt
+Lake City is sometimes called, is doubly interesting, from its history
+and from its peculiar features, so unlike those of any other city. The
+streets are one hundred and twenty-eight feet wide, crossing each other
+at right angles, an eighth of a mile apart, each square thus formed
+containing ten acres. Each square is divided into eight lots, measuring
+ten by twenty rods, and containing one-fourth of an acre. Several of the
+squares in the business quarter of the town have been cut across since
+the original laying out, forming cross streets. The streets are lined
+with trees, while streams of running water course down each side of
+every street, being brought from the neighboring mountains, ten thousand
+feet high, furnishing a pure water supply, and irrigating the gardens.
+Almost every lot has an orchard of pear, apple, plum, apricot, and peach
+trees, and Utah furnishes large quantities of fresh and dried fruit for
+the eastern markets. Apricots, which in the east are almost unknown,
+sometimes grow as large as eastern peaches, from six to eight inches in
+circumference. Locust, maple and box-elder are the favorite shade trees,
+and these grow luxuriantly. When, however, their roots strike soil from
+which the alkali has not yet been washed, their leaves turn from a dark
+green to a sickly yellow. But irrigation washes out this alkali, and the
+trouble from it grows less every year.
+
+Salt Lake City is divided into twenty wards, nearly every one of which
+has a square. Every ward has its master, who superintends the public
+improvements, and sees that every man does his share without shirking.
+The houses are generally of adobe (sun-dried bricks), though a few of
+the newer business blocks are handsome and commodious stone structures.
+Most of the dwelling houses are small, and but a single story in height,
+having separate entrances when there is more than one wife in the
+family. The city is not an imposing one. The wide streets, large grounds
+around each dwelling, and low, small houses, give it more the appearance
+of an overgrown village than that of a city. Nevertheless, it cannot be
+denied that the plan upon which it is built secures to its inhabitants
+the maximum of comfort, health and cleanliness. There are no narrow and
+stifling streets, overshadowed by tall buildings; no dirty alleys; no
+immense crime and pestilence-breeding tenement houses. Each little
+dwelling has its garden and orchard, securing to each family the
+blessings of fresh vegetables and fruit, and making each in a measure
+self-dependent. The air is pure, blowing down the valley from the
+mountain heights; and no foul vapors from half protected sewers or
+reeking courts poison it.
+
+The chief business thoroughfares are Main and Temple streets. The former
+is entirely devoted to trade, while church edifices are found in the
+latter. The Tabernacle is, of course, the most prominent object which
+meets the eye of the traveler as he arrives in Salt Lake City, standing
+out, as it does, in all its huge proportions, surrounded by the tiny
+homes of the people. It is on Temple street, in the heart of the city,
+and is entirely without architectural beauty, its predominant features
+being its hugeness and its ugliness. It is an enormous wooden structure,
+oval in form, with an immense dome-like roof, supported by forty-six
+sandstone pillars. It will seat fifteen thousand persons, and is used
+for the services of the church, lectures and public gatherings. It
+contains one of the largest organs in America. It is inclosed within a
+high wall, and a little to the east of it, within the same inclosure,
+are the foundations of a new temple, estimated to cost ten millions of
+dollars, but which will not probably be finished for many years to come.
+An inferior adobe building, also within the walls, is the celebrated
+Endowment House, where are performed those sacred and mysterious rites
+of the Mormon Church which no Gentile may look upon, and where the
+Saints are sealed to their polygamous wives.
+
+On South Temple street, east of the Tabernacle, is the group of
+buildings known as Brigham Block, inclosed, like the former, by a high
+stone wall, and comprising the Tithing House, the Beehive House, the
+Lion House, the office of the _Deseret News_, and various other offices
+and buildings. The Beehive House and the Lion House constituted the
+residences of the late Brigham Young and eighteen or twenty of his
+wives. A handsome structure nearly opposite, the most pretentious
+structure in Salt Lake City, and known as Amelia Palace, was built by
+Brigham Young, for his favorite wife, Amelia. The theatre is a large
+building with a gloomy exterior, but handsomely fitted up inside. It is
+a favorite resort of the Saints, who make it a source of innocent
+recreation, and entertain no prejudices against it, permitting their
+wives and children to appear upon its boards. One of the daughters of
+Brigham Young was at one time an actress at this theatre.
+
+On South Temple street, opposite the Tabernacle, is the Museum,
+containing interesting products of Mormon industry; specimens of ores
+from the mines of Utah, and precious stones from the desert; a fair
+representation of the fauna of the Territory; relics of the mound
+builders; articles of Indian use and manufacture, and other curiosities,
+which the visitor may behold on the payment of a small admission fee.
+The City Hall, which is at the present time used by the Territorial
+Government, is a handsome building, erected at a cost of sixty thousand
+dollars. In its rear is the city prison. A co-operative store in
+successful operation will be found occupying a handsome building on East
+Temple street. The Deseret National Bank, at the corner of East Temple
+and South First streets, is also a fine building. The two principal
+hotels of Salt Lake City are the Walker House, on Main street, and the
+Townsend House, at the corner of West Temple and South Second streets.
+With all its quaintness and want of resemblance to other cities, it has
+adopted the system of horse cars, which run on the principal streets,
+and make all parts of the city accessible.
+
+About one mile distant from the city are the Warm Springs, issuing from
+the limestone rock at the foot of the mountains. The water of these
+springs contains lime, magnesia, iron, soda, chlorine, and sulphuric
+acid, and their temperature is lukewarm. A bath in them is delightful,
+and beneficial, if not prolonged. Private bathing apartments are fitted
+up for the use of bathers. A mile further north are the Hot Springs,
+also strongly sulphurous, and with a temperature of over 200 deg.. Eggs may
+be boiled in these springs in three minutes, ready for the table. The
+water from these springs forms a beautiful lake, called Hot Spring Lake,
+which practically destroys all agriculture and vegetation for hundreds
+of yards within the vicinity. Strange as it may seem, the hot water does
+not prevent the existence of some kinds of excellent fish, among which
+have been seen some very fine, large trout.
+
+The population of Salt Lake City is something over twenty thousand
+persons, of whom about one-third are Gentiles and apostate Mormons. This
+population is made up of all nationalities, apostles and missionaries
+being continually sent out to nearly every part of the civilized world,
+to make proselytes, and bring them to the fold. These converts to the
+faith are usually from the lower classes, ignorant and superstitious;
+and as a consequence the intellectual and social standards of Salt Lake
+City are not high. But with their new faith these people acquire habits
+of industry, if they never possessed them before; and the conditions of
+the city are favorable for growth in certain directions. Their children
+are educated and brought up to a higher position than that occupied by
+their parents; so that whatever may be our opinion as to the advantages
+or disadvantages, from a religious point of view, in their conversion to
+the Mormon faith, materially, intellectually and socially they have many
+of them undoubtedly made a change for the better. They are taken away
+from the stationary conditions of life in the old world, and
+transplanted into a new and growing country, where there is plenty of
+room and incentive for progress and expansion. Though the first
+generation do not always avail themselves of this room, nor even the
+second, to its fullest extent, ultimately these people will come to
+compare favorably with other classes of American citizens.
+
+The completion of the Union Pacific Railroad, although it deprived the
+Mormons of that isolation which they sought, has been of vast benefit to
+them in material ways. It is said that when the city was first settled
+the whole community could not have raised one thousand dollars in cash.
+And up to the completion of the railroad nine-tenths of the business of
+the Mormon people was conducted on a system of barter. A writer thus
+facetiously describes the condition of things at that period: "A farmer
+wishes to purchase a pair of shoes for his wife. He consults the
+shoemaker, who avers his willingness to furnish the same for one load of
+wood. He has no wood, but sells a calf for a quantity of adobes, the
+adobes for an order on the merchant, payable in goods, and the goods and
+the order for a load of wood, and straightway the matron is shod. Seven
+watermelons purchased the price of a ticket of admission to the theatre.
+He paid for the tuition of his children seventy-five cabbages per
+quarter. The dressmaker received for her services four squashes per day.
+He settled his church dues in sorghum molasses. Two loads of pumpkins
+paid his annual subscription to the newspaper. He bought a 'Treatise on
+Celestial Marriage' for a load of gravel, and a bottle of soothing syrup
+for the baby with a bushel of string beans."
+
+There are not the most harmonious relations existing between the Mormon
+and Gentile people of Salt Lake City. Each regards the other with
+suspicion. The former look upon the latter as hostile to their faith,
+and determined to destroy it. The Gentiles regard certain practices of
+the Mormons with abhorrence, and themselves as at heart rebellious to
+the government to which they have been compelled to submit. The leading
+papers of the two factions are very hostile, and keep alive the feeling
+of antagonism.
+
+Lying between two prominent mountain chains, the chief city in a vast
+valley which the enterprise of man has demonstrated to be fertile;
+furnishing a depot of supplies, and a mart and shipping place for
+produce and manufactures; Salt Lake City is destined to become an
+important point in the western section of our country. Her future is
+assured, even though the people who founded her, together with the faith
+to which they cling, should disappear from the face of the earth, and be
+forgotten, like the lost tribes of Israel, which they believe themselves
+to represent. Essentially American in all her features--since no city of
+the Old World, either ancient or modern, furnishes a prototype--and in
+her very plan including certain sure elements of success, as our Western
+States and Territories become filled up with a thriving and industrious
+people, she will find herself the natural centre of a vast agricultural
+and mining population, and continue to increase in importance and
+prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ San Francisco.--The Golden State.--San Francisco Bay.--Golden
+ Gate.--Conquest of California by Fremont, 1848.--Discovery of
+ Gold.--Rush to the Mines, 1849.--"Forty-niners."--Great Rise
+ in Provisions and Wages.--Miners Homeward Bound.--Dissipation
+ and Vice in the City.--Vigilance Committee.--Great Influx of
+ Miners in 1850.--Immense Gold Yield.--Climate.--Earthquakes.--
+ Productions.--Irrigation.--Streets and Buildings.--Churches.--
+ Lone Mountain Cemetery.--Cliff House.--Seal Rock.--Theatres.--
+ Chinese Quarter.--Chinese Theatres.--Joss Houses.--Emigration
+ Companies.--The Chinese Question.--Cheap Labor.--"The Chinese
+ Must Go."--Present Population and Commerce of San Francisco.--
+ Exports.--Manufactures.--Cosmopolitan Spirit of Inhabitants.
+
+
+San Francisco is situated on the best harbor which our Pacific Coast
+affords, a little below the 38th parallel of latitude, and about a
+degree further south than St. Louis, Cincinnati and Washington. It is
+the western terminus of the Central Pacific Railroad, American gateway
+to Asia and the far East.
+
+As the traveler proceeds thitherward from the Valley of the Mississippi,
+on descending the western slopes of the Sierras, he finds himself fairly
+within the Golden State; and in more senses than one does California
+deserve that name. If it be the summer season the very air seems filled
+with a golden haze. In leaving the mountains all freshness is left
+behind. Trees and fields are yellow with drouth, which lasts from April
+to November. Dense clouds of dust fill the air and settle upon
+everything. Whole regions, by the means of extensive and destructive
+mining operations, have been denuded of all verdure, and lie bare and
+unsightly, waiting until the slow processes of time, or the more
+expeditious hand of man, shall reclaim them. But mines have now given
+place to vast grain and cattle farms or ranches; and great fields of
+golden grain and the cattle on a thousand hills are on either side of
+the track. If it be later or earlier in the year there is a wealth of
+bloom such as is never dreamed of in the East. The ground, sometimes, as
+far as the eye can reach, is brilliant with color, a golden yellow the
+predominating hue. In the rainy season the Sacramento valley, the
+occasional victim of prolonged drouth, is sometimes visited by a
+freshet, which carries destruction with it; a mountain torrent, taking
+its rise near the base of Mt. Shasta, and fed by the snows of the
+Sierras, it is fitful in its demeanor. It finds its outlet through San
+Francisco Bay and the Golden Gate to the Pacific.
+
+San Francisco is on a peninsula which extends between the bay of that
+name and the ocean. Its site is nothing more than a collection of sand
+hills, which, before the building of the city, were continually changing
+their positions. The peninsula is thirty miles long and six wide, across
+the city, which stands on the eastern or inner slope.
+
+San Francisco Bay is unsurpassed in the world, except by Puget Sound, in
+Washington Territory, for size, depth, ease of entrance and security.
+The entrance to the bay is through a passage five miles in length and
+about two in width, with its shallowest depth about thirty feet at low
+tide. Rocks rise almost perpendicularly on the northern side of the
+entrance, to a height of three thousand feet. A lighthouse is placed on
+one of these, at Point Bonita. Fort Point, a fortress built on solid
+rock, commands the entrance from the south, and beyond it, until San
+Francisco is reached, are a series of sand dunes, some of them white and
+drifting and others showing green with the scant grass growing upon
+them. The entrance to the bay is called the Golden Gate, a name applied
+with singular appropriateness, since through its portals have passed
+continuous streams of gold since the discovery of the latter in 1848.
+Strangely enough, the name was given before the gold discovery, though
+at how early a date there seems no means of knowing. As far as can be
+ascertained, it first appears in Fremont's "Geographical Memoir of
+California," published in 1847. Six miles eastward from its entrance the
+bay turns southward for a distance of thirty miles, forming a narrow
+peninsula between it and the ocean, on the northeastern extremity of
+which the city is built. It also extends northward to San Puebla Bay,
+which latter extending eastward, connects by means of a narrow strait
+with Suisun Bay, into which the Sacramento River discharges its volume
+of water. These three bays furnish ample and safe harborage for all the
+merchant fleets of the world.
+
+San Francisco Bay is about forty miles in length, its widest point being
+twelve miles. At Oakland, directly east of San Francisco, it is eight
+miles in width. Alcatraz Island, in the centre of the channel, six miles
+from the Golden Gate, is a solid rock rising threateningly above the
+water, and bristling with heavy artillery. It is sixteen hundred feet in
+length, and four hundred and fifty feet in width. Angel Island is
+directly north of Alcatraz, and four miles from San Francisco, contains
+eight hundred acres, and is also fortified. Midway between San
+Francisco and Oakland is Yerba Buena, or Goat Island, which, too, is
+held as a United States military station. Red Rock, Bird Rock, the Two
+Sisters, and other small islands dot the bay.
+
+In 1775 the first ship passed the portals of the Golden Gate, and made
+its way into the Bay of San Francisco. This ship was the _San Carlos_,
+commanded by Caspar De Portala, a Franciscan monk and Spanish Governor
+of Lower California, who set out on a voyage of discovery and
+exploration. The same man had six years previously visited the sand
+hills of the present site of San Francisco, being the first white man to
+set his foot upon them. Portala named the harbor San Francisco, after
+the founder of his monastic order, St. Francis. A mission was founded
+there six years later, on the twenty-seventh of June, by Friars
+Francisco Paloa and Bonito Cambou, under the direction of Father
+Junipero Serra, who had been commissioned by Father Portala as president
+of all the missions in Upper California. This was the sixth mission
+established in California, and up to the year 1800 the Fathers labored
+with great zeal and industry, had established eighteen missions,
+converted six hundred and forty-seven savages, and acquired a vast
+property in lands, cattle, horses, sheep and grain. Presidios or
+military stations were established for the protection of these missions,
+and the Indians readily submitted themselves to the Fathers, and
+acquired the arts of civilization.
+
+The Franciscan friars continued complete sovereigns of the land during
+the first quarter of the present century, and increased in worldly
+goods. Mexico became a republic in 1824, and in 1826 considerably
+curtailed their privileges. In 1845 their property was finally
+confiscated and the missions broken up. The priests returned to Spain;
+the Indians to their savagery; and only the crumbling walls of their
+adobe houses, and their decaying orchards and vineyards, remained to
+tell the tale of the past history of California. From that period until
+1847 California was a bone of contention between Mexico and the United
+States, her territory overrun by troops of both nations. On the
+sixteenth of January, 1847, the Spanish forces capitulated to Fremont,
+and peace was established.
+
+With the exception of the Mission Dolores, there was no settlement at
+San Francisco until 1835, when a tent was erected. A small frame house
+was built the following year, and on the fifteenth of April, 1838, the
+first white child was born. The population of San Francisco, then known
+as Yerba Buena, in 1842 was one hundred and ninety-six persons. In 1847
+it had increased to four hundred and fifty-one persons, including
+whites, Indians, negroes and Sandwich Islanders. In March, 1848, the
+city contained two hundred houses, and eight hundred and fifty
+inhabitants. In November of the same year, the first steamer, a small
+boat from Sitka, made a trial trip around the bay. In this year the
+first public school and the first Protestant church were established.
+
+This year marked the great era in the history of San Francisco. In the
+fall of 1847, Captain John A. Sutter, a Swiss by birth, who had resided
+in California since 1839, began erecting a saw mill at a place called
+Colorna, on the American River, a confluent of the Sacramento, about
+fifty miles east of the city of that name. James W. Marshall, who had
+taken the contract for erecting the mill, was at work with his men
+cutting and widening the tail-race when, on January eighteenth, 1848, he
+observed some particles of a yellow, glittering substance. In February
+specimens of these findings were taken to San Francisco, and pronounced
+to be gold. The truth being soon confirmed, the rush for the gold fields
+commenced. People in all sections of California and Oregon forsook their
+occupations, and set out for the mines. The news spread, increasing as
+it went; until the reports grew fabulous. Many of the earliest miners
+acquired fortunes quickly, and as quickly dissipated them. The journal
+of Rev. Walter Colton, at that time Alcalde of Monterey, contains the
+following paragraph, under date of August twelfth, 1848:--
+
+"My man Bob, who is of Irish extraction, and who had been in the mines
+about two months, returned to Monterey about four weeks since, bringing
+with him over two thousand dollars, as the proceeds of his labor. Bob,
+while in my employ, required me to pay him every Saturday night in gold,
+which he put into a little leather bag and sewed into the lining of his
+coat, after taking out just twelve and a half cents, his weekly
+allowance for tobacco. But now he took rooms and began to branch out; he
+had the best horses, the richest viands, and the choicest wines in the
+place. He never drank himself but it filled him with delight to brim the
+sparkling goblet for others. I met Bob to-day, and asked him how he got
+on. 'Oh, very well,' he replied, 'but I am off again for the mines.'
+'How is that, Bob? you brought down with you over two thousand dollars;
+I hope you have not spent all that; you used to be very saving; twelve
+and a half cents a week for tobacco, and the rest you sewed into the
+lining of your coat.' 'Oh, yes,' replied Bob, 'and I have got _that_
+money yet. I worked hard for it, and the devil can't get it away. But
+the two thousand dollars came aisily, by good luck, and has gone as
+aisily as it came!'"
+
+Reports of the new El Dorado reached the States, and during 1849, from
+Maine to Louisiana came the gold seekers. From every country in Europe,
+from Australia and from China, additions were made to the throng of
+pilgrims, who, by the Isthmus, around the Horn, across the seas, and by
+the terrible journey overland, all rushed pell mell up the Sacramento,
+stopping at San Francisco only long enough to find some means of
+conveyance. We have no space to tell the story of that time. Men came
+and went. Some made fortunes. Others returned poorer than they came.
+Many who attempted the overland route left their bones bleaching on the
+plains. Some went back to their homes, and others remained to become
+permanent citizens of California. What the F. F. V.s are to Virginia,
+and the Pilgrim Fathers to Massachusetts, the "Forty-niners," a large
+number of whom still survive, will be, in the future, to California.
+
+During 1848 ten million dollars' worth of gold had been gathered on the
+Yuba, American and Feather rivers. The city of San Francisco had, in
+January, 1849, two thousand inhabitants, and these were in a hurry to be
+off to the mines as soon as the rainy season was over. Ships began to
+arrive from all quarters, and July of that year found the flags of every
+nation floating in the bay. Five hundred square-rigged vessels lay in
+the harbor, and everybody was scrambling for the mines. These multitudes
+of people, though they thought only of gold, yet had to be fed, clothed
+and housed after a fashion. There were no supplies adequate to the
+demand, and provisions went up to fabulous prices. Apples sold for from
+$1 to $5 apiece, and eggs at the same rates. Laborers demanded from $20
+to $30 for a day's work, and were scarcely to be had at those figures.
+The miners probably averaged $25 a day at the mines, though some were
+making their hundreds. But at the exorbitant prices to be paid for
+everything, few were able to lay up much money.
+
+Late in the year of 1849 the reaction came. The steamers were filled
+with downcast miners, thankful that they had enough left to take
+themselves home. Others having acquired something, stopped at San
+Francisco, and plunged into the worst forms of dissipation. The city
+during this and the following year held a carnival of vice and crime.
+Women there were few or none, save of the worst character, and gambling
+dens, dance houses, and drinking hells flourished on every street. In
+1850 a Vigilance Committee was organized by the better class of
+citizens, which soon exercised a wholesome restraint upon the criminal
+classes. In the same year California was admitted to the Union without
+the preliminary of a Territorial Government, and San Francisco was
+chartered as a city. Courts were established, and the lawless community
+came under the dominion of law and order.
+
+By this time the great haste which seized everybody in his eagerness to
+obtain gold and return home to enjoy it, had somewhat subsided. Men
+began to realize that there were other means of making money besides
+digging for it. Gardens were planted and orchards set out, and it was
+discovered that the apparently barren soil of the State would yield with
+a fruitfulness unparalleled in the East. San Francisco began to be more
+than a canvass city. Mud flats were filled in and sand hills leveled,
+houses, hotels and stores erected, and a wild speculation began in city
+property. Lots which a few days before had been purchased for two or
+three thousand dollars, were held at fifty thousand dollars. A canvas
+tent, fifteen by twenty feet, near the plaza, rented for forty thousand
+dollars per annum. The Parker House, a two-story frame building on
+Kearney street, also near the plaza, brought a yearly rent of one
+hundred and twenty thousand dollars. Board in a hotel or a tent was
+eight dollars per day, and provisions were proportionately high. To
+build a brick house cost a dollar for each brick used. Twenty-seven
+thousand people arrived in San Francisco, by sea or land, during 1850.
+In 1853 thirty-four thousand gold seekers returned home, the yield of
+gold that year having been $65,000,000, the largest annual yield of the
+State. The imports of San Francisco in the same year were over
+$45,000,000. As early as this period it was the third city in tonnage
+entrances in the United States, New York and New Orleans alone exceeding
+it. In 1856 the bad state of public affairs again necessitated the
+interference of a Vigilance Committee, but since that time the city has
+been orderly.
+
+The site of San Francisco was fixed by chance. More desirable places
+might have been selected, but the influx of miners dropped upon the
+first spot convenient for them to land, from which to start post-haste
+to the mines, and that spot is indicated by the present city. Owing to
+its location its climate is not in all respects desirable. The general
+climate of the coast is tempered, both in summer and winter, by a warm
+ocean current, which, flowing northward along the coast of China and
+Siberia, takes a turn to the south when it reaches Alaska, and washes
+the western coast of the continent of America. It is so warm that it
+produces a marked effect upon this coast, just as the Gulf Stream
+tempers the climate of the British Islands. But it has been sensibly
+cooled by its proximity to Arctic seas, and so sends cool breezes to fan
+the land during the heat of summer. These summer sea breezes rushing
+through the narrow opening of the Golden Gate become almost gales, and
+bring both cold and fog with them. The air of winter is mild and
+spring-like. This is the rainy season, but it does not rain
+continuously. It is the season of verdure and growth, and frosts are
+both slight and infrequent in the latitude of San Francisco. Not a drop
+of rain falls during the summer. The mornings are warm and sometimes
+almost sultry; but about ten o'clock the sea breeze springs up, growing
+more violent as the day advances, and frequently bringing a chilly fog
+with it, so that by evening men are glad to wrap themselves in
+overcoats, and women put on their cloaks and furs. The sand, which is
+still heaped in dunes to the westward of the city, and lies upon its
+vacant lots, is lifted and whirled through the air, falling almost like
+sleet, and stinging the faces of pedestrians.
+
+Thunder storms are of rare occurrence at San Francisco, but earthquakes
+are exceedingly frequent. Probably not a year elapses in which slight
+shocks are not felt in the State. Sometimes these shocks extend over
+vast areas, and at other times are merely local. On October
+twenty-first, 1868, a severe earthquake occurred at San Francisco,
+swaying buildings and throwing down numbers in process of erection. The
+houses of the city are mostly built with a view to these disturbances of
+nature. The dwelling houses are seldom more than two and one-half
+stories in height, while the blocks of the business streets do not
+display the altitude of structures in the eastern cities.
+
+The climate is so mild and so favorable that the productions of
+California embrace those of both temperate and semi-tropical latitudes.
+The sand hills of San Francisco were found, with the help of irrigation
+to produce plentifully of both fruits and flowers, and the suburbs of
+the city display many greenhouse plants growing in the open air. Roses
+bloom every month in the year, and strawberries ripen from February to
+December. In San Francisco the mean temperature in January is 49 deg. and in
+June 56 deg.. The average temperature of the year is 54 deg..
+
+The California market, between Kearney and Montgomery streets, extending
+through from Pine to California streets, displays all the fruits,
+vegetables and grains of the northern States, raised in the immediate
+neighborhood of the city, while oranges, lemons and pomegranates are
+sent from further south. The tenderer varieties of grapes flourish in
+the open air, and the State produces raisins which command a price but
+little below those of Europe. The thrift of the fruit trees of
+California is most remarkable. Most trees begin bearing on the second
+year from the slip or graft, and produce abundantly at three or four
+years of age. Their growth and the size of their productions are
+unequaled on the continent. The above mentioned market is one of the
+sights of the city, and should not be missed by the visitor.
+
+Irrigation has been found necessary to render the sand hills about San
+Francisco productive, and windmills have become familiar objects in the
+landscape, their long arms revolving in the ocean breeze, while little
+streams of water trickling here and there vivify the earth. As a result,
+though trees are scarce, what few there are being mostly stunted live
+oaks, whose long roots extend down deep into the soil, there are flowers
+everywhere. On one side of a fence will be a sand-bank, white with
+shifting sand, on the other, flourishing in the same kind of soil, will
+be an _al fresco_ conservatory, brilliant with color and luxuriant in
+foliage.
+
+Montgomery street is the leading thoroughfare, broad and lined with
+handsome buildings. Toward the north it climbs a hill so steep that
+carriages cannot ascend it, and pedestrians make their way up by means
+of a flight of steps. From this elevation a fine view is obtained of the
+city and bay. Kearney and Market streets are also fashionable
+promenades, containing many of the retail stores. The principal banks
+and business offices are found on California street, and the handsomest
+private residences are on Van Ness avenue, Taylor, Bush, Sutter,
+Leavenworth and Folsom streets, Clay street Hill and Pine street Hill.
+The city extends far beyond its original limits, having encroached upon
+the bay. Solid blocks now stand where, in 1849, big ships rode at
+anchor. It is laid out with regularity, most of its streets being at
+right angles with one another. The business streets are generally paved
+with Belgian blocks or cobble stones, and most of the residence streets
+are planked. The city does not present the handsome and showy
+architecture of many cities of the east, though here and there are fine
+edifices. It is yet too new, and too hurriedly built, to have acquired
+the substantiality and grandeur of older cities. Between fine brick or
+stone structures several stories high are sandwiched insignificant
+wooden houses of only two stories, the relics of a past which is yet
+exceedingly near the present. The public buildings, especially those
+belonging to the United States, are fine.
+
+The City Hall will, when finished, be surpassed by few structures in the
+country. The Palace Hotel, at the corner of Market and New Montgomery
+streets, is a vast building, erected and furnished at a cost of
+$3,250,000. It is entered by a grand court-yard surrounded by
+colonnades, and from its roof a birds-eye view of the whole city can be
+obtained. Baldwin's Hotel, at the corner of Marshall and Powell streets,
+is another palatial structure, costing a quarter of a million more, for
+building, decorating and furnishing, than the Palace Hotel. The Grand
+Hotel, Occidental, Lick House, Russ House and Cosmopolitan are all
+established and popular hotels.
+
+The largest and finest church edifice on the Pacific Coast is that of
+St. Ignatius, Roman Catholic, in McAlister street. The finest interior
+is that of St. Patrick's, also Roman Catholic, in Mission street between
+Third and Fourth. The First Unitarian church, in Geary street, is one of
+the finest churches in the city, remarkable for the purity of its
+architectural design and the elegance of its finish. The Chinese Mission
+House, at the corner of Stockton and Sacramento streets, will prove
+interesting to strangers. The Roman Catholics, who number among their
+adherents all the Spanish citizens, make no concealment of their
+intention to gain a majority of the population. But though they are a
+power in the community, and have many churches, the different Protestant
+sects are largely represented. Indeed, San Francisco is thoroughly
+tolerant in matters of religion. Not only do Catholics and Protestants
+find their own appropriate places of worship, but the Jews have two
+Synagogues, and the Chinese Buddhists three Temples or Joss Houses.
+
+There is but one road leading out of the city, but within the city
+limits there are many modes of conveyance. Cars propelled by endless
+wire cables, which move along the streets without the assistance of
+either horse or steam power, intersect the city in every direction.
+Omnibuses run out on the Point Lobos road to the Cliff House; and he who
+has not ridden or driven thither and watched the seals on Seal Rock, has
+not seen all of San Francisco. This is the one excursion of the city;
+its one pet dissipation. Everybody goes to the Cliff. A drive of five or
+six miles, on a good road, over and through intervening sand hills,
+brings the visitor to the Cliff House. This road leads by Laurel Hill,
+or as it was formerly called, Lone Mountain Cemetery, two and one-half
+miles west of the city, within whose inclosure a conical hill rises to a
+considerable height above the surrounding level country. On its summit
+is a large wooden cross, a prominent landmark, and within the cemetery
+are several fine monuments, conspicuously that of Senator Broderick, and
+a miniature Pantheon, marking the resting place of the Ralston family.
+The Lone Mountain possesses an unrivaled outlook over city, bay, ocean
+and coast range.
+
+The Cliff House is a large, low building, set on the edge of a cliff
+rising abruptly from the ocean, and facing west; and from it you have a
+grand view of the Golden Gate, while oceanward you strain your eyes to
+catch some glimpse of China or Japan, which lie so far away in front of
+you. But you see instead, if the day be clear, the faint but bold
+outlines of the Farallon Islands, and the white sails of vessels
+passing in and out of the Golden Gate.
+
+Late in the year of 1876 I completed my horseback journey across the
+continent, dashing with my horse into the surf to the westward of the
+Cliff House. A long and wearisome, but at the same time interesting and
+reasonably exciting ride, was at an end, and after viewing San
+Francisco, I was free to enjoy those luxuries of modern civilization,
+the railway cars, on my homeward route.
+
+ [Illustration: SEAL ROCKS, FROM THE CLIFF HOUSE, NEAR SAN FRANCISCO.]
+
+The Farallones de los Frayles are six islets lifting up their jagged
+peaks in picturesque masses out in the ocean, twenty-three and one-half
+miles westward of the Golden Gate. The largest Farallon extends for
+nearly a mile east and west, and is three hundred and forty feet high.
+On its highest summit the government has placed a lighthouse, and there
+the light-keepers live, sometimes cut off for weeks from the shore,
+surrounded by barrenness and desolation, but within sight of the busy
+life which ebbs and flows through the narrow strait which leads to San
+Francisco. These islands are composed of broken and water-worn rocks,
+forming numerous sharp peaks, and containing many caves. One of these
+caves has been utilized as a fog-trumpet, or whistle, blown by the force
+of the waves. The mouth-piece of a trumpet has been fixed against the
+aperture of the rock, and the waves dashing against it with force enough
+to crush a ship to pieces, blows the whistle. This fog whistle ceases
+entirely at low water, and its loudness at all times depends upon the
+force of the waves. The Farallones are the homes of innumerable sea
+birds, gulls, mures, shags and sea-parrots, the eggs of the first two
+being regularly collected by eggers, who make a profitable business
+of gathering them at certain seasons of the year. In 1853 one thousand
+dozen of these eggs, the result of a three days' trip, were sold at a
+dollar a dozen. Gathering the eggs is difficult and not unattended by
+danger, as precipices must be scaled, and the birds sometimes show
+themselves formidable enemies. The larger island is also populated by
+immense numbers of rabbits, all descended from a few pairs brought there
+many years ago. Occasionally these creatures, becoming too numerous for
+the resources of the island, die by hundreds, of starvation. Though
+their progenitors were white, they have reverted to the original color
+of the wild race. The cliffs of these islands are alive with seals, or
+sea-lions, as they are called, which congregate upon their sunny slopes,
+play, bark, fight and roar. Some of them are as large as an ox and
+seemingly as clumsy; but they disport themselves in the surf, which is
+strong enough to dash them in pieces, with the utmost ease, allowing the
+waves to send them almost against the rocks, and then by a sudden,
+dextrous movement, gliding out of danger.
+
+The Cliff House has also its sea-lions, on Seal Rock, not far from the
+hotel, and the visitors are never tired of watching them as they wriggle
+over the rocks, barking so noisily as to be heard above the breakers.
+Formerly numbers of them were shot by wanton sportsmen, but they are now
+protected by law. "Ben. Butler" and "General Grant" are two seals of
+unusual size, which appear to hold the remainder of the seal colony in
+subjection. If two begin to fight and squabble about a position which
+each wants, either "Ben" or the "General" quickly settles the dispute by
+flopping the malcontents overboard. The higher these creatures can
+wriggle up the rocks the happier they appear to be; and when a huge
+beast has attained a solitary peak, by dint of much squirming, he
+manifests his satisfaction by raising his small pointed head and
+complacently looking about him. As soon as another spies him, and can
+reach the spot, a squabble ensues, howls are heard, teeth enter into the
+contest, the stronger secures the eminence, and the weaker is
+ignominiously sent to the humbler and lower regions.
+
+An early drive to and a breakfast at the Cliff House, with a return to
+the city before the sea-breeze begins, is the favorite excursion of the
+San Franciscan. The road passes beyond this hotel to a broad, beautiful
+beach, on which, at low tide, one can drive to the Ocean House, at its
+extreme end, and then return to the city by the old Mission grounds,
+which still lie in its southwestern limits. The Mission building is of
+adobe, of the old Spanish style, built in 1778. Adjoining it is the
+cemetery, with its fantastic monuments, and paths worn by the feet of
+the Mission fathers and their dusky penitents.
+
+The largest and finest theatre of the city, and one of the finest in the
+United States, is the Grand Opera House, at the corner of Mission and
+Third streets. Four other theatres and an Academy of Music, furnish
+amusements to the residents of the city. Woodward's Gardens, on Mission
+street between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets, contains a museum, an
+art galley, and a menagerie. There are also two Chinese theatres, one at
+618 Jackson street, and the other at 625-1/2 Jackson street.
+
+The Chinese Quarter of San Francisco, which has become famous the world
+over, occupies portions of Sacramento, Commercial, Dupont, Pacific and
+Jackson streets. It is a locality which no stranger should fail to see.
+Here he steps at once into the Celestial Empire. Chinamen throng the
+streets, dressed in their semi-American, semi-Asiatic costumes, the
+pig-tail usually depending behind, though sometimes it is rolled up, out
+of sight, under the hat. The harsh gutturals of the Chinese language,
+nearly every word ending in ng, are heard on every hand, mingled with
+the grotesque pigeon English. The signs exhibit Chinese characters, and
+the stores and bazaars are filled with Chinese merchandise.
+
+Women are scarce in this quarter, and only of the courtezan class; but
+here and there one meets you, dressed usually in Chinese gown and
+trowsers, with hair arranged in the indescribable Chinese chignon, and
+carrying a fan--for all the world as though she had stepped off a fan or
+a saucer--and not more immodest in demeanor than the same class in our
+eastern cities. There are few or no Chinese wives in San Francisco.
+Chinese immigration takes the form of an immense bow, beginning at
+China, stretching to the Pacific coast of America, and retiring again to
+its starting point; for every Chinaman expects to return to his native
+land, either alive or dead. He does not take root in American soil. He
+comes here to make a little money, leaving his family behind him, and,
+satisfied with a very modest competence, returns as he came. If he dies
+here, his bones are carried back, that they may find a resting-place
+with those of his ancestors. Therefore the women imported are for the
+basest purposes.
+
+But to return to this Chinese Quarter. Here is the old St. Giles of
+London, the old Five Points of New York magnified and intensified. Here
+congregate the roughest and rudest elements, and here stand, shamelessly
+revealed, crime and bestiality too vile to name. In one cellar is a
+gambling-hell, for John Chinaman's besetting weakness is his love of
+gambling. The mode of gambling is very simple, involving no skill, and
+the stakes are small; but many a Celestial loses there, at night, his
+earnings of the day. Near by is an opium cellar, fitted up with benches
+or shelves, on each of which will be found a couple of Chinamen lying,
+with a wooden box for a pillow. While one is preparing his opium and
+smoking, the other is enjoying its full effects, in a half stupor. The
+Chinese tenement houses are crowded and filthy beyond description, and
+the breeding places of disease and crime. They are scattered thickly
+throughout the quarter. Their theatres, of which there are two, already
+referred to, have only male performers, who personate both sexes, and
+give what seems to be passable acting, accompanied by the clash and
+clang of cymbals, the beating of gongs, the sounding of trumpets, and
+other disagreeable noises regarded by the Chinese as music. The entire
+audience are smoking, either tobacco or opium.
+
+The Joss houses, or temples of the Chinese, are more in the nature of
+club houses and employment bureaus, than of religious houses. The first
+floor contains the business room, smoking or lounging room, dining room,
+kitchen, and other offices, which are used by the Emigration Company to
+which the building belongs. The second floor contains a moderate-sized
+hall, devoted to religious rites. Its walls are decorated with moral
+maxims from Confucius and other writers, in which the devotees are
+exhorted to fidelity, integrity, and the other virtues. The Joss or Josh
+is an image of a Chinaman, before whom the Chinese residents of San
+Francisco are expected to come once a year and burn slips of paper.
+Praying is also done, but as this is by means of putting printed
+prayers into a machine run by clockwork, there is no great exhaustion
+among the worshipers.
+
+The Chinese have no Sunday, and are ready to work every day of the week,
+if they can get paid for it. Their only holiday is at New Year, which
+occurs with them usually in February, but is a movable feast, when they
+require an entire week to settle their affairs, square up their
+religious and secular accounts, and make a new start in life. The
+Chinese have one saving virtue. They pay their debts on every New Year's
+day. If they have not enough to settle all claims against them they hand
+over their assets to their creditors, old scores are wiped out, and they
+commence anew.
+
+The six Chinese Emigration Companies, each representing a Chinese
+province, manage the affairs of the immigrants with a precision,
+minuteness and care which is unparalleled by any organization of western
+civilization. Before the passage of the anti-Chinese law, when a ship
+came into port laden with Chinamen, the agents of the different
+companies boarded it, and each took the names of those belonging to his
+province. They provided lodgings and food for the new comers, and as
+quickly as possible secured them employment; lent them money to go to
+any distant point; cared for them if they were sick and friendless, and,
+finally, sent home the bones of those who died on American shores. These
+companies settle all disputes between the Chinese, and when a Chinamen
+wishes to return home, they examine his accounts, and oblige him to pay
+his just debts before leaving. The means for doing all this are obtained
+in the shape of voluntary contributions from the immigrants. These
+companies do not act as employment bureaus, for these are separate and
+thoroughly organized institutions. These latter farm out the work of
+any number of hands, at the price agreed upon, furnishing a foreman,
+with whom all negotiations are transacted, who, perhaps, is the only one
+speaking English, and who is responsible for all the work.
+
+The English spoken by the Chinese is known as "pigeon English," "pigeon"
+being the nearest approach which a Chinamen can make to saying
+"business."
+
+Most English words are more or less distorted. L is always used by them
+for r, mi for I, and the words abound in terminal ee's.
+
+The Chinese problem is one which is agitating the country and giving a
+coloring to its politics. The Pacific States seem, by a large majority
+of their population, to regard the presence of the Mongolian among them
+as an unmitigated evil, to be no longer tolerated. Eastern capitalists
+have hailed their coming as inaugurating the era of cheap labor and
+increased fortunes for themselves. Hence the discussion and the
+disturbances. A lady who had made her home in San Francisco for several
+years past, says, in a letter to the writer of this article, "A person
+not living in California can form no conception of the curse which the
+Chinese are to this section of the world."
+
+Yet without them some of the great enterprises of the Pacific coast,
+notably the Central Pacific Railroad, would have remained long
+unfinished; and they came also to furnish manual labor at a time when it
+was scarce and difficult to obtain at any price. The Chinaman is a
+strange compound of virtue and vice, cleanliness and filth, frugality
+and recklessness, simplicity and cunning. He is scrupulously clean as to
+his person, indulging in frequent baths; yet he will live contentedly
+with the most wretched surroundings, and inhale an air vitiated by an
+aggregation of breaths and stenches of all kinds. He is a faithful
+worker and a wonderful imitator. He cannot do the full work of a white
+man, but he labors steadily and unceasingly. He takes no time for
+drunken sprees, but he is an inveterate opium smoker, and sometimes
+deliberately sacrifices his life in the enjoyment of the drug. He is
+frugal to the last degree, but will waste his daily earnings in the
+gambling hell and policy shop. Scrupulously honest, he is yet the victim
+of the vilest vices which are engrafting themselves upon our western
+coast. Living upon one-third of what will keep a white man, and working
+for one-half the wages the latter demands, he is destroying the labor
+market of that quarter of our country, reducing its working classes to
+his own level, in which in the future the latter, too, will be forced to
+be contented on a diet of "rice and rats," and to forego all educational
+advantages for their children, becoming, like the Chinese themselves,
+mere working machines; or else enter into a conflict of labor against
+labor, race against race.
+
+The latter alternative seems inevitable, and it has already begun.
+China, with her crowded population, could easily spare a hundred million
+people and be the better for it. Those one hundred million Chinamen, if
+welcomed to our shores, would speedily swamp our western civilization.
+They might not become the controlling power--the Anglo-Saxon is always
+sure to remain that--but as hewers of wood and drawers of water, as
+builders of our railroads, hands upon our farms, workers in our
+factories, and cooks and chambermaids in our houses, a like number of
+American men and women would be displaced, and wages quickly reduced to
+an Asiatic level; and such a time of distress as this country never saw
+would dawn upon us.
+
+There seems to be no assimilation between the Caucasian and the
+Mongolian on the Pacific slope. In the East an Irish girl recently
+married a Chinaman; but in San Francisco, though every other race under
+the sun has united in marriage, the Chinaman is avoided as a pariah.
+White and yellow races may meet and fraternize in business, in pleasure,
+and even in crime; but in marriage never. Chinamen rank among the most
+respected merchants of San Francisco, and these receive exceptional
+respect as individuals; but between the two races as races a great gulf
+is fixed. The Chinese immigrant takes no interest in American affairs.
+His world is on the other side of the Pacific. And the American people
+return the compliment by taking no interest in him. It is undeniable
+that, by a certain class of San Francisco citizens, popularly known as
+Hoodlums, the treatment of the Chinese population has been shameful in
+the extreme. A Chinaman has no rights which a white man is bound to
+respect. Insult, contumely, abuse, cruelty and injustice he has been
+forced to bear at the hands of the rougher classes, without hope of
+redress. He has been kicked, and cheated, and plundered, and not a voice
+has been raised in his behalf; but if he has been guilty of the
+slightest peccadillo, how quickly has he been made to feel the heavy
+hand of justice!
+
+It seems a pity that before the cry was raised with such overwhelming
+force, "The Chinese must go!" some little effort had not been made to
+adapt them to Western civilization. They are quick to take ideas
+concerning their labor; why not in other things? We have received and
+adopted the ignorant, vicious hordes from foreign lands to the east of
+us, and are fast metamorphosing them into intelligent, useful citizens.
+We are even trying our hand upon the negro, as a late atonement for all
+the wrong we have done him. But the Indian and the Chinaman seem to be
+without the pale of our mercy and our Christianity. It might not have
+been possible, but still the experiment was worth the trying, of
+attempting to lift them up industrially, educationally and morally, to a
+level with our own better classes, instead of permitting them to drag us
+down. Returning to their own country, and carrying back with them our
+Western civilization, as a little leaven, they might have leavened the
+whole lump. It is too late for that now, and the mandate has gone forth:
+"The Chinese must go!" Considering all things as they are, rather than
+as they might have been, it is undoubtedly better so, and the only
+salvation of our Pacific States.
+
+San Francisco had, in 1880, a population of 232,956. The commerce is
+very large, and must every year increase as the West is built up. The
+chief articles of export are the precious metals, breadstuffs, wines and
+wool. She has important manufactures, embracing watches, carriages,
+boots and shoes, furniture, iron and brass works, silver ware, silk and
+woolen. California seems peculiarly adapted to the silk industry, and
+her silk manufactures will probably assume marked importance in the
+future. The wonderful climate and unequaled productiveness are
+constantly attracting immigration, and the Pacific Central, which spans
+the continent, has vastly improved on the old methods of travel by
+caravan across the plains and over the mountains.
+
+The population of San Francisco is cosmopolitan to the last degree, and
+embraces natives of every clime and nearly every nation on the globe.
+Yet in spite of this strange agglomeration she is intensely Yankee in
+her go-ahead-ativeness, with Anglo-Saxon alertness intensified. In fact,
+as San Francisco is on the utmost limits of the West, beyond which there
+is nothing but a vast expanse of water until we begin again at the East,
+so she represents the superlative of Anglo-Saxon enterprise and American
+civilization, and looks to a future which shall far outstrip her past.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+SAVANNAH.
+
+ First Visit to Savannah.--Camp Davidson.--The City During
+ the War.--An Escaped Prisoner.--Recapture and Final Escape.--A
+ "City of Refuge."--Savannah by Night.--Position of the City.--
+ Streets and Public Squares.--Forsyth Park.--Monuments.--
+ Commerce.--View from the Wharves.--Railroads.--Founding of the
+ City.--Revolutionary History.--Death of Pulaski.--Secession.--
+ Approach of Sherman.--Investment of the City by Union Troops.--
+ Recuperation After the War.--Climate.--Colored Population.--
+ Bonaventure, Thunderbolt, and Other Suburban Resorts.
+
+
+My first visit to Savannah was made on the twenty-ninth of July, 1864,
+when I was brought there as a prisoner of war. I found the city with its
+business enterprises in a state of stagnation, and the streets thronged
+with soldiers in Confederate uniforms. About four thousand troops were
+doing garrison duty in the city, which was thronged with refugees, and
+the entire population was suffering from a paralysis of all industrial
+enterprises, and from the interruption of its commerce by the Federal
+blockade at the mouth of the river. Camp Davidson, where we were
+confined, was in the eastern part of the city, near the Marine Hospital,
+with Pulaski's Monument in full view, to the westward.
+
+The camp was surrounded by a stockade and deadline, and the principal
+amusement and occupation of the prisoners was the digging of a tunnel
+which was to conduct them to liberty beyond the second line of
+sentinels, without the stockade. But our little camp, like Chicago, had
+a cow for an evil genius. This luckless creature broke through the
+tunnel, as it was nearing completion, and suddenly ended it and our
+hopes together.
+
+The nearest Union forces were at Pulaski, at the mouth of the Savannah
+River, and Savannah was one of the most important military posts of the
+Confederate army. Our treatment at Camp Davidson was exceptionally kind
+and considerate, and the ladies of the city, in giving suitable
+interment to the remains of a Union officer who had died in the camp,
+proved themselves to be possessed of generous hearts. Therefore it was
+with regret that we received the order to leave Savannah for Charleston.
+
+I next visited Savannah a few months later, when the war was drawing to
+a close, after General Sherman and his army had made their successful
+entrance into the town. On the sixteenth of December, myself and a
+companion found ourselves twenty miles from Savannah, after having been
+many weeks fugitives from "Camp Sorghum," the prison-pen at Columbia,
+South Carolina. We were on the Savannah River Road, over which
+Kilpatrick's Cavalry and the Fourteenth Army Corps had passed only a
+week before. Emboldened by our successes and hairbreadth escapes of
+three weeks, when we at last felt that deliverance was close at hand, we
+pursued our way, only to fall suddenly into the hands of the enemy. Hope
+deferred maketh the heart sick. But who shall describe the terrible
+sinking of the heart--the worse than sickness--when hope is thus
+suddenly crushed and turned to certain despair? Our second captivity was
+not, however, of long duration. Death was preferable to bondage under
+such masters. Taking our lives in our hands, a second escape was
+effected, and on December twenty-third, but two days after Sherman's
+occupancy of the city, Savannah proved itself, indeed, a city of
+refuge. Union troops welcomed us with open arms, and we were soon
+despatched northward.
+
+The traveler who visits Savannah to-day will view it under very
+different auspices. The white wings of peace have brooded over it for
+more than half a generation, loyalty has taken the place of treason in
+the hearts of her people, and prosperity is visible on her streets and
+wharves. Let him, if he can, approach the city from the sea, and by
+night. Fort Pulaski stands like a sentinel guarding the entrance to the
+harbor, the lighthouse upon the point keeping a bright eye out to
+seaward. As he glides up the river, which winds in countless lagoons
+around low sea islands covered with salt marshes, at last he will see in
+the distance the lights of the city set on a hill, and of the shipping
+at her feet. A distant city is always beautiful at night, though it may
+be hideous by daylight. Night veils all its ugliness in charitable
+shadows; it reveals hitherto unseen beauties of outline, crowns it with
+a tiara of sparkling gems, and enwraps the whole scene in an air of
+romance and mystery which is charming to the person of poetic nature.
+But whether seen by night or day, Savannah is indeed a beautiful city,
+probably the most beautiful in all the Southern States.
+
+The Savannah River winds around Hutchinson Island, and the city is built
+in the form of an elongated crescent, about three miles in length, on
+its southern shore. It is on a bluff about forty feet above the stream,
+this bluff being about a mile wide at its eastern end, and broadening as
+it extends westward. Surrounding it are the low lands occupied by market
+gardens, for Savannah is a great place for market gardeners, and helps
+to supply the northern market in early spring.
+
+The streets of Savannah are laid out east and west, nearly parallel to
+the river, with others crossing them at right angles, north and south.
+They are wide, and everywhere shaded with trees, many of the latter
+being live oaks, most magnificent specimens of which are found in the
+city. Orange trees also abound, with their fragrant blossoms and golden
+fruit, stately palmettoes, magnolias and oleander, rich in bloom, bays
+and cape myrtles.
+
+The streets running north and south are of very nearly uniform width,
+every alternate street passing on either side of a public square, which
+is bounded on the north and south by narrow streets running east and
+west, and intersected in the centre by a wide street taking the same
+direction. These public squares, twenty-four in number, and containing
+from one and a half to three acres, are a marked feature of the city.
+They are placed at regular intervals, as already described, are
+handsomely inclosed, laid out with walks, shaded with evergreen and
+ornamental trees, and in the spring and summer months are green with
+grass. In a number of these are monuments, while others contain
+fountains or statuary. These squares or plazas are surrounded with fine
+residences, each having its own little yard, beautiful with flowers,
+vines, shrubbery and trees. In these premises roses thrive and bloom
+with a luxuriance unknown in the North, and the stately Camelia
+Japonica, the empress among flowers, grows here to a height of twelve or
+fifteen feet, and blossoms in midwinter. Savannah, the most beautiful
+city of the South, if not in the United States, is more like the wealthy
+suburb of some large city, than like a city itself. It is embowered in
+trees, which are green the whole year around; and shares with Cleveland,
+its northern rival in beauty, the _soubriquet_ of the "Forest City."
+
+Forsyth Park, originally laid out in the southern suburb of the city, is
+now the centre of a populous quarter, abounding in handsome edifices.
+Many of the original trees, the beautiful southern pines, are left
+standing in this park, and other trees and shrubbery added. Sphynxes
+guard the Bull street entrance, and in the centre of the old park, which
+was ten acres in extent, is a handsome fountain, modeled after that in
+the Place de la Concorde, in Paris. This fountain is surrounded by a
+profusion of flowers, while shelled walks furnish pathways through the
+park. It has recently been increased in dimensions to thirty acres; in
+the centre of the new or western portion stands a stately monument in
+honor of the Confederate dead.
+
+Pulaski Monument stands in Monterey Square, the first plaza to the
+northward of Forsyth Park. The steps of the monument are of granite, and
+the shaft of fine white marble, fifty-five feet high, surmounted by a
+statue of Liberty holding the national banner. This monument covers the
+spot where, in 1779, Count Pulaski fell, during an attack upon the city,
+while it was occupied by the British. In Johnson Square, the first
+square south of the river intersected by Bull street, is a fine
+Druidical pile, erected to the memory of General Greene and Count
+Pulaski. The corner-stone of this obelisk was laid in 1825, by
+Lafayette, during his visit to America.
+
+Savannah was founded in 1733, by General James Oglethorpe, whose plan
+has been followed in its subsequent erection. Upon each of the
+twenty-four squares were originally left four large lots, known as
+"trust lots," two on the east and two on the west. We are told by Mr.
+Francis Moore, who wrote in 1736, that "the use of this is, in case a
+war should happen, the villages without may have places in town to bring
+their cattle and families into for refuge; and for that purpose there is
+a square left in every ward, big enough for the outwards to encamp in."
+These lots are now occupied by handsome churches, conspicuous public
+buildings, and palatial private residences, thus securing to all the
+squares a uniform elegance which they might otherwise have lacked.
+
+Bay street is the great commercial street of the city. It is an
+esplanade, two hundred feet wide, upon the brow of the cliff overlooking
+the river. Its southern side is lined with handsome stores and offices.
+At the corner of Bay and Bull streets is the Custom House, with the Post
+Office in the basement. Its northern side is occupied by the upper
+stories of warehouses, which are built at the foot of the steep cliff
+fronting the river. These upper stories are connected with the bluff by
+means of wooden platforms, which form a sort of sidewalk, spanning a
+narrow and steep roadway, which leads at intervals, by a series of
+turns, down to the wharves below. Long flights of steps accommodate
+pedestrians in the same descent. The warehouses just spoken of are four
+or five stories high on their river fronts, and but one or two on the
+Bay.
+
+One should walk along the quay below the city to gain a true idea of the
+extent of its commerce. Here, in close proximity to the wharves, are
+located the cotton presses and rice mills. Here everything is dirty and
+dismal, evidently speaking of better days. The beauty of the city is all
+above. The buildings are some of them substantially built of brick, but
+begin to show the ravages of time. There is an old archway, which once
+had pretensions of its own, but the wall has fallen away, and it is now
+an entrance to nowhere. Yet in spite of this general dilapidation, there
+is all the bustle and activity of a full commercial life. The wharves
+are piled with cotton bales, which have found a temporary landing here,
+awaiting shipment to the North, or perhaps across the sea. For Savannah
+is the second cotton port in the United States. But cotton is not its
+only export. It is the great shipping depot for Southern produce bound
+for Northern markets. Some sheds are filled with barrels of rosin, while
+great quantities of rosin litter the ground. From others turpentine in
+great quantities is shipped to various ports. The lumber trade of the
+city is immense, the pine forests of Georgia furnishing an apparently
+inexhaustible supply. The city is also in the centre of the rice-growing
+region, and sends its rice to feed the North. Steamships from all the
+Atlantic ports lie along its wharves, while those of foreign nations are
+by no means scarce. Vessels of too large a draft to lie alongside the
+wharves discharge and load their freight three miles below the city.
+
+The view from the river front is over the river itself, filled with
+craft of all sorts, from the tiny ferry boat up to the immense ocean
+steamer, across to Hutchinson's Island and the Carolina shore. The
+island, which is two miles long by one wide, has upon it numerous lumber
+yards and a large dry dock. Rice was formerly cultivated upon it, but is
+now forbidden by law, because of its unhealthfulness. The river is about
+seven hundred and twenty feet wide in front of the city, with a depth of
+water at the wharves varying from thirteen to twenty-one feet. The
+portion of South Carolina visible is low and flat, dotted here and there
+with palmetto trees. There is little of the picturesque about this
+river view except the busy life, which keeps in constant motion.
+
+Savannah has extensive railroad connection with all parts of the United
+States. She has direct communication by rail with Vicksburg on the
+Mississippi. She also offers an outlet, by means of railroads, for the
+products of Georgia, Florida, and portions of Alabama and Tennessee. She
+has unbroken railroad connection with Memphis, Mobile, Cincinnati,
+Louisville, and the principal commercial cities of the West and North.
+Her water communication is established with all the great Northern and
+Southern seaboard cities. Her harbor is one of the best and safest on
+the South Atlantic coast, and she is the natural eastern terminus of the
+Southern Pacific Railroad, being almost on the same parallel of latitude
+with San Diego, its western terminus.
+
+The corporate limits of Savannah extend backward from the river about
+one and one-half miles, and embrace a total area of three and one-half
+square miles, but additions are fast being made to the southward, which
+will, in time, greatly extend its area, and add to the population,
+which, in 1880, was 30,681.
+
+Savannah's history goes back to the early days of the colonies. Its site
+marks the first settlement in Georgia. General Oglethorpe, with a
+hundred and fourteen men, women and children, having landed at
+Charleston, in January, 1733, sailed from that port with a plentiful
+supply of provisions and a small body of troops for their protection,
+and landed on Yamacraw Bluff, on the Savannah River, eighteen miles from
+its mouth. On the bluff General Oglethorpe laid out a town and called it
+Savannah, and by the ninth of February the colony commenced the erection
+of buildings. The colony survived various haps and mishaps until 1776,
+when, in the War of the Revolution, the British attacked the city, but
+were repulsed. On December twenty-ninth, 1778, they made a second
+attack, surprised the American forces, who attempted to fly, but were
+mostly killed or captured. On the morning of October fourth, 1779, the
+American and French troops made a direct assault upon Savannah,
+attempting to take it from the British, but were obliged to retire with
+heavy loss. Count Pulaski, a Polish nobleman, who had been expatriated
+for participating in the carrying off of King Stanislaus from his
+capital, was wounded in this battle, and soon afterwards died. Pulaski
+Monument, as already stated, was erected on the spot where he fell.
+
+Savannah received its city charter in 1788. In 1850 it had a little more
+than fifteen thousand inhabitants, and in 1860, 22,292. When Secession
+cast its shadow upon the sunny South, it fell like a pall upon Savannah,
+no less than upon the other Southern cities. All her business was
+suspended, and grass grew in her streets. On the northeast corner of
+Bull and Broughton streets stands the building known as Masonic Hall,
+where, on January twenty-first, 1861, the Ordinance of Secession was
+passed. On the sixteenth of March the State Convention assembled in
+Savannah, adopted the Constitution of the Confederate States of America,
+Georgia being the second State to adopt this Constitution without
+submitting it to the people. The mouth of the river was blockaded by
+United States gunboats, and all commerce prevented. On April fifteenth,
+1862, Fort Pulaski was captured by the Federal troops, and great
+excitement prevailed in the city. Women and children left their homes,
+and property and furniture were sent into the interior.
+
+During the following years a number of unsuccessful attempts were made
+by the Union naval forces to capture the city. In December, 1864,
+Sherman was making his famous march to the sea, and was steadily drawing
+nearer the city, while southern chivalry fled before him, and the now
+emancipated slaves gathered and rolled in his rear like a sable cloud.
+On the twentieth, heavy siege guns were put in position by his forces
+between Kingsbridge and the city; and General Hardee, suddenly awakened
+to a sense of the danger which menaced them, set his troops hurriedly to
+work to destroy the navy yard and government property; while the
+ironclads, the "Savannah" and "Georgia," were making a furious fire on
+the Federal left, the garrison, under cover of darkness and confusion,
+were being transported on the first stage of their journey to
+Charleston. Before leaving, they blew up the iron clads and the
+fortifications below the city. On the twenty-first, General Sherman
+received a formal surrender from the municipal authorities. On the
+following day, the twenty-second, he sent a dispatch to the President,
+presenting him, "as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah." On December
+twenty-eighth, 1864, Masonic Hall, already historical, witnessed a
+gathering of loyal citizens celebrating the triumph of the Union army.
+Sherman, when he entered the city, encamped his forces on the still
+vacant "trust lots." This triumphant conclusion of Sherman's march from
+Atlanta broke the backbone of the Confederacy, and was the prelude to
+the downfall of Richmond and the surrender of Lee's army.
+
+Prosperity eventually followed in the wake of peace. The blockade
+lifted, the deserted wharves were soon filled with the shipping of all
+nations. Her silent and empty streets grew noisy and populous with the
+rush of business, and Savannah is now one of the most prosperous of our
+Southern cities. Her architecture is not striking for either its beauty
+or its grandeur; nevertheless she has many fine public and private
+buildings. The City Exchange is one of the former, and it also possesses
+a historical interest, General Sherman having reviewed his troops in
+front of it in his investment of the city. From its tower the best view
+of the city and neighborhood may be obtained. The Court House, the
+United States and Police Barracks, Artillery Armory, Jail, Chatham
+Academy and St. Andrews' Hall, are all conspicuous buildings. The
+Georgia Historical Society has a large and beautiful hall, with a fine
+library and interesting relics. St. John's and Christ's Episcopal
+churches, the Independent Presbyterian Church, and the Roman Catholic
+Cathedral, are all striking edifices. Trinity Church, in Johnson Square,
+is near the spot where John Wesley delivered his famous sermons. Wesley
+visited Savannah in its early days, having been invited thither by
+Oglethorpe. At Bethesda, about ten miles from the city, where the Union
+Farm School is now located, was the site of the Orphan House established
+in 1740 by Whitefield, Wesley's contemporary and companion.
+
+The benevolent, literary and educational institutions of Savannah are
+numerous and well sustained, some of them being among the oldest in the
+country. The Union Society, for the support of orphan boys, and the
+Female Society, for orphan girls, were founded in 1750.
+
+Savannah is situated just above the 32d parallel of latitude, and
+possesses a mean temperature of 66 deg. Fahr. Being within the influence of
+the Gulf Stream it enjoys all the mildness of the tropics in winter,
+while the summers are less oppressive than at New York or Washington. It
+is a favorite resort for northern invalids, being comparatively free
+from malarious fevers and pulmonary diseases.
+
+Colored people abound in Savannah, constituting about three-eighths of
+the entire population. They do most of the menial work of the city,
+being laborers, waiters in the hotels and public houses, and stevedores
+upon the wharves. It is astonishing to see the number of colored men it
+takes to load and set afloat a steamship; and one of the last sights
+which meets the eye of the traveler and lingers in his memory, as he
+leaves the city by means of the river, is the long row of upturned black
+faces, most of them beaming with good humor and jollity, on the wharf,
+as the vessel casts off her lines and turns her head down stream.
+
+Savannah possesses certain famous suburban attractions, without seeing
+which the traveler can scarcely say he has seen the city. In a bend of
+the Warsaw River, a short distance from its junction with the Savannah,
+and about four miles from the city, is the famous Bonaventure Cemetery.
+A hundred years ago this was the country seat of a wealthy English
+gentleman, who, upon the marriage of his daughter, made her a wedding
+present of the estate. The grounds were laid out in wide avenues, and
+shaded by live oaks, and the initials of the young bride and her husband
+were outlined with trees. In course of time the property was converted
+into a cemetery, and for many years has been devoted to that purpose.
+It is filled with monuments to the dead, some of them bearing historic
+names. Meantime the live oaks have grown to enormous dimensions, their
+gigantic branches meeting and interlacing overhead, forming immense
+arches, like those of the gothic aisles of some great cathedral, under
+and through which are visible bright vistas of the river and the sea
+islands lying beyond. The branches are fringed with pendants of the gray
+Spanish moss, yards in length, which sway softly in the breeze, and by
+their sombre color add to the solemnity of the scene. The steamers on
+the Sea Island route to Fernandina, Florida, pass Bonaventure, and
+afford glimpses of white monuments through the avenues of trees.
+Bonaventure is a favorite drive from the city, and is also reached by
+the horse cars.
+
+Thunderbolt, so named, tradition tells us, because a thunderbolt once
+fell there, is a short distance from Bonaventure, down the Warsaw River,
+and is a popular drive and summer resort. A spring of water flows from
+the spot where the lightning is supposed to have entered the ground.
+Jasper's Spring is two and one-half miles west of the city, and is the
+scene of the exploit of Sergeant Jasper, who at the time of the
+Revolution succeeded, with only one companion, in releasing a party of
+American prisoners from a British guard of eight men. Another
+fashionable drive is to White Bluff, ten miles distant from the city.
+The latter, with Beaulieu, Montgomery and the Isle of Hope, furnish salt
+water bathing and delightful sea breezes for the summer visitors.
+
+There is but one line of horse cars in the city, running on South Broad
+street, and then out the Thunderbolt road to Thunderbolt, Bonaventure,
+and the other suburban resorts. This company, we are told, has been so
+reckless in regard to the limitations of its charter, that the municipal
+government refuses to charter a second road. If our Northern cities were
+as scrupulous, we wonder where their many horse railroads would be!
+
+Since the war Northern men and Northern capital have helped to build up
+the various interests of Savannah. Planing mills, foundries, flouring
+and grist mills, have been established, furnishing employment to a
+considerable number of workingmen. Old channels of commerce have been
+extended, and new ones opened; and the natural advantage of her
+position, added to the public spirit which her citizens manifest in the
+accomplishment of great enterprises of internal improvement, give a
+guarantee of increased prosperity in the future.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+SPRINGFIELD.
+
+ Valley of the Connecticut.--Location of Springfield.--The United
+ States Armory.--Springfield Library.--Origin of the Present
+ Library System.--The Wayland Celebration.--Settlement of
+ Springfield.--Indian Hostilities.--Days of Witchcraft.--Trial
+ of Hugh Parsons.--Hope Daggett.--Springfield "Republican."
+
+
+A journey up the Valley of the Connecticut at this season of the year is
+a positive luxury to the tourist or professional traveler. It is a
+broad, beautiful road, winding through hill and dale, with grand old
+forests and mountains in the background, their foliage tipped with
+variegated colors by the fingers of Autumn, as an artist would put a
+finishing touch to his landscape.
+
+A ride of twenty-five miles northward from Hartford brought us to
+Springfield, the most enterprising and important town in Western
+Massachusetts. The United States Armory, located here, gives to the city
+a national consequence. No city in the Union did more to crush out the
+Rebellion than Springfield, through her Armory. Two or three thousand
+men were kept constantly employed here during the war, turning out the
+various arms used in the Federal service. The force now employed is
+considerably less than in war times. All hands are engaged just now upon
+the Springfield rifled musket, which has recently been adopted by the
+Government. The military precision with which every detail is attended
+to is the admiration of all who are shown through the Armory.
+
+A visit to the City Library, on State street, cannot fail to interest
+every person who feels a pride in the public institutions of New
+England. A fine, large, brick and stone building, with plain exterior
+and artistically finished interior, is the Springfield Public Library.
+Over forty thousand volumes cover its shelves, and are so systematically
+arranged that the librarian or his assistants can produce at once any
+work named in the catalogue. The oblong reading room is furnished with
+black walnut tables; and winding staircases, painted in blue and gold,
+lead from the columned alcoves to the galleries above.
+
+The library owns some very old and valuable books of engravings. A room
+on the first floor is devoted to stuffed birds, geological specimens,
+preserved snakes, and a wonderful assortment of curious relics obtained
+from all parts of the world. Icelandic snow shoes and Hindoo gods occupy
+places on the same shelf, in peaceful proximity, and catamounts,
+paralyzed in the act of springing, glare at you harmlessly behind their
+glass cases. Patriotic mementoes are not wanting, as the bullet-riddled
+battle-flags of Massachusetts regiments will testify.
+
+The free public library system is distinctively a New England
+institution, and wields a mighty influence for good. It was originated
+in 1847, by Rev. Francis Wayland, President of Brown University,
+Providence, Rhode Island. On Commencement day of that year Mr. Wayland
+expressed a wish to help the inhabitants of the town of Wayland,
+Massachusetts, to a public library, and tendered a donation of five
+hundred dollars to the town for that purpose, upon the condition that
+another five hundred should be added by the town. The required fund was
+quickly raised, by subscription, and President Wayland immediately
+placed his donation in the hands of one of their prominent citizens,
+Judge Mellen. This was the beginning of the movement which resulted in
+the "Library Act," of May, 1851, in the State of Massachusetts.
+
+The people of Wayland bought their library and provided a room in the
+"Town House" for its safe keeping. A librarian was chosen, whose salary
+was paid by the town, and the institution made its first delivery of
+books August seventh, 1850. Rev. John B. Wright was a member of the
+Massachusetts Legislature, from Wayland, during the session of 1851, and
+through his agency the Act "to authorize cities and towns to establish
+and maintain public libraries" was passed. A "Library Celebration" took
+place in Wayland, August twenty-sixth, 1851, and was a most interesting
+affair. Thus it came to pass that through the practical working of this
+man's idea public libraries were established, not only all over the
+State of Massachusetts, but throughout New England.
+
+Springfield was founded in 1636 by William Pyncheon, who with seven
+other men settled here, with their families, on May fourteenth of that
+year. They were bound together by mutual contract, with the design of
+having their colony consist of forty families. There was an especial
+provision that the number should never exceed fifty.
+
+The early prosperity of Springfield was considerably retarded by Indian
+hostilities.
+
+In October, 1675, the brown warriors of King Phillip made a descent upon
+the place, burning twenty-nine houses and killing three citizens--one of
+them a woman. The timely arrival of Major Pyncheon, Major Treat and
+Captain Appleton, with their troops, prevented further destruction and
+repulsed the attack of the Indians. Springfield was also the scene of
+operations during the troubles of 1786-87. At that time, General
+Shepperd was posted here, for the defence of the Armory.
+
+Thus, through much tribulation, has the thriving town attained its
+present prosperity.
+
+In its infant days, Springfield cherished a strong belief in witchcraft,
+as the following incident will testify: In the same year that Hartford
+set such a bad example to her northern neighbor on the Connecticut, by
+hanging Mrs. Greensmith, Springfield, not to be outdone, preferred a
+charge of witchcraft against one Hugh Parsons--a very handsome and
+pleasing young man, it seems, with whom all the women fell in love. Of
+course, this was not to be tolerated by the male population of the
+place, who hated him, as a natural consequence; and, accordingly, the
+handsomest man in Springfield was indicted and tried, on the grave
+accusation of being in league with the powers of evil. It is not
+surprising that the jury found him guilty. But, through some influence
+not explained, the judge, Mr. Pyncheon, stayed proceedings in his behalf
+until the matter could be laid before the General Court, in Boston.
+There the decision of the Springfield jury was reversed, and Mr. Parsons
+set at liberty. Whether after this his dangerous attractions were duly
+husbanded, or whether he went on, as of old, winning such wholesale
+admiration, we are not informed.
+
+One of the sensations of the hour during my sojourn in Springfield, was
+an encounter between the State Street Baptist Church and Hope Daggett,
+one of its members. The disaffected sister had at sundry times and in
+divers manners made herself so obnoxious to the congregation, by her
+strong-minded peculiarities, that an officer was called upon the scene
+and requested to eject by force, if necessary, the eccentric and
+uncompromising Hope. Officer Maxwell, suiting the action to the word,
+seized the unruly sister, and without stopping to consider the sudden
+fame which this act would launch upon him, thrust her into the street,
+amid the cheers and taunts of friends and enemies. Now it was the
+peculiar misfortune of Miss Daggett to have a wooden leg, and on the day
+following this tragic affair the press of Springfield was devoted to
+various accounts of the engagement, in which Maxwell and the wooden leg
+figured alternately.
+
+I cannot leave Springfield without some mention of its leading paper,
+the Springfield _Republican_, which for many years has been one of the
+solid papers of the Bay State, and a representative organ in politics
+and literature. Its editor, Samuel Bowles, is an energetic business
+manager and a stirring politician, who has fought his way up from
+obscurity to a position in the front rank of American journalism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Approach to St. Louis.--Bridge Over the Mississippi.--View of
+ the City.--Material Resources of Missouri.--Early History of St.
+ Louis.--Increase of Population.--Manufacturing and Commercial
+ Interests.--Locality.--Description of St. Louis in 1842.--
+ Resemblance to Philadelphia.--Public Buildings.--Streets.--
+ Parks.--Fair Week.--Educational and Charitable Institutions.--
+ Hotels.--Mississippi River.--St. Louis During the Rebellion.--
+ Peculiar Characteristics.--The Future of the City.
+
+
+The visitor to St. Louis, if from the east, will probably make his
+approach over the great bridge which spans the Mississippi. This bridge,
+designed by Captain Eads, and begun in 1867, was completed in 1874, and
+is one of the greatest triumphs of American engineering. It consists of
+three spans, resting on four piers. The central span is 520 feet in
+width, and the side ones 500 feet each. They have a rise of sixty feet,
+sufficient to permit the passage of steamers under them, even at high
+water. The piers are sunk through the sand to the bed-rock, a distance
+of from ninety to one hundred and twenty feet, the work having been
+accomplished by means of iron wrought caissons and atmospheric pressure.
+Each span consists of four ribbed arches, made of cast steel. The bridge
+is two stories high, the lower story containing a double car track, and
+the upper one two horse-car tracks, two carriageways and two foot-ways.
+Reaching the St. Louis shore, the car and road ways pass over a viaduct
+of five arches, of twenty-seven feet span each, to Washington avenue,
+where the railway tracks run into a tunnel 4,800 feet long, terminating
+near Eleventh street. Bridge and tunnel together cost eleven millions of
+dollars.
+
+ [Illustration: THE LEVEE AND GREAT BRIDGE AT ST. LOUIS.]
+
+This wonderful structure, which has few if any equals upon the
+continent, will impress the traveler with the commercial magnitude and
+enterprise of the great western city to which it forms the eastern
+portal. Looking from the car window he will see, first, the Mississippi,
+which, if at the period of low water, disappoints him with its apparent
+insignificance; but which, if it be at the time of its annual flood, has
+crept, on the St. Louis side, nearly to the top of the steep levee, and
+has filled up the broad valley miles away on the hither side, a rushing,
+turbulent river, turbid with the yellow waters of the Missouri, which,
+emptying into it twenty miles above, have scarcely, at this point,
+perfectly mingled with the clearer Mississippi. He will see next the
+river front of St. Louis--a continuous line of steamboats, towboats and
+barges, without a sail or mast among them; the levee rising in a steep
+acclivity twenty feet above the river's edge; and multitudinous mules,
+with their colored drivers, toiling laboriously, and by the aid of much
+whipping and swearing, up or down the steep bank, carrying the
+merchandise which has just been landed, or is destined to be loaded in
+some vessel's hold. Beyond the river rises the city, terrace above
+terrace, its outlines bristling with spires, and prominent above all,
+the dome of the Court House.
+
+St. Louis is situated in the very heart of the great Mississippi Valley,
+and a large share of its rich agricultural products and mineral stores
+are constantly poured into her lap. Pilot Knob and Iron Mountain, both
+containing inexhaustible supplies of the useful ore, are not far
+distant. The lead districts of Missouri include more than 6,000 square
+miles. In fifteen counties there is copper. In short, within one hundred
+miles of St. Louis, gold, iron, lead, zinc, copper, tin, silver,
+platina, nickel, emery, cobalt, coal, limestone, granite, pipe-clay,
+fire-clay, marble, metallic paints and salt are found, in quantities
+which will repay working. In the State there are twenty millions acres
+of good farming lands; five millions of acres are among the best in the
+world for grapes; and eight millions are particularly suited to the
+raising of hemp. There is, besides, a sufficiency of timber land. With
+all these resources from which to draw, it would be surprising if St.
+Louis did not become a leading city in the West. Situated, as she is, on
+the Mississippi River, about midway between its source and its mouth,
+the junction of the Missouri twenty miles above, and that of the Ohio
+about one hundred and seventy-five miles below, and being the river
+terminus of a complicated system of western railways, the towns and
+cities, and even the small hamlets of the north, south and west, and to
+a limited extent of the east also, all pay her tribute. As Chicago is
+the gateway to the East, by means of the great chain of lakes and rivers
+at whose head she sits, so St. Louis holds open the door to the South
+and the East as well, through the Mississippi and the Ohio rivers.
+
+In many respects the business rival of Chicago to-day, it has a history
+reaching half a century further back. While Chicago was still a howling
+wilderness, its only inhabitants the warlike Pottawatomies, who
+sometimes encamped upon the shores of its lake and river, St. Louis had
+a local habitation and a name. On February fifteenth, 1764, Pierre
+Laclede Siguest, an enterprising Frenchman, established at this point a
+depot for the furs of the vast region watered by the Mississippi and
+Missouri, and gave it the name of St. Louis. This was done by permission
+of the Governor General of Louisiana, which was then a French province.
+In the course of the year cabins were built, a little corn planted and
+the Indians placated. The Frenchmen seemed to have gotten along with the
+Indians tolerably well in those days. They had no hesitation in marrying
+squaws, even though they already possessed one lawful wife; they were
+good tempered and merry, and attempted no conversion of the Indians with
+a Bible in one hand and a sword in the other. So the two races got along
+nicely together.
+
+The peace of 1763 gave the country east of the Mississippi to the
+English, and the Frenchmen who had settled upon the Illinois made haste
+to remove to St. Louis, to avoid living under the rule of their "natural
+enemy." This was scarcely accomplished when the more terrible news
+reached them that Louis XV had ceded his possessions west of the
+Mississippi to Spain. For the next thirty years the town was a Spanish
+outpost of Louisiana, in which province no one not a Catholic could own
+land.
+
+To go to New Orleans and return was a voyage of ten months; but in that
+early day, and under such surprising difficulties, St. Louis began its
+commercial career. It exported furs, lead and salt, and imported the few
+necessaries required by the settlers, and beads, tomahawks, and other
+articles demanded by the Indians in exchange for furs. In 1799 the
+inhabitants numbered 925, a falling off of 272 from the previous year.
+In 1804, St. Louis passed to the United States, together with the whole
+country west of the Mississippi. In 1811 the population had increased to
+1400, and there were two schools in the town, one French and one
+English. In 1812 the portion of the territory lying north of the
+thirty-fifth degree of latitude was organized as Missouri Territory. In
+1813 the first brick house was erected in St. Louis. In 1820 its
+population was 4,928. In 1822 it was incorporated as a city.
+
+After the cession of Louisiana to the United States, the law forbidding
+Protestant worship, and requiring owners of land to profess the Catholic
+faith, was repealed, and men American born but of English descent began
+to pour into the town. In 1808 a newspaper was established, and in 1811
+many of the old French names of the streets were changed to English
+ones. In 1812 the lead mines began to be worked to better advantage, on
+a larger scale, and agriculture assumed increasing importance. In 1815
+the first steamboat made its appearance.
+
+In 1820 St. Louis cast its vote for slavery, and settled the question
+for Missouri. The population then was 4,928, which in 1830 had increased
+to 5,852; 924 additional inhabitants in ten years! From 1830 to 1860 its
+population trebled every ten years, the census returns of the latter
+year giving it 160,773. In 1870 it had nearly doubled again, the number
+being 310,864 inhabitants. According to the United States Census report
+of 1880, the population was 350,522, which made St. Louis the sixth city
+in the Union. Since that time it has been rapidly on the increase.
+
+St. Louis is among the first of our cities in the manufacture of flour,
+and is a rival of Cincinnati in the pork-packing business. It has
+extensive lumber mills, linseed-oil factories, provision-packing
+houses, manufactures large quantities of hemp, whisky and tobacco, has
+vast iron factories and machine shops, breweries, lead and paint works.
+In brief, it takes a rank second only to New York and Philadelphia in
+its manufactures, to which its prosperity is largely due. In 1874 the
+products of that year were valued at nearly $240,000,000, while it
+furnished employment to about 50,000 workmen. Great as are Chicago's
+manufacturing interests, St. Louis excels her in this respect, while she
+rivals the former city in her commercial interests. The natural
+commercial entreport of the Mississippi Valley, the commerce of St.
+Louis is immense. It receives and exports to the north, east and south,
+breadstuffs, live stock, provisions, cotton, lead, hay, salt, wool,
+hides and pelts, lumber and tobacco.
+
+St. Louis is perched high above the river, so that she is beyond the
+reach of all save the highest floods of that most capricious stream. She
+is built on three terraces, the first twenty, the second one hundred and
+fifty, and the third two hundred feet above low-water mark. The second
+terrace begins at Twenty-fifth street, and the third at Cote Brillante,
+four miles west of the river. The surface here spreads out into a broad,
+beautiful plain. The highest hill in the neighborhood of the city was
+the lofty mound on the bank of the river, a relic of prehistoric times,
+and from which St. Louis derived its name of the "Mound City." Greatly
+to the regret of antiquarians a supposed necessity existed for the
+removal of this mound, and now no trace of it is left.
+
+In 1842 Charles Dickens published his _American Notes_, in which is
+found the following description of St. Louis:
+
+"In the old French portion of the town the thoroughfares are narrow and
+crooked, and some of the houses are very quaint and picturesque, being
+built of wood, with tumble-down galleries before the windows,
+approachable by stairs, or rather ladders, from the street. There are
+queer little barber shops and drinking houses, too, in this quarter; and
+abundance of crazy old tenements, with blinking casements, such as may
+be seen in Flanders. Some of these ancient habitations, with high garret
+gable windows perking into the roofs, have a kind of French spring about
+them; and, being lopsided with age, appear to hold their heads askew,
+besides, as if they were grimacing in astonishment at the American
+improvements."
+
+There is nothing of this now seen in St. Louis, except in the narrower
+streets along the river, which remain a lasting relic of the ancient
+city. Yankee enterprise has obliterated, in the appearance of the city
+at least, all trace of its French and Spanish origin. The work of
+renovation must have commenced soon after Dickens' visit, for Lady
+Emeline Wortley, visiting St. Louis in 1849, describes it as follows:--
+
+"Merrily were huge houses going up in all directions. From our hotel
+windows we had a long view of gigantic and gigantically-growing-up
+dwellings, that seemed every morning to be about a story higher than we
+left them on the preceding night; as if they had slept, during the
+night, on guano, like the small boy in the American tale, who reposed on
+a field covered by it, and whose father, on seeking him the following
+day, found a gawky gentleman of eight feet high, bearing a strong
+resemblance to a Patagonian walking stick."
+
+ [Illustration: SHAW'S GARDEN AT ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI.]
+
+If Chicago is a western reproduction of New York, with its
+characteristic alertness preternaturally developed, St. Louis takes
+Philadelphia for her prototype. The merchants and statesmen plodding
+wearily across the continent during the latter part of the last century
+and early in this, found Philadelphia the chief city of the country, and
+went home with their minds filled with the distinguishing features of
+that city. These they reproduced, as far as was practicable, in their
+own young and growing town. They laid it out with regularity, the
+streets near the river, which describes a slight curve, running parallel
+to it. Further back, they describe straight lines, while the streets
+running from east to west are, for the most part, at right angles with
+those they cross. Imitating Philadelphia, the streets are named
+numerically from the river. Those crossing them have arbitrary names
+given them, while many Philadelphia nomenclatures, such as Market,
+Chestnut, Pine, Spruce, Poplar, Walnut and Vine, are repeated. The
+houses are also numbered in Philadelphia fashion, the streets parallel
+with the river being numbered north and south from Market street, and
+those running east and west taking their numbers from the river. In
+numbering, each street passes on to a new hundred; thus No. 318 is the
+ninth house above Third street on one side of the way.
+
+Not only in these superficial matters is Philadelphia imitated, but the
+resemblance is preserved in more substantial particulars. Many of the
+buildings are large, old-fashioned, square mansions, built of brick with
+white marble trimmings. There is less attempt at architectural display
+than in Chicago, apparently the main thought of the builders being to
+obtain substantiality. Yet there are many handsome buildings, both
+public and private. One of the finest structures of its kind in the
+United States is the Court House, occupying the square bounded by
+Fourth, Fifth, Chestnut and Market streets. It is in the form of a Greek
+cross, of Grecian architecture, built of Genevieve limestone, and is
+surmounted by a lofty iron dome, from the cupola of which it is possible
+to obtain an extensive view of the city and its surroundings. The
+building cost $1,200,000. The fronts are adorned with beautiful
+porticoes. The Four Courts, in Clark avenue, between Eleventh and
+Twelfth streets, is a handsome and spacious building, constructed of
+limestone, at a cost of $1,000,000. A semi-circular iron jail is in its
+rear, so constructed that all its cells are under the observation of a
+single watchman. A Custom House and Post Office has recently been
+erected, at the corner of Olive and Eighth streets. It is of Maine
+granite, with rose-colored granite trimmings, three stories in height,
+with a French roof and Louvre dome, and occupies an entire square. The
+cost of the structure was $5,000,000.
+
+The Chamber of Commerce is the great commercial mart of the city, the
+heart of enormous business interests, whose arteries sometimes pulsate
+with feverish heat, and whose transactions affect business affairs to
+the furthest extent of the country. The edifice is the handsomest of its
+kind in America. It is five stories high, wholly built of gray
+limestone, and cost $800,000. The main hall of the Exchange is two
+hundred feet long, one hundred wide, and seventy high. In the gallery
+surrounding it strangers can at any time witness the proceedings on the
+floor, and watch how fortunes are made and unmade.
+
+The most imposing and ornate building of the city, architecturally
+speaking, is the Columbia Life Insurance building, which is of
+rose-colored granite, in the Renaissance style, four stories high, with
+a massive stone cornice representing mythological figures. The roof is
+reached by an elevator, and affords a fine view.
+
+The city abounds in handsome churches. Most prominent among them all is
+Christ Church (Episcopal) at the corner of Thirteenth and Locust
+streets. It is in the cathedral gothic style, with stained-glass windows
+and lofty nave. The Catholic Cathedral, on Walnut street, between Second
+and Third streets, is an imposing structure with a front of polished
+freestone faced by a Doric portico. The Church of the Messiah
+(Unitarian), at the corner of Olive and Ninth streets, is a handsome
+gothic structure. The Jewish Temple, at the corner of Seventeenth and
+Pine streets, is one of the finest religious edifices in the city. There
+are many others which will challenge the visitor's attention and
+admiration as he passes through the streets of the city.
+
+The wholesale business of St. Louis is confined to Front, Second, Third
+and Main streets. Front street is one hundred feet wide, and extends
+along the levee, being lined with massive stores and warehouses. Fourth
+street contains the leading retail stores, and on every pleasant day it
+is filled with handsome equipages, while on its sidewalks are found the
+fashion and beauty of the city. Washington avenue is one of the widest
+and most elegant avenues in St. Louis, and west of Twenty-seventh street
+contains many beautiful residences. Pine, Olive and Locust streets,
+Chouteau avenue and Lucas Place, are also famed for their fine
+residences. Lindell or Grant avenue, running north and south, on the
+western boundary of the city, and slightly bending toward the river, is
+its longest street, being twelve miles in length.
+
+The corporate limits of St. Louis extend eleven miles along the river,
+and about three miles inland. The densely built portion of the city is
+about six miles in length by two in width. Its public parks are one of
+its striking features. They embrace an aggregate of about 2,000 acres.
+The most beautiful is Lafayette Park, lying between Park and Lafayette,
+Mississippi and Missouri avenues. In it are a bronze statue of Thomas H.
+Benton, by Harriet Hosmer, and a bronze statue of Washington. It is for
+pedestrians only, is elaborately laid out and ornamented, and is
+surrounded by magnificent residences. Missouri Park is a pretty little
+park at the foot of Lucas Place, containing a handsome fountain. St.
+Louis Place, Hyde Park and Washington Square are all attractive places
+of resort. Northern Park, on the bluffs to the north of the city, is
+noted for its fine trees, and contains 180 acres. Forest Park is the
+great park of the city. It lies four miles west of the Court House, and
+contains 1350 acres. The Des Pares runs through it, and the native
+forest trees are still standing. With great natural advantages, it
+requires only time and art to number it among the handsomest parks in
+the country. Tower Grove Park, in the southwest part of the city,
+contains 227 acres, offers delightful drives among green lawns and
+charmingly arranged shrubbery.
+
+Adjoining this park is Shaw's Garden, which contains 109 acres. It
+possesses a peculiar interest, from the manner in which it is arranged.
+It is divided into three sections, the first being the Herbaceous and
+Flower Garden, embracing ten acres, and including every flower which can
+be grown in the latitude of St. Louis, besides several greenhouses
+containing thousands of exotic and tropical plants. The second section,
+called the Fruticetum, comprises six acres devoted to fruit of all
+kinds. The Arboretum, or third section, includes twenty-five acres, and
+contains all kinds of ornamental and fruit trees. The Labyrinth is an
+intricate, hedge-bordered pathway, leading to a summer-house in the
+centre. There are also a museum and botanical library. This garden is
+entirely the result of private taste and enterprise, having been planned
+and executed by Henry Shaw, who has thrown it open to the public, and
+intends it as a gift to the city.
+
+Bellefontaine Cemetery is the most beautiful in the West. It is situated
+in the northern part of the city, about four and one-half miles from the
+Court House, and embraces 350 acres. It contains a number of fine
+monuments, while the trees and shrubbery are most tastefully arranged.
+Calvary Cemetery, north and not far distant, is nearly as large and
+quite as beautiful. Here, in these quiet cities of the dead, far from
+the bustle of the great town, the men and women of this western
+metropolis, whose lives were passed in turmoil and activity, find at
+last that rest which must come to all.
+
+The people of St. Louis are supplied with water from the river, the
+waterworks being situated at Bissell's Point, three and one-half miles
+north of the court house. Two pumping engines, each with a daily
+capacity of 17,000,000 gallons, furnish an ample supply for all the
+needs of the great city.
+
+Fair week, which is usually the first week in October, is the great
+holiday and gala season of St. Louis. The writer of this article was
+once so fortunate as to visit the city early in this week. Every train
+of cars on the many lines which centre at St. Louis, and every
+steamboat which came from up or down the river, brought its living
+freight of men and women, who were out for a week's holiday, and, it may
+have been, paying their annual visit to the greatest city west of the
+Mississippi. The country roads leading to town were black with vehicles
+of all descriptions, and laden with men and merchandise. The laborers
+and mules upon the levee were busier than ever, receiving and
+transporting the articles to be exhibited and sold. Every hotel was
+crowded, and the surplus overflowed into boarding and lodging houses, so
+that their keepers undoubtedly reaped a golden harvest for that one
+week, at least. The streets were thronged with an immense and motley
+multitude: business men, on the alert to extend their trade and add to
+their gains; working women, who found an opportunity for a brief
+holiday; ladies of fashion who viewed the scene resting at their ease in
+their carriages; farmers from the rural districts, looking uncomfortable
+yet complaisant in their Sunday suits, and trying to take in all there
+was to see and understand; their wives, old-fashioned and countrified in
+their dress, and with a tired look upon their faces, which this week
+given up to idleness and sight-seeing could not quite dispel; sporting
+men, easily recognizable by their flashy dress and "horsey" talk;
+gamblers and blacklegs by the score, whose appearance and manners were
+too excessively gentlemanly to pass as quite genuine, and whose gains
+during the week were probably larger and more certain than those of any
+other class; western men, with their patois, borrowed apparently from
+the slang of every nation on the globe; Southerners, with their long
+hair, slouched hats and broad accent; river hands, whose most
+noticeable accomplishments seemed to be disposing of tobacco and
+inventing new oaths; negroes, whose facile natures entered heartily into
+the occasion, and on whose sleek, shining countenances the spirit of
+contentment was plainly visible; eastern men, with the Yankee
+intonation; Germans, in great numbers, patronizingly endorsing their
+adopted country, and selling lager beer with stolid content; Irishmen,
+whose preference was whisky, and who were ever ready for fun or a fight;
+beggars, plying their vocation with an extra whine, adopted to conceal
+an unwonted tendency to cheerfulness; magnates, who looked pompous and
+conscious of their own importance, but who were jostled and pushed with
+the democratic disregard for rank and station which characterizes an
+American crowd.
+
+Probably in no city in the Union would one find quite so cosmopolitan a
+multitude, representing all sections and all nationalities so
+impartially. In the business and populous centre of our country, here
+came all classes and peoples who had been born under, or had sought the
+protection of, our flag, to worship one week at the shrines of Ceres and
+Pomona.
+
+The fair grounds of the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical
+Association are three miles northwest of the Court House, and embrace
+eighty-five acres handsomely laid out and containing extensive
+buildings. The Amphitheatre will seat 40,000 persons. The street cars
+leading to these grounds were at all times filled with people, and in
+addition there was a constant procession of carriages, wagons and carts,
+going and returning. Within the enclosure the dense throng surged and
+swayed like a human whirlpool. The displays in the agricultural and
+mechanical departments were something astonishing; for where in the
+world is there such grain grown and in such quantities, as in the
+Mississippi and Missouri valleys? Where are there such fat oxen, such
+sleek, self-satisfied cows, with such capacity for rich milk? Horses,
+hogs and sheep were all of the best, and indicated that the West is very
+far advanced in scientific stock raising. The farm implements displayed
+all sorts of contrivances for lightening and hastening the farmer's
+toil. It needed but a glance to show that farming in this region was no
+single-man, one-horse affair.
+
+In art the East as yet excels the West; for in the scramble after
+material gain the artistic nature has not been greatly cultivated, and
+its expressions are, for the most part, crude. But they give promise of
+future excellence. St. Louis has no picture gallery worthy the name, but
+excells in scientific and educational institutions.
+
+The Mercantile Library, at the corner of Fifth and Locust streets,
+contains 50,000 volumes, and its hall is decorated by paintings, coins
+and statuary, among which latter may be mentioned Miss Hosmer's
+life-size statue of Beatrice Cenci and Oenone; a bronze copy of the
+Venus de Medici, a sculptured slab from the ruins of Nineveh, and marble
+busts of Thomas H. Benton and Robert Burns. The library with its reading
+room is free to strangers.
+
+Besides the library there is a public school library of 38,000 volumes;
+an Academy of Science, founded in 1856, with a large museum and a
+library of 3,000 volumes; and a Historical Society, founded in 1865,
+with a valuable historical collection. Washington University, organized
+in 1853, embraces the whole range of university studies except theology.
+With it is connected the Mary Institute, for the education of women, the
+Polytechnic School, and the Law School. The public school system of St.
+Louis is one of the best in the country, and its school-houses are
+commendably fine. The Roman Catholic College of the Christian Brothers
+has about four hundred students, and a library of 10,000 volumes.
+Concordia College (German Lutheran), established in 1839, has a library
+of 4,500 volumes. Besides the numerous public schools, the Roman
+Catholics, who embrace a majority of the inhabitants, have about one
+hundred parochial, private and conventual schools. They have also a
+number of convents, charitable homes, asylums and hospitals.
+
+The hotels, chief amongst which are the new Southern Hotel, Lindell
+House, Planters' Hotel, Laclede Hotel and Barnum's Hotel, will compare
+favorably, in point of attendance, comfort and elegance, with any in the
+country. Horse cars traverse the city in every direction, rendering all
+points easily accessible, and carriages are in waiting at the depots and
+steamboat landings. Ferries ply continually to East St. Louis, on the
+Illinois shore, from the foot of Carr street, north of the bridge, and
+from the foot of Spruce street, south of it, the two points of departure
+being about a mile apart.
+
+So long as the Mississippi River washes the levee in front of the city,
+the citizens of St. Louis are in little danger of long remaining dull,
+for want of excitement. That river, one of the uneasiest of water
+courses, constantly furnishes fresh themes of interest, and even of
+anxiety. It has a singular penchant for a frequent change of channels,
+and occasionally threatens to desert to Illinois and leave St. Louis an
+inland town, with its high levee a sort of rampart to receive the
+mocking assaults of Chicago. Then, every spring, there is the annual
+freshet, which, once in ten or fifteen years, creeps up over the top of
+the levee, and finds its way into cellars and first floors of stores and
+warehouses. Occasionally there is a severe winter, when ice is formed
+upon the river as far south even as St. Louis; and when it breaks up in
+the spring, mischief is sure to ensue. A hundred steamboats are in
+winter quarters along the levee, their noses in the sand, and their
+hulls extending riverward, fixed in the ice. At last the great mass of
+congealed water, extending up the river hundreds of miles, begins to
+move down stream. The motion is at first scarcely perceptible; but,
+suddenly, the ice cracks and breaks, and fragments begin to glide
+swiftly with the current of the river. The various masses create
+conflicting currents, and, presently, the surface of the stream is like
+a whirlpool. Some boats are crushed like egg shells between the floes;
+cables snap, and others are drawn out into the midst of the whirling
+waters and are fortunate indeed if they are not overwhelmed or forced
+upon the ice. Meantime, consternation reigns upon the levee. The
+multitudes are powerless to prevent, yet make frantic and futile efforts
+while they watch, the disaster. At the breaking up of the ice in 1866,
+seventeen steamboats were crushed and sunk in a few minutes. Then there
+are other river disasters; steamboats burned; others struck on snags and
+sunk; and now and then a boiler explosion makes up the tale of horrors
+and prevents the Mississippi from ever becoming monotonous or
+uninteresting.
+
+St. Louis was most unfavorably affected by the war, and made to expiate
+her political sin of 1820. On the border land between the North and the
+South, the conflict was carried on in her very midst. Sectional strife
+was most bitter and keen. There was no neutrality, and there could be
+none. All were either for or against; families were divided in deadly
+strife; and while the city suffered to a terrible degree from this
+condition of affairs, in back counties whole sections were depopulated.
+The population being largely southern, either by birth or descent, its
+sympathies were with the South. The class truly loyal was the Germans,
+who numbered about 60,000 of the population, and who were characterized
+by the Secessionists as the "D---- Dutch." The blockade of the river
+reduced the whole business of the city to about a third of its former
+amount. Yet, when the war was ended, St. Louis was quick to recover her
+prostrated energies. In 1866, and but two years after the war, the city
+did more business than in any preceding year; and, relieved from the
+incubus of slavery, which had retarded its progress, it aroused itself
+to new life.
+
+With the Quaker-like simplicity of its outward appearance, its absence
+of business rush, and its general tranquillity, St. Louis' resemblance
+to the Quaker City ceases. It is a town of composite character, but from
+its earliest existence has been under Roman Catholic domination. Even
+now the Roman Catholic element predominates in its population. And its
+French and Spanish founders, though their quaint buildings are torn down
+and replaced by more modern ones, and their very streets re-named, have
+left their impress upon the city. Its many places of amusement, compared
+to its population, its general gayety, its stores closed by sunset in
+winter, and before sunset in summer, its billiard rooms open on Sunday,
+and its ball-playing on the same day, all give indication of its being
+the home of a people whose ancestors had no New England prejudices
+against worldly amusements, and in favor of sobriety, decorum,
+industry, and the observance of the Sabbath.
+
+St. Louis presents a pleasing contrast to many other western cities. Its
+prosperity is substantial--not a sham. The capital which has paid for
+these costly places of business and elegant residences, and is invested
+in these gigantic enterprises, has been created out of the immense
+material wealth of the State--not borrowed on a factitious credit. Its
+merchants do not make princely fortunes in a day, but what they acquire
+they keep. With so satisfactory a past, the errors of its youth atoned
+for, the future of St. Louis cannot fail to be a brilliant one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+SYRACUSE.
+
+ Glimpses on the Rail.--Schenectady.--Valley of the Mohawk.--
+ "Lover's Leap."--Rome and its Doctor.--Oneida Stone---The Lo
+ Race.--Oneida Community.--The City of Salt.--The Six Nations.--
+ The Onondagas.--Traditions of Red Americans.--Hiawatha.--
+ Sacrifice of White Dogs.--Ceremonies.--The Lost Tribes of
+ Israel.--Witches and Wizards.--A Jules Verne Story.--The Salt
+ Wells of Salina.--Lake Onondaga.--Indian Knowledge of Salt
+ Wells.--"Over the Hills and Far Away."--A Castle.--Steam
+ Canal Boats.--Adieux.--Westward Ho!
+
+
+The distance from Albany to Syracuse by rail, on the line of the New
+York Central, is about one hundred and forty-two miles, or reckoned by
+language on the dial, between six and seven hours.
+
+Schenectady, the first stopping point on the route outward, was once
+hovered under the motherly wings of Albany--her lawful progeny. The
+embryo city, however, had aspirations of her own, and set up in the
+world for herself. She now rejoices in a population of about twenty-five
+thousand, and has separated herself from the maternal skirt by seventeen
+miles of intervening country. Union College, the _alma mater_ of many of
+the sons of New York and her sister States, is located at this point.
+
+The route from Albany to the junction of the Watertown and Ogdensburg
+Road, at Rome, takes us through the Valley of the Mohawk--one of the
+loveliest valleys in the State. At Little Falls the scenery is wild and
+rugged, and looking out from the car window to the opposite hillside,
+where the waters break into foam over the rocks, set in a dark framework
+of pines, the imaginative traveler conjectures at once that this must be
+the scene of the "Lover's Leap"--a bit of romance rife in this region.
+But the Mohawk rushes on, unmindful of those legendary lovers; the
+heartless conductor, who cares nothing about dreams, shouts "all
+aboard!" from the platform, and the screech of the engine whistle echoes
+down the valley, as the train is once more in motion.
+
+At Utica we make a longer stop. This point is the largest place between
+Albany and Syracuse, and is as handsome a city as sits on the banks of
+the Mohawk. The Black River Railroad joins the main line of the New York
+Central here, and it is also the location of the State Lunatic Asylum.
+
+Rome comes next in order, in importance and population, and is the last
+place of any note on the road to Syracuse. It is a stirring little city
+of about ten or eleven thousand inhabitants, and at least some of its
+citizens have mastered the art of advertising, if one may judge from the
+pamphlets which flood the arriving and departing trains. We are
+repeatedly made aware of the fact that one of the dwellers in Rome is a
+doctor, and that he doats on curing--not corns, but cancers.
+
+The Midland Road from Oswego, and the Watertown Road--those connecting
+arterial threads from Lake Ontario and Northern New York--unite with the
+main artery, the Central, here, and the flow of human freight down these
+channels is continuous and unceasing.
+
+The second station from Rome, on the road to Syracuse, is Oneida--so
+named from the tribe of red men who, less than a century ago, occupied
+this particular region. A tradition once existed among the Oneidas that
+they were a branch of the Onondagas, to whom they were allied by
+relationship and language. Long ago they lived on the southern shore of
+Oneida Lake, near the mouth of the creek, but afterwards their
+habitation was made higher up the valley. The famous "Oneote or _Oneida
+Stone_ became their talisman and the centre of their attractions. Many
+of their tribe were distinguished as orators and statesmen.
+
+The Oneida "Community" live about two miles back from the station, and,
+notwithstanding their peculiar religious belief and social practices,
+they have achieved a reputation for quiet thrift, industry and harmony,
+which their more Puritanic neighbors would do well to emulate.
+
+But, at last, our train enters the outskirts of Syracuse, and
+penetrating the heart of the city, rumbles inside the gates of the New
+York Central Station at this place. Outside, all is hurry and bustle,
+and confusion, as we descend the steps and elbow our way through the
+crowd, to run the gauntlet of hack drivers and baggage expressmen, with
+their plated caps and deafening calls.
+
+Syracuse is sometimes known as the Central City, on account of its
+location near the geographical centre of New York. It was first settled
+in 1787, and did not pass the limits of a small village until the
+completion of the Erie canal, in 1825. Two canals and three or four
+lines of railway now centre here, and contribute to the growth of this
+enterprising city. The region surrounding Syracuse is rife with the
+romantic history of that once powerful Indian Confederacy known as the
+Six Nations, now fast fading from the memory of men. The site of their
+ancient Council House was on Onondaga Creek, a few miles distant from
+the city, and is still held sacred to their traditions by the remnant of
+the lost tribes now occupying the Indian reservation. The Onondagas
+became the leading nation of the Confederacy. No business of importance,
+touching the Six Nations, was transacted, except at Onondaga. They held
+the key of the great Council House; they kept the sacred council fire
+ever burning. From what portion of the country they emigrated before
+occupying this region is unknown, but there is a very early tradition
+among them that, many hundred moons ago, their forefathers came from the
+North, having inhabited a territory along the northern banks of the St.
+Lawrence. After a lapse of time there was an exodus of the powerful
+tribe to the hills and hollows of Onondaga.
+
+The River God of this nation was named Hiawatha--which meant "very
+wise." He always embarked in a white canoe, which was carefully guarded
+in a lodge especially set apart for that purpose. Their favorite
+equipments were white. White plumes, from the heron, were worn in their
+head-bands when they went on the war path; white dogs were sacrificed.
+The yearly sacrifice of the dogs, among the Onondagas, was a ceremony of
+great importance with the tribe, and occurred at one of the five stated
+festivals of the Six Nations. On the great sacrificial day it was the
+habit of the people to assemble at the Council House in large numbers.
+Early in the morning, immense fires were built, guns were discharged,
+and loud hallooing increased the noise. Half a cord of wood, arranged in
+alternate layers, was placed near the Council House, by a select
+committee of managers, for the sacrificial offering. The two officiating
+priests for the occasion, as well as the high priest, were dressed in
+long, loose robes of white. At about nine o'clock in the morning the two
+priests appear. The white dogs following them are painted with red
+figures, and adorned with belts of wampum, feathers and ribbons. The
+dogs are then lassooed and suffocated, amid yells and the firing of
+guns. After some intervening ceremonies, the details of which are too
+long for recital here, a procession is formed, led by the priests in
+white, followed by the managers, bearing the dogs on their shoulders. A
+chant is sung as the procession marches around the burning pile three
+successive times; the dogs are then laid at the feet of the officiating
+priest, a prayer is offered to the Great Spirit and the high priest,
+lifting the dogs, casts them into the fire. After this, baskets of herbs
+and tobacco are thrown, at intervals, into the fire, as propitiating
+sacrifices.
+
+Their idea of these sacrifices was, that the sins of the people were, in
+some mysterious manner, transferred yearly to the two priests in white,
+who, in turn, conveyed them to the dogs. Thus the burnt offering
+expiated the sins of the people for a year.
+
+These ideas and customs are so singularly similar to the ancient Jewish
+religious rites as to suggest a possible origin from the same source.
+The mystical council fire of the Six Nations, which was kept always
+burning by the Onondagas, who had charge of it, and which, if
+extinguished, was supposed to prophesy the destruction of the nation,
+may have a deeper meaning than that attached to it by the chiefs
+themselves. It may possibly point to a common parentage with the
+ever-burning flame in the Vestal Temple at Rome, whose eclipse
+endangered the safety of the city. Another point of resemblance may be
+noted. Time, which is reckoned among the Red men by moons, also
+suggests the Jewish year, which began with the new moon, and was
+reckoned by lunar months.
+
+The Six Nations had a firm belief in witches and wizards, and executed
+them, on the discovery of their supposed witchcraft, with a zeal and
+spirit worthy of our early Christian fathers. One old Indian used to
+relate a story something on the Jules Verne order. He said that, as he
+stepped out of his cabin one evening, he sank down deep into an immense
+and brilliantly-lighted cavern, full of flaming torches. Hundreds of
+witches and wizards were there congregated, who immediately ejected him.
+Early next morning he laid the matter before the assembled chiefs at the
+Council House, who asked him whether he could recognize any whom he saw?
+The sagacious Red man thought he could, and singled out many through the
+village, male and female, who were doomed to an untimely execution, on
+the evidence of this person's word.
+
+The Senacas, another numerous and powerful nation of the Confederacy,
+were always noted for the talent and eloquence of their orators and
+statesmen. Corn Planter, Red Jacket, and other celebrities, came of this
+tribe.
+
+Syracuse is celebrated for its salt, the country over; and the most
+singular thing about it is that the salt wells surround a body of fresh
+water. This sheet of water bears the name of Onondaga Lake, and is six
+miles long by one mile wide. It is about a mile and a half from the
+heart of the city. A stratum of marl, from three to twelve feet thick,
+underlaid by marly clay, separates the salt springs from the fresh
+waters of the lake. The wells vary in depth, from two hundred to three
+hundred feet, and the brine is forced from them, by pumps, into large
+reservoirs, which supply the evaporating works. The salt is separated
+from the water partly by solar evaporation and partly by boiling. The
+reservoirs for the solar salt evaporation cover about seven hundred
+acres of land. The brine is boiled in large iron kettles, holding about
+a hundred gallons, which are placed in blocks of brick work, in one or
+two long rows, the whole length of the block. It takes about
+thirty-three and a fourth gallons of brine to make a bushel of salt,
+which will average from fifty to fifty-six pounds in weight.
+
+These salt wells were known to the Indians at a very early
+period--Onondaga salt being in common use among the Delawares in 1770,
+by whom it was brought to Quebec for sale.
+
+Le Moyne, a Jesuit missionary, who had lived among the Hurons, and who
+first came to Onondaga in 1653, with a party of Huron and Onondaga
+chiefs, is supposed to be the first white man who personally knew about
+the springs, though Father Lallemant had previously written of them. In
+a letter which Colonel Comfort Tyler wrote to Dr. Jeremiah Van
+Rensselaer, in 1822, the first manufacture of salt at this place by the
+whites, in 1788, is described. He says: "In the month of May, 1788, the
+family, wanting salt, obtained about a pound from the Indians, which
+they had made from the waters of the springs upon the shore of the lake.
+The Indians offered to discover the water to us. Accordingly, I went
+with an Indian guide to the lake, taking along an iron kettle of fifteen
+gallons capacity. This he placed in his canoe and steered out of the
+mouth of Onondaga Creek, easterly, into a pass since called Mud Creek.
+After passing over the marsh, then covered with about three feet of
+water, and steering toward the bluff of hard land (now that part of
+Syracuse known as Salina), he fastened his canoe, pointed to a hole,
+apparently artificial, and said: "There is the salt!"
+
+Salina, or the first ward, as it is frequently spoken of, lies partly
+upon the shores of this lovely lake of Onondaga, and enjoys the
+advantages of a close proximity to the saline atmosphere of the wells.
+The drives in the vicinity of the lake and about the neighboring
+localities afford an ever-shifting panorama of beautiful views, with
+glimpses of the blue Onondaga at all points. On a breezy day, in the
+early part of May, 1875, when the air was soft with hints of coming
+summer, and the violets along the river banks were just putting on their
+hoods of blue, I took one of those long and delightful drives which so
+exhilarates the blood and gives a kind of champagne sparkle to the mind.
+If there are any known remedial agents which can possibly be an
+improvement on pure air and sunshine, will you tell us what they are,
+Dr. Dio Lewis? My companion was keen-witted and full of jollity; we had
+a spirited animal, and miles upon miles of space quickly vanished behind
+us, as we sped onward over the smooth roadway. The hills seemed to open
+wide their portals and close again as we passed; the valleys allured us
+with their romantic, winding roads, and Lake Onondaga, viewed from all
+points of the compass, tossed itself into a multitude of little waves
+which sparkled in the sunshine like a thousand diamonds. The sky,
+changeful as April, alternated between floating fields of atmospheric
+blue and pillars of gray cloud. As we rounded the last curve of the
+lake, the tall chimneys and long, low buildings of the salt works at
+Salina came into view, forming a more conspicuous than elegant feature
+of the landscape.
+
+The principal street for retail business in Syracuse is named Salina,
+and it always wears an air of brisk trade and enterprise. The large dry
+goods houses of McCarthy and of Milton Price are located on this street.
+Some of the public edifices are built of Onondaga limestone, quarried a
+few miles out of the city. It makes very handsome building material, as
+the Court House and other structures will testify. The ranking hotels of
+Syracuse are the Vanderbilt and Globe, though the Remington, Syracuse
+and Empire Hotels are well-kept and well-conducted houses.
+
+The Erie Canal runs through the heart of the city, and the bridges over
+it are arranged with draws. The first steam canal boat I ever saw lay
+moored at this place, at the corner of Water and Clinton streets. It was
+gay with new paint and floating pennons, and created quite a sensation
+on its first trip out. It belonged to Greenway, the great ale man, and
+was named after his daughter.
+
+The High School, on West Genesee street, has a delightful location on
+the banks of Onondaga Creek, and combines with its other advantages that
+of a public library. It has a free reading room, thrown open to the city
+at large, and a choice collection of many thousand volumes adorn its
+shelves. Sitting at the open window and listening to the noisy waters of
+the creek as it flows past, intermingled with an occasional bird carol
+overhead, I could almost imagine myself out in the heart of the country,
+away from the struggling masses of the crowded marts, in their mad race
+after wealth--with nothing more inharmonious around me than the bird
+orchestra of some imaginary June sky, the low sweep of waters and the
+sound of the summer wind among the pines.
+
+Syracuse rates herself sixty thousand strong, and I am unable to say
+whether the hard figures will bear her out in this assertion. Perhaps,
+however, a small margin of egotism ought to be subtracted from our
+estimate of ourselves, especially when "ourselves" means a city.
+
+James street is decidedly the handsomest thoroughfare in Syracuse. It is
+wide, well paved, and two miles or more in length. On it are
+congregated, with a few exceptions, the finest residences of the city.
+These are surrounded, for the most part, by spacious grounds, and some
+of them by groves of primeval forest growths. The street is an inclined
+plane on one side, with a gentle declivity on the other. From its top,
+quite an extensive prospect opens to the view, taking in most of the
+city of salt, and its enclosing amphitheatre of hills. Looking down the
+street, and over across the valley, the gray turrets of Yates' Castle
+can be seen, nearly hidden by its surrounding trees.
+
+"A castle?" I hear my imaginary reader question. "Yes," I answer, a
+castle,--the real, genuine, article--towers, turrets, gate-keeper's
+lodge and all; nothing lacking but moat and drawbridge, to transport one
+to the times of tournament and troubadours--of knight-errantry and fair
+ladies riding to the chase with hawk and hound.
+
+A Latin motto, on the coat of arms adorning the arched gateway, points
+to an ancestry of noble blood. But, alas for greatness! not even the
+lodge-keeper's family knew the meaning of the Latin inscription. We
+learned, however, that the armorial emblems were of English origin, and
+belonged, possibly, to the times of the royal Georges. The grounds about
+the castle are quite in keeping with the building itself. Winding roads,
+rustic bridges, statuary, summer-houses and fountains, fitly environ
+this antique pile.
+
+Just opposite this place, on the hill-top, stands the Syracuse
+University--its white walls outlined in bold relief against the sky. It
+is a Methodist institution, and its chief office is to prepare young men
+for the ministry, and teach the youthful idea how to shoot, in
+accordance with modern theology. The location is breezy enough, and high
+enough, to satisfy almost any one's aspirations, and, if height has
+anything to do with ideas, the thoughts of these young students ought to
+be well-nigh heavenly.
+
+But, at last, we are compelled to say good-bye to Syracuse, and all its
+pleasant associations, to say nothing of its salt. Westward the star of
+Empire takes its way, and we have engaged a seat on the same train. It
+is with real regret that we part company with these cities of our
+beloved New York--Syracuse not the least among them. But the arrival of
+the midnight "Lightning Express" for Rochester cuts short our musings,
+and we are soon whirling away in the darkness, leaving the country of
+the Onondagas far behind us, slumbering in the arms of night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+TORONTO.
+
+ Situation of Toronto.--The Bay.--History.--Rebellion of 1837.--
+ Fenian Invasion of 1866.--Population.--General Appearance.--
+ Sleighing.--Streets.--Railways.--Commerce.--Manufactures.--
+ Schools and Colleges.--Queen's Park.--Churches.--Benevolent
+ Institutions.--Halls and Other Public Buildings.--Hotels.--
+ Newspapers.--General Characteristics and Progress.
+
+
+Toronto, the capital of the Province of Ontario, is situated on the
+northern shore of Lake Ontario, on a beautiful and nearly circular bay,
+about five miles in length, formed by a long, narrow, curved tongue of
+land, extending out into the lake in a southwest direction. This harbor
+is capable of receiving the largest vessels upon the lake, and is
+defended at its entrance by a fort upon the extreme end of the
+peninsula, which is called Gibraltar Point. This fort was thoroughly
+repaired in 1864, and mounted with the most efficient modern ordnance.
+
+Toronto was founded in 1794, by Governor Simcoe, who gave it the name of
+York. In 1813, it was twice captured by the Americans, who burned the
+public buildings and destroyed the fortifications. It was incorporated
+as a city in 1834, when its name was changed to Toronto, an Indian word,
+signifying "The place of meeting." It was the headquarters of the
+Rebellion in 1837, when Sir Francis Head, then Governor of Upper Canada,
+dissolved the House, for having stopped the supplies, as a retaliatory
+measure upon his refusal to grant an elective legislative council. Sir
+Francis had sent away from Upper Canada the whole of the Queen's army,
+but putting himself at the head of the militia, he succeeded in
+suppressing the insurrection. The city also suffered severely from the
+fire of 1849. It has no manufactures of any importance, but, like most
+of Western Canada, is chiefly dependent upon agriculture.
+
+The growth of Toronto has been more rapid than that of any other city in
+Canada. Though of such recent origin compared with many Canadian towns,
+it is now second only to Montreal in size and population, the former
+having increased from twelve hundred in 1837 to upwards of eighty
+thousand at the present time. The site of the city is low, the
+surrounding country being level, but free from swamp and perfectly dry.
+The ground rises gently from the shores of the lake. The scenery in the
+vicinity is tame and comparatively monotonous, though not unpleasing.
+The city lies along the shores of the lake for something over two miles,
+and extends inward about a mile and a half.
+
+As one approaches Toronto its outlines appear picturesque, being varied
+and broken by an unusual number of handsome spires. The traveler will be
+pleasantly surprised, as he enters the city, at the extent and
+excellence of its public edifices, the number of its churches, and its
+general handsome and well-to-do aspect. Many of the houses and business
+structures are built of light-colored brick, having a soft and cheerful
+appearance. The streets are laid out regularly, crossing each other at
+right angles, and, as a general thing, are well paved. In the winter
+time they are filled with sleighs, and the air is alive with the music
+of sleigh-bells. These sleighs are, some of them, most elegant in form
+and finish, and provided with most costly furs. Every boy has his
+hand-sled or "toboggan." At the same season of the year skating upon the
+bay is a favorite amusement. King and Yonge streets are the leading
+thoroughfares and fashionable promenades, being lined with handsome
+retail stores which would do credit to any city in America. Other
+important business streets are Front, Queen, York, Wellington and Bay.
+
+Five railways centre at Toronto, connecting it with every section of
+Canada, the West and the South. The principal of these are the Grand
+Trunk and Great Western railways, which connect the city by through
+lines with the East and West. While navigation is open magnificent
+steamers connect it with all points on the lake, and carry on an
+extensive commerce. It imports large quantities of lumber, both
+manufactured and unmanufactured; wheat and other grain, soap, salt and
+glue; while foundries, distilleries, breweries, tanneries, rope-walks,
+paper and flour mills, furnish products which reach markets throughout
+the Provinces and States.
+
+Toronto is the centre of the Canadian school system, and its educational
+institutions are numerous and of the highest order. It has Normal and
+Model schools, in the first of which teachers exclusively are trained.
+These schools, with the Educational Museum, built in the plain Italian
+style, are picturesquely grouped in park-like grounds, on Church street.
+The Museum contains a collection of curiosities, and a number of good
+paintings and casts. The University of Toronto exhibits the finest
+buildings in the city, and the finest of their kind in America. They
+stand in a large park, approached by College avenue, half a mile in
+length, and shaded by double rows of trees. The buildings, which are
+of Norman architecture, of gray rubble stone, trimmed with Ohio and Caen
+stone, form the sides of a large quadrangle. It was founded in 1843;
+possesses a library of twenty thousand volumes, and a fine museum of
+natural history, and has attached to it an observatory. Knox College,
+Presbyterian, is situated a short distance north of the University, and
+is a large building, in the Collegiate-Gothic style. Trinity College, in
+Queen street west, overlooks the bay, and is an extensive and
+picturesque structure, turreted and gabled, and surrounded by extensive
+grounds. Upper Canada College is found in King street near John.
+
+ [Illustration: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, CANADA.]
+
+Adjoining the University grounds is Queen's Park, embracing the most
+elevated quarter of the city, and including fifty acres, handsomely laid
+out. In this park a brownstone shaft, surmounted by a colossal statue of
+Britannia, perpetuates the memory of the Canadians who fell in repelling
+the Fenian invasion in 1866. This park is from one hundred to two
+hundred feet above the level of the lake, and is surrounded by handsome
+public buildings and private residences.
+
+The Episcopal Cathedral of St. James, at the corner of King and Church
+streets, is a spacious edifice, in the early English style, with lofty
+tower and spire, and elaborate open roof. It was built in 1852, and is
+surrounded by well shaded grounds. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of St.
+Michael, fronting on Bond street, is a large, decorated Gothic
+structure, with stained windows, and a spire two hundred and fifty feet
+high. The Wesleyan Methodist Church, in McGill street, is the finest
+church of that denomination in America. Its massive tower is surmounted
+by graceful pinnacles, and its interior is tastefully and richly
+decorated. Knox's Church has a beautiful spire. One of the finest
+church edifices in the Dominion is the Jarvis street Baptist Church, in
+the decorated Gothic style. St. Andrews Presbyterian is a massive stone
+structure, which dates back to the Norman style of architecture.
+
+Toronto contains many benevolent institutions, hospitals and asylums.
+Prominent among them is the Provincial Lunatic Asylum, a large and
+handsome building, situated west of the city, and surrounded by two
+hundred acres of handsomely ornamented grounds. The General Hospital is
+a fine structure, east of the city, in Don street, near Sumach.
+
+The Normal School Building, with its beautifully laid out grounds, is
+one of the most attractive spots in the city, and the building is said
+to be the largest of the kind in America. There is very little fine
+scenery in the environs.
+
+One of the most strikingly beautiful buildings of Toronto is Osgood
+Hall, in Queen street, an imposing structure, of elegant Ionic
+architecture, the seat of the Superior Law Courts of Upper Canada, and
+containing an extensive law library. St. Lawrence Hall, in King street,
+is a stately structure, in the Italian style, surmounted by a dome,
+containing a public hall and reading-room. Masonic Hall, an attractive
+stone building, is in Toronto street. The city contains two Opera
+Houses: the Grand, capable of seating two thousand persons, and the
+Royal, with accommodations for about fifteen hundred persons. The Post
+Office, a handsome stone building, stands near the head of Toronto
+street. The Custom House is of cut stone, of imposing proportions,
+extending from Front street to the Esplanade. The City Hall stands in
+Front street near the Lake Shore, in the midst of an open square, and
+is an unpretentious structure, in the Italian style. Near by is the
+extensive Lawrence Market. The Court House is in Church street.
+
+Of the hotels, the Rossin House, corner of King and York streets;
+Queen's Hotel, in Front street; the American House, in Yonge street; and
+the Revere House, in King street, are the most noteworthy.
+
+Toronto takes a front rank in literature, a large number of newspapers
+and periodicals, daily, weekly, and monthly, being issued from its
+presses. It is unlike, in many respects, its sister cities of Lower
+Canada. It has more of a nineteenth century air, and more of American
+and less of European characteristics, than Montreal and Quebec. The
+French Canadians form a smaller proportion of its inhabitants. The
+people in the streets are well dressed and comfortable looking, stout
+and sturdy, though not so tall, on an average, as the people of New
+York. An educated population is growing up, and Toronto already ranks
+well, in general intelligence and public enterprise, with other cities
+of like magnitude in the States while it outranks all others on Canadian
+soil.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+WASHINGTON.
+
+ Situation of the National Capital.--Site Selected by
+ Washington.--Statues of General Andrew Jackson, Scott,
+ McPherson, Rawlins.--Lincoln Emancipation Group.--Navy Yard
+ Bridge.--Capitol Building.--The White House.--Department of
+ State, War and Navy.--The Treasury Department.--Patent Office.--
+ Post Office Department.--Agricultural Building.--Army Medical
+ Museum.--Government Printing Office.--United States Barracks.--
+ Smithsonian Institute.--National Museum.--The Washington
+ Monument.--Corcoran Art Gallery.--National Medical College.--
+ Deaf and Dumb Asylum.--Increase of Population.--Washington's
+ Future Greatness.
+
+
+Washington, the Capital of the United States of America, is situated in
+the District of Columbia, on the left bank of the Potomac, between the
+Anacostia or eastern branch of that river, and about one hundred and
+eighty-five miles from the mouth of Chesapeake Bay. At an early period,
+indeed, before the clamor of war had fairly ceased, or the proud
+standard of England had been driven from its shores, the necessity of a
+territory which should be under the exclusive jurisdiction of Congress
+had engaged the attention of the founders of the new Republic. The
+possession of such a territory formed an important feature in the
+debates upon the framing of the Constitution, and it was only
+forty-eight days after the last act of ratification that the Capital
+City was, by solemn enactment of Congress, located on the eastern shore
+of the beautiful Potomac.
+
+The site of the Capital was selected by General Washington, the beloved
+first President of the Republic, and covers an undulating tract on the
+east bank of the river. From the rugged elevations on the borders of
+Rock Creek, a crescent-shaped ridge crosses the northern portion of the
+city, which is abruptly sundered, as it were, to admit the passage of a
+small stream called the Tiber. From this point the ridge ascends,
+gradually expanding into the extensive plateau of Capitol Hill,
+overlooking the Anacostia on the east. Within this encircling ridge the
+surface declines, in gentle slopes and terraces, down to the banks of
+the Potomac. From the lower falls of the river at Georgetown, beyond the
+outlying spurs of the Blue Ridge, a chain of low wooded hills extend
+across the north, which, continuing along the opposite shores of the
+Anacostia and Potomac, emerge again in the hills on the Virginia side of
+that river, presenting the appearance of a vast amphitheatre, in the
+centre of which stands the Capitol.
+
+The mean altitude of the city is about forty feet above the ordinary low
+tide of the Potomac; the soil on which it is built is generally a
+yellowish-clay intermixed with gravel. In making excavations for wells
+and cisterns, near New Jersey avenue, trees were found, in a good state
+of preservation, at a depth of from six to forty-eight feet below the
+surface.
+
+The Tiber, a little stream, with its tributaries, passes through the
+city. Tradition affirms that this stream received its name more than a
+century before Washington city was founded, in the belief and with the
+prediction that there would arise on its banks, in the future, a Capital
+destined to rival in magnificent grandeur that which crowned the banks
+of its great historic namesake. The streams forming this river have
+their source among the hills to the east, and enter the city in several
+directions, the principal branch winding off to the southwest, around
+the base of Capitol Hill, across Pennsylvania avenue, to the Botanical
+Gardens. Originally its course continued along the Mall and emptied into
+the Potomac immediately west of the Washington Monument, but
+subsequently it was diverted into the canal, the filling up of which
+caused still other changes. The Tiber and its tributaries were utilized
+by diverting them into the sewerage system of the central and southern
+portions of the city; consequently, although the stream traverses one of
+the most populous sections, its course is not visible, the current
+flowing beneath heavy brick arches upon which buildings have been
+erected, and avenues, streets and parks laid out. In primitive days the
+banks of the Tiber were covered with heavy forests, while shad, herring
+and other fish, in their season, were taken from its waters, under the
+very shadow of the hill upon which the Capitol now stands.
+
+There is no city in the Union which presents to the thoughtful and truly
+patriotic American so many objects of interest as does the city of
+Washington. First of all, this feeling is intensified by the fact of its
+having been located and founded by the great, immortal _Pater PatriA|_
+whose illustrious name it has the honor of bearing. A plan of the city
+was prepared in 1791, by Peter L'Enfant, a French engineer of fine
+education and decided genius, who had served in the Continental army
+with such distinction as to attract the attention of General Washington.
+He was assisted in the work by the advice and suggestions of Thomas
+Jefferson, who, while diplomatic representative of the United States,
+had studied the plans of the principal cities visited in Europe, with a
+view to the future wants of his country, and was prepared, by the aid of
+his personal knowledge of their details, to contribute valuable
+information and suggestions.
+
+It is evident that the predominating object in designing a plan for the
+city, was first to secure the most eligible situations for the different
+public buildings, and to arrange the squares and areas so that the most
+extended views might be obtained from every direction. The amplest
+arrangements were also made by the founders of Washington for its rapid
+growth and expansion, while they evidently designed and anticipated its
+being magnificently built up and embellished. The indifference of the
+Government and people has permitted these suggestions to remain too long
+unheeded; yet it is consoling to those possessing an intelligent
+patriotism and proud love of country, to know that the neglected
+condition of the Capital of the United States for nearly three-fourths
+of a century was not the result of any defect in the design originated
+by its noble founders.
+
+Any one who has visited the royal residence of the kings of France, will
+immediately recognize the resemblance between the plans of Le Notre for
+Versailles, and L'Enfant for Washington City. The grand avenues, de
+Sceaux and St. Cloud, diverging from the _Cour Royal_, are reproduced in
+Pennsylvania and Maryland avenues, radiating from the east front of the
+Capitol. Its broad thoroughfares are among the principal attractions of
+Washington, and are the finest possessed by any city in the world. The
+avenues, twenty-one in number, radiate from principal centres and
+connect different parts of the city; the original number was thirteen,
+named for the States constituting the Union at the time the Capital was
+laid out. The first in importance is Pennsylvania avenue; its width
+varies from one hundred and sixty to one hundred and eighty feet; its
+length is four and one-half miles, traversing the finest business
+portion of the city, as well as being the most popular and fashionable
+thoroughfare for driving. The War and Treasury departments, Washington
+Circle, and the President's House, are each located on this superb
+street, which, winding up and around Capitol Hill, finds its terminus on
+the banks of the Anacostia.
+
+The spaces at the intersection of the more important avenues form what
+are called _Circles_. Washington Circle, at the intersection of
+Pennsylvania and New Hampshire avenues, contains the equestrian statue
+of General Washington, which was ordered by Congress, and cannon donated
+for the purpose, in 1853. The great hero is represented at the crisis of
+the battle of Princeton; the horse seems shrinking from the storm of
+shot and shell and the fiery conflict confronting him; his rider
+exhibits that calm equanimity of bearing so eminently his
+characteristic. This statue was executed by Clark Mills, at a cost of
+fifty thousand dollars.
+
+At the western base of Capitol Hill stands the naval monument, termed in
+the resolutions of Congress, the "_Monument of Peace_." It was designed
+by Admiral Porter, and erected by subscriptions started by him among the
+officers, midshipmen and men of his fleet, immediately after the fall of
+Fort Fisher. The height of this monument is forty-four feet; it is built
+of Carrara marble and cost $44,000. The surmounting figures represent
+History recording the woes narrated by America, who holds a tablet in
+her hand on which is inscribed: _They died that their country might
+live._ This monument is exceedingly well executed, and was considered,
+in Rome, one of the finest ever sent to America.
+
+Lafayette Square, comprising seven acres lying north of the President's
+House, is beautifully laid out with rustic seats, graveled walks, and
+adorned with a rare variety of trees and shrubbery. In the centre of
+this square stands an equestrian statue of General Andrew Jackson, by
+Clark Mills, originally contracted for by the friends and admirers of
+the General composing the Jackson Monument Association, who subscribed
+twelve thousand dollars towards its erection. Congress afterward granted
+them the brass guns and mortars captured by General Jackson at
+Pensacola. In 1850 an additional donation of guns was made; in 1852
+another appropriation sufficient to complete the work was granted, and
+Congress assumed possession of the monument. The figure of the horse is
+weighted and poised without the aid of rods, as in the celebrated
+statues of Peter the Great, at St. Petersburg, and Charles I., at
+London. This was the first application of the principle, and resulted in
+the production of one of the most graceful and astonishingly beautiful
+works of its kind in existence. The statue is of colossal size, weighing
+fifteen tons, and was erected at a cost of $50,000.
+
+_Scott Square_, lying north of the White House, contains a bronze statue
+of General Winfield Scott, made of cannon captured by the General during
+his Mexican campaign, and donated by Congress in 1867. The work was
+executed by Brown, of New York; with the pedestal, it is twenty-nine
+feet high, and cost $20,000. The General is represented in full uniform,
+mounted on his war-horse, surveying the field of battle.
+
+The _Circle of Victory_, at the intersection of Massachusetts and
+Vermont avenues, contains a bronze equestrian statue of General George
+H. Thomas, of the Army of the Cumberland. The statue confronts the
+South, in the direction of the General's native hills of Virginia. On
+the site of this monument a salute of eight hundred guns was fired in
+commemoration of the capture of Petersburg and Richmond on the third of
+April, 1865; and, a few days later, five hundred guns were fired from
+the same spot in honor of General Lee's surrender and the fall of the
+Southern Confederacy.
+
+On East Capitol street, at a distance of about one mile from the
+Capitol, is a square comprising six and a half acres, beautifully laid
+out and adorned with trees, shrubbery and walks. In this enclosure a
+bronze group called _Emancipation_ has been erected; Abraham Lincoln is
+represented holding in his right hand the proclamation which gave
+freedom to the negroes of the South. A slave kneels at his feet, with
+manacles broken, and in the act of rising as they fall from his hands.
+This monument is said to have been built exclusively of funds
+contributed by the negroes liberated by Lincoln's proclamation of
+January first, 1863. The first contribution of five hundred dollars was
+made, it is stated, by Charlotte Scott, formerly a slave in Virginia,
+out of her first earnings as a freed-woman, and consecrated by her, on
+hearing of President Lincoln's death, to aid in building a monument to
+his memory. The interesting memorial was unveiled with appropriate
+ceremonies, on the anniversary of his assassination, April fourteenth,
+1876, the President and his Cabinet, foreign ministers, and a vast
+concourse of white and colored citizens being present. Including the
+pedestal of Virginia granite, the structure is twenty-two feet in
+height, and cost $20,000. It was in this square, now called _Lincoln
+Square_, that, according to the founder's original plan of
+embellishment, a grand _Historic Column_ was to have been erected, to
+serve as an itinerary column, from which all geographical distances
+within the boundaries of the United States should be calculated.
+
+_McPherson Square_, on Vermont avenue, contains a bronze equestrian
+statue of General James Birdseye McPherson, who was killed near Atlanta,
+at the head of the Army of the Tennessee, in 1864. He is represented in
+full uniform, with field-glasses in hand, surveying the battle-ground. A
+vault was constructed beneath the statue, for the purpose of receiving
+his body, but the devoted opposition of the people prevented its removal
+from his native place.
+
+Farragut and Rawlins squares contain respectively colossal, but not
+equestrian statues of Admiral Farragut and General Rawlins.
+
+Mount Vernon Place, at the intersection of New York and Massachusetts
+avenues, is handsomely laid out and planted with trees; in the centre,
+occupying an elevated circular space, is a superb fountain of bronze.
+
+There are numerous smaller spaces at the intersection of various streets
+and avenues, called triangular reservations, all of which are highly
+adorned with trees, shrubs and beautiful small fountains.
+
+The Government Propagating Gardens cover an area of eighty acres on the
+banks of the Potomac, south of Washington's Monument. The Botanical
+Garden, an instructive place of public resort, lies at the foot of
+Capitol Hill, between Pennsylvania and Maryland avenues. North of the
+Conservatory is found the Bartholdi Fountain, which is supplied with
+water from the aqueduct, its highest stream reaching an altitude of
+sixty-five feet. This fountain is the work of Frederic Augustus
+Bartholdi, a French sculptor and pupil of Scheffer. It will be
+remembered by all who visited the National Centennial Exposition at
+Philadelphia, where it was exhibited, and afterward purchased by
+Congress for the inadequate sum of six thousand dollars. The lower basin
+is twenty-six feet in diameter, and from its centre rises a pedestal
+bearing aquatic monsters and fishes spouting water; three female
+caryatides, eleven feet high, support a basin thirteen feet in diameter;
+a smaller basin above this is upheld by three infant Tritons, the whole
+being surmounted by a mural crown. Twelve lamps, arranged around the
+lower basin, and lighted by electricity, give the most beautiful effects
+of light and water. On the plaza in front of the Treasury Department, is
+another fine fountain, in the form of an immense granite urn, the
+_tassa_ of which measures sixteen feet in diameter.
+
+Immediately in front of Washington city the Potomac expands into a
+broad, lake-like body of water, a mile and a quarter wide and at least
+eighteen feet deep. The Anacostia River, at its mouth, is almost the
+same width and fully as deep. Improving the navigation of the Potomac
+and the construction of a canal to the head waters of the Ohio River,
+were enterprises that began with the founding of the National Capital.
+
+In 1872, Congress appointed a board of officers with a view to the
+improvement of the channel of the river and water fronts of Washington
+and Georgetown, for commercial purposes, as well as the reclamation of
+the malaria-infected marshes opposite the city. These improvements will
+necessitate the rebuilding of Long Bridge for railroad and ordinary
+traveling purposes, and reclaim more than a thousand acres of valuable
+land. It is proposed to remove the National Observatory and use the
+earth for filling up the marshes.
+
+The _Navy Yard Bridge_ crosses the Anacostia River, at the foot of
+Eleventh street, having supplanted the wooden structure built in 1819,
+over which Booth made his escape after the assassination of Lincoln.
+
+The various buildings occupied by the Executive and Legislative branches
+of the Government are worthy of especial notice. The _Capitol_ is
+considered one of the largest and finest edifices of the kind in the
+world, and in point of durability of structure and costliness of
+material, it certainly has no superior. It stands on the west side of
+Capitol Hill, very near the centre of the city, and one mile distant
+from the Potomac River. The main or central building is three hundred
+and fifty two feet in length, with two wings or extensions, each having
+a front of one hundred and forty-three feet on the east and west, and a
+depth of two hundred and thirty-nine feet along the north and south
+_facades_, exclusive of the porticoes. The entire length of this great
+edifice is seven hundred and fifty feet; its greatest depth three
+hundred and twenty-four feet; the ground plan covering three and a half
+acres.
+
+The central and original Capitol building is of freestone, taken from
+the Government quarries at Aquia Creek, forty miles below the city,
+which were purchased for that purpose, by the Commissioners, in 1791.
+This building is now painted white, to correspond with the extensions,
+columns and porticoes of white marble. From the centre rises the great
+dome, designed by Walter, to replace the original one removed in 1856,
+after the additions to the building had rendered it out of proportion.
+The apex is surmounted by a lantern fifty feet high, surrounded by a
+peristyle, and crowned by the bronze statue of Freedom executed by
+Crawford in 1865. The height from the base line to the crest of this
+statue is three hundred and eight feet, making the dome of the Capitol
+rank fifth in height with the greatest structures of the kind in Europe.
+
+The great dome is visible from every elevated point in the District for
+miles around, and from its windows, as far as the eye can reach, is
+extended a panorama of wooded hills, beautiful valleys, with the
+majestic cloud-capped spurs of the Blue Ridge raising their lofty heads
+in the distance. The eastern facade of the building looks out upon the
+extended plain of Capitol Hill, with its background of green hills
+reaching far beyond the Anacostia. On the north a broad valley extends,
+until it unites with the encircling hills of the city; on the south the
+majestic Potomac and Anacostia rivers are seen to meet and mingle their
+placid waters; while from the west are beheld the lawns and groves of
+the Botanic Garden, the Mall, and handsome grounds of the President's
+house, with Georgetown Heights and the glittering domes of the
+Observatory in the distance.
+
+The main entrance, from the grand portico into the rotunda is filled by
+the celebrated bronze door modeled by Rogers, in Rome, 1858, and cast in
+bronze at Munich, by Miller, in 1860. On the panels of this door are
+portrayed, in _alto relievo_, the principal events in the life of
+Christopher Columbus, and the discovery of America. The key of the arch
+is adorned with a fine head of the great navigator; in the four corners
+of the casing are statuettes, representing Asia, Africa, Europe and
+America, with a border in relief of ancient armor, banners and heraldic
+designs emblematic of navigation and conquest. Bordering each leaf on
+the door are statuettes, sixteen in number, of his patrons and
+contemporaries; the nine panels bear _alto relievo_ illustrations of the
+principal events in his life; while between the panels are a series of
+heads, representing the historians of the great discoverer and his
+followers. Altogether, this justly celebrated bronze door, besides being
+wonderful as a work of art, constitutes in itself a small volume of the
+most interesting and important events belonging to the history of our
+country.
+
+ [Illustration: EAST FRONT OF CAPITOL AT WASHINGTON.]
+
+The rotunda into which the door leads is embellished with eight large
+historical paintings, by different artists. Four of these were executed
+by Trumbell, who served as aid-de-camp to Washington in 1775, and
+reproduced in his figures the likenesses of the actors in the scenes
+portrayed. In arranging the characters for the "Declaration of
+Independence," in which the Congress of 1776 is represented in the act
+of signing that great instrument of American liberty, the artist
+conferred with Jefferson, the Author of the Declaration, and John Adams,
+both of whom were present and signers. The individual costumes, the
+furniture, and the hall itself, are represented with scrupulous
+fidelity, all of which tends to increase the interest inspired by this
+painting.
+
+The _National Library_ was founded by act of Congress in 1800, and the
+following year, after the report of John Randolph, of Roanoke, had been
+submitted, setting forth the necessity for further legislation on the
+subject, a second act was passed, which placed it on a permanent basis.
+The number of volumes first contained in the library was three thousand,
+but appropriations were annually made by Congress to increase the
+number. In 1814 the Capitol was burned by the British, and the library
+destroyed; a few months later, Thomas Jefferson offered the Government
+his private collection of 6,700 volumes, among which were many rare and
+valuable works obtained in Europe, and these were purchased for the sum
+of $23,950. In 1866 the Smithsonian Library, containing forty thousand
+volumes, was added, and a year later, the _Peter Force_ collection was
+purchased by Congress, for $100,000; constant additions have increased
+the number, until the library now contains nearly four hundred thousand
+bound volumes, and one hundred thousand pamphlets. It is enriched also
+by journals, manuscripts, and maps relating to the history and
+topography of the country; in respect to the latter, being only
+approached by the library in the British Museum. The Library halls
+occupy the principal floor of the entire west projection of the Capitol.
+
+In the _Vice President's Room_ hangs the original painting of
+Washington, taken from life by Rembrandt Peale, and purchased by the
+Government in 1832, for the sum of two thousand dollars.
+
+The _Senate Reception Room_ is a beautiful and brilliant apartment,
+about sixty feet in length, with its vaulted and arched ceiling, divided
+into four sections, adorned with allegorical frescoes of _Prudence_,
+_Justice_, _Temperance_ and _Strength_, executed by Brumidi, in 1856.
+The ceiling is heavily gilded throughout; the walls finished in stucco
+and gilt, with a base of Scagliola, imitating the marbles of Potomac and
+Tennessee. A finely executed fresco, in oil, by Brumidi, adorns the
+south wall, representing Washington in consultation with Jefferson and
+Hamilton, his Secretaries of State and Treasury.
+
+The _President's Boom_ is an equally magnificent apartment, with groined
+arches embellished with numerous allegorical figures in fresco, the
+decoration, by Brumidi, being, in general design, the same as in the
+private audience chamber of the Vatican at Rome. The work throughout is
+very fine, being richly decorated with arabesques on a groundwork of
+gilt; the luxurious furniture of the apartment is entirely in keeping
+with this high order of artistic finish.
+
+The old _Hall of the House of Representatives_ is a magnificent
+apartment, designed and planned after the theatre at Athens, with
+fourteen Corinthian columns of variegated marble, forming a circular
+colonnade on the north. The bases of these columns are of freestone, the
+capitals of Carrara marble, designed and executed in Italy, after those
+in the temple of Jupiter Stator, at Rome; the paneled dome overhead is
+similar to that of the Pantheon. This venerable apartment was occupied
+by the House of Representatives for thirty-two years; its atmosphere
+must, in consequence, ever continue redolent with historic associations.
+On its walls, in the old days, hung the full-length portraits of
+Washington and Lafayette, presented by the latter on his last visit to
+this country; and the exact spot is pointed out where stood the desk of
+the venerable Ex-President, John Quincy Adams, when that aged patriot
+and senator was stricken by death. When, on the completion of the new,
+the old Hall was abandoned, in 1857, it was set apart, by Congress, as a
+_National Statuary Gallery_, and the President authorized to invite the
+different States to contribute statues, in bronze or marble, of such
+among their distinguished citizens as they might especially desire to
+honor, the number being limited to two from each State. These
+contributions have been coming in slowly from year to year, besides
+which, many valuable statues and paintings have been purchased and
+added, by the Government.
+
+The new _Hall of Representatives_ is said to be the finest in the world;
+its length being one hundred and thirty-nine feet, width ninety-three,
+and height thirty-six feet, while the galleries will seat twenty-five
+hundred persons. The ceiling is of cast-iron, with panels gilded and
+filled with stained-glass centres, on which are represented the
+coat-of-arms of each of the different States. The walls are adorned with
+valuable historical paintings and frescoes.
+
+The _Supreme Court Room_, formerly the old United States Senate Chamber,
+is a semicircular apartment, seventy-five feet in diameter; its height
+and greatest width being forty-five feet. The ceiling is formed by a
+flattened dome, ornamented with square caissons in stucco, with
+apertures for the admission of light. Supporting a gallery back of the
+Judges' seats extends a row of Ionic columns of Potomac marble, with
+capitals of white Italian marble, modeled after those in the Temple of
+Minerva. Along the western wall are marble brackets, each supporting the
+bust of a deceased Chief Justice.
+
+When occupied by the Senate, the Hall contained desks for sixty-four
+Senators. It was in this chamber that the Nation's purest and most
+profound statesmen assembled, and the great "Immortal Trio," Clay,
+Webster and Calhoun, made those wonderful forensic efforts which gave
+their names forever to fame and the admiration of posterity.
+
+The _New Senate Chamber_, first occupied in 1859, is a magnificent
+apartment, belonging to the new extension of the Capitol, one hundred
+and thirteen feet in length by eighty feet in width, and thirty-six feet
+high. The Senators' desks are constructed of mahogany, and arranged in
+concentric semicircles around the apartment. The galleries rise and
+recede in tiers to the corridors of the second floor, and are capable of
+seating twelve thousand people.
+
+Immense iron girders and transverse pieces compose the ceiling, forming
+deep panels, each glazed with a symbolic centre piece; the walls are
+richly painted, the doors elaborately finished with bronze ornaments.
+From the lobby we pass into the _Senate Retiring Room_, handsomely
+furnished, and said to be the finest apartment of the kind in the world.
+The ceiling is composed of massive blocks of polished white marble,
+which form deep panels, resting upon four Corinthian columns, also of
+white Italian marble. Highly polished Tennessee marble lines the entire
+walls, in the panels of which are placed immense plate glass mirrors,
+enhancing the brilliancy and already striking effect of the whole.
+
+The limits of this chapter will not admit of further description of the
+numerous apartments gorgeously furnished; the palatial corridors
+beautifully designed; magnificent vestibules with fluted columns of
+marble; richly gilt paneled ceilings and tinted walls; grand stairways
+of marble and bronze, with the statues, busts, paintings and bronzes,
+which enrich the Capitol, many of them being masterpieces of art, and
+none devoid of merit. A detailed account of all would fill a small
+volume; we are compelled, therefore, to reluctantly leave the subject,
+and proceed to the description of the Public Buildings.
+
+The _President's House_ is situated in the western part of the city,
+distant one and a half miles from the Capitol. A premium of five hundred
+dollars was awarded James Hoban, architect, of South Carolina, for the
+plan, and the corner stone laid, with Masonic honors, October
+thirteenth, 1792. John Adams was the first presidential occupant; he
+took possession during the month of November, 1800, after the Government
+offices had been removed to Washington. This building was burned by the
+British in 1814; the following year Congress authorized its restoration,
+committing the work to the original architect, Hoban, by whom it was
+completed in 1826, in all its details. It is built of freestone, one
+hundred and seventy feet in length, eighty-six in width, with grand
+porticoes on the north and south fronts, supported by Ionic columns. The
+main entrance is on the north, by a spacious vestibule handsomely
+frescoed. The _Blue Room_, in which the President receives, on both
+public and private occasions, is an oval-shaped apartment, finished in
+blue and gilt, with draperies and furniture of blue damask.
+Communicating with this is a second parlor called the _Green Room_, from
+the prevailing color of the furniture and hangings. In this apartment
+are found the portraits of Presidents Madison, Monroe, Harrison and
+Taylor. _The East Room_, which closes the suite, is a truly royal
+apartment, magnificently decorated in a style purely Grecian, the
+ceiling frescoed in oil, mantles of exquisite wood carving, immense
+mirrors in magnificent frames, with the richest furniture, and window
+drapery of the costliest lace and damask. A full length portrait of
+Washington adorns this apartment, purchased by Congress in 1803. When
+the Capitol was burned, in 1814, this painting was rescued from
+destruction by Mrs. Madison, who had it removed from the frame and
+carried to a place of safety. A portrait of Martha, the wife of
+Washington, also hangs in this room, painted by Andrews in 1878.
+
+The numerous other apartments in the President's House exhibit the same
+lavish style of adorning, the furniture being constantly changed and
+renewed; but the vandal spirit of _change_ has not, as yet, dared to lay
+its sacrilegious hand upon or to alter the construction of the house,
+which remains the same as when, almost a century ago, it was first
+occupied by the elder President Adams. It is not difficult, therefore,
+to evoke the spirit of the past while standing among these ancient
+apartments, halls and corridors, and behold in fancy the long line of
+true statesmen, incorruptible patriots and noble men, who have
+successively lived and moved among them, in the early days of the
+Republic. And it is to be devoutly hoped that the vanity and caprice of
+the rulers who, in these later years, are being cast into high places,
+will not prevail in the effort to have this venerable home of the
+Presidents, hallowed by the memories of the nation's past, cast aside,
+and another building, modern and meaningless, substituted in its stead.
+
+Immediately west of the President's House stands the _Department of
+State, War and Navy_, a vast and imposing structure in the Doric style,
+combining the massive proportions of the ancient with the elegance of
+modern architecture. The Diplomatic Reception Room is a magnificent
+apartment, decorated and furnished in the most sumptuous manner, with
+ebonized woods and gold brocade, after the Germanized Egyptian style.
+The portraits of Daniel Webster and Lord Ashburton, by Healy (purchased
+by Congress from the widow of Fletcher Webster, 1879), adorn the walls,
+and over the mantels are busts, in bronze, of Washington and Lafayette.
+In the Diplomatic Ante-room is seen a full-length portrait of the Bey of
+Tunis, sent by special envoy in 1865, with a letter of condolence to the
+Government, on the death of Lincoln. Above this apartment is the
+library, containing a valuable collection of works on diplomacy, and
+many objects of interest, including the original draft of the
+Declaration of Independence, with the desk on which it was written,
+presented to the Government by the heirs of James Coolidge, of
+Massachusetts, to whom it was presented by Thomas Jefferson. The
+original document, _signed_, is also here, together with the sword of
+Washington, purchased by Congress in 1880, and his commission as
+Commander-in-Chief; the staff of Franklin; original drafts of the laws
+of the United States, the Federal Constitution, and other valuable and
+interesting historic documents, from the foundation of the Government.
+The entire building contains one hundred and fifty apartments, and cost
+five million dollars.
+
+The _Treasury Department_ is situated east of the President's House; it
+presents a most classic appearance, with its three stories in the pure
+Ionic style of architecture, upon a basement of rustic work, surmounted
+by an attic and balustrade. It has four fronts and principal entrances;
+the western front, consisting of a colonnade, after the style of the
+temple of Minerva, at Athens, is three hundred and thirty-six feet long,
+with thirty Ionic columns, and recessed porticoes on either end. This
+building contains the vaults in which the current funds and National
+Bank bonds of the Government are kept. The Secretary's office is a
+beautiful apartment, on the second floor. The walls being formed of
+various kinds of highly polished marble. This building contains two
+hundred apartments, exclusive of the basement and attic, and cost six
+million dollars.
+
+ [Illustration: STATE, WAR AND NAVY DEPARTMENTS, WASHINGTON, D. C.]
+
+The _Bureau of Engraving and Printing_, a branch of the Treasury
+Department, occupies a separate building, recently erected, at a cost of
+three hundred thousand dollars. It is a handsome structure, of pressed
+brick, in the Romanesque style, is entirely fireproof, and situated
+between the Agricultural Department and the Washington Monument.
+
+The _Patent Office_, an immense building covering two squares, or two
+and three-fourths acres of ground (which in the original plan of the
+city had been set apart for the erection of a National Mausoleum, or
+church), is in the Doric style of architecture, after the Parthenon at
+Athens, and impresses all who behold it with the grandeur of its
+proportions. The Museum of Models, a collection of inventions, both
+native and foreign, patented by the Government, occupies the four
+immense halls on the second floor, and contains upwards of one hundred
+and fifty-five thousand models, which have accumulated since the fire of
+1836. In December, of that year, the old building was destroyed,
+containing four thousand models, the accumulation of half a century. But
+for this calamity, the progress of mechanical arts in the United States
+could be traced back to the foundation of the Government. The south Hall
+of the Museum is a magnificent apartment, two hundred and forty-two feet
+long, sixty-three feet wide, and thirty feet high, decorated in the
+Pompeiian style, the entire structure of the room being in solid
+masonry. Among the historical relics contained here, are the uniform of
+Washington, worn at the time he resigned his commission, and his sword,
+secretary, compass, and sleeping tent, with camp utensils for cooking,
+etc. The number and variety of models contained in these four large
+halls are almost bewildering, and afford material for hours of study.
+The cost of this immense structure was two million, seven hundred
+thousand, but the entire sum has been principally liquidated by the
+surplus funds received, which annually amount to at least two hundred
+thousand dollars.
+
+The _General Post Office_ building is immediately opposite the Patent
+Office; it is a most imposing edifice, constructed of white marble, from
+the quarries of New York, and was built--the portion fronting on E
+street--in 1839. The northern half of the square was afterward purchased
+by the Government, and the extension begun in 1855; the building, as now
+completed, being three hundred feet in length, by two hundred and four
+in depth, with a large courtyard in the centre, entered on the west
+front by a carriage way, where the mails are received and sent out.
+Above the basement, on every side of this noble structure, arise
+monolithic columns and pilasters, surmounted by handsomely wrought
+capitals, upon which rests a paneled cornice. The main entrance is
+adorned with Doric columns, and the ceiling, walls and floor finished
+with white marble. In the office of the Postmaster-General is a fine
+collection of photographs and crayons of those who have filled this
+position since the appointment of Samuel Osgood, by Washington, in 1789.
+The cost of this building was one million seven hundred thousand
+dollars.
+
+The _Agricultural Building_ is a large and handsome structure, built of
+pressed brick, in the _renaissance_ style of architecture, with
+trimmings of brown stone. Immediately in front of the house is a flower
+garden, beautifully laid out, and planted with an almost countless
+variety of flowers; the remaining grounds adjacent to the building have
+been laid out as an _arboreture_, with walks and drives winding through
+forests of trees and shrubs, all of which have been planted according to
+the strictest botanical rules. The experimental grounds, occupying ten
+acres in the rear of the house, contain artificial lakes, rivers and
+swamps, for the cultivation of water and marsh plants. The building is
+handsomely finished and the various apartments and offices elegantly
+furnished, including a handsome library, thoroughly equipped laboratory,
+and an _Agricultural Museum_, which occupies the main building, and is
+replete with objects of interest and beauty too numerous to admit of
+description. The _Plant Houses_ are immense conservatories, in which the
+fruits and flowers of every clime and country may be found _growing_.
+The main structure is three hundred and twenty feet long, by thirty
+wide, with a projecting wing giving one hundred and fifty feet
+additional. On the north bank of the Potomac is the _Naval Observatory_,
+one of the principal astronomical establishments in the world. The
+Observatory was founded in 1842, the location being selected by
+President Tyler. The site had been called "University Square," from the
+fact that it had been the cherished intention of Washington, from the
+foundation of the city, to urge the erection upon this spot of a
+_National University_. The central building of the Observatory was
+completed in 1844--a two-story building, with wings, and surmounted by a
+dome. The great telescope, purchased in 1873, cost forty-seven thousand
+dollars, and is the most powerful instrument in the world, the
+refracting glass being twenty-six inches; the focal length thirty-two
+and a half feet. The library contains six thousand volumes, a number of
+them very rare, dating back to 1482.
+
+The _Army Medical Museum_ was formerly Ford's Theatre, in which
+President Lincoln was assassinated on the fourteenth of April, 1865. The
+building was purchased a year later, by Congress, remodeled and
+converted to its present use. No trace has been left to indicate the
+exact location of the murder. The Chemical Laboratory, on the first
+floor, was the restaurant in which Booth took his last drink; among the
+relics and curiosities is a portion of the vertebrae taken from the neck
+of the assassin. The first floor is occupied by the record and pension
+division of the Surgeon General's office, and upon the registers are
+inscribed the names of three hundred thousand of the _dead_. The Museum
+is on the third floor, and contains about sixteen thousand medical,
+surgical, and anatomical specimens.
+
+The _Government Printing Office_ is a large four-story building, in
+which the printing of the two Houses of Congress and other Departments
+is done. In 1794 an appropriation of ten thousand dollars was made, and
+sufficed, for "firewood, stationery and printing; the amount required at
+the present time to meet the expenses of this department is two million
+five hundred thousand dollars per annum, showing the rapid advance of
+the country, in extent, population, and the prodigality of its
+representatives as well.
+
+The _United States Barracks_, formerly the _Arsenal_, is situated at the
+extreme southern point of the city. A Government Penitentiary was
+erected on the grounds in 1826; in one of the lower cells was buried
+the body of Booth, and afterward those of the other conspirators. The
+Penitentiary was taken down in 1869, at which time the family of Booth
+was permitted to remove his body to Baltimore, where it was interred in
+the family burial lot at Druid Hill, the grave remaining unmarked. In
+front of the old buildings, the grounds, since the war, have been
+beautifully laid out, and contain a number of cannon captured by the
+Government forces in different conflicts. There is a brass gun with a
+ball shot into its muzzle at the battle of Gettysburg, and two captured
+Blakely guns, one of which bears the inscription: "Presented to the
+Sovereign State of South Carolina, by one of her citizens residing
+abroad, in commemoration of the twentieth of December, 1860." There are
+also British, French, and Mexican cannon, captured from those nations,
+some of them dated as far back as 1756.
+
+On the Anacostia, three-fourths of a mile from the Capitol, is the _Navy
+Yard_, formally established by act of Congress in 1804, and in those
+early days standing unrivaled, as it sent out such famous vessels as the
+Wasp, Argus, and Viper; and frigates, carrying 44 guns each, were built
+in its shops. But the gradual filling up of the channel in which ships
+of the line formerly anchored, and the increased facilities of other
+later established stations, have deprived the old yard of its importance
+as a naval constructing port, although it is still one of the most
+important for the manufacture of supplies. The _Marine Barracks_,
+organized in 1798, are but a short distance from the Navy Yard gate; the
+building is seven hundred feet in length, with accommodations for two
+hundred men. The Barracks were burned by the British in 1814, but were
+at once rebuilt.
+
+The _Smithsonian Institute_, by name, is generally familiar, while
+comparatively few are acquainted with its origin, the design of its
+founder, his antecedents or history, all of which are peculiarly
+interesting, and deserving of a more extended notice than our sketch
+will permit. James Smithson was an Englishman, the son of the first Duke
+of Northumberland, and a grand nephew, on his mother's side, of Charles,
+the proud Duke of Somerset. Whether or not any secret romance was
+connected with his life, we are not informed; all that is known is, that
+he devoted himself to literature and science, was never married, and
+died at Genoa, Italy, in 1828, bequeathing his fortune to his nephew,
+Henry James Hungerford, during life; at his death to become the property
+of the United States; in the language of the will, "To found, at
+Washington, under the name of the Smithsonian Institute, an
+establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men."
+The Government accepted the bequest, which was at its disposal as early
+as 1836, and the original fund, of upwards of five hundred and fifteen
+thousand dollars, was deposited in the Treasury. A little more than ten
+years later the Smithsonian Institute was organized, a board of Regents
+appointed, and the corner-stone laid, with masonic ceremonies, May the
+first, 1847. The building was completed in 1856, the accrued interest
+being mere than sufficient to cover all the expenses of its erection,
+and leaving a permanent fund of six hundred and fifty thousand dollars
+in the Treasury for its future maintenance. In less than a year after
+the close of the war the main building was partially destroyed by fire,
+together with the papers and reports of the Institute, and the personal
+effects of its founder. It was immediately restored, however; but the
+Library, comprising a large collection of valuable scientific works, was
+removed to the Capitol. It would seem that this immense building, so
+generously endowed, could, and should, be made to advance "the increase
+and diffusion of knowledge among men," in a more direct and individual
+manner, by being devoted to educational purposes. But further than its
+use in conducting exchanges between the Government and scientific bodies
+at home and abroad, and the care of the National Museum, the Smithsonian
+Institute has contributed nothing toward "the advancement of knowledge
+among men," and those, generally, of the country whom it was especially
+intended to benefit.
+
+The _National Museum_, completed in 1879, is situated a very short
+distance east of the Institute, and covers nearly two and a half acres
+of ground. It is a handsome structure, of the modernized Romanesque
+style of architecture; having four entrances and eight lofty towers; the
+principal entrance being approached by granite steps, thirty-seven feet
+wide, to a richly tiled platform. Above the inscription plate on the
+globe of the nave, is an allegorical group representing Columbia as the
+patroness of Science and Industry. The whole is surmounted by a dome;
+the windows filled with double glass imported from Belgium; in fine, the
+entire building is externally and internally complete, being finished
+and furnished in the most costly and elegant manner. The large
+collections of the Museum in the Smithsonian Institute, are to be
+divided; objects of purely natural history being alone kept in the
+Institute, the second floor of which will be devoted to archA|ology,
+including the antiquities of the "Stone Age."
+
+South of the President's House, and but a short distance from the stone
+which marks the centre of the District stands the National Monument to
+the Father of his Country, designed by Mills. It was completed on
+Saturday, December sixth, 1884, by the setting of its marble cap-stone.
+The idea of this National Monument took definite shape in 1833, when the
+_Washington National Monument Association_ was organized, composed of
+some of the most distinguished men of the country. The design was to
+build it by means of popular subscriptions, of individual sums, not to
+exceed one dollar each. In 1847 the collections amounted to $87,000, and
+with this sum it was determined to begin the work. On the Fourth of
+July, 1848 the corner stone of the monument was laid; in 1854, the funds
+of the _National Monument Association_ were exhausted. The structure had
+then reached a height of one hundred and seventy feet, and during the
+succeeding twenty-four years only four feet were added to its altitude.
+August twenty-second, 1876, Congress passed an Act, creating a
+commission for its completion, and made the necessary appropriation,
+which was to be continued annually. Before resuming work on the
+monument, it was deemed best to strengthen the foundation by placing
+under the shaft an additional mass of concrete, one hundred and
+twenty-three feet, three inches beyond the old foundation. The weight of
+the mass then worked under was 32,176 tons. The total pressure on the
+foundation as it now stands is 80,378 tons.
+
+The monument is a marble obelisk, the marble having been brought from
+the quarries of the Beaver Dam Marble Company, Baltimore County,
+Maryland. The shaft, from the floor, is 555 feet, 4 inches high, being
+thirty feet, five inches higher than the spires of the great cathedral
+of Cologne. The present foundation is thirty-six feet, eight inches
+deep, making an aggregate height, from the bed of the foundation, of 592
+feet, the loftiest work of ancient or modern times. The walls of the
+obelisk, at its base, are over fifteen feet thick, and at the 500 feet
+mark, where the pyramidal top begins, eighteen inches thick. The total
+cost of the monument has been $1,130,000. Within the obelisk is an
+elevator and a stairway. On the latter there are nine hundred steps, and
+about twenty minutes are required to make the descent.
+
+The _Corcoran Art Gallery_ is one of the most interesting and valued
+institutions belonging to the National Capitol, and the last that our
+limits will permit being described at length. The building stands on the
+corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street, and is constructed
+of brick, in the Renaissance style of architecture, finished with
+freestone ornaments and a variety of beautiful carving. On the avenue
+front are four statues, in Carrara marble, executed by Ezekiel, in Rome,
+of _Phidias_, _Raphael_, _Michael Angelo_, and _Albert Durer_,
+representing respectively, sculpture, painting, architecture and
+engraving. In the vestibules and corridors are casts of ancient _bas
+reliefs_, with numerous antique busts and statues in marble. The _Hall
+of Bronzes_ contains a very large and interesting collection of bronzes,
+armor, ceramic ware, etc. The Hall of _Antique Sculpture_, almost one
+hundred feet in length, contains casts of the most celebrated specimens
+of ancient sculpture. The _Main Picture Gallery_ is also nearly one
+hundred feet long and fifty feet wide, with a collection of paintings
+ranking among the first of this country, and more than one hundred and
+fifteen in number. The _Octagon Chamber_ contains the original Greek
+Slave, by Powers. In the _East Gallery_ is displayed a valuable
+collection of portraits of distinguished Americans, painted by the best
+native artists; in the _West Gallery_, is a large number of paintings,
+historical, landscape and other subjects.
+
+The _Corcoran Art Gallery_ was presented to the city and country by W.
+W. Corcoran, Esq., in 1869. This magnificent gift, including the donor's
+private collection of paintings and statuary, cost three hundred and
+fifty thousand dollars, to which he added an endowment fund of nine
+hundred thousand dollars more. Mr. Corcoran has also erected and
+elegantly furnished, a large and beautiful building, called the _Louise
+Home_, at a cost of two hundred thousand dollars, with an endowment fund
+of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. _The Home_, the only
+institution of its kind in the entire country, is an asylum for ladies
+of education and refinement who have been reduced in fortune. The house
+is furnished in a style of subdued elegance, with every luxury and
+convenience to be found in the best appointed private residence; while
+the ladies are waited upon and treated with the same attention and
+respect as if they were each paying an extravagant rate of board. There
+are ample accommodations for fifty-five ladies, who must have reached
+the age of fifty-years, as a general rule, and who make their
+application for admission in writing. There is _no charge_ for
+admission, nor expense of any kind, nor _limit_ to the time of remaining
+at the _Louise Home_. This beautiful institution, in which charity is
+bestowed in so refined and delicate, yet magnificent a manner, has been
+erected and endowed by the Founder _in memoriam_ of a beloved wife and
+only daughter and child. It is but due to this great philanthropist, to
+mention here, that in addition to his gifts named above, the _National
+Medical College, of Columbian University_, was his gift, in 1864, and
+cost forty thousand dollars. The original grounds of _Oak Hill
+Cemetery_, comprising ten acres, were also donated by him, together with
+an endowment fund of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars; the
+grounds were incorporated by Congress in 1840. It were fortunate for
+mankind if the number of such benefactors were greater, and the wisdom
+displayed by Mr. Corcoran oftener imitated by the rich, who, if they
+_give_, permit their good deeds only "_to live after them_," instead of
+planning, and directing with their own hands, the schemes of benevolence
+they desire to inaugurate for the benefit of their unfortunate fellow
+beings.
+
+There are many places of historical interest that might be described, as
+well as numerous Halls, Colleges, Hospitals, etc., but the limits of
+this paper will not permit. We shall only refer to the _Government
+Hospital for the Insane_, situated at the junction of the Potomac and
+Anacostia rivers, and one of the finest and largest institutions of the
+kind in the world. It is seven hundred and fifty feet in length by two
+hundred deep, containing five hundred single rooms, and accommodations
+for more than nine hundred patients. The _Deaf and Dumb Asylum and
+College_ are also conspicuous among the Public Institutions, built in
+the pointed Gothic style, and costing the Government $350,000.
+
+During the late war Washington was converted into a vast fortress, and
+made the base of operations for the entire forces of the Union. The
+hills surrounding it were covered with the camps of soldiers, while its
+vast streets and avenues hourly echoed the tread of moving troops, and
+the heavy crushing roll of artillery. At the close of the contest the
+city was found to have risen high upon the wave of revolution; a new
+element had been infused into its population, and the march of
+improvement had begun. In ten years the number of inhabitants had
+increased fifty thousand. With the continuance of peace, and the spirit
+of improvement and progress remaining unchecked, it may reasonably be
+predicted and confidently anticipated, that the close of the Nineteenth
+Century will find the Capital City of this great Republic approaching in
+splendor and importance the realization of the proudest hope and dream
+of magnificence ever cherished in the hearts of its worthy founders, and
+in _itself_ a monument worthy of the immortal name of WASHINGTON.
+
+
+
+
+_TESTIMONIALS._
+
+COMMENDATIONS
+
+OF
+
+Peculiarities of American Cities.
+
+
+_Buffalo Sunday Times._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is the title of the latest work of
+Captain Willard Glazier, whose numerous books show great versatility and
+vivacity. The work before us contains sketches of thirty-nine of the
+principal cities of the United States and Canada. It is replete with
+interest. The pages are not filled with a mass of dry statistics or mere
+description, but record the personal observations of the author,
+detailed in an easy, familiar style.
+
+
+_Hamilton (Canada) Tribune._
+
+The "Peculiarities of American Cities" contains a chatty description of
+the leading American and Canadian cities. A bright, descriptive style
+gives piquancy to the work, which is a gazetteer without seeming to be
+so. The Canadian cities described are Montreal, Toronto, and Quebec, and
+the accounts given of them are accurate. This being so of our own land,
+the probability is strong that the accounts given of the American cities
+are so too.
+
+
+_Rock Island Union._
+
+Captain Willard Glazier, whose war stories have proved so attractive,
+has turned his attention to another field, and proved that he can write
+entertainingly while imparting information to his readers of permanent
+reference value. His new book is entitled "Peculiarities of American
+Cities," and embodies the results of his personal observations and
+studies in the leading towns of the country. There are thirty-nine
+chapters, and each one is devoted to a different city, and may be said
+to be complete in itself. The classification is alphabetical, beginning
+with Albany and ending with Washington. The descriptive work has been
+well and faithfully done, and the prominent features of each city have
+received especial attention. This is the special point of the work--to
+show the distinct peculiarities and characteristics of our cities--and
+the charm lies in the fact that every city is treated in accordance with
+its local color, instead of in a stereotyped manner, as is usually the
+case. The book is a valuable one, and should be perused and studied by
+old and young.
+
+
+_Detroit Journal._
+
+Under the title of "Peculiarities of American Cities," Captain Willard
+Glazier, the author of half a dozen successful volumes, has lately
+produced a very attractive book of nearly six hundred pages. It is
+written in a graceful style, as one would describe a trip through the
+country from East to West, including visits to the chief cities, and
+touching upon their most notable characteristics. The author gives his
+readers the salient and significant points, as they strike an observing
+man and a skilled writer, and in this he has been very successful.
+
+
+_Madison State Journal._
+
+Captain Glazier is a noted American traveler. His canoe trip down the
+Mississippi and his extended horseback tour through the States made him
+quite famous at the time. The volume before us presents the peculiar
+features, favorite resorts, and distinguishing characteristics of the
+leading cities of America, including Canada. The author launches into
+his subject with directness, treating them with perspicuity and in an
+easy, flowing, graphic style, presenting a series of most admirable pen
+pictures. The book is practically invaluable in households where there
+are children and youth.
+
+
+_Chicago Tribune._
+
+In this work Captain Glazier has entered upon a new field in literature,
+and his researches are at once unique and interesting. The first chapter
+opens with a visit to Albany, the quaint old Dutch city of the Hudson,
+and here at the outset the author discovers "peculiarities" without
+limit. Boston is next taken up, and then follow in succession
+thirty-seven of the leading cities of the United States and Canada. The
+book is a compendium of historical facts concerning the cities referred
+to which are not given in any other work with which we are acquainted,
+making this volume a valuable addition to any library.
+
+
+_Saginaw Courier._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a handsome and attractive volume,
+descriptive of the characteristics of many of the cities of North
+America, by one who seems to be thoroughly familiar with the subject,
+and who has developed an aptness in grasping the peculiarities of modern
+city life, as well as the power to graphically portray them. To those
+who may never be able to visit the places described, as well as to those
+who have seen them, the pen pictures will be both interesting and
+entertaining. The author gives his readers the salient and significant
+points as they strike an observant critic and a fascinating writer.
+
+
+_Racine Daily Times._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a work that will give to the
+person who has only money to stay at home an intelligent idea of how the
+great cities of the country look, and what their people do to gain a
+livelihood, and what objects of interest there are to be seen. Through
+the medium of this work one can wander through the streets of far-off
+places; he can watch the rush of the multitude and hear the roar of the
+industries that help to make our country the great land that it is. He
+can gaze upon the palaces of the rich or hurry through scenes where
+poverty is most pitiful and vice most hideous. It is a work that ought
+to be in every house.
+
+
+_Alton Democrat._
+
+One of the most entertaining books is "Peculiarities of American Cities"
+by Captain Willard Glazier, whose pen has enraptured thousands by
+descriptions of battle scenes and heroic adventures. The book is almost
+a necessity, as it familiarizes one with scenes in travel and history.
+The author has the faculty of making his readers see what he has seen
+and feel the impressions which he has felt in the view. The style is
+easy and flowing, not complicated and wearisome, The great cities are
+described in a way which makes the reader familiar with them--their
+history, society, manners, customs, and everything relating to their
+past, present, and future. The book will be a companion of many a
+leisure hour.
+
+
+_Buffalo Courier._
+
+The books written by Captain Willard Glazier have had a very wide,
+almost a phenomenal circulation; in myriads of volumes they have been
+distributed throughout the country. From the time when a very young man,
+and just after the war, in which he served, Captain Glazier published
+his first book, they have, until the one just out, been all founded on
+and descriptive of events and scenes of the Revolution and the
+Rebellion. Now, however, he has turned from the beaten path and taken an
+altogether different topic, as is clearly explained in the title of his
+new work, "Peculiarities of American Cities." There are thirty-nine
+chapters, in which as many different cities have their noteworthy
+characteristics set forth in a pleasing and very interesting style, with
+handsome illustrations.
+
+
+_Hamilton (Canada) Spectator._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a work by Captain Willard Glazier,
+who has earned some fame as a writer of books describing the incidents
+of the War of the Rebellion. The present work is a compilation of facts
+concerning thirty-nine of the principal cities of the continent,
+including Toronto, Quebec, and Montreal, and the information the work
+contains is brought down to recent date. The history, growth in
+commerce, progress in art and science, and architectural and physical
+characteristics of each city are treated of in a very interesting way.
+Few people who have traveled at all but have visited one or more of
+these cities, and will read the work with pleasure. Others will find it
+intensely interesting because it gives them in detail much they have
+often wanted to know of the cities of America.
+
+
+_New York Herald._
+
+The author talks of cities as he has seen them; describing their
+appearance, their public resorts, and the peculiarities which
+characterize them and their people. He leads the reader through the
+streets, into the public parks, museums, libraries, art galleries,
+churches, theatres, etc.; tells him of great business schemes, marts,
+and manufactories; sails to suburban pleasure resorts; describes the
+many avocations and ways of picking up a living which are peculiar to
+large cities and the phases of character in men and women which are to
+be found where men most do congregate. The book will prove to be an
+interesting and instructive one to those who have not seen the cities it
+describes, and interesting to those who have traveled as a review and
+comparison of views from an experienced traveler and chronicler.
+
+
+_Detroit Christian Herald._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" contains brief studies of the
+history, general features, and leading enterprises of thirty-nine cities
+of the United States and Canada. The author states in the preface that
+he has been a resident of one hundred cities, and feels qualified to
+write largely from personal observation and comparison. It is not a dry
+compendium of facts, but is enlivened by picturesque legends, striking
+incidents, and racy anecdotes. Though the author has attempted no
+exhaustive description of these prominent centres of interest, he has
+shown taste and judgment in selecting the things one would most like to
+know, and skill in weaving the facts into an entertaining form.
+
+
+_Davenport Democrat._
+
+This is the fifth of a readable series of popular books by the
+soldier-author, Captain Willard Glazier. Many readers have become
+familiar with "Soldiers of the Saddle," "Capture, Prison-pen, and
+Escape," "Battles for the Union," and "Heroes of Three Wars," and they
+will welcome the volume under notice as one of the most attractive of
+the list. Captain Glazier does not compile--he writes what he has seen.
+He has a trained eye, a facile pen, and a power of graphic description.
+"American Cities" is a work devoted to a pen-portraiture of thirty-nine
+cities, and those who have not or cannot visit these cities have in this
+book an easy and most fascinating way of acquainting themselves with
+their distinguishing characteristics. All readers ought to know
+something of our American cities, each of which has features peculiar to
+itself.
+
+
+_Syracuse Herald._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is the title of a new book by Captain
+Willard Glazier, author of "Soldiers of the Saddle," "Battles for the
+Union," and several other popular works. In its pages the favorite
+resorts, peculiar features, and distinguishing characteristics of the
+leading cities of America are described. Dry statistics are avoided, the
+facts which the general reader most desires being given in the style of
+graphic description for which the author is noted. The book not only
+contains a great deal of information in regard to America's principal
+cities as they exist to-day, but many important events in local history
+are cleverly worked in. The _Herald_ feels safe in commending this book
+as both instructive and entertaining. It will be read with interest by
+those who have "been there," and seen for themselves, as well as by
+those who can at most see only in imagination the places treated.
+
+
+_Indianapolis Educational Weekly._
+
+This book occupies a niche in the literature of the country peculiar to
+itself. It describes thirty-nine cities of America, including all the
+largest cities and some others which, though not quite so large, are
+rapidly growing, and seem destined to occupy positions of importance.
+Still other sketches possess peculiar interest for their historical
+associations. Of the latter class are the stories of Savannah,
+Charleston, and Richmond. It is said that Americans too often rush off
+to Europe without knowing that America possesses a Niagara Palls,
+Yosemite Valley, and Yellowstone National Park. The same may be said of
+our reading. Many books descriptive of European cities and places of
+interest are widely circulated and read. And if they are reliable they
+should be read. But America might, with profit, be studied more. This
+book offers a splendid opportunity to learn something of our American
+cities.
+
+
+_Altoona Times._
+
+The reader will find a great abundance of useful information contained
+in a small compass and very pleasantly imparted in Captain Glazier's
+"Peculiarities of American Cities." Those who have little time to gather
+their information from more extended sources will find this a valuable
+work that will supply a vacant place in their library. It is certainly a
+book very much in advance of the volumes of like import that from time
+to time our people have been solicited to buy.
+
+
+_Boston Transcript._
+
+Captain Glazier's style is particularly attractive, and the discursive,
+anecdotal way in which the author carries his readers over the
+continent, from one city to another, is charmingly interesting. He lands
+his reader, by the easiest method, in a city; and when he has got him
+there, strives to interest and make him happy by causing him to glean
+amusement and instruction from all he sees. Every page of the book is
+teeming with interest and information. Persons are made conversant with
+the chief characteristics and history of cities they may never hope to
+visit. The book has apparently been written principally for the purpose
+of presenting the truth about the various chief centres of trade in the
+country, and the writer has adopted a pleasant conversational style,
+more likely to leave the impression desired than all the histories and
+arid guide-books ever published. It is a delightful book, full of happy
+things.
+
+
+_Pittsburgh Sunday Globe._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities," by Willard Glazier, will be found
+disappointing to those who look for an ordinary re-hash of musty data
+about leading cities, as, aside from the numerous illustrations, which
+are far above the average book illustrations in accuracy, the work will
+be found to contain pleasantly written chapters on the industrial and
+social features of New York, Pittsburgh, Washington, Montreal, Portland,
+Savannah, Boston, Albany, Quebec, Omaha, Chicago, Buffalo, St. Louis,
+Hartford, Cleveland, Richmond, Providence, Baltimore, New Orleans, San
+Francisco, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, etc. The chapter on Pittsburgh
+embraces a summing up of its features as an iron, glass, and oil centre,
+while the descriptions of our people and the labor organizations,
+banking, and business interests are well-timed and as comprehensive as
+the limits of the work will permit. It will make a valuable addition to
+any library.
+
+
+_Fort Wayne Gazette._
+
+The author gives his views concerning the history, character, or
+"peculiarities" of some forty prominent American cities. The subject is
+an interesting one, familiarizing the reader with what belongs
+particularly to his own country. Persons may visit a place frequently,
+yet know nothing in regard to its history or the events connected with
+it which make the same memorable. Such matters have been carefully
+collected by the author and properly arranged into a systematic
+narrative. The chapters are exceedingly entertaining aside from the
+information they convey. The author has the ability to present what he
+wishes to communicate in an admirable way, and is tedious in nothing he
+has written. We know of no work on this subject from which so much that
+is valuable can be obtained in so concise a form. It is a book that will
+never weary or lose in interest, and can be placed in the library among
+the valuable works.
+
+
+_Milwaukee Sentinel._
+
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" is a book rather unique in character,
+and may be said to occupy a place somewhere between the regular
+guide-book and the volume of travels. As people who stay at home are not
+generally given to reading guide-books, and as volumes of travel
+embracing the same route as that gone over by our author are not common,
+"Peculiarities of American Cities" fills a niche that has hitherto been
+vacant, and meets a want not before satisfied. The writer takes up the
+most important cities of the United States and Canada in alphabetical
+order, beginning with Albany and ending with Washington, and gives a
+more or less extended description of each, commencing usually with a
+slight historical outline, particularly where it would be of general
+interest, as in the case of Boston, but devoting the greater part of his
+space to the treatment of their present condition. The natural
+advantages of each place are considered, its commerce and manufactures
+discussed, its public parks and buildings described, and illustrations
+of a number of the latter given.
+
+
+_New York World._
+
+To become well acquainted with the principal cities of the Union is not
+a matter of secondary importance, but should be one of the first duties
+of an American citizen. It is at once a source of pleasure and profit to
+know the points of interest in the various places; to be able to give an
+account of the commercial transactions, the people and customs; and, in
+fact, to know about other communities what you find it necessary to
+learn of your own. To the great majority of Americans the opportunity is
+not given of personally becoming acquainted with the various cities of
+import, and the only way we have of knowing the peculiarities of our
+sister cities is by the few scraps we read now and then in the
+newspapers. The want of some method by which to instruct the people in
+this matter has long been manifest, but what to do has often been asked
+and remained unanswered. Educators recommend the compilation of
+statistics of the various places, and many plans were suggested by which
+a knowledge of the subject could be diffused among the masses. It has
+finally been solved by Captain Willard Glazier, of whom the country has
+heard in civil and military life on many former occasions. Captain
+Glazier has traveled over the entire continent since the late war, and
+has become well acquainted with the principal cities, and the thought
+struck him to write a book on the points of interest he has visited in
+the various places. For a number of years he has been at the work, and
+finally gives to the public his latest literary effort, which he has
+appropriately entitled "Peculiarities of American Cities." The book is
+just what is needed in every public and private library in the country,
+and will awaken a deep interest in the citizens of each city on which
+the work treats. The public cannot fail to be interested in the work,
+for it treats on a live subject, and, furthermore, the author's style is
+far too pleasing to permit of any lack of interest. Captain Glazier is
+the author of a number of books, all of which have become popular, and
+we predict for this, his latest effort, the success which it merits.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ POPULAR WORKS
+ OF
+ Captain Willard Glazier,
+ THE SOLDIER-AUTHOR.
+
+ I. Soldiers of the Saddle.
+ II. Capture, Prison-Pen and Escape.
+ III. Battles for the Union.
+ IV. Heroes of Three Wars.
+ V. Peculiarities of American Cities.
+ VI. Down the Great River.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Captain Glazier's works are growing more and more popular every
+ day. Their delineations of _social_, military _and frontier_ life,
+ constantly varying scenes, and deeply interesting stories, combine
+ to place their writer in the front rank of American authors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SOLD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.
+
+ PERSONS DESIRING AGENCIES FOR ANY OF CAPTAIN GLAZIER'S
+ BOOKS SHOULD ADDRESS
+
+ THE PUBLISHERS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBERaEuro(TM)S NOTES:
+
+
+1. Images have been moved from the middle of a paragraph to the closest
+paragraph break.
+
+2. Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.
+
+3. The words "Phoenix" and "Oenone" uses an oe ligature in the original.
+
+4. The following typographical errors have been corrected:
+
+ "Bath-on-the Hudson" corrected to "Bath-on-the-Hudson" (page 28)
+ "facades" corrected to "facades" (page 30)
+ "scarely" corrected to "scarcely" (page 168)
+ "Real" corrected to "Real" (page 236)
+ "Situate" corrected to "Situated" (page 248)
+ "condemed" corrected to "condemned" (page 261)
+ "transferrred" corrected to "transferred" (page 261)
+ "pedestrains" corrected to "pedestrians" (page 312)
+ "possesesion" corrected to "possession" (page 358)
+ "establisment" corrected to "establishment" (page 438)
+ "granduer" corrected to "grandeur" (page 459)
+ "ignominously" corrected to "ignominiously" (page 464)
+ "excelence" corrected to "excellence" (page 523)
+
+4. Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in
+spelling, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peculiarities of American Cities, by
+Willard Glazier
+
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