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Brief Orientation to Counseling 1st Edition Neukrug Test Bank
A Brief Introduction to Counseling
Ed Neukrug

Chapter 2: Professional Associations in Counseling and Related Fields

Multiple Choice
1. An analogy provided by the author of membership in professional organizations is that of a(n) ___________.
A. Door
B. Elevator
C. Home
D. Universe

ANS: C PG: 19

2. There are many benefits of joining a professional association, some of which are listed below. Which of the
following is generally not a benefit?
A. A sense of belonging
B. Lobbying efforts for policy issues
C. Conferences, workshops, and scholarly publications
D. Attainment of licensure through the association (e.g., LPC)
E. Awards and fellowship (“a sense of belonging”)

ANS: D PG: 21

3. Lobbying by professional organizations is widely considered to be:


A. Important and effective
B. Overrated
C. A past trend that is waning
D. A conflict of interest

ANS: A PG: 20

4. All but which of the following is true of the American Counseling Association?
A. It is the largest counseling association in the world
B. It has 19 divisions
C. It can be traced back to 1913 and the founding of the National Vocational Guidance Association
D. It originally split off from the National Association of Social Workers

ANS: D PG: 22

5. The ACA charter states that it is the organization’s goal to promote respect for human __________ and
___________.
A. Behaviors/social justice issues
B. Dignity/diversity
C. Rights/social justice issues
D. Beings/animal rights

ANS: B PG: 22

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6. ACA membership provides for subscriptions to the Journal of Counseling and Development and ___________.
A. Psychological Review
B. American Psychologist
C. Psychology Today
D. Counseling Today

ANS: D PG: 22

7. One who wishes to create his or her own division of the ACA should address all of the following issues except:
A. Cost
B. Statement of purpose
C. Benefits
D. A preliminary list of board members

ANS: D PG: 23

8. The American Counseling Association with its divisions and branches is:
A. Limited to the United States
B. Limited to “The Americas” (The United States, Central America, South America and U.S. territories)
C. Located and prospering in more than 120 countries worldwide
D. Found in the United States, Latin America and Europe

ANS: D PG: 23

9. Which of the following is not an affiliate of or professional partner with ACA?


A. The ACA Insurance Trust
B. The ACA Foundation
C. ACA Travel
D. CACREP
E. NBCC

ANS: C PG: 23

10. This affiliate of ACA provides liability insurance for its members.
A. ACAIT
B. ACAF
C. CACREP
D. CSI

ANS: A PG: 23

11. The American Counseling Association Foundation provides all the following services except:
A. A corporate-style wellness program
B. Support for the needy
C. Scholarships
D. Recognition of outstanding professionals

ANS: A PG: 23

12. Which is true about the divisions of ACA?


A. Almost all of them have a journal
B. One must join ACA to be a member of every division
C. According to the ACA bylaws, they must all offer the same benefits
D. According to the ACA bylaws, they must all charge the same membership fee
E. All of the above are true

ANS: A PG: 24

13. Which affiliate of ACA is an honor society that promotes scholarly activities, leadership, professionalism, and
excellence?
A. ACA Insurance Trust
B. Chi Sigma Iota
C. Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs
D. National Board for Certified Counselors
E. Council on Rehabilitation Education

ANS: B PG: 23, 27

14. Which ACA division is dedicated to the issue of enhancing the lives of persons with disabilities?
A. ARCA
B. ASCA
C. NCDA
D. AMCD
E. NRCA

ANS: A PG: 25

15. The main purpose of this association for clinical counselors is to represent its counselors and to “advocate for
client-access to quality services within the health care industry.”
A. ARCA
B. ASCA
C. AMHCA
D. AMCD
E. ACCA

ANS: C PG: 25

16. The main purpose of this association is to promote its professionals and activities that affect the personal,
educational, and career development of students. These members also work with parents, educators, and
community members to provide a positive learning environment.
A. ARCA
B. ASCA
C. AMHCA
D. AMCD

ANS: B PG: 26

17. ACAs division dedicated to enhancing the lives of persons with disabilities?
A. ARCA
B. ASCA
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the first rank. His literary style is both vigourous and concise, and
displays at times a remarkable intensity of expression. A
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the United States. See Works in 6 volumes; Parton’s Famous
Americans; Lives by Jenkins; Von Holst. Ap.
Calkins, Norman Allison. N. Y., 1822-1895. The first assistant
superintendent of primary schools in New York city for thirty-three
years. Primary Object Lessons; How to Teach; Manual of Object
Teaching; Aids for Object Teaching; Trades and Occupations;
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Callender, James Thomas. E., 17— -1803. A writer who was exiled
from England on account of his pamphlet, The Political Progress of
Great Britain. He was at first the friend and soon the violent
political opponent of Thomas Jefferson. Sketches of the History of
America; The Prospect before Us.
Callender, John. Ms., 1706-1748. A Baptist clergyman of Newport,
Rhode Island, whose Historical Discourse, 1739, is a careful
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Calthrop, Samuel Robert. E., 1829- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of
Syracuse. Essay on Religion and Science; The Rights of the Body.
Calvert, George Henry. Md., 1803-1889. A littérateur of Newport,
Rhode Island, who published a great number of volumes of verse
that never was mistaken for poetry by any reader, and almost as
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Works; Dante and his Latest Translators; St. Beuve, the Critic;
Count Julian, a tragedy; Three Score, and Other Poems; a
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Cameron, Henry Clay. W. Va., 1827- ——. A professor at Princeton
College since 1877. Princeton Roll of Honour; History of American
Whig Society.
Camp, Walter. Ct., 1859- ——. A writer of prominence on athletic
matters. Book of College Sports; American Football; Football Facts
and Figures; Football (with L. F. Deland). Har. Hou.
Campbell, Alexander. I., 1788-1866. A Baptist clergyman of West
Virginia, who was the founder of the sect of Campbellites, or
Disciples of Christ. He established Bethany College in 1841, and
was its first president. His writings, mainly controversial, are nearly
sixty in number, among them being Christian Baptism; Infidelity
Refuted by Infidels; Essay on Life and Death; Popular Lectures and
Addresses; Christianity as it Was; Familiar Lectures on the
Pentateuch; Six Letters to a Sceptic. See Hart’s American
Literature; Memoir by Richardson, 1868.
Campbell, Alexander Augustus. Va., 1789-1846. A Presbyterian
clergyman and physician, once prominent in Tennessee, whose only
book was a work on Scripture Baptism.
Campbell, Alexander James. 18— - ——. Son of A. Campbell, supra.
The Power of Christ to Save to the Uttermost; American Practical
Cyclopædia; A True Friend, reflections on Life, Character, and
Conduct.
Campbell, Bartley. Pa., 1843-1888. A journalist of Pittsburg, who
turned his attention to the stage and became a popular playwright.
My Partner; The Galley Slave; Matrimony; Siberia; The Big
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successful plays.
Campbell, Charles. Va., 1807-1876. An educator of Petersburg,
Virginia, whose father, John Wilson Campbell, a bookseller there
for many years, wrote a History of Virginia to 1781. The writings of
Charles Campbell include History of the Colony of Virginia;
Genealogy of the Spotswood Family; The Bland Papers; Memoir of
John Daly Burk, supra. Lip.
Campbell, Douglas. N. Y., 1840-1893. Son of W. W. Campbell, infra. A
lawyer of New York city, whose notable historical work, The
Puritan in Holland, England, and America, has attracted much
attention. Har.
Campbell, Douglas Houghton. Mch., 1859- ——. A professor of
botany in Stanford University. Elements of Structural and
Systematic Botany; Structure and Development of the Mosses and
Ferns. Mac.
Campbell, Mrs. Helen [Stuart]. 1839- ——. A writer who is deeply
concerned in philanthropic and social reforms, and whose work
covers a wide range of topics. In Foreign Kitchens; The Easiest
Way in Housekeeping, are books for the housekeeper. Prisoners of
Poverty; Prisoners of Poverty Abroad; Some Passages in the Life of
Dr. Martha Scarborough; Women Wage-Earners; Problem of the
Poor; Darkness and Daylight in New York, relate to the social
problems of the time. Six Sinners; His Grandmothers; Roger
Berkeley’s Probation; Miss Melinda’s Opportunity; Mrs. Herndon’s
Income; The What-to-Do-Club; Under Green Apple-Boughs; Unto
the Third and Fourth Generation; Patty Pearson’s Boy, are fictions.
Other works are Girls’ Handbook of Work and Play; A Sylvan City,
a description of Philadelphia; The Ainslee Stories, for juvenile
readers; Anne Bradstreet and her Time, supra. Fo. Hou. Lo. Rob.
Campbell, James Valentine. N. Y., 1823-1890. A Michigan jurist.
Outlines of the Political History of Michigan.
Campbell, John Lyle. Va., 1818-1886. A professor of chemistry at
Washington and Lee College, 1851-86. Manual of Scientific and
Practical Agriculture; Idaho, Six Months in the New Gold Diggings;
Guide to the Agricultural and Mineral West; Geology and Mineral
Resources of the James River Valley, Virginia.
Campbell, John Poage. Va., 1767-1814. A once popular clergyman on
the Ohio border. The Passenger; Strictures on Stone’s Letters on the
Atonement; Vindex; Letters to the Rev. Mr. Craighead; The
Pelagian Defeated; An Answer to Jones.
Campbell, William Henry. Md., 1808-1890. A Dutch Reformed
clergyman, president of Rutgers College, 1863-82. Subjects and
Modes of Baptism; Influence of Christianity in Civil and Religious
Liberty; System of Catechetical Instruction.
Campbell, William W. N. Y., 1806-1881. A jurist of New York city.
Annals of Tryon County, reissued as Border Warfare; Memoirs of
Mrs. Grant, Missionary to Persia; Life and Writings of De Witt
Clinton; Sketches of Robin Hood and Captain Kidd.
Canfield, Henry Judson. Ct., 1789-1856. An agriculturist who
published a serviceable Treatise on the Breed, Management,
Structure, and Diseases of Sheep.
Cannon, Charles James. N. Y., 1810-1860. A New York littérateur who
besides compiling a series of readers published, among other works,
Poems, Dramatic and Miscellaneous; Pencillings from the Web of
Life, and a number of dramas now forgotten.
Cannon, James Spencer. W. I., 1776-1852. A Dutch Reformed
clergyman of New Jersey, professor of metaphysics at Rutgers
College, 1826-56. Lectures on Chronology; Lectures on Pastoral
Theology.
Capen, Nahum. Ms., 1804-1886. A Boston publisher who was
postmaster 1857-61, and introduced the custom of street letter-box
collections. The Republic of the United States; Reminiscences of
Spurzheim and Combe; History of Democracy, or Political Progress
Historically Illustrated.
Capers, William. S. C., 1790-1855. A Methodist bishop once prominent
in the South. Cathechisms for Negro Missions; Short Sermons and
True Tales for Children. See Life, by Wightman, 1859.
Carey, Henry Charles. Pa., 1793-1879. Son of M. Carey, infra. One of
the foremost of American political economists, who advocated
protection as a preliminary step toward ultimate free trade. He
opposed such theorists as Malthus and Ricardo, holding that human
progress depends upon success in subjugating nature; that land
values depend upon labour; and that the social well-being is directly
dependent upon existing conditions. Principles of Political
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Lectures on the Currency; Letters on Political Economy; Letters on
International Copyright; Financial Crises; The Unity of Law,
comprise his chief works. See Allibone’s Dictionary; Memoir by
Elder; Gross’s Sketches of Contemporaries. Bai. Lip.
Carey, Matthew. I., 1760-1839. An Irishman who came to America in
1785, entered into politics, and established himself in Philadelphia
as a bookseller. His writings include The Olive Branch, or Faults on
Both Sides, Federal and Democratic (1814), which soon entered a
tenth edition; Vindiciæ Hibernicæ; Thoughts on Penitentiaries and
Prison Discipline; Essays on Political Economy; The Yellow Fever
of 1793.
Carleton, Henry Guy. N. M., 1856- ——. A journalist of New York city
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Carleton, Osgood. 1742-1816. A Massachusetts mathematician.
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Carleton, William. Mch., 1845- ——. A writer of homely verse which
appeals with great force to imperfectly educated tastes, and has
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Ballads; Farm Festivals; Farm Legends; City Legends; City
Ballads; City Festivals; Rhymes of our Planet; Young Folks’
Centennial Rhymes; The Old Infant, and Similar Stories. Har.
Carman [William], Bliss. N. B., 1861- ——. A poet of Canadian birth,
whose literary work has been done mainly in New York and Boston.
Low Tide on Grand Pré; A Seamark; Behind the Arras; Songs from
Vagabondia (with R. Hovey, infra); More Songs from Vagabondia
(with R. Hovey); Ballads of Lost Haven, a Book of the Sea. Cop.
Lam.
Carnegie, Andrew. S., 1835- ——. A noted steel-manufacturer of
Pittsburg who came to America in 1845. He has made many
important gifts to his native Scotland and to Pittsburg, and as a
writer is distinguished for the rather exuberant Americanism of his
work. An American Four-in-Hand in Europe; Round the World;
Triumphant Democracy, or Fifty Years’ March of the Republic. Scr.
Carnochan, John Murray. Ga., 1817-1887. A New York surgeon of
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Operative Surgery. Har.
Carpenter, Edmund Janes. Ms., 1845- ——. A journalist of Boston. A
Woman of Shawmut, a Romance of Colonial Times; History of
Roger Williams. Lit.
Carpenter, Esther Bernon. R. I., 1848-1893. A writer of southern
Rhode Island, whose South Country Neighbours is a series of
sympathetic studies in fiction of Rhode Island types of character.
Rob.
Carpenter, Francis Bicknell. N. Y., 1830-1900. A portrait painter of
New York city, who painted The Emancipation Proclamation in the
Capitol at Washington. Six Months in the White House with
Abraham Lincoln.
Carpenter, Henry Bernard. I., 1840-1890. A Unitarian clergyman of
Boston, brother of W. Boyd Carpenter, the Anglican bishop of
Ripon. He wrote principally in verse, his only published books
including The Oatmeal Crusaders; Liber Amoris, a Metrical
Romaunt of the Middle Ages; A Poet’s Last Songs. The last-named
volume was issued after his death, with memorial sketch by J. J.
Roche, infra. Hou.
Carpenter, Stephen Cullen. E., c. 17— -1820. An English journalist
who came to America in 1803 and settled in Charleston. Memoir of
Thomas Jefferson, containing a Concise History of the United
States (1809); An Overland Journey to India, published under the
pseudonym “Donald Campbell.”
Carpenter, Stephen Haskins. N. J., 1831-1878. A Wisconsin educator,
professor of literature at the University of Wisconsin. Evidences of
Christianity; English of the 14th Century; Introduction to the Study
of Anglo-Saxon; Elements of English Analysis. Gi.
Carr, Lucien. Mo., 1829- ——. An archæologist of Cambridge, assistant
curator of the Peabody Museum, 1876-1894. The Mounds of the
Mississippi Valley Historically Considered; Missouri, a brief history
of the State; Prehistoric Remains of Kentucky (with N. S. Shaler,
infra). Clke. Hou.
Carrier, Augustus Stiles. N. Y., 1857. A Presbyterian clergyman of
Chicago, professor of Hebrew in McCormick Theological Seminary
from 1892. The Hebrew Verb, a Series of Tabular Studies.
Carrington, Henry Beebe. Ct., 1824- ——. A general in the United
States army living in Boston. His principal writings include Crisis
Thoughts; Battles of the American Revolution; Apsaraka, or Indian
Operations on the Plains; Hints to Soldiers Taking the Field; The
Washington Obelisk and its Voices. See One of a Thousand. Bar. Le.
Lip.
Carrol, John. Md., 1735-1817. The first Roman Catholic archbishop of
Baltimore. His writings are mainly of a controversial cast. Concise
View of the Principal Points of Controversy between the Protestant
and Catholic Churches; Discourse on General Washington.
Carroll, Anna Ella. Md., 1815-1894. A political writer who was the real
author of the Federal campaign of 1862 in Tennessee. The Great
American Battle, or The Contest between Christianity and Political
Romanism; The Star of the West, or National Men and National
Measures; The Union of the States; The War Powers of the General
Government; The Relation of the National Government to the
Revolted Citizens Defined. See S. E. Blackwell’s A Military Genius.
Carroll, Henry King. N. J., 1847- ——. A Methodist clergyman and
religious statistician. The World of Missions; The Catholic Dogma
of Church Authority; The Religious Forces of the United States.
Carryl, Charles Edward. N. Y., 1841- ——. A broker of New York city,
the author of the popular juvenile tales, Davy and the Goblin; The
Admiral’s Caravan. Cent. Hou.
Carson, Joseph. 1808-1876. A medical professor at the University of
Pennsylvania from 1850. Illustrations of Medical Botany; Lectures
on Materia Medica and Pharmacy.
Carter, Franklin. Ct., 1837- ——. President of Williams College. Life
of Mark Hopkins, infra, and a scholarly translation of Goethe’s
Iphigenie auf Tauris. Hou.
Carter, James Gordon. Ms., 1795-1849. A once prominent educator of
Massachusetts. Essays on Popular Education; Geography of New
Hampshire; Geography of Massachusetts; Letters to William
Prescott on the Free Schools of New England.
Carter, Nathaniel Franklin. N. H., 1830- ——. A Congregational
clergyman in New Hampshire. The Ride for Life, and Other Poems;
History of Pembroke, New Hampshire.
Carter, Nathaniel Hazeltine. N. H., 1787-1830. A New York journalist
who published Letters from Europe (1827), and wrote many poems
of reflection.
Carter, Peter. S., 1825- ——. A prominent New York publisher. Crumbs
from the Land of Cakes, a volume of travels in Scotland; Scotia’s
Bards; and three juvenile tales, including Bertie Lee; Donald Fraser;
Effie’s Home.
Carter, Robert. N. Y., 1819-1879. A New York writer who was one of
the editors of Appleton’s American Cyclopædia, to which he
contributed many articles. A Summer Cruise on the Coast of New
England was his only book of importance.
Carter, Russel Kelso. Md., 1849- ——. A mathematician of Chester,
Pennsylvania, prominent in the “Holiness” movement in the
Methodist church and as a Faith healer. The Atonement for Sin and
Sickness; Miracles of Healing.
Cartwright, Peter. Va., 1785-1872. A once famous Methodist preacher
of Illinois. Controversy with the Devil; Autobiography of a
Backwoods Preacher; Fifty Years a Presiding Elder.
Caruthers, William Alexander. Va., 1800-1850. A physician of
Savannah who wrote a number of romances now quite forgotten.
The Kentuckian in New York; The Cavaliers of Virginia; Knights of
the Horse Shoe; Life of Charles Caldwell, supra.
Cary, Alice. O., 1820-1871. An Ohio writer who came with her sister
Phœbe to New York city in 1852, and as poet and novelist became
prominent in literary circles there. The weekly receptions of the
sisters were attended by artists and writers for many years. Her
books of verse include Lyra, and Other Poems; A Lover’s Diary;
Ballads, Lyrics, and Hymns; Early and Late Poems (with Phœbe
Cary, infra). Her other works are Clovernook, a book of the type of
Miss Mitford’s Our Village; Pictures of Country Life; the novels,
Hagar; The Bishop’s Son; Married, not Mated. Snowberries, a
juvenile; From Year to Year, a Token of Remembrance (with P.
Cary). See Memorials of Alice and Phœbe Cary, by Mrs. [Clemmer]
Hudson. Hou. Lip.
Cary, Edward. N. Y., 1840- ——. A journalist of New York city on the
editorial staff of The Times. Life of George William Curtis, infra.
Hou.
Cary, George Lovell. Ms., 1830- ——. A professor of New Testament
literature at Meadville Theological School since 1862. Introduction
to the Greek of the New Testament.
Cary, Phœbe. O., 1824-1871. Sister of A. Cary, supra. Poems and
Parodies; Poems of Faith, Hope, and Love. She will be longest
remembered by the well-known hymn, Nearer Home. Hou. Lip.
Casey, Silas. R. I., 1807-1882. A general in the United States army who
published Infantry Tactics; Infantry Tactics for Colored Troops.
Cass, Lewis. N. H., 1782-1866. A statesman of Michigan who was the
Democratic candidate for president in 1845. Inquiries Concerning
the History, Traditions, and Languages of the Indians in the United
States; France, its King, Court, and Government, 1840. See Lives by
Schoolcraft, 1848; W. L. G. Smith, 1856; McLaughlin, 1891.
Cassin, John. Pa., 1813-1869. A naturalist of Philadelphia whose
American Ornithology is a continuation of Audubon’s work on that
subject. Other works of his are Ornithology of the Japan
Expedition; Mammalogy and Ornithology of the Wilkes Exploring
Expedition; Illustrations of the Birds of California, Texas, etc.; A
General Synopsis of North American Ornithology. Lip.
Castlemon, Harry. See Fosdick.
Caswall, Henry. E., 1810-1870. An Episcopal clergyman of English
birth, but ordained in the United States, where the most of his life
was spent. He lived for a time in England, however, and was a
prebend of Salisbury. An Epitome of the History of the American
Episcopal Church (1836); Didascalus, or The Teacher; Mormonism
and its Author; The Jerusalem Chamber, or Convocation and its
Possibilities; The Californian Crusoe, a Tale of Mormonism;
Scotland and the Scottish Church; The Western World Revisited;
The Martyr of the Pongas; The American Church and the American
Union, include the majority of his writings.
Caswell, Alexis. Ms., 1799-1877. A Baptist clergyman and educator; for
35 years a professor at Brown University, and its president, 1868-
72. Lectures on Astronomy; Meteorological Observations.
Cathcart, William. I., 1826- ——. A Baptist clergyman of Philadelphia.
The Baptists and the American Revolution; The Papal System; The
Baptism of the Ages and the Nations; The Baptist Encyclopædia.
Catherwood, Mrs. Mary [Hartwell]. O., 1847-1902. A writer of
Hoopeston, Illinois, whose historical romances dealing with the
early days of Canada and the Northwest are as notable for their
careful attention to historical details as for their graphic and
picturesque style. A Woman in Armour; The Lady of Fort St. John;
The Romance of Dollard; Story of Tonty; Old Kaskaskia; The
Chase of St. Castin, and Other Tales; The Spirit of an Illinois Town;
The White Islander, a story of Mackinac; Craque o’ Doom. Her
books for young people include Old Caravan Days; The Dogberry
Bunch; Rocky Fork; The Secrets of Roseladies. Cent. Hou. Lip. Lo.
Mg.
Catlin, George. Pa., 1796-1872. An artist who spent many years among
the Indians. Notes of Eight Years in Europe; Illustrations of the
Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians;
Notes for the Emigrant to America; Life among the Indians, a Book
for Youth; The Breath of Life, or Mal-Respiration and its Effects;
O-Kee-Pa, a Religious Ceremony, and other Customs of the
Mandans; Last Rambles Among the Indians of the Rocky
Mountains; The Lifted and Subsided Rocks of America. See
Tuckerman’s Book of the Artists.
Catlin, George Lynde. S. I., 1840-1896. A journalist and diplomat,
consul at Limoges, Stuttgart, and Zurich. Bilbigheim, a story; The
Presidential Campaign of 1896, written in 1888; Titbits for
Travellers; The Postilion of Nagold and Other Poems. Fu.
Caton, John Dean. N. Y., 1812-1895. A jurist of Chicago. A Summer in
Norway; The Last of the Illinois and a Sketch of the Pottawatomies;
The Antelope and the Deer of America; Miscellanies, Speeches, and
Essays.
Caulkins, Frances Mainwaring. Ct., 1796-1869. A local historian of
Connecticut. A History of Norwich; A History of New London.
Cawein, Madison Julius. Ky., 1865- ——. A poet of Louisville,
Kentucky, whose verse is very musical, and shows much
individuality. Days and Dreams; Moods and Memories; Intimations
of the Beautiful; Blooms of the Berry; The Triumph of Music;
Accolon of Gaul; Lyrics and Idyls; Poems of Nature and Love; Red
Leaves and Roses; The Garden of Dreams; Undertones. Cop. Mor.
Put.
Cesnola [ches-no´la], Luigi Palma di. It., 1832-1904. An archæologist
who served in the Union army during the War and became a
colonel, but for a number of years filled the position of director of
the Metropolitan Museum of New York city. Cyprus, its Ancient
Cities, Tombs, and Temples; The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Ap.
Har.
Chadbourne, Paul Ansel. Me., 1823-1883. A Congregational
clergyman who was president of Williams College, 1872-81.
Relations of Natural History to Intellect, Taste, Wealth, and
Religion; Natural Theology; Instinct in Animals and Men; Strength
of Men and Stability of Nations; The Hope of the Righteous; The
Public Services of the State of New York [with W. B. Moore]. Bar.
Put.
Chadwick, Henry. N. H., 1824- ——. An authority on games and
sports. Base Ball Players’ Book of Reference; Base Ball, How to
Learn, Play, and Teach It; Base Ball Manual; Sports and Pastimes of
American Boys.
Chadwick, John White. Ms., 1840- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of
Brooklyn, prominent among the more radical thinkers of his
denomination. The Man Jesus; The Faith of Reason; The Bible of
To-Day; Old and New Unitarian Belief; The Power of an Endless
Life; The Revelation of God, and Other Sermons; Thomas Paine:
the Method and Value of his Religious Teachings; George William
Curtis: an Address; A Book of Poems; In Nazareth Town, and Other
Poems. Har. Put. Rob.
Chaffin, William Ladd. Me., 1837- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of
Easton, Massachusetts, whose History of Easton is of notable
excellence.
Chaillé, Stanford Emerson. Mi., 1830- ——. A prominent physician of
New Orleans. Yellow Fever in Havana and Cuba; Laws of
Population and Voters; Living, Dying, Registering, and Voting
Population of Louisiana; Intimidation of Voters in Louisiana; Origin
and Progress of Medical Jurisprudence, 1776-1876.
Chalkley, Thomas. E., 1675-1741. A Quaker itinerant preacher born in
London, who spent his life preaching throughout New England and
the Southern colonies. His writings, consisting of religious tracts
and a Journal of his experiences, published as Life, Labours, and
Travels, are noted for their quaint simplicity. His Journal has been
very popular among the Friends, and has been several times
reprinted. See Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 9.
Chalmers, Lionel. S., c. 1715-1777. A once noted physician of
Charleston. Treatise on the Weather and Diseases of South Carolina;
Essay on Fevers.
Chamberlain, Jacob. Ct., 1835- ——. A Reformed Dutch missionary to
India. The Bible Tested is his most important work.
Chamberlain, Nathan Henry. Ms., 1830-1901. An Episcopal
clergyman of Massachusetts, whose principal writings include The
Autobiography of a New England Farm House; Samuel Sewell and
the World he Lived In; The Sphinx in Aubrey Parish.
Chamberlayne, Israel. N. Y., 1795-1875. A Methodist clergyman. The
Past and the Future; The Australian Captive; Saving Faith: its
Rationale; The Great Specific against Despair of Pardon. Meth.
Chamberlin, Joseph Edgar. Vt., 1851- ——. A Boston journalist on the
staffs of The Transcript and the Youth’s Companion. The Listener in
the Town; The Listener in the Country. Cop.
Chamberlin, Thomas Chrowder. Il., 1843- ——. A prominent
geologist of Wisconsin. Outline of a Course of Oral Instruction;
Geology of Wisconsin.
Chambers, Charles Julius. O., 1850- ——. A journalist long connected
with the New York Herald. A Mad World and its Inhabitants, a
description of lunatic asylums founded on the author’s personal
experience in one in disguise; On a Margin, a Story of These Times;
Lovers Four and Maidens Five, a Story. Ap. Fu.
Chambers, Robert William. L. I., 1865- ——. A novelist and artist of
New York city. In the Quarter; The King in Yellow; The Red
Republic; The Maker of Moons; The Mystery of Choice; A King
and a Few Dukes; With the Band, a book of ballads. Ne. Put. St.
Chambers, Talbot Wilson. Pa., 1819-1896. A noted Reformed Dutch
clergyman of New York city. The Noon Prayer Meeting in Fulton
Street; Memoir of Theodore Frelinghuysen; The Psalter a Witness
to the Divine Origin of the Bible; Companion to the Revised
Version of the Old Testament. Fu.
Champlin, James Tifft. Ct., 1811-1882. A Baptist clergyman of
Portland, Maine, president of Colby University, 1857-73. First
Principles of Ethics; Lessons on Political Economy; Text-Book of
Intellectual Philosophy; Scripture Reading Lessons; The
Constitution of the United States, with Brief Comments; and a
series of classical text-books. See Bibliography of Maine.
Champlin, John Denison. Ct., 1834- ——. A littérateur of New York
city. Young Folks’ Cyclopædia of Common Things; Young Folks’
Cyclopædia of Persons and Places; Young Folks’ History of the War
for the Union; Young Folks’ Catechism of Common Things; Young
Folks’ Cyclopædia of Games and Sports; Young Folks’ Astronomy;
Chronicle of the Coach: Charing Cross to Ilfracombe. With W. F.
Apthorp, supra, he has edited a Cyclopædia of Music and
Musicians, and with C. C. Perkins, infra, a Cyclopædia of Painters
and Paintings. Ho. Scr.
Champney, Mrs. Elizabeth [Williams]. O., 1850- ——. A popular
New York writer for young people, and wife of the artist, J. Wells
Champney, who has illustrated many of her books. The Three
Vassar Girls Series; The Witch Winnie Books; The Bubbling
Teapot; Howling Wolf and his Trick-Pony; All Around a Palette;
Children’s Art Sketches; In the Sky Garden; Fables in Astronomy,
and other juveniles; and the novels, Bourbon Lilies; Sebia’s Tangled
Web; Rosemary and Rue. Do. Est. Lo. Ran.
Chancellor, Charles Williams. Va., 1833- ——. An eminent physician
of Baltimore. Prisons, Reformatories, and Charitable Institutions of
Maryland; Mineral Waters and Seaside Resorts; Contagious and
Infectious Diseases; Drainage of the Marsh Lands of Maryland;
Heredity; The Sewerage of Cities.
Chandler, Bessie. See Parker, Mrs.
Chandler, Elizabeth Margaret. Del., 1807-1835. A verse-writer whose
themes were mainly those relating to the subject of anti-slavery, in
which she was greatly interested. See Poetical Works and Essays,
with Memoir by Benjamin Lundy.
Chandler, Peleg Whitman. Me., 1816-1889. A prominent lawyer of
Boston. The Bankrupt Law of the United States; American Criminal
Trials; Memoir of Governor Andrew; Observations on the
Authenticity of the Gospels. Rob.
Chaney, George Leonard. Ms., 1836- ——. A Unitarian clergyman,
pastor of the Hollis Street Church in Boston, 1862-79, and
subsequently pastor in Atlanta, Georgia, where he edited the
Southern Unitarian, 1893-96. F. Grant & Co., a story for boys; Tom,
a Home Story; Aloha, travels in the Sandwich Islands; Every Day
Life and Every Day Morals; Belief. Rob.
Chaney, Lucien West. N. Y., 1857- ——. A naturalist, professor of
biology in Carleton College, Minnesota, since 1882, and author of
Guides for the Laboratory.
Chanler, Mrs. Amélie Rives. See Troubetzkoy.
Channing, Edward. Ms., 1856- ——. Son of W. E. Channing, 2d. A
professor of history at Harvard University since 1883. Guide to the
Study of American History (with A. B. Hart, infra); Town and
County Government of the English Colonies of North America;
Narragansett Planters; The United States of America, 1765-1865.
Gi. Mac.
Channing, Edward Tyrrel. R. I., 1790-1856. Brother of W. E.
Channing, infra. A professor of rhetoric and oratory at Harvard
University. Life of William Ellery; Lectures on Rhetoric and
Oratory (with Memoir by R. H. Dana, Jr.).
Channing, Walter. R. I., 1786-1876. Brother of W. E. Channing, infra.
A physician of prominence in Boston for many years, and medical
professor in Harvard University. The Prevention of Pauperism;
Etherization in Childbirth; Professional Reminiscences of Foreign
Travel; New and Old; Miscellaneous Poems; A Physician’s
Vacation, or A Summer in Europe; Reformation of Medical
Science.
Channing, William Ellery. R. I., 1780-1842. A Unitarian theologian of
eminence, who became pastor of the Federal Street Church in
Boston in 1803. He was the foremost theologian in America in his
time, and his influence is still great. He wrote upon philanthropic
and social as well as religious and ethical questions, and was a
noted opponent of slavery. His writings have been translated into
French, Italian, German, Icelandic, Russian, and Hungarian.
Evidences of Revealed Religion; Self-Culture; Essay on Milton;
The Duty of the Free States, are among his most notable works. See
Sprague’s Annals of the American Pulpit; Lives by W. H. Channing,
infra; C. T. Brooks, supra; Reminiscences by Miss Peabody;
Correspondence of Channing and Lucy Aikin; New England
Magazine, December, 1896. A. U. A.
Channing, William Ellery. Ms., 1818-1901. Son of W. Channing,
supra. A poet and essayist of Concord, Massachusetts, who married
a sister of Margaret Fuller, infra. His verse is thoroughly original in
tone and more or less willful in form. His work in verse includes
The Youth of the Painter, a series of psychological essays; Poems
1843-47; The Woodman; The Wanderer; Near Home; Eliot; John
Brown; Thoreau, the Poet Naturalist; Conversations in Rome
between an Artist, a Catholic, and a Critic, are prose volumes.
Channing, William Francis. Ms., 1820-1901. Son of W. E. Channing,
1st. A physician, scientist, and inventor. Davis’s Manual of
Magnetism; Medical Application of Electricity; The American Fire
Alarm Telegraph.
Channing, William Henry. Ms., 1810-1884. Nephew of W. E.
Channing. A Unitarian clergyman who settled in England, and
succeeded James Martineau as pastor of the Unitarian Chapel in
Hope Street, Liverpool. The Christian Church and Social Reform;
Memoirs of Wm. E. Channing; Memoirs of James H. Perkins;
Memoirs of Margaret Fuller (with R. W. Emerson and J. F. Clarke).
A. U. A.
Chapin, Aaron Lucius. Ct., 1817-1892. A Congregational clergyman of
Wisconsin, who was president of Beloit College, 1849-86. First
Principles of Political Economy.
Chapin, Alonzo Bowen. Ct., 1808-1858. An Episcopal clergyman of
Hartford. Classical Spelling-Book; Organization and Order of the
Primitive Church; Views of Gospel Truth; Glastenbury for 200
Years (1853); Puritanism not Protestantism.
Chapin, Edwin Hubbell. N. Y., 1814-1881. A Universalist clergyman of
New York city, long the foremost preacher in his denomination. The
Crown of Thorns; Humanity in the City; Christianity the Perfection
of True Manliness; Moral Aspects of City Life; Discourses on the
Lord’s Prayer; Hours of Communion; Token for the Sorrowing;
Characters in the Gospels. See Life, by Sumner Ellis.
Chapin, James Henry. Ind., 1832-1892. A Universalist clergyman and
educator, professor of geology in St. Lawrence University, 1871-92.
Sketches of the Huguenots; The Creation and Early Development of
Mankind; From Japan to Granada, a Tour Around the World. See
Life of, by G. S. Weaver. Put.
Chaplin, Mrs. Ada C. Ms., 1842-1883. A Massachusetts writer of
religious juveniles, some of which are Christ’s Cadets; Charity
Hurlburt; Our Gold Mine, the Story of American Baptist Missions
in India.
Chaplin, Heman White. R. I., 1847- ——. Son of J. Chaplin, 2d. A
lawyer of Boston, whose Five Hundred Dollars, and Other Stories
of New England Life, are exceptionally faithful and delicate studies
of character, and rank among the foremost of American short
stories. Lit.
Chaplin, Mrs. Jane [Dunbar]. S., 1819-1884. Wife of J. Chaplin, 2d,
infra, and daughter of Duncan Dunbar. Among her various writings,
mainly religious juveniles, are The Transplanted Shamrock; Black
and White; The Convent and the Manse.
Chaplin, Jeremiah. Ms., 1776-1841. A Baptist clergyman and educator,
the first president of Colby University, 1822-33. The Evening of
Life.
Chaplin, Jeremiah. Ms., 1813-1886. Son of J. Chaplin, supra. A Baptist
clergyman of Newton, Massachusetts, who after leaving the
ministry devoted himself to literary pursuits in Boston. The
Memorial Hour; The Hand of Jesus; Riches of Bunyan; Life of
Henry Dunster, First President of Harvard College; Chips from the
White House; Life of Benjamin Franklin; Life of Galen; Life of
Duncan Dunbar; Life of Charles Sumner (with Jane Chaplin). Lo.
Chapman, Alvan Wentworth. Ms., 1809-1899. A botanist for whom
the genus Chapmannia was named. Flora of the Southern United
States.
Chapman, George Thomas. E., 1786-1872. An Episcopal clergyman.
Sketches of Alumni of Dartmouth College from 1771-1868.
Chapman, Henry Cadwalader. Pa., 1845- ——. Grandson of N.
Chapman, infra. A physician of Philadelphia. Evolution of Life;
History of the Discovery of the Circulation of the Blood.
Chapman, Nathaniel. Va., 1780-1853. A Philadelphia physician and
professor of medicine in the University of Pennsylvania, 1814-50.
Materia Medica and Therapeutics, long a valued text-book; Select
Speeches (edited); Lectures on Eruptive Fevers, Hemorrhages and
Dropsies; Lectures on Thoracic Viscera. See Gross’s Sketches of
Contemporaries.
Charles, Mrs. Emily [Thornton]. Ind., 1845-189-. A Washington
journalist who published two volumes of verse. Hawthorn
Blossoms; Lyrical Poems. Lip.
Chase, George. Me., 1849- ——. A professor of criminal law at
Columbia College. The American Students’ Blackstone.
Chase, George Wingate. Ms., 1826-1867. A native and resident of
Haverhill, Massachusetts. History of Haverhill, 1640-1860; The
Freemason’s Monitor; Masonic Dictionary and Manual of Masonic
Law; Tactics for Knights Templars and Appendant Authors.
Chase, Irah. Vt., 1793-1864. A Baptist clergyman of prominence who
founded the theological seminary at Newton Centre, Massachusetts,
and was professor there, 1825-45. Life of Bunyan; Design of
Baptism; The Jewish Tabernacle; Infant Baptism an Invention of
Men; The Constitutions of the Holy Apostles, are his principal
works.
Chase, Lucien B. Vt., 1817-1864. A member of Congress from
Tennessee, who wrote the History of Polk’s Administration.
Chase, Philander. N. H., 1775-1852. The first Protestant Episcopal
bishop of Ohio, and, later, of Illinois. He founded Kenyon College
at Gambier, Ohio. A Plea for the West; Defence of Kenyon College;
Reminiscences.
Chase, Pliny Earle. Ms., 1820-1886. An educator and scientist of
Philadelphia. Numerical Relations of Gravity and Magnetism;
Elements of Meteorology; Elements of Arithmetic; Common
School Arithmetic.
Chase, Thomas. Ms., 1827-1892. Brother of P. E. Chase, supra. An
educator of Pennsylvania, and president of Haverford College. He
was co-editor with George Stuart of a series of classical text-books,
and also published Hellas, her Monuments and Scenery, descriptive
of his travels in Greece.
Chatard, Francis Silas Marean. Md., 1834- ——. The Roman Catholic
bishop of Vincennes. Christian Truths.
Chatfield-Taylor, Hobart Chatfield. Il., 1865- ——. A novelist of
Chicago. With Edge Tools; An American Peeress; Two Women and
a Fool; The Land of the Castanet.
Chauncy [chän´sĭ or chaun´sĭ], Charles. E., 1592-1672. A Puritan
clergyman, vicar of Ware, 1627-35. He came to America in 1638,
and was 13 years minister at Scituate. He was the second president
of Harvard College, succeeding Henry Dunster in 1654. His most
important work is a series of Twenty-Six Sermons on Justification.
Antisynodalia Scripta America, a controversial pamphlet, appeared
in 1662. See Tyler’s American Literature; Dictionary of National
Biography, vol. 10.
Chauncy, Charles. Ms., 1705-1787. Great-grandson of C. Chauncy,
supra. A Congregational clergyman of Boston. A vigourous, logical
thinker, who exercised a great influence upon colonial thought.
Seasonable Thoughts on the State of Religion in New England;
Discourse on Enthusiasm, directed against Whitefield, of whose
teachings he was a strong opponent; Letters to Whitefield;
Complete View of Episcopacy; The Mystery hid from the Ages;
Benevolence of the Deity; Five Dissertations on the Fall and its
Consequences; Validity of Presbyterian Ordination, comprise his
principal works. See Tyler’s American Literature; Chauncy
Memorials.
Chauvenet [shō-ve-nay´], William. Pa., 1820-1870. A mathematician
who was chancellor of Washington University, St. Louis, 1862-69.
Binomial Theorem and Logarithms; Plane and Spherical
Trigonometry; Manual of Spherical and Practical Astronomy;
Elementary Geometry. See Memoir, 1877. Lip.
Checkley, John. Ms., 1680-1753. An Episcopal clergyman of Rhode
Island, noted in his day for his witty, reckless attacks on his
theological opponents. Choice Dialogues about Predestination.
Cheetham, James. E., 1772-1810. An English journalist who came to
America in 1798, and became editor of The American Citizen. Nine
Letters on Burr’s Defection; Reply to Aristides; Life of Thomas
Paine, a work written from a hostile point of view.
Cheever, Ezekiel. E., 1615-1708. A colonial educator of Boston, who
was master of the Latin School for many years. Scripture
Prophecies Explained, an essay on the millennium; Latin
Accidence, for a century a standard introductory Latin text-book in
New England.
Cheever, George Barrell. Me., 1807-1890. A noted Congregational
clergyman of New York city. Deacon Giles’s Distillery; Studies in
Poetry; Wanderings of a Pilgrim in the Shadow of Mont Blanc;
Lectures on Pilgrim’s Progress; Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth;
God Against Slavery; Incidents and Memories of the Christian Life;
The Guilt of Slavery; The Republic or the Oligarchy, Which?; Faith,
Doubt, and Evidence; God’s Timepiece for Man’s Eternity; Lectures
on Cowper; Windings of the River of the Water of Life, include his
principal writings. Ran. Wi.
Cheever, Henry Theodore. Me., 1814-1897. Brother of G. B. Cheever,
supra. A Congregational clergyman. Way Marks in the Moral War
with Slavery; Correspondences of Faith and Views of Madame
Guyon; The Island World of the Pacific; Life in the Sandwich
Islands; The Whale and his Captors; The Pulpit and the Pew; Life of
Nathaniel Cheever; Life of Walter Colton, infra; Captain Caugar.
Har.
Chellis, Mary Dwinell. See Lund, Mrs.
Cheney, Mrs. Ednah Dow [Littlehale]. Ms., 1824-1904. A Boston
writer, associated in early life with the prominent New England
transcendentalists, who was long active in the woman-suffrage
movement, and whose writing had more or less to do with
philosophical themes. Her principal works comprise Hand-book of
American History for Coloured People; Faithful to the Light, and
Other Tales; Stories of the Olden Time; Gleanings in the Fields of
Art; Life of Louisa Alcott, supra; Life of Christian Daniel Rauch,
Sculptor; Memoir of John Cheney, Engraver; Memoir of Dr. Susan
Dimock; Nora’s Return, a sequel to Ibsen’s Doll’s House; Sally
Williams, the Mountain Girl.
Cheney, Mrs. Harriet Vaughan [Foster]. Ms., c. 1815- ——. Daughter
of Hannah Foster, infra. Confessions of an Early Martyr; A Peep at
the Pilgrims in 1636; The Rivals of Acadia; Sketches from the Life
of Christ; The Sunday School, or Village Sketches (with her sister,
Mrs. Cushing).
Cheney, John Vance. N. Y., 1848- ——. Son of S. P. Cheney, infra. A
poet and essayist, for some years at the head of the public library in
San Francisco, and now (1897) librarian of the Newberry Library in
Chicago. His work in verse includes Thistle Drift; Wood Blooms;
Queen Helen, and Other Poems. In prose, The Old Doctor, a
Romance of Queer Village; The Golden Guess, a series of critical
essays; That Dome in Air, a similar collection of critical studies. Ap.
Cop. Le. Mg. Sto. Wy.
Cheney, Simeon Pease. N. H., 1818-1890. A once noted musical
educator of Vermont. The American Singing Book; Wood Notes
Wild, notations of Bird Music. Le.
Cheney, Theseus Apoleon. N. Y., 1830-1878. A writer who devoted his
attention to the history of the western portion of his native State.
Report on the Ancient Monuments of Western New York; Historical
Sketch of the Chemung Valley; Historical Sketch of 18 Counties of
Central and Southern New York; Laron; Relations of Government
to Science; Antiquarian Researches.
Chenoweth, Mrs. Caroline [Van Dusen]. Ind., 1846- ——. A teacher
of literature in Boston and New York. Stories of the Saints. Hou.
Chesebro [cheez´brō], Caroline. N. Y., 1825-1873. A writer of stories
and sketches who was during the latter part of her life a teacher in
the Packer Institute of Brooklyn. Her writing displays much
individuality, and the novel, The Foe in the Household, her finest
work, is a careful study of some unfamiliar phases of Pennsylvania
life. Her other works include The Beautiful Gate and Other
Sketches; Peter Carradine; The Children of Light; Susan the
Fisherman’s Daughter; The Little Cross Bearers; Dream-Land by
Daylight; Philly and Kit; Victoria; Amy Carr; The Glen Cabin.
Chester, Albert Huntington. N. Y., 1843- ——. A professor of
chemistry and metallurgy at Rutgers College. Dictionary of the
Names of Minerals; Catalogue of Minerals with their Chemical
Composition and Synonyms. Wil.
Chester, Frederick Dixon Walthall. W. I., 1861- ——. A geologist of
Delaware who has written many monographs upon local state
geology.
Chester, Joseph Lemuel. Ct., 1821-1882. A Philadelphia journalist who
went to England in 1858, living in London, and devoting himself to
antiquarian research till he became one of the most famous
genealogists of his day. His own writings include Greenwood
Cemetery and Other Poems; Treatise on the Laws of Repulsion;
Educational Laws of Virginia: the personal narrative of Margaret
Douglass, imprisoned for the crime of teaching free coloured
children to read; John Rogers, the Compiler of the English Bible;
Preliminary Investigation of the Alleged Ancestry of George
Washington. His most important antiquarian work is an edition of
the Marriage, Baptismal, and Burial Registers of Westminster
Abbey, with notes, on which he spent 17 years’ labour. He edited
also the parish registers of six London city churches. See Dictionary
of National Biography, vol. x.
Chickering, Jesse. N. H., 1797-1855. A Boston physician who was a
Unitarian minister in his earlier career, and later became a noted
writer on political economy. Statistical View of the Population of
Massachusetts, 1765-1840; Emigration into the United States;
Reports on the Census of Boston; Letter to the President on Slavery
in Relation to Constitutional Government in Great Britain and the
United States.
Chickering, John White. Ms., 1808-1888. A Congregational clergyman
of Portland, Maine, 1835-65. What it is to Believe in Christ, a very
widely circulated tract; The Hillside Church.
Child, Francis James. Ms., 1825-1896. A professor at Harvard
University, 1851-96, and the foremost authority upon all matters
pertaining to ballad literature. He edited the American edition of
The British Poets, in 130 volumes; English and Scottish Popular
Ballads; The Debate between the Body and the Soul, and other
specimens of mediæval literature. As a Chaucerian scholar he had
few equals. Observations on the Language of Chaucer;
Observations on the Language of Gower’s Confessio Amantis. See
Atlantic Monthly, December, 1896. Hou.
Child, Mrs. Lydia Maria [Francis]. Ms., 1802-1880. A once famous
writer whose literary career began with the publication of
Hobomok, a Tale of Early Times, in 1821, and closed with
Aspirations of the World, in 1878. In 1833 she sacrificed much of
her popularity by her Appeal for that Class of Americans Called
Africans, and was ever after prominent as an abolitionist, assisting
her husband in editing the National Anti-Slavery Standard. Among
her other works are included The Rebels, a novel in which occur a
speech by James Otis and a sermon by Whitefield, long supposed to
be real and not imaginary; The First Settlers of New England; The
Mother’s Book; The Girl’s Book; Philothea, a Greek romance; The
Power of Kindness; Isaac T. Hopper, a True Life, a popular
biography of a noted Quaker abolitionist; The Progress of Religious
Ideas; Autumnal Leaves; Looking Toward Sunset; The Freedman’s
Book; Miria, a Romance of the Republic. See Letters of; Lowell’s
Fable for Critics. Hou. Rob.
Childs, George William. Md., 1829-1894. A noted journalist of
Philadelphia who established the Public Ledger in 1864.
Recollections of General Grant; Personal Recollections. Lip.
Chiles, Mrs. Mary Eliza [Hicks] [Hemdin]. Ky., 1820- ——. Among
her writings are Louisa Elton, a reply to “Uncle Tom;” Bandits of
Italy; Oswyn Dudley; Select Poems.
Chipman, Nathaniel. Ct., 1752-1843. A Vermont jurist who was
professor of law at Middlebury College, 1816-43. Sketches of the
Principles of Law; Reports and Dissertations. See Life, by D.
Chipman, 1846.
Chittenden, Lucius Eugene. Vt., 1824-1900. A lawyer of New York
city. Personal Reminiscences, 1840-1890; Recollections of Lincoln
and his Administration; An Unknown Heroine, an historical episode
of the War between the States; The Capture of Ticonderoga. Do.
Har.
Chittenden, Russell Henry. Ct., 1856- ——. A professor of chemistry
in the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale University. Studies from
the Laboratory of Physiology and Chemistry in Sheffield Scientific
School; On Digestive Proteolysis.
Chivers, Thomas Holley. 1807-1858. A Georgia physician and versifier.
Virginalia, or Songs of my Summer Nights; Atlanta, a Paul Epic in
Three Lustra; Eonchs of Ruby.
Choate, Isaac Bassett. Me., 1833- ——. An educator of Boston.
Elements of English Speech; Wells of English. Ap. Rob.
Choate, Rufus. Ms., 1799-1859. A lawyer of Boston and member of
Congress, 1841-45, famous for his gifts as an orator, a
distinguishing feature of his style being an extravagant use of long
sentences. Addresses and Orations. See Memoir, by S. G. Brown,
supra, 1862; Some Recollections of, by E. P. Whipple; Memoirs, by
Neilson, 1884. Lit.
Chopin, Mrs. Kate [O’Flaherty]. Mo., 1851-1904. A writer of St.
Louis. Bayou Folk; At Fault, a novel. Hou.
Choules [chōlz], John Overton. E., 1801-1856. A Baptist clergyman of
Newport. History of Missions; Christian Offering; Young

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