AND Industrial Resources, Statistics, etc. DEVOTED TO COMMERCE, AGRICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS, Commerce is King. EDITED BY J. D. B. DE BOW. VOLUME XXVI. NEW-ORLEANS AND WASHINGTON CITY. 1859. ART. XXX.-THE MOUTHS OF THE MIS- 429 ART. II.-IS THE SLAVE TRADE PIRACY? By D. S. Troy, Esq., of Alabama..... 23 TREATED AS A QUESTION OF PHI- ART. XXXI.-CHRONICLES OF THE TOMBS 434 43 43 OF LOUISIANA-BATON ROUGE. By 439 445 ART. XXXIV.-ANCIENT FAMILIES OF ART. IV.-EDUCATION OF SEAMEN AT THE ART. VIII-OLD CHURCHES, MINISTERS 89 487 VIRGINIA, MARYLAND, & c. By 66 By 121 513 ART. XL.-THE NORTH AMERICAN PLAIN nison.. 257 647 664 GREAT SOUTHEN VINEYARD. By Prof. VERS OF THE GULF STATES. By Dr. J. G. Harris, of 668 679 300 ART. XXV.-HENRY W. LONGFELLOW ART. L.-CHAMBEES OF COMMERCE AND 691 361 RT. XXVI.-THE OLD DOMINION-THE By George Fitzhugh, of Virginia THE MOUNTAIN REGIONS OF CAROLINA AND TENNESSEE. 702 ART. LI-HARBOR OF CHARLESTON, By 698 ALPHABETICAL INDEX. w VOLUME XXVI. JANUARY-JUNE, 1859. For an Alphabetical Index of the Volumes I. to XX., inclusive, see Vol. XX. Direct Trade between the South and Europe, Mississippi-Early History, 232. Mineral Wealth of the World, 318. Mississippi River-Its Mouths and Improve- ments, 429. Missouri, 468. Marine Disasters, 469. Mexico, 474. Mississippi River-Its Obstructions and Char acter, 524. Mississippi Valley, 560. Southern Direct Trade with Europe, 1. 66 Internal Improvement System, 8, Slave Trade-Further Views cn, 51. 118. 145. Sugar Market of New Orleans, 79. Southern Manufacturers-Why they Fail, 95. Sugar-Its Manufacture, 229. Swamp Sands of the South, 240. South and the Union, 476. 577. Shoe Factories at the South, 319. Southern League, 346. Southern Convention, 607. Squatter Sovereignty, 640. Slaves, Effects of High Price of, 647. |