NEW INTERNATIONAL ENCYCLOPEDIA


Marsupials

Missouri

Four books measuring over one foot (0.3048m) in width

The '''New International Encyclopedia''' was an encyclopedia first published in the early 1900s. It was printed in two editions. The first edition was published from 1902 to 1914 by Dodd, Mead and Company. The second edition was copyrighted in 1917 and afterwards by Dodd, Mead and Company, Inc. The Second Edition contains more volumes than the First Edition.
The 1926 output was printed in Cambridge, Massachusetts by The University Press. Boston Bookbinding Company of Cambridge produced the covers. Thirteen books enclosing twenty-three volumes comprise the encyclopedia, which includes a supplement after Volume 23. Each book contains about 1600 pages.
A great deal of biographic material is recorded in the ''New International Encyclopedia''. An early description of Adolf Hitler and his activities from 1920 to 1924 is in the supplement to the 1926 edition. Many of the names which are used to describe the scientific identities of plants and animals are now obsolete.
Numerous colorful maps which display the nations, states, colonies, and protectorates which existed early in the twentieth century are included. The maps are valuable for their depictions of national and colonial borders in Europe, Asia, and Africa at the time of World War I. Drawings, illustrations, and photographs are plentiful, too.

Contents
Contributors and Office Editors
Others
Foreign-born in certain places in 1910
Negroes in certain places in 1910
Statements on foreign-born and Negroes living in certain places
Foreign-born by states in 1910
Biographies of women
Railroads
Pony Express fees
List of 172 maps (1926 edition, in colors)
Images
1902 paintings
Photographs contained within the encyclopedia
Drawings

Contributors and Office Editors


More than five-hundred educated men and some women submitted and composed the information contained in the New International Encyclopedia.
:◊Editors of the First Edition

Daniel Coit Gilman, LL.D., President of Johns Hopkins University (1876-1901), President of Carnegie Institution.

Harry Thurston Peck, Ph.D., L.H.D.

Frank Moore Colby, M. A., Formerly Professor in New York University.
:◊Editors of the Second Edition

★ Frank Moore Colby, M. A.

Talcott Williams, LL.D., L.H.D., Litt. D. Director of the School of Journalism, Columbia University.
:::'EXAMPLES'

Washington Irving Lincoln Adams (Photography).

Mary Warren Allen, (Bibliographer).

Samuel Angus, Ph.D., Professor of Hellenistic Greek, Hartford Theological Seminary. (Ostraka, etc.).

Edith Arrowsmith, (Department of Reader's Handbook).

Robert Arrowsmith, Ph.D., Formerly Professor of Latin and Greek, Teachers College, Columbia University. (Department of Reader's Handbook).

Maurice Bloomfield, Ph.D., LL. D., Professor of Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, Johns Hopkins University. (Topics in Oriental Literature).

★ Mrs. Ella A. Boole, Ph.D., President New York State W. C. T. U. (Woman's Christian Temperance Union and other articles).

Demarchus C. Brown, M. A. (Indiana State librarian).

Alexander F. Chamberlain, Ph.D., Professor of anthropology, Clark University. (South American Indian tribes and Peoples; Asiatic tribes and Peoples).

Colby Mitchell Chester, Rear-Admiral United States Navy (Naval Observatory)

Wynfrid Laurence Henry Duckworth, M.D., Sc. D., M. A., Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge, England; University Lecturer in Physical Anthropology, and Senior Demonstrator of Human Anatomy. (Man, Science of).

A. A. Goldenweiser, Ph.D., Instructor in Anthropology, Columbia University. (Animism and Ancestor worship).

William Everett Hooper, Associate Editor, ''Railway Age Gazette'', (Supervisor of Department of Railways).

Wolfgang L. G. Joerg, Assistant Editor of the ''Bulletin of the American Geographical Society'', (Topics in Geography).

Joseph J. Kral, (Topics in Gazateer).

William S. Lahey, B. Lit. (Jersey City).

Charles F. Marvin, Chief of the United States Weather Bureau. (Meteorology).

Charles W. Mead, Assistant Curator of Anthropology, Department of Archæology, American Museum of Natural History, New York. (Peruvian Antiquities).

Nelson P. Mead, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of History, College of the City of New York. (War in Europe).

Grace A. Owen, (Topics in Modern History).

Walter Pach, B. A., (Biographies in Painting and Sculpture).

Harry Fielding Reid, C. E., Ph.D., Professor of Dynamical Geology and Geography, Johns Hopkins University. (Glacier).

Paul Samuel Reinsch, Ph.D., Formerly Professor of Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison; United States Minister to China. (Political Science).

J. Salwyn Schapiro, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of History, The College of the City of New York. (Modern History).

Munroe Smith, J.U.D., LL. D., Professor of Roman Law and Comparative Jurisprudence, Columbia University. (Topics in European Law).

Preserved Smith, Author of ''The Life and Letters of Martin Luther''.

Ralph S. Thompson, (Music and Biography).

Frank Weitenkampf, L. H. D., Chief, Arts and Prints Division, New York Public Library. (Mezzotint; Meryon).

R. H. Whitbeck. A. B., Professor of Geography, University of Wisconsin-Madison. (New Jersey{Physiographic Portion}).

★ Miss Elizabeth Wilson, Secretarial Department, National Board, Young Women's Christian Association. (Young Women's Christian Association).

Levi Edgar Young, Professor of History, University of Utah. (Mormons).

Others


Some notable contributors are:
'A'

Cleveland Abbe

Cleveland Abbe, Jr.

Wilbur Cortez Abbott

Charles Christopher Adams

Thomas Sewall Adams

Cyrus Adler

Hartley Burr Alexander

Joseph Sweetman Ames

Oscar Phelps Austin
'B'

Moses Nelson Baker

Erwin Hinckly Barbour

Louis Agricola Bauer

William Beebe

Marcus Benjamin

Edward W. Berry

Frederic Mayer Bird

Maurice Bloomfield

Edward Gaylord Bourne

William Bowie

Isaiah Bowman

David Josiah Brewer

Albert Perry Brigham

William Keith Brooks

Robert Broom

Henry Augustus Buchtel

Francis Marion Burdick

William Hubert Burr
'C'

William Campbell

Henry Smith Carhart

Rolla C. Carpenter

William Henry Carpenter

Paul Carus

John White Chadwick

Charles Joseph Chamberlain

Edward Potts Cheyney

Russell Henry Chittenden

Alexander Hamilton Church

William Churchill

Hubert Lyman Clark

William Bullock Clark

Adolphe Cohn

Frank Nelson Cole

Leighton Coleman

Hermann Collitz

Charles Arthur Conant

Frederic Taber Cooper

Edward Tanjore Corwin

John Merle Coulter

Henry Chandler Cowles

Isaac Joslin Cox

Charles Albert Crampton

Wilbur Lucius Cross
'D'

Charles Davenport

Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh

Theodore Low De Vinne

Davis Rich Dewey

Melvil Dewey

Samuel Warren Dike

Henry Otis Dwight
'E'

Mortimer Lamson Earle

Richard Eddy

Thomas William Edmondson

James Chidester Egbert

Samuel Atkins Eliot

Richard T. Ely

Ephraim Emerton

John Erskine

Marshall Davis Ewell
'F'

Livingston Farrand

John Alfred Faulkner

Charles Ernest Fay

Albert Warren Ferris

George Wilton Field

Henry Theophilus Finck

Jeremiah Denis Mathias Ford

Frank Hugh Foster

Frank Fowler

Arthur Frothingham
'G'

Henry Gannett

Henry Gantt

James Wilford Garner

Gordon Hall Gerould

Franklin Henry Giddings

Henry H. Goddard

Charles Buxton Going

James Isaac Good

Frank Johnson Goodnow

Richard James Horatio Gottheil

Louis Herbert Gray

William Elliot Griffis
'H-I'

George Ellery Hale

William Hallock

Alfred Dwight Foster Hamlin

Gilbert Dennison Harris

William Hatch

Erasmus Haworth

Paul Leland Haworth

Carlton Hayes

Angelo Heilprin

William James Henderson

Daniel Webster Hering

Walter Lowrie Hervey

Charles Shattuck Hill

Friedrich Hirth

William Hobbs

George Hodges

Jacob Hollander

William Henry Holmes

Franklin Hooper

Edward Washburn Hopkins

William Temple Hornaday

Walter Hough

George Elliott Howard

Leland Ossian Howard

William Henry Howell

James Gibbons Huneker

Edward Hunter

George Leland Hunter

Louis Doremus Huntoon

Frederick Remsen Hutton

James Monroe Ingalls

Ernest Ingersoll
'J'

A. V. Williams Jackson

Melancthon Williams Jacobus

Harold Jacoby

Edgar Jadwin

Joseph Jastrow

Morris Jastrow, Jr.

Arthur Whipple Jenks

Jeremiah Jenks

Alvin Saunders Johnson

Joseph French Johnson

Christopher Johnston

Robert Matteson Johnston

David Starr Jordan
'K-L'

Isaac Leon Kandel

James Furman Kemp

Charles Foster Kent

Sumner Increase Kimball

George Washington Kirchwey

Charles Knapp

George Williams Knox

Gustav Kobbé

Horatio Sheafe Krans

George Kriehn

Albert Geouffre de Lapradelle

Phœbus Aaron Theodor Levene

Ben Lindsey

Burton Edward Livingston

Francis Ernest Lloyd

Robert Henry Lowie

Frederic Augustus Lucas
'M'

Hamilton Wright Mabie

George Grant MacCurdy

W J McGee

Evander Bradley McGilvary

William Douglas Mackenzie

Lawrence Amos McLouth

Thomas Guthrie Marquis

Otis Tufton Mason

Arthur Bartlett Maurice

Royal Meeker

Elmer Truesdell Merrill

Adolf Meyer

Paul Monroe

James Mooney

Clifford Herschel Moore

Lewis Freeman Mott

Wilhelm Max Müller

Dana Carleton Munro

Charles Edward Munroe
'N-P'

Ehrman Syme Nadal'

Edward Everett Nourse

Alpheus Spring Packard

Condé Benoist Pallen

Harry Thurston Peck

Lyman Pierson Powell

Michael Idvorsky Pupin

George Haven Putnam

Herbert Putnam
'R'

Frederick Leslie Ransome

Alfred Remy

William North Rice

Heinrich Ries

Theophilus Francis Rodenbough

John Carew Rolfe

William James Rolfe

Sarah Tyson Rorer

Martin André Rosanoff

Rudolf Ruedemann

Israel Russell
'S'

Samuel Philip Sadtler

Marshall Howard Saville

Albert Schinz

Theodore Emanuel Schmauk

Nathaniel Schmidt

James Brown Scott

Henry Rogers Seager

Louis Livingston Seaman

Lorenzo Sears

Thomas Joseph Shahan

Isaac Sharpless

Paul Shorey

Benjamin Eli Smith

David Eugene Smith

John Randolph Spears

Simeon Strunsky

Russell Sturgis
'T-V'

Ralph Stockman Tarr

John Boyd Thacher

Calvin Thomas

Charles Comfort Tiffany

Wilbur Fisk Tillett

Edward Bradford Titchener

Oliver Samuel Tonks

Charles Haskins Townsend

Aaron Louis Treadwell

William Peterfield Trent

Alfred Charles True

Lewis Sayre Van Duzer

Henry Clay Vedder
'W-Y'

Williston Walker

James Joseph Walsh

Raymond Weeks

Benjamin W. Wells

Everett Pepperrell Wheeler

William Morton Wheeler

Cornelis DeWitt Willcox

Walter Francis Willcox

Henry Parker Willis

George Parker Winship

Irving Francis Wood

George Edward Woodberry

Dean Conant Worcester

David Gilbert Yates

Foreign-born in certain places in 1910


An account of the number of foreign-born people living in certain places is given for the year 1910.

Baltimore, Maryland
:: 77, 043 (Total population, 558,485)

Chicago, Illinois (Includes foreign birth 'or parentage').
::1,693,918 (Total population, approximately 2,189,520)

Indianapolis, Indiana
::19,767 (Total population, 233,650)

Kansas City, Kansas
::10,344 (Total population, 82,331)

Los Angeles, California
::60,000 (Total population, 319,918)

Minneapolis, Minnesota
::85,938 (Total population, 301,408)

New Orleans, Louisiana
::27,686 (Total population, 339,075)

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
::140,436 (Total population, 533,905)

St. Louis, Missouri
::125,706 (Total population, 687,029).

United States
:::'Foreign-born white'
::13,345,545 (Sixteen per cent of the total population of white people in the nation). (Total population in the nation, 91,972,266, of which 68,386,412 were native white people)
:::Foreign-born white males in 1910, 7,523,788
:::Foreign-born white females in 1910, 5,821,757
:: (In 1900, 10,213,817 foreign-born white people existed).

Negroes in certain places in 1910


An account of the number of negroes living in certain places is given for the year 1910.

Baltimore, Maryland
::85,098 (Total population, 558,485)

Chicago, Illinois
::44,103 (Total population, approximately 2,189,520)

Indianapolis, Indiana
::21,816 (Total population, 233,650)

Kansas City, Kansas
::9,286 (Total population, 82,331)

Los Angeles, California
::7,000 (Total population, 319,198)

Mobile, Alabama
::22,763, or 44% of the 51,521 total population

New Orleans, Louisiana
::89,262 (Total population, 339,075)

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
::84,549 (Total population, 1,549,008)

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
::34,217 (Total population, 533,905)

St. Louis, Missouri
::43,960 (Total population, 687,029)

United States
::9,827,763 (Total population, 91,972,366)

Statements on foreign-born and Negroes living in certain places


Alternately, or additionally in some cases, generalized accounts of the ethnic identities of the residents of certain places is given for the early years of the twentieth century, (i. e., circa 1910), expressed as a paragraph or a sentence.
:::'CIRCA 1910'.

Atlanta, Georgia (for the year 1900)
::Population in 1900, 89,872, including 2,500 persons of foreign birth and 35,900 of negro descent.

Baltimore, Maryland
::The thirteenth census (1910) of the United States gave the total population of Baltimore as 558,485, divided into 118,851 families, occupying 101,905 dwellings. Of this number, 268,195 were males and 290,290 were females; 481,442 were native born and 77,043 were foreign born. The total number of whites was 473,387 and of colored 85,098. Of the native whites, 261,474 had native parents and 134,870 had foreign parents.

Boston, Massachusetts
::While it is claimed for Boston that it still retains its old American spirit and character, the city has a larger foreign element than many other large American cities. The percentage of people of foreign birth in 1890 was 35.37, and those of foreign parentage constituted 60.9; while in 1900 the former constituted 34.8%, and in 1910 35.9%, of the total population. Of the foreign nationalities, the Irish are most strongly represented. The largest immigration of Irish took place in the decade 1845-55, the immigrants settling in the once fashionable section of the North End. The Scottish, English, and Germans are represented in much smaller numbers, while in later years the immigration has been made up largely of Italians and Russian Jews, the latter having taken the place of the Irish in the North End of the city. The colored population is very small, having been less than 12,000 in 1900 and under 14,000 in 1910.

Chicago, Illinois
::The city had increased in 1870 to 298,977, ranking fifth among American cities; in 1880, to 503,185, ranking fourth; in 1890 to 1,099,850, ranking second; in 1900, to 1,698,575; and in 1910, to 2,185,283, still ranking second. (The exact number of people is unknown, however, due to the rapid increases).
::Chicago has a remarkably high per cent (36) of foreign-born population, and of the native-born, 54% are of foreign parentage. Of the foreign nationalities the Germans are most numerous, aggregating more than twice the number of Irish, the latter having shown an inclination to remain in the Eastern towns. The numbers of those who are of foreign birth 'or parentage' are given in the following list after the names of the countries from whence they were derived: Germany, 501,832; Austria, 227,958; Ireland, 204,821; England and Scotland, 85,894; Canada, 66,453; Russia, 184,757; Scandinavian countries, 184,747; and various other countries of Europe, 303,909; making a total under this classification (exclusive of Canadians) of 1,693,918, i. e., about 77 and one-half per cent of the entire population of the city. The population rose to 2,701,705 in 1920, an increase of approximately 23%. 44,103 negroes were enumerated in 1910.

Cleveland, Ohio
::There are few negroes, but many foreigners, the foreign born in 1910 numbering 195,700, or more than one-third of the total. (Population in 1910, 560,663). Among the foreign born the Germans are predominant, constituting in 1910 about 29%. Bohemians and other Slavs come next with 18%, and thereafter the Hungarians with 11%, the Russians with 9%, the Irish with 8%, the English with 6%, the Italians with 4%, and the Canadians with less than 4%. The native whites of foreign parents numbered 171,560, and with the foreign-born inhabitants made up 75% of the city's population.

Detroit, Michigan
:: (The total population accelerated from 285,704 in 1900 to 465,466 in 1910 and to 993,739 in 1920). (The following information may indicate the 1910 figures, not those of 1920, despite the wording). Of the last, 156,565 were foreign born, the German and Canadian elements being the largest. About two-thirds of the native born were native white of foreign parents. The colored population numbered only 5,741.

Kansas City, Missouri
::Of the population, 61.8% are white of native parents, 18.3% white with foreign or mixed parents, and 9.5% negro. (Total population in 1910, 248,381).

New Orleans, Louisiana
::There were 27,686 persons of foreign birth and 89,262 negroes. Of the former, about 8000 were Italians, 6000 Germans, 3600 French, and 3000 Irish.

New York City
::In 1910, the foreign-born whites numbered 1,927,703, or 40.4% of the total population of the city. In Manhattan alone, 47.4% of the population was foreign born. The negro population in 1910 numbered 91,709.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
::Of the white population 61.9% is of foreign parentage, but native whites of foreign parentage comprise 32% of the entire population. The negroes numbered 84,549 in 1910; Chinese, Japanese, and Indians, 1,177. The largest classes of European descent are Irish, German, Russian, English, and Italian. French, Greeks, Armenians, Hungarians, Bohemians, and Poles are present in lesser numbers. (In 1910, 1,549,008 people lived in Philadelphia).

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
::In 1910, 393,469 were native born, 140,436 foreign born, and 191,483 of foreign or mixed parentage. The great industries of the Pittsburgh district draw this large alien population. The colored population in 1910 was 34,217, or 6.4% of a total population of 533,905.

St. Louis, Missouri
::From 1810, the date of the first Federal census, to 1880, the totals include with the city of Saint Louis the population of Saint Louis County, which in 1880 was separately enumerated at 31,888. The great growth between 1840 (35,979) and 1850 (104,978) had for one of its causes the German emigration following the revolutionary movement of 1848. This influence has been continuous. In 1910, 47,765 out of the total of 125,706 foreign-born residents of the city were natives of the German Empire. This was 38%, exclusive of Austrians of German race. In 1910, 11.3% of the foreign-born population was of Irish nativity, 4.1% of English, 12.3% of Russian, 6 of Italian, and 8.8 of Austrian. Although the total of foreign-born is comparatively small, the native population born of white foreign parents is 246,946, the native population born of native white parents being 269,836. The negro population was 43,960. (In 1910, 687,029 people lived in the city).

San Francisco, California
::In 1910, San Francisco had a population of 416,912, 50.3% of the population being native whites, 43.1% foreign-born whites, and 6.4% belonging to colored races. There were 24,137 Germans, 23,151 Irish, 9,815 English, 6,244 French, 4,641 Austrians, 10,582 Chinese, and 6,988 Japanese. The number of Chinese is diminishing, while the Japanese are increasing slowly or not at all. The Chinese are segregated in a quarter of their own, which has been rebuilt since the fire with almost, if not all, of its former charm and color, while Japanese colonies may be found in several parts of the city.

United States
:::'1920 census' (Total population, 105,710,620)
::White, 94,820,915
:::Native white, total, 81,108,161
:::Foreign-born white, 13,712,754
::Negro, 10,463,131
::Indian, 244,437
::Chinese, 61,639
::Japanese, 111,010
::All other, 9,488

Washington, D. C.
::In 1915 the population of the district was 357,749; of whom 258,940 were white and 98,809 were colored.

Foreign-born by states in 1910



New Hampshire The population per square mile in 1910 was 47.7. The State lost largely in the latter part of the nineteenth century through immigration to the Western States, but in recent years this outflow has been offset to a considerable extent by the increase in immigration of foreign-born population, particularly French Canadians. The urban population, i. e., that of places of 2500 or more, was, in 1910, 255,099, and the rural population, 175,473. The native whites of native parentage in that year were 230,231; the native whites of foreign or mixed parentage, 103,177; the foreign-born whites 96,558. Of the foreign-born whites the largest number came from Canada and Ireland. By sex the population was divided in 1910 into 216,290 males and 214,282 females. The males of voting age numbered 136,668.

Utah In 1910 it ranked forty-first amongst the States in population. (Total: 373,351). The negro population numbered 1,444, the Indian 3,123, and the Japanese 2,110. The native whites numbered 303,190 and the foreign-born whites 63,393. Among the foreign born, the English were by far the most numerous; the Danes numbered 8,300, the Swedes, 7,227, and the Greeks 4,039.

Biographies of women


Several hundred brief biographies of little-known or mostly-forgotten women are included in this encyclopedia.
::::::::'''PARTIAL LISTING'''

Annette Abbott Adams
Isabella Macdonald Alden
Fannie Fern Andrews
Mary C. Ames
Effie Bancroft
Hannah O'Brien Chaplin
Florence Converse
Elaine Goodale
Helen Hyde
Anna T. Jeanes
Ida Marie Lipsius
Therese Malten

Helen Reimensnyder Martin
Pidal María Goyri de Menéndez
Alvilde Prydz
Elizabeth Armstrong Reed
Myrtle Reed
Elizabeth Clementine Stedman
Lillian M. N. Stevens
Matilda Coxe Stevenson
Sara Yorke Stevenson
Anna Swanwick
Mabel Osgood Wright

Railroads


The names of many of the railroads which had existed early in the twentieth century are mentioned at thousands of place names.
::::'EXAMPLES'

Toledo, Ohio - "It is the terminus of a number of railroads, among which are the Pennsylvania, the Hocking Valley, the Clover Leaf, the Pere Marquette, and the Grand Trunk. In all there are 17 railroads operating 22 divisions, 12 electric interurban, and five passenger steamship lines connecting with Detroit, Mackinaw, Duluth, and Chicago."

River Rouge, Michigan - "... on the Detroit and Toledo Shore and the Michigan Central railroads."

Albuquerque, New Mexico - "... on the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe and the Santa Fe and New Mexico Central railroads."

Pocatello, Idaho - "... on the Oregon Short Line."

Fairbanks, Alaska - The Tanana Valley Railroad, 45 miles (72 km) in length, connects it with Chena (pop., 138 in 1910), and with the principal mining camps.... Among the railway lines to be built by the United States, under the Act of Congress of April, 1914, the principal section is one from Chitina to Fairbanks, 313 miles (504 km), at a cost of $14,000,000.

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan - "... on the Canadian Pacific, Canadian Northern, and Grand Trunk Pacific railroads...."

Fredericton, New Brunswick - "... on the Canadian Pacific and the Intercolonial railroads ...."

Salem, Oregon - "... on the Southern Pacific, the Oregon Pacific, and the Salem Falls City and Western railroads."

Seattle, Washington - It is a terminal point for eight transcontinental railways, four of which (the Great Northern, Northern Pacific, Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul, and the Union Pacific-Oregon-Washington) enter the city upon their own rails. Other railways have connections with these lines, while the Canadian Pacific and Grand Trunk make connection by water, the former also by rail. Two electric interurban lines and one short local railway, the Columbia and Puget Sound, also enter the city.

Bakersfield, California - "... on the Southern Pacific and the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe railroads ..."

California, Missouri - "... on the Missouri Pacific Railroad...."

Central City, Colorado - "... on the Colorado and Southern Railroad ...."

Chadron, Nebraska _ "... on the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad ...."

Hammond, Louisiana - "... on the Illinois Central and the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley railroads."

Fort Payne, Alabama - "... on the Alabama Great Southern Railroad."

Key West, Florida - The city is on the Florida East Coast Railroad....

Charlotte, North Carolina - "... on the Southern, the Piedmont and Northern, the Norfolk Southern, and the Seaboard Air-line railroads ...."

Orrville, Ohio - "... on the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago, the Cleveland, Akron and Cincinnati, and the Wheeling and Lake Erie railroads."

East Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania - "...on the Lehigh Valley, the Central of New Jersey, and the Mauch Chunk Switch Back (Look-see) railroads...."

Allegheny, Pennsylvania - "...is the terminus of the Western Pennsylvania, the Pittsburgh and Western, and the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh railroads; and is on the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago, the Cleveland and Pittsburgh, the Pittsburgh and Erie, and the Pittsburgh and Newcastle railroads, all of which belong to the Western Division of the Pennsylvania system."

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh annexed Allegheny, Pennsylvania in 1906-1911.) "...22 railroads, comprising the Pennsylvania System, New York Central lines, Baltimore and Ohio, Bessemer, the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh, and the Wabash railroads." (A handful of freight yards existed including one in "..Sheridan for the Pan Handle lines....")
:In 2005, the well-constructed, sturdy Pan Handle (Railroad) bridge is an important transit bridge which carries electric trolleys (streetcars) across the Monongahela river. It is the third-to-last bridge over that river before the river meets with the Allegheny to form the Ohio river.

Uniontown, Pennsylvania - "...on the Pennsylvania and the Baltimore and Ohio railroads."

Pony Express fees



★ At first the cost was $5.00 for a ½-ounce (15.55 gm) letter; later the charge was reduced to $2.50.

★ Riders were paid $100 to $125 per month. Each rider was expected to cover 75 miles (121 km) a day.
The quickest trip was that made for the delivery of President Lincoln's inaugural address. About 1400 miles (2253 km) from St. Joseph, Mo. to Sacramento, Cal. being covered in 7 days and 17 hours. Mail passing through Panama required about 22 days.
The first pony express left on April 3, 1860. Eventually there were 190 stations, 200 station keepers, 200 assistant station keepers, 80 riders, and between 400 and 500 horses. The company ceased operations in October, 1861, on the completion of the line of the Pacific Telegraph Company.

List of 172 maps (1926 edition, in colors)


Ancient map of the world

Foldout page with a map of Manitoba

The Netherlands and Belgium


The World

Afghanistan

Africa, Physical Map

Africa

Alabama

Alaska and the Klondike Region

Alberta

America, North, Physical Map

America, South, Physical Map

America, North

America, South

Antarctic Regions

Arctic Regions

Argentine Republic

Arizona

Arkansas

Asia, Physical Map

Asia

Asia, Central

Australia

Austria-Hungary

Balkan Peninsula

Bavaria-German Empire

Belgium

Bermuda

Boston and Vicinity

Brazil

British Columbia

Burma

California

Canada

Cape of Good Hope, Province of

Central America

Chicago

Chile

Chinese Republic

Civil War in America

Colombia

Colorado

Congo

Connecticut

Cuba

Delaware

Denmark

East India Islands

Egypt

England

Europe

Europe, Physical Map

Europe (At the time of Charlemagne)

Europe (About 1500)

Europe (At the time of Napoleon's greatest power, 1812)

Europe (After the Congress of Vienna, 1815)

Florida

France, Northern

France, Southern

French Indo-China

Geography, The World

Geography, The Known World at Various Times

Georgia

German Empire

Greece

Greece, Ancient

Guam

Guiana

Hawaii

Hungary

Idaho

Illinois

India

Indiana

International Date Line

Iowa

Ireland

Italy

Jamaica

Japan

Kansas

Kentucky

Korea

★ London and Vicinity

Louisiana

Maine

★ Manchuria and China

Manitoba

Maryland

Massachusetts

Mexico

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

Netherlands

Nevada

New Brunswick

Newfoundland

New Hampshire

New Jersey

New Mexico

New South Wales

New York

New York City (Greater New York) and Vicinity

New Zealand, North Island

New Zealand, South Island

North Carolina

North Dakota

Northwest Territories

Norway

Nova Scotia

★ Ocean Currents

Ohio

Oklahoma

Ontario

Oregon

Palestine

Panama Canal

Paris

Pennsylvania

Persia

Peru

Philadelphia and Vicinity

Philippine Islands

Porto Rico

Portugal

Prussia

Quebec

Queensland

Rainfall

Rhode Island

Roman Empire

Russia

Samoa

Saskatchewan

Scotland

Siam

South Australia

South Australia, Northern Territory

South Carolina

South Dakota

Spain

★ Stars-Celestial Charts

Sweden

Switzerland

Tasmania

Tennessee

Texas

★ Transportation-Commercial Map of the World

Transvaal

Turkey in Europe

Turkey in Asia

United States, Eastern-Physical and Political

United States, Western-Physical and Political

★ Early Colonial Grants

United States in 1789 and 1808

United States in 1816

United states in 1852

United States, Showing Accessions of Territories

Uruguay

Utah

Venezuela

Vermont

Victoria

Virginia

Wales

Washington

Western Australia

West Indies

West Virginia

Wisconsin

Wyoming

Images



Image:NIEdot132.jpg|Mourning cloak butterfly
Image:NIEdot109.jpg|Midwife frog
Image:NIEdot092.jpg|USA February 5, 1915 surface chart prior to the inclusion of fronts
Image:NIEdot095.jpg|February 6, 1915 surface chart
Image:NIEdot194.jpg|Fossil skull from La Quina, Charente, France
Image:NIEdot195.jpg|Fossil skull from La Chapelle-aux-saints (France)
Image:NIEdot222.jpg|Fish
Image:NIEdot207.jpg|Fish
Image:NIEdot206.jpg|Old hunting rifles
Image:NIEdot223.jpg|Early twentieth-century military uniforms prior to the widespread adoption of helmets
Image:NIEdot243.jpg|American Indians
Image:NIEdot210.jpg|Hand-woven rugs
Image:NIEdot208.jpg|Roses
Image:NIEdot148.jpg|Granny knot
Image:NIEdot152.jpg|Sheet bend knot
Image:NIEdot154.jpg|Knots
Image:NIEdot142.jpg|Two American States
Image:NIEdot091.jpg|Machine parts

1902 paintings


These paintings were copyrighted in 1902 by Dodd, Mead and Company and are now in the public domain. They were published in various editions of the encyclopedia.

Image:NIEdot287.jpg|Dark races of Africa
Image:NIEdot290.jpg|Azaleas and Rhododendrons
Image:NIEdot292.jpg|Indian baskets
Image:NIEdot293.jpg|Amaryllis flowers
Image:NIEdot294a.jpg|Antelopes
Image:NIEdot295.jpg|Apples
Image:NIEdot296.jpg|Aquatic plants
Image:NIEdot297.jpg|Yellow races of Asia
Image:NIEdot298A.jpg|Beetles
Image:NIEdot299.jpg|Beverage plants
Image:NIEdot300.jpg|Birds of paradise
Image:NIEdot301.jpg|Indian blankets
Image:NIEdot302.jpg|American butterflies
Image:NIEdot303.jpg|Cacti
Image:NIEdot304.jpg|California flora
Image:NIEdot305.jpg|California shrubs
Image:NIEdot306.jpg|Dog family
Image:NIEdot307.jpg|Cereals
Image:NIEdot309.jpg|Merchant flags
Image:NIEdot310.jpg|Merchant flags
Image:NIEdot311.jpg|Marsupials
Image:NIEdot312.jpg|Medusas and siphonophora
Image:NIEdot313.jpg|Mineralogy
Image:NIEdot314.jpg|Mountain plants
Image:NIEdot315.jpg|Mosses and lichens
Image:NIEdot316.jpg|Pompeian mural decoration
Image:NIEdot317.jpg|Clams and edible mussels
Image:NIEdot318.jpg|Chrysanthemums
Image:NIEdot319.jpg|Citrus fruits
Image:NIEdot320.jpg|Flavoring plants
Image:NIEdot321.jpg|American food fish
Image:NIEdot322.jpg|White races of Europe
Image:NIEdot323.jpg|Dragonflies
Image:NIEdot324.jpg|Ducks
Image:NIEdot325.jpg|Drupes
Image:NIEdot326.jpg|Ferns
Image:NIEdot327.jpg|Birds eggs
Image:NIEdot328.jpg|Birds eggs
IMage:NIEdot329.jpg|
Image:NIEdot330.jpg|
Image:NIEdot331.jpg|
Image:NIEdot332.jpg|
Image:NIEdot333.jpg|
Image:NIEdot334.jpg|
Image:NIEdot335.jpg|
Image:NIEdot336.jpg|
Image:NIEdot337.jpg|
Image:NIEdot338.jpg|
Image:NIEdot339.jpg|
Image:NIEdot340.jpg|
Image:NIEdot341.jpg|
Image:NIEdot342.jpg|
Image:NIEdot343.jpg|
Image:NIEdot344.jpg|
Image:NIEdot345.jpg|
Image:NIEdot346.jpg|
Image:NIEdot347.jpg|
Image:NIEdot348.jpg|
Image:NIEdot349.jpg|
Image:NIEdot350.jpg|
Image:NIEdot351.jpg|
Image:NIEdot352.jpg|
Image:NIEdot353.jpg|
Image:NIEdot354.jpg|
Image:NIEdot355.jpg|
Image:NIEdot356.jpg|
Image:NIEdot357.jpg|
Image:NIEdot358.jpg|
Image:NIEdot359.jpg|
Image:NIEdot360.jpg|
Image:NIEdot361.jpg|
Image:NIEdot362.jpg|
Image:NIEdot363.jpg|
Image:NIEdot364.jpg|
Image:NIEdot365.jpg|
Image:NIEdot366.jpg|
Image:NIEdot367.jpg|
Image:NIEdot368.jpg|
Image:NIEdot369.jpg|
Image:NIEdot370.jpg|
Image:NIEdot371.jpg|
Image:NIEdot372.jpg|
Image:NIEdot373.jpg|
Image:NIEdot374.jpg|
Image:NIEdot375.jpg|
Image:NIEdot376.jpg|
Image:NIEdot377.jpg|American Indians
Image:NIEdot378.jpg|
Image:NIEdot379.jpg|

Photographs contained within the encyclopedia



Image:NIEdot400T01.jpg|The Taj Mahal
Image:NIEdot400T02.jpg|German submarines including Deutschland
Image:AircraftNIEdot477.jpg|Old U. S. Army aircraft
Image:ArmorNIEdot432.jpg|Armor in the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Drawings



Image:NIEdot400BB.jpg|American cavalry (1776-1914)


This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves