Isaiah Thomas Broadside Ballads Project

Verses in Vogue with the Vulgar

Works Cited

Please also join our Isaiah Thomas Broadside Ballads Zotero Group.

Abrams, M. H. A Glossary of Literary Terms. Belmont, CA: Thomas Wadsworth, 2005.

A Collection of Old Ballads. London, 1723.

A Collection of the Most Celebrated Scotch Tunes for the Violin. Dublin: John and William Neale, 1724.

A Curious Hieroglyphick Bible; or, Select Passages in the Old and New Testaments, Represented with Emblematical Figures, for the Amusement of Youth: Designed Chiefly to Familiarize Tender Age, in a Pleasing and Diverting Manner, with Early Ideas of the Holy Scriptures. To Which Are Subjoined, a Short Account of the Lives of the Evangelists, and Other Pieces. Illustrated with Nearly Five Hundred Cuts. -- The First Worcester Edition. Worcester, Massachusetts: Isaiah Thomas, 1788.

Adam and Eve: A Favorite New Song, Much in Vogue Among the Young Ladies and Gentlemen. Boston: Ezekial Russell, 1797.

Adams, John. Diary and Autobiography of John Adams. Vol. 4. Cambridge: Belknap Press, 1961.

———. The Works of John Adams. Vol. 2. 10 vols. Boston: C. C. Little and J. Brown, 1850.

A Dialogue between Death and a Lady: Being a Picture of the Condition of a Sinner, When Death Approaches: [Two Lines of Verse]. Exeter [N.H.]: Printed and sold at H. Ranlet’s office, 1793.

A Dialogue between Death and a Lady: Very Suitable for These Times. Boston: Sold at the Heart and Crown in Cornhill, Boston, 1731.

A Dialogue between Death and a Lady: Very Suitable to Be Learned by Heart, in These Degenerate Times. Boston: Sold at the Bible and Heart in Cornhill, Boston, 1776.

A Dialogue between Death and a Lady: Very Suitable to Be Learned by Heart, in These Degenerate Times. [Boston]: Printed and sold at the Bible & Heart, in Cornhill, Boston, 1776.

Adventures of an Ill Natured Boy. Printed by J. Wh[ite], 1796.

“A Favourite Comic Irish Song.” Shamrock. March 25, 1814.

A Few Lines Composed on the Dark Day, May 19, 1780. Boston? between 1780 and 1810, n.d.

A Few Lines Composed on the Dark Day of May 19, 1780. Boston? 1780?, n.d.

A Few Lines Composed on the Dark Day, of May 19, 1780. Boston? 1780?, n.d.

A Garland of New Songs. Newcastle: 1790?, n.d.

A Good Wife, God’s Gift; or, A Character of a Wife Indeed! : Also, a Poetical Description of the Chaste Virgin; of a Good Wife; and a Pious Widow, &c. Boston: Printed by J. White near Charles-River Bridge, 1796.

“A HYMN, ON THE DEATH OF GEN. WASHINGTON,” n.d. www.mcsr.olemiss.edu/~mudws/texts/Mount-Vernon.txt.

A Late Letter from a Solicitous Mother to Her Only Son, : Both Living in New England. 10th ed. Salem: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, Junr, 1800.

A Lawyer Outwitted. Boston: Fleet, 1731.

Allen, Gardner W. Our Navy and the Barbary Corsairs. Boston: Houghton and Mifflin, 1905.

Allen, Richard. A Collection of Spiritual Songs and Hymns. Philadelphia: John Ormrod, 1801.

“Ally Croaker.” Universal Magazine, 1753.

Ally Croker. London, 1730.

Almasa, wife of Almas Ali Cawn. Petition of Almas Ali Cawn Who Was Lately Seized upon and Put to Death for Political Purposes in India, n.d.

———. The Following Is a Literal Translation of the Petition, Sent by the Wife of Almas Ali Cawn, Who Was Lately Seized upon and Put to Death, for Political Purposes in India. London: 1800?, n.d.

Althoff, Gerard T. Deep Waters Sailors, Shallow Water Soldiers. Putin Bay: The Perry Group, 1993.

“American Meteor Society.” American Meteor Society, n.d. http://comets/amsmeteors.org/comets.

American Primer Improved. Medford, MA: Printed and so[l]d by Nathaniel Coverly, 1798.

American Star. Richmond: Peter Cottom, 1814.

American Taxation, n.d.

American Taxation: This Song Was Written When the Trump of War Sounded Loud Thro’ This Happy Land, during the Revolutionary War, and Although Peculiarly Applicable to Those Times ... Let It Be Distinctly Understood and Remembered, That as We Fought and Conquered When Britain Endeavored to Enslave Us, We Will Never Consent to Be Enslaved by France, nor Give up Our Free Trade and Commerce to Any Set of Men. ... United States, 1798.

America’s Lamentation on the Death of Gen. Washington. United States, 1800.

“America Triumphant; Or, Old England’s Downfall. To the Tune of There Was a Jovial Beggar.” Public Advertiser. 1766. Upcott Collection 3: 117-19, header: “for the blic Advertiser” with “1766” in MSPu. New York Historical Society.

An Account of the Extraordinary Abstinence of Ann Moor, of Tutbury, Staffordshire, England, Who Has for More than Three Years, Lived Entirely without Food; : Giving the Particulars of Her Life to the Present Time, an Account of the Investigation Instituted on the Occasion and Observations on the Letters of Some Medical Men Who Attended It. Boston: B. True, 1811.

A Narrative, of the Captivity, Sufferings and Removes, or Mrs. Mary Rowlandson. Amherst, NH: Nathaniel Coverly and Son, 1796.

Anburey, Thomas. Travels Through the Interior Parts of America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1923.

Andrew Barton. The Disappointment, or The Force of Credulity, 1767.

A New Academy of Compliments; or, Complete Secretary. Containing the True Art of Indicting Letters; with Dialogues Very Witty and Pleasant, Relating to Love, &c. : To Which Is Added, Instructions for Carving, &c. : With a Collection of New Songs. New York? B. Gomez, 1799.

“A New Liberty Song to the Tune of Black Sloven.” In Commonplace Book. Connecticut?, 1780.

An Historic Record and Pictorial Description of the Town of Meriden, Connecticut and Men Who Have Made It. Meriden: Journal Publishing Co., 1906.

An Narrative of Events, as They Occurred from Time to Time, in the Revolutionary War; : With an Account of the Battles, of Trenton, Trenton-Bridge, and Princeton. Charlestown: Sold at no. 206 Main Street, 1833.

Anthony, Joseph Jr. The Western Minstrel; or, Ohio Melodist; Containing a Choice Collection of Moral, Patriotic and Sentimental Songs, with the Appropriate Music for Each Piece in Patent Notes, Carefully Selected and Affixed Thereto; Together with Instructions for Learners. Being Well Calculated to Give a Correct Knowledge of Vocal Music: And Also Designed to Assist Learners of the Instrumental Branch of That Science. Cincinnati, OH: E.H. Flint, 1831.

An Unhappy Memorable Song of the Hunting in Chevy-Chace, between Earl Piercy of England and Earl Douglas of Scotland. [Massachusetts?, 1775.

“A Particular Account of the Late Distressing Fire at Portsmouth.” Boston Gazette. December 27, 1813.

“Appleton’s Cyclopedia of American Biography.” Accessed April 18, 2004. www.famousamericans.net/johnlowe/.

A Remarkable Prophecy, Supposed to Have Laid Six Hundred Years under a Stone in Paris. The Following Prophecy Is Presented to Our Readers, as a Support of Their Faith in the Millenium [sic]. To Which Is Added, The Sailors Acknowledgment, and The Unknown World. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles’ River Bridge, 1798.

A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston. Boston: Rockwell and Churchill, 1890.

A Report of the Trial of Samuel Tully and John Dalton, on an Indictment for Piracy, Committed January 21st, 1812: Before the Circuit Court of the United States, at Boston, 28th October, 1812: Containing the Evidence at Large, a Sketch of the Arguments of Counsel, and the Charge of the Hon. Judge Story, on Pronouncing Sentence of Death (from Minutes Taken at the Trial). Boston: J. Belcher, 1812.

A Report of the Trial of Samuel Tully and John Dalton, on an Indictment for Piracy, Committed January 21st, 1812: Before the Circuit Court of the United States, at Boston, 28th October, 1812: Containing the Evidence at Large, a Sketch of the Arguments of Counsel, and the Charge of the Hon. Judge Story, on Pronouncing Sentence of Death (from Minutes Taken at the Trial). 4th ed. Boston: Joshua Belcher, 1814.

Armstrong, Lt. Samuel. “Diary,” 1778 1777. New England Historical Genealogical Society.

Arne, Michael. The Positive Man. London, 1782.

Arne, Thomas. Love in a Village. London: John Walsh, 1763.

Arne, Thomas Augustine. Universal Magazine, 1758, Supplement 22 edition.

Arnold, Samuel. Fairies; Revels, or Love in the Highlands. London: Woodfall, 1802.

———. The Children in the Wood, 1793.

———. The Woodman’s Hut: A Melo-Dramatic Romance in Three Acts. London: J. Miller, 1814.

Aschenbach, Joy. “When the Earth Trembles.” Worcester Sunday Telegram. April 1980.

A Selection of Scotch, English, Irish, and Foreign Airs. Glasgow: James Aird, 1782.

Ashton, John. Humor, Wit, & Satire of the Seventeenth Century. London: Chatto & Windus, 1883.

“A Song--Sung July 17, 1799.” Federal Songster, 1800.

A Specimen of Metal Ornaments Cast at the Letter Foundery of Binny & Ronaldson. Philadelphia: Fry and Kammerer, 1809.

“Astronomical: History of the Comet.” The Weekly Register. March 1812.

Atkinson, David. The English Traditional Ballad: Theory, Method, and Practice. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2002.

A Touch Upon the Times: Being a Dialogue between Parson Goodly, Mr. Clinchfist, and His Son Jonathan. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, 1797.

A Tragical Account of the Two Lovers of Exeter. Boston: Sold [by J. White] near Charles-river Bridge, 1800.

“A Translation from the Ancient Irish.” Western Star, and Harp of Erin. December 19.

Auden, W. H., ed. Oxford Book of Light Verse. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1938.

A Visit to the Bazaar. New Haven, CT: A. B. Goldsmith and N. & S.S. Jocelyn, 1819.

“A Warning to the Gay and Thoughtless Youth.” Herald of Gospel Liberty. May 10, 1811.

A Wonderful New Ballad of a Wonderful Old Man. London: Longman Lukey & Co., 1775.

Backus, Isaac. An Address to the Second Baptist Church in Middleborough, Concerning the Importance of Gospel Discipline. [Middleborough] County of Plymouth: Nathaniel Coverly, 1787.

Baird, Julianne. Music in the Life of Benjamin Franklin. Annapolis: Colonial Music Institute, 2007.

Balfour. Columbian. October 17, 1810.

Ball, Ebenezer. The Trial of Ebenezer Ball, before the Hon. Samuel Sewall, George Thatcher, and Isaac Parker, Esquires, for the Murder of John Tileston Downes, at Robinstown, Jan. 28, 1811. Castine, ME: Samuel Hall, 1811.

Ballou, Silas. New Hymns, on Various Subjects. Newbury [VT]: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun’r, 1797.

Baltimore Mob!. Exeter: Ephriam Beals, 1812.

Barks, Katherine Susan. “Death and a Lady: Echoes of a Mortal Conversation in English and American Folk Song Tradition.” MA Thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1966.

Barrand, Anthony G. Six Fools and a Dancer: The Timeless Way of the Morris. Plainfield, VT: Northern Harmony Publishing Company, 1991.

Barret, C.F. The Black Castle; or, The Spectre of the Forest. S. Fisher, 1803.

Barrett, C.F. The Perilous Cavern; or, Banditti of the Pyrenees. London: Printed and published by A. Neil, 1803.

Barrett, John Pressley, ed. The Centennial of Religious Journalism. Dayton, Ohio: Christian Publishing Association, 1908.

Barton, Titus Theodore. A Sermon, Preached at Tewksbury, February 22, 1800. : On Account of the Death of George Washington. Medford, MA: [By Nathaniel Coverly?], 1800.

Bayard, Samuel P. Dance to the Fiddle, March to the Fife, Instrumental Folk Tunes in Pennsylvania. University Park: Pennsylvania University Press, 1982.

Beaumont, Francis. “The Knight of the Burning Pestle.” In The Singing Tradition of Child’s Popular Ballads, edited by Bertrand Harris Bronson, 189. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976.

Beck, Henry. “Granuweal.” Commonplace Book. Philadelphia?, 1786. DLC.

Beck, Horace Palmer. Folklore of Maine. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1857.

Beers, Andrew. Beers’s Almanac and Ephemeris for 1793. Hartford: Hudson and Goodwin, 1792.

Belden, Henry M., ed. Ballads and Songs Collected by the Missouri Folk-Lore Society. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1940.

Belden, Henry M., and Arthur Palmer Hudson, eds. The Frank C. Brown Collection of North Carolina Folklore; the Folklore of North Carolina, Collected by Dr. Frank C. Brown during the Years 1912 to 1943 in Collaboration with the North Carolina Folklore Society. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1952.

Belknap, Daniel. Middlesex Songster. Dedham: H, Mann, 1809.

Belknap, Elisha. “Fife Manuscript.” Framingham, MA, 1784. Houghton Library, Harvard University.

Bennet, Anna Maria. The Beggar Girl and Her Benefactors. London: Lane, 1797.

Bentley, William. Diary of William Bentley, D.D. Pastor of the East Church, Salem, Massachusetts. 4 vols. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1904.

Beverstock, George. The Silver-Key: or, A Fancy of Truth, and a Warning to Youth: Shewing the Benefit of Money, and the Contempt of the Poor, Under the Term of a Silver-Key. Boston: John Kneeland, 1774.

———. The Silver-Key; or, A Fancy of Truth, and a Warning to Youth: Shewing the Benefit of Money, and the Contempt of the Poor, under the Term of a Silver-Key. New London, CT: Timothy Green?, 1774.

———. The Silver Key; or, A Fancy to Truth and a Warning to Youth: Shewing the Benefit of Money, and the Contempt of the Poor, under the Term of a Silver Key. Boston: Leonard Deming, 1829.

Bickerstaff, Isaac. Love in a Village: A Comic Opera. In Three Acts. New York: David Longworth, 1817.

Bickerstaff’s Boston Almanack; or, Federal Calendar, for 1791. ... : Containing, besides What Is Usual, a True Narrative of the Shocking Captivity of Robert White, among the Algerines. Boston: E. Russell, 1790.

Bickerstaff’s Genuine Almanack for the Year of Our Lord 1796 ... : Calculated for the Meridian of Botson [sic]; but Will Serve the Adjacent States without Sensible Error. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, and by the booksellers, 1795.

Bickerstaff’s Genuine Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1798 ... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, and by most of the booksellers, 1797.

Bickerstaff’s Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhodeisland, Newhampshire and Vermont Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1799. [Salem, Mass.]: Printed by Nathaniel & John Coverly, sold by them, at their bookstore in Salem, 1798.

Bickerstaff’s North-Carolina Almanack for the Year of Our Lord 1786. Plymouth: Nathaniel Coverly, 1785.

Bickerstaff’s Plymouth Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1786...: Calculated for the Meridian of Boston, but Will Serve without Essential Variation for the Adjacent States. Plymouth: Printed and Sold by Nathaniel Coverly, 1785.

Bickham, George. The Musical Entertainer. London: C. Corbett, 1740.

Bidwell, John. “The Size of the Sheet in America.” The Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 87, no. 2 (October 1977). http://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44517595.pdf.

Bird of Birds. New York, 1818.

B., J. An Invitation to Reformation: A Song for a N Nited [sic] Society. Boston?, 1795.

“Bodleian Library Broadside Ballads.” Bodleian Library Allegro Catalogue of Ballads, n.d. http://bodley24.bodley.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/acwwweng/maske.pl?db=ballads.

Bolling, Linnaeus. “The Graces.” Copybook. Buckingham County, VA, 92 1790. University of North Carolina, Southern Historical Collection.

Bonny Breast-Knots, John Anderson, My Jo, and Croos-Keen Lawn. Boston: L. Deming, 1832.

Bonny Bunch of Roses, and Croos-Keen Lawn. Boston: J.G. & H. Hunt, 1841.

“Boston.” New Advent, n.d. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02703a.htm.

Bragdon, Rufus. “Rufus Bragdon MS.” York, ME, 1790.

Bray, John. Il Ammonitore Dell Amore, or Love’s Remembrancer. Philadelphia, 1807.

Brewer, E. Cobham. The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. New York: Avenel Books, 1978.

Brewer, Jehoiada. “Christ the Hiding Place.” Gospel Magazine, October 1776.

Brewster, Charles W. Rambles About Portsmouth. Portsmouth, N.H.: C. W. Brewster & Son, 1859.

Bridenbaugh, Carl. Myths and Realities, Societies of the Colonial South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University, 1952.

Bristol, Roger P. Supplement to Charles Evans’ American Bibliography. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1970.

British Barbarity and Piracy!!: The Federalists Say That Mr. Christopher Gore Ought to Be Supported as Governor--for His Attachment to Britain.--If British Influence Is to Effect the Suffrages of a Free People, Let Them Read the Following Melancholy and Outrageous Conduct of British Piracy, and Judge for Themselves. The “Leopard Outspotted” or Chesapeak Outrage Outdone. ... Facts Respecting the Treatment of Americans by the Commanders of British Vessels of War, within the Neutral Waters of the Empire of China, in 1807. ... Boston: Adams & Rhoades, 1808.

British Lamentation and Green on the Cape. Boston: J. G. & H. Hunt, 1840s? http://www.loc.gov/item/amss000160/.

British Lamentation, and Green on the Cape. Boston: L. Deming, 1829. http://www.loc.gov/item/amss000159/.

Britton, Allen Perdue, Irving Lowens, and Richard Crawford. American Sacred Music Imprints 1689-1810. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1990.

Bronson, Bertrand Harris. The Ballad as Song. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1969.

———. , ed. The Singing Tradition of Child’s Popular Ballads. First. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976.

Brooks, Henry. Goshen, Connecticut, 1800. Private Collections (Unknown).

Brooks, Hervey. “Ballads in Manuscript,” ca. 1800. Litchfield, Ct. Private collection of Whitney Brooks.

Brown, Mary Ellen, and Bruce Rosenberg, eds. Encyclopedia of Folklore and Literature. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 1998.

Brown, Richard D. “‘No Harm to Kill Indians’: Equal Rights in a Time of War.” New England Quarterly 81, no. 1 (March 2008): 34–62.

Buckingham, Joseph T. “The Faustus Association.” Boston Evening Transcript. September 7, 1859.

Bullard, Samuel. An Almanack, for the Year of Christian Aera, 1791: ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston, in America, Lat. 42 Deg. 25 Min. North--but Will Serve the Adjacent States without Any Sensible Error. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles River Bridge, 1790.

———. , ed. An Almanack, for the Year of Christian Aera, 1792:... Calculated for the Latitude and Longitude of the Town of Boston, in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts: But Will Serve the Adjacent States without Any Sensible Error. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles River Bridge, 1791.

Bullock, Steven C. Revolutionary Brotherhood: Freemasonry and the Transformation of the American Social Order, 1730-1840. Chapel Hill: University of Virginia Press, 1996.

“Bulwark of Religion.” Independent Chronicle. January 7, 1813.

Bumgardner, Georgia B. American Broadsides: Sixty Facsimiles dated 1680 to 1800 from Originals in the American Antiquarian Society. Barre: Mass., 1971.

Bunyan, John. The Christian Pilgrim: Containing an Account of the Wonderful Adventures and Miraculous Escapes of a Christian, in His Travels from the Land of Destruction to the New Jerusalem. Worcester: Isaiah Thomas, 1798.

———. The Pilgrim’s Progress from This World to That Which Is to Come; Delivered under the Similitude of a Dream. London, 1678.

Burke, Edmund. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1791. http://www.bartleby.com/100/276.30.html.

Burns, Robert. Solomon’s Temple: And the Free-Mason’s Farewell. 1 2349. Boston: Coverly?, 182AD.

———. The Sodier’s Return [sic]. Coverly, n.d.

Bush, George. “A New Collection of Songs.” Sunbury, PA, 1789 1779. Historical Society of Delaware.

———. “[Commonplace Book].” Commonplace Book. Sunbury, PA and Wilmington, DE, 1789 1779. Historical Society of Delaware.

Caledonian Country Dances. London: I. Walsh, 1737.

Campbell, Charles, ed. The Bland Papers. Petersburg: Edmund & Julian C. Ruffin, 1840.

Campbell, Thomas. Pleasures of Hope. Edinburgh: Mundell & Son, 1799.

———. “The Exile of Erin.” Salem Register, January 6, 1803.

———. “The Soldier’s Dream.” Spectator. August 21, 1805.

———. “The Soldier’s Dream.” Columbian Centinel. June 24, 1812.

Camus, Raoul F. Military Music of the American Revolution. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1976.

Captain Barber, 1769.

“Captain Barber, A New Song.” Slip Ballad, n.d. Volume 4, no. 254. Madden Collection, Cambridge University Library.

Captain Barber, A New Song. Vol. 4, n.d.

Captain Barber, A New Song. Vol. 4, n.d.

Captain Mulligan, Bold Soldier, and Blue Eyed Mary. Boston: L. Deming, 1832.

Captain Ward, the Pirate. Boston: L. Deming, 1832.

Captain Ward, the Pirate: An Account of His Famous Fight with the Rainbow Ship of War. United States, 1775.

Captain Ward, the Pirate: With an Account of His Famous Fight with the Rainbow Ship of War. United States, 1775.

Carey, Henry. “Chrononhotonthologos, The Most Tragical Tragedy That Ever Was Tragedized by Any  Company of Tragedians.” Chrononhotonthologos, n.d. Http://www.chrononhotonthologos.com/script.htm.

———. Musical Century. London, 1737.

———. The Country Bumkins. London, 1730.

———. , ed. “The Languishing Lover.” In The Musical Century, 24th ed. Vol. 2. London: 1740, n.d.

———. The Musical Century. London, 1737.

Carr, Benjamin. Musical Journal for the Piano Forte. Philadelphia, 1800.

Caslon, William. A Specimen of Printing Types: By Wm Caslon, Letter-Founder to the King. London: C. Whittingham, 1796.

Cazden, Norman, Herbert Haufrecht, and Norman Studer, eds. Folk Songs of the Catskills. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982.

———. , eds. Notes and Source for Folk Songs of the Catskills. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982.

Chaffin, William L. History of the Town of Easton, Massachusetts. Cambridge, MA: John Wilson and Son, 1886.

Chapman, Joseph. The Dark Day: Verses Occasioned by a Very Dark Day, May 19, 1780, 1813.

Chappell, William. The Ballad Literature and Popular Music of the Olden Time: A History of the Ancient Songs, Ballads, and of the Dance Tunes of England, with Numerous Anecdotes and Entire Ballads Also a Short Account of the Minstrels. 2 vols. New York: Dover Publishing Co., 1965.

“Charles Dibdin.” The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, n.d.

Chaucer, Geoffrey. “Wife of Bath.” In The Canterbury Tales, n.d.

Cherry, Andrew. The Bay of Biscay, O, n.d.

Chevy-Chace. Salem, Mass.: Sold [by Samuel and Ebenezer Hall?] at the printing-office in Salem, 1772.

Child, F. J. The English and Scottish Traditional Ballad. Boston, 1882.

Child, F.J., ed. “The Hunting of the Cheviot.” In The English and Scottish Traditional Ballad, #162. Boston, 1882.

Clarion, R.I. “The Frogs of Windham, An Old Colony Tale Founded on Fact.” Salem Gazette. January 30, 1824.

Clark, Jonas. A Short and Brief Account of the Shipwreck of Cap. Joshua Winslow, : Who Was Overset on Carolina Coast ... on the 23d Day of July, 1788. Boston, 1795.

Code, Henry B. The Russian Sacrifice, Or Burning Of Moscow. Dublin, 1813.

Coffin, Tristram P. The British Traditional Ballad in North America. Philadelphia: American Folklore Society, 1950.

Coggins, Jack. Ships and Seamen of the American Revolution. Harrisburg: Stackpole Books, 1969.

Cohen, Daniel A. Pillars of Salt, Monuments of Grace. New England Crime Literature and the Origins of American Popular Literature. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.

Cohen, Selma Jean. “The Ballad of Nancy Dawson.” Dance Perspectives, Summer 1966.

Cole, John. Minstrel. Baltimore: F. Lucas, 1812.

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, 1797.

Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, for the Year M,DCC,XCV. Boston: Samuel Hall, 1795.

Collins, John. Political Calendar. August 6, 1804.

Collins, William. New Vocal Miscellany. London, 1787.

Colman, George. The Forty Thieves; or the Female Duelist. London, 1806.

———. The Jealous Wife. New York, 1816.

Colman, the Younger, George. Love Laughs at Locksmiths: A Comic Opera: In Two Acts, Etc. London: T. Woodroof, 1803.

Columbian Naval Melody. Boston: Hans Lund, 1813.

Columbian Naval Songster. New York: Edward Gillespy, 1813.

Comic Songs, as Sung at the Theatres and Principal Concerts: To Which Is Added, an Appendix, Containing a Number of the Most Celebrated Popular Songs. Philadelphia: Peter A. Grotjan, 1814.

“Commodore Rodgers.” Independent Chronicle. January 20, 1812.

Complaynte of Scotland, 1549.

Constant Charley: Together with the Banks of the Dee and the Answer: Three Excellent Songs, Much in Vogue among the Young Gentlemen and Ladies in Town and Country. Boston: Sold [by Ezekiel Russell] at the office in Essex-Street, next Liberty-Pole, 1785.

Constitution of the New Century Fire Society: Instituted December 21, 1801. Boston: Russell and Cutler, 1801.

Conway, Moncure D. The Life of Thomas Paine. Vol. 1. 2 vols. New York: The Knickerbocker Press, 1893.

Conyers, Richard. A Collection of Psalms & Hymns. London: J. & W. Oliver, 1774.

Corry, Mary Jane. “The Performing Arts in Colonial American Newspapers, 1690-1783.” The Colonial Music Institute, n.d. http://www.colonialmusic.org/PAC-cdr.htm.

Crafty Kate of Colchester; Or, the False Hearted Clothier Frighted into Good Manners. Tune Of, the Languishing Lover. Newcastle: John White, 1750.

Cram, Nancy Gove. A Collection of Hymns and Poems. Schnectady, NY, 1815.

Crawford, James Ludovic Lindsay, ed. Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Catalogue of a Collection of English Ballads. New York: Burt Franklin, 1890.

Creighton, Helen. Songs and Ballads From Nova Scotia. Ottawa: E. Cloutier, King’s Printer, 1950.

Crooskeen Laun, A Favorite Irish Ballad. Vol. 1, n.d.

Cross, John C. The Purse, or Benevolent Tar. Philadelphia: Wrigley and Berriman, 1794.

Cumberland, Richard. The Jew of Mogadore : A Comic Opera in Three Acts. New York: David Longsworth, 1808.

Cunningham, John. Poems, Chiefly Pastoral. London, 1771.

———. Poems, Chiefly Pastoral. Newcastle, 1771. http://literature.proquest.com/marketing/index.jsp.

Currier, John J. History of Newburyport, Mass., 1764-1905. Newburyport: Printed by himself, 1906.

Currier, Wells. Farewell Hymn: On the Death of Miss Polly Gould of Newhampshire [sic], 1800.

Cushman, Robert. The Sin and Danger of Self-Love Described: In a Sermon Preached at Plymouth, in New-England, 1621. Plymouth, Massachusetts: Nathaniel Coverly, 1785.

Cussans, John P. Oh! Poor Robinson Crusoe: A Favorite Comic Chaunt. E. Bates, 1797.

Cynthia, : With the Account of the Unfortunate Loves of Almerin and Desdemona. : Illustrated with a Variety of the Chances of Fortune; Moralized with Many Useful Observations, Drawn from Thence, Whereby the Reader May Reap Both Pleasure and Profit. Boston: Printed by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, 1796.

Damon, S. Foster. Yankee Doodle. Providence: Bibliographic Society of America, 1959.

Dana, Richard Henry Jr. Two Years Before the Mast, 1840.

Davidson, Levette J. “Two Old War Songs.” California Folklore Quarterly 4, no. 2 (April 1945).

Davis, Arthur Kyle. Folk-Songs of Virginia. New York: AMS Press, 1949.

Davis, Charles Henry Stanley. History of Wallingford, Conn: From Its Settlement in 1670 to the Present Time, Including Meriden, Which Was One of Its Parishes Until 1806, and Cheshire, Which Was Incorporated in 1780. Meriden: C.H.S. Davis, 1870.

Davy, John. Spanish Dollars; Or, The Priest of the Parish. London: Clementi, 1805.

Day, Thomas. Grateful Turk. Or The Advantages of Friendship. Boston: Printed by J. White, 1796.

Deacon, George. John Clare and the Folk Tradition. London: Sinclar Browne, 1983.

Dearborn, Nathaniel. Commercial Advertiser, February 1, 1819.

Decatur’s Victory: Accomplished Ala-Mode-de Constitution & Guerriere, or the Second Part of the Same Tune. Battle between the American Frigate, “United States,” Commodore Decatur, Master, and the British Frigate, “Macedonian.” Captain Carden, Which She Took after an Action of 17 Minutes, on the 25th October.---The British Lost 104 Men, Killed and Wounded, the Americans 12 Only. “Tune, Paul Jones’s Victory.” [Boston]: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun. corner Theatre Alley, 1812.

Defesch, William. “The Masquerade Song, Sung by Mr. Beard at Ranelagh, 1749.” London, ca 1749.

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———. The Wonderful Life, and Surprising Adventures of That Renowned Hero Robinson Crusoe: Who Lived Twenty-Eight Years on an Uninhabited Island, Which He Afterwards Colonised. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1791.

———. The Wonderful Life, and Surprising Adventures of That Renowned Hero Robinson Crusoe: Who Lived Twenty-Eight Years on an Uninhabited Island, Which He Afterwards Colonised. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1792.

Deloney, Thomas. Fai[r Rosamond] Ga[?...] Who Wa[s King Henry] the Seco[nd’s Concubine], and Put [to Death] by Queen [Elinor, I]n the Bower of Woodstock, near Oxford. Newport [R.I.]: Printed and sold by the Widow Franklin, at the town school-house, 1746.

Delone[y], Thomas. Strange Histories, or Songs and Sonnets, of Kinges, Princes, Dukes, Lord, Ladyes, Knights, and Gentlemen, &c. London, 1607.

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———. Cabinet of Wonders, 1805.

———. Christmas Gambols, 1795.

———. The General Election, 1796.

———. The Oddities, 1798.

———. The Whim of the Moment, 1788.

———. The Woodman, 1790.

———. Will-O’-the-Wisp, 1795.

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———. The Tight Little Island, 1797.

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———. A New Guide to the English Tongue: In Five Parts. ... The Whole Being Recommended by Several Clergymen, and Eminent Schoolmasters. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles River Bridge, 1797.

Dimond, William. Hunter of the Alps. London, 1804.

———. The Foundling of the Forest. New York: David Longsworth, 1809.

Dishabille. Connecticut Courant. March 27, 1769.

Distressing Calamity: A Brief Account of the Late Fire at Richmond, Virg. in Which the Theatre Was Burnt, and Upwards of One Hundred and Sixty Persons Perished in the Flames. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1812.

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———. “The Female Warrior Heroine in Anglo-American Popular Balladry.” Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles, 1982.

———. “The Popular Marketing of ‘Old Ballads’: The Ballad Revival and Eighteenth-Century Antiquarianism Reconsidered.” Eighteenth-Century Studies 21, no. 1 (Autumn 1987): 71–73.

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———. Warrior Women and Popular Balladry, 1650-1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.

———. Warrior Women and Popular Balladry, 1650-1850. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.

———, ca. 1981.

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———. Wit and Mirth: Or Pills to Purge Melancholy. 6 vols. Hatboro: Folklore Society, 1698.

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———. “Jonathan’s Courtship.” The Federal Mirror. June 21, 1796.

———. Jonathan’s Courtship: A Merry Tale. Massachusetts?, 1795.

———. Original Poems. Philadelphia: Printed at the Lorenzo press of E. Bronson, 1806.

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———. Lines on the Death of Ebenezer Ball, Who Was Executed at Castine, October 31, 1811, for the Murder of John Tileston Downs. Bluehill, 1811.

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———. A Token for Mourners; or, The Advice of Christ to a Distressed Mother, Bewailing the Death of Her Dear and Only Son. Newbury [VT]: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, near the Court-House, 1796.

———. A Token for Mourners; or, The Advice of Christ to a Distressed Mother Bewailing the Death of Her ... Son. Salem: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, 1802.

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———. Sources of Irish Traditional Music C. 1600-1855. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1998.

———. , ed. “The Irish Wedding.” In Sources of Irish Traditional Music C. 1600-1855. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1998.

Flowers of Irish Melody. Belfast: John Henderson, 1847.

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———. The Mayor of Garret, 1809.

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Forget Me Not Songster. New York: Nafis & Cornish, 1835.

Forget-Me-Not Songster. New York: Richard Marsh, 1847.

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———, January 31, 2004. BALLAD-L@LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU.

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Gay, John. The Beggar’s Opera, 1728.

———. The What D’ye Call It, 1715.

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———. , ed. “Lord Baker.” In Ballad and Tune Book, 220–21. Connecticut, 1798.

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Hardy, Thomas. Tess of the D’Urbervilles, 1891.

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Harrison Victorious: : Copy of a Letter from General Harrison to the Department of War.....Head-Quarters, near Moravian Town, on the River Thames, 80 Miles from Detroit, 5th October, 1813. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, Jun. Milk-Street, Boston, 1813.

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Hastings, George Everett. The Life and Works of Francis Hopkinson. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1926.

Hawes, William. The Wreath of Love; a Favorite Glee for Three Voices with an Accompaniment for Two Performers on the Piano Forte. London: Birchall, 181-?

———. The Wreath of Love, a Glee for Three Voices with an Accompaniment for Two Performers on the Piano Forte, the Poetry by J. Rannie. London: Rt. Birchall, 1808.

Hewitt, James. The Primrose Girl, 1790.

Highfill, Jr., Philip H., Kalman A. Burnim, and Edward A. Langhans. A Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses, Musicians, Dancers, Managers & Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660-1800. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1973.

Hime’s Pocket Book for the German Flute. Dublin: Hime, 1810.

Hinde, Thomas S. The Pilgrim’s Songster: Or A Choice Collection of Spiritual Songs. Cincinnati, OH: A. Wright & A. Wolliscroft, 1828.

———. The Pilgrim’s Songster Or, A Choice Collection of Spiritual Songs from the Best Authors with Many Original Pieces. 2nd ed. Chillicothe, OH: Freedonian Press, 1815.

Hinds, Ebenezer. A History of Facts. / Writen [sic] by a Friend to Truth: and Also the Dealings of Some Brethren, of the Second Baptist Church of Christ in Middleborough, with Elder Hinds, Who Was Ordained Pastor of That Church and Society, in 1758, after He Had Preached near Six Years to Them on Probation: And This Church and Society Were Reputable, as to Their Number and Interest. Middleborough, MA: Nathaniel Coverly, 1787.

“History - Battle of Trafalgar 21st Oct 1805.” An Historical Overview of Andalucia, History of Southern Spain, n.d. http://www.andalucia.com/history/trafalgar.htm.

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Hogan, Charles Beecher. London Stage, 1776-1800: A Critical Introduction. Vol. 5. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1968.

Holden, Smollet. Collection of Old Established Irish Slow and Quick Tunes. Dublin: S. Holden, 1805.

Holyoke, Samuel. Christian Harmonist. Salem, Mass: Joshua Cushing, 1804.

Home Industry, the Most Direct Road to National Prosperity, 1830. http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/S?ammem/rbpebib:@OR%28@field%28TITLE+@od1%28Home+industry,+the+most+direct+road+to+national+prosperity++[183-?+++%29%29+@field%28ALTTITLE+@od1%28Home+industry,+the+most+direct+road+to+national+prosperity++[183-?+++%29%29%29.

Hook, James. She Lives in the Valley Below, a New Song, Sung . . . by Master Gray, at Vauxhall Gardens. London: Bland & Weller, 1799.

———. Tekeli; or the Siege of Montgatz, 1806.

———. The Ladies Magazine and Musical Repository, March 1801.

Hopkins, Francis. Miscellaneous Essays and Occasional Writings. Philadelphia: T. Dobson, 1792.

Hopkinson, Francis. Hail Columbia : Tune--“Presidents March.” Boston: Sold by J. White, near Charlestown Bridge, Boston, 1798.

Horrible Scenes at Baltimore. From a Philadelphia Paper. On Monday Morning Last ... Another Mob Assembled at the Office of the Federal Republican, No. 45 S. Charles St. for the Purpose of Demolishing It, and Committing Violence on Alexander C. Hanson, Esq. One of the Editors. ... Newburyport, Mass: Printed by E.W. Allen, 1812.

Horrid Indian Cruelties! Affecting History of the Dreadful Distresses of Frederic Manheim’s Family. To Which Are Added, an Encounter between a White Man and Two Savages. Remarkable Bravery of a Woman. Sufferings of John Corbly’s Family. Boston: Printed by J. White, near Charles-River bridge, 1799.

Horrid Murder!! Sketches of the Life of Capt. James Purrinton, Who on the Night of the 8th of July, 1806, Murdered His Wife, Six Children, and Himself, with a Particular Account of That Horrid Catastrophe. To Which Are Subjoined Remarks on the Fatal Tendency of Erroneous Principles, and Motives for Receiving and Obeying the Pure and Salutary Precepts of the Gospel. Copy Right Secured. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1818.

Hughes, Herbert, ed. Irish County Songs. London: Boosey & Hawkes, 1909.

Hulan, Richard. “John Adam Granade: The Wild Man of Goose Creek.” Western Folklore 33, no. 1 (January 1974).

———, September 21, 1979.

Humor of 1776: American Taxation. Boston?, 1808.

Humphreys, David. The Miscellaneous Works. New York: T. and J. Swords, 1804.

Hunter, Anne. Poems. London: T. Payne, 1802.

Hunter, Anne Home. Indian Chief, and Canadian Boat Song. Boston: Sold, wholesale and retail, by L. Deming, no. 62, Hanover Street, 2d door from Friend Street, 1832.

Huntington, Daniel Henry. “Preceptor for the Flute.” Copybook. Onandaga, NY, 1817. New-Haven Colony Historical Society, Read Collection.

Huntington, Gale, and Lani Herrmann, eds. Sam Henry’s Songs of the People. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1990.

Hutton, Joseph. The Wounded Hussar; or, Rightful Heir: A Musical Afterpiece, in Two Acts. New York: D. Longworth, at the Dramatic Repository, Shakespeare-Gallery, 1809.

“Hymn for the Massachusetts Fast.” Essex Register. August 15, 1812.

“Hymn for the Massachusetts Fast.” New-Hampshire Patriot. September 1, 1812.

Hymns and Spiritual Songs for the Use of Christians. 3rd ed. Philadelphia: John W. Scott, 1803.

Ingalls, Jeremiah, ed. The Christian Harmony; Or, Songster’s Companion. Exeter, NH: Henry Ranlet, 1805.

Ireland, Joseph Norton. Records of the New York Stage: From 1750 to 1860. Vol. 1. New York: T.H. Morrell, 1866.

Ives, Dr. Edward, n.d. American Folk Society Letters.

———, n.d. American Folk Society Letters.

Jackey and the Cow. Colored mezzotint, April 12, 1796. http://www.grosvenorprints.com/anonjack.jpg.

Jackson, George Pullen. Down-East Spirituals and Others: Three-Hundred Songs. New York: Da Capo Press, 1975.

———. White Spirituals in the Southern Uplands. The Story of the Fasola Folk, Their Songs, Singings, and “Buckwheat Notes.” [With Plates, Including Portraits and Facsimiles.] Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1933.

Jacky Dandy’s Delight; or, The History of Birds and Beasts. Salem: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, 1799.

Jacky Dandy’s Delight; or The History of Birds and Beasts; In Verse and Prose. Adorned with a Variety of Cuts. [Four Lines of Verse] -- The First Worcester Edition. Worcester, Massachusetts: Isaiah Thomas, 1788.

James, Elizabeth. “The Captain’s Apprentice and the Death of Young Robert Eastick of King’s Lynn : A Study in the Development of a Folk Song.” Folk Music Journal 7, no. 5 (1999): 579–94.

Jarratt, Devereux. The Life of the Reverend Devereux Jarratt. Baltimore: Warner & Hanna, 1806.

———. “The Life of the Reverend Devereux Jarratt.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd, 9, no. 3 (July 1952): 363.

Jemmy and Nancy; or, A Tragical Relation of the Death of Five Persons. Norwich [Conn.]: Printed at Spooner’s printing-officw, 1775.

Jemmy and Nancy; or, A Tragical Relation of the Death of Five Persons. [New London, Conn.]: Sold [by Timothy Green?] at the printing-office, New-London, 1775.

Jenks, Stephen. Collected Works. Madison: A-R Editions, 1995.

———. , ed. The Jovial Songster, No. II: Being a Selection of Some of the Most Favorite, and Sentimental Songs; Some of Which Are Original. Set to Music, Chiefly in Two Parts. Dedham, 1806.

John Hay Library Staff. Catalog of Broadsides of American Verse in the Harris Collection of American Poetry and Plays. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1986.

“John Lowe.” Appleton’s Cyclopedia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1889 1887. www.famousamericans.net/johnlowe/.

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Johnson, Charles. The Cobler of Preston As It Is Acted at the Theatres, with Applause. Written by Mr. Johnson. Dublin: Printed by George Faulkner, 1732.

Johnson, James. The Scots Musical Museum in Six Volumes : Consisting of Six Hundred Scots Songs with Proper Basses for the Piano Forte. Vol. 6. 6 vols. Edinburgh: James Johnson, 1803.

Johnson, James, and William Stenhouse, eds. Scots Musical Museum Originally Published by James Johnson. Vol. 2. Hatboro: Folklore Associates, 1853.

Johnson, Richard. The History of a Little Boy, Found under a Haycock. : Likewise, Little Stories for Little Children. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, 1790.

———. The History of a Little Boy Found under a Haycock. To Which Is Added, The Royal Alphabet. Likewise, Little Stories for Little Children. Boston: Printed by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles’ River Bridge, 1789.

Johnson, R. [Richard]. The Hermit of the Forest, and the Wandering Infants: A Rural Fragment. Hartford: Hale & Hosmer, 1812.

Johnston, Arch C. “A Major Earthquake Zone on the Mississippi.” Scientific American 246, no. 4 (April 1982): 55–68.

Johonnet, Jackson. The Remarkable Adventures of Jackson Johonnet, of Massachusetts... Salem Mass.? Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun’r.?, 1802.

———. The Remarkable Adventures of Jackson Johonnet. Salem: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, jun’r., 1802.

Jones, Abner. The Melody of the Heart: Original and Selected Hymns for Social Devotion. Boston: Manning & Loring, 1804.

Jones, William. An Oration, Pronounced at Concord, the Fourth of July, 1794. : Being the Anniversary of the American Independence. Concord, MA: Nathaniel Coverly, 1794.

Jovial Songster: Being a Number of the Most Celebrated–Love–and Sea Songs. Charlestown, Mass: Printed & sold by J. White, Main-street, 1811.

Joyce, William L. Printing and Society in Early America. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1983.

Judicious Collection of Naval Songs. Warren, RI, 1814.

Julian, John, ed. A Dictionary of Hymnology. 2nd ed. New York: Dover Publications, 1907.

“Julian Marshall Collection,” n.d. Houghton Library, Harvard University.

Keller, Kate Van Winkle. “Checklist of the Publications of Nathaniel Coverly and Son, 1767-1825.” Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 117, no. 2 (October 2007). http://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44539658.pdf.

———. “Joseph White: A Biographical Note and Preliminary Checklist of His Publications, 1783-1833.” Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 117, no. 2 (October 2007). http://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44539659.pdf.

———. “Nathaniel Coverly and Son, Printers, 1767-1825.” Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 117, no. 1 (April 2007). http://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44574370.pdf.

———. Printers of Ballads, Books and Newspapers: Biographical Notes and Checklists for Nathaniel Coverly, Sr., Nathaniel Coverly, Jr., and Joseph White. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 2008.

Keller, Kate Van Winkle, and George A. Fogg. Country Dances from Colonial New York: James Alexander’s Notebook, 1730. Boston: Country Dance Society, Boston Centre, 2000.

Keller, Robert M. Early American Secular Music and Its European Sources, 1589-1839, An Index. Annapolis: The Colonial Music Institute, 2002. www.colonialmusic.org.

Keller, Robert M. Early American Songsters, 1734-1820, An Index. Annapolis: Colonial Music Institute, 2010. Also available online at www.colonialmusic.org.

Kelly, Michael. The Forty Thieves, 1806.

Kennedy, John. A Scriptural Account of the Uncommon Darkness That Happened on Friday May 19th, 1780. Boston: Printed and sold at the Bible and Heart in Cornhill [by Thomas and John Fleet], 1780.

Kenney, Michael G. The Perfect Law of Liberty: Elias Smith and the Providential History of America. Washington: Smithsonian Institute Press, 1994.

Kidson, Frank. “Supplement to Chappel’s [sic] Traditional Tunes.” In Old English Popular Music, edited by William Chappell and H. Ellis Wooldridge, 167–68. New York: Jack Brussel, 1893.

Kimball, Jacob. The Village Harmony, or Youth’s Assistant to Sacred Musick: Containing, a Concise Introduction to the Grounds of Musick, with Such a Collection of the Most Approved Psalm Tunes, Anthems, and Other Pieces, as Are Most Suitable for Divine Worship.: Designed for the Use of Schools and Singing Societies. Exeter, NH: Henry Ranlet, 1796.

Kingsley, Luther. Luther Kingsley’s Property. Mansfield, CT, 1795.

Kinsley, James, ed. Burns Poems and Songs. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969.

Klocko, David Grover. “Jeremiah Ingalls’ The Christian Harmony: Or, Songster’s Companion (1805).” University of Michigan, 1978.

Koegel, John. “The ‘Indian Chief’ and ‘Morality’: Eighteenth-Century British Popular Song Transformed into Nineteenth-Century American Shape-Note Hymn.” In Music in Performance and Society: Essays in Honor of Roland Jackson, edited by Malcolm Cole and John Koegel, 437–508. Warren, MI: Harmonie Park Press, 1997.

“Ladies Monthly Museum,” n.d.

“Ladies Monthly Museum,” n.d.

Lady Washington’s Lamentation. United States, 1800.

Lair, John. Songs Lincoln Loved. New York: Duell, Sloan, and Pearce, 1954.

Lambert, Barbara, ed. Music in Colonial Massachusetts 1630-1820. Vol. 2. Boston: Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1985. 

Lamentation for Gen. Washington: Commander in Chief of the Combined Forces of America and France during the Revolutionary War, and Afterwards President of the U.S.--Died Dec, 14, 1799. Boston: Sold wholesale and retail by L. Deming, 1828.

Langdon, Chauncy. The Select Songster. New Haven, CT: Daniel Bowen, 1786.

Larkin, Samuel. The Columbian Songster and Freemason’s Pocket Companion : A Collection of the Newest and Most Celebrated Sentimental, Convivial, Humourous, Satirical, Pastoral, Hunting, Sea and Masonic Songs, Being the Largest and Best Collection Ever Published in America. Portsmouth, NH: Printed by J. Melcher, for S. Larkin, at the Portsmouth book-store, 1798.

———. , ed. The Nightingale: A Collection of the Most Popular Ancient & Modern Songs Set to Music. Portsmouth, NH: William and Daniel Treadwell, 1804.

Larned, Ellen D. The History of Windham County, Connecticut. Worcester: Ellen D. Larned, 1880.

Last Night but Three, of This Season. Mr. & Mrs. Mill’s Benefit; Who Have the Pleasure of Announcing to Their Friends and Public, That Mons. Labottiere Has Kindly Offered His Services for This Evening. This Evening, Monday, April 30, 1810, Will Be Presented ... Coleman the Younger’s Historical Play, in 3 Acts Called, The Battle of Hexham ... End of the Play ... a Pantomime Interlude, in One Act, Called--the Scotch Ghost: or..Little Fanny’s Love. ... The Whole to Conclude with a Pantomime ... Called, Robinson Crusoe: And His Man Friday. ... Boston, 1810.

Last Words. Timothy Longlive, n.d.

Lathrop, John, Elkanah Tisdale, and Lucius M. Sargent. Order of Performances for the First Celebration of the Washington Benevolent Society of Massachusetts: April 30, 1812. Boston, 1812.

Lauber, Almon W., ed. Orderly Books of the Fourth New York Regiment, 1778-1780; The Second New York Regiment, 1780-1783 with Diaries of Samuel Talmadge, 1780-1782 and John Barr, 1779-1782. Albany: The University of the State of New York, 1932.

Laugh and Be Fat. Or, An Antidote against Melancholy. Salem: Printed [by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun.] at Faust’s Head, Essex-Street, 1799.

Law, Andrew. Select Number of Plain Tunes. Connecticut, 1781.

Lawrence, Vera Brodsky. Music for Patriots, Politicians and Presidents. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1975.

Laws, Jr., G. Malcolm. Native American Balladry. Philadelphia: The American Folklore Society, 1964.

Lawyers and Bull-Frogs. Willimantic, Conn.?, 18uu?

Leavett, Jack. Alexandria Gazette. n.d.

Leavitt, Joshua. Christian Lyre. New York: Jonathan Leavitt, 1831.

Lemay, J. A. Leo. “The American Origins of Yankee Doodle.” William and Mary Quarterly, July 1976.

Letters on Courtship and Marriage: Shewing That the Real Felicity of Marriage Does Consist in an Union of Minds, and a Sympathy of Affections--in a Mutual Esteem and Friendship for Each Other in the Highest Degree--It Will Then Harmonize All the Tender Feelings in the Heart--Calm Each Discordant Passion, and Swell the Breast with Those Exquisite Emotions That Rise above All Description. Boston: J. White, 1802.

Levin, Phyllis Lee. Abigail Adams. New York: Ballantine Books, 1987.

Lewis, Arthur Ansel. “American Songsters 1800-1805.” Brown University, 1937.

Lewis, Matthew Gregory. The Monk, 1796.

Lichtenwanger, William. “The Music of The Star-Spangled Banner from Ludgate Hill to Capitol Hill.” The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 34, no. 3 (July 1977).

Light, Edward. Introduction to Playing the Harp-Lute & Apollo-Lyre. London, 1785.

Lillo, George. Silvia. London: J. Watts, 1731.

Lines Composed on the Execution of J. Clement’s: Who Was Shot for Desertion, on Fort Independence, Feb. 18 Having Been Four Times Pardoned, but Having Last Deserted His Post, Was Condemned to Die. Boston: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun. corner Theatre Alley, 1813.

Linley, George. Woods of Green Erin, Irish Ballad. New York: William Hall and Son, 1853. http://www.loc.gov/item/sm1853.700960/.

Livingston, Henry. “Manuscript Tune Book.” Tune book. Poughkeepsie, NY, 1793 1783. Locust Grove Museum.

Lochlainn, Colm O, ed. More Irish Street Ballads. London: Pan Books, 1978.

Long, David F. Ready to Hazard. Hanover: University Press of New England, 1981.

Lord, Melvin. “Boston Booksellers Records, 1640-1860,” n.d. Volume 3. MWA.

Lossing, Benson J. Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1868.

———. Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. New York: Harper & brothers, 1869. http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~wcarr1/Lossing2/Chap22.html.

Love in a Tub; or, The Merchant Outwitted by a Vintner. Hudson: William E. Norman, 1812.

Love in a Tub; or,--The Merchant Outwitted by the Vintner. An Excellent Old Song. Shewing--How a Young Vintner in London, Fell in Love with a Rich Winemerchant’s Daughter, and How They Fun’d the Old Man ... Salem: Samuel and Ebenezer Hall?, 1772.

Lowell, John. Gov. Strong’s Calumniator Reproved, in a Review of a Democratic Pamphlet Entitled, Remarks on the Governor’s Speech. By No Bel-Esprit. Boston: W. W. Clapp, 1814.

Lowell Offering, A Repository of Original Articles, Written by Factory Girls, 1845.

Mackenzie, W. Roy. Ballads and Sea Songs from Nova Scotia. Hatboro, PA: Folklore Associates, Inc., 1963.

Maclay, Edgar, S. A History of American Privateers. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1899.

Maclay, Edgar S. History of the Navy. New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1895.

Macpherson, James. Temora. 8 vols., 1763.

Madan, Martin. An Account of the Triumphant Death of F---- S----. : A Converted Prostitute. Amherst, NH: Nathaniel Coverly and Son, 1795.

Madison’s Mob. Boston: Office of the Boston Gazette, 1812.

Maidment, James. Scottish Ballads and Songs. Edinburgh: William Paterson, 1868.

Malcomson, Thomas and Robert. The Battle For Lake Erie. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1990.

Mallet, David. The Plain Dealer. August 28, 1724.

Maloney, Linda. The Captain From Connecticut: The Life And Naval Times Of Isaac Hull. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1986.

Mann, Bruce H. Republic of Debtors, Bankruptcy in the Age of American Independence. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000.

Martin, Tyrone G. A Most Fortunate Ship. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1997.

———. “Isaac Hull’s Victory Revisited.” The American Neptune 47, no. 1 (Winter 1987).

———, November 27, 2002.

Mason, Eliphalet, ed. Complete Pocket Song Book. Northampton: Andrew Wright, 1802.

Matchette, Robert, December 21, 1981.

Mazzinghi, Joseph, and William Reeve. The Turnpike Gate. London: Goulding, Phipps & D’Almaine, 1799.

McCorison, M.A. “Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure or Fanny Hill in New England.” In American Book Collector, 29–30. New York: Moretus Press, 1980.

McCreery, John. Independent Chronicle. February 15, 1814.

McCurry, John G. Social Harp. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1855.

McDonald, Philip. A Surprising Account of the Captivity and Escape of Philip M’Donald. Amherst, NH: Nathaniel Coverly, 1796.

———. A Surprising Account of the Captivity and Escape of Phillip [i.e., Philip] M’Donald & Alexander M’Leod, of Virginia. Haverhill, MA: Printed by N. Coverly & Son, 1796.

McGibbon, William. A Collection of Scots Tunes. Edinburgh: R. Brenner, 1746.

———. A Collection of Scots Tunes, Some with Variations for a Violin, Hautboy, or German-Flute: With a Bass for a Violoncello or Harpsichord. Edinburgh: R. Brenner, 1755.

McGraw, Hugh, ed. The Sacred Harp. Bremen, GA, 1991.

———. , ed. The Sacred Harp, 1991 Revision. Bremen, GA: Sacred Harp Publishing Company, 1991.

McKee, Christopher. Edward Preble. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1972.

McLoughlin, William G. New England Dissent 1630-1883: The Baptists and the Separation of Church and State. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971.

McMichael, George, and James S. Leonard, eds. Concise Anthology of American Literature, n.d. http://cwx.prenhall.com.

McNeil, W.K., ed. Southern Folk Ballads. Vol. 1. Little Rock: August House, 1987.

Mead, Stith, ed. A General Selection of the Newest and Most Admired Hymns and Spiritual Songs. Richmond, VA: Seaton Grantland, 1807.

“Melancholy Accidents.” Boston Gazette. n.d.

“Melancholy Accidents.” Independent Chronicle. n.d.

Mellen, John. The Doctrine of the Cross of Christ. A Discourse, Delivered at Wellfleet, On Cape-Cod, 13th of April, 1785. Plymouth, Massachusetts: Nathaniel Coverly, 1785.

Merritt, Timothy. A Discourse on the Unpardonable Sin: Delivered at the Chapel in Broomfield’s Lane on Sabbath Evening, March 14, 1819. Nathaniel Coverly, 1819.

———. A Sermon on the Horrid Murder of Captain James Purrinton’s Family, of Augusta: Delivered in Bowdoin- Ham, July 20, 1806. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1818.

Minutes of the Meredith Baptist Association.: Held at Bradford,  State of Vermont, September 13th and 14th. Newbury [VT]: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly for the Association, 1798.

Minutes of the Meredith Baptist Association.: Held at Sandwich, State of New-Hampshire, September 14th and 15th, 1796. Haverhill, MA: Printed by N. Coverly for the Association, 1797.

Moffat, Alfred, and Frank Kidson. English Songs of the Georgian Period. London: Bayley & Ferguson, 1911.

Molly Lawder, n.d.

“Monopolizer, A New Song,” n.d. Madden Collection, Cambridge University Library.

Moore, Frank. Diary of the American Revolution. New York, 1861.

———. Songs and Ballads of the American Revolution. New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1859.

Moore, Thomas. “Come to the Bower.” Musica International, n.d. http://www.musicanet.org/robokopp/eire/willyouc.htm.

———. Irish Melodies. Vol. 2, 1807.

“More Naval Laurels.” Independent Chronicle. September 6, 1813.

Morison, Samuel Eliot. John Paul Jones:  A Sailor’s Biography. Boston: Little Brown and Company, 1959.

Morris, Richard B. Encyclopedia of American History. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1953.

Moss, Harold Gene. “Ballad-Opera Songs: A Record of the Ideas Set to Music, 1728-1733.” The University of Michigan, 1970.

Most Horrible!! Office of the Newport Mercury, Saturday Evening, August 1. ... From the Philadelphia Freeman’s Journal. Baltimore Riot! Extract of a Letter from Baltimore, Dated July 28 [1812]. Newport, R.I.: Printed by Rousmaniere & Barber, 1812.

Mother Goose’s Melody, or Sonnets for the Cradle. [Boston]: Nathaniel Coverly, Nathaniel Coverly Jr., or White?, 1804.

Mother Goose’s Melody, or Sonnets for the Cradle. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1812.

Mott, Frank Luther. A History of American Magazines. Vol. 1. 5 vols. New York, 1930.

Moulton, Ian Frederick. Before Pornography: Erotic Writing in Early Modern England. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.

Mournful Tragedy of the Major’s Only Son; or, Crazy Jones:--A True Story.---Hollis, N.H. 1787. United States, 1810.

Moylan, Terry. The Age of Revolution, 1776-1815 in the Irish Song Tradition. Dublin: Lilliput Press, 2000.

Murray, Sterling. “Weeping and Mourning: Funeral Dirges in Honor of General Washington.” Journal of the American Musicological Society 31, no. 3 (1978).

“Music Legacy.” Music Legacy, n.d. Www.musiclegacy.com/fooba.htm.

Myers, Christian. “Orderly Book.” Wyoming, PA, 1779. Library of Congress.

“National Weather Service Southern Region Headquarters.” National Weather Service  Southern Region Headquarters, n.d. www.srh.noaa.gov/research.

Native Eloquence: Being Public Speeches. Canandaigua, NY: J. D. Bemis, 1811.

Naval Chronicle. London: J. Gould, 1799.

Naval Songster. Fredericktown, MD: M. E. Bartgis, 1814.

Naval Songster. Charlestown: Joseph White, 1815.

Naval Songster; or, Columbian Naval Melody: Being a Choice Collection of the Most Approved Naval Songs. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1816.

Newland, Jeremiah. Earthquakes Improved: Or Solemn Warning to the World; By the Tremendous Earthquake Which Happen’d on Tuesday Morning the 18th of November 1755, between Four and Five O’clock. Boston: J. Green, 1755.

———. Verses Occasioned by the Earthquakes in the Month of November, 1755. Boston, 1755.

“News as History.” The Buffalonian. Accessed August 8, 2003. www.buffalonian.com/hnews.

Nichols, Charles. Autobiography of Rev. Chas. Nichols. New Britain, 1881.

Nightingale. New York: Harrison, 1797.

Niles, Nathaniel. The American Hero: A Sapphick Ode. / By Nath. Niles, A.M. Cheshire, Conn.? Printed by William Law?, 1781.

Nixon, Thomas. “Thos. Nixon Junr’s Book of Capers of All Sorts.” Framingham, c 1780. Framingham Historical Society.

Norcott, John. Baptism Discovered Plainly and Faithfully according to the Word of God. Salem: Printed by N. Coverly, 1801.

North, James E. “The Hiding Place.” Gospel Magazine, New, no. 1619 (August 2001). http://www.gospelmagazine.org.uk/julyaugust2001.pdf.

Norton, Kay. Baptist Offspring, Southern Midwife: Jesse Mercer’s Cluster of Spiritual Songs (1810): A Study in American Hymnody. Warren, MI: Harmonie Park Press, 2002.

“Notes on Disestablishment in Massachusetts, 1780-1833.” The William and Mary Quarterly, Third, 24, no. 2 (April 1969): 169–90.

Nurse Truelove’s New-Year’s Gift; or, The Book of Books for Children. Adorned with Cuts and Designed for a Present to Every Little Boy and Girl, Who Would Become Great Men and Women. Plymouth, Massachusetts: Nathaniel Coverly, 1787.

O’Brien, William. O’Brien’s Irish Sermon, Or, Roman Catholic Mass-House Lecture, Addressed to ****, and Delivered in the Character of an Irish Priest. London, 1782.

———. O’Brien’s Lusorium: Being a Collection of Convivial Songs, Lectures &c. Entirely Original, in Various Styles. London: Mr. Durham [et al], 1782.

Observations upon the Present State of the Clergy of New-England... Boston: Printed and sold by Norman & White, in Marshall’s Lane near the Boston Stone, 1783.

Occom, Samson. “Samson Occom Papers.” Connecticut Historical Society Museum and Library, 1808 1727. http://www.chs.org/finding_aides/finding_aids/occos1792.html.

Occum, Samson. A Choice Collection of Hymns and Spiritual Songs: Intended for the Edification of Sincere Christians, of All Denominations. New London: Timothy Green, 1774.

O’Connor, Jennifer. “The Irish Origins and Variations of the Ballad ‘Molly Brown.’” Canadian Journal for Traditional Music, 1986. http://cjtm.icaap.org/content/14/v14art3.html.

O’Connor, Thomas H. The Boston Irish, A Political History. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1995.

Odell, Thomas. The Patron, 1729.

O Farrell’s Pocket Companion. London: Goulding, D’Almaine Potter & Co., 1804.

O’Hara, Kane. The Golden Pippin: An English Burletta, 1773.

O’Keefe, John. The Poor Soldier, 1782.

———. The She Gallant; or Square-Toes Outwitted: A New Comedy of Two Acts. London, 1767.

O’Keefe, John, and Samuel Arnold. The Agreeable Surprise: A Comic Opera, in Two Acts, 1781.

O’Keefe, John, and William Shield. The Farmer: A Comic Opera in Two Acts. Boston: Printed at the Apollo Press, in Boston, by Belknap and Hall, for William P. Blake, no. 59, Cornhill, and William T. Clap, no. 90, Newbury Street, 1794.

Old Adam. Manchester: J. Wheeler, 1837. http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/static/images/sheets/15000/14057.gif.

Olson, Bruce. “Bruce Olson’s Web Site,” n.d. http://www.csufresno.edu/folklore/Olson/.

———, May 27, 2003.

Olson, Wm. Bruce. “A Note on the Tune ‘Jamaica,.’” Folk Music Journal 2, no. 4 (1973): 315–17.

“O My Deary. [Song, Begins: ‘Adown a Green Valley’.] Written by C. Dibdin, Junr.” Amazon, n.d. Http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000D22RO/202-0245925-9166267.

On the Dark Day May 19th 1780. Massachusetts?, 1810.

On the Death of General Washington. Commander in Chief of the Combined Forces of America and France, during the Revolutionary War, and Afterwards President of the United States of America--Who Died December 14th, 1799. United States, 1800.

On the Evacuation of Boston by the British Troops, March 17th, 1776. Boston?, 1776.

“On the Force of Music: To a Favourite Air in the Opera of Atalanta.” The Universal Magazine 41 (December 1767): 326.

Opie, Amelia. Temper. New York, 1812.

Opie, Iona, and Peter Opie, eds. The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1951.

Order of Service, at the Interment of the Rev. Joseph Stevens Buckminster, Late Pastor of the Church in Brattle-Square, Boston, June 12th, 1812. Boston, 1812.

Original Sacred Harp. Kingsport, TN: Kingsport Press, 1859.

Osgood, Joseph. An Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1801 ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston, in New-England, Lat. 42 Deg. 23 Min. North. Boston: Printed and sold by Joseph White, near Charles’ River Bridge, 1800.

———. The Town and Country Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1796. Being Bissextile, or Leap-Year; and the 20th of the Independence of America. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, and by the booksellers, 1795.

O’Sullivan, Donal. Carolan, The Life Times and Music of an Irish Harper. 2 vols. Lincolnshire, England: Celtic Music, 1991.

Oswald, James, ed. Caledonian Pocket Companion. London: James Oswald, 1751.

———. Collection of the Best Old Scotch and English Songs. London: J. Oswald, 1761.

———. The Reprisal, 1757.

Otis, George. “Collection of Music [in Manuscript] by George Otis for the Violin or Flute.” Worcester, 1808 1793. Thomas Warner Collection.

Oxenford, John. Cruiskeen Lawn. Air--“The Little Jug.” Philadelphia: A.W. Auner, 1871.

Paddy’s Resource: Being a Collection of Original and Modern Patriotic Songs, Toasts and Sentiments. Philadelphia: T. Stephens, 1796.

Paine, Robert Treat. The Works, in Verse and Prose, of the Late Robert Treat Paine, Jun., Esq. Boston: J. Belcher, 1812.

Paine, Thomas. “Atlanticus.” Pennsylvania Magazine, March 1775.

———. The American Crisis, Number II. Boston: Re-printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, In Federal Court, 1803.

———. “The Death of General Wolf.” The Pennsylvania Magazine, Or, American Monthly Museum. March 1775.

Palmer, Roy. The Rambling Soldier: Life in the Lower Ranks, 1750-1900, through Soldiers’ Songs and Writings. Harmondsworth: 1977, n.d.

———. , ed. Thomas Ford’s Ballads. Felinfach, UK: Llanerch Publishers, 2001.

Parker, Martin. Roome for Companie, 1614.

Parker, Richard, and Job Sibly. The Trial of Richard Parker, Complete: President of the Delegates, for Mutiny, &c. on Board the Sandwich, and Others of His Majesty’s Ships, at the Nore, in May, 1797. Before a Court Martial, Held on Board the Neptune, of 98 Guns, Laying off Greenhithe, near Gravesend, on Thursday, June 22, 1797, and Following Days. Boston: William T. Clap, 1797.

Parkhurst, John. The New-England Diary and Almanac for the Year ... 1809. Leominster, Mass: Salmon Wilder, 1808.

Parlor Songster, 1856.

“Passengers and Vessels to America.” New England Genealogical Society, June 1712.

Pater, Erra. The Book of Knowledge: Treating of the Wisdom of the Ancients... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge near Charles River Bridge, 1790.

Pathetic History of the Plague in London, in the Year 1665. Whereof Three Thousand Died in One Night, and an Hundred Thousand Taken Sick. Charlestown, Mass: Printed and sold by J. White, 181AD.

Pat’s Observations on a Peacock’s Being Stung to Death by a Hornet. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1813.

Patterson, Daniel W., ed. The Shaker Spiritual. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1979.

Paullin, Charles Oscar. Commodore John Rodgers,  1773-1838. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1967.

Pepperpot, Simon. The Sacred Refuge for Federalists. Henry Mellen, Esquire’s Very Smart Federal Song, “The Embargo,” Parodied by Simon Pepperpot the Younger. [four Lines of Verse]: Tune--“Come Let Us Prepare.” New Hampshire, 1808.

Pepys, Samuel. Diary and Correspondence of Samuel Pepys. New York: McKinlay, Stone & MacKenzie, 1924.

Perkins, Israel, n.d. Unlocated.

Perkins, Whittier. “Collection of Dancing Tunes.” Commonplace book for violin. MA, 1790.

Perry, Ruth, ed. “Ballads and Songs in the Eighteenth Century.” In The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation, 2006.

“Perry’s Tide Re I.” Centinel of Freedom. January 14, 1814.

Peter Pindar [John Wilcot]. “Poor Tom.” Scots Magazine 60 (November 1798): 771–72.

———. “Poor Tom.” Salem Gazette. May 21, 1799.

———. “Poor Tom.” Romantic Circles, September 2004. http://www.rc.umd.edu/editions/warpoetry/1798/1798_8.html.

Peter Pindar [John Wolcot]. “Poor Tom.” Oracle Dauphin. June 12, 1799.

———. Tales of the Hoy, 1798.

Peters, Samuel. General History of Connecticut. London: 1781, n.d.

Phelps, William Lyon. The Beginnings of the English Romantic Movement. Boston: Gill and Co., 1893.

———. , ed. “Untitled in ‘The Plain Dealer.’” In The Beginnings of the English Romantic Movement, 177–82. Boston: Gill and Co., 1893.

Philbrick, Thomas L. “British Authorship of Ballads in the Isaiah Thomas Collection.” Studies in Bibliography 9 (1957): 255–58.

Picture Gallery; or, Interesting Views: Being a Selection of Some of the Most Remarkable Buildings and Natual Wonders in the United States of America, Europe, and Africa. Charlestown, Mass: Printed and sold by J. White, 1813.

Pierpont, John. “The Portrait.” Newburyport Herald. May 10, 1814.

———. “The Portrait.” Concord Gazette. May 17, 1814.

Pilsbury, Amos. The Sacred Songster. Charleston, SC: G. M. Bounetheau, 1809.

Pitts, J. “Patrick O’Neal, Or, The Irishman’s Description of a Man of War,” 1790s. Vol 3, No 63, p. 60. Madden Collection, Cambridge University Library.

Playford, John. Dancing Master. London: Playford, 1651.

Plummer, Frederick. New Spiritual Songs. Haverill, MA, 1815.

Plummer, Jonathan. Murder: Death of Miss Mack Coy [i.e., McCoy], and the Young Teazer. On the Death of Miss Elizabeth Mack Coy, of Lee, (N.H.) Who Was Cruelly, Murdered It Is Expected, towards the End of August, 1813: And on the Deaths of Capt. Dobson, Lieut. Johnson, Sailing Master Merril, Prize Master Allen, and Twenty Five Others, Killed by a Dreadful Explosion on Board a Privateer Called the Young Teazer: Fire Having Been Conveyed to the Magazine It Is Expected, by This Johnson, Who It Is Likely Would Have Been Hanged, Had He Not Killed Himself. Boston: Sold [by Nathaniel Coverly, Jr.] corner Theatre-Alley, Milk-St., 1813.

Pocock, Isaac. Hit or Miss. W. H. Wyatt, 1810.

Poems of Allan Ramsay. 2 vols. Paisley: Alex. Gardner, 1877.

Pollack, Thomas Clark. The Philadelphia Theatre in the Eighteenth Century. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1933.

Polydore. “The Friendly Society.” Pennsylvania Ledger, n.d., September 30, 1775 edition.

Porter, Anna. A Sailor’s Friendship, and a Soldier’s Love. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, & Orme, 1805.

Porter, Anna Maria. A Sailor’s Friendship, and a Soldier’s Love: Two Volumes in One. Baltimore: Printed and sold by Warner & Hanna, 1810.

———. The Lake of Killarney. London: Longman and Rees, 1804.

———. The Lake of Killarney: A Novel, in Two Volumes. Philadelphia: Printed for Thomas de Silver, no. 162, South Sixth-Street., 1810.

Porter, Susan L. “‘Children in the Wood’: The Odyssey of an Anglo-American Ballad.” In Vistas of American Music: Essays and Compositions in Honor of William K. Kearns, edited by Susan L. Porter and John Graziano, 77–95. Warren, MI: Harmonie Park Press, 1999.

———. With An Air Debonair, Musical Theatre in America 1785-1815. Washington: Smithsonian Institute Press, 1991.

Price, Laurence. A Key to Open Heaven’s Gate. Amherst, NH: Nathaniel Coverly and Son, 1795.

Price, Norma Adams, ed. Letters From Old Ironsides, 1813-1815. Tempe: Beverly-Merriam Press, 1984.

Priestly, Thomas. The Christian’s Looking Glass, or The Timorous Soul’s Guide. Concord, MA: Nathaniel Coverly, 1794.

Proposals for Printing by Subscription, the Boston Magazine. Boston: Printed by Norman, White & Freeman, 1784.

Rabson, Carolyn. “‘The Disappointment’ Revisited.” American Music 2, no. 1 (Spring 1984): 4–5.

Ramsay, Allan. Tea-Table Miscellany. Edinburgh: Printed by Mr. Thomas Ruddiman, for Allan Ramsay, 1724.

Randel, Don Michael. The New Harvard Dictionary of Music. Cambridge: Belknap Press, 1986.

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Ranters’ Hymns and Spiritual Songs, 1820.

Ravencroft, Thomas, ed. Deuteromelia or The Seconde Part of Musicks Melodie. London: Printed for Thomas Adams, 1609.

———. Melismata. London: Thomas Adams, 1611.

Ray, John. Virginia Gazette (Parks), November 17, 1738.

Reilly, Elizabeth Carroll. A Dictionary of Colonial American Printer’s Ornaments and Illustrations. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1975.

“Religion and the Founding of the American Republic: Religion and the Federal Government, Part 2.” Library of Congress, n.d. http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel06-2.html.

Renwick, Roger deV. Recentering Anglo/American Folksong. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2001.

Reynardine, n.d. http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/static/images/sheets/15000/12544.gif.

Reynardine, n.d. http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/static/images/sheets/15000/12564.gif.

Rice, Jr., Howard C., and Anne S. K. Brown, trans. The American Campaigns of Rochambeau’s Army: 1780, 1781, 1782, 1783: Volume I: The Journals of Clermont-Crevecoeur, Verger. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1972.

Richardson, Samuel. Pamela; or, Virtue Rewarded. London: Messrs Rivington & Osborn, 1740.

Rich, Elisha. A Poem on the Bloody Engagement That Was Fought on Bunker’s Hill in Charlestown New-England, on the 17th of June, 1775. Together with Some Remarks on the Cruelty and Barbarity of the British Troops ... / By Elisha Rich, Minister of the Gospel. Chelmsford, MA: Nathaniel Coverly, 1775.

Richmond, W. Edson. Ballad Scholarship: An Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1989.

Riddell, Maria. Voyages to the Madeira, and Leeward Caribbean Isles: With Sketches of the Natural History of These Islands. Salem: Printed by N. Coverly, Jun., 1802.

Riley, Edward. Riley’s Flute Melodies. 4 vols. New York: E. Riley, 1814.

“Rinordine.” In Ozark Folksongs, 1:379–80, n.d.

Rippon, John, ed. A Selection of Hymns from the Best Authors: Intended to Be an Appendix to Dr. Watts’ Psalms & Hymns. 2nd ed. Baltimore: Printed for Warner & Hanna by John W. Butler, 1804.

Ritson, Joseph, ed. Ancient Songs and Ballads from the Reign of King Henry the Second to the Revolution in Two Volumes. London: Printed for J. Johnson, 1790.

———. , ed. A Select Collection of English Songs. Vol. 2. 3 vols. London: J. Johnson, 1783.

Rittenhouse, David. Weatherwise’s Town and Country Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1784: ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston, New England, Lat. 42: 25 N. But Will Also Serve the Adjacent States without Any Sensible Error. Boston: Printed [by Norman and White?] for and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, opposite the sign of the White Horse, in Newbury Street, 1783.

Robertson, J. Logie, ed. Complete Poetical Works of Thomas Campbell. New York: Haskell House Publishers, 1907.

Robin Hood. London: J. Watts, 1730.

Rollins, Hyder. An Analytical Index to the Ballad-Entries (1557-1709) in the Registers of the Company of Stationers of London. Hatboro: Tradition Press, 1924.

———. , ed. A Pepysian Garland, Black-Letter Broadside Ballads of the Years 1595-1639. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971.

Roosevelt, Theodore. The Naval War of 1812. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1910.

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Rowlandson, Mary. A Narative [sic] of the Captivity, Sufferings and Removes of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson. Boston: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, in Black-Horse Lane: North-End, 1770.

———. A Narrative, of the Captivity, Sufferings and Removes, of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson. Haverhill, MA: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly and Son, 1797.

Rowson, Susanna. Miscellaneous Poems. Boston: Gilbert and Dean, 1804.

Russell, Ezekial. Composed by a British Officer. Boston?, 1780.

———. The True Christian’s Anchorhold; or, Jesus Christ the Only Hiding-Place. Boston: Printed at Russell’s, near Liberty Pole, 1781.

Rutherford, David. Choice Collection of 60 Country Dances. London: D. Rutherford, 1754.

———. , ed. Rutherford’s Compleat Collection of 200 of the Most Celebrated Country Dances. Vol. 1. London: David Rutherford, 1756.

Sadie, Stanley, and John Tyrrell, eds. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musician. Vol. 8, n.d.

Sanderson, James. The Lady of the Lake, 1812.

Sanjek, Russell. American Popular Music and Its Business: The First Four Hundred Years. Vol. 2. 3 vols. New York: Oxford UP, 1988.

Schein, Anna M. Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794. Edited by G. Peter Jemison. Santa Fe: Clear Light Publishing, 2000.

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———. , ed. “If I Live to Grow Old.” In British Union-Catalogue of Early Music Printed before the Year 1801. London: Butterworths Scientific Publications, 1957.

———. , ed. “Moulines Maria.” In British Union-Catalogue of Early Music Printed before the Year 1801, 697 and 1026. London: Butterworths Scientific Publications, 1957.

Schneider, Ben Ross, ed. Index to The London Stage, 1660-1800. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1979.

Scholes, Percy A. The Puritans and Music in England and New England. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1934.

Schrader, Arthur. “‘The World Turned Upside Down’: A Yorktown March, or Music to Surrender By,” American Music 16, no. 2 (Summer 1998).

———. “Broadside Ballads of Boston, 1813: The Isaiah Thomas Collection.” Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 98, no. 1 (April 1988). http://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44539422.pdf.

———. “Meandering Banks of the Dee.” New York Folklore 8, no. 1–2 (Summer 1982): 65–84.

———. “Songs to Cultivate the Sensations of Freedom.” In Music in Colonial Massachusetts 1630-1820, vol. 1 edited by Barbara Lambert. Boston: Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1980.

———. “The Annotated Moore’s Irish Melodies,” August 1977. Old Sturbridge Village Research Department. http://resources.osv.org/explore_learn/document_viewer.php?Action=View&DocID=1014.

 ———.“Arcade Revisited: Some Additional Notes for A Pioneer Songster.” New York Folklore Quarterly 24, no. 1 (March 1968).

Scott, Walter. “Captain Ward and the Rainbow.” Edinburg University Library, Walter Scott Digital Archive, n.d. http://www.walterscott.lib.ed.ac.uk/biography/cc0013.html.

Scriptural and Experimental Songs for Those Who Wish to Praise God. Philadelphia: F. Plummer, 1816.

Seneca Chief, Red Jacket. “Indian Speech.” The Monthly Anthology, and Boston Review, 1809.

Sewall, Jonathan Mitchell. A New Song: To the Tune of The British Grenadiers. United States, 1776.

———. Gen. Washington: A New Favourite Song, at the American Camp. : To the Tune of the British Grenadiers. United States, 1776.

———. Miscellaneous Poems, with Several Specimens from the Author’s Manuscript Version of the Poems of Ossian. Portsmouth: Printed by William Treadwell & Co. for the author, 1801.

Shakespeare, William. As You Like It, 1623.

———. Cymbeline, n.d.

———. Henry IV, Part 1, 1597.

———. The Tragedy of Macbeth, n.d.

Shattuck, Abel. “The Union or York Shire.” Massachusetts, 182 1801. Shattuck’s Book, Library of Congress.

Shaver, Jill. “Amelia Opie Brief Intro.” University of Nebraska-Lincoln, December 2001. www.unl.edu/corvey/html/Etexts/OpieAmelia/Opie%Essay.htm.

"Sheep in Clusters. A Particular Favourite Song." The London Magazine, July 1770, 446–48.

Sheridan, Richard Brinsley. Robinson Crusoe, n.d.

Shield, William. Siege of Gibralter, 1780.

———. The Hartford Bridge, 1792.

———. The Woodman. New York: Belwin Mills, 1791.

———. Variety, 1801.

Shipton, Clifford K. Isaiah Thomas, Printed, Patriot and Philanthropist, 1749-1831. Rochester: Leo Hart Co., 1948.

“Shipwreck and Miraculous Escape.” New York Evening Post. May 9, 1809.

Shoemaker, Richard H. Checklist of American Imprints for 1820-1829. 12 vols. New York: Scarecrow Press, 1964.

Shuldham-Shaw, Patrick, Emily B. Lyle, and Andrew R. Hunter, eds. The Greig-Duncan Folk Song Collection. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press, 1981.

Silver, Rollo G. “Abstracts from the Wills and Estates of Boston Printers, 1800-1825.” Studies in Bibliography: Papers of the Bibliographic Society of the University of Virginia 7 (1955): 212–17.

———. Boston Book Trade, 1800-1825. New York: New York Public Library, 1949.

———. The American Printer 1787-1825. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1967.

Sime, David, ed. Edinburgh Musical Miscellany. 2 vols. Edinburgh: W. Gordon, 1792.

Simpson, Claude M. The British Broadside Ballad and Its Music. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1966.

Sleeper, Samuel, and Joshua Smith, eds. Divine Hymns, Or, Spiritual Songs: For the Use of Religious Assemblies and Private Christians: Being a Collection. Exeter NH: Printed by Henry Ranlet, and sold at his store, 1801.

Smith, Elias. A Collection of Hymns, for the Use of Christians. Boston: Manning & Loring, 1804.

Smith, Elias, and Abner Jones. Hymns, Original and Selected. 3rd ed. Exeter, NH: Elias Smith & Charles Pierce, 1809.

Smythe, Percy Clinton Sydney, trans. Philadelphia Repository, April 7, 1804.

Smythe, Percy Clinton Sydney, trans. Oracle of Dauphin. June 30, 1804.

Solemn Reflections, Occasioned by the Trial of John Dalton, and S. Tully: For Piracy and Murder. Nathaniel Coverly, 1812.

Solomon’s Temple, and the Free-Mason’s Farewell. Boston: Coverly?, 182AD.

Solomon’s Temple: And the Grand Sweeper. 1 4366. Boston: L. Deming, 1832.

Solomon’s Temple, and the Grand Sweeper. Boston: Leming, 1832.

Song Made on the Taking of General Burgoyne. Boston? [not before 1777], n.d.

Songs, for the Amusement of Children. Middletown, CT: M.H. Woodward, 1790.

Sonneck, Oscar George Theodore. Report on “The Star-Spangled Banner,” “Hail Columbia,” “America,” “Yankee Doodle.” New York: Dover Publication, 1972.

Sonneck, Oscar G. T. Bibliography of Early Secular American Music (18th Century. New York: Da Capo Press, 1905.

Specimen of Isaiah Thomas’s Printing Types. Worcester: Isaiah Thomas, 1785.

Specimen of Printing Types, from the Foundery of Binny & Ronaldson. Philadelphia: Fry and Kammerer, 1812.

Spicer, Ishmael. “A Song, Written on a Virginia Cotton and Tobacco Merchant.” Bozrah, CT, 1797. Collection of Freemason’s Songs, Connecticut Historical Society.

———. “Hard Times,” 1821 1797. Collection of Freemason’s Songs, Connecticut Historical Society.

———. “The Galley Slave; or, the American Captive in Algiers.” Bozrah, CT, 1821 1797. Collection of Freemason’s Songs, Connecticut Historical Society.

———. “The Jolly Sailor,” 1821 1797. Collection of Freemason’s Songs, Connecticut Historical Society.

———. “The Sailor’s Farewell,” 1821 1797. Collection of Freemason’s Songs, Connecticut Historical Society.

———. Bozrah, CT, c 1812. Collection of Freemason’s Songs, Connecticut Historical Society.

Stephens, Frederic George, ed. “(Bagshot Heath) or the Modern Duel.” In Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, 4:135. London: Chiswick Press, 1883.

———. , ed. “Gisbal Triumphant.” In Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, 4:236. London: Chiswick Press, 1883.

———. , ed. “John Wilkes Esq. & Liberty.” In Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, 4:253. London: Chiswick Press, 1883.

———. , ed. “The Chamber Boxing Match; or, The Mad L__ and Enraged C__.” In Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, 1194. London: Chiswick Press, 1877.

———. , ed. “The Funeral of Faction.” In Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum: Division I, 3:379. London: Chiswick Press, 1877.

Stephens, Frederick George. Catalogue of Political and Personal Satires Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in The British Museum, 1320-1783. London: Trustees of the British Museum, 1978.

Sterne, Laurence. A Sentimental Journal through France and Italy. London: T. Becket and P.A. De Hondt, 1768.

Stiles, Abel, July 9, 1754. Stiles papers. Yale University.

Stiles, Ezra. The Literary Diary of Ezra Stiles. New York: C. Scribner’s Sons, 1901.

Stiles, Henry Reed. Bundling, Its Origin, Progress and Decline in America. Cambridge, MA: Applewood Books, 1871.

Stillwell, Margaret B. “Checklist of Eulogies and Funeral Orations on the Death of George Washington.” Bulletin of the New York Public Library, May 1916.

St. John, Samuel. British Taxation. The Guinea Boy; or, Black Yankee. And the Maid with Elbows Bare. Baltimore: Samuel Jefferis, 1816.

Storace, Stephen. The Iron Chest, 1796.

Stow, John. The Annales of England, 1580.

Stuart, Alexander, ed. Musick for Allan Ramsay’s Collection of Scots Songs. Edinburgh: Allan Ramsay, 1724.

“Suffolk County Land Records,” May 11, 1811. Volume 237, page 136-138.

“Sung in Dublin, in the Jew of Magadore.” Farmers’ Repository. June 7, 1811.

Sutherland, James. A Preface to Eighteenth-Century Poetry. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1948.

Swan, Timothy, ed. “Bonny Bett.” In The Songster’s Museum, 147–48. Northampton, MA: Andrew Wright, 1803.

———. , ed. The Songster’s Museum; or, A Trip to Elysium, a Selection of the Most Approved Songs, Duets, &c. Now in Use, with the Notes, Many of Which Were Never before Published. Northampton, Mass.: Printed by Andrew Wright for S. and E. Butler, 1803.

Sweetman, Jack. American Naval History: An Illustrated Chronology. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1984.

Sweet William of Plymouth. London: Printed by William Dicey in Bow Church-Yard, 1735.

“Sweet William’s Happy Return to His Dear Susan,” n.d. Madden Collection, Cambridge University Library.

Tait, John. “A Favorite New Song to the Tune of Langolee.” Pennsylvania Ledger. December 17, 1777.

Tanner, B. The Burning of the Theatre in Richmond, Virginia, on the Night of the 26th of December 1811. Engraving, 1819. University of Virginia, The Albert & Shirley Small Special Collections Library Images. http://www.lva.virginia.gov/public/archivesmonth/2005/UVA/UVA1.htm.

Tanner, Dwight. “Young Teazer, the Making of a Myth.” Nova Scotia Historical Quarterly 6, no. 4 (1976): 405–12.

Tasch, Peter A., ed. The Plays of George Colman the Younger. New York: Garland Publishing, 1981.

Taylor, Amos. The Bookseller’s Dream, A New Song. Tune Sweet William of Plymouth. Bennington? Printed for the author, 1805.

Taylor, Thomas F. Thematic Catalog of the Works of Jeremiah Clark. Detroit: Information Coordinators, 1977.

Temperley, Nicholas. “The Hymn Tune Index,” n.d. http://hymntune.library.uiuc.edu/.

“Texian Songs, Hymns and Poetry.” Texas A & M University, n.d. http://www.tamu.edu/faculty/ccbn/dewitt/texianpoetry.htm.

Thacher, Peter. A Reply to the Strictures of Mr. J.S. a Layman, upon the Pamphlet Entitled Observations upon the Present State of the Clergy in New-England... Boston: Printed and sold by Norman, White and Freeman at their office in Marshall’s Lane, 1784.

Thatcher, B.B. Indian Biography. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1840.

Thatcher, James. Military Journal of the American Revolution. New York: Arno Press, 1862.

The American Musical Miscellany. Northampton: Daniel Wright, 1798.

The American Primer. Improved; or, An Easy and Pleasant Guide to the Art of Reading. Medford, MA: Printed by N. Coverly for Charles Cambridge, of Amherst, 1799.

The American Primer, Improved; or, An Easy and Pleasing Guide to the Art of Reading. Newbury: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun’r for John West of Boston, 1796.

The American Republican Harmonist. Philadelphia: William Duane, 1803.

The American Songster. Houghton Library, Harvard Library, 1814.

The Amherst Journal and the New Hampshire Advertiser. Amherst,NH: Nathaniel Coverly, 1795.

Theatrical Songster. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White near Charles’ River Bridge and by the booksellers, 1797.

The Baltimore Musical Miscellany; or, Columbian Songster: Containing a Collection of Approved Songs Set to Music: To Which Is Prefixed an Essay on Vocal Music, with Directions for Graceful Singing and the Improvement of the voiceBaltimore Musical Miscellany. Baltimore: Sower & Cole and Samuel Butler, 1804.

The Bold Soldier, n.d.

The Book of Books, for Children, To Teach All Good Boys and Girls to Be Wiser than Their School-Fellows. Salem: N. Coverly, 1801.

The Book of Trades; or, Library of the Useful Arts. Vol. 1. 3 vols. White-Hall, Pennsylvania: Jacob Johnson, 1807.

The Boston Musical Miscellany: A Selection of Modern Songs, Sentimental, Amatory, Humorous, Anacreontick. Boston: J.T. Buckingham, 1811.

“The British Bulwark.” Independent Chronicle. October 21, 1813.

The British Lamentation, Together with Green on the Cape. Boston: William Rutter, 1829.

The Bunch of Rushes O. Liverpool: Printed for W. Armstrong, 1820.

The Castle of Otranto, 1764.

The Comet Explained and Improved: In a Conversation between a Minister and One of His Parishioners. Boston: Printed & published by Lincoln & Edmands, no. 53 Cornhill, Boston, who publish a great variety of cheap religious tracts, 1812.

The Comical Jester: Containing a Number of Curious, Amusing, and Entertaining Anecdotes--Jests--Bon Motts--Repartees and Epigrams. : [Two Lines of Verse]. Charlestown, Mass: J. White, 1810.

The Constitution & Guerriere. New York: Printed and Sold by John Low, 17 Maiden Lane, n.d.

The Convivial Songster. London: Printed for John Fielding, 1782.

The Crafty Princess; or The Golden Horse: In Four Parts. United States, 179AD.

The Damsel’s Tragedy; or, The Cruel Mother-in-Law. Salem, Mass.: [by N. & J. Coverly] Printed at the sign of Fausts Statue, where cash and the highest price is given for cotton and linen rags, 1799.

The Dancing Master; or, Directions for Dancing Country Dances, with the Tunes to Each Dance, for the Treble-Violin. 10th ed. London: J. Heptinstall, for H. Playford, 1968.

“The Dark Day of May 19, 1780.” Housmail, December 13, 2001. http://home.mira.net/~housmail/hm086.htm.

The Death and Burial of Cock Robin. Printed for N. Coverly, 1820.

The Death of Washington. United States, 1800.

The Death of Washington: or, Columbia in Mourning for Her Son. United States, 1800.

The Death of Washington: With Some Remarks on Jeffersonian & Madisonian Policy. United States, 1800.

The Death of Washington, with Some Remarks on the Jeffersonian Policy. United States, 1808.

“The Dicey and Marshall Catalogue,” n.d. http://www.bham.ac.uk/DiceyandMarshall/old_ballads.htm.

The Downfall of Justice; and the Farmer Just Return’d from Meeting on Thanksgiving Day. A Comedy, Lately Acted in Connecticut. -- In This Second Edition Is Annexed, a Fable, by Way of an Address to a Countryman, on His Petitioning Jupiter for an Amendment of His Circumstances. Danvers, MA: E. Russell, 1777.

The Duel: An Affair of Honor...Alias the Battle of the Frogs! Providence: Thomas Flang, n.d.

“The Dying Soldier.” Poulson’s American Daily Advertiser, August 5, 1805.

The Echo; or, Columbian Songster: Being a Large Collection of the Most Celebrated, Modern Poetical Writings, of Different Authors. Brookfield, MA: E. Merriam, 1800.

The Echo; or, Federal Songster. Being a Large Collection of the Most Celebrated, Modern Poetical Writings, of Different Authors. Brookfield, MA: E. Merriam, 1798.

The Election: A Medley, Humbly Inscribed to Squire Lilliput Professor of Scurrility. Philadelphia, 1764.

The Embargo: A New Song--Tune “Yankee Doodle.” Boston: Nathaniel Coverly Jr., 1808.

The Entertaining Adventures of Lord Horn, and Sir Henry Way, in Italy. With a Description of the Carnival in Venice. Also, the Duels They Fought; the Dangers They Escaped; and Their Safe Arrival in England. Likewise, the Curious Manner Two Italian Ladies Contrive to Follow Them. Boston: Printed by J. White, near Charles’-River Bridge, 1796.

The Essex Junto; or, Quixotic Guardian. A Comedy. In Four Acts. Salem: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun., 1802.

“The Exile of Erin.” Sentinel. January 5, 1803.

The Factor’s Garland; or, the Turkish Lady. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1810.

The Fair Maid of Islington; or, The London Vintner over- Reach’d. London: C. Bates and W. Onley, n.d. http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/static/images/sheets/15000/14839.gif.

The Farmer and His Son’s Return from a Visit to the Camp: : Together with the Rose Tree. United States, 1786.

The Farmer’s Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1799. Salem, Mass.: Printed [by Nathaniel and John Coverly] for, and sold by the booksellers, 1798.

The Federal Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1791... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge near Charles River Bridge, 1790.

The Federal Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1795. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White near Charles River Bridge and sold by the booksellers, 1794.

The Federal Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1797 ... Calculated for the Meridian and Latitude of Boston; but Will Serve without Sensible Variation for the Adjacent States. Boston: [J. White], 1796.

“‘The Female Marine’ in an Era of Good Feelings: Cross Dressing and the ‘Genius’ of Nathaniel Coverly, Jr.” Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 103, no. 2 (1994): 363–64.

The First Book of the “Washington Benevolents;” Otherwise Called, The Book of Knaves. Nathaniel Coverly, 1813.

The Folksongs of Britain. Vol. 3. Caedmon RecordsTC 1143, n.d.

The Fortunate Lovers; or, Sweet William of Plymouth. New London, Conn: Printed and sold [by Timothy Green?] in New-London, 1774.

The Great Honor of a Valiant Prentice: Being an Account of His Matchless Manhood and Brave Adventures Done in Turkey, and How He Came to Marry the King’s Daughter, &c. To the Tune of All You That Love Good Fellows, &c. Boston: Printed and sold [by Thomas Fleet] at the Heart and Crown, 1748.

The Great Honour of a Valiant London Prentice: Being an Account of His Matchless Manhood, and Brave Adventures, Done in Turkey; and How He Came to Marry the King’s Daughter, &c. To the Tune Of, “All You That Love Good Fellows,” &c. Boston, 177AD.

The Happy Child: Being a Narrative of the Holy Life and Peaceable Death of a Remarkable Pious Child of Hertfordshire----England. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1810.

The Happy Ship-Carpenter. Providence: Printed and sold at the paper-mills [by John Waterman], 1775.

The Happy Ship-Carpenter. Providence: Printed and sold at the paper-mills [by John Waterman], 1775.

The Happy Ship-Carpenter. Providence: Printed and sold at the paper-mills [by John Waterman], 1775.

The History and Adventures of Little William, a Companion to Little Eliza. Philadelphia, 1815.

The History of Capt. Thomas Parismas... [Boston]: Nathaniel Coverly, Nathaniel Coverly Jr., or White?, 1805.

The History of Capt. Thomas Parismas: Containing a Particular Account of the Cruel and Barbarous Treatment of a Young Lady, Who Was the Wife of Mr. James Negocio, an English Merchant in the East-Indies. Boston: Printed by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, 1802.

The History of Capt. Thomas Parismas, Containing a Particular Account of the Cruel and Barbarous Treatment of a Young Lady, Who Was the Wife of Mr. James Negotio, an English Merchant, in the East-Indies. Medford, MA: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, 1798.

The History of Capt. Thomas Parismas, Containing a Particular Account of the Cruel and Barbarous Treatment of a Young Lady, Who Was the Wife of Mr. James Negotio, an English Merchant, in the East Indies. Medford, MA: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, 1799.

The History of Dr. John Faustus, the Famous Conjuror and Necromancer. Wherein Are Contained the Many Wonderful Things That Himself Had Seen and Done in the Earth and Air; Together with His Bringing Up, Travels, and Last End. Boston: Thomas Fleet, 1807.

The History of Fair Rosamond, Mistress to Henry II. and Jane Shore, Concubine to Edward IV. Kings of England: Shewing How They Came to Be So. With Their Lives, Remarkable Actions, and Unhappy Ends. New York: J. Tiebout, 1796.

The History of Jane Shore. Concubine to King Edward IVth. Containing an Account of Her Wit and Beauty. Her Marriage with Mr. Shore. The King’s Visits to Her, Her Going to Court, and Leaving Her Husband. Her Great Distress and Misery after the King’s Death. Boston: Printed [by Joseph White] near the Charles’-River Bridge, 1801.

The History of the Holy Bible, as Contained in the Old and New Testament. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1790.

The History of the Holy Bible, as Contained in the Old and New Testament. Adorned with Cuts. For the Use of Children. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1792.

The History of the Seven Wise Masters, of Rome. Containing, Many Excellent and Delightful Examples. With Their Explanations and Modern Significations; Which (by Way of Allusion) May by [sic] Termed an Historical Comparison of Sacred and Civil Transactions; the Better to Make an Impression on the Minds of Men. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charlestown-Bridge, 1794.

“The Holland Purchase of Western New York.” The USGenWeb Project, n.d. http://usgenweb.org/.

The Holy Bible Abridged; or, The History of the Old and New Testament. Boston: Printed by Robert Hodge for Nathaniel Coverly, in Newbury-Street, 1782.

The House That Jack Built. Also, The History of Mrs. Williams. And Her Plumb Cake, Which She Mathematically Divided among Her Pupils, according to Their Merit. The Story of Little Red Riding Hood. Boston: Printed and sold [by Joseph White and Charles Cambridge] near Charles-River Bridge, 1790.

The Humorous Bits of the World. London: Printed and sold at the Printing-Office in Bow Church-Yard, 1740s?

The Humourist. New York: William Degrushe, 1811.

The Hunting in Chevy-Chase: A Ballad. Salem, Mass.: Sold [by William Carlton] at the Bible & Heart in Salem., [1792?], 1792.

The Hunting of Chevy-Chace: A Ballad. United States, 1799.

The Jovial Songster. Containing a Good Collection of Songs. Boston: Printed by J. White. near Charles-River Bridge, 1800.

The Kingston Trio. Here We Go Again. Capital Records, ST 1190, 1959.

The Last Words of Polly Goold. Salem, Mass.: N. Coverly?, 1798.

The Last Words of Polly Goold: To a Very Mournful Tune. Boston: Sold at the Bible and Heart in Cornhill, 179-?

The Last Words of Polly Gould. Salem: Nathaniel Coverly, Jr., 1801.

The Last Words of Polly Gould: To a Very Mournful Tune. [Salem, Mass.]: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jr., 1798.

The Launch, or Huzza for the New Seventy Four. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, n.d.

The Life and Adventures of Ambrose Gwinett... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White near Charles River Bridge, 1800.

The Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Little Giant: Ornamented with Cuts. Printed for N. Coverly, 1820.

The Little Sailor Boy: A Ballad Sung at the Theatres & Other Public Places in Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York &c. by Messrs. Darley, Williamson, Miss. Breadhurst, Mrs. Hodgkinson & Mrs. Oldmixon. Philadelphia: Printed and sold at the authors musical repository Philadelphia, J. Carrs Baltimore & J. Hewitts New York, 1798.

The Massachusetts and New-Hampshire Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1792.... Calculated for the Latitude and Longitude of the Town of Boston ... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1791.

The Massachusetts and New-Hampshire Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1793.... Calculated for the Latitude of Boston ... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles River Bridge, 1792.

The Merry Medley. Frances Adancourt, 1804.

The Merry Medley; or, Pocket Companion: Being a Collection of the Best Sentimental, Convivial, Humourous, Patriotic, Pastoral, Hunting, Sea, and Masonic Songs. Lansingburgh, NY: Francis Adancourt and Samuel Shaw, 1804.

The Mocking-Bird: Being a Choice Collection of the Most Celebrated Songs. Albany: G. J. Loomis, 1815.

The Mother’s Gift; or, Nurse Truelove’s Lullaby. Boston: N. Coverly, 1812.

The Mountains High. London: Catnach, 1813.

The Mountains High. London: Pitts, J., 1819.

The Mountains High. Liverpool: W. Armstrong, 1820.

The Mountains High. London: H. Such, 1849.

The Mournful Tragedy of Rosanna. Massachusetts?, 1790.

The Musical Gem; or, The Rosebud of Song. New York: Turner & Fisher, 184AD.

The National Songster. Philadelphia: Robert Desilver, 1808.

The Naval Songster; or, The Sailor’s Pocket Companion. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1813.

The Neptune; or, A Collection of the Most Entertaining Comic and Sea Songs: Being a Selection from the Newest and Most Favourite Publications ... Boston: Thomas Fleet, 1806.

The Neptune; or, A Collection of the Most Entertaining Comic and Sea Songs: Being a Selection from the Newest and Most Favourite Publications ... Boston: Printed for Nathaniel Coverly, No. 16 Milk-street, 1818.

The Newengland Coquette: From the History of the Celebrated Eliza Wharton. A Tragic Drama. In Three Acts. Salem: Printed by N. Coverly, 1802.

The New England Pocket Songster: A Choice Collection of Popular Songs, New and Old. Claremont, N. H., 1846.

The New-England Primer. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1793.

The New-England Primer Improved. For the More Easy Attaining the True Reading of English. To Which Is Added, the Assembly of Divines Catechism. Plymouth, Massachusetts: Nathaniel Coverly, 1786.

The New-England Primer, Improved; or, An Easy and Pleasant Guide to the Art of Reading. Adorned with Cuts. To Which Is Added, the Assembly of Divine’s Catechism. Concord, MA: Nathaniel Coverly, 1794.

The New-England Primer; or, An Easy and Pleasant Guide to the Art of Reading. Adorn’d with Cutts. To Which Are Added, the Assembly of Divines’ Catechism. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge near Charles-River Bridge, 1790.

The New-England Primer; or, An Easy and Pleasant Guide to the Art of Reading. Adorn’d with Cutts. To Which Is Added, the Assembly of Divines’ Catechism. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, 1795.

The New England Primer; or, An Easy and Pleasant Guide to the Art of Reading. Adorn’d with Cutts. To Which Is Added, the Assembly of Divines Catechism, &c. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White and C. Cambridge near Charles-River Bridge, 1789.

“The Newfoundland Sailor,” n.d. 5:1223; p. 247. Madden Collection, Cambridge University Library.

The New Game of Cards; or, A Pack of Cards Changed into a Complete and Perpetual Almanack... Boston, 1802.

“The New Hail Columbia.” Bee. June 11, 1805.

The Nightingale; or, Rural Songster in Two Parts. Part I.--Containing Favorite, Innocent, Entertaining and Sentimental Songs. Part II.--Containing the Most Approved Patriotic Songs. (Many of Which Are Original.). Dedham, MA: Printed by H. Mann, 1800.

The Northern Ditty; or, The Scotsman Outwitted by a Country Damsel. To a New Scots Tune, n.d.

The Oxfordshire Tragedy; or, The Virgin’s Advice, In Two Parts. Part I. How Fair Rosanna of the City of Oxford, Was Betrayed by a Young Gentleman, of Her Virginity. Part II. His Cruelty in Murdering Her; and How a Rose Bush Sprung up on Her Grave, Which Blossomed All the Year Through; and How the Murder Came to Be Found Out, by His Cropping the Rose, &c. Worcester, Massachusetts: Isaiah Thomas, 1787.

The Petition of Peter Plague’em. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, Jr., 1813.

The Pilgrim’s Songster. Portsmouth, NH, 1814.

The Plain Path-Way to Heaven; or, A Celestial Messenger. Containing a True Account of One Mr. James Worthy, Who Had Twelve Sons ... Boston: Printed and sold [by Joseph White and Charles Cambridge] near Charles’-River Bridge, 1788.

“The Poor Little Child of a Tar.” Western Constellation. October 31, 1803.

“The Poor Little Child of a Tar.” Greenfield Gazette. December 26, 1803.

“The Printed Image in the West: Woodcut.” Met Museum, n.d. www.metmuseum.org.

“The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, London 1674 to 1834.” The Proceedings of the Old Bailey: Londons Central Criminal Court,1674-1913, n.d. Http://www.oldbaileyonline.org.

The Procession, with the Standard of Faction: A Cantata. New York, 1770.

The Remarkable History of Tom Jones, a Foundling. Salem: Printed and sold by N. & J. Coverly, Faust’s Head, Essex treet [sic], 1799.

The Remarkable History of Tom Jones, a Foundling. Salem: Printed and sold [by N. and J. Coverly] at Faust’s Head, Essex Street, 1799.

The Repartee; or, Comical Jester. Containing a Choice Selection of Anecdotes--Bon Mots--Jests--Comical Stories--Repartees &c. &c. ; [Two Lines of Verse]. Boston: J. White, 1803.

The Rich Gentleman Who Swallowed a Cobler; or, A Description of a Vapoury Man. Charlestown, Mass: J. White, 1814.

The Rich Gentleman Who Swallowed a Cobler; or, A Description of a Vapoury Man. Boston: Printed [by J. White] for N. Coverly Jr., 1814.

“The Saphic Ode.” The Connecticut Courant and Hartfrd Weekly Intelligencer. March 3, 1776.

The Shannon Side, and Love Song about Murder. Boston: L. Deming, 1832.

The Songster’s Museum. Northampton, MA: Andrew Wright, 1803.

The Squire and the Farmer. Newcastle: W. & T. Fordyce, n.d.

“The Storm; or, The Dangers of the Sea, Sung by Mr. Dodd.” Universal Magazine 49 (October 1771): 208.

The Town and Country Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord, 1790. ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston.--Lat. 42 Deg. 25 Min. North. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, and C. Cambridge, near Charles-River Bridge, 1789.

The Town and Country Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1798. ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston... Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, and by the booksellers, 1797.

The Town and Country Almanack for the Year of Our Lord 1802 ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston, but Will Serve for the Neighboring States. Salem: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun’r, 1801.

The Town and Country Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1803 ... Salem: Printed [by Nathaniel Coverly] for, and sold by the booksellers, 1802.

The Tragical History of the Children in the Wood. Containing a True Account of Their Unhappy Fate, with the History of Their Parents, and Their Unnatural Uncle. Interspersed with Instructive Morals. : Embellished with Cuts. Boston: S. Hall, 1815.

The Trial of Samuel Tulley [i.e., Tully] & John Dalton, on an Indictment for Piracy and Murder; Committed January 21st, 1812. Before the Circuit Court of the United States, at Boston, 28th October, 1812: Containing the Evidence at Large, a Sketch of the Arguments of Counsel, and the Charge of the Hon. Judge Story, on Pronouncing Sentence of Death. Boston: Printed for the publisher, 1814.

“The Two Loyal Lovers of Exeter.” Broadside, n.d. Thomas Percy papers. Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University.

The Unfortunate Concubines; or, The History of Fair Rosamond, Mistress to Henry II. and Jane Shore, Concubine to Edward IV. Kings of England. Wilmington: Peter Brynberg, 1796.

The Unfortunate Lady of Kentucky. Providence: Trumbull, 1826.

The Universal Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1804... Boston: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, 1803.

The Universal Songster; or, Museum of Mirth. 3 vols. London: George Routledge and Sons, 1826.

The Victories of Hull, Jones, Decatur, Bainbridge; As Detailed in Their Official Letters and the Letters of Other Officers. Together with a Collection of the Public Testimonials of Respect; And the Songs and Odes Written in Celebration of Those Events. Illustrated with Engravings of the Actions. The Designs by Woodside, the Engravings by Mason. Philadelphia: Published by the proprietor. Dennis Heartt, printer, 1813.

The Virginia Nightingale: Containing a Choice Collection of New Songs. Alexandria: Cottom and Stewart, 1807.

The Virgin’s Advice; or, The Oxfordshire Tragedy: In Two Parts Shewing How a Knight’s Daughter in Oxford Was Courted by a Gentleman, Who after Many Vows and Promises to Marry Her, and Threatening to Kill Himself, Got Her with Child, and Afterwards Murder’d Her. Also How a Damask Rose-Bush Grew over Her Grave Which Flourish’d Winter and Summer, till Being Touch’d by Him It Immediately Wither’d; upon Which He Confess’d the Murder. Newport, Rhode-Island: Printed and sold by James Franklin at his printing house on Tillinghast’s Wharf, 1730.

The Whim of the Day. The Merry Companion. Containing Twenty-Six of the Newest and Most Approved Songs. Sung at the Theatres in Boston, and Other Genteel Places of Amusement. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, 1798.

“The White House Historical Association,” n.d. Www.whitehousehistory.org.

[The] Winter Evenings Amusement; or, Jovial Companion. Containing a Choice Collection of Songs, Much Admired. And Sung at Most Genteel Places of Amusement. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles-River Bridge, and by W.T. Clap in Fish-Street, 1795.

“The Witness.” Witness (Litchfield, Conn.). November 13, 1805. http://clarence.mwa.org/Clarence/full-holding.php?bib_id=1258.

The Wonderful Escape. Boston: Printed by J. White, 1796.

The World Turn’d Upside Down, n.d. http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/static/images/sheets/10000/09136.gif.

The World Turn’d Upside-Down. A New Song, n.d. http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/static/images/sheets/10000/09135.gif.

“The Yarrow Ballads.” In Roxburghe Collection, 1679.

The Young Convert’s First Experiences, &c. Two Excellent Hymns; Composed for the Spiritual Comfort and Edification of All Well-Disposed Christians. Boston: E. Russell, 1795.

Thomas, Isaiah. A History of Printing in America. Worcester, 1810.

———. “The Diary of Isaiah Thomas, 1805–1828.” Diary, 1828 1805. MWA.

———. “The Diary of Isaiah Thomas, 1805–1828.” In Transactions and Collections of the American Antiquarian Society. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1909.

Thomas, Nicholas. “The Sketch of the Life of Nicholas Thomas of Eden Written by Himself August 6, 1857, . . . Taken from Minutes Kept by Him Thro the Former Part of His Life.” In Minstrelsy of Maine, edited by Fannie Hardy Eckstorm and Mary Winslow Smyth, 349–57. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1927.

Thomas Paine [Robert Treat Paine]. Adams and Liberty: The Boston Patriotic Song. Boston: Printed and sold by J. White near Charles’ River Bridge, 1798.

Thompson, Aaron. “[A Collection of Songs in Manuscript].” Concord, NH, 1814 1790. Old Sturbridge Village.

———. A Table of Time [commonplace Book for Fife]. New Jersey, 1777.

Thompson, Harold W., ed. A Pioneer Songster: Texts from the Stevens-Douglass Manuscript of Western New York, 1841-56. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1958.

Thompson, Ralph. “Deathless Lady.” The Colophon, Autumn 1935.

Thompson’s Compleat Collection of 200 Favourite Country Dances. London: Charles and Samuel Thompsons, 1765.

Thompson, Stith, ed. Motif-Index of Folk-Literature. Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1955.

Thomson, William. Orpheus Caledonius; or, A Collection of Scots Songs. London: Printed for the author, at his house in Leicester-Fields, 1733.

———. “The Country Lass.” In Orpheus Caledonius: Or, A Collection of Scots Songs, 2:38–39. London: Printed for the author, at his house in Leicester-Fields, 1733.

Thorpe, Alice Louise. “American Songsters of the Eighteenth Century.” Brown University, 1935.

Thumb, Tom. The Exhibition of Tom Thumb: Being an Account of Many Valuable and Surprising Curiosities Which He Has Collected in the Course of His Travels, for the Instruction and Amusement of the American Youth. Worcester: Isaiah Thomas, 1787.

“Time and Eternity; or, The Difference between To Day and To Morrow.” Courier. April 6, 1808.

Toelken, Barre. The Dynamics of Folklore. Boston: Houghton and Mifflin, 1979.

Tom Bolin: Together with Collin and Phebe. A Couple of Excellent New Songs; with Good Tunes. Boston: Ezekial Russell, 1786.

Town and Country Song Book: A Collection of New, Favorite, and National Songs. Philadelphia: John Bioren, 1813.

Tracy, Henry D. “Scrapbook,” 1814.

Travel [sic] of Robinson Crusoe. Boston: Printed by J. White and C. Cambridge, near Charles’ River Bridge, 1790.

Travels of Robinson Crusoe; Who Was Twenty-Eight Years on a Desolate Island. Boston: Printed by J. White & C. Cambridge, near Charles’ Rive [sic] Bridge, 1791.

“Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794.” Ganondagan, n.d. http://www.ganondagan.org/treaty.html.

Trent, W. P., J. Erskine, S. P. Sherman, and C. Van Doren, eds. “The Buckminsters.” The Cambridge History of English and American Literature. 22.6. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1907. www.bartleby.com/226/1306.html.

Trevor-Roper, Hugh. “The Highlander Myth.” Wilson Quarterly Washington DC (Summer 1984): 105–19.

Trial for Murder. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1813.

Trumbell, Henry. The Good Child’s Death. Providence, 1826.

Truxton’s Victory— : Together with The Beggar Girl—and Two Strings to My Bow. [Boston] : Printed by Nathaniel Coverly Jun’r. corner of Theatre Alley.–Boston., 1810. http://catalog.mwa.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=287306.

Tucker, Glen. Dawn Like Thunder. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1962.

Tully, Samuel. Life of Samuel Tully: Who Was Executed at South-Boston, Dec. 10, 1812, for Piracy/ Written by Himself. Boston: Watson & Bangs, 1812.

Turner, Orsamus. Pioneer History of the Holland Purchase of Western New York: Embracing Some Account of the Ancient Remains, and a History of Pioneer Settlement under the Auspices of the Holland Company; Including Reminiscences of the War of 1812; the Origin, Progress and Completion of the Erie Canal, Etc., Etc., Etc. Buffalo: Jewett, Thomas & Co., 1850.

Twenty Four Country Dances for the Year 1780. London: T. Skillern, 1779.

Twenty Four Country Dances for the Year 1786. London: Saml Ann & Peter Thompson, 1785.

Two Favorite Songs Made on the Evacuation of the Town of Boston by the Britons, March 17th, 1776. Boston? 1776?, n.d.

Two New Songs: On the Disgraceful Flight of the Ministerial Fleet & Army from Boston and Bunker-Hill on March 17, 1776. Boston: Sold [by Thomas and John Fleet] at the Bible & Heart in Cornhill, Boston, 1776.

Two Unfortunate Concubines; or, The History of Fair Rosamond, Mistress to Henry II and Jane Shore, Concubine to Edward IV, Kings of England Shewing How They Came to Be So; with Their Lives, Remarkable Actions, and Unhappy Ends. Boston: J. White, 1796.

Two Unfortunate Concubines; or, The History of Fair Rosamond, Mistress to Henry II and Jane Shore, Concubine to Edward IV, Kings of England: Shewing How They Came to Be So; with Their Lives, Remarkable Actions, and Unhappy Ends. Boston: Printed by J. White, near Charles’-River Bridge, 1796.

“Two Unrecorded American Printings of ‘Fanny Hill.’” Vermont History 40, no. 1&2 (Winter & Spring  -73 1972).

Tyler, Royall. The Contrast. Philadelphia: Prichard & Hall, 1790.

Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher. A Midwife’s Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard Based on Her Diary, 1785–1812. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1990.

“Under the Greenwood Tree,” n.d. 1(81b). Francis Douce, Collection of broadsidesB, odleian Library Collection.

Union Hymn. Greenwich, MA: S. Howe, 1809.

United States. “United States Census, 1810,” n.d. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration.

———. “United States Census, 1860,” n.d. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration.

Upon Those Mountains High. Northampton: Henson, n.d.

Van Doren, Mark. Two Years Before the Mast. New York: Bantam Books, 1963.

Van Rensselaer, Elizabeth Sanders. “Musical Copybook.” Copybook. Boston, 1782. Watkinson Library, Trinity College.

Verter, Bradford. “Interracial Festivity and Power in Antebellum New York, The Case of Pinkster.” Journal of Urban History 28, no. 4 (May 2002).

Vinton, David. The Masonick Minstrel, a Selection of Masonick, Sentimental, and Humorous Songs, Duets, Glees ... and Canzonets ...: With an Appendix, Containing a Short Historical Account of Masonry: And Likewise, a List of All the Lodges in the United States. Dedham: H. Mann and Company, 1816.

Vocal Music; or, The Songster’s Companion. London: Robert Horsfield, 1772.

Vocal Remembrancer. Philadelphia, 1790.

Wadsworth, William. The Murderer’s Cave; or, The Punishment of Wickedness. Boston: Nathaniel Coverly, 1818.

Walker, William, ed. The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1835.

———. , ed. The Southern Harmony, and Musical Companion : Containing a Choice Collection of Tunes, Hymns, Psalms, Odes, and Anthems. Spartanburg, SC, 1847.

Walpole, Horace. “A New Arabian Nights Entertainment.” In Hieroglyphic Tales. Strawberry Hill: Printed by T. Kirgate, 1785.

“War and Washington.” Massachusetts Spy, February 2, 1776.

Ward, Edward. The Prisoner’s Opera. London, 1730.

Watts, Isaac. Divine Songs, Attempted in Easy Language, for the Use of Children. Boston: Printed and sold by N. Coverly, over the Sign of the Indian Chief, north side of the market, 1794.

———. Divine Songs, Attempted in Easy Language, for the Use of Children. 64th ed. Haverhill, MA: Printed and sold by N. Coverly, 1797.

———. Divine Songs, Attempted in Easy Language, for the Use of Children. Haverhill, MA: Printed and sold by N. Coverly, 1797.

———. Divine Songs, Attempted in Easy Language, for the Use of Children. Medford, MA: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Coverly, 1799.

———. Divine Songs, Attempted in Easy Language, for the Use of Children. Boston: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun’r. corner of Theatre Alley, 1812.

———. Divine Songs, Attempted in Easy Language, for the Use of Children. / By I. Watts, D.D. ; [Three Lines from Matthew] -- The Fourteenth Edition. Boston: N. Coverly, near Christ-Church, North-End, 1775.

———. Horae Lyricae. New York: Hugh Gaine, 1762.

———. “Sermons [vol 3].” In A Selection of More than Three Hundred Hymns: From the Most Approved Authors, on a Great Variety of Subjects: Among Which Are All the Hymns of Dr. Watts, Adapted to Public and Private Worship, Not Found in the Editions Now in Use, edited by James M. Winchell. Boston: James Loring, and Lincoln & Edmands, 1819.

Weatherwise’s Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1797: ... Calculated for the Meridian and Latitude of Boston; but Will Serve without Sensible Variation for the Adjacent States. Boston: [J. White], 1796.

Weatherwise’s Boston Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord [1786]. Plymouth, Massachusetts: Nathaniel Coverly, 1785.

Weatherwise’s Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhodeisland, Newhampshire and Vermont Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1799. Medford, MA: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, 1798.

Weatherwise’s Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhodeisland, Newhampshire and Vermont Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1799. Salem: Printed by Nathaniel & John Coverly, sold by them, at their bookstore in Salem, 1798.

Weatherwise’s Plymouth Almanack, for the Year of Our Lord 1786. ... Calculated for the Meridian of Boston, but Will Serve without Essential Variation for the Adjacent States. Plymouth, Massachusetts: Nathaniel Coverly, 1785.

Weaver, Richard. Richard Weaver’s Enlarged Tune Book: Containing Tunes for the Hymns in "Richard Weaver’s Enlarged Hymn Book. London: Morgan and Chase, 1861.

Webb, Alfred. A Compendium of Irish Biography. New York: Lemma Publishing Co., 1970.

Wegelin, Oscar. Early American Poetry. 2nd ed. Gloucester: Peter Smith, 1965.

Welch, d’Alté A. (d’Alté Aldridge), 1907-1970., and American Antiquarian Society. A Bibliography of American Children’s Books Printed prior to 1821 / by d’Alté A. Welch. Worcester, Mass. : Published by the [American Antiquarian] Society, 1963. http://catalog.mwa.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=186079.

Wells, Paul. “The Music in ‘The Poor Soldier.’” In Irish Drama of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, edited by Christopher Wheatley and Kevin Donovan. Bristol: Thoemmes Press and Edition Synapse, 2003.

Wells, Paul F., and Anne Dhu McLucas. “Musical Theater as a Link between Folk and Popular Traditions.” In Vistas of American Music: Essays and Compositions in Honor of William K. Kearns, 99–115. Warren, Michigan: Harmonie Park Press, 1999.

Welsh, Charles, and William H. Tillinghast. Catalogue of English and American Chapbooks and Broadside Ballads in Harvard College Library. Detroit: Singing Tree Press, 1905.

W., G. B. Up Salt River. New York: Firth and Hall, 1840. http://www.loc.gov/item/sm1840.371130/.

Wheatley, Henry Benjamin. London Past and Present. Vol. 1. Detroit: Singing Tree Press, 1891.

White, Benjamin Franklin, and Elisha J. King, eds. The Sacred Harp, 1844.

Whitefield, George. Two Serious Verses Composed by the Revd. Doctor Whitefield. Boston, 179-.

Whitmore, Abel Bowen. Abel Bowen, Engraver: A Sketch Prepared for the Bostonian Society. Boston: Rockwell and Churchill, 1884.

Wigglesworth, Michael. The Day of Doom; or, A Poetical Description of the Great and Last Judgment. 6th ed. Boston: Benjamin Eliot, 1715.

———. The Day of Doom; or, A Poetical Description of the Great and Last Judgment, With a Short Discourse about Eternity. / By Michael Wigglesworth, Teacher of the Church at Maldon, in N.E. Cambridge, Mass.: Printed by Samuel Green, 1666.

Wilder, Salmon, ed. Entertaining Stories for Little Children. Leominster: Salmon Wilder, 1811.

———. The New England Diary. Leominster: Salmon Wilder, 1808.

Wild, Thomas. The Budget of Mirth: Being a Choice Collection of the Most Approved and Fashionable Songs. Boston: Snellling [sic] and Simons, 1807.

Wilgus, D.K. “The Comparative Approach.” In The Ballad and the Scholars: Approaches to Ballad Study. Los Angeles: William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 1986.

“William and Susan,” n.d. Madden Collection, Cambridge University Library.

William and Susan, a Favourite Ballad. London: J. and C. Evans, n.d.

Williams, Daniel E. “Reckoned to Be Almost a Natural Fool: Textual Self Constructions in the Writings of Jonathan Plummer.” Early American Literature 33, no. 2 (1998): 149–72.

Williams, Elizabeth. Elizabeth Williams Her Book 1745. Houghton Library, Harvard University, MS Eng 895, 1745.

Wilson, Ruth Mack. Connecticut’s Music in the Revolutionary Era. Hartford: The American Revolution Bicentennial Commission of Connecticut, 1979.

Windham Bull-Frog Song. Willimantic, CT: Printed at the Journal Office, 1850.

Windley, Lathan A., ed. Runaway Slave Advertisements. 4 vols. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1983.

Winick, Stephen D. “A.L. Lloyd and Reynardine: Authenticity and Authorship in the Afterlife of a British Broadside Ballad.” Folklore 115, no. 3 (December 2004): 286–308.

Winslow, Ola Elizabeth. American Broadside Verse. New York: Yale University Press, 1930.

Winsor, Justin. Memorial History of Boston Including Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 1630-1880. Boston: Osgood, 1881.

Winstock, Lewis S. Songs & Music of the Redcoats, 1642-1902. London: Leo Cooper, 1970.

Winthrop, John, John Davis, and A. Oliver. Two Lectures on Comets, by Professor Winthrop, Also an Essay on Comets, by A. Oliver Jun. Esq., with Sketches of the Lives of Professor Winthrop and Mr. Oliver. Likewise, a Supplement, Relative to the Present Comet of 1811. Boston: W. Wells and T. B. Wait and Co., 1811.

Wolfe, Richard, ed. “Lawrence’s Tide Re I.” In Secular Music in America 1801-1825. New York: New York Public Library, 1964.

———. Marbled Paper, Its History, Techniques, and Patterns. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989.

Wolfe, Richard J. Secular Music in America 1801-1825. New York: New York Public Library, 1964.

Worcester, Noah. A Sermon Delivered at Haverhill, New Hampshire, July 28, 1796, at the Execution of Thomas Powers. Haverhill, MA: Printed and sold by N. Coverly, 1796.

World Turn’d Upside down. London: J. Pitts, 1819.

World Turn’d Upside down. Birmingham: R. Peach, 1855.

Wright, Nathaniel H. “Ode 2d, Written by Nathaniel H. Wright. Sung by I. D. Lucas Tune, Hail Columbia.” Democrat. July 6, 1805.

———. “Ode 3d. Written by Mr. Nathaniel H. Wright.” Independent Chronicle. July 8, 1805.

———. Ode Written for the Celebrarion [sic] of the Republican Young Men, July 4, 1808. Boston?, 1808.

Wyeth, John. Wyeth’s Repository of Sacred Music. 5th ed. Harrisburg, PA: John Wyeth, 1820.

———. Wyeth’s Repository of Sacred Music, Part Second. Vol. 2. Harrisburg, PA, 1813.

Yates, Michael. “English Dance & Song” 42 (1980).

Yates, Octavius K. Lines on the Great Calamity at Lawrence, 1860.

———. Poland Tragedy: Tune, “Major’s Only Son.” Poland, Me.?, 1856.

Young Bateman. New London, Conn.: Printed and sold [by Timothy Green?] in New-London, 1771.

Young Bateman. New London, Conn.: Printed and sold [by Timothy Green?], 1771.

Young, Edward. A Poem on the Last Day. In Three Books. Salem: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, Jun., 1802.

Young, Henry J. “A Note on Scalp Bounties in Pennsylvania.” Pennsylvania History 24, no. 3 (July 1957).

Young, John. The Poor Man’s Companion; or, Miscellaneous Observations, Concerning Penal and Sanguinary Laws, the Mode and Nature of Evidence, And, an Inquiry into the Propriety and Policy of Punishment. Newbury [VT]: Printed by Nathaniel Coverly, 1796.

Zimmerman, Georges-Denis, ed. “Gráinne Mhaol in Dublin Monthly Magazine.” In Songs of Irish Rebellion. Hatboro: Folklore Associates, 1967.

———. Songs of Irish Rebellion. Political Street Ballads and Rebel Songs 1780-1900. Hatboro: Folklore Associates, 1967.

Virginia Gazette, November 17, 1738.

The London Magazine, February 1751, 84.

Boston Newsletter. April 27, 1753.

Universal Magazine, April 1754.

Boston Weekly News-Letter. November 20, 1755.

The London Magazine, December 1766, 646.

The Universal Magazine 41 (October 1767).

Public Advertiser. February 1769.

New York Journal. February 23, 1769.

Connecticut Courant. April 10, 1769.

New York Journal. September 14, 1769.

Massachusetts Calendar. 1771.

Virginia Gazette. January 6, 1774.

Pennsylvania Packet. August 29, 1774.

Massachusetts Spy. February 16, 1775.

Massachusetts Spy. May 10, 1775.

Connecticut Gazette. April 19, 1776.

South Carolina and American General Gazette, November 20, 1777.

Boston Gazette. May 22, 1780.

Independent Chronicle. May 22, 1780.

Continental Journal. May 25, 1780.

Independent Chronicle. November 30, 1780.

Pennsylvania Packet. June 10, 1781.

Freeman’s Journal. August 8, 1781.

Independent Gazette. August 31, 1782.

Pennsylvania Packet. December 21, 1782.

Boston Gazette. December 1, 1784.

Columbian Herald. August 31, 1786.

The Massachusetts Gazette. September 1, 1786.

London Chronicle. November 23, 1790.

Massachusetts Magazine. May 1791.

Boston Gazette. June 20, 1791.

The Amherst Journal. June 5, 1795.

The Amherst Journal. September 12, 1795.

The Herald. June 10, 1797.

Columbian Centinel. June 2, 1798.

Oriental Trumpet. October 24, 1799.

New-York Weekly Museum. August 23, 1800.

The Salem Impartial Register. January 29, 1801.

The Salem Impartial Register. February 19, 1801.

The Salem Impartial Register. February 23, 1801.

The Salem Impartial Register. February 26, 1801.

United States Chronicle. October 29, 1801.

Salem Register. July 12, 1802.

The Providence Gazette. February 19, 1803.

The Balance. August 30, 1803.

Centinel of Freedom. November 22, 1803.

Baltimore Musical Miscellany. 1804.

Vermont Gazette. March 20, 1804.

Political Observatory. April 14, 1804.

The Daily Advertiser, May 5, 1804.

Middlebury Mercury. September 5, 1804.

Commercial Advertiser. July 12, 1805.

Alexandria Expositor. July 12, 1805.

Post Boy. December 3, 1805.

Middlebury Mercury. July 30, 1806.

City Gazette. November 3, 1806.

New Jersey Journal. January 13, 1807.

The National Intelligencer. July 29, 1807.

Suffolk Gazette. August 24, 1807.

Suffolk Gazette. September 7, 1807.

The Mount Hope Eagle. September 19, 1807.

New Jersey Journal. July 12, 1808.

Columbian Phenix. July 16, 1808.

Republican Spy. August 3, 1808.

Portsmouth Oracle. August 20, 1808.

Portsmouth Oracle. October 15, 1808.

Impartial Observer. November 12, 1808.

Otsego Herald. December 10, 1808.

The Enquirer. December 14, 1809.

Herald of Gospel Liberty. August 31, 1810.

Political Bulletin. January 2, 1811.

Shamrock. April 13, 1811.

Columbian. May 25, 1811.

Charleston Courier. July 9, 1811.

Republican Star. July 30, 1811.

American Watchmen. July 31, 1811.

The Eagle. September 12, 1811.

The Eagle. November 7, 1811.

Orange County Patriot. November 26, 1811.

Boston Gazette, January 16, 1812.

The Boston Satirist. January 16, 1812.

Federalist. January 27, 1812.

Charleston Courier. February 8, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. February 10, 1812.

Concord Gazette. May 12, 1812.

Columbian Centinel. June 27, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. July 30, 1812.

The Repertory & General Advertiser. August 4, 1812.

Boston Weekly Messenger. August 7, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. August 31, 1812.

The Pilot. September 25, 1812.

Spooner’s Vermont Journal. September 28, 1812.

Portland Eastern Argus. October 1, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. October 5, 1812.

The Portland Gazette. October 5, 1812.

Portland Eastern Argus. November 19, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. December 1812.

Portland Gazette. December 14, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. December 24, 1812.

Independent Chronicle. December 28, 1812.

City Gazette. January 30, 1813.

City Gazette. July 23, 1813.

Boston Gazette. August 5, 1813.

The Boston Patriot. August 7, 1813.

The Boston Patriot. August 11, 1813.

The Boston Patriot. August 14, 1813.

The Boston Patriot. August 21, 1813.

Merrimack Intelligencer. September 4, 1813.

Gleaner. September 10, 1813.

Independent Chronicle, September 27, 1813.

Orange County Patriot. October 5, 1813.

Newport Mercury. October 23, 1813.

New-Hampshire Patriot. December 7, 1813.

Boston Patriot. December 18, 1813.

Boston Gazette. December 20, 1813.

New-Hampshire Sentinel. December 25, 1813.

Concord Gazette. April 26, 1814.

Shamrock; or, Hibernian Chronicle. November 5, 1814.

Herald of Gospel Liberty. June 23, 1815.

National Aegis. January 7, 1818.

Vermont Gazette. May 25, 1830.

The Patriot. February 4, 1853.

The Weekly Arizona Miner. August 2, 1878.

Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 20 (June 1883).

Dallas Morning News. December 31, 1899.

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n.d. http://fortlock.com.

University of Chicago, n.d. http://classweb.uchicago.edu.

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The Amherst Journal. n.d., May 8, 1795 edition.