Illustrations

    Frontispiece. Clifford Kenyon Shipton (1902–1973). Harvard University Archives.

    1. Ted Shipton working at the American Antiquarian Society. Harvard University Archives.

    2. Ted Shipton at an informal moment. Harvard University Archives.

    3. William Hack’s “Description of New England in America” (London, circa 1695–1700). Pilgrim Society, Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth, Massachusetts.

    4. [William Hack], manuscript map of Eastern New England (London, circa 1680–1690?). No. 3, atlas 7 Tab. 127. The British Library, London.

    5. John Seller, “A Mapp of New England” (London, 1676). Yale University Library, New Haven, Connecticut.

    6. Detail of Robert Morden and William Berry’s “A Map of New England, New York, New Iersey, Mary-Land & Virginia” (London, 1676). John Carter Brown Library, Providence, Rhode Island.

    7. “A Map of New-England” (Boston, 1677) in William Hubbard’s A Narrative of the Troubles with the Indians in New England. John Carter Brown Library, Providence, Rhode Island.

    8. [William Hack], detail of a manuscript map of New England and the valley of the St. Lawrence (London, 1690’s?). No. 5, atlas 7 Tab. 127. The British Library, London.

    9. Detail of John Thornton, Robert Morden, and Philip Lea’s “A New Map of New England, New York, New Iarsey, Pensilvania, Maryland and Virginia” (London, circa 1685). John Carter Brown Library, Providence, Rhode Island.

    10. “An Exact Mapp of New England and New York” (London, 1702). John Carter Brown Library, Providence, Rhode Island.

    11. Sir Robert Cotton, from an original portrait by P. Van Somer; in John Thane, British Autography (London, [1819]), I, near page 36. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    12. Henry, Prince of Wales, from the original by [Daniel] Mytens, engraved by W. Finden; in Edmund Lodge, Portraits of Illustrious Personages of Great Britain . . . (London, [1835]), iv, no. 8. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    13. Sir Thomas Bodley, from the original by Cornelius Jansen, in the Bodleian Gallery, Oxford, engraved by H. T. Ryall; in Lodge, op. cit., iv, no. 6. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    14. William Camden, Antiquary, engraved by R. White; in Camden’s Britannia . . . (London, 1695), frontispiece. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    15. The Bodleian Library and the Schools, by David Loggan, Oxonia Illustrata, 1675, Plate [4]; reduced in The Bodleian and Its Friends: Catalogue of an Exhibition held 1969–1970 (Oxford, 1969), p. 22. The Library on left, second floor. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    16. The Inside of the Public or Bodleian Library—from the East (above), from the West (below); in David Loggan, op. cit., Plate [7], double-page. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    17. The First British Museum, formerly the Residence of the Duke of Montagu, at the opening of the Institution in 1759, containing the Cottonian Library; in Edward Edwards, Lives of the Founders of the British Museum . . . 1570–1870 (London and New York, 1870), frontispiece. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    18. John Selden, Antiquary and Collector, copy after Sir Peter Lely (?) in the National Portrait Gallery, London. In Richard Garnett and Edmund Gosse, English Literature, an Illustrated Record (New York and London, 1903–04), II, page 388. The Newberry Library, Chicago.

    19. The Reverend Increase Mather (1639–1723). Harvard University Archives.

    20. Harvard College, 1726. Engraving by William Burgis. Harvard University Archives.

    21. The Reverend Pitt Clarke (1763–1835). First Parish Church (Unitarian), Norton, Massachusetts.

    22. The Congregational Parsonage, Mansfield Avenue, Norton, Massachusetts, completed by Clarke in 1797. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Phillips, Norton, Massachusetts.

    23. An interior view of the parsonage. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Phillips, Norton, Massachusetts.

    24. Houdin-Dorgemont view of Harvard College in 1795. Author’s Photograph Collection.

    25. First page of Clarke’s Harvard diary, listing some of his classmates. Norton Public Library, Norton, Massachusetts.

    26. Clarke’s Harvard diary—the beginning of his sophomore year. Norton Public Library, Norton, Massachusetts.

    27. Clarke’s Harvard diary—Thanksgiving, 1787. Norton Public Library, Norton, Massachusetts.

    28. A page from Clarke’s account of his expenses, 1791. Norton Public Library, Norton, Massachusetts.

    29. Stipple engraving of the Reverend Enos Hitchcock, by William Hamlin. The Rhode Island Historical Society, Providence.

    30. First Congregational Church, Providence. Engraving by William Hamlin. The Rhode Island Historical Society, Providence.

    31. Blackburn’s portrait of Henry Vassall (1721–1769) of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Cambridge Historical Society.

    32. Blackburn’s portrait of Andrew Oliver, Jr. (1731–1799). Oliver Family.

    33. Blackburn’s portrait of Mrs. Andrew (Mary Lynde) Oliver (1733–1807). Oliver Family.

    34. The Colonial Society of Massachusetts’ Blackburn-hunt in Bermuda, 1976, with Walter Muir Whitehill (seated) signing the guest register in the St. George’s Town Hall. Left to right, otherwise: Frederick Doveton Nichols, Mrs. Andrew Oliver, Mrs. Carl Bridenbaugh, Carl Bridenbaugh, Sinclair Hitchings, Ernest S. Dodge, the Worshipful and Honorable Norman Roberts (Mayor of St. George’s), Charles D. Childs, Mrs. William Rotch, Elisabeth S. Dodge, Elton W. Hall, Jane C. Whitehill, Mrs. John Galvin, Andrew Oliver, John Galvin, Sidney Jackman, aide to Mayor Roberts, William Rotch. Sinclair Hitchings.

    35. The Reverend John Cotton (1584–1652). The Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford.

    36. Robert Treat Paine (1731–1814) by Edward Savage and John Coles, circa 1796–1801. Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston.

    37. John Adams (1735–1826) by Benjamin Blyth, 1766. Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston.

    38. Portrait of John Prince. The American Journal of Science and Arts, 31 (1837).

    39. Schematic diagram of the common English air pump in the eighteenth century.

    40. Hauksbee’s air pump. Physico-Mechanical Experiments (1709).

    41. Martin’s air pump. Philosofhia Britannica (1771).

    42. Schematic diagram of Smeaton’s air pump (1752).

    43. Schematic diagram of Prince’s air pump (1785).

    44. Prince’s air pump. Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, o.s., 1 (1785).

    45. Copy of William Jones’s diagram of the Prince pump sold to Harvard in 1804.

    46. The Adams model of Prince’s pump. Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy (1799).

    47. The Jones model of Prince’s pump which was sold to Harvard in 1804. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    48. Examples of alt-azimuth terrestrial mounted telescopes. Adams, Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy (1806).

    49. Rack and pinion mechanism on the brace of Prince’s telescope mounting (1831).

    50. Prince’s telescope stand. Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, n.s., 1 (1833).

    51. Adams’s lucernal microscope and argand oil lamp. Essays on the Microscope (1787). Houghton Library, Harvard University.

    52. Prince’s mounting of the lucernal (1796).

    53. Lucernal shadow box and micrometer.

    54. The lucernal remounted by Prince for Harvard in 1796. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    55. Adams’s lucernal built on Prince’s design. Hill, The Gentleman’s Magazine, 66 (1796).

    56. Magic lantern which Prince repaired and improved for Harvard. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    57. Astronomical lantern machinery designed by Prince and sold to Harvard by W. and S. Jones. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    58. The magic lantern projecting an image. ’sGravesande, Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy (1737).

    59. Nine-jar battery. Adams, An Essay on Electricity (1787). Houghton Library, Harvard University.

    60. General quadrant electrometer. Adams, Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy (1807).

    61. Prince’s electrometer with nonius.

    62. Electrostatic machine repaired by Prince for Harvard in 1789. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    63. Equatorial instrument that Prince sold to Harvard in 1803. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    64. Thunder house made by Prince for Harvard in 1789. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    65. Thunder house used to simulate the destruction of a church by lightning. Beck, Kurzer Entwurf der Lehre von der Elektricität (1787). Courtesy of David Wheatland.

    66. Set of bells made by Prince for Harvard in 1799. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    67. Pantograph which Prince sold to Harvard in 1792. Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.

    68. Increase Mather’s The Wicked mans Portion . . . . , 1675. American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts.

    69. Cotton Mather’s Pillars of Salt . . . , 1699. American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts.

    70. John Rogers’ Death the Certain Wages of Sin . . . , 1701. Boston Public Library.

    71. A Brief Relation of Remarkables in the Shipwreck of above One Hundred Pirates . . . , 1717. Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston.

    72. “The last Speech and dying Advice of poor Julian,” broadside, 1733. Boston Public Library.

    73. “Poor Julleyoun’s Warnings To Children and Servants . . . ,” broadside. Boston Public Library.

    74. “Advice from the Dead to the Living . . . ,” broadside. Boston Public Library.

    75. “An Exhortation to young and old to be cautious of small Crimes . . . ,” broadside, 1773. The Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

    76. Seal of William III and Mary for the colony of Massachusetts Bay. Public Record Office, London.

    77. Seal of George I for the colony of Massachusetts Bay. Public Record Office, London.

    78. Seal of George II for the colony of Massachusetts Bay. Public Record Office, London.

    79. Seal of George III for the colony of Massachusetts Bay. Public Record Office, London.