22 TWENTY-SIXTH ANNUAL REPORT
sity School of Law and he is the editor of several distinguished works in
this field: Appeals to The Privy Council -from The American Planta-
tions, Colonial Justice in Western Massachusetts and others. He has
been assisted in the historical introduction by Dr. Philip A. Crowl, now
in the State Department and author of Maryland During and After The
Revolution.
NOTICES OF HALL OF RECORDS COMMISSION PUBLICATIONS
The reviewer of the Twenty-Second, Twenty-Third and Twenty-
Fourth Annual Reports in The American Archivist (January 1961)
closes with praise for us and our work. While it is inexcusably immodest
to do so, I quote him with great satisfaction: "No individual responsible
for archival, manuscripts, or records administration activities can afford
to overlook the Hall of Records annual reports series. They will long
serve as an educational device and as a monument to one of the most
gifted and dedicated men in the field."
The anonymous reviewer of The County Courthouses and Records
of Maryland, Part One: The Courthouses in the Tennessee Historical
Quarterly is equally sympathetic. His concluding sentence encourages
us to go forward with this work: "The volume is a splendid contribu-
tion to the history of Maryland, and it suggests the need for such a
study in the counties of Tennessee."
ARTICLES AND REVIEWS BY MEMBERS OF THE HALL OF RECORDS
STAFF:
White, Frank F., Jr., "Advice to a Young Traveler Touring The
British Isles, 1817," The Historian, November 1960.
Reviews: Katy of Catoctin, by George A. Townsend; Early Maps
of the Ohio Valley, by Lloyd A. Brown. Maryland Historical
Magazine, September 1960.
My Odyssey: Experiences of a Young Refugee from Two Revolu-
tions, by a Creole of Saint Domingue, edited and translated by
Althea de Puech Parham; The Historians' Handbook, by Wood
Gray. Maryland Historical Magazine, December 1960.
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