Page:Debt of Pacific Northwest to Dr. Joseph Schafer.djvu/9

 :British Attitude toward the Oregon Question, 1815–1846, 1911
 * Jesse Applegate: Pioneer and State Builder, 1912
 * Francis Parkman, 1923
 * Prince Lucien Campbell, 1926

He edited two important overland journals:
 * Across the Plains in 1850, by John Steele, 1930
 * Day with the Cow Column in 1843, by Jesse Applegate, 1934

Articles in the Oregon Historical Quarterly:
 * "Survey of Public Education in Eugene" (March, 1901)
 * "Notes on the Colonization of Oregon" (December, 1905)
 * "Documents Relative to Warre and' Vavasour's Military Reconnoissance in Oregon, 1845–46" (March, 1909)
 * "Career of Frederic George Young" (March, 1929)
 * "Harvey W. Scott, Historian" (September, 1933)

Articles in the Wisconsin Magazine of History:
 * "Turner's Frontier Philosophy" (June, 1933)
 * "Turner's America" (June, 1934)
 * "Turner's Early Writings" (December, 1938)

Biographies written for the Dictionary of American Biography: George Abernethy; W. L. Adams; Jesse Applegate; G. H. Atkinson; R. P. Boise; Prince L. Campbell; H. W. Corbett; P. J. DeSmet; James R. Doolittle; James D. Doty; Lyman C. Draper; T. J. Farnham; John P. Gaines; Robert Greenhow; LaFayette Grover; Mortimer M. Jackson; Hall J. Kelley; Elisha W. Keyes; Joseph Lane; John McLoughlin; James W. Nesmith; Samuel Parker; Alexander W. Randall; Jeremiah M. Rusk; Jedediah Smith; Isaac Ingalls Stevens; Marcus Whitman; Nathaniel J. Wyeth

Besides numerous articles in the Wisconsin Magazine of History, which he edited, and other articles published in periodicals, he wrote the following seven books on Wisconsin:
 * A History of Agriculture in Wisconsin, 1922
 * Yankee and Teuton in Wisconsin, 1922–23
 * Wisconsin Domesday Book I, 1924
 * Four Wisconsin Counties, Prairie and Forest, 1927
 * Winnebago-Haricon Basin, 1927
 * Rural Life of a Western State, 1930
 * The Wisconsin Lead Region, 1931
 * Memoirs of Jeremiah Curtin, 1940

Writings on the contributions of German-Americans to our national life, going with characteristic expansiveness from Germans in Wisconsin to Carl Schurz:
 * Yankee and Teuton in Wisconsin, 1922–23
 * Life of Carl Schurz, 1929
 * Intimate Letters of Carl Schurz, 1929

Writings on agriculture, including the earliest and one of the latest of his books, with 34 years between—a paramount interest that never had a productive opportunity but that never died:


 * Origin of the System of Land Grants for Education, 1902
 * His various books and articles on Wisconsin agriculture
 * The Social History of American Agriculture, 1936