Parker, Arthur Caswell - Published Writings

Title: ARTHUR CASWELL PARKER PAPERS -- PUBLISHED WRITINGS OF ARTHUR CASWELL PARKER
Date range: 1860-1952
Location: A.P23
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List of books, articles and addresses written by Arthur Caswell Parker and published between the years 1900 and 1959. Writings marked with an asterisk were not available for checking purposes. The list is arranged by the year of publication.

Supplementary lists attached to this bibliography include newspaper articles and radio scripts written by Dr. Parker, continuations edited by Dr. Parker, and a series of addresses written by Dr. Parker, but whose publication is not known.
 

 



1900

*The Philosopher Discovers. Dickinson Union. 1900.

The Triumph of Woman's Wit. A Dream, by Moonstone, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Dickinson Union, 6:47-50. December, 1900.

1907

Excavations in an Erie Indian Village and Burial Site at Ripley, Chautauqua Co., N. Y. New York State Museum Bulletin 117:459-554. 1907.

1908

Myths and Legends of the New York State Iroquois, by Harriet Maxwell Converse; edited and annotated by Arthur Caswell Parker. New York State Museum Bulletin 125. 1908. 195p.

Neh Ho-Noh-Ki-Noh-Gah, the Guardians of the Little Waters, a Seneca Medicine Society. In: Myths and Legends of the New York State Iroquois, by Harriet Maxwell Converse. New York State Museum Bulletin 125:149-176. 1908.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 121:85-110. 1908. Fourth report of the director.

1909

The Iroquois Wampums. N. Y. State Historical Association Proceedings, 8:205-208. 1909.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 133:54-77. 1909. Fifth report of the director.

Secret Medicine Societies of the Seneca. American Anthropologist, n.s., 11:161-185. April-June, 1909.

Seneca Burden Strap in Process. New York State Museum Bulletin 133:65. 1909.

Snow-Snake as Played by the Seneca Iroquois. American Anthropologist, n.s., 11:250-256. April-June, 1909.

1910

Iroquois Sun Myths. The Journal of American Folklore, 23:473-478. October-December, 1910.

Iroquois Uses of Maize and Other Food Plants. New York State Museum Bulletin 144:5-119. 1910.

The League of the Five Nations. Livingston County Historical Society Proceedings, 1910: 25-41.

The Origin of Iroquois Silversmithing. American Anthropologist, n.s., 12:349-357. July-September, 1910.

Report of the Archaeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 140:59-69. 1910. Sixth report of the director.

1911

Additional Notes on Iroquois Silversmithing. American Anthropologist, n.s., 13:283-293. April-June, 1911.

Fate of the New York State Collections in Archaeology and Ethnology in the Capitol Fire. American Anthropologist, 13:169-171. January-March, 1911.

The Influence of the Iroquois on the History and Archaeology of the Wyoming Valley, Pennsylvania and the Adjacent Region. Wyoming Historical and Geological Society Proceedings, 11:1-38. 1911.

*The League of Peace. Southern Workman. October, 1911.

Mary Jemison, the White Captive of the Genesee. The Assembly Herald, February, 1911: 64-65.

The Mission of Making New Americans from Old. The Assembly Herald, February, 1911:66-68.

*The Philosophy of Indian Education. American Indian Association Conference Report, 1911:1-7.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 149:43-58. 1911. Seventh report of the director.

[Woman's Place Among the Indians] American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, 16th Annual Report, 1911:252-253

1912

Certain Iroquois Tree Myths and Symbols. American Anthropologist, n.s., 14:608-620. October-December, 1912.

The Code of Handsome Lake, the Seneca Prophet. New York State Museum Bulletin 163: 5-148. November, 1912.

*The Iroquois Creation. Myth Kit Kat. September, 1912.

The Philosophy of Indian Education. Society of American Indians. Proceedings of the First Annual Conference, 1912: 68-76.

Progress for the Indian. The Southern Workman, 41:628-635. November, 1912.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 156:61-84. 1912. Eighth report of the director.

1913

Congress and the Indian Problem. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 1:95-97. April-June, 1913.

Old Squawkie Hill. Livingston County Historical Society Proceedings, 1913: 27-37.

A Plea for Social Survey. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 1:107-114. 1913.

The Real Tragedy of the Red Race. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 1:345-350, October-December, 1913.

The Real Value of Higher Education for the Indian. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 1:278-284. July-September, 1913.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 164:45-57. 1913. Ninth report of the director.

Superstitions of and About the American Indian. Thirteen Club Annual Report, 1913:21-27.

What Makes the Indian a Problem? Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 1:103-114. April-June, 1913.

1914

The Awakened American Indian. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:269-274. October-December, 1914.

The American Indian - What Is He? Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:109-119. April-June, 1914.

Blood Mixture Among Races. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:262-265. October-December, 1914.

The Discovery of America as an Incentive to Human Achievement. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:265-268. October-December, 1914.

Indian Blood. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:261-262. October-December, 1914.

The League of Peace, by Gawasa Wannah, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:191-195. July-September, 1914.

The Legal Status of the American Indian. Lake Mohonk Conference on the Indian and Other Dependent Peoples. Thirty-Second Annual Report, 1914: 77-82.

The Legal Status of the American Indian. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:213-218. July-September, 1914.

Let Us Discover the Human Elements of the Indian Problem. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:183-184. July-September, 1914.

Marching as to War. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:185. July-September, 1914.

My Race Shall Live Anew. A poem by Alnoba Waubunaki, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:125. April-June, 1914.

The Quaker City Meeting of the Society of American Indians. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:56-59. January-March, 1914.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 173:93-102. 1914. Tenth report of the director.

The Road to Competent Citizenship. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:178-183. July-September, 1914.

The Robins' Song. A poem by Alnoba Waubunaki, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:190. July-September, 1914.

Situwaka, Chief of the Chilcats, by Gawasa Wanneh, [pseudonym of Arther Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:280-283. October-December, 1914.

A Survey of the [Indian] Problem - Its Elements and Its Ends. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:13-22. January-March, 1914.

With the Passing of Puritanism the Red Man Comes, by Alnoba Waubunaki, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:120-125. April-June, 1914.

1915

*The Awakened American Indian. The Red Man. January, 1915.

Certain Important Elements of the Indian Problem. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 2:24-38. January-March, 1915.

The Crow Indian. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:129-133. June, 1915.

Frederic Ward Putnam. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:224-227. July-September, 1915.

Industrial and Vocational Training in Indian Schools. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:86-97. April-June, 1915.

In the Path of the Morning Star. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:127-129. June, 1915.

*Tahan: Out of Savagery into Civilization; an autobiography, by Joseph K. Griffis. Introduction by Arthur Caswell Parker. N. Y. Doran, 1915. 263p.

Kicking Against the Rock of Offense. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:161-163. July-September, 1915.

The Lawrence Platform. Lake Mohonk Conference on the Indian and other Dependent Peoples. Thirty-third Annual Report, 1915: 31-34.

Let Us Pause to Consider Our Ways. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:159-160. July-September, 1915.

McKenzie - Thinker. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:122-124. June, 1915.

Occupations of the American Indian. The Indian Leader, 19:18-22. October, 1915.

The Persistence of Barbarism in Civilized Society, Society of American Indians, Quarterly Journal, 3:76-81. April-June, 1915.

Popular History, a Criticism and an Interpretation. Society of American Indians, Quarterly Journal, 3:167-168. July-September, 1915.

Red Patriots in the Revolution, by Alnoba Waubunaki, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:82-85. April-June, 1915.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 177:63-73. 1915. Eleventh report of the director.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin, 187:52-59. 1915. Twelfth report of the director.

Sekosa, the Weasel, Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:124-127. June, 1915.

Sherman Coolidge. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:220-223. July-September, 1915.

Sohia C. Pitchlynn, by Gawasa Wanneh, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:104-107. April-June, 1915.

The Status and Progress of Indians as Shown by the Thirteenth Census. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:185-208. July-September, 1915.

Why Should the Country Heed Our Pleading? Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:163-167. July-September, 1915.

*The Wider Vision. The Native American. October 2, 1915.

The Wider Vision. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 3:86-97. April-June, 1915.

1916

The American Indian as a Warrior, by Gawasa Wanneh, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians, Quarterly Journal, 4:25-27. January-March, 1916.

Are Your Officers Traitors? Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:15-18. January-March, 1916.

The Civilizing Power of Language. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:126-128. April-June, 1916.

A Conference on Race Progress. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:216-222. July-September, 1916.

The Constitution of the Five Nations. New York State Museum Bulletin 184:7-188. April 1, 1916.

Faith, a poem by Gawasa Wanneh, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:317. October-December, 1916.

The Functions of the Society of American Indians. Society of American Indians, Quarterly Journal, 4:8-14. January-March, 1916.

The Indian, the Country and the Government. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:38-49. January-March, 1916.

A Message in Congress. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:282-284. October-December, 1916.

Musings and Maxims of a Medicine Man. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:79-81. March, 1916.

A New Sort of American Day. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:60-62. January-March, 1916.

Notes from Adarios Diary. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:73-76. March, 1916.

Nothing But Rocks. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:77-79. March, 1916.

The Origin of the Iroquois as Suggested by their Archeology. American Anthropologist, n.s., 18:479-507. October-December, 1916.

The Parable of the Bloody Spear. Society of American Indians, Quarterly Journal, 4:81-82. March, 1916.

Problems of Race Assimilation in America. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:285-304. October-December, 1916.

The Senecas in the War of 1812. N. Y. State Historical Association Proceedings, 15:78-90. 1916.

The Social Elements of the Indian Problem. The American Journal of Sociology, 22:252-267. September, 1916.

Some of Our Work During the Year. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:229-233. July-September, 1916.

The White Aryan and the Red American. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:121-126. April-June, 1916.

Why We Go A Fishin'. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 4:71-73. March, 1916.

1917

*America Needs Men. American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

*The American Indians' Part in the World War. American Indian Magazine, 5. July-September, 1917.

*Americans in the Stone Age. State Service. 1917.

Birdstones and Gorgets. In: Stone Ornaments Used by Indians in the United States and Canada, by Warren King Moorehead. Andover, Mass., The Andover Press, 1917.

The Civic and Governmental Ideals of the Iroquois Confederacy. Case and Comment, 23:717-719. February, 1917.

*Civilization Not Yet Perfect. American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

How Flint Arrowheads Are Made. American Indian Magazine, 5:160-165. July-September, 1917.

*Kusick the Friend of Lafayette. American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

*Lewis Henry Morgan. American Indian. Magazine, 5. 1917.

*Making a White Man Out of an Indian Not a Good Plan. American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

Notes on the Banner Stone, With Some Inquiries As to Its Purposes. New York State Museum Bulletin, 196:165-176. April 1, 1917. Thirteenth report of the director, 1916.

*The Perils of Peyote Poison. American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

The Polished Slate Culture in New York. In: Stone Ornaments Used by Indians in the United States and Canada, by Warren King Moorehead. Andover, Mass., The Andover Press, 1917. p. 170-178.

Problematical Polished Slate Implements and Allied Forms from New York. In: Stone Ornaments Used by Indians in the United States and Canada, by Warren King Moorehead. Andover, Mass., The Andover Press, 1917. p.179-195.

*The Red Man's Love of Mother Earth. American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 196:67-75. 1917. Thirteenth report of the director.

*The American Indian in the World Crises, American Indian Magazine, 5. 1917.

1918

*The American Indian in the World War. Southern Workman, February, 1918.

Champlain's Assault on the Fortified Town of the Oneidas 1615. New York State Museum Bulletin 207/208:165-173. March-April, 1918. Fourteenth report of the director, 1917.

The Constitution of the Five Nations, a Reply, American Anthropologist, n.s., 20:120-124, January-March, 1918.

Habitat Groups in Wax and Plaster. Museum Work, 1:78-85: December, 1918.

*Making Democracy Safe for the Indians. American Indian Magazine, 6:25-29. Spring, 1918.

*Marching as to War. Society of American Indians. Quarterly Journal, 6. 1918.

A Prehistoric Iroquoian Site on the Reed Farm, Richmond Mills, Ontario County, N. Y. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc., Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions. Vol. 1, No. 1, 1918. 41p.

1919

American Indian Freemasonry. Buffalo, Buffalo Consistory, A. A. S. R. N. M. J. U. S. A., 1919. 36p.

A Contact Period Seneca Site Situated at Factory Hollow, Ontario Co., N.Y. N.Y State Archaeological Assoc., Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1919. 36p.

The Iroquois in Canada. In: Ontario Provincial Museum, Toronto. Thirty-first Annual Archaeological Report. 1919. p.7-55.

The Life of General Ely S. Parker, Last Grand Sachem of the Iroquois and General Grant's Military Secretary. Buffalo Historical Society Publications, 23:14-346. 1919.

The Mound Builder Culture in New York. New York State Museum Bulletin 219/220:283-292, March-April, 1919. Fifteenth report of the director.

*The New York Indians in the World War. State Service. April, 1919.

Presentation and Unveiling of the Morgan Tablet. In: The Morgan Centennial Celebration at Wells College, Aurora. N.Y. State Archaeological Assoc., Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, Vol. 1, No. 3: 23-27, 1919.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 207/208:69-73. 1919. Fourteenth report of the director.

1920

Ancient Indian Occupation of the Mendon Ponds Area. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 9:223-226. 1920.

The Archaeological History of New York. New York State Museum Bulletins 235, 236, 237, 238, July-October, 1920. 2 vol.

Freemasonry Among the American Indians. The Builder, 6:295-298. November, 1920.

The Hero of the Long House, by Mary Elizabeth Laing. Introduction by Arthur Caswell Parker. Yonkers-on-Hudson, N.Y., World Book Company, 1920. 329p.

Indian Tribal Government a Failure. State Service, 4:99-102. Feburary, 1920.

[Letchworth Memorial Address] William Pryor Letchworth Memorial Association Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Meeting: 10-16. May 26, 1920.

The New York Indian Complex and How to Solve It. N.Y. State Archaeological Assoc. Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, Vol. 2, No. 1. 1920. 20p.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 219/220:99-120. 1920. Fifteenth report of the director.

*A Solution of the New York Indian Problem. Report to the State Museum. State Education Department, 1920.

1921

The Indians of New York State, by Arthur Caswell Parker and Gustavus Elmer Emanuel Lindquist. New York, Rome Missions Council. [1921] 19p.

New York Indians. Southern Workman, 50:155-160. April, 1921.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 227/228:28-29. 1921. Sixteenth report of the director.

1922

*The Aboriginal Occupation of New York. New York State Museum Educational Leaflet Series: 1-6. [1922]

*Americans of the Stone Age. State Museum.

The Archaeological History of New York. Albany [The University of the State of New York] 1922. 2 vol. Originally published in New York State Bulletins 235,236, 237, 238. July-October, 1920.

How Civilization Grew. New York Central Magazine. September, 1922. p.6.

[Livingston County Centennial Celebration Address] Livingston County Historical Society Proceedings. 1918/22: 23-30. 1922.

Method in Archaeology. Ontario Provincial Museum, Toronto. Thirty-third Annual Archaeological Report: 55-61. 1922.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 239/240:41-49. 1922. Seventeenth report of the director.

Secrets of the Temple. Buffalo, Buffalo Consistory A.A.S.R., 1922. 52p.

1923

The Double-Headed Eagle and Whence it Came. The Builder, 9:138-142. May, 1923

Memorial Tribute to Lewis Henry Morgan. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 2:77-78. 1923.

Outline of the Algonkian Occupation in New York. In: The Algonkian Occupation of New York, by Arthur Caswell Parker and Alanson Buck Skinner. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc. Lewis H. Morgan Chapter, Researches and Transactions, 4:49-80. 1923.

The Red Man and the "Great Spirit." In: The Red Man in the United States, by Gustavus Elmer Emanuel Lindquist. N. Y., George H. Doran, [1923] p.47-54.

Seneca Myths and Folk Tales. Buffalo Historical Society Publications, 27, 1923. 465p.

Why All This Secrecy? The Builder, 9:361. December, 1923.

1924

American Indian Masonry. The Builder, 10:137-138, May, 1924.

The Capital District of Indian Days. In: Albany's Tercentenary, Albany, J. B. Lyon Co., 1924. p.17-32.

*The False Face Society. Exploration. September-October, 1924.

Fundamental Factors in Seneca Folk Lore. New York State Museum Bulletin 253:49-66. July, 1924. Reprinted from the nineteenth report of the director, 1923.

The Pickering Treaty. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 3:79-91, 1924.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 251:38-44. 1924. Eighteenth report of the director.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 253:44-48. 1924. Nineteenth report of the director.

The Status of New York Indians. New York State Museum Bulletin 253:67-82. July, 1924. Reprinted from the nineteenth report of the director, 1923.

Unhistorical Museums. Museum Work, 6:155-158. January-February, 1924.

Unhistorical Museums or Museums of History, Which? New York State Historical Association Quarterly Journal, 5:256-263. July, 1924.

1925

Aboriginal Inhabitants. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:145-165.

Ancient Land of the Genesee. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:111-119.

An Approach to a Plan for Historical Society Museums, Museum Work, 8:47-56. July-August, 1925.

A Century of Perplexity, 1700-1800, In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:223-259.

The Field of Archeology in the Genesee Country, In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty, Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:121-144.

The Great Algonkin Flint Mines at Coxsackie. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc. Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, 4:105-125. 1925.

Indian Place Names of the Genesee Country. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:285-316.

The Natural Forces that Molded the Genesee Country. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 4:103-119. 1925.

Report of the Archeology and Ethnology Section. New York State Museum Bulletin 260:57-62. 1925. Twentieth report of the director.

The Rise of the Seneca Nation, 1535-to 1699. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarks Publishing Company, 1925. 1:167-189.

The Senecas in Their Own Home Land. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:191-222.

The War of 1812. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarks Publishing Company, 1925. 1:455-536.

The White Man Takes Possession, 1783-1842. In: History of the Genesee Country, edited by Lockwood Richard Doty. Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1925. 1:261-284.

1926

American Indian Freemasonry. Masonic Outlook, February, 1926.

An Analytical History of the Seneca Indians. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc. Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, 6:162p. 1926.

An Approach to a Plan for Historical Society Museums. Museum Work, 3:47-56. July-August, 1926.

The Ark of the Covenant in the Light of Modern Research. The Builder, 12:45. February, 1926.

The Mendon Pond Trail. In: The Mendon Kame Area, by Herman LeRoy Fairchild. Rochester Academy of Science Proceedings, 64:211-215. August, 1926.

The Museum Idea. Museum Service, 1:3. April 15, 1926.

The Scottish Pioneers of Caledonia. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 5:275-291. 1926.

1927

Skunny Wundy and Other Indian Tales. New York, George H. Doran Co., 1927. 262p.

Aboriginal Chronology of New York. Museum Service, 2:33. May 15, 1927.

The Amazing Iroquois. Art and Archaeology, 23:99-108. March, 1927.

Charles Williamson, Builder of the Genesee Country. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 6:1-34. 1927.

Faking Antique Furniture. The Dearborn Independent, 27:6-7. January 29, 1927.

The Indian How Book. New York, George H. Doran Co., 1927. 335p.

Legend of Famous Oil Spring of Senecas. The Pure Oil News, July 1927. p.18.

Notes on the Ancestry of Cornplanter. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc. Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, 5:3-22. 1927.

The Wise Master Builder. Museum Service, 2:63. December 15, 1927.

1928

Dynamic Dreams. Museum Service, 3:75. December 15, 1928.

The Explorer. Museum Service, 3:11. February 15, 1928.

Government and Institutions of the Iroquois, by Lewis Henry Morgan. Introduction and editorial notes by Arthur Caswell Parker. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc. Lewis H. Morgan Chapter, Researches and Transactions, Vol. 7, No. 1, 1928. 30p.

Indian Medicine and Medicine Men. In: Ontario Provincial Museum, Toronto. Archaeological Report, 1928. p.3-11.

Inspiration. Museum Service, 3:19. March 15, 1928.

A Museum for Rochester - ? Museum News, 3:52-53. September 15, 1928.

The Museum of History vs. The Historical Society Exhibit. Museum Service, 3:43-46. June 15, 1928.

Notes on Rock Crevice Burials in Jefferson County at Point Peninsula, by John B. Nichols. Introduction and editorial notes by Arthur Caswell Parker. N. Y. State Archeological Assoc, Lewis H. Morgan Chapter. Researches and Transactions, 5:60-73. 1928.

*Our Brothers. The Corinthian. October, 1928.

The Red Man's Gateway of the Genesee Country. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 7:219-223. 1928.

Rumbling Wings and Other Indian Tales. New York, Doubleday Doran and Company, 1928. 279p.

Symbols. Museum Service, 3:27. April 15, 1928.

Transient Form. Museum Service, 3:35. May.15, 1928.

1929

Aboriginal Cultures and Chronology of the Genesee Country. Rochester Academy of Science. Proceedings, 6:243-283. September, 1929.

"Collecting" - An Old Country Store. Rochester Commerce, September 23, 1929. p.5.

Christmas a World Need. Museum Service, 4:75. December 15, 1929.

An Educational and Museum Program for Letchworth State Park. New York State Museum Bulletin 284:73-79, December, 1929. Reprinted from the twenty-third report of the director.

The Indian Interpretation of Sullivan-Clinton Campaign. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 8:45-59. 1929.

Indian Men and Medicine Men. Ontario. Ministry of Education. Thirty-sixth Annual Archaeological Report, 1928:9-17. 1929.

Influence of the Erie Canal in the Development of New York State. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 8:265-280. 1929.

The Light of Archeology on World Problems. Museum Service, 4:44-45. June 15, 1929.

Light's Golden Jubilee. Museum Service, 4:59. October 15, 1929.

Modern Museums Stand for Commerce. Rochester Commerce, June 24, 1929. p.5.

Museizing the World. Museum Service, 4:19-22. March 15, 1929.

Museums and the Park Movement. Museum Service, 4:36-37. May 15, 1929.

Solving the New York Indian Problem. The Six Nations, 3:1-3. January, 1929.

The Value to the State of Archaeological Surveys. National Research Council Bulletin,74:31-41. December, 1929.

Why Not Be An Uncle? Spokes of the Rotary Club of New York, 17:4. August 13, 1929.

1930

Ancient Indian Occupation of Mendon Ponds Park, Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 9:223-226. 1930.

Consider the Arrowhead. Museum Service, 5:59. October 15, 1930.

*The Food Quest -- War and Strategy. In: Big Vacation Book for Boys. New York, Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1930.

Gustango Gold. New York, Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1930. 258p.

Man of the Museum. Museum Service, 5:51. September 15, 1930.

Myths Have Real Meaning. Rochester Commerce, December 8, 1930. p.6.

Think of the Wheel. Museum Service, 5:19. March 15, 1930.

You and Your Doctor. Museum Service, 5:3. January 15, 1930.

1931

The Attitude of the American Indian to American Life. Journal of Religious Education, 26:111-114. February, 1931.

Early Rochester. Moving and Storage News. July, 1931.

First Human Occupants of the Rochester Region. Rochester Historical Society. Publication Fund Series, 10:19-48. 1931.

Patriot Red Men in the American Revolution. Wyoming Commemorative Assoc. Proceedings, [July] 1931. 7-19.

1932

Big Tree Remembers. Masonic Outlook, November, 1932. p.72.

Consider the Arrowhead. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 3:24. May, 1932.

The Explorer. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 3:22. September, 1932.

The Funny-Bone of Early Rochester. Rochester Historical Society, Publication Fund Series, 11:125-144, 1932.

The League of the Iroquois. Home Geographic Monthly, 2:7-12. August, 1932.

Scouts May Save America's Pre-History. Scouting. 20:148. May, 1932.

Teaching History by Museum Methods. New York History, 13:247-255, July, 1932.

1933

The Civilization of the Red Man. In: History of the State of New York, edited by Alexander Clarence Flick, 1933. 1:99-131.

Dramatize the Vital Things of Masonry. [Kansas Masonic Digest] May, 1933.

The First Appearance of Man. In: History of the State of New York, edited by Alexander Clarence Flick, 1933. 1:41-66.

La Grotte des Transformations. Le Symbolisme, July, 1933: 178-189. Translation.

In the Cave of Transformation. The Canadian Theosophist [12?] 393-397. [February 15, 1933]

The Iroquois. In: History of the State of New York, edited by Alexander Clarence Flick, 1933. 1:67-97.

Whence Came the American Race? The Indian Leader, 37:1-2. September 22, 1933.

Problems of the Delaware Susquehanna Area. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 3:7-11. September, 1933.

1934

Catalog Problems of Museums. The Museum News, 11:6-8. January 15, 1934.

Centennial Almanac. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Municipal Museum Commission, 1934. 29p.

The Classification of History Museum Objects. The Museum News, 11:7-8. April 1, 1934.

The History Museum -- An Opportunity. New York History, 15:326-331. July, 1934.

Some Preliminary Considerations in the Determination of Aboriginal Cultures. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 4:16-18. April, 1934.

1935

A Committee on Archaeological Terminology -- Why Not? The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 5:24-26. April, 1935.

Getting Down to Facts. Museum Service, 8:6. August, 1935.

Indian Episodes of New York, a Drama Story of the Empire State. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences, 1935. 35p.

A Manual for History Museums. New York, Columbia University Press, 1935. 204p. (New York State Historical Association Series, No. III.)

The Measure of the Museist. Museum Service, 8:12-13. September, 1935.

The Small History Museum. New York History, 16:189-195. April, 1935.

So You're Making a Speech. Museum Service, 8:38-39. December, 1935.

1936

Antler Combs of the Iroquois. Museum Service, 9:156-157, October 15, 1936.

Becoming a Participant in a Creative Movement. Museum Service, 9:195. December 15, 1936.

Centennial of the Patent System of the United States. Museum Service, 9:206. December 15, 1936.

How Does the Museum Do It? Museum Service, 9:168. November 15, 1936.

In the Not So Distant Future. Museum Service, 9:18-19. February 15, 1936.

The Museum Moves Forward. Museum Service, 9:3-4. January 15, 1936.

 

A Museum Sponsors an Indian Arts Project. Social Welfare Bulletin, 7:12-14. January-February, 1936.

The Nanticoke. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 5:83-90. January, 1936.

The Nanticoke, appendix. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 6:3-12. April, 1936.

Piping the Museum to the Public. Museum Service, 9:102. June 15, 1936.

World Recognition for Rochester. Museum Service, 9:143. October 15, 1936.

1937

About Losing Millions. Museum Service, 10:4. January 15, 1937.

Archeology Adopts a New Policy. Museum Service, 10:160. September 15, 1937.

Awake! There is a New Day. Museum Service, 10:75. April 15, 1937.

Changing Emphasis. Museum Service, 10:32. February 15, 1937.

The Denonville -- La Salle Celebration. Museum Service, 10:123. June 15, 1937.

The Director Walks Around. Museum Service, 10:195-196. November 15, 1937.

Does Rochester Need A New Museum Building? Museum Service, 10:193. November 15, 1937.

Education Through Industry. Museum Service, 10:97. May 15, 1937.

The Ethics of the Museologist. Museum Service, 10:51. March 15, 1937.

George Eastman, We Are Grateful! Museum Service, 10:219. December 15, 1937.

Let Us Have Specimens Too. Museum Service, 10:171. October 15, 1937.

The Museum Brings the World to the Classroom. The Science Counselor, 3:12. March, 1937.

An Old Word With a New Meaning. Museum Service, 10:3. January 15, 1937.

The Rochester Hall of Fame. Museum Service, 10:25. February 15, 1937.

Rochester Museum Standards. Museum Service, 10:27. February 15, 1937.

When Educators Awaken. Museum Service, 10:169. October 15, 1937.

Where Disrespect of the Law Starts. Museum Service, 10:147. September 15, 1937.

1938

Better Organization. Museum Service, 11:27. February 15, 1938.

But What Shall We Do About It? Museum Service, 11:99. May 15, 1938.

Cash and Civilization. Museum Service, 11:25. February 15, 1938.

A Comprehensive Museum. Museum Service, 11:49. March 15, 1938.

Discovering the Essential. Museum Service, 11:219. December 15, 1938.

History is Written in Objects. Museum Service, 11:193. November 15, 1938.

Indian Children of the Eastern Woodlands, by Mrs. Cornelia H. Dam. Edited by Arthur Caswell Parker. Chicago, Orthovis Publishing Co., 1938. 39p.

Indians Versus Pot-Hunters. Museum Service, 11:16. January 15, 1938.

The Museum and the Genius. Museum Service, 11:97. May 15, 1938.

The Museum as a University. Museum Service, 11:75. April 15, 1938.

The Museum as a World Center. Museum Service, 11:195. November 15, 1938.

Regional History Museum. Museum Service, 11:79. April 15, 1938.

A Report of the Susquehanna River Expedition Sponsored by the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, compiled and annotated by Warren King Moorehead. Edited by Arthur Caswell Parker. Andover, Mass., The Andover Press, 1938. 142p.

Seven Steps for State Museums. Museum News, 15:10-12. March 15, 1938.

A Synthesis of Estimates of Kantian Philosophy. Read before the Rochester Philosophical Society, [1938] 23 numb. l. Mimeographed.

The Voice of Rochester - Who? Museum Service, 11:73. April 15, 1938.

What is a Museum Worker? Museum Service, 11:51. March 15, 1938.

Why Do Museums Succeed? Museum Service, 11:169. October 15, 1938.

Working Together. Museum Service, 11:147. September 15, 1938.

1939

A City With Vision and a Man. Museum Service, 12:97. May-June, 1939.

The Deer Fly Bubble. Museum Service, 12:49. March-April, 1939.

Diamonds in Newspapers. Museum Service, 12:236. December-January, 1939-1940.

The Efficiency Gage. Museum Service, 12:73. April-May, 1939.

Here is Rochester! Museum Service, 12:193. November-December, 1939.

Is There an Unmixed Race? Museum Service, 12:25. February-March, 1939.

Making a Museologist. Museum Service, 12:99. May-June, 1939.

Making Mockery of Archeology, Museum Service, 12:52, March-April, 1939.

March of Science. Museum Service,12:145. September-October, 1939.

A Museum Is a Place in Which to Live! Museum Service, 12:27. February-March, 1939.

Museums Are One Thing -- Exhibits Are Another. Museum Service, January-February, 1939.

Museums in Taverns. Museum Service, 12:121. June-July, 1939.

Museums Succeed Everywhere. Museum Service, 12:192, October-November, 1939.

Nature's Analogy. Museum Service, 12:219. December-January, 1939-1940.

The Old Genesee Valley Canal. Museum Service, 12:44-45. February-March, 1939.

Rochester Museum Testing Laboratory, Museum Service, 12:169. October-November, 1939.

Twentieth Century Time Chest. Museum Service, 12:147. September-October, 1939.

What Is Most Valuable in a Museum? Museum Service, 12:1. January-February, 1939.

The White Captive. Museum Service, 12:123. June-July, 1939.

Will Our Culture Survive? Museum Service, 12:75. April-May, 1939.

1940

All Paper Money Seems Queer. Museum Service, 13:132-133. July, 1940.

Analyzing the Museum Workers. Museum Service, 13:147. October, 1940.

Anniversary of the Jesuit Order. Museum Service, 13:171. November, 1940.

Bookplates of Bibliophiles. Museum Service, 13:107-108. June, 1940.

Civilization Rests Upon Nature. Museum Service, 13:193. December, 1940.

Consider the Check - And Thank Your Brother. Museum Service, 13:156-157. October, 1940.

The Copernican Quadricentennial. Museum Service, 13:195. December, 1940.

Four Fevered Decades. Museum Service, 13:97. June, 1940.

The Genesee Country Historical Federation. Museum Service, 13:151. October, 1940.

God's Business and the King's Glory. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Staff Lectures and Addresses, 1940. 21p.

Is Civilisation Stymied. Museum Service, 13:75. May, 1940.

Lewis Henry Morgan, Social Philosopher. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Staff Lectures and Addresses, 1940. 23p.

The Logic of the Museum Molecule. Museum Service, 13:51. April, 1940.

Making Mockery of Archaeology. Massachusetts Archaeological Society. Newsletter, 1:3-5. April, 1940.

The Museum a Complex Organization. Museum Service, 13:169. November, 1940.

The Museum and Science. Museum Service, 13:1. January-February, 1940.

The New Structure. Museum Service, 13:145. October, 1940.

Our Convocation. Museum Service, 13:25. March, 1940.

Planning a New Museum. Museum Service, 13:49. April, 1940.

The Realistic Idealism of Lotze. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Staff Lectures and Addresses, 1940. 20p.

Seneca Woodcarving. Museum Service, 13:76-77. May, 1940.

Tippecanoe and Tyler Too in 1840. Museum Service, 13:180-181. November, 1940.

Why Are We So Queer? Museum Service, 13:202-203. December, 1940.

Young Faces in Old Places. Museum Service,13:27. March, 1940.

The State That Has Everything. Museum Service, 13:3. January-February, 1940.

1941

Art Reproductions of the Seneca Indians. Museum Service, 14:31-33. November, 1941.

Bausch Hall of Science and. History of the Rochester Museum. Science Monthly, 53:96-97. July, 1941.

Edward Bausch Hall of Science and History, Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Guide Bulletin 7, 1941. 4p.

Ghost Towns of the Genesee, by Peter Moon Stone, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Museum Service, 14:29-30. November, 1941.

Hobbies for Health. Museum Service, 14:44-45. November, 1941.

Planning a Regional History Museum. Museum News, 19:8, June 1, 1941.

Why We Have Paused. Museum Service, 14:1. October, 1941.

1942

Adventures in Collecting, by Antiquarian, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Museum Service, 15:172-175. October, 1942.

An Anthropologist Looks Ahead. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Staff Lectures and Addresses, 1942. 24p.

Be Prepared. Museum Service, 15:164. September, 1942.

The Fabric of Culture Mast Not Be Broken. Museum Service, 15:(l). February, 1942.

Full Steam Ahead! Museum Service, 15:84-86. March, 1942.

Inclusive Programs Mean Economy. Museum Service, 15:55-56. March, 1942.

The Local History Museum and the War Program. American Association for State and Local History. Bulletins, 1:75-112. October, 1942.

Looking Ahead in Anthropology. Museum Service, 15:62-63. March, 1942.

Looking Ahead in Archeology. Museum Service,15:105-106. May, 1942.

Museum Regulations, compiled by Arthur Caswell Parker. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences, Museum Regulations No. 9, 1942. l6p.

The Mystery of the Price Codes, by Peter M. Stone, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Museum Service, 15:58. March, 1942.

War and the Museum Program. Museum Service, 15:37-39. February, 1942.

You Are in the Association, by Peter M. Stone, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Museum Service, 15:182-183. October, 1942.

1943

Back to Date News, by Peter M. Stone, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Museum Service, 16:77. November, 1943.

Museums in the World Crisis. Museum News, 21:6-8, September 1, 1943.

Rochester (N. Y.) Museum of Arts and Sciences. Description of New Buildings and Activities. Museums Journal, 43:81-84. September, 1943.

The Unknown Mother of Red Jacket. New York History, 24:525-533. October, 1943.

We Can't Get Away from History. Museum Service, 16:66. October, 1943.

1944

Culture Stimulates Commerce. Museum Service, 17:30-31. April, 1944.

A Paragraph History of the Rochester Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution. [Rochester, N. Y.?] Sons of American Revolution, National Society, 1944. [14]p.

The Riddle of the State. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Staff Papers and Addresses, 1944. 22p.

*Washington: Responsive Citizen. National Society, Sons of the American Revolution Quarterly Bulletin. April, 1944.

1945

Address to the Oswego Regional Meeting. N. Y. State Historical Association Bulletin, 13:13. November, 1945.

*Every Journey Tells a Story. The Yorker. September, 1945.

Fluorescence Comes to Town. Museum Service, 18:78. November, 1945.

*Hiawatha and the First League of Peace. The Yorker. October, 1945.

President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 26:409-414. October, 1945.

What Is a Museum? Museum Service, 18:75. November, 1945.

What Is a Transorama? Museums Journal, 45:114. October, 1945.

Where Is Our Museum? Museum Service, 18:83. December, 1945.

1946

Construction of a Floral Diorama at Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences; abstract. Museums Journal, 46:90-91. August, 1946.

Lewis Henry Morgan as Social Philosopher. In: Union [College] Worthies, 1:10-15. [1946]

*Municipal Museum Commission. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences Ninth Annual Report. 1946.

Policies and Programs for the New York State Historical Association. New York History, 27:8-13. January, 1946.

President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 27:1-6. January, 1946.

The President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 27:133-140. April, 1946.

The President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 27:277-284. July, 1946.

The President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 27:417-423. October, 1946.

The Wild Flowers of Western Now York. Museum Service, 19:30-31. April, 1946.

1947

Aspects of Philosophical Thought in Primitive Societies. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. Staff Lectures and Addresses, April, 1947. 20p.

The Future Rules Us Now. The Philalethes, July, 1947. p.11.

The Future Rules Us Now. Museum Service, 20:38. April, 1947.

Post-War Museum Trends. Museum Service, 20:15. February, 1947.

The President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 28:1-9. January, 1947.

The President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 28:121-127. April, 1947.

The President's Message [New York State Historical Association] New York History, 28:265-270. July, 1947.

Review of the Development of the New York State Historical Association, 1899-1946. New York History, 28:10-21. January, 1947.

Rochester Museum Honors Dr. A. C. Parker, by Gawaso Wanneh, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Hobbies, 52:28. August, 1947.

The Treaty of Big Tree. Museum Service, 20:77. September, 1947.

1948

An Inspiring Word. Museum Service, 21:27. March, 1948.

Which Way Now America. New York History, 29:10-20. January, 1948.

1949

From Atom to Auditorium. Museum Service, 22:3. January, 1949.

How Do You Rate in Hobbies? Museum Service, 22:79. September, 1949.

1950

Financing Museums of History: Analyze Before You Ask. Museum News, 28:6-8. May 1, 1950.

Logically Conceived -- Amply Justified. Museum Service, 23:87. October, 1950.

The Mysterious Underground of Cattaraugus, New York Folklore Quarterly, 6:85-90. Summer, 1950.

Red Streak of the Iroquois. Chicago, Children's Press, 1950. 191p.

Rochester Rappings of 1850. Museum Service, 23:77. September, 1950.

The Museum Comes of Age. Museum Service, 23:41. April, 1950.

1951

Abelard Reynolds and the Rochester Rappings. Genesee Country Scrapbook, 2:1-4. 1951.

How Came Haih! New York Folklore Quarterly, 7:141. Summer, 1951.

The Next Fifty Years. Museum Service, 24:3. January, 1951.

A Thousand Visitations of an Area. Museum Service, 24:111. December, 1951.

1952

Adult Education Programs in Museums. Museum Service, 25:77. September, 1952.

Lewis Henry Morgan, 1818-1881. Museum Service, 25:101. November, 1952.

A Principle in Action. Museum Service, 25:51. May, 1952.

Red Jacket, Last of the Seneca. New York, McGraw-Hill, 1952. 228p.

The Role of Contagion in the Conquest of America. The Galleon, 8:1-4. 1952.

Twenty-Five Years Have Flown. Museum Service, 25:3. January, 1952.

What Means Fellow of the Rochester Museum. Museum Service, 25:17. February, 1952.

1953

How Shall We Get an Indian Name? Museum Service, 26:94. June, 1953.

Living With Nature. Museum Service, 26:40. March, 1953.

Rochester's Time Chest. Museum Service, 26:105. September, 1953.

What Is This Creature Called Man. Museum Service, 26:60. April, 1953.

Where Questions Are Answered. Museum Service, 26:163. December, 1953.

Why Great Nations Fall. Museum Service, 26:69. May, 1953.

1954

Alf's Tough Oxen. New York Folklore Quarterly, 10:297. Winter, 1954.

Old Alb Wins a Bet. New York Folklore Quarterly, 10:48-49. Spring, 1954.

Sources and Range of Cooper's Indian Lore. New York History, 35:445-456. 1954.

Who Was Hiawatha? Museum Service, 27:158. December, 1954.

Who Was Hiawatha? New York Folklore Quarterly, 10:285-288. Winter, 1954.

1955

Photography in the Museum. Museum Service, 28:21. February, 1955.

1959

Iroquois Indians Still Thank the Maple. Museum Service, 32:39. March, 1959.

n.d.

The Indians of New York State. Home Missions Council, n.d. 15p.

The Transcendent Word, by Gawaso Wanneh, [pseudonym of Arthur Caswell Parker] Switzerland, n.d. 8 numb. l. (Typewritten copy with notation in Dr. Parker's handwriting: "Published in Switzerland. Tr. in French.")

 


 


CONTINUATIONS, EDITED BY ARTHUR CASWELL PARKER

The American Indian Magazine, edited by Arthur Caswell Parker. Washington, D. C., Society of American Indians. 1913-1920. 7 vols.

Herodotus, compiled by Arthur Caswell Parker. Rochester, N. Y., Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. 1935-1944. 36 nos.

The Museologist, compiled by Arthur Caswell Parker, Rochester, N. Y., Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. 1935-1945. 41 nos.

Museum Service, edited by Arthur Caswell Parker, Rochester, N. Y., Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. 1926-1945. 18 vols.

Rochester War Council, Speakers' Bureau. Information Bulletin, edited by Arthur Caswell Parker. Rochester, N. Y., Rochester War Council Speakers' Bureau. 1943-1944. 27 nos.

 

 

 


 


RADIO SCRIPT

[Radio Broadcasts] sponsored by Rochester War Council Speakers' Bureau. 1942-1943. 86 broadcasts.

The Romance of Old Indian Days. WHAM (Rochester) Radio Broadcasts, sponsored by Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences. 1937-1938. 28 broadcasts.

 

 

 


 


UNPUBLISHED PLAYS

The First Grand Lodge, a Masonic drama. n.d. 18l. Typewritten.

The League of Peace, pageant for American Indian Day. September 28, 1940. 9l. Mimeographed.