Lancaster county Indians; annals of the Susquehannocks and other Indian tribes of the Susquehanna territory from about the year 1500 to 1763, the date of their extinction. An exhaustive and interesting series of historical papers descriptive of Lancaster county's Indians prior to and during the advent of the paleface
Meynen, Bibliography on German settlements in colonial North America, no. 4266.
Includes photographs--Lancaster County's Almshouse and Insane Hospital--The City Hall, Lancaster, PA--Center Square--Boat Landing, Rocky Springs--Old Toll House--Witmer's Bridge--First Milestone--Rockford--Home of George L. Buckwalter--Oak Hill-Home of Justice J. Hay Brown--Home of Mr. N.M. Woods--Farm House of P.E. Slaymaker--Bleak House-Country Home of W.U. Hensel--White Chimneys-Home of S.R. Slaymaker--Gap Clock Tower--Where Wm. Penn met the Schwanka Chiefs in1700--Old Riot House--
In: Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, v. 30.
Summary
The article focuses on a letter from Edward Shippen lll to his son, Edward Shippen lV (who would later become the Chief Justice of Pennsylvania). The letter contains advice on how to live a good and productive life both in business and family life.