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The New American Cyclopædia was a general encyclopedia with a special focus on subjects related to the United States. As it was created over the years spanning the American Civil War, the focus and tone of articles could change drastically; for example, Jefferson Davis, the future president of the Confederate States of America, was treated at length as a United States Army soldier and US ...
New American Cyclopedia in 16 volumes, edited by George Ripley and Charles Anderson Dana, 1857–1863; revised and enlarged as American Cyclopedia (1873–1876) Progress and Poverty 1880; Annual Cyclopedia for the years 1861–1901, annual; Johnson's Universal Cyclopaedia 1893, in 8 volumes edited by Charles Kendall Adams. The rights were ...
Blackie's Modern Cyclopaedia of Universal Information (1889) (link contains Vols. 1–3, 5) New Cabinet Cyclopedia and Treasury of Knowledge (1891) American ed. New National Cyclopedia and Treasury (1899) XXth century Cyclopaedia and Atlas (1901) New Twentieth Century Cyclopaedia (1903) New and Complete Universal Self-Pronouncing Dictionary (1905)
New American Cyclopaedia (1857–1863), 16 volumes, editors George Ripley and Charles A. Dana; American Cyclopaedia (1873–1876), the retitled New American Cyclopaedia; Johnson's New Universal Cyclopaedia (1876–1878), 4 volumes; editors Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard and Arnold Henry Guyot; Cyclopedia of Universal History (1880–1884 ...
This page was last edited on 2 May 2017, at 22:03 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply ...
American Cyclopaedia, 1873–76, the successor to the New American Cyclopaedia, the primary editors were George Ripley and Charles A. Dana; Cyclopedia of Universal History, 1880–84, World History; Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and the Political History of the United States, 1881, edited by John Joseph Lalor
Low's Encyclopedia is primarily an American work. Although the title page says it was taken from the Encyclopædia Perthensis, this does not appear to be the case, as this work is seven volumes of around 650 pages each, while the latter work was 23 volumes of 800 pages each.
International dictionary and cyclopaedia (1901) Imperial Dictionary and Cyclopaedia (1901) New Popular Encyclopaedia British ed. (1901), based on Blackie's Modern Cyclopaedia of Universal Information (1889) itself based on Popular Encyclopedia or Conversations Lexicon (1841) Modern Encyclopaedia of Universal Information British ed. (1906)