s of the Flowers_, by Susan Pindar. New York,
D. Appleton & Co., 178 pp.
1853. _Fairy Tales and Legends of Many Nations_, by Charles
B. Burkhardt. New York, Chas. Scribner. 277 pp. Illustrated
by W. Walcutt and J.H. Cafferty.
1854. _The Little Glass Shoe, and Other Stories for
Children_. Philadelphia, Charles H. Davis. 128 pp.
Advertising pages: A description of illustrated juvenile
books, published by Charles H. Davis: 16 pp. _A Book of
Fairy Stories_: p. 9.
1854. _The History of Whittington and His Cat_. Miss Corner
and Alfred Crowquill. _Dick Whittington_ is said to have
been the best seller among juvenile publications for five
hundred years.
1855. _Flower Fables_, by Louisa May Alcott. Boston, G.W.
Briggs & Co. 182 pp.
1855. _The Song of Hiawatha_, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
Published now by Houghton, illustrated by Frederick
Remington.
1864. _Seaside and Fireside Fairies_, by George Blum.
Translated from the German of Georg Blum and Louis Wahl. By
A.L. Wister. Philadelphia, Ashmead & Evans, 292 pp.
1867. _Grimm's Goblins_, selected from the _Household
Stories_ of the Brothers Grimm. Jacob L.K. Grimm. Boston,
Ticknor & Fields. 111 pp.
1867. _Fairy Book. Fairy Tales of All Nations_, by Edouard
Laboulaye. Translated by Mary Booth. New York, Harper &
Bros., 363 pp. Engravings.
1867. _The Wonderful Stories of Fuz-buz the Fly and Mother
Grabem the Spider_. By S. Weir Mitchell. Philadelphia, J.B.
Lippincott & Co. 79 pp.
1868. _Folks and Fairies_. Stories for little children. Lucy
Comfort. New York, Harpers, 259 pp. Engravings. Advertising
pages: Six fairy tales published by Harper & Bros.
1870. _Cinderella, or The Little Glass Slipper_. Boston,
Fields, Osgood & Co. 1871. 8 pp. Colored plates by Alfred
Fredericks.
1873. _Mother Goose_. Illustrations of Mother Goose's
Melodies. By Alexander Anderson. New York. Privately printed
by C.L. Moreau (Analectic Press), 1873, 36 1. 10 numb. 1.
(Designed and engraved on wood.)
1870. _Beauty and the Beast_, by Albert Smith. New York,
Manhattan Pub. Co., 1870. 64 pp. With illustrations by
Alfred Crowquill.
This brings the American child's fairy tale up to recent publications
of the present day which are given in the chapter, "Sources o
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