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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2009
page 1 note 1 Papers, first series, vol. viii., p. xxxi.
page 7 note 1 For eleven months of each year the books may be freely consulted by the public. The general duplicates were sent to Atlanta Theological Seminary. Most of the duplicates in the field of bibliography were left to Washington and Lee University; but a portion went to New York University. In 1901 Dr. Jackson had presented his Zwingli Collection to the Union Theological Seminary, where a bronze tablet now bears the following inscription: “The Samuel Macauley Jackson Collection of Reformation Literature. Founded in 1901 by Samuel Macauley Jackson, D.D., LL.D., an alumnus of 1873, and endowed by his brother George T. Jackson, M.D., 1914.”
page 9 note 1 New York, 1891, Reprinted from the Encyclopedia of Missions.
page 9 note 1 The source of “Jerusalem the Golden,” together with other pieces attributed to Bernard of Cluny. In English translation by Henry Preble. Introduction, notes, and annotated bibliography by Samuel Macauley Jackson. Chicago, 1910.
page 10 note 1 Dr. Jackson died of pernicious anæmia at Washington, Connecticut, August 2, 1912. He was buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.
page 10 note 1 See above, p. ix, p. xvii. Dr. Jackson's unpublished manuscripts are in the custody of the present writer.