The New American Cyclopedia was a 16-volume encyclopedia created and published by D. Appleton & Company of New York over the years 1857 to 1866.[1] Its primary editors were George Ripley and Charles A. Dana.[1]
The New American Cyclopedia 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 government politician.[1]
A notable contributor was Karl Marx, then a European correspondent for the New York Tribune, who, under the suggestion of the editors, submitted articles on military affairs (for which he may have collaborated with Friedrich Engels).[2] He also wrote a highly unsympathetic biographical article on Simon Bolivar.[2][3]
The New American Cyclopedia was revised and republished as the American Cyclopedia in 1873.[4]
Volume | From | To |
---|---|---|
Volume 1 | A | Asher |
Volume 2 | Ashes | Bowle |
Volume 3 | Bolan Pass | Carmine |
Volume 4 | Carmona | Coddington |
Volume 5 | Code | Demotica |
Volume 6 | Dempster | Everett |
Volume 7 | Evesham | Glascock |
Volume 8 | Glasgow | Hortense |
Volume 9 | Hortensius | Kingslake |
Volume 10 | Kinglet | Magnet |
Volume 11 | Magnetism | Motril |
Volume 12 | Mott | Pales |
Volume 13 | Palestine | Printing |
Volume 14 | Prior | Shoe |
Volume 15 | Shomer | Trollope |
Volume 16 | Trombone | Zymosis |