LIST OF AUTHORS VOL. XI. GATH, see Townsend, George ALFRED GAYARRE, CHARLES ETIENNE ARTHUR GEIBEL, EMANUEL GEIJER, ERIC GUSTAF GEIKIE, SIR ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, JOHN CUNNINGHAM GELLERT, CHRISTIAN FÜRCHTEGOTT GELLIUS, AULUS GENLIS, STÉPHANIE FÉLICITE GEOFFREY CRAYON, see IRVING, WASHINGTON GEORGE FLEMING, see FLETCHER, JULIA CONSTANCE 56 GOETHE, JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOGOL, YANOUSKY NICOLAI VASILYEVITCH GOLDONI, CARLO GOLDSCHMIDT, MEIER AARON GOLDSMITH, OLIVER GORDON, CHARLES WILLIAM . GORDON, JULIEN, see CRUGER, JULIA GRINNELL GORE, CATHERINE GRACE MOODY . GRAND, SARAH, see CLARKE, FRANCES ELIZABETH GRANT, ANNE MACVICAR GRANT, ROBERT GRANT, ULYSSES SIMPSON GRAS, FELIX. GRATTAN, HENRY GRAY, DAVID 307 312 . 317 323 GRAY, THOMAS GREELEY, HORACE GREEN, ANNA KATHERINE, see ROHLFS, ANNA K. G. GREEN, JOHN RICHARD GREEN, MARY ANN EVERETT WOOD . € 400 402 406 G AYARRÉ, CHARLES ETIENNE ARTHUR, an American historian; born at New Orleans, La., January 9, 1805; died there February II, 1895. He was educated at the University of New Orleans, studied law at Philadelphia, and was admitted to the bar in 1829. In 1830 he was appointed Deputy Attorney-General of Louisiana, and in 1833 presiding Judge of the City Court of New Orleans. In 1835 he was chosen to the United States Senate, but impaired health prevented him from taking his seat. He went to Europe, where he remained for about eight years. Returning to New Orleans he was elected to the Legislature in 1844, and again in 1846. He was appointed Secretary of State in Louisiana, and held the office for seven years, after which he retired from public service. His writings relate mainly to the history of Louisiana. They are Essai Historique sur la Louisiane (1830); Histoire de la Louisiane (1848); Louisiana, its Colonial History and Romance (1851); Louisiana, its History as a French Colony (1852); History of the Spanish Domination in Louisiana (1854). He has also written Philip II. of Spain, a biographical sketch (1866); Fernando de Lemos, a novel (1872), and a continuation of it, Albert Dubayet (1882), and two (7) |