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THE

AMERICAN POULTRY YARD;

COMPRISING THE

ORIGIN, HISTORY, AND DESCRIPTION

OF THE DIFFERENT BREEDS

OF

DOMESTIC POULTRY;

WITH

COMPLETE DIRECTIONS FOR THEIR BREEDING, CROSSING, REARING
FATTENING, AND PREPARATION FOR MARKET; INCLUDING SPE
CIFIC DIRECTIONS FOR CAPONISING FOWLS, AND FOR

THE TREATMENT OF THE PRINCIPAL DISEASES TO
WHICH THEY ARE SUBJECT, DRAWN FROM
AUTHENTIC SOURCES AND PER-

SONAL OBSERVATION;

ILLUSTRATED WITH NUMEROUS ENGRAVINGS.

BY D. J. BROWNE,

AUTHOR OF THE SYLV

AMERICANA.

WITH

AN APPENDIX,

EMBRACING THE COMPARATIVE MERITS OF DIFFERENT
BREEDS OF FOWLS,

BY SAMUEL ALLEN.

NEW YORK:

PUBLISHED BY C. M. SAXTON.
1854.
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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1849, by

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In the Clerk's Office of the Vistrict Court of the United States for the Southern

District of New York.

ADVERTISEMENT.

THE "American Poultry Yard" being now completed, the publisher has thought proper to offer a few preliminary remarks on its design and the manner in which it has been got up.

Actuated by the most liberal motives, he has, in the first place, endeavored to keep pace with the improvements of the age, in obtaining the best information on the subject, that could be procured, suited to the general reader, and answering, at the same time, the purposes of practice and economy.

Mr. Browne, the ostensible author of this work, was bred and brought up a practical farmer, and was favorably known as editor of "The Naturalist," a monthly periodical, published in Boston some twenty years ago, and more recently as a civil engineer on our public works, and as the writer of a treatise on American trees. He is an enthusiastic devotee to the natural and exact sciences, particularly to agriculture and rural economy, having travelled and resided for a considerable time in various parts of North and South America, the West Indies, Europe, and Western Africa, with the express object of practically investigating the agriculture and natural features of these countries. From his intimate knowledge of the history and habits of our domestic animals, having devoted, probably, more attention to the subject, as a whole, by reading and observation, than any other individual in the country, the task of preparing this work was assigned to him.

Mr. Allen, who has very generously looked over the pron sheets and favored the public with a valuable Apppendix, is well known as the father and co-laborer of the editors of the "American Agriculturist," and as an experienced and successful breeder of stock, as well as of the choicer varieties of domestic fowls.

The publisher, therefore confidently presents the "American Poultry Yard" to the public with the full belief that it combines the utmost economy and utility, united, at the same time, with elegance and the facility of obtaining the desired end.

NEW YORK, January 2, 1850.

C. M. SAXTON.

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