I Stanford White.- II The White Family in America.- III Stanford Whites Father.- IV His Youth.- V Apprenticed to Richardson.- VI The Beginnings of his Friendship with St. Gaudens.- VII Aboard ShipBound for EuropeJuly, 1878.- VIII Arrived in Paris. First Impressions.- IX Exploring the South of France with McKim and St. Gaudens.- X The Grand Tour.- XI The Voyage Home, September, 1879.- XII American Architecture Before 1880.- XIII McKim, Mead & White.- XIV The Practice of Architecture in the Early Eighties.- XV The Farragut, the Randall and the Morgan Monuments.- XVI With Dick and St. Gaudens in New Mexico.- XVII Marriage.- XVIII 18851887.- XIX Salmon Fishing.- XX Boston Speaks its Mind Concerning McKim, Mead & White.- XXI The Washington Arch.- XXII Madison Square Garden.- XXIII The Festive Diana.- XXIV The Columbus Celebration.- XXV The Herald Building.- XXVI The University of Virginia, New York University and Columbia College.- XXVII Clubs and Clubhouses.- XXVIII Churches and Church Architecture.- XXIX SherrySAnd the Invasion of Upper Fifth Avenue.- XXX Magazine and Book Covers.- XXXI The Theatre.- XXXII The Turn of the Century in New York.- XXXIII Wherein Draughtsmen Differ from Valets.- XXXIV White was Fortunate in his Clients.- XXXV White as Seen by Simmons.- XXXVI And by Janet Scudder.- XXXVII Later Correspondence with St. Gaudens.- XXXVIII January To June, 1906.- XXXIX Midsummer.- XL The Thaw Case.- XLI Twenty Years Later.- AppenddcBiographical and Critical Notes Dealing, for the Most, with Whites Friends and Their Relation to Him.Springer Book Archives