Ultrafilters - when did it start?

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I am writing a paper on some of the applications of ultrafilters, especially the ones on $\mathbb{N}$. I thought that it would be interesting to include some information about how the concept got introduced into mathematics. I would suspect that the earliest applications would be in topology or in Boolean algebras, but I can't seem to find any historical reference. Could someone be so kind as to offer a reference to when and how ultrafilters were first used, or some directions of where I should start digging?

(Neither The Theory of Ultrafilters" by Comfort & Negrepontis, nor "Algebra in the Stone-Čech Compactification" by Hindman & Strauss seem to contain much reference to history of the concept).

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The existence of ultrafilters was first proved by Tarski in

Tarski, A.: Une contribution à la théorie de la mesure, Fundamenta Mathematicae 15 (1930), 42-50.

This is mentioned in a recent article here.

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I believe the concept of ultrafilter, but not the name, first arose in the work of Stone on the topological representation of Boolean algebras. After all, the points of the Stone space of a Boolean algebra are the ultrafilters in that algebra. The name "ultrafilter" was probably introduced by Henri Cartan, perhaps via Bourbaki.

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The notion of filter was defined for the first time probably by Henri Cartan [Cart1] (see also [B, §6.1]). However, some authors mention that the notion of filterbase was used by L. Vietoris [V] under the name "Kranz" prior to H. Cartan (see [P, p.46], [R1] or [R2]). R. M.Dudley [D, p.76] mentions that C. Caratheodory used filterbases in [Cara1] and M. H. Stone was in fact dealing with filters in [S].