Keith, George, promoter of religious training,18Kennedy, Dempsey, an anti-slavery preacher,173Kentucky, the Emancipating Baptists in,34-36;Negro Baptists in,119-120Kirkland, Colonel, a friend of George Liele,44,45
Lambert, William, a pioneer Methodist preacher,81;troubles with the A. M. E. Zion Church,81;relations with Richard Allen,80-82Lane, Isaac, a bishop of the C. M. E. Church,240Lane, John W., a C. M. E. worker,196Lane College, the establishment of,203Latin element, missionary spirit of,2Law, Josiah, a preacher to Negroes,155Lawton, Bristol, a minister in Savannah,117Leadership in the Negro church,280-281Lee, George W., achievements of,244Lee, Bishop, President of Wilberforce,238Legislation, reactionary,131-132Lemon, William, a Negro Baptist preacher in Virginia,53Lexington, Kentucky, the Baptist Church in,86;Negro Baptist Church in,119Liberty County, Georgia, instruction of Negroes in,165Liele, George, preacher at the Silver Bluff Church,42;efforts of, in Savannah,43-45;in Jamaica,44-45Lincoln University, development of,203Lindsay, the work of, in New Jersey,12Literature for religious instruction,166Livingston College, the establishment of,205-206Locke, a white minister interested in Thomas Paul,88Locke, John, the philosophy of, influential,25Locke, Richard, the work of, among Negroes,11London Freedmen's Aid Society, the work of,208Lott Cary Convention, organization,262-263Love, E. K., a popular preacher in Georgia,240Louisville, Negro Baptists in,119
MacIntosh County, Georgia, instruction of Negroes in,165Macsparran, Dr., a worker among Negroes at Narragansett,17McClaskey, John, an adviser of the A. M. E. Zion Church,79McDonald, James, a co-worker with Negroes in Florida,118McKall, Basil, a preacher of power,104McLemore, James, an evangelist among Negroes,137McQueen, Steven, a preacher in Savannah,116McTyeire, interest of, in the Colored Methodist,195Management of the Church, the, questioned,254Manchester, Virginia, large Negro Baptist church in,111-112Manly, Governor Charles, a student under John Chavis,70Mangum, P. H., a student under John Chavis,69Mangum, W. P., a student under John Chavis,69Manning, J. M., a friend of the freedmen,213Mars, John N., an anti-slavery Methodist preacher,173Marsh, Jacob, a supporter of Richard Allen,76Marshall, Abraham, organizer of the Savannah Baptist Church,48Marshall, Andrew, a noted Baptist preacher in Savannah,112;troubles of,113-115;work of,112-118Martin, J. C., denominational work of,297Martin J. Sella, an eloquent preacher,238Maryland, Catholic workers among Negroes in,4-5Massachusetts Episcopal Association, the efforts of,211Mather, Cotton, interest of, in slaves,15-16Matthews, John, a co-worker of Morris Brown,76Mayo, A. D., the efforts of,214Meacham, J. B., a pioneer Negro preacher in St. Louis,120Meade, Bishop, interest of, in the instruction of Negroes,151-152Methodist and Baptist attract Negroes,196-197,217Methodists, African, in the North,120-122;school statistics of,203Methodist Episcopal Church, position on slavery in 1784,29;pioneer work among Negroes,26-31;division of, on slavery,123-124;interest of, in Negro uplift,158-159;in the Civil War,186-187,189-192;attitude of, toward the Negroes,188-192,258-259;qualified recognition of Negroes, by,191-192,193-197Mifflin, Warner, the memorial of,38Migration of Negro Methodists and Baptists,122Miles, W. H., one of the first bishops of the C. M. E. Church,196Miller, George Frazier, an Episcopal rector of Brooklyn,277,304Miller, Kelly, opinion of, referred to,280-281Miller, Thomas, pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church,78Miller, William, a pioneer preacher among the Methodists,78;elected bishop of the A. M. E. Zion Church,105;death of,105Missionaries, the attitude of the early, among Negroes,1-2;in the West Indies,26-27Missionary work, the lack of, in America,21;impeded in Africa,309-311Mississippi, the Presbyterians of, interested in the Negro,155Mixed churches, procedure in,132-133Mobile, a Negro church in,118;establishment of the Anthony Street Church in,135Monks, Capucin, protest of,3Montague, Justice James, favorable to Andrew Bryan,49-50Montgomery, Alabama, Negro Baptists in,118Moore, Matthew, the pastor of whites and Negroes,44Moore, Bishop, election of,105;retirement of,105Morehouse College, the establishment of,203Morris Brown University, the establishment of,205Morris, E. C., head of the National Baptist Convention,261Morris, Rev. Mr., a preacher in Virginia,135Moses, Rev. Mr., a worker among Negroes in Virginia,53Mound Bayou, mixed Baptist Church in,86Muir, a worker in Kentucky,38
National Association for the Relief of Destitute Colored Women and Children, the efforts of,307National Baptist Convention,201;the fight of, against white Baptists,257-264National Freedmen's Relief Association, the work of,207Neal, Rev. Mr., the labors of, in Dover,12Neau, Elias, the work of, among Negroes in New York,12-14Negro Baptists, connection of, with white Baptists,201Negro Church, the, socialized,266-285;a place for recreation,267-268;educational institution,268-273;a welfare agency,273-277;leadership in,280-281;the criticism of,302-303;its present situation,300-313Negro ministers, restrictions upon,131;the authority of,278-279;unique position of,281-282;still numerous,304-305;in conflict with southern white ministers,305-306;a redeeming force,301Negro schools established after the Civil War,203-219Negroes, the religious point of view of,146-147New England Missionary Convention, the,200New England, missionary work of, among Negroes,15-17;Negro churches in,121New Haven, Connecticut, Negro Congregational Church in,99New Jersey, the conversion of Negroes in,12New York, the instruction of Negroes in,12-15New York City, the Abyssinian Baptist Church in, organized,88-89Newman, Rev. Mr., preaching of, to Negroes in North Carolina,9-10Norman, M. W. D., a preacher of power,282North, Negro Baptists in,120,122North Carolina, the instruction of Negroes in,9-10;the work of the Quakers in,18;Negro Baptists of, organized the first State Convention,199-200Northern philanthropy, change in,263-264Northwestern Baptist Convention,200Northwestern Freedmen's Aid Commission, the work of,207
Ohio, Negro Baptists in,122Olivet Baptist Church, the success of,278-279Olmsted, F. L., comment of, on religious instruction,149-151;interest of, in the freedmen,212O'Neal, J. B., ideas of, as to Negro uplift,164Opinions, differences of, a difficulty,19-20Osborne, Justice Henry, favorable to Andrew Bryan,49
Paine, Bishop Robert, interest of, in Colored Methodists,195-196Paine College, the establishment of,205Palmer, founder of the Church at Silver Bluff,41-42Pamphlet, Gowan, a preacher of the Negro race in Virginia,53Panama, de Luna Victoria, a bishop in,4Parsippany, Presbyterian School at,152Patterson, Robert, an elder in Kentucky,38Paul, Thomas, a pioneer Negro Baptist preacher in New England,88-91;work of, in Boston,88;efforts of, in New York,89-90;missionary efforts of,90-91Payne, Bishop Daniel A., early work of,171-172Payne, C. H., religious work of,230;in politics,230-231Penn, William, interest of, in Negroes,18Pennington, J. W. C., the achievements of,178-179Pennsylvania Freedmen's Relief Association, the efforts of,207Pennsylvania, the missionary movement in,11-12Perkins, R. J., a pioneer preacher of West Virginia,240Perry, Rufus L., religious and educational work of,242-244Peru, a Negro bishop in,4Peter, Jesse, the work of, in reviving the Silver Bluff Church,42Petersburgh, Virginia, Baptist Church in,53,85Philadelphia, the Negro Baptist Church of, established,86;proslavery element in,86-87Philanthropy, northern, change in,263-264Phillips, C. H., a bishop of the C. M. E. Church,240Phillips, Doc., a pioneer Negro preacher,137Pierce, Edward L., interest of, in the freedmen,212Pioneer Negro preachers,40-70Poindexter, James, a pioneer Negro Baptist preacher in Ohio,122;religious efforts of,223;in politics,223-224Politics, the call of,220-246Polk, Bishop, attitude of, toward the instruction of his slaves,149-151Pontier, Samuel, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church,78Porteus, Bishop, interest of, in the salvation of Negroes,7Portsmouth, Virginia, Negro Baptist church in,54-55,111Powell, A. C, a preacher with a following,282Preachers, Negro, pioneer work of,40-70;educational work of,168-169;as spokesmen of the Negroes,169;interested in colonization,170;in the underground railroad,170,171;in the press,171Preachers, Negro Pioneer,40-70Preachers of versatile genius,167-184Presbyterians, interest of, in Negroes,97-98;failure to win Negroes,98;position on slavery and the Negro,36-39;position of in 1782,36-37;pacifist letter of,38-39;the attitude of, on slavery,124-127,128,130;interest of, in the instruction of Negroes,152-158;schools of,203,204,205;educational work of,210;attract Negroes,256Price, J. C., the record of,206;the education of,217Primitive Baptist Church, Negroes separate therefrom,192Princeton, John Chavis at,68Proctor, H. H., church institutional work of,276Progressive Baptists, the separation of, from whites,259-264Progressive ideas in the Negro church,247-265Protestant Episcopal Freedmen's Commission, aid of, to Negroes,211Protracted meetings among Baptists,143-144Providence Baptist Association, organization of,122Pugh, the work of, among Negroes,12