Index to Volume I.Abel, A. H. II,The Slaveholding Indiansof, reviewed,339African Mind, The,42Aftermath of the Civil War, The, reviewed,444Albany,a state convention of Colored people at,293;slavery at,400Allen, Richard, letter of,436American Colonization Society opposed by free Negroes,276American lady, an, on the treatment of slaves,400Anburey, travels through North America, quoted,407Anderson, Martha E., a teacher in Ohio,19Andrew, one of the first Negroes to teach in Charleston,352Angus, Judith, the will of,238Antar, the Arabian Negro Warrior, Poet and Hero,151Arming the slaves,urged in South Carolina,121;in Virginia,119;in Rhode Island,119;in Massachusetts,120;in New York,120Astor, John Jacob, grandson of, aided slaves to purchase freedom,252Attitude of the Free People of Color toward African Colonization,276Auchmutty, Rev. Mr., took up the work of Elias Neau,358Augusta, Dr. A. T.,studied medicine at Toronto,105;surgeon in the Civil War,107Augusta, Negroes at the siege of,117Bacon, Rev. Thomas, favored the instruction of Negroes,350Ball, Thomas, a colored photographer,20Baltimore, George, on colonization,297Baltimore,meeting to protest against African colonization,279;another colonization meeting in 1831,238;a divided meeting,298;A Typical Colonization Meeting,318Bancroft, tribute to Negro troops,129"Baptists, Emancipating,"143Barclay, Rev. T., instructed Negroes at Albany,358Bartow, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes,355Beckett, Rev. Mr., instructed Negroes,355Beech, Rev. J., baptized Negroes,359Beecham, Mrs., teacher of Negroes in Fredericksburg,24Beecher, Henry Ward, aided slaves to purchase freedom,254Berea College in anti-slavery centre,149Bienville,exchanged Indians for Negroes,362;code of,365;Negro troops under,371Bigham, J. A., review of Du Bois'sThe Negro,217Birney, James G., editor ofThe Philanthropistdestroyed by mob,8Black and White in the Southern States, reviewed,437Black Laws of Ohio,2,3,4;repeal of16Black master, the existence of,235-236Blackburn, Miss Lucy, taught in Cincinnati,19Border States, position of, in 1861,371Boré, de Etienne,learned to granulate sugar,375;the effects of the discovery,375-376Boston, anti-colonization meetings at,284,292Bowen, Nathaniel, on colonization,298Boyd, Henry, a successful Negro business man prior to 1860,21Brawley, Benjamin,Lorenzo Dow,265Bray, Rev. Thomas, work of,among Negroes,353-354;"The Associates" of,354"Breckinridge Democrats," in control of Kentucky,379Breckinridge, John, views of,377,378,379Breacroft, Dr., appeal of, in behalf of the enlightenment of the Negroes,352Brissot de Warville, J. P., on the condition of the slaves,419Brooklyn, anti-colonization meeting of,285Brown County, Ohio, Negroes in,302Brown, William Wells, an occasional physician,106Bryan, Andrew, letters of,87Buckner, S. B., joined the Confederates,390Calhoun, John C., refuted by Dr. James McCune Smith,104Casas, De las, on slavery,361-362Casey, Wm. R., a teacher,19Casor, John, a slave,234Cesar, cure of,101-102Channing, offered to aid the defense of Daniel Drayton,251Charleston, missionary efforts at,among Negroes,350-352;attitude of Negroes of, toward colonization,280-281Charlton, Rev. Mr., a teacher of Negroes in New York,358Chase, Salmon P., desired to aid Daniel Drayton,251Chastellux, Marquis de,his observations of Negro troops,128critical examination of the travels of,419Chatham, the attitude of the Negroes of, toward colonization,300Chickasaws, fought with Negroes in Louisiana,370Chouchas, fought with Negroes in Louisiana,369,370Choctaws, Negroes' troubles with, in Louisiana,371Cimarrones, in Guatemala,393-394Cincinnati,The Negroes of, Prior to 1861,1;Lane Seminary students opposed slavery,7-8,10-11,12;Negro churches of,11progress of the Negroes of,9,10,11,12,13;anti-colonization meetings of,289,293,294;Negroes excluded from public schools of,17-18Clark, F. B.,The Constitutional Doctrines of Justice Harlan,342Clark, Jonathan, letters of,79,82Clark, Peter H., a teacher in Ohio,19Clay, Henry, asked to head the anti-slavery societies of Kentucky,144Clayton, Powell,The Aftermath of the Civil Warof, reviewed,444Cleveland, anti-colonization meeting of,292Clinton, Sir Henry,appeal of, to Negroes,116proclamation of,116Code Noir, quoted,365Coffin, Joshua, aided fugitives to Northwest Territory,146Colgan, Rev. Mr., taught Negroes in New York,358Colonization, African,opposed,279;supported,280-282Color, People of, in Louisiana,362Colored Freemen as Slave Owners in Virginia,233Columbia, anti-colonization meeting of,287Columbus, Negroes of, opposed to colonization,292,293Conrad, Rufus, a preacher in Ohio,20Cook, Rev. Joseph, letter of,69Cooke, Stephen, letter of,77Cookes, moved from Fredericksburg to Detroit,26Cooper, Phil, chattel of his free wife,240Corbic, W. J., a teacher of Ohio,19Cornish, Samuel, opposed colonization,294Cornwallis, Ft., garrisoned by Negroes,117Corsair, a mulatto,397Creole, definition of,366-368Crittenden, John J.,advocated neutrality,383;letter of, to General Scott,387Crittenden, Thomas L., stood with the Union,391Cromwell, John W.,The Negro in American Historyof, reviewed,94Crozat, Anthony, traffic of, in slaves,362Crummell, Alexander, on colonization,296Cutler, Rev. Dr., admitted Negroes to his congregation at Boston,359Dabney, Austin, remarkable soldier and man,129-131Dahomey, speech of the king of,65D'Alone, a supporter of Dr. Bray,353Davis, Garrett, letter of, to General MeClellan,381Davis, John, thoughts on slavery,434Dayton, meeting at, to promote colonization,298De Baptiste, Richard,attended school at Fredericksburg,22;moved to Detroit,22; a preacher,29Debern, Magdelaine, lawsuit of,366De Grasse, John V., student at Bowdoin,105Delany, M. R.,studied at Harvard,105;physician at Pittsburgh,106;news on African colonization,296;sent to Africa,300Depression of Louisiana,375-376.Derham, James, a Negro physician,103Detroit, attitude of,toward Negroes,27;the question of fugitives in,27;measures unfavorable to colored people,28;progress of the Negroes of,29Diggs, Judson, betrayed the fugitives of thePearl,247Don Quixote, quoted,43Dorsey, Thomas, opposed colonization,282Dotty, Duane, Miss Fannie M. Richards's first superintendent ofschools,31Douglass, Frederick,opposed to colonization,295;controversy of, with the National Council,300Dove, Dr., owner of James Derham,103Dow, Lorenzo,journeys of,266;writings of, discussed,271;attitude of, toward slavery,273Drayton, Daniel, in charge of thePearl,245Drummond, Henry, quoted,42Du Bois,The Negroof, reviewed,217Dunbar-Nelson, Alice,People of Color in Louisianaof,361Dunmore, Lord, issued proclamation of freedom to loyal Negroes,115Dyson, Walter,review of, of Ellis'sNegro Culture in West Africa,95;ofGouldtown,221East, the attitude of, toward the West,119Edmondson children, the,243; family tree of,261Edmondson, Hamilton, sold in New Orleans,253Edmondson, Richard, heroic efforts of,248Edmondson, Samuel, married Delia Taylor,256Education of the Negroes in Cincinnati,6,10Education, The, of the Negro Prior to 1861, reviewed,96Edwards, Mrs., taught Negroes in South Carolina,350-351Effect of slaveholding in Louisiana,368Eighteenth Century Slaves as advertised by their Masters,163Ellis, Geo. W.,Negro Culture in West Africaof, reviewed,95Emancipating Baptists in Kentucky,143Emancipation, the, and the arming of slaves, urged,119English, Chester, sailor on thePearl,246Enlisting Negroes in the American Revolution,112,113,114;considered by a council of war,114;urged and allowed,117Ermana, a slave owned by her husband,241Erroneous opinions concerning the Negro,34Essadi Abdurrahman, a writer of the Sudan,41Essays on Negro slavery,49,54Established Church of England, the ministrations of,349Ethiopia, ruled Egypt,37Evans, M. S.,Black and White in Southern Statesof, reviewed,437Fausett, Jessie, review of,of T. G. Steward'sHaitian Revolution,93;of A. H. Abel'sThe Slaveholding Indians,339Ferguson, Joseph, a physician,103Fleet, Dr., educated in Washington,105Fleetwood, Bishop, urged the proselyting of Negroes,350Foote, John P., his opinion of Negroes,19Foote, Senator, effect of the speech of, at the Louis-Phillipecelebration,245Foster, James, opposed to colonization,290Free Negroes,power of, to manumit limited,241-242;transplanted to free soil,302;litigation concerning, in Louisiana,368;aristocracy of,395Free Soilers attacked "Black Laws" of Ohio,16Freedman, a rich one of Guatemala,395Freedom in a Free State,311"Friends of Humanity" organized in Kentucky,144Frink, Rev. Mr., toiled among Negroes of Augusta,354Fugitives,going to the Northwest Territory,1;from British territory to Michigan,27Fugitives of the Pearl, The,243Fuller, Betsey, owned her husband,241Gage, Thomas, quoted, on Negroes in Guatemala,392-398Gaines, John L., secured writ to obtain fund for colored schools,17Galvez, Governor of Louisiana, who employed Negro troops,374Garden, Commissary, opened a colored school in Charleston,352Garrison, Wm. L., effects of the radicalism of,146Gazzan, Dr. Joseph, teacher of M. R. Delany,106Gens de couleur libres,365-366George, James Z.,The. Political History of Slaveryof, reviewed,340Georgia,rise and progress of Negro Churches,69;Negroes with the British in,116,117;Reconstruction in Georgia, reviewed,343;missionary work in,354Germans,crowded the Negroes out in Cincinnati,5;in Appalachian America,133-134Gibson, Bishop, address of, in behalf of Negroes,352Giddings, Joshua, motion for an inquiry into the detention of fugitives,250-251Gilmore High School founded,19Goldsmith, Samuel, deposition of,234Gordon, Robert, a successful business man,21-22Gordon, Virginia Ann, daughter and heir of Robert Gordon,22Graydon, referred to Negro troops,129Greeks, acquainted with Ethiopia,39Greene, General, learned that the British would enlist Negroes,115Grimké, Thomas, letter of, referred to,281Gromes, Frank, purchased his relatives,239Guy, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in South Carolina,352Haigue, Mrs., taught Negroes in South Carolina,351Haitian Revolution, The, reviewed,93Hale, Senator, offered resolutions concerning the fugitives of thePearl,251Hall, Rev. C., admitted Negroes to his church in North Carolina,353Hamilton, Alexander,urged the emancipation and arming of slaves,118;letter of, on conditions in South Carolina,121Hancock, John, member of the committee that opposed the enlistment ofNegroes,--Hanson, Roger W., went with the South,390Harlan, J. M.,Constitutional Doctrinesof, reviewed,342Harlan, Robert, once a man of considerable wealth,20Harris, Dr., opinion of, of Negro troops,128Harry, one of the first Negro teachers in America,352Hartford, anti-slavery meeting at,286Hartgrove, W. B.,The Negro Soldier in the American Revolutionof,110Hawkins, Peter, emancipated slaves,240Healing art among Negroes,101-102Henrico County, Virginia, records,237Henry, H. M.,Police Control of the Slave in South Carolinaof, reviewed,219Henry, Patrick, influence of, in the uplands,138Hildreth, Richard, offered Daniel Drayton aid,251Hill, James H., statement of,239Historic Background of the Negro Physician,99Holly, James Theodore, position on African colonization,300Honyman, Rev. Mr., had Negroes in his congregation,360Hopkins, Samuel, urged the emancipation and arming of slaves,118How the Public received the Journal of Negro History,225Howe, Samuel, offered aid to Daniel Drayton,251Hubbard, Dr., a friend of Negro education,107Huddlestone, Rev. Mr., a successor of Neau,358Humboldt, Alex. Von,Observations on Negroes,393Hunt, Rev. Mr., had a Negro under probation,352Huntsville, Alabama, Negroes of, for colonization,282Husting Court of Richmond, a lawsuit in, to obtain freedom,238Iben Khaldun, a writer of Arabia, quoted,39Illinois, attitude of Negroes in, toward colonization,300Immigration of Negroes into Ohio,2,4; opposition to, aroused,4Impressions of an English traveler,404Indiana,Negroes took up land in,8;attitude of Negroes of, toward African colonization,300Insurrections in Louisiana,370,376Irish,crowded out the Negroes of Cincinnati,5;the Scotch-Irish in the West,133,135Iron first smelted by Negroes,36-37Jackson, George W., manager of Robert Gordon's estate,22Jacob, R. T., offered resolutions for mediatorial neutrality,384Jefferson County, Ohio, free Negroes of,304Jefferson, Thomas, influence of, on frontier,138Jenny, Dr., worked among Negroes,355Johnson, Anthony, a Negro owning slaves,234-236Johnson, Jerome A., remembered Judson Diggs,247Johnson, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes at Stratford,359Jones, Absalom,letter of, --;mentioned by Dow,274;opposed colonization,277Jones, David A., deposition of,238-239Jones, S. Wesley, letter of, quoted,281Kearsley, John, master of James Derham,103Kemps Landing, Negroes in battle of,115Kench, Thomas, wanted Negroes in separate regiments,120Kentucky,"Emancipating Baptists" of,143anti-slavery Presbyterians in,143neutrality of,383dangerous policy of,385Knight and Bell, Negro contractors in Cincinnati,20Kunst. J.,Notes on the Negroes in Guatemala in the SeventeenthCentury,392Lannon, W. D., joined the Confederates,390Laurens, John, urged the arming of slaves,118Law, John, schemes of,362-363Lawrence County, Ohio, Negroes in,4,306Lawrence, Samuel, Negroes under, behaved well,112,113Lecky, tribute of, to Negro troops,129Lees, migrated to Detroit,24,26Leile, George, letters of,80,81,84Lemoyne, Dr. Francis J., teacher of M. R. Delany,106Letters on slavery by a Negro,60;letters showing the rise and progress of Negro Churches in Georgiaand the West Indies,69Lewiston, Pennsylvania, anti-colonization meeting of,287Liberia, the Republic of, discussed,313Lincoln, a desire of, for the support of Kentucky,377,384Lindsay, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in New Jersey,355Locke, Rev. Richard, baptized Negroes in Pennsylvania,355Longworth, Nicholas, aided colored schools of Cincinnati,19Louis-Philippe, the expulsion of, celebrated in Washington,244Louisiana,prostration of,374-375;relieved somewhat by Negro refugees,375Lowth, Bishop, urged the conversion of Negroes,350Lundy, Benjamin, work of, in Tennessee,145Lutherans, in the West,134Lyell, Sir Charles, on the Negroes of Cincinnati,18Lyme, anti-colonization meeting of,286Madison, James, urged the emancipation and arming of slaves,118Magoffin, Governor, tried to aid the Secessionists in Kentucky,382Mann, Horace, offered to aid Daniel Drayton,251Manumission Society of Tennessee,145Marshall, Abraham, letters of,77,78,85Marshall, Humphrey, views of,377,384Maryland, the enlistment of Negroes in,120Maryville, Tennessee, favorable to Negroes,147-149Massachusetts, arming the slaves in,120May, Samuel, helped to furnish defense for Daniel Drayton,251McSparran, conducted a class of Negroes,359Mehlinger, Louis R.,The Attitude of the Free Negro toward African Colonizationof,276Mennonites in the West,134Mercer County, Ohio, Negroes in,9,306Middletown, anti-colonization meeting at,286Migration of Negroes,West Indian,370-371;to the Northwest Territory,1Miller, Kelly,The Historic Background of the Negro Physician,99Monmouth, Negroes in the battle of,129Moore, Edwin, father of Maria Louise Moore,23Moore, Maria Louise, her struggles and triumphs,23Moral Religious Manumission Society of West Tennessee,145Moravians, in the mountains,134Morris, Robert, Jr., offered to aid Daniel Drayton,251Mountaineers,attitude of, toward slavery,147;their efforts to elevate the slaves,148,149,150;supported the Union,149,150;aided the Underground Railroad,146;attitude of, toward the American Colonization Society,146Mulatto corsair, a,397Mundin, William, declaration of,238Nantucket, anti-colonization meeting at,288Natchez, Negroes captured by,370National Council,299-300Neau, Elias,work of,356-358;supposed connection with Negro riot,357Negro,The, in American History, reviewed,94;Negro Culture in West Africa, reviewed,95;Negro Soldiers in the American Revolution,110;What the Negro was thinking in the Eighteenth Century,49Negroes,contribution of, to civilization,36;Notes on the Negroes of Guatemala in the Seventeenth Century,392Neill, Rev. Mr., preached to Negroes at Dover,355Neutrality in Kentucky,383,385;became dangerous policy,385;abandoned,389New Bedford, anti-colonization meeting at,293New England, work among Negroes of,359New Hampshire, the enlistment of Negroes in,120New Jersey, teaching Negroes in,355New York,the enlistment of Negroes in,120;instruction of Negroes in,356;anti-colonization meetings of,285,288,289Newman, Rev. Mr., worked among Negroes,353North Carolina, slavery in,142Northampton County, Virginia, records of black masters,237Ohio, Negroes owned land in,8-9;"Black Laws" of,4;Law of 1849,12;Negroes transplanted to,302;protest against,308;Negroes an issue in the Constitutional Convention of,4Ordinance of 1787, interpretation of,377"Othello," letters of, on slavery,49-60Otis, James, influence of, in the uplands,138Palomeque, a hard master,396Parham, William, a teacher of Negroes,19Park, Dr. R. E., review ofRace Orthodoxyof,439Patoulet, M., decision of,366Patterson, Senator, speech at Louis-Philippe celebration,245Payne, Daniel A., on colonization,296Pearl, The Fugitives of,246Pelhams moved to Detroit,26,29Pennington, J. W. C., opposed colonization,293People of Color in Louisiana,361Perier, Governor,fought Indians with Negroes368,369;tribute to NegroesPhiladelphia,anti-colonization meetings of,277,279;Convention of Free People of Color at,290,291Philanthropist, The, office of, destroyed,8Physicians, Negro, the number of,107Piatt, James W., efforts with Cincinnati mob,14Pittsburgh, anti-colonization meetings of,287,292Pittsylvania County, Virginia, Negroes from,4Point Bridge, Negro soldiers behaved well at battle of,129Political History of Slavery, The, by James Z. George, reviewed,340Political theories of Appalachian America, discussed,129Polk, invaded Kentucky,390Prejudice against the colored people in Cincinnati,12-13Presbyterians, anti-slavery, in Kentucky,143Pressly, J., a colored photographer,20Prince William County, Virginia, a Negro of, owned his family,241Professions, Negroes in,99-101Protests against African colonization,277-296Providence, anti-colonization meeting of,293Pugh, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in Pennsylvania,355Puritan, attitude of, toward Negro,359Purvis, Dr. Charles B., a Negro surgeon in the Civil War,107Quakers,interested in colonizing Negroes in the Northwest,3;work of, among Negroes of Appalachian America,133,134Quickly, Mary, owner of slaves,238Race Orthodoxy in the South, reviewed,447Racial characteristics on the frontier,135Racial elements in Appalachian America,133Radford, James, sold a Negro,238Radford, George, purchased a Negro woman,238Ramsey's estimate of Negroes lost to British,116Randolph, John, the slaves of, sent to Ohio,308,310,311,312Ransford, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in North Carolina,353Redpath, James, appointed commissioner of emigration of Haiti,300Richards, Adolph,came to Fredericksburg for his health,23;married Maria Louise Moore,23Richards, Fannie M.,studied in Toronto,30;taught in Detroit,31Richmond, meeting of, to denounce the American Colonization Society,277Rider, Sidney, opinion of the services of Negro troops,128Ripley, Dorothy, letters received,436Riots,in Cincinnati, in 1836,8;in 1841,13-16;in New York,357Robert, M., decision of, with reference to Negroes,366Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, "l'esclavage" of,430Rochester, anti-colonization meeting of,293Roman, C. V.,The American Civilizationof, reviewed,218Ross, Rev. G., commended Mr. Yeates for work among Negroes,354,355Rumford, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes,353Rush, Benjamin, talks with James Derham,103Rutledge, Governor, freed a slave for his valor in battle,129Ryall, Anne, teacher in Cincinnati,19
Abel, A. H. II,The Slaveholding Indiansof, reviewed,339African Mind, The,42Aftermath of the Civil War, The, reviewed,444Albany,a state convention of Colored people at,293;slavery at,400Allen, Richard, letter of,436American Colonization Society opposed by free Negroes,276American lady, an, on the treatment of slaves,400Anburey, travels through North America, quoted,407Anderson, Martha E., a teacher in Ohio,19Andrew, one of the first Negroes to teach in Charleston,352Angus, Judith, the will of,238Antar, the Arabian Negro Warrior, Poet and Hero,151Arming the slaves,urged in South Carolina,121;in Virginia,119;in Rhode Island,119;in Massachusetts,120;in New York,120Astor, John Jacob, grandson of, aided slaves to purchase freedom,252Attitude of the Free People of Color toward African Colonization,276Auchmutty, Rev. Mr., took up the work of Elias Neau,358Augusta, Dr. A. T.,studied medicine at Toronto,105;surgeon in the Civil War,107Augusta, Negroes at the siege of,117
Bacon, Rev. Thomas, favored the instruction of Negroes,350Ball, Thomas, a colored photographer,20Baltimore, George, on colonization,297Baltimore,meeting to protest against African colonization,279;another colonization meeting in 1831,238;a divided meeting,298;A Typical Colonization Meeting,318Bancroft, tribute to Negro troops,129"Baptists, Emancipating,"143Barclay, Rev. T., instructed Negroes at Albany,358Bartow, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes,355Beckett, Rev. Mr., instructed Negroes,355Beech, Rev. J., baptized Negroes,359Beecham, Mrs., teacher of Negroes in Fredericksburg,24Beecher, Henry Ward, aided slaves to purchase freedom,254Berea College in anti-slavery centre,149Bienville,exchanged Indians for Negroes,362;code of,365;Negro troops under,371Bigham, J. A., review of Du Bois'sThe Negro,217Birney, James G., editor ofThe Philanthropistdestroyed by mob,8Black and White in the Southern States, reviewed,437Black Laws of Ohio,2,3,4;repeal of16Black master, the existence of,235-236Blackburn, Miss Lucy, taught in Cincinnati,19Border States, position of, in 1861,371Boré, de Etienne,learned to granulate sugar,375;the effects of the discovery,375-376Boston, anti-colonization meetings at,284,292Bowen, Nathaniel, on colonization,298Boyd, Henry, a successful Negro business man prior to 1860,21Brawley, Benjamin,Lorenzo Dow,265Bray, Rev. Thomas, work of,among Negroes,353-354;"The Associates" of,354"Breckinridge Democrats," in control of Kentucky,379Breckinridge, John, views of,377,378,379Breacroft, Dr., appeal of, in behalf of the enlightenment of the Negroes,352Brissot de Warville, J. P., on the condition of the slaves,419Brooklyn, anti-colonization meeting of,285Brown County, Ohio, Negroes in,302Brown, William Wells, an occasional physician,106Bryan, Andrew, letters of,87Buckner, S. B., joined the Confederates,390
Calhoun, John C., refuted by Dr. James McCune Smith,104Casas, De las, on slavery,361-362Casey, Wm. R., a teacher,19Casor, John, a slave,234Cesar, cure of,101-102Channing, offered to aid the defense of Daniel Drayton,251Charleston, missionary efforts at,among Negroes,350-352;attitude of Negroes of, toward colonization,280-281Charlton, Rev. Mr., a teacher of Negroes in New York,358Chase, Salmon P., desired to aid Daniel Drayton,251Chastellux, Marquis de,his observations of Negro troops,128critical examination of the travels of,419Chatham, the attitude of the Negroes of, toward colonization,300Chickasaws, fought with Negroes in Louisiana,370Chouchas, fought with Negroes in Louisiana,369,370Choctaws, Negroes' troubles with, in Louisiana,371Cimarrones, in Guatemala,393-394Cincinnati,The Negroes of, Prior to 1861,1;Lane Seminary students opposed slavery,7-8,10-11,12;Negro churches of,11progress of the Negroes of,9,10,11,12,13;anti-colonization meetings of,289,293,294;Negroes excluded from public schools of,17-18Clark, F. B.,The Constitutional Doctrines of Justice Harlan,342Clark, Jonathan, letters of,79,82Clark, Peter H., a teacher in Ohio,19Clay, Henry, asked to head the anti-slavery societies of Kentucky,144Clayton, Powell,The Aftermath of the Civil Warof, reviewed,444Cleveland, anti-colonization meeting of,292Clinton, Sir Henry,appeal of, to Negroes,116proclamation of,116Code Noir, quoted,365Coffin, Joshua, aided fugitives to Northwest Territory,146Colgan, Rev. Mr., taught Negroes in New York,358Colonization, African,opposed,279;supported,280-282Color, People of, in Louisiana,362Colored Freemen as Slave Owners in Virginia,233Columbia, anti-colonization meeting of,287Columbus, Negroes of, opposed to colonization,292,293Conrad, Rufus, a preacher in Ohio,20Cook, Rev. Joseph, letter of,69Cooke, Stephen, letter of,77Cookes, moved from Fredericksburg to Detroit,26Cooper, Phil, chattel of his free wife,240Corbic, W. J., a teacher of Ohio,19Cornish, Samuel, opposed colonization,294Cornwallis, Ft., garrisoned by Negroes,117Corsair, a mulatto,397Creole, definition of,366-368Crittenden, John J.,advocated neutrality,383;letter of, to General Scott,387Crittenden, Thomas L., stood with the Union,391Cromwell, John W.,The Negro in American Historyof, reviewed,94Crozat, Anthony, traffic of, in slaves,362Crummell, Alexander, on colonization,296Cutler, Rev. Dr., admitted Negroes to his congregation at Boston,359
Dabney, Austin, remarkable soldier and man,129-131Dahomey, speech of the king of,65D'Alone, a supporter of Dr. Bray,353Davis, Garrett, letter of, to General MeClellan,381Davis, John, thoughts on slavery,434Dayton, meeting at, to promote colonization,298De Baptiste, Richard,attended school at Fredericksburg,22;moved to Detroit,22; a preacher,29Debern, Magdelaine, lawsuit of,366De Grasse, John V., student at Bowdoin,105Delany, M. R.,studied at Harvard,105;physician at Pittsburgh,106;news on African colonization,296;sent to Africa,300Depression of Louisiana,375-376.Derham, James, a Negro physician,103Detroit, attitude of,toward Negroes,27;the question of fugitives in,27;measures unfavorable to colored people,28;progress of the Negroes of,29Diggs, Judson, betrayed the fugitives of thePearl,247Don Quixote, quoted,43Dorsey, Thomas, opposed colonization,282Dotty, Duane, Miss Fannie M. Richards's first superintendent ofschools,31Douglass, Frederick,opposed to colonization,295;controversy of, with the National Council,300Dove, Dr., owner of James Derham,103Dow, Lorenzo,journeys of,266;writings of, discussed,271;attitude of, toward slavery,273Drayton, Daniel, in charge of thePearl,245Drummond, Henry, quoted,42Du Bois,The Negroof, reviewed,217Dunbar-Nelson, Alice,People of Color in Louisianaof,361Dunmore, Lord, issued proclamation of freedom to loyal Negroes,115Dyson, Walter,review of, of Ellis'sNegro Culture in West Africa,95;ofGouldtown,221
East, the attitude of, toward the West,119Edmondson children, the,243; family tree of,261Edmondson, Hamilton, sold in New Orleans,253Edmondson, Richard, heroic efforts of,248Edmondson, Samuel, married Delia Taylor,256Education of the Negroes in Cincinnati,6,10Education, The, of the Negro Prior to 1861, reviewed,96Edwards, Mrs., taught Negroes in South Carolina,350-351Effect of slaveholding in Louisiana,368Eighteenth Century Slaves as advertised by their Masters,163Ellis, Geo. W.,Negro Culture in West Africaof, reviewed,95Emancipating Baptists in Kentucky,143Emancipation, the, and the arming of slaves, urged,119English, Chester, sailor on thePearl,246Enlisting Negroes in the American Revolution,112,113,114;considered by a council of war,114;urged and allowed,117Ermana, a slave owned by her husband,241Erroneous opinions concerning the Negro,34Essadi Abdurrahman, a writer of the Sudan,41Essays on Negro slavery,49,54Established Church of England, the ministrations of,349Ethiopia, ruled Egypt,37Evans, M. S.,Black and White in Southern Statesof, reviewed,437
Fausett, Jessie, review of,of T. G. Steward'sHaitian Revolution,93;of A. H. Abel'sThe Slaveholding Indians,339Ferguson, Joseph, a physician,103Fleet, Dr., educated in Washington,105Fleetwood, Bishop, urged the proselyting of Negroes,350Foote, John P., his opinion of Negroes,19Foote, Senator, effect of the speech of, at the Louis-Phillipecelebration,245Foster, James, opposed to colonization,290Free Negroes,power of, to manumit limited,241-242;transplanted to free soil,302;litigation concerning, in Louisiana,368;aristocracy of,395Free Soilers attacked "Black Laws" of Ohio,16Freedman, a rich one of Guatemala,395Freedom in a Free State,311"Friends of Humanity" organized in Kentucky,144Frink, Rev. Mr., toiled among Negroes of Augusta,354Fugitives,going to the Northwest Territory,1;from British territory to Michigan,27Fugitives of the Pearl, The,243Fuller, Betsey, owned her husband,241
Gage, Thomas, quoted, on Negroes in Guatemala,392-398Gaines, John L., secured writ to obtain fund for colored schools,17Galvez, Governor of Louisiana, who employed Negro troops,374Garden, Commissary, opened a colored school in Charleston,352Garrison, Wm. L., effects of the radicalism of,146Gazzan, Dr. Joseph, teacher of M. R. Delany,106Gens de couleur libres,365-366George, James Z.,The. Political History of Slaveryof, reviewed,340Georgia,rise and progress of Negro Churches,69;Negroes with the British in,116,117;Reconstruction in Georgia, reviewed,343;missionary work in,354Germans,crowded the Negroes out in Cincinnati,5;in Appalachian America,133-134Gibson, Bishop, address of, in behalf of Negroes,352Giddings, Joshua, motion for an inquiry into the detention of fugitives,250-251Gilmore High School founded,19Goldsmith, Samuel, deposition of,234Gordon, Robert, a successful business man,21-22Gordon, Virginia Ann, daughter and heir of Robert Gordon,22Graydon, referred to Negro troops,129Greeks, acquainted with Ethiopia,39Greene, General, learned that the British would enlist Negroes,115Grimké, Thomas, letter of, referred to,281Gromes, Frank, purchased his relatives,239Guy, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in South Carolina,352
Haigue, Mrs., taught Negroes in South Carolina,351Haitian Revolution, The, reviewed,93Hale, Senator, offered resolutions concerning the fugitives of thePearl,251Hall, Rev. C., admitted Negroes to his church in North Carolina,353Hamilton, Alexander,urged the emancipation and arming of slaves,118;letter of, on conditions in South Carolina,121Hancock, John, member of the committee that opposed the enlistment ofNegroes,--Hanson, Roger W., went with the South,390Harlan, J. M.,Constitutional Doctrinesof, reviewed,342Harlan, Robert, once a man of considerable wealth,20Harris, Dr., opinion of, of Negro troops,128Harry, one of the first Negro teachers in America,352Hartford, anti-slavery meeting at,286Hartgrove, W. B.,The Negro Soldier in the American Revolutionof,110Hawkins, Peter, emancipated slaves,240Healing art among Negroes,101-102Henrico County, Virginia, records,237Henry, H. M.,Police Control of the Slave in South Carolinaof, reviewed,219Henry, Patrick, influence of, in the uplands,138Hildreth, Richard, offered Daniel Drayton aid,251Hill, James H., statement of,239Historic Background of the Negro Physician,99Holly, James Theodore, position on African colonization,300Honyman, Rev. Mr., had Negroes in his congregation,360Hopkins, Samuel, urged the emancipation and arming of slaves,118How the Public received the Journal of Negro History,225Howe, Samuel, offered aid to Daniel Drayton,251Hubbard, Dr., a friend of Negro education,107Huddlestone, Rev. Mr., a successor of Neau,358Humboldt, Alex. Von,Observations on Negroes,393Hunt, Rev. Mr., had a Negro under probation,352Huntsville, Alabama, Negroes of, for colonization,282Husting Court of Richmond, a lawsuit in, to obtain freedom,238
Iben Khaldun, a writer of Arabia, quoted,39Illinois, attitude of Negroes in, toward colonization,300Immigration of Negroes into Ohio,2,4; opposition to, aroused,4Impressions of an English traveler,404Indiana,Negroes took up land in,8;attitude of Negroes of, toward African colonization,300Insurrections in Louisiana,370,376Irish,crowded out the Negroes of Cincinnati,5;the Scotch-Irish in the West,133,135Iron first smelted by Negroes,36-37
Jackson, George W., manager of Robert Gordon's estate,22Jacob, R. T., offered resolutions for mediatorial neutrality,384Jefferson County, Ohio, free Negroes of,304Jefferson, Thomas, influence of, on frontier,138Jenny, Dr., worked among Negroes,355Johnson, Anthony, a Negro owning slaves,234-236Johnson, Jerome A., remembered Judson Diggs,247Johnson, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes at Stratford,359Jones, Absalom,letter of, --;mentioned by Dow,274;opposed colonization,277Jones, David A., deposition of,238-239Jones, S. Wesley, letter of, quoted,281
Kearsley, John, master of James Derham,103Kemps Landing, Negroes in battle of,115Kench, Thomas, wanted Negroes in separate regiments,120Kentucky,"Emancipating Baptists" of,143anti-slavery Presbyterians in,143neutrality of,383dangerous policy of,385Knight and Bell, Negro contractors in Cincinnati,20Kunst. J.,Notes on the Negroes in Guatemala in the SeventeenthCentury,392
Lannon, W. D., joined the Confederates,390Laurens, John, urged the arming of slaves,118Law, John, schemes of,362-363Lawrence County, Ohio, Negroes in,4,306Lawrence, Samuel, Negroes under, behaved well,112,113Lecky, tribute of, to Negro troops,129Lees, migrated to Detroit,24,26Leile, George, letters of,80,81,84Lemoyne, Dr. Francis J., teacher of M. R. Delany,106Letters on slavery by a Negro,60;letters showing the rise and progress of Negro Churches in Georgiaand the West Indies,69Lewiston, Pennsylvania, anti-colonization meeting of,287Liberia, the Republic of, discussed,313Lincoln, a desire of, for the support of Kentucky,377,384Lindsay, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in New Jersey,355Locke, Rev. Richard, baptized Negroes in Pennsylvania,355Longworth, Nicholas, aided colored schools of Cincinnati,19Louis-Philippe, the expulsion of, celebrated in Washington,244Louisiana,prostration of,374-375;relieved somewhat by Negro refugees,375Lowth, Bishop, urged the conversion of Negroes,350Lundy, Benjamin, work of, in Tennessee,145Lutherans, in the West,134Lyell, Sir Charles, on the Negroes of Cincinnati,18Lyme, anti-colonization meeting of,286
Madison, James, urged the emancipation and arming of slaves,118Magoffin, Governor, tried to aid the Secessionists in Kentucky,382Mann, Horace, offered to aid Daniel Drayton,251Manumission Society of Tennessee,145Marshall, Abraham, letters of,77,78,85Marshall, Humphrey, views of,377,384Maryland, the enlistment of Negroes in,120Maryville, Tennessee, favorable to Negroes,147-149Massachusetts, arming the slaves in,120May, Samuel, helped to furnish defense for Daniel Drayton,251McSparran, conducted a class of Negroes,359Mehlinger, Louis R.,The Attitude of the Free Negro toward African Colonizationof,276Mennonites in the West,134Mercer County, Ohio, Negroes in,9,306Middletown, anti-colonization meeting at,286Migration of Negroes,West Indian,370-371;to the Northwest Territory,1Miller, Kelly,The Historic Background of the Negro Physician,99Monmouth, Negroes in the battle of,129Moore, Edwin, father of Maria Louise Moore,23Moore, Maria Louise, her struggles and triumphs,23Moral Religious Manumission Society of West Tennessee,145Moravians, in the mountains,134Morris, Robert, Jr., offered to aid Daniel Drayton,251Mountaineers,attitude of, toward slavery,147;their efforts to elevate the slaves,148,149,150;supported the Union,149,150;aided the Underground Railroad,146;attitude of, toward the American Colonization Society,146Mulatto corsair, a,397Mundin, William, declaration of,238
Nantucket, anti-colonization meeting at,288Natchez, Negroes captured by,370National Council,299-300Neau, Elias,work of,356-358;supposed connection with Negro riot,357Negro,The, in American History, reviewed,94;Negro Culture in West Africa, reviewed,95;Negro Soldiers in the American Revolution,110;What the Negro was thinking in the Eighteenth Century,49Negroes,contribution of, to civilization,36;Notes on the Negroes of Guatemala in the Seventeenth Century,392Neill, Rev. Mr., preached to Negroes at Dover,355Neutrality in Kentucky,383,385;became dangerous policy,385;abandoned,389New Bedford, anti-colonization meeting at,293New England, work among Negroes of,359New Hampshire, the enlistment of Negroes in,120New Jersey, teaching Negroes in,355New York,the enlistment of Negroes in,120;instruction of Negroes in,356;anti-colonization meetings of,285,288,289Newman, Rev. Mr., worked among Negroes,353North Carolina, slavery in,142Northampton County, Virginia, records of black masters,237
Ohio, Negroes owned land in,8-9;"Black Laws" of,4;Law of 1849,12;Negroes transplanted to,302;protest against,308;Negroes an issue in the Constitutional Convention of,4Ordinance of 1787, interpretation of,377"Othello," letters of, on slavery,49-60Otis, James, influence of, in the uplands,138
Palomeque, a hard master,396Parham, William, a teacher of Negroes,19Park, Dr. R. E., review ofRace Orthodoxyof,439Patoulet, M., decision of,366Patterson, Senator, speech at Louis-Philippe celebration,245Payne, Daniel A., on colonization,296Pearl, The Fugitives of,246Pelhams moved to Detroit,26,29Pennington, J. W. C., opposed colonization,293People of Color in Louisiana,361Perier, Governor,fought Indians with Negroes368,369;tribute to NegroesPhiladelphia,anti-colonization meetings of,277,279;Convention of Free People of Color at,290,291Philanthropist, The, office of, destroyed,8Physicians, Negro, the number of,107Piatt, James W., efforts with Cincinnati mob,14Pittsburgh, anti-colonization meetings of,287,292Pittsylvania County, Virginia, Negroes from,4Point Bridge, Negro soldiers behaved well at battle of,129Political History of Slavery, The, by James Z. George, reviewed,340Political theories of Appalachian America, discussed,129Polk, invaded Kentucky,390Prejudice against the colored people in Cincinnati,12-13Presbyterians, anti-slavery, in Kentucky,143Pressly, J., a colored photographer,20Prince William County, Virginia, a Negro of, owned his family,241Professions, Negroes in,99-101Protests against African colonization,277-296Providence, anti-colonization meeting of,293Pugh, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in Pennsylvania,355Puritan, attitude of, toward Negro,359Purvis, Dr. Charles B., a Negro surgeon in the Civil War,107
Quakers,interested in colonizing Negroes in the Northwest,3;work of, among Negroes of Appalachian America,133,134Quickly, Mary, owner of slaves,238
Race Orthodoxy in the South, reviewed,447Racial characteristics on the frontier,135Racial elements in Appalachian America,133Radford, James, sold a Negro,238Radford, George, purchased a Negro woman,238Ramsey's estimate of Negroes lost to British,116Randolph, John, the slaves of, sent to Ohio,308,310,311,312Ransford, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in North Carolina,353Redpath, James, appointed commissioner of emigration of Haiti,300Richards, Adolph,came to Fredericksburg for his health,23;married Maria Louise Moore,23Richards, Fannie M.,studied in Toronto,30;taught in Detroit,31Richmond, meeting of, to denounce the American Colonization Society,277Rider, Sidney, opinion of the services of Negro troops,128Ripley, Dorothy, letters received,436Riots,in Cincinnati, in 1836,8;in 1841,13-16;in New York,357Robert, M., decision of, with reference to Negroes,366Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, "l'esclavage" of,430Rochester, anti-colonization meeting of,293Roman, C. V.,The American Civilizationof, reviewed,218Ross, Rev. G., commended Mr. Yeates for work among Negroes,354,355Rumford, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes,353Rush, Benjamin, talks with James Derham,103Rutledge, Governor, freed a slave for his valor in battle,129Ryall, Anne, teacher in Cincinnati,19