AA Negro Pioneer in the West,333-335Abram Hannibal, the Favorite of Peter the Great,359-366Africa and the Discovery of America, review of,233-238African Institution, the interest of, in colonization,168,169,170,178,182,200,204,215African Methodist Episcopal Church, organization of,303African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, the organization of,303African slave, the status of, in the colonies,250,251Alabama, the movement of Negroes to,367,370,373,379-381;Cotton culture in,372Allen, Philip, owner of land near Dartmouth,155Allen, Richard, the work of,51;anti-colonization meeting in church of,216Allen, William, interest of, in African colonization,174,182,186,189,195,200,201,205,206Alvord, J. W., Assistant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau,13American Catholic Historical Society, the prize offered by,351American Freedmen's Union Commission,16American Magazine, extract from,91-92American Missionary Association, the work of, in South Carolina,7,8,15,16,25,26Anderson, Joseph, of Montreal, purchase of a slave by,329Anderson, Lymus, a teacher of Negroes at Port Royal,38André, a Negro, suit of, for freedom,326,327Andrew, Governor, interest of, in Negro education,35Anna Murray-Douglass--My Mother As I Recall Her,93-101Antoine, C. C., sketch of, by W. O. Hart,84-87;how he made money,86Arkansas, cotton culture in,372Arnett, Bishop B. W., the statistics of A. M. E. Church by,310Arnold, Thomas, a friend of Paul Cuffe,184Arthur, Stanley Cisby, sketch of Isaiah T. Montgomery by,87-91Asbury, Bishop, organizer of a mixed Sunday school,302Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, proceedings ofthe Annual Meeting of,116-122;Spring Conference of,353-357Auger, Jean-Baptiste, a sale of a slave by,322Auguste, Tancrede, a ruler of Haiti,138Avery Institute, the establishment of,19BBa Mangwato, a native in South Africa,288Babcock, Colonel, effort of, to annex Santo Domingo,145Baganda, the morality of,286-287,288,289;art of,291Bailly, Augustin, a vendor of a slave,321Baltimore, Spring Conference in,353-357;Negroes in domestic service in,390;interest of, in training domestic workers,399Baptist Home Mission Society, the work of,26Baptists, the efforts of, among the freedmen,18Barahona, a plantation in Santo Domingo,139,140Barbadoes, the progress of,249Beaufort, South Carolina, Negro schools at,22,24,26Beauvais, reference to,286,289Bell, J. W., address of, at the annual meeting,117,122,123-127Benedict, Mrs., the gift of,26Benefit of clergy as applied to slaves,443-447Bent, reference to, and quotations from,288,292,293,294Betty, a Negro servant, one of the first Methodists,301Bickel, Beatrice, review ofDas Unbekannte Afrikaby,453-458Bigelow, A. M., a teacher of a Negro school at Aiken,31Biography, Negro, by P. W. L. Jones,128-133Biron, an enemy of Abram Hannibal in Russia,364Bishop, Josiah, a preacher in Virginia,51Blaney, Mary, the owner of a slave in Montreal,330Blyd, Cornelius Winst, the achievements of, in Dutch Guiana,448-453Bond, James, participation of, in the annual meeting,118Book of American Negro Poetry, The, review of,347-348Booker, S. S., participation of, in the Spring Conference of the Association in Baltimore,353Border States, the movement of Negroes from,367-383Bornu, the kings of,296;the rise of,297Boston Education Commission,6Boston, Negro servants in,260,261;Negroes in domestic service in,429Botume, Elizabeth Hyde, a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina,11Boutton, Louis Philippe, a sale of slaves by,322Bowles, Mrs. Emma Castleman, facts of, on the origin of Wilberforce,335-337Boyd, Wm. K.,Benefit of Clergy as applied to Slavesby,443-447Boyer, a ruler of Haiti,137Boy's Life of Booker T. Washington, A, review of,463-464Bragg, George F.,The History of the Afro-American Group of the Episcopal Churchby,107-109;remarks of,355-356Brass, a Negro held in Virginia,258-259,278British America, the status of the Negro in,276-277Breeding of slaves for market,374Brooks, John, the purchaser of a slave in Montreal,329Brooks, W. H., a prominent Negro minister,313Brown, George W., an instructor in history,115;Haiti and the United Statesby,134-152Brown, John, a vendor of a slave from Saratoga,327Brown, Moses, a friend of Paul Cuffe,184Brown, Thomas E., remarks of,356Brownell, David, the owner of land at Dartmouth,154Bryan, Andrew, a Negro preacher,50Bryan, Sampson, a preacher,50Bryan, William J., efforts of, to encroach upon Haiti,143Bryant, William Cullen, interest of, in freedom,7Buffum, a co-worker of Prudence Crandall,74Bulkley, Ichabod, an attorney against Prudence Crandall,78Bureau of Refugees, establishment of,3Bush, W. O., a Negro farmer of fame in the West,333Bush, George, a Negro pioneer in the West,333-335Butler, B. F., at Fortress Monroe,2-3Byrne, William, disposal of slaves by,329CCaesar, a slave sold in Montreal,327Campbell, William, the purchase of slaves by,328Came, Amable-Jean-Joseph, sale of a slave by,319Canada, slavery in,316-330Canal, a ruler of Haiti,137Canterbury, Connecticut, the people of, arrayed against Prudence Crandall,76-80Capers, Bishop, the missionary work of,303Carberry, Daniel, of Montreal, a purchaser of slaves,329Cardoza, F. L., an educator of Negroes in South Carolina,39Carter, Frank, a teacher of Negroes at Camden, S. C.,38Carter, E. A., participation of, in the annual meeting,116Cary, Lott, a missionary in Africa,304Castor, John, a slave owned by Anthony Johnson, a Negro,259,278Chaboille, Sir Charles, a purchaser of slaves,329Champlin, G. C., a supporter of Paul Cuffe,184Chavigny, Joseph, a vendor of slaves,322Channing, Walter, a supporter of Paul Cuffe,184Charleston, John, a Negro preacher,302Charleston, South Carolina, the Negro schools of,18,19,20,21,22-40Chase, Salmon P., interest of, in the freedmen,7Chêne, Mary Josephine, slaves of, by marriage,329Chicago, race commission of,112-114;Negroes in domestic service in,390,422Chicago Commission on Race Relations,The Negro in Chicagoby,112-114Christophe, a ruler of Haiti,136Cincinnati, the treatment of Negroes in,331-332Clair, Bishop Matthew W., recognition of, by Methodists,315Claflin University, the establishment of,26Clark, Peter H., quotation from,102-103Clarkson, Thomas, interest of, in colonization,168;efforts of,195Clifford, John R., the achievements of,338-341Coppin, Mrs. L. J., interest of, in training domestic workers,399Coggeshall, John, a supporter of Paul Cuffe,184Coker, Daniel, a friend of Paul Cuffe,185Collins, a friend of Paul Cuffe,185Colored Methodist Episcopal Church, the organization of,312Columbia, South Carolina, the Negro schools of,18,19,20,21Columbus, Christopher, the discoverer of Haiti and Santo Domingo,135Colvis, Joseph, the record of,132Comparative Study of the Bantu and Semi-Bantu Languages, A, by Sir Harry H. Johnston,241-242Caucasians in domestic service in the United States,386-387Concerning the Origin of Wilberforce,335-337Congregationalists, educational efforts of,15,16Connecticut, Negro servants in,265-266,280"Contraband of War," at Fortress Monroe,2-3Cooke, Edward, quotation from letter of Paul Cuffe to,221Cotterill, R. S., participation of, in the annual meeting,118Cotton, the rise of cotton culture,370-374;the price of,376-378;output of,377-378Cowan, Philip, petition of, for freedom,279Cox, a missionary to Africa,304Cramahé, Hector-Theophile, purchase of a slave by,323-324Crenshaw, David, a mixed Sunday School in the home of,302Croder, Josiah, a merchant connected with Paul Cuffe,203Cromwell, John W., letter of,338-341Cuffe, Paul, early life of,153-156;a sea captain,156-159;domestic affairs of,159-161;protest of, against taxation,162-166;a colonizationist,167-210;trip of, to England,174-181;life of, as a Quaker,188-194;death of,221-223;the will of,230-232Cuffe, John, a brother of Paul Cuffe,155;protest of, against taxation,162-166,188Cureux, Louis, purchaser of slaves,319Curry, Thomas, a purchaser of slaves in Montreal,327DDaggett, Judge, decision of, in the Prudence Crandall case,78-80Daguille, Jacques-François, a vendor of a slave,322Damien, Jacques, sale of a slave by,319Das Unbekannte Africa, review of,455-458Dassier, Estienne, sale of slave by,320Davis, T. R.,Negro Servitude in the United Statesby,247-283Davis, Jefferson, befriended by Isaiah T. Montgomery,87-91Dayly, Dennis, vendor of a slave,324Deane, Major E. L., work of, under the Freedmen's Bureau,13De Chalet, François, the hire of a slave by,323De Champigny, Intendant, proposal of,316De la Chevrotière, Joseph Chavigny, purchase of an Indian slave by,321Decline of border States,367-383De Grasse, John V., the example of,132De la Tesserie, Joseph, the sale of a Negro by,318Delaware, Lord, the orders of,267-268Delaware, the movement of Negroes from,367Delaware River, status of Negroes along,262,263Delzenne, Ignace-François, purchase of a slave by,320Denonville, Governor, proposal of,316Dessalines, the emperor of Haiti,136Detroit, Negroes in domestic service in,390,405Detweiler, Frederick G.,The Negro Press in the United Statesby,238-239De Vitre, Mathieu-Theodore, a purchaser of a slave,322Director of the Association, the annual report of,466-471Discovery of Gold in California, the result of,377Disfranchisement of Negro servants,272Disruption of Virginia, The, review of,239-241District of Columbia, the movement of the Negroes from,367;Negroes in domestic service in,390,392,393,394,395,400,401,402,403,404,407,408,409-413,414,415,419,425,426Dolgorukovs, friends of Abram Hannibal,363Dominican Republic, the history of,135-142Domingue, a ruler of Haiti,137Domestic service in the United States, Negroes in,384-442Douglass, Frederick, story related by,54;his wife,93-101;in Ireland,102-107Dregis, Emanuel, a Negro servant,260Dumoulin, François, of Montreal, a vendor of slaves,329Dunière, Louis, sale of slaves by,319,320Dutch frigate, slaves brought to Jamestown in,249Dutch law with regard to slavery,253EEdie, Colonel J. R., Assistant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau,13Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872,1-40Edwards, G. A., participation of, in the Spring Conference in Baltimore,354,355El Bekri, the author of Tarikh-es-Soudan,296Elizabeth, Empress, a friend of Abram Hannibal,364Elizabeth, Queen, the attitude of, toward slavery,251,256Elkonhead, Jane, the owner of Francis Pryne,259Ellsworth, W. W., an attorney for Prudence Crandall,78Ely, General, daughters of, teachers of Negroes,21Embury, Philip, a meeting of Methodists at the home of,301Employment agencies as they concern Negro domestic workers,436-440Ethics of Africans,286-290Evans, Henry, a pioneer preacher,51Evening Bulletin(Philadelphia), extract from,81-84FFarando, Bashasar, a Negro servant,260Fay, Thomas, inquiry of, into the affairs of Africa,207Featherstonhaugh, quotation from,375Fetishism, the religion of Africa,43-45Finley, Robert, the correspondence of, with Paul Cuffe,212-213,215Fisher, Miles Mark, an instructor at Virginia Union University,115Fisher, Samuel R., proposal of, to establish a Negro school,206Flora, a slave sold in Montreal,327Forten, Charlotte S., a teacher in South Carolina,10-11Forten, James, correspondence of, with Paul Cuffe,205-206,207;attitude of, on colonization,216,217Fouse, W. H., participation of, in the annual meeting,118,121Free Negroes in Baltimore,94Free Society of Traders, attitude of, toward freedom,263Free Will Baptists, educational efforts of, in South Carolina,15,16,18Freedmen's Bureau, the work of, in South Carolina,1-40Freedmen's Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, the schools of, in South Carolina,26Frederick Douglass in Ireland,102-107French Canada, slavery in,316-330Friends, the work of, among freedmen in South Carolina,27;interest of, in colonization,170,171Friendly Society of Sierra Leone, the efforts of,186,193,200,206Frobenius, Leo, reference to,286,287,295;Das Unbekannte Africaof,455-458Furley, Benjamin, opposition of, to slavery,263GGainesville, Georgia, occupations of, graduates of schools of,400Gannett, W. C., a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina,8Garneau, François-Xavier, quotations from,316,317Garrettson, Freeborn, attitude of, toward slavery,301Garrison, William Lloyd, interest of, in the freedmen,7;letter of Prudence Crandall to,72;letter of Frederick Douglass to,103-107Gautier, Pierre, purchase of a slave by,319Gay, Sydney Howard, in the home of Frederick Douglass,97Geaween, John, a Negro servant,260Geffrard, a ruler of Haiti,137Georgia, restriction upon slavery in,254-255;servants in,279,280;movement of Negroes from,363Germantown, Friends of, protest of, against slavery,263Ghana, the kings of,296;the rise of,296Gibbons, William, inquiry of, into the affairs of Sierra Leone,207-208"Gideonites," the efforts of,7Gifford, Enos, owner of land near Dartmouth,155Gifford, Isaac, quotation from letter of Paul Cuffe to,221-222Gilbert, a settler from Antigua,301Gloucester, Duke of, interest of, in colonization,169,195Goddard, Calvin, an attorney for Prudence Crandall,78Gold, the discovery of, in California, the effect of,377Grant, U. S., effort of, to annex Santo Domingo,145Guérin, Danielle Marie-Anne, vendor of a slave,319Guerrier, a ruler of Haiti,137Guillaume, a ruler of Haiti,138Gulf States, migration to,367-383Gummere, Amelia Mott,The Journal of John Woolmanby,349-350HHaiti, relations of, with the United States,134-152;the occupation of, by the United States,138;the commercial position of,148-150Haiti and the United States, by George W. Brown,134-152Hale, Edward Everett, interest of, in freedmen,7Hammond, Anna Eliza, a pupil of Prudence Crandall,76;the arrest of,76Hammond, L. H.,In the Vanguard of a Raceby,111-112Hammond, John, of Saratoga, the sale of a slave by,327-328Hancock, Gordon B.,Three Elements of African Cultureby,284-300Hannibal, Ivan, a son of Abram Hannibal,365Hannibal-Pushkin, Nadejda, the mother of Alexander Pushkin,365Hannibal, Ossip, a son of Abram Hannibal,365Harris, Sara, a pupil of Prudence Crandall,73Harris, William, quotation from letter of Paul Cuffe to,221Hart, W. O., sketch of C. C. Antoine by,84-87Hartford, interest of, in the training of domestic workers,399Hartzell, Bishop J. C.,Methodism and the Negro in the United Statesby,301-315Hawkins, Sir John, the trading of,251;argument of, in favor of slavery,255-256Hawkins, M. A., participation of, in the Spring Conference of the Association in Baltimore,353,354Hawkins, John R., address of, in Baltimore,353-354Hay-Pauncefote Treaty,145-146Haynes, Elizabeth Ross,Negroes in Domestic Service in the United Statesby,384-442Haynes, George E.,The Trend of the Racesby,109-111Health of Negro domestic workers,432-433Henrique y Carvajol, Frederico, nomination of,144Herard, a ruler of Haiti,137Hicks, Mrs. C. M., a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina,37Hicks, Jenkins, and Company, merchants connected with Paul Cuffe,203Higginson, T. W., quotations from,55,56,57Hill, L. P., address of, in Baltimore,356-357Hilton Head, capture of,4;educational efforts at,5Hippolyte, a ruler of Haiti,137Hipp, George, sale of a slave by,323History, the teaching of,123-127History of the Afro-American Group of the Episcopal Church, review of,107-109History of the United States since the Civil War, A, review of,458-461Hodge, LeRoy, a letter of,343-344Holly, Bishop Theodore, the lineage of,454Hopkins, Charles, a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina,37-38Hopkins, Samuel D., interest of, in colonization,168Hosier, Harry, a Negro preacher,49Howard, Horatio P., the death of,243;relation of, to Paul Cuffe,243;the will of,243Howard, O. O., the head of the Freedmen's Bureau,13Howard School, the establishment of,21Hume, Naethan, the owner of slaves in Montreal,330Hunter, General David, in command in South Carolina,8Hunter, William, a friend of Paul Cuffe,185Hurst, Bishop John, participation of, in the Spring Conference in Baltimore,356Hutchinson, Samuel, a friend of Paul Cuffe,184IImportation of slaves, restriction on,252-253,375Impostor posing as the relative of Paul Cuffe,208-210In the Vanguard of a Race, review of,111-112Indian slaves in Canada,320-323Indianapolis, occupations of graduates of schools of,400,401,405,434Ireland, Frederick Douglass in,102-107Isabella, the slave of Hector-Theophilie Cramahé, Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec,323,324,325Isthmian Canal, the seizure of,146;the completion of,146JJack, a pioneer Negro preacher,50-51Jackson, John H., the services of,132Jackson, L. P.,Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872by,1-40;an instructor at the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute,115Jackson, W. C.,A Boy's Life of Booker T. Washingtonby,463-464James, John, a friend of Paul Cuffe,184;inquiry of, into the condition of Sierra Leone,207James, L. S., address of, in Baltimore,355Jamestown, the introduction of slavery at,249Jessop, Joseph, visit to, by impostor,209Johnson, Anthony, a Negro owner of slaves,259,278Johnson, James Weldon,The Book of American Negro Poetryby,347-348Johnson, Richard, a Negro brought to Virginia,260Johnston, Sir Harry H.,A Comparative Studyof the Bantu and Semi-Bantu Languagesby,241-242Jones, Absalom, the opposition of, to colonization,219Jones, J. McHenry, the services of,132Jones, Laurence C.,Piney Woods and Its Storyby,346-347Jones, P. W. L., participation of, in the annual meeting,117;Negro Biographyby,128-133Jones, Bishop R. E., recognition of, by Methodists,315Jordan, L. G., participation of, in the annual meeting,117Journal of John Woolman, The, review of,349-350Judson, A. T., an opponent of Prudence Crandall,75,76,77,78KKeith, George, opposition of, to slavery,263Kentucky, Colonization Society of, the establishment of,211;the culture of tobacco in,368;breeding of slaves in,374Khama, an honest native of South Africa,288Kizell, John, a settler in Sierra Leone,193LLabart, Guillaume, a vendor of slaves,329Ladoga Canal Commission, Abram Hannibal a member of,364Lane College, the establishment of,312La Promenade, Paul, a purchaser of a slave in Montreal,328Larger Canal Zone, a reality,143,146,150,151,152Larned, E. D., quotation from, concerning Prudence Crandall,73Lecompte Cincinnatus, a ruler of Haiti,138Lee, Barnard K., a founder of a school for Negroes,8Legitime, a ruler of Haiti,137Lepage Louis, a slave in Quebec,322Le Pailleur, Charles, a purchaser of a slave in Montreal,327,329Levy, Gershon, owner of André, a Canadian slave,326Levy, Solomon, a purchaser of slaves,327Lewis, Edmonia, the achievements of,132Liberia, part played by Philadelphia in founding,81-84Lifland, Abram Hannibal in,364Light, George, an early owner of slaves in Virginia,279Living conditions of Negro domestic workers,428-429Locke, Perry, a minister going to Africa,198,201;interest of, in colonization,217London Freedmen's Aid Society,15,16Los Angeles, domestic workers in,435Louisiana, the movement of Negroes to,367,370,373,379,381;cotton culture in,372Louison, a slave in Canada,319Lucas, Charles, a slaveholder in Virginia,279Lucas, Sir Charles,The Partition of Africaby,461-463Lugard, Lady, quotation from,294-295,298-299,300Lurker, King, the grandson of,205
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L