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The story of the Negro,

the rise of the race from slavery,
  
 II. 
  
  
 II. 

expand sectionIII. 

  
INDEX

403

Page 403

INDEX

  • Abbott, Dr. A. R., coloured graduate
    Canadian University, II, 244.
  • Abolition, of slavery, in Canada, II,
    239; in New York, 313; effect of , on
    free coloured people, I, 200.
  • Acadians, in Louisiana, I, 122.
  • Adams, first slave on Calhoun plantation,
    I, 150.
  • Adams, Lewis, responsible for location
    of Tuskegee Institute, II, 28, 29;
    on extent to which slaves were educated
    in the trades, 63, 64.
  • Addison, Nancy, endows St. Francis
    Academy, Baltimore, II, 346.
  • Africa, Coloured Baptist Mission in, II,
    333; Ethiopian movement in, 334,
    335; mission of A. M. E. Church in,
    334; native method of smelting
    ores in, I, 32; slave trade in, 95;
    intermingling of races in, 22.
  • African Colony, Mobile, Ala., I, 103;
    visited by members of Alabama
    Coloured Medical Society, II, 138.
  • African, folk-tale of the origin of music,
    II, 259.
  • African Free Schools, New York, II,
    132.
  • African Law, I, 70–72.
  • African Literature, I, 72, 73.
  • African Kings, artistic sceptres, I, 47.
  • African Medicine, I, 67, 68.
  • African Methodist Episcopal Church,
    founded 1790, I, 255; first general
    conference of, Philadelphia, 1816,
    255.
  • African Methodist Episcopal Zion
    Church, started New York, 1800,
    I, 255, 256; founded 1820, 256;
    missionary of, to freedmen, II, 16,
    17.
  • African Natives, at Tuskegee, I, 39.
  • African Native Markets, I, 49, 50.
  • African Natives, skill in hand-crafts of,
    I, 46–49.
  • African Religion, I, 65.
  • African Story Tellers, I, 72.
  • African Students, at Oxford, Eng.,
    II, 285.
  • African Union Methodist Protestant
    Church, II, 345.
  • African Women, distrust white man's
    civilisation, I, 61.
  • Afro-American Presbyterian Church,
    see Presbyterian Church.
  • Agriculture, need of better in South
    emphasised by former slave, I, 308.
  • Agriculture, number of Negroes
    engaged in, II, 67, 68.
  • Aimes, H. H. S., slavery in Cuba, I, 120.
  • Alabama, Negro first settler in, II,
    385; number of Negro banks in,
    211; State Association of Coloured
    Physicians of, 175.
  • Albany, O., Station of Underground
    Railway in, II, 197.
  • Alarcon, Hernando de, Negro slave of,
    in 1540 carries message from Rio
    Grande to New Mexico, II, 385.
  • Aldridge, Ira, famous coloured actor,
    I, 294; II, 282.
  • Allen, Bishop Richard, founder of
    Free African Society, I, 253–255;
    founder and first bishop of the
    A. M. E. Church, 252–255; Abolitionist,
    288; Associated with Lundy
    in Haitian colonisation movement,
    II, 237, 332.
  • Allen, Macon B., first coloured attorney
    in the United States, II, 185.
  • Allen, William G., editor National
    Watchman, coloured anti-slavery
    newspaper, I, 294.

  • 404

    Page 404
  • Alexander, Archibald, influence of, on
    Jack of Virginia, I, 267.
  • Alienated American, The, ante-bellum
    coloured newspaper, I, 295.
  • Aloyons, Sister, convent name of Maria
    Becraft, II, 136.
  • American Board, see American Missionary
    Association.
  • American Missionary Association, work
    among Negroes, I, 276; Freedmen's
    Board of, II, 345.
  • American Mount Coffee School Association,
    II, 329.
  • American Music, slave songs, the only,
    II, 264.
  • American Negro, interest in Africa, I,
    34; influence of, on African people,
    I, 35; so-called savage instincts of,
    I, 180.
  • Ames, General Adelbert, appoints
    Negro alderman, Natchez, Miss.,
    1866, II, 11.
  • Anderson, Charles W., United States
    Internal Revenue Collector, I, 93.
  • Anderson, Osborne, Negro companion
    of John Brown at Harper's Ferry, I,
    175, 177.
  • Andrew, Bishop James Osgood, M.
    E. Church South, referred to, I,
    258.
  • Andrews, Gov. John A., of Massachusetts,
    organises regiments of coloured
    troops, I, 323; friend of George T.
    Downing, II, 196.
  • Anthony, Mrs. Libbie C., officer
    National Federation of Coloured
    Women's Clubs, II, 329.
  • Anti-slavery Convention, first American,
    only coloured man to sign
    declarations of, I, 284.
  • Anti-slavery Convention, World's, in
    England, 1846, attended by Negroes,
    I, 283.
  • Anti-slavery, in Ohio and New England
    compared, I, 239.
  • Anti-slavery Society, coloured lecturer
    of, I, 307; fugitive slave shipped to,
    217, 218; of Canada, report on
    refugee slaves, II, 243, 244; rooms
    of in Philadelphia, I, 215.
  • Arab Merchants, at Kano,
    I, 22.
  • Arkansas, number of Negro banks
    in, II, 211.
  • Armstrong, Samuel Chapman, experiment
    with Indian boys, I, 125.
  • Arnett, Bishop Benjamin W., first
    coloured man to represent a white
    constituency in the Legislature, I,
    238.
  • Artis, Matthew, Grand Army Post
    named in honour of, I, 248.
  • Asbury, Bishop Francis, estimate of
    Harry Hosier, I, 258.
  • Ashanti people, skilled in hand-crafts,
    I, 46.
  • Ashmun, Jehudi, leading spirit in
    foundation of Liberia, II, 235.
  • Askia, Mohammed, African ruler, I,
    55, 56.
  • Assaults on women, see Rape.
  • Athens, O., station of Underground
    Railway, II, 197.
  • Atkins, S. G., founds coloured normal
    school at Winston-Salem, II, 252;
    president of a realty company, 254.
  • Atlanta Exposition, first meeting of
    coloured doctors at, 1895, II, 180.
  • Atlanta Riot, some results of, II, 107.
  • Atlanta University, founded Atlanta,
    1867, II, 140.
  • Attucks, Crispus, in Boston Massacre,
    I, 132.
  • Attwell, Mrs. Cordelia A. Jennings,
    first coloured public school-teacher
    in Philadelphia, II, 305–308.
  • Attwell, Ernest T., son of Rev. Joseph
    S., Business Agent, Tuskegee Institute,
    II, 307.
  • Attwell, Rev. Joseph S., coloured
    Episcopal minister, II, 306, 307.
  • Attwood, L. K., coloured banker, Jackson,
    Miss., II, 207, 208.
  • Augusta, Dr. Alexander T., coloured
    army surgeon, I, 326.
  • Augusta, Ga., Lucy C. Laney, school
    in, II, 308.
  • Avery Institute, ante-bellum coloured
    school at Pittsburg, Pa., I, 295.
  • Avery, Negro insurance company,
    Philadelphia, II, 156.
  • Avery, Elroy McKendree, on government
    expenditures for Indians, I, 137.

  • 405

    Page 405
  • Avis, Captain John, jailer of John
    Brown, I, 175.
  • Ayllon, Vasquez de, Spanish explorer,
    Negro accompanies, I, 88, 89; constructs
    first ship on Atlantic Coast
    of North America with Negro labour,
    II, 384.
  • Bacon, Rev. Thomas, establishes 1750
    mission for poor white and Negro
    children, II, 121.
  • Baganda, casuistic Christians, I, 28;
    of Uganda, 28.
  • Bahima, related to ancient Egyptians,
    I, 28.
  • Baker, Ray Stannard, statement of, in
    regard to Negro progress, II, 398.
  • Balboa, Vasco, Nunez de, Negro companions
    of, I, 87; finds race of black
    men in Darian Districts, South
    America, II, 384.
  • Baldwin, Maria L., coloured principal
    of white school, Cambridge, Mass.,
    II, 309, 310.
  • Ball, J. P., adopts Ella Sheppard, gives
    her musical education, II, 268.
  • Ballagh, James, on white servitude in
    Virginia, I, 110, 111; quoted on rights
    of Negroes and Indians to hold white
    servants, 115; on Jack of Virginia,
    267, 268.
  • Ballot, coloured delegation calls on
    President Andrew Johnson in regard
    to, II, 18; right of Negroes to, in
    Ohio, 134; restrictions upon, 370.
  • Ballot, see Politics.
  • Ballou, Hosea, coloured minister
    preaches famous sermon in opposition
    to Universalist teachings of,
    II, 390.
  • Baltimore, coloured secret orders of,
    II, 153, 154; homes of Negroes in,
    254, 257; coloured high school of,
    363; coloured ministers' association
    of, 366; coloured Law and Order
    League of, 358, 368, 369.
  • Baltimore Sun, comment on the work
    of Coloured Law and Order League,
    II, 364–368.
  • Bancroft, George, Historian, on religious
    and race prejudice in the colonies,
    I, 90; on population of Negroes at
    time of New York "Negro Plot,"
    94; on white servitude, 108–110.
  • Banks, Charles, Negro banker, Mound
    Bayou, Miss., I, 24; referred to, II,
    373.
  • Banks, deposits of Negroes in, Jackson,
    Miss., II, 205.
  • Banks, General Nathaniel P., commands
    coloured troops, I, 327; reconstruction
    work in department
    of, II, 9.
  • Banneker, Benjamin, assists in laying
    out District of Columbia, II, 60;
    achievements of, 60-62; tribute of
    Thomas Jefferson to, 62.
  • Bantus, of South Africa, legion of,
    II, 259.
  • Baptist Church, in relation to slaves,
    I, 261, 262.
  • Baptist Home Mission Society, educational
    work of, supported by Negroes,
    II, 341.
  • Baptists, coloured, start school in Boston,
    1806, II, 134; schools supported
    by, 339; established publishing house
    in Nashville, 1896, 340.
  • Barbary pirates, sufferings of white
    slaves among, arouses sympathy for
    Negro slaves, I, 280, 281.
  • Barbers, society of coloured in Baltimore,
    II, 154.
  • Barrows, John, of Nashville, Tenn.,
    referred to, II, 347.
  • Barth, Henry, travels of in North Central
    Africa, I, 22; descriptions of
    Kano, 53–56.
  • Bassett, Ebenezer D., principal of
    Institute of Coloured Youth, Philadelphia,
    II, 132.
  • Bassett, John Spencer, on displacement
    of white servitude by Negro slavery,
    I, 113; on right to enslave Negroes,
    114, 115; on relations of master and
    slave, 148, 149; on free Negro in
    North Carolina, 201–203; on foundation
    of First Methodist Church in
    Fayetteville, N. C., 260; on social
    equality, 275; sketches life of Lunsford
    Lane, free Negro of North
    Carolina, 296–309.

  • 406

    Page 406
  • Battle, C. C., aids Lunsford Lane to
    avoid disabilities of free Negroes,
    I, 300, 301.
  • Beaufort, Negro regiment organised in,
    I, 322; state convention in, "without
    distinction of colour," II, 14.
  • Becraft, Maria, principal first seminary
    for coloured girls in Washington,
    D.C., II, 135, 136.
  • Bedford, Mrs. Lucinda, of Nashville,
    Tenn., referred to, II, 347.
  • Belgarnie, Mrs. Florence, letter to, concerning
    Negro women causes organisation
    of National Federation of
    Coloured Women's Clubs, II, 329.
  • Bell, George, one of three coloured
    men to build first schoolhouse for coloured
    pupils in District of Columbia,
    II, 134.
  • Bell, Philip A., early Negro editor, I,
    293.
  • Benedict, The Moor, Saint, son of a
    slave woman, I, 271.
  • Benezet, Anthony, abolitionist, starts
    evening school for Negroes, Philadelphia,
    1750, II, 131; teacher of
    James Forten, I, 288.
  • Benford, Charles, held in trust as a
    slave by a free Negro, I, 206.
  • Benin, bronze castings, of I, 47.
  • Benson, John J., successful Negro
    farmer, II, 53.
  • Benson, William E., son of John J.,
    II, 53.
  • Berea College, founded 1856, II, 140;
    exclusion of Negroes from, 347, 348.
  • Berean Building and Loan Association,
    II, 257.
  • Berean Educational Conference, II,
    349.
  • Berean Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia,
    social work of, II, 349.
  • Berean Seaside Conference, II, 349.
  • Berean Seaside Home, Asbury Park,
    II, 349.
  • Berean Trades' Association of Philadelphia,
    II, 349.
  • Bermudas, Indians sold as slaves to,
    I, 130.
  • Berry, E. C, successful coloured hotel
    keeper, II, 197, 198.
  • Bethune, Thomas Greene, blind Tom,
    musical prodigy, sketch of, II, 271–
    276.
  • Beverly, Robert, slave of a corporation,
    II, 60.
  • Bibb, Henry, fugitive slave, forms organisation
    to purchase home for fugitive
    slaves in Canada, II, 242.
  • Bible, one book slaves knew, II, 3;
    desire to read, among Negroes, 125;
    Negro slaves interpretation of, 261.
  • Biddle Alley, coloured quarter, Baltimore,
    Md., II, 360.
  • Biddle University, Charleston, N. C.,
    1867, II, 140.
  • "Big House," the centre of slaves'
    world, I, 8.
  • Binga, Jesse, coloured banker in
    Chicago, II, 223.
  • Birmingham, Ala., Negroes employed
    in and near, II, 225.
  • Birney, James G., takes slaves North
    to freedom, I, 146, 240.
  • Black Code, in Ohio, Illinois and
    Indiana, II, 19.
  • Black Patti, see Madam Sissieretta
    Jones.
  • Black Swan, see Elizabeth Taylor
    Greenfield.
  • Blair, Henry, first Negro inventor, II,
    77.
  • "Blind Tom," story of, II, 271–276.
  • Blue, Thomas F., librarian coloured
    library, Louisville, Ky., II, 354.
  • Boaz, Dr. Franz, art of smelting ores
    by Africans, I, 32; on race prejudice,
    42, 43; on artistic industries
    of Africa, 47; on agriculture of
    Africans, 50; on native African
    culture, 58, 59; on African law,
    71; on character of African states,
    74, 75.
  • Bode, Louis, endows St. Francis Academy,
    Baltimore, II, 346.
  • Boley, Negro town in Oklohoma, II,
    248–251.
  • Bond, Rev. James, coloured trustee
    of Berea College, II, 348.
  • Bond Servants, first sent out by London
    Company, I, 110; number
    imported to Virginia, 112.

  • 407

    Page 407
  • Bonsal, Stephen, account of Twenty-fourth
    Regiment coloured regulars
    at Siboney, Cuba, II, 391.
  • Boston, Mass., separate schools for
    Negroes in, II, 134.
  • Boston Slave Market, Phillis Wheatley,
    purchased in, II, 286.
  • Boyd, Rev. R. H., founder National
    Baptist Publishing Co., II, 340.
  • Boyd, Robert Fulton, coloured physician
    and surgeon, II, 175; aids in establishing
    coloured National Medical
    Association, II, 180.
  • Bower, Charity, fortunes and vicissitudes
    of slave life illustrated by, I,
    167–169.
  • Bowler, Jack, leader of slave insurrection,
    Virginia, 1800, I, 172, 173.
  • Boylan, William, friend of Lunsford
    Lane, I, 305.
  • Bradley, James, former slave testifies
    in Lane Seminary debate on slavery,
    I, 290.
  • Bragg, Fellow, free Negro, North Carolina,
    I, 202.
  • Braithwaite, William Stanley, coloured
    poet, II, 289.
  • Brandt, Captain, Indian, holder of
    Negro slaves, II, 239.
  • "Brierfield," plantation of Jefferson
    Davis, I, 153, 156.
  • Bristol, Eng., former stronghold of
    white slave trade, I, 111.
  • Brodie, John, referred to, II, 175.
  • Brooks, R. B., director of coloured
    bank, II, 223.
  • Brothers of Friendship, Negro secret
    order, property owned by, II, 156.
  • Brown, Andrew Jackson, vice-president
    coloured bank, II, 254.
  • Brown, Dr. Arthur M., conductor of
    coloured infirmary, II, 172.
  • "Brown Fellowship Society," organisation
    of Free Negroes of Charleston,
    S. C., I, 210, 211.
  • Brown, Henry Box, remarkable escape
    from slavery, I, 217, 218, 282.
  • Brown, Henry E., first coloured Y. M.
    C. A. secretary, II, 352.
  • Brown, John, Negroes with at Harper's
    Ferry, I, 175; rescue of Missouri
    slaves, 286; bust of, by coloured
    sculptress, II, 293.
  • Brown, J. C., free Negro, organises a
    society for colonisation in Canada,
    I, 226.
  • Brown, John M., one of delegation to
    President Johnson in interests of
    Negro citizenship, II, 18.
  • Brown, William Wells, agent Underground
    Railway, I, 282; sketch of
    282, 283; assists in raising coloured
    troops, 323; Negro anti-slavery agitator,
    II, 83.
  • Browne, Hugh M., principal Institute
    for Coloured Youth, Cheney, Pa.,
    II, 305.
  • Browne, Rev. William Washington,
    founder True Reformers, I, 24, II,
    163; organises True Reformers'
    Bank, 216; referred to, 226.
  • Bruce, Blanche K., political leader of
    Reconstruction period, II, 23; sketch
    of, 23, 24.
  • Bruce, Roscoe Conklin, son of Blanche
    K., II, 24.
  • Bryan, Andrew, founder of Negro
    Baptist church, Savannah, I, 265,
    266.
  • Buffaloes, Benevolent Order of, coloured,
    II, 148.
  • Bugg, Dr. J. H., director coloured
    bank, Savannah, II, 223.
  • Bukerè', Doalu, inventor of Vei alphabet,
    I, 72, and footnote.
  • Bunker Hill, Negroes in battle of, I,
    310, 314; in Trumbull's painting,
    314.
  • Burleigh, Harry T., coloured concert
    singer, II, 281.
  • Burrell, W. P., account of founding
    of True Reformers' Bank, II, 215,
    216.
  • Burroughs, George L., agent Underground
    Railway, I, 286.
  • Burwell, Dr, L. L., conductor of coloured
    infirmary, II, 172.
  • Bush, John E., founder with Chester
    W. Keats, of the Mosaic Templars
    of America, II, 162.
  • Bushman, a student at Tuskegee, I,
    25; colour of, 23, 24.

  • 408

    Page 408
  • Bushmen, not black, I, 18; low
    estimate of by other African peoples,
    19; not Negroes; 25, 26.
  • Business League, National Negro,
    meetings of in Boston and in New
    York, II, 229.
  • Butler, Gen. Benjamin Franklin, organises
    first coloured regiment, New
    Orleans, I, 321, 322; receives General
    Weitzel's letter objecting to
    Negro troops, 331; issues first proclamation
    of emancipation, II, 6;
    in New Orleans, 8, 9.
  • Buxton, Ia., work of coloured Y. M.
    C. A. in, II, 352.
  • Buxton, Ontario, Canada, settled by
    freedmen from Louisiana, II, 241,
    242.
  • Buxton, Thomas Foxwell, refugee
    colony in Canada named after, II,
    241.
  • Cable, George W., account of white
    woman sold as slave from Louisiana,
    I, 122; on Creole slave songs, II, 276.
  • Cain, Bishop Richard H., runs Reconstruction
    newspaper, II, 24; coloured
    congressman, 25.
  • Calhoun, Patrick, father of John C.,
    becomes a slave-owner, I, 149, 150.
  • Calhoun, John C., early life on plantation,
    I, 149–152; impression of
    speeches on Lunsford Lane, I, 296.
  • Calvin, Louis, coloured minister saves
    white men from execution for death
    of, II, 389.
  • Calvin Township, Cass County, Mich.,
    settled by Saunders' Freedmen, I,
    246; condition of coloured settlers of,
    246–249.
  • Cambridge, Mass., coloured woman
    principal of school in, II, 309.
  • Campbell, Bishop Jabez B., referred
    to, II, 347.
  • Canaan, New Hampshire, seat of Noyes
    Academy for Negroes, II, 130.
  • Canada, settlements of fugitive slaves in,
    I, 227; refuge for freedmen in, II,
    238; becomes known as free soil to
    slaves, 239, 240.
  • Cape Palmas, referred to, I, 273.
  • Cape to Cairo Railway, constructed
    by native African labour, I, 30.
  • Carib Indians, enslavement of, I, 129.
  • Cary, Lott, extraordinary history of,
    II, 234–236; first Negro missionary
    to Liberia, 333; referred to, 343.
  • Carney, Sergt. William H., sketch of,
    I, 328–330.
  • Carr, J. S., referred to, II, 37.
  • Carroll, Henry King, church statistics
    of, I, 276, 277.
  • Carroll, Richard, on personal relations
    of whites and Negroes, II, 36, 37.
  • Carter, Granville, successful coloured
    book dealer, Greenville, Miss., II,
    202, 203.
  • Carter, John, provides for emancipated
    slaves, I, 197.
  • Cass County, Mich., settled by freedmen
    and fugitive slaves, I, 245.
  • Caste System, growth of in United
    States, I, 199.
  • Cate, Isaac, retired capitalist, Baltimore,
    supports work of Coloured
    Law and Order League, II, 362.
  • Catholic, classed with Indians and
    Negroes, I, 91.
  • Catholic Church, schools conducted by,
    I, 271, 272; II, 346.
  • Catto, Octavius V., coloured schoolmaster
    killed in Philadelphia riot,
    II, 306.
  • Century Magazine, article of, on Negro
    homes, quoted, II, 255; poem by
    James W. Johnson, quoted from,
    265.
  • Chain-gang, Negro children in, II, 110.
  • Chambersburg, Frederick Douglass's
    last interview with John Brown at,
    I, 176.
  • Charles, John, early Negro preacher in
    North Carolina, I, 260.
  • Charleston, Indian slaves bought and
    sold in, I, 129; colony of "free persons
    of colour in," 205; Negro population
    of in 1860, 206; Negro
    crime in, II, 86; clandestine schools
    in, 123.
  • Chatham Convention, I, 287.
  • Chatelain, Heli, African folk tales collected
    by, I, 73.

  • 409

    Page 409
  • Chavis, John, first Negro educated
    at Princeton, I, 274; school for
    whites of, in North Carolina, 274,
    275.
  • Cheatham, H. P., coloured congressman,
    II, 25.
  • Cherokees, Indian slave-owners of
    Georgia, I, 133.
  • Chesnutt, Charles W., coloured novelist,
    I, 203; descended from free
    Negroes of North Carolina, II, 289,
    290.
  • Chew, Benjamin, master of Richard
    Alien, I, 253.
  • Cheyney, Pa., industrial school for
    Negroes in, II, 132.
  • Chicago, Negro crime in, II, 86; Provident
    Hospital, coloured, in, II,
    174.
  • Chickasaws, conspiracy of with slaves
    of New Orleans, I, 133.
  • Chretien, Paul, wealthy Creole Negro,
    I, 208.
  • Christianity, relation of to slavery, I,
    115, 116, 238.
  • Christian League, organisation of by
    ex-Gov. Northen, II, 107, 108.
  • Christmas in Virginia, II, 57.
  • Church, Negro, the richest, in United
    States, 307.
  • Church Institute, for Negroes, of Protestant
    Episcopal Church, II, 345.
  • Churches, Negro, amounts collected
    annually by, for education, 342,
    343.
  • Churchill, Winston, the Kingdom of
    Uganda, described by, I, 76, 77.
  • Cincinnati, Negro refugees in, I, 227;
    Negro crime in, II, 86; High School
    for Negroes in, 133.
  • Civic League, organisation of in Altanta
    II, 107, 108.
  • Claflin University, Orangeburg, S. C.,
    II, 140.
  • Clark, Col. Elijah, referred to, I,
    316.
  • Clark, William, accompanied by Negro
    servant in exploration of Oregon
    Country, II, 385.
  • Clay, Cassius M., publishes anti-slavery
    paper in Kentucky, I, 193.
  • Cleopatra, death of, represented by
    coloured sculptress, II, 293.
  • Cleveland, President Grover, effect of
    appointment on a Negro politician,
    II, 208.
  • Clinton, Bishop George W., reminiscences
    of Reconstruction, II, 38, 39.
  • Clinton, Bishop I. C., spiritual adviser
    of former masses, II, 39.
  • Clinton, Sir Henry, invites Negro to
    enlist in King's Army, I, 319.
  • Coffin, Levi, Quaker, abolitionist,
    President Underground Railway, I,
    240.
  • Coke, Bishop Thomas, Negro companion
    of, I, 257.
  • Cole, Bob, Negro comedian, II, 281.
  • Coleman, organiser of coloured cotton-mill
    company, II, 76, 77.
  • Coleridge-Taylor, S., Negro composer,
    I, 13.
  • Colleges, for Negroes, II, 140.
  • Collins, Captain Jack, free Negro, I, 209.
  • Collins, Winfield N., on domestic slave
    trade, I, 96, 98; on kidnapping
    free Negroes, I, 196, 197.
  • Colonisation, African, interest of Virginia
    Negroes in, II, 235.
  • Colonisation, see Liberia.
  • Colour line, difficulty of defining, I, 21;
    II, 393, 394.
  • Coloured American, Ante-bellum coloured
    newspaper, I, 293.
  • Coloured Citizen, Ante-bellum newspaper,
    I, 204.
  • Coloured Conservators, meets at Nashville,
    Tenn., adopts resolutions, II,
    15, 16.
  • Coloured High School, record of the
    Baltimore, II, 363.
  • Coloured Library, of Louisville, Ky.,
    promoted by coloured Y. M. C. A.,
    II, 354.
  • Coloured Methodist Church organised,
    1866, I, 256; schools supported by,
    II, 344.
  • Coloured Methodists, of Mississippi,
    money raised by, for support of
    schools, II, 345.
  • Coloured Patriots of the Revolution,
    the, I, 310.

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    Page 410
  • Coloured Women's Clubs, national conference
    of in Boston, 1895, II, 329;
    names of, 326; first officers of, 329;
    work of the state federations of, 330.
  • Coloured Women, see Women, Negro.
  • Colquhoun, Archibald, desire of Africans
    for education, referred to, I,
    80, 81.
  • Columbia Heights, coloured suburb
    of Winston-Salem, N. C., II, 254.
  • Columbia University, New York, Zulu
    takes oratorical honors at, II, 285.
  • Columbian Orator, The, Frederick
    Douglass, gets first notion of freedom
    from, I, 184.
  • Concklin, Seth, loses life in attempt to
    rescue slave family, I, 221.
  • Congregational Churches, coloured, in
    South, I, 276; First, of Atlanta, II,
    107.
  • Connecticut, rights of Free Negroes in,
    I, 199.
  • Continental Army, number of Negroes
    on rolls of, I, 312.
  • "Contraband of War," effect of phrase
    on condition of slaves, II, 6.
  • Convention, Coloured, South Carolina,
    1865, II, 14, 15; national, at Syracuse,
    1864, 17; at Poughkeepsie,
    N.Y., 1863, 17; at Philadelphia, 1831,
    17; constitutional of 1867, 18.
  • Convict Lease System, effect of, in
    Georgia, II, 100, 101.
  • Cook, Elijah, successful undertaker,
    coloured, II, 200.
  • Cook, George F. T., takes up work of
    father, John F., II, 135.
  • Cook, John F., coloured teacher in
    District of Columbia, II, 135; member
    of delegation which urged President
    Johnson to grant Negroes
    citizenship, II, 18.
  • Coon, Charles L., superintendent of
    schools, Wilson, N. C., on the cost
    of public schools in the South for
    Negroes, II, 143–146.
  • Copeland, John A., Negro companion
    of John Brown at Harper's Ferry,
    I, 175, 176.
  • Coppin, Mrs, Fanny Jackson, coloured
    teacher, II, 305.
  • Coppin, Bishop Levi J., referred to
    II, 305.
  • Corn Shucking Bees, I, 159, 160.
  • Cornish, Rev. Samuel, helps starts
    first Negro newspaper, I, 292; financial
    agent for coloured industrial
    school, 1831, II, 129, 130.
  • Cornwallis, Lord Charles, invites
    Negroes to join King's army, I, 319.
  • Coronado, Francisco Vasquez de, Spanish
    explorer, Negroes accompany,
    I, 88.
  • Cortez, Fernando, Negro slaves accompany
    to Mexico, II, 384.
  • Costin, Louisa Park, coloured teacher,
    Washington, D. C., II, 135, 305.
  • Costin, Martha, Educational worker
    in Washington, D. C., II, 305.
  • Costin, William, Washington, D. C.,
    II, 135.
  • Cottin gin, effect of invention of, on
    slave labour, II, 122.
  • Cotton growing, in Africa, Tuskegee
    students as teachers of, I, 37, 38.
  • Cottrell, Bishop Elias, founder of Mississippi
    Theological and Industrial
    College, II, 344, 345.
  • Country Week Society, Boston, Mass.,
    coloured woman a member of, II,
    327.
  • Covent Garden, London, Eng., first
    appearance of Negro actor in, II,
    282.
  • Covington, Ga., Dinah Pace's school
    in, II, 309.
  • Craft, Ellen, remarkable escape of
    from slavery, I, 227–229.
  • Craft, Henry K., grandson of William
    and Ellen, I, 231.
  • Craft, William, remarkable escape
    from slavery of, I, 227–229; attempt
    to kidnap, 230; later history of, 231.
  • Crandall, Prudence, prosecution for
    conducting Negro school, Canterbury,
    Conn., I, 200, II, 129.
  • Creole slave songs, described by
    George W. Cable, II, 276.
  • Creeks, Indian slave owners of Alabama,
    I, 133.
  • Crime, Negro statistics of, II, 85; maximum
    rate of, 87; in Northern and

    411

    Page 411
    Southern states, 87, 88; method of
    enumeration, 93–95; striking changes
    in statistics of, 95; in South Atlantic
    and Western states, 95; in Northern
    and Southern states, 96, 97;
    length of sentence in Northern and
    Southern states, 96; profits of, under
    convict lease system, 100; per cent.
    of, compared with seven nationalities
    in United States, 103; effect of education
    on, 363, 364; in Mound Bayou,
    372, 373.
  • Criminal, juvenile Negro, II, 99; care
    of, in Birmingham, Ala., 110–113.
  • Cross of Leopold, conferred upon
    Negro actor, II, 282.
  • Crowther, Samuel, native African missionary,
    II, 336.
  • Crucifixion, Negro insurance company,
    Philadelphia, II, 156.
  • Crum, William D., former collector of
    customs, Charleston, S. C., I, 230,
    231.
  • Crummell, Alexander, coloured episcopal
    minister, I, 272, 273; referred
    to, II, 195, 196.
  • Crummell, Boston, assists in starting
    first Negro newspaper in New
    York, I, 292; referred to, II, 195.
  • Cuffe, Paul, Negro colonisationist, I,
    132.
  • Cummings, Harry S., member of Baltimore
    city council, II, 258.
  • Curry, Rev. A. B., on character of
    Negro, I, 164, 165.
  • Curtis, Bishop, coloured commander
    Grand Army Post, I, 248.
  • Curtis, Dr. Austin Maurice, coloured
    physician and surgeon, II. 175,
    180.
  • Cutler, James Elbert, on lynching of
    Negro, II, 89.
  • Dabney, Austin, coloured soldier of
    Revolutionary war, I, 316–318.
  • Daggett, A. D. Lieut. Col., 25th Regiment,
    statement of in regard to 25th
    Regiment, coloured regulars at El
    Caney, Cuba, II, 390.
  • Daggett, David, decision of in Prudence
    Crandall case, I, 199, 200.
  • Dailey, Sam, sets aside part of farm for
    Negro reform school, II, 113.
  • Dahomey, slaves from uplands of, I,
    103, 104.
  • Dance Hall, work of coloured men's
    club in abolishing in Savannah, II,
    351.
  • Darian District of South America, race
    of black men of, II, 384.
  • Davis, E. M. aids in escape of Henry
    Box Brown, I, 218.
  • Davis, Jefferson, slave of, invents a
    ship propeller, II, 78; relations of
    master and slave on plantation of,
    I, 153–157; seat of United States
    Senate occupied by Negro, II, 12.
  • Davis, Joseph, brother of Jefferson, I,
    155, 156; former owner of Isaiah T.
    Montgomery, II, 246.
  • Davis, Mrs. Jefferson, reference to
    Benjamin Montgomery in memoirs
    of, I, 155.
  • Davis, Rev. Samuel, letter of, 1747, on
    "the poor neglected Negroes," II,
    119, 120.
  • Davis, Senator Garrett, opposes Fredmen's
    Bureau, II, 13.
  • Dawn, settlement of fugitive slaves,
    Dresden, Ontario, Canada, II, 240,
    243.
  • Day, William Howard, coloured antislavery
    agitator, I, 295.
  • Dayton, Ohio, Daniel Flickinger, Wilberforce
    educated in, II, 337; Paul
    Laurence Dunbar born in, II, 338.
  • Dean, Jennie, founder of industrial
    school, II, 309.
  • De Baptiste, George, agent Underground
    Railway, I, 286.
  • Dédé, Edward, coloured musical director
    in Bordeaux, France, II, 177.
  • De Grasse, Dr. John V., first Negro
    member of Massachusetts Medical
    society, II, 277.
  • Delany, Martin R., coloured officer
    Federal Army, I, 326; anti-slavery
    agitator, 287, 288.
  • DeLarge, Robert C., coloured congressman,
    II, 11.
  • Delaware, rights of Free Negroes in, I,
    199.

  • 412

    Page 412
  • Denmark, South Carolina, seat of
    Voorhees Industrial School, II, 183,
    184.
  • Derham, James, first Negro physician,
    II, 176, 177.
  • Derrick, Bishop William B., sailor in
    Civil War, I, 324.
  • De Soto, Fernando, Negroes accompany,
    I, 88.
  • Deveaux, John H., collector of customs,
    Port of Savannah, II, 222.
  • Dickinson, William, conveys a slave
    in trust to Quaker society, I, 243.
  • Dickson, Moses, founder of Knights
    and Daughters of Tabor, II,
    158–160.
  • Dillon, Dr. Sadie, first woman granted
    license to practice medicine in Alabama,
    II, 171.
  • Dismal Swamp, scene of Nat Turner's
    insurrection, I, 174.
  • District of Columbia, Negro crime in,
    II, 86.
  • Dober, Leonard, Moravian missionary
    sells self into bondage, I, 119.
  • Dolarson, George, agent Underground
    Railway, I, 286.
  • Dooley, Normal and Industrial Instistute,
    Alabama, gift to, II, 347.
  • Dossen, J. J., vice-president Liberia,
    I, 144, 145.
  • Dorsette, Dr. Cornelius Nathaniel,
    first Negro physician in Montgomery,
    Ala., II, 171.
  • Douglass, Frederick, fugitive slave,
    I, 8; Indian ancestry of, 132;
    interview with John Brown at
    Chambersburg, 176; first notions
    of freedom of, 184; opposed to emmigration
    of Negroes from the South,
    186; member of Free Negro society,
    Baltimore, 212; escape from slavery,
    223; Underground Station Agent,
    223, 283; editor, North Star, 293;
    leader of Negro anti-slavery agitation,
    295; assists in raising coloured
    troops 323; sons enlist as soldiers,
    323; letter of, demanding political
    and military equality for Negro, II,
    18; member of coloured delegation
    to President Johnson urging grant
    of Negro citizenship, 18; estimate
    of Robert Brown Elliott, 25; antislavery
    agitator, 83; describes how
    he learned to read, 127–129.
  • Douglass, H. Ford, coloured antislavery
    agitator, I, 295.
  • Dowd, Jerome, sociological studies of
    Africa quoted, I, 28; on instability
    of West African Kingdom, 75.
  • Downing, George T., noted Negro
    caterer, I, 294; member of coloured
    delegation to President Johnson,
    urging grant of citizenship to Negro,
    II, 18; friend of prominent abolitionists,
    196.
  • Downing, Thomas, early coloured
    caterer, New York, II, 196.
  • Druid Hill, coloured district of Baltimore,
    Md., II, 257; invasion of by
    Negroes, 367.
  • Drummond, Henry, on native labour,
    Central Africa, I, 30.
  • DuBois, W. E. Burghardt, on slave
    trade, I, 95; on Freedmen's Bureau,
    II, 13; on Negro property owning,
    256.
  • Dubuclet, coloured physician and
    musician in France, II, 276.
  • Duke, Ball, assists Negro hospital,
    Durham, N. C., II, 38.
  • Duke, James B., referred to, II, 38.
  • Dumas, Alexander, Negro blood of,
    II, 289.
  • Dunbar, Paul Laurence, poet, I, 25;
    interpretation of Negro life, II, 290–
    292; referred to, 338.
  • Dunlop, Alexander, member of coloured
    delegation urging President
    Johnson to grant Negro citizenship,
    II, 18.
  • Dunmore, Lord, Governor of Virginia,
    offers freedom to Negroes joining
    King's army, I, 319.
  • Dunn, J. P., Jr., statement concerning
    Indian cannibalism, I, 136.
  • East Baltimore Mental Improvement
    Society, society of Free Negroes, I,
    212.
  • Ecumenical Council, London, Joseph
    C. Price delegate to, II, 343.

  • 413

    Page 413
  • Education, conference for Southern,
    cost of Negro education discussed
    there, II, 143.
  • Education, Negro, Colonel Henry
    Waterson speaks in interests of, II,
    114; work of Methodist Church for,
    121; restrictions upon, 122, 123;
    special privileges granted Negroes,
    124; opposition to in the North,
    129; in Ohio, 133; in Massachusetts,
    134; Northern aid to, 139; sacrifices
    of Negroes for, 141; relative cost of,
    and of white, 142; women work for,
    305; amount collected for, by the
    A. M. E. Church, 342; amount collected
    for, in 1907 by A. M. E. Zion
    Church 342; economic effect on
    Negro, 363 364.
  • Education, Negro, see Schools.
  • Education of emancipated slaves, II,
    136–140.
  • Education of native Africans in cotton
    growing, I, 37–39.
  • Education, restrictions on, during
    slavery, II, 118.
  • Educational day of A. M. E. Church, II,
    343.
  • Edwards, Henry Stillwell, on progress
    of the Negro, II, 255.
  • Eggleston, Rev. E. F., pastor Grace
    Presbyterian Union Church, Baltimore,
    Md., II, 360.
  • Elgin Settlement, of fugitive slaves at
    Buxton, Ontario, Canada, II, 241.
  • Elks, Improved Benevolent and Protective
    Order of, coloured, II, 148.
  • Ellicott, George, friend and benefactor
    of Benjamin Banneker, II, 61.
  • Elliott, Robert Brown, coloured congressman,
    II, 24, 25.
  • Emancipation, agitation begun for in
    Pennsylvania, I, 280; of slaves in
    Rhode Island, 1788, I, 313.
  • Emancipation Proclamation, limited
    in its application, II, 6.
  • Emigrant Aid Society, Amos A. Lawrence
    member of, I, 315.
  • Emigration office, Haitian, at Baltimore,
    II, 237.
  • Enterprise Academy, ante-bellum coloured
    school at Albany, O., II, 197.
  • Estevan, Negro explorer, discovers the
    Zuni Indians, II, 385.
  • Ethiopian Church, II, 334, 335.
  • Ethiopian Movement, II, 334, 335.
  • Evans, Henry, founder of Methodist
    Church in Fayetteville, N. C., I, 260,
    261.
  • Evans, Phillip, agent Underground
    Railway, I, 286.
  • Evans, Dr. Matilda A., founder of
    coloured hospital, Orangeburg, S. C.,
    II, 175.
  • Exodus, Negro, to Kansas, I, 186.
  • Fairbank, Calvin, slave abductor, I,
    221, foot-note.
  • Fanti People, customary law of, I, 70.
  • Farmers' Improvement Association, of
    Texas, II, 378–380.
  • Farmers' Institute, at Tuskegee, Ala.,
    II, 192.
  • Fayetteville, N. C., founding of
    Methodist Church in, I, 260, 261.
  • Fee, Rev. John G., establishes Berea
    College, II, 140.
  • Feagin, Judge N. B., establishes voluntary
    probation system for coloured
    juvenile offenders, II, 110–113.
  • Fellani, ruling class at Kano, I, 22.
  • Fellani, see Fuhlas.
  • Ferdinand and Isabella, Letter of, to
    Juan de Valladolid, coloured, I, 86,
    87.
  • Ferguson, Samuel David, Bishop of
    Cape Palmas, I, 273.
  • Fetishism, a system of thought, I, 66,
    67.
  • Fields, W. R., vice-president Coloured
    Bank, II, 222.
  • Fifty-fourth Massachusetts, First Regiment
    of Coloured Troops raised in
    the North, I, 328, 329.
  • Fisk University, founded at Nashville,
    Tenn., 1866, II, 140; gifts to by
    Negroes, II, 347.
  • Flickinger, Daniel, missionary to West
    Coast, Africa, II, 337.
  • Florida, cost of Negro education in, II,
    143; Everglades of, home of Afro-Indians,
    I, 133; slave raiders visit
    coast of, 129.

  • 414

    Page 414
  • Folk tales of Angola, I, 73.
  • Foresters, ancient order of, II, 148.
  • Fort Wagner, Negroes' part in battle
    of, I, 328.
  • Forten, James, Negro abolitionist, I,
    288, 289; sketch of, 290.
  • Fortune, T. Thomas, Seminole ancestors,
    I, 132.
  • Franklin, Benjamin, statue of, inspires
    Edmonia Lewis, II, 292.
  • Franklin College, free Negro sends
    a white boy through, I, 318.
  • Franklin, Nicholas, one of three
    Negroes to build first coloured
    schoolhouse in District of Columbia,
    II, 134.
  • Frazier, Henry, former master of Maggie
    Porter, II, 270.
  • Frazier, James, slave of, freed in
    Canada on writ of habeas corpus,
    II, 239.
  • Freeman, Ralph, anti-bellum Negro
    preacher, I, 268, 269.
  • Free African Society, founded in
    Philadelphia, 1787, I, 254.
  • Free Coloured Women, sisters of the
    Holy Family, founded among, I, 272.
  • Free Negroes, increase of from 1790
    to 1860, I, 195; number of, in Maryland,
    196; re-enslaved, 196, 197;
    rights of, in English colonies, 198,
    199; restrictions upon, 200; of
    North Carolina, 201; property owned
    by, in Charleston, S. C., 205; societies
    formed among, 210; mutual
    benefit associations among, permitted
    in Maryland, 213; arrested
    for assembling in Washington, D. C.,
    213; number engaged in work of
    Underground Railway, 282; first
    convention of in 1817, 289; of
    Raleigh, N. C., 299; regiment in
    Confederate army, 320; regiment
    of, organised by General Butler, 321;
    in Massachusetts in 1777, 311;
    enlist in Virginia regiments in Revolutionary
    War, 312; of New Orleans,
    seek to obtain part in the Government,
    II, 14; rights of, in Northern
    states in 1866, 19; restrictions upon,
    83; number of, attending school in
    Maryland in 1860, 124; educational
    advantages of Creole, 123, 124;
    methods of obtaining education, 124,
    125; business enterprises of, in the
    North, 195, 196; total value of
    property owned by, 209; help to
    found Liberia, 235; of North Carolina,
    Charles W. Chesnutt descended
    from, 289.
  • Freedman, relations with former master,
    II, 39.
  • Freedmantown, coloured quarter of
    Oakland, Texas, II, 379.
  • Freedmen, colony, in Haiti, II, 237,
    238; difficulties in dealing with,
    II. 7; education of, 136–140;
    from Louisiana, settled at Buxton,
    Ontario, Canada, 241.
  • Freedmen's Aid Society, Negroes contribute
    to education through, II, 345,
  • Freedmen's Bank, history of, II, 214;
    effect of failure of, on freedmen, 215.
  • Freedmen's Bureau, organisation of,
    II, 9–13; coloured men employed
    by, 10; bounties paid to Negro
    soldiers by, 41.
  • Freedom's Journal, first coloured newspaper,
    I, 292.
  • Freedmen's Hospital, Washington,
    D. C., II, 174; Dr. Charles B.
    Purvis, surgeon-in-chief of, I, 290.
  • Friends, of North Carolina, slavery
    among, I, 240; German, protest
    against slavery in 1696, 242; progress
    of anti-slavery sentiment among, 242,
    243; efforts of, to free their slaves,
    243, 244; settlement of, in Cass
    County, Mich., refuge for runaway
    slaves, 245, 246; first schools for
    Negroes, established by, 280; aid to
    Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, by
    member of, II, 277, 278.
  • Fugitive Slaves, shipped as express
    package, I, 218.
  • Fugitive Slaves, in Ohio, I, 240; names
    of distinguished, II, 83; settlements
    of in Canada, 240; names of,
    240.
  • Fugitive Slave Law, effect of, in Ohio,
    I, 226, 227; increases number of fugitives
    in Canada, II, 240.

  • 415

    Page 415
  • Fulah, compared with Hausas, I, 54.
  • Fuller, James C., collects funds in
    England for refugees in Canada, II,
    243.
  • Gabriel, leader of slave insurrection,
    1800, I, 172, 173.
  • Gaines, John I., leads coloured people,
    Cincinnati, in struggle for equitable
    division of school funds, II, 133.
  • Galilean Fisherman, Grand United
    Order of, II, 148; amount in death
    claims by, 162; Bank of Grand
    United Order of, Hampton, Virginia,
    219.
  • Gambia, price of slaves in, I, 60.
  • Gant, Wheeling, referred to, II, 347.
  • Garfield, President James A., appoints
    Blanche K. Bruce Registrar of the
    Treasury, II, 23, 24; effect of election
    of, upon coloured people of Alabama,
    II, 190.
  • Garnet, Henry Highland, career of,
    I, 294, 295.
  • Garrett, noted anti-slavery Quaker,
    I, 294; becomes an abolitionist, I,
    192.
  • Garrison, William Lloyd, meeting of
    with Benjamin Lundy, I, 192, reference
    of, to James Fort, 289; speaks
    at funeral of William C. Nell, 295;
    encourages Edmonia Lewis to become
    a sculptress, II, 293; referred to, 327.
  • Gayarré, Charles Etienne, author, on
    emigrants replaced by Negro slaves
    in Louisiana, I, 121.
  • Genius of Universal Emancipation,
    The
    , Benjamin Lundy's anti-slavery
    newspaper, II, 238.
  • Georgia, rights of free Negroes in, I,
    199; Historical Collections of, 316;
    story of Austin Dabney, 316; introduction
    of slaves into, II, 121; property
    of Negroes in, 145; number of
    Negro banks in, 211.
  • German Labour, in Brazil, I, 121.
  • Germans, in Louisiana, replaced by
    Negroes, I, 121; found Bombardopolis,
    122; in New Orleans, 122.
  • Gibbs, Mifflin W., coloured antislavery
    agitator, I, 295, 296; first
    coloured judge of a city court, II,
    186.
  • Gibson, G. W., ex-president of
    Liberia, I, 68, 69; purchased by
    father and sent to Liberia, 195.
  • Giles, Goodrich, wealthy Negro farmer
    of Ohio, I, 236.
  • Gilman, Daniel, C., ex-President Johns
    Hopkins' University, supports Coloured
    Law and Order League,
    Baltimore, Md., II, 361, 362.
  • Gilmore, Rev. Hiram S., founder
    Cincinnati High School, II, 133.
  • Gilreath, Belton, on progress of Negroes
    in coal and iron mining, II, 72.
  • Glenn, Joe, defended on charge of
    rape, by Atlanta Civic League, II,
    108.
  • Glenn, John M., Secretary Sage
    Foundation, supports Coloured Law
    and Order League, II, 362.
  • God, slave's idea of colour of, I, 23.
  • Gold Coast, inhabitants of, I, 70.
  • Goler, Dr. W. H., President Livingstone
    College, II, 344.
  • Good, John, supports master's children,
    I, 202.
  • Good Samaritans, Negro secret order,
    II, 148.
  • Gorden, Henry, referred to, II, 347.
  • Graceland, Moravian coloured school,
    Antigua, West Indies, I, 324.
  • Grace Presbyterian Church, Baltimore,
    meeting-place of coloured law and
    Order League, II, 365.
  • Grant, General Ulysses S., care of
    refugees slaves, II, 6, 7.
  • Grant, W. E., first suggests organisation
    True Reformers' Bank, II, 216.
  • Graves, Richard, trustee for purpose of
    emancipating slaves, I, 243, 244.
  • Gray, French, referred to, II, 347.
  • Gray, Rev. William, minister and
    founder of bank, II, 221, 222.
  • Green, Benjamin T. with Isaiah T.
    Montgomery, founder of Mound
    Bayou Miss., II, 371.
  • Green, Beriah, founder Oneida Institute
    for Negroes, I, 225.
  • Green, John P., Negro lawyer, Justice
    of the Peace, I, 203.

  • 416

    Page 416
  • Green, John Y., free Negro carpenter
    and contractor in North Carolina, I,
    202.
  • Green, Shields, Negro companion of
    John Brown at Harper's Ferry, I,
    175–177.
  • Greene, Colonel Christopher, defended
    by Negro troops, I, 311.
  • Greene, John Richard, on white slavery
    in England, I, 111.
  • Greenfield, Elizabeth Taylor, coloured
    singer, II, 277–279.
  • Grimke, Mrs. Charlotte Forten, granddaughter
    James Forten, I, 290.
  • Grimke, Francis J., coloured Presbyterian
    minister, I, 290.
  • Gross, William E., caterer New York
    City, II, 195.
  • Guiana, Dutch and British, maroons
    of, I, 131.
  • Haiti, revolt of slaves in, I, 172; Benjamin
    Lundy settles colony of Freedmen
    in, 192; Bishop of, 273; U. S.
    Consul-general, II, 132; Philanthropic
    Society of, 237; A. M. E.
    Church in, 332.
  • Hale, Mrs. Ann, first conductor Hale
    Infirmary, II, 172.
  • Hale, James H., founder of Hale
    Infirmary, II, 172.
  • Hall, Mrs. Anne Maria, opens first
    school for coloured children, District
    of Columbia, II, 305.
  • Hall, Dr. George C., coloured physician,
    Chicago, Ill., II, 175, 180;
    visits African colony, Mobile, Ala.,
    188, 189.
  • Hall, Dr. R. M., wealthy coloured
    physician, Baltimore, Md., II, 257.
  • Hall, Primus, first separate coloured
    school in house of, Boston, Mass.,
    II, 134.
  • Hall, Prince, founder coloured Masonic
    order, U. S., II, 148–151.
  • Hallowell, N. P., on Sergeant Carney
    in assault on Fort Wagner, I, 329.
  • Hallowell, Lieutenant-colonel, Edward
    H., referred to, I, 329.
  • Hamilton County, Ind., ante-bellum
    coloured settlement in, I, 241.
  • Hamilton, J. C., on Negro in Canada,
    II, 246.
  • Hampton Institute, becomes independdent
    of A. M. A., I, 276; teachers
    of, in Gloucester Co., Va., II, 44;
    founded, Hampton, Va., 1866, 140;
    industrial teaching at, 141; summer
    school for teachers at, 310.
  • Hampton Negro Conference, studies
    of Negro crime, II, 91; story of True
    Reformers' Bank told at, 216.
  • Handlemann, Heinrich, on Negro in
    Brazil, I, 120.
  • Haralson, Jere, coloured congressman,
    II, 25.
  • Hargrove, Samuel, John Jasper's
    master, I, 263, 264.
  • Harper, Fenton, referred to, II, 320.
  • Harper's Ferry, John Brown's raid
    on, I, 175; pamphlet on, Osborne
    Anderson, referred to, 177.
  • Harris, Eliza, fugitive slave, original of
    Uncle Tom's Cabin, I, 240.
  • Harris, Joel Chandler, inventor of
    "Uncle Remus," I, 162.
  • Harris, Thomas N., conductor of
    coloured infirmary, Mobile, II, 172.
  • Harris, W. Hall, referred to, II, 362.
  • Harrison, W. P., gospel among the
    slaves, II, 119, 120; on origin of First
    Baptist Church, Savannah, I, 266.
  • Hart, Albert Bushnell, on slave insurrections,
    I, 171; on fugitive slaves
    in Ohio, 226; on Harriet Tubman,
    II, 284.
  • Hatcher, William E., life of John
    Jasper quoted, I, 262–264.
  • Hausa, colour of, I, 23; and Fulahs
    compared, 54.
  • Hausa, merchant, at Kano, I, 22.
  • Hawkes, Samuel, wealthy Negro of
    Cass County, Mich, I, 247.
  • Hawkins, Dr. Thomas S., coloured
    physician, Baltimore, Md., II, 359.
  • Hawkins, Rev. William S., life of
    Lunsford Lane quoted, I, 309.
  • Hawkins, W. Ashbie, referred to, II,
    359.
  • Hawley, Colonel Joseph Roswell, on
    conduct, coloured troops, in assault
    of Fort Wagner, I, 330.

  • 417

    Page 417
  • Haviland, Mrs. Laura S., opens school
    for refugees in Canada, II, 242, 243.
  • Haynes, Rev. Lemuel, Revolutionary
    soldier, first coloured Congregational
    minister, II, 388–390.
  • Haywood, Sherwood, owner of Lunsford
    Lane, I, 296.
  • Hazel, Richard, Free Negro, blacksmith,
    North Carolina, I, 202.
  • Heidelberg, University of, confers
    degree upon Negro, I, 284.
  • Henderson, John, pupil of coloured
    school-teacher, John Travis, I, 274.
  • Henson, Josiah, fugitive slave, original
    "Uncle Tom," II, 243; assists in
    establishing manual labour school
    in Canada, 243.
  • Henson, Matt, companion of Peary in
    discovery of North Pole, II, 386.
  • Hewlett, E. M., coloured city magistrate,
    Albany, N. Y, II, 186.
  • Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, on
    plantation melodies, II, 262–265.
  • Hill, Collier, leaves slaves to trustee, I,
    243, 244.
  • Hill, Leslie P., principal Manassas
    Industrial School, Manassas, Va.,
    II, 309.
  • Hill, William, influence of, on Jack of
    Virginia, I, 267.
  • Hodges, Willis A., coloured antislavery
    editor, I, 295.
  • Hodgson, W. B., account of slaves'
    translation of Gospel of John, I,
    53.
  • Hogan, Ernest, coloured comedian, II,
    280, 281.
  • Holloway, Richard, Free Negro of
    Charleston, I, 206.
  • Holly, James Theodore, Bishop of
    Haiti, I, 273.
  • Holly Springs, Miss., progress of
    Negroes in, I, 187.
  • Holt, Roland, helps establish Negro
    Masonry in America, II, 149, 150.
  • Honey Hill, Negroes part in battle of,
    I, 328.
  • Hood, Bishop James W., chairman
    first coloured convention, North
    Carolina, II, 16; first missionary
    in the coloured church, to the Southern
    states, 17; leading spirit in founding
    Livingstone College, 343.
  • Hopkins, Charles T., organises Civic
    League, Atlanta, II, 107.
  • Horner, Rev. James H., referred to, I,
    274.
  • Horton, George, M., slave poet, II,
    288.
  • Hosier, Harry, first Negro preacher in
    Methodist Church, I, 257, 258.
  • Hospitals, for Negroes, the larger
    named, II, 174.
  • Howard, General Oliver Otis, organises
    Freedmen's Bureau, II, 9; Howard
    University named after, 140.
  • Howard, Thomas, Earl of Effingham,
    assists in establishing Negro Masonry
    in United States, II, 149, 150.
  • Howard University, founded at Washington,
    D. C., 1867, II, 140; medical
    school of, 178; graduates first woman
    lawyer, 184.
  • Howe, Dr. Samuel G., on Canadian
    refugee colonies, II, 241, 242.
  • Howells, William Dean, estimate of
    Paul Laurence Dunbar, II, 290.
  • Hubbard, Elbert, commends Hotel
    Berry, Athens, O., II, 198, 199.
  • Hubbard, William P., acting mayor
    of Toronto, II, 245, 246.
  • Humphreys, Richard, ex-slave-holder,
    establishes Negro school, II, 132.
  • Humphreys, Solomon, Negro slave
    purchases freedom and becomes
    business man, I, 200.
  • Hunter, General David, enlists regiment
    of former slaves, I, 322.
  • Huntingdon, Countess of, friend and
    patron of Phyllis Wheatley, II,
    287.
  • Hunton, William A., secretary coloured
    Y. M. C. A., II, 352.
  • Huntsville, Ala., homes of James G.
    Birney, former slave-owner and
    abolitionist, I, 240.
  • "Hurricane," plantation of Joseph
    Davis, I, 153, 156.
  • Hurst, Rev. John, coloured minister of
    Baltimore, II, 359.
  • Hyman, John, coloured congressman,
    II, 25.

  • 418

    Page 418
  • Ibo, Negro translates Bible into language
    of, II, 336.
  • Illinois, rights of free Negroes in, I,
    199; coloured settlements in, 226;
    black code in, II, 19; number of
    Negro banks in, 211.
  • Impartial Citizen, anti-slavery coloured
    newspaper, II, 25.
  • India, Negro woman evangelist in, II,
    322.
  • Indian, The, recedes before white man,
    I, 77; compared with Negro as a
    labourer, 120; compared with Negro,
    125; and Negro at Hampton, 125;
    feeling of superiority of, 126; intimate
    association of, with Negro in America,
    128; Negro white man and, 128, 136;
    as a labourer, 141, 142; mother of
    P. B. S. Pinchback on, II, 22.
  • Indians, intermarriage with whites prohibited,
    I, 130; intermixture with
    Negroes, 131; remnants of in West
    Indies, 132; Chickasaws conspire
    with slaves of New Orleans, 133;
    bounty on scalps of, 135; cannibals
    in United States, 136, note; cost of,
    to govern of United States, 137; numbers
    of compared with Negroes, 137;
    and Negroes at Hampton Institute,
    138, 139; of Charleston, S. C., 206;
    first public school in Virginia for
    benefit of, II, 118; and Negroes,
    religious education of, 118, 119;
    fugitive slaves found refuge among,
    239.
  • Indian Slaves, absorbed by Negroes, I,
    131; price of, in Massachusetts, 129;
    sold to West Indies, 129.
  • Indian Slave-holders, in Georgia and
    Alabama, I, 133; in Western states,
    141.
  • Indian Territory, Negroes slaves in,
    I, 134.
  • Independent, article on Negro crime
    quoted, II, 97.
  • Industrial Education, connection with
    economic advance in Southern states,
    II, 192.
  • Institute for Coloured Youth, started
    1837, Philadelphia, II, 132; summer
    school for teachers at, 310.
  • Iowa, rights of free Negroes in, I, 199.
  • Insurance, Negro, II, 37; local companies
    in Philadelphia, 155; number
    of companies in United States, 1907,
    161.
  • International Congress of Women,
    Berlin, Germany, Negro women
    represented at, II, 325.
  • Insurrection, slave, of Nat Turner, I,
    173; of Denmark Vesey, 173; of
    Gabriel and Jack Bowler, 173; not
    inspired by revenge, 181.
  • Island Mound, Mo., first battle of
    coloured troops near, I, 323.
  • Italians, given privileges in United
    States not enjoyed by Negroes, I,
    118.
  • Jack of Virginia, ante-bellum Negro
    preacher, I, 267, 268.
  • Jackson, Andrew, reference to proclamation
    of, to Free Negroes of
    New Orleans, II, 14.
  • Jackson, Deal, Negro farmer of Georgia.
    II, 53.
  • Jackson, Egbert, Negro youth receives
    severe sentence, II, 97.
  • Jackson, Gov. James, invites Austin
    Dabney to home, I, 318.
  • Jackson, Jennie, of original Fisk
    Jubilee Singers, II, 269.
  • Jackson, Miss., special study of economic
    condition of Negroes in, II,
    204–206.
  • Jamaica, Henry Highland Garnet,
    missionary to, I, 294; maroons of,
    171.
  • James, Rev. J. D., coloured probation
    officer, Birmingham, II, 113.
  • Jamestown, Va., first slave landed at,
    I, 85.
  • Jasper, ante-bellum Negro preacher, I,
    262–265.
  • Jay, John, on white slavery in Africa,
    I, 281.
  • Jefferson, Thomas, sentiments on Negro
    slavery, I, 313; correspondence with
    Benjamin Banneker, II, 62.
  • Jenkins, Rev. O. C., founds Negro
    Farmers' Banking Association,
    Northampton, Va., II, 213.

  • 419

    Page 419
  • Jennings, Mrs. Mary McFarland,
    mother of Mrs. Cordelia A. Attwell,
    II, 307.
  • "Jerry Rescue," I, 225.
  • Johannes, among first converts of
    Moravian missionaries, II, 119.
  • John, emancipated slave appointed
    guardian his former master's ward,
    I, 197.
  • Johnson, Anthony, Negro slave and
    land owner in colony of Virginia, I,
    198.
  • Johnson, Bishop J. Albert, A. M. E.
    Church, member of Baltimore Law
    and Order League, II, 360.
  • Johnson, C., Ferst, quits politics for
    business, II, 208.
  • Johnson, James W., coloured poet,
    poem on "Black and Unknown
    Bards," II, 265, 266; musical composer,
    281.
  • Johnson, J. Rosamond, Negro comedian,
    II, 281.
  • Johnson, Lewis E., secretary coloured
    Y. M. C. A., Washington, D. C.,
    II, 353.
  • Johnson, President Andrew, coloured
    delegation visits to urge Negro citizenship,
    II, 18.
  • Johnson, Richard, obtains patent to
    land in Colony of Virginia, I, 198.
  • Johnson, Sol. C., editor Savannah
    Tribune, coloured, II, 222.
  • Johnson, William H., Henry Box Brown
    shipped from Virginia to, I, 218.
  • Johnston, Sir Harry H., on diversity of
    native types in Africa, I, 28; on
    Negro slaves in India, 75; on character
    of emigrants to Liberia, 244, 245;
    on character of native African, II,
    387.
  • Johnston, John, Negro owner of estate
    in Colony of Virginia, I, 198.
  • Jones, Absolom, joint author of account
    of plague in Philadelphia, I, 251, 252;
    establishes first Negro Episcopal
    Church in America, 252, 255; joint
    founder of "Free African Society,"
    253–255; petitions Legislature of
    Pennsylvania and Congress against
    first Fugitive Slave Law, 288.
  • Jones, John, visits President Johnson
    in interest of Negro citizenship, II,
    18.
  • Jones, John G., wealthy Negro, Chicago,
    Il., agent Underground Railway,
    I, 286.
  • Jones, Madam Sissieretta, coloured
    singer, II, 279, 280.
  • Jones, Wiley, owner street railway,
    Pine Bluff, Ark., II, 209.
  • Journalism, Negro, II, 187, 188.
  • Journalism, Negro, see Ante-bellum
    newspaper.
  • Jubilee Singers, Story of, II, 266–271.
  • Jupiter, Negro converted by early
    Moravian missionary, II, 119.
  • Juvenile Court, coloured, in Alabama,
    II, 111.
  • Kaffirs, drive Bushmen out of South
    Africa, I, 135.
  • Kano, Negro city, Western Soudan, I,
    22; market of, described, 50; first
    visit of white man to, 53; compared
    with Chicago, 54, 55.
  • Kansas Relief Association, organised
    in Boston by Mrs. St. Pierre Ruffin,
    II, 327.
  • Kean, Edmund, plays Iago to Negro
    actor's Othello, II, 282.
  • Keatts, Chester W., joint founder of
    Mosaic Templars of America, II,
    162.
  • Keebe, Ossie, native African of African
    Colony, Mobile, Ala., I, 104.
  • Kenbridge, Va., seat of school for
    freedmen, II, 307, 308.
  • Kenny, John A., coloured physician,
    Tuskegee Institute, Ala., II, 172.
  • Kentucky, rights of Free Negroes in,
    I, 199.
  • Kettle Creek, Battle of Negro soldier
    in, I, 316.
  • King, Rev. William, emancipates slaves
    and settles them, Elgin, Canada, II,
    240, 241.
  • King of Prussia, confers distinction on
    Negro actor, II, 282.
  • Kingsley, Mary H., on importance
    of native labour in West Africa, I,
    29, 30; estimate of the Negro, 43, 44,

    420

    Page 420
    46; native women's distrust of white
    civilisation, 61; Africans' point of
    view, 66; African religion, 67, 68;
    African slave trade, 101, 102.
  • Knights and Daughters of Tabor, International
    Order of Twelve, story of,
    II, 158–160.
  • Knights of Honour Savings Bank,
    Greenville, Miss., II, 219.
  • Knights of Honour, coloured secret
    order, II, 148.
  • Knights of Liberty, Negro anti-slavery
    secret order, II, 159.
  • Knights of Pythias, coloured, when
    organised, II, 153; property owned
    by, 156, 157.
  • Kongo people, basketry of, I, 47.
  • Koran, slave who could read, I, 53.
  • Kru people, farms and gardens of,
    I, 46.
  • Labour, of Negro in Southern states,
    I, 117.
  • Lafayette, Marquis de, Lunsford Lane
    meets, I, 296; visits Negro school,
    II, 133.
  • Lafon, Thomy, Negro philanthropist,
    I, 272; reputed millionaire, II, 209,
    210; referred to, 346, 347.
  • Lake Erie, Negroes in the battle of, I,
    310.
  • Lambert, Lucien, coloured musical
    composer, II, 276.
  • Lambert, Richard, father of Lucien,
    II, 276.
  • Lambert, Sidney, coloured pianist and
    composer, II, 277.
  • Land Owners, in Farmers' Improvement
    Association, Texas, II, 380.
  • Land Owners, see Farmers.
  • Lane, Bishop Isaac, founder Lane
    College, Jackson, Tenn., II, 344;
    referred to, 347.
  • Lane, Lunsford, free Negro of Raleigh
    North Carolina, I, 296–309; makes
    abolition speech to Southern audience,
    I, 302.
  • Lane College, Jackson, Tenn., II,
    344; gifts to, by Bishop Lane, 347.
  • Lane Seminary, Cincinnati, O., growth
    of anti-slavery agitation at, I, 290;
    Rev. John G. Fee, converted to
    abolitionism at, II, 140.
  • Laney, Lucy C., founder industrial
    school, Augusta, Ga., II, 308
  • Langston, John M., Negro congressman
    from Virginia, I, 235; terms by
    which, obtained freedom, 235; antislavery
    agitator, 295; Reconstruction
    makes political leader of, II, 22;
    date of admission to bar of, 185.
  • Lapsley, Rev. Samuel N., Southern
    white missionary to Africa, II,
    338.
  • Las Casas, Bartolomé de, Negro bodyguards,
    I, 88.
  • Las Guasimas, Negro soldier's part in
    battle of, II, 390.
  • Laurens, Colonel John, on enlistment
    of Negro soldiers in Revolutionary
    War, I, 312.
  • Law, John, imports Negro slaves into
    Louisiana, I, 121.
  • Law and Order League, of Baltimore,
    II, 365.
  • Lawrence, last slave ship, I, 104.
  • Lawrence, Amos, member of the
    Emigrant Aid Society, in Kansas
    struggle, I, 315.
  • Lawrence, Major Samuel rescued
    by Negro troop, I, 315.
  • Lawrenceville, Va., Negro industrial
    school in, I, 273.
  • Lawson, Cornelius, coloured supervisor
    Cass County, Mich., I, 247.
  • Lawyer, first coloured in United
    States, II, 185.
  • Leader, coloured newspaper referred
    to, II, 24.
  • Leary, John S., first Negro admitted
    to bar in North Carolina, I, 204.
  • Leary, Lewis, Negro companion of
    John Brown at Harper's Ferry, I,
    175.
  • Leary, Mathew, Free Negro, North
    Carolina, land and slave-owner, I,
    203, 204.
  • Leary, Mathew, Jr., Reconstruction
    politician, North Carolina, I, 204.
  • LeCount, Caroline R., principal coloured
    school, Philadelphia, Pa., II,
    306.

  • 421

    Page 421
  • Lee, Joseph W., coloured hotel keeper,
    Squantum, Mass., II, 199.
  • Leonard Medical College, coloured,
    work of, II, 178.
  • Leupoldt, Tobias, Moravian missionary,
    sells self into bondage, West
    Indies, I, 119.
  • Levering, Eugene, President Commercial
    National Bank, Baltimore, Md.,
    supports work of coloured Law and
    Order League, II, 362.
  • Lewis, Edmonia, Negro sculptress, II,
    292, 293.
  • Liberator, Garrison's, assisted by James
    Forten, I, 289.
  • Liberia, struggle with native slave-traders,
    I, 145; settlement of Port
    Cresson, by Quaker Negroes, 245;
    American Negro in, II, 236; Mrs.
    Sharpe's Home School in, 329.
  • Liberia Herald, I, 293.
  • Liberian, see Colonisation.
  • Liberian College, Alexander Crummell,
    teacher in, I, 273.
  • Liberty League, coloured anti-slavery
    organisation, I, 287.
  • Lincoln, Abraham, Southern birth of,
    I, 249; Emancipation Proclamation
    of, referred to, II, 33; head of, by
    coloured sculptress, 293.
  • Lincoln Institute, founded 1865, Jefferson
    City, Mo., II, 140.
  • Lisle, George, early Negro preacher,
    Savannah, Ga., I, 265.
  • Livermore, George, views of the
    Nation's Founders concerning Negro,
    I, 319–320.
  • Liverpool, Moses, one of three coloured
    men to build first coloured
    school-house District of Columbia,
    II, 134.
  • Livingstone College, anniversary celebration
    of, II, 343, 344.
  • Loguen, Bishop Jarmain W., conductor
    Underground Railway, I,
    224; sketch of, 224, 225; referred to,
    283; anti-slavery agitator, II, 83.
  • Long, Jefferson, coloured congressman,
    II, 12, 25.
  • Longfellow, Henry W., bust of by
    coloured sculptor, II, 293.
  • Longworth, Nicholas, builds first coloured
    school in Cincinnati, II, 134.
  • Louisiana, Strange, True Stories of,
    by George W. Cable, referred to, I,
    122.
  • Louisville, Ky., coloured Y. M. C. A.
    in, II, 354; meeting of National Negro
    Business League in, 341.
  • Lovejoy, Elijah, William Wells Brown
    associated with, I, 282.
  • L'Overture, Toussaint, leader slave
    insurrection Santo Domingo, I, 172.
  • Lunda, African Empire of, I, 74, 75.
  • Luca, Alexander C., Sr., father of
    family of distinguished coloured
    singers, II, 279.
  • Lucas, George W. S., agent Underground
    Railway, I, 285, 286.
  • Lugrande, E. L., coloured business
    man, Boley, Okla., II, 250.
  • Lundy, Benjamin, editor first abolition
    paper in United States, I, 192; interests
    Garrison in abolition, 239; starts
    abolition paper, Mount Pleasant,
    O., 239; meets prosperous free
    coloured man in Texas, 200, 201;
    establishes colony of Negro freedmen
    in Haiti, 192; II, 237, 238.
  • Lynchings, statistics of, II, 88; by what
    offences occasioned, 89.
  • McCarty, Owen, runaway white servant,
    I, 107.
  • McCord, Sam, successful Negro farmer
    II, 53, 54
  • McCoy, Elijah, Negro holder of 28
    patents, II, 78, 79.
  • McKee, Colonel John, of Philadelphia,
    coloured philanthropist, II, 346.
  • McKim, J. Miller, secretary Pennsylvania
    Anti-slavery Society, I, 217.
  • McKissack, E. H., treasurer Mississippi
    Odd Fellows, I, 188.
  • Magee, Rev. Joseph, friendship of, for
    a coloured preacher, I, 269.
  • "Ma'm Linda," story of Southern life,
    referred to, II, 299.
  • Manassas, Va., Industrial school at,
    started by Jennie Dean, II, 309.
  • Mangum, Priestly, pupil of John
    Chavis, coloured teacher, I, 274.

  • 422

    Page 422
  • Mangum, Willie P., United States
    Senator, pupil of John Chavis, I, 274.
  • Manly, Charles, Governor of North
    Carolina, pupil of John Chavis, I,
    274.
  • Maroons, of Dutch and British Guiana,
    I, 131; of Jamaica, 171.
  • Martyr, Peter, Spanish historian, belief
    of, that Negroes reached America
    before Columbus, II, 384.
  • Maryland Journal advertising runaway
    Irish servant, I, 107.
  • Maryland, rights of Free Negroes in,
    I, 199.
  • Masai, of Uganda, I, 28.
  • Mason, Dr. Ulysses G., conductor of
    coloured infirmary, Birmingham,
    Ala., II, 172.
  • Masonic Benefit Association, business
    of Alabama branch of, II, 161, 162.
  • Masons, Negro, first lodge of, in
    America, II, 149, 150; at funeral of
    George Washington, 151; number
    of lodges in United States, 1904, 151;
    second lodge in United States of,
    151, in Louisville, 152; property
    owned by, 156–158; charities of,
    158.
  • Massachusetts, Negro population of,
    in 1741, I, 94.
  • Matthew, freedman, completes payment
    to his master for his freedom
    after emancipation, II, 32, 33.
  • Matthews, James C., city judge,
    Albany, N. Y., II, 186.
  • Matthews, Mrs. Victoria E., officer
    National Federation Coloured Women's
    Clubs, II, 329.
  • Matthews, William E., member of
    coloured delegation urging President
    Johnson to grant Negro citizenship,
    II, 18.
  • Matzeliger, J. E., Negro inventor of
    machinery for soleing shoes, II, 79.
  • May, Samuel J., abolitionist, aids in the
    "Jerry Rescue," I, 225.
  • Meharry Medical College, coloured,
    Nashville, Tenn., work of, II, 178.
  • Memphis, race war in, 1866, II, 19.
  • Menendez, Pedro, settles Negroes, St.
    Augustine, Fla., I, 89.
  • Meredith, William, builds first Methodist
    Church, Wilmington, N. C.,
    with aid of donations of slaves, I, 259.
  • Merrick, John, founder North Carolina
    Mutual and Provident Association,
    II, 37; account of, 38.
  • Methodist Church, coloured, see Coloured
    Methodist Church.
  • Methodist Church, Negroes attend
    first general conference of, 1784, I,
    253; establishes Sunday schools for
    slaves, 1790, II, 121.
  • Methodist Discipline, in regard to
    slavery, I, 259.
  • Methodism, beginning of in North
    Carolina, I, 259, 260.
  • Methodists, Negro, first general conference
    of leading denominations,
    Washington, D. C., 1908, I, 257.
  • Mexico, Benjamin Lundy seeks a
    refuge for freedmen, II, 238; Negroes
    with Cortez in, 384.
  • "Middle Passage," slave memories of,
    I, 6; described by Mungo Park, I,
    101; losses of slave during, 102.
  • Miller, Thomas H., coloured congressman,
    II, 25.
  • Milliken's Bend, Negroes part in battle
    of, I, 327.
  • Ministerial Union, coloured, Baltimore,
    II, 366.
  • Ministers, Negro, number of in United
    States, II, 182.
  • Minstrels, Negro, the first, II, 280.
  • Mirror of the Times, Ante-bellum
    coloured newspaper, I, 296.
  • Missions, coloured Baptist Church, II,
    333; of the A. M. E. Church, 332,
    333.
  • Mississippi, number of Negro banks
    in, II, 211.
  • Mississippi Theological and Industrial
    College, Holly Springs, Miss., II,
    344.
  • Mob Violence, see Lynchings.
  • Mobile, Ala., colony of Africans near,
    I, 103; Creole Negroes of, 208, 209;
    grants license for education of Creole
    Negro, II, 124.
  • Mobile Bay, favourite haunt of slave
    smugglers, I, 103.

  • 423

    Page 423
  • Mohammedan Fanatics, among Negroes
    of Uganda, I, 28; Negro, 54.
  • Mon Louis Island, Creole settlement
    on, I, 209.
  • Montamal, John, incident of Reconstruction
    in New Orleans, II, 7, 8.
  • Montgomery, Benjamin, manager of
    Davis plantation, I, 154–156.
  • Montgomery, Thornton, former slave
    of Joseph Davis, I, 155, 156; letter
    to Mrs. Jefferson Davis, 157.
  • Montgomery, Isaiah T., referred to, I,
    24; former slave of Joseph Davis,
    155; founder of Mound Bayou,
    II, 246, 247, 371; opinions of, in
    regard to moral and political conditions
    in Mound Bayou, 374–376.
  • Moore, Rev. George W., coloured
    field superintendent, A. M. Association,
    II, 269.
  • Moore, George Henry, on law of slavery
    in Massachusetts, I, 130.
  • Moorland, Dr. J. E., secretary coloured
    Y. M. C. A., II, 352.
  • Moravians, Negro, II, 119; established
    missions for Negroes, 119;
    of Salem, N. C., II, 253.
  • Moral Education Association of
    Boston, coloured woman a member
    of, II, 328.
  • Morris, Albert, Free Negro in North
    Carolina, I, 202.
  • Morris, Freeman, Free Negro in North
    Carolina, I, 202.
  • Morris, Robert, coloured attorney
    admitted to bar on motion Charles
    Sumner, II, 185.
  • Mosaic Templars of America, founded
    1882, business of, II, 162.
  • Moten, Major Robert R., commandant
    Hampton Institute, I, 25; great-grandfather
    of, kidnapped from
    Africa, 102, 103.
  • Mott, James and Lucretia, aid in
    escape of Henry Box Brown, I, 218.
  • Moultry, Francis, J, coloured caterer,
    II, 196.
  • Mound Bayou, Miss., Negro colony in
    Yazoo Delta, I, 156, II, 246–248;
    self government in, 371; moral conditions
    in, 374.
  • Mount Meigs, Reformatory for coloured
    children at, II, 113.
  • Murray, George W., coloured congressman,
    II, 25, 26.
  • Music, of native Africans, II, 260.
  • Myers, George A, successful barber,
    II, 199, 200.
  • Mystery, Ante-bellum coloured newspaper,
    I, 287.
  • Napier, James C., founder One Cent
    Savings Bank, Nashville, Tenn., II
    212.
  • Narvaez, Panfilo de, Spanish explorer,
    Negroes accompany, I, 88; accompanied
    by Negro Estevan, II, 385.
  • Nash, Charles E., Negro soldier and
    congressman, I, 324.
  • Nassau, Rev. R. H., on African religion,
    I, 65.
  • Natchez Indians, sold as slave to Santo
    Domingo, I, 130.
  • National Bank, Chelsea, N. Y., stock
    owned in, by Negro, II, 202.
  • National Baptist Publishing Company,
    II, 340, 341.
  • National Medical Association, coloured,
    sketch of, II, 179–181.
  • Nazarites, coloured secret order, II,
    148.
  • Neau, Elias, establishes, 1704, school
    for Indian and Negro slaves in New
    York, II, 119.
  • Negro, The, in Africa, as represented
    in school books, I, 8; American,
    natives of Africa, 10, 18; colour,
    basis of solidarity of, 33, 34; the
    true, better than the Asiatic, 43;
    in the country districts of the South,
    62, 63; power of adaptation of, 77;
    compared with the Indians, 125–143
    part of, in slavery, 144; as an
    individual and as a race, in the
    South, 179; the educated, II, 91, 92;
    literacy of, compared with European
    nations, 117, 118; colonies, value
    of, 252; gift of poetic expression of,
    284; mission for, in Maryland, 121;
    natural eloquence of, 318; relation
    to white man in slavery and
    freedom, 399.

  • 424

    Page 424
  • Negro Abolitionists, I, 288; speech of
    at Raleigh, N. C., 1842, 302.
  • Negro Arch-deacons, in Episcopal
    Church, I, 273.
  • "Negro Artisan," Atlanta University
    Studies, II, 64, 65.
  • Negro Baker, large business of, in
    Jackson, Miss, II, 203.
  • Negro Banks, names of, II, 204, 207,
    219–224, 250, 253, 254; number
    of, 211; types of, 212, 213; Alabama
    Savings and Loan, of Birmingham,
    225, 226; moral and material interests
    interwoven in the work of, 231.
  • Negro Baptists, statistics of, I, 270.
  • Negro Barbers, increase of, II, 74;
    trade of frequently confined to
    Negroes, 199.
  • Negro Blacksmith, his place in social
    life of Africa, I, 47, 48.
  • Negro Booksellers, successful at Greenville,
    Miss, II, 202, 203.
  • Negro Business Enterprises, number of
    in Jackson, Miss, II, 205, 206.
  • Negro Business League, National, II,
    204, 341.
  • Negro Business Men, origin of, II, 194,
    195.
  • Negro Caterers, names of ante-bellum,
    II, 195, 196.
  • Negro Catholics, in Maryland and
    Louisiana, I, 271, 272.
  • Negro Church, work of in Africa, I, 34;
    Berean Presbyterian, social work of,
    II, 257.
  • Negro Churches, support voluntary
    probation officers, Birmingham, Ala.,
    II, 111.
  • Negro Churches, see Churches, Negro.
  • Negro College, plan for, at New Haven,
    Conn., 1832, II, 129, 130.
  • Negro Conference, annual at Tuskegee,
    II, 50.
  • Negro Congressmen, names of, I, 324;
    II, 12, 25, 26.
  • Negro Craftsmen in Virginia, II, 60.
  • Negro Crime, case of Ike Winder, II, 364.
  • Negro Crime, see Crime, Negro.
  • Negro Domination, evils of so-called,
    II, 31.
  • Negro Education, see Education, Negro.
  • Negro Education, made to pay in
    Macon County, Ala., II, 46.
  • Negro Explorers, II, 384.
  • Negro Farmer, amount of land owned
    by, in United States, II, 47; conducts
    reformatory at Tuscaloosa,
    Ala., II, 112; of Maryland, 363.
  • Negro Farmers, names of successful,
    II, 52–54, 250.
  • Negro Farmers, see Landowners.
  • Negro Folk Songs, II, 4.
  • Negro Governor, elected in Connecticut,
    I, 87, foot-note.
  • Negro Grocer, II, 202.
  • Negro Hotel Keeper, most successful,
    II, 197.
  • Negro in Africa, diversity of stocks
    of, I, 20; as a labourer, 29, 30;
    inventor of art of smelting ore, 32;
    compared with American Negro,
    33, 34, indefinable bond connecting
    with America, 34; affection for
    mother of, 44; stability of economic
    conditions of, 50.
  • Negro in Brazil, I, 129.
  • Negro in Business during slavery, II,
    81; in Jackson, Miss., 205.
  • Negro in Canada, study of by J. C.
  • Hamilton, II, 246.
  • Negro in Cuba, I, 120.
  • Negro Inventors, II, 77–79.
  • Negro Labour, in America compared
    with, in Africa, I, 31; Lower South,
    117; in West Indies, 118; compared
    with Indian, 120; compared with
    white, 121; compared with that of
    other primitive people, 138, 141;
    most efficient in United States, II,
    59; in hemp-bagging factories, 63;
    re-distribution of, 66; statistics of,
    in factories, 75; in Maryland, 362;
    used to build the first ship on Pacific
    Coast of North America, 384.
  • Negro Labourer, compared with white
    in South, I, 142; in cotton factories,
    II, 62; losing monopoly of trades in
    the South, 66.
  • Negro Landowners, in Virginia in the
    seventeenth century, I, 198; in
    Georgia, II, 41, 42, in Gloucester

    425

    Page 425
    County, Va., 43; in Macon County,
    Ala., 45; rate of increase, 46; compared
    with white in North Carolina
    and Georgia, 145; origin of, 194; in
    Chicago, 224.
  • Negro Mechanics, before the Revolution,
    II, 60; restriction upon, after
    1830, 62; slave educated as, 63;
    number of, in slavery, 64, 65.
  • Negro Millionaire, reputed, II, 209.
  • Negro Missionaries in Africa, II, 336–
    338.
  • Negro Musicians of Louisiana, II, 276.
  • Negro Philanthropists, II, 209, 210,
    346.
  • Negro Physician, drug stores owned by,
    II, 181.
  • Negro Plot, of 1741, I, 91–94.
  • Negro Poets, names of several, II, 288,
    289.
  • Negro Politicians, names of, II, 22;
    character of those of Reconstruction
    period, 193; history of two former,
    207, 208.
  • Negro Preachers, names of, antebellum,
    I, 257, 260, 262–265, 267,
    269.
  • Negro Princes, in India, I, 75.
  • Negro Problem, courage quoted as
    solution of, I, 191.
  • Negro Progress, referred to, in speech
    of Congressman White, II, 27;
    in Georgia, 41, 42; in Macon County,
    Ala., 45, 46; since emancipation,
    114; nature of, in United States,
    206, 207; during slavery, 396.
  • Negro Schoolmaster, conducts white
    school in Granville County, N. C.,
    I, 274.
  • Negro Self-government, test of, at Boley,
    Okla., II, 249; example of, at Mound
    Bayou, 371–378.
  • Negro Self-help, II, 158.
  • Negro Senator, first, II, 12.
  • Negro Slave, condition of, in seventeenth
    century, I, 112; appointed guardian
    of white girl in Virginia, 197.
  • Negro Slaves, in Greece and Rome, I,
    85; fresh levies necessary, 118; in
    Indian Territory, 134.
  • Negro Slaves, see Slaves.
  • Negro Soldiers, contribute to the
    founding of Lincoln Institute, Jefferson
    City, Mo., H, 140.
  • Negro State, in Brazil, I, 75.
  • Negro Surgeons, the most noted named,
    II, 180.
  • Negro Surveyor, laid out District of
    Columbia, II, 60.
  • Negro Teacher, anecdote of an early,
    I, 42.
  • Negro Undertakers, II, 200–202.
  • Negroes, number of Louisiana in 1728,
    I, 121; intermixture with Indians,
    131; Creole, 158, 207; home for
    aged and infirm, Philadelphia, 292,
    293; industrial home for, in South
    Carolina, II, 36; employed in Durham,
    N. C., tobacco factories, 38;
    as employers of labour, 74; support
    voluntary probation officer in Birmingham,
    Ala., 112; special privileges
    of Creole, 124; in the professions,
    statistics of, 182; effect upon,
    of laws of political rights, 190–193;
    religious instruction of, by Presbyterians,
    119; wealth of, in Louisiana,
    I, 207–208.
  • Nell, William C., coloured anti-slavery
    editor, I, 295.
  • Newby, Dangerfield, Negro companion
    of John Brown at Harper's Ferry, I,
    175.
  • New Jersey, rights of free Negroes
    in, I, 199.
  • New Mexico, Negro explorer in, II, 385.
  • New Orleans, Negroes in battle of, I,
    310; riot in 1866, II, 19; clandestine
    schools in, 123; reputed Negro millionaire
    of, 210.
  • Newport, R. I., headquarters of slave
    trade, I, 145.
  • Newspapers, ante-bellum coloured, I,
    287, 293, 294.
  • Newspapers, coloured, I, 204; number
    of, in the United States, II, 187.
  • New York African Society, coloured
    ante-bellum mutual relief society, I,
    212, 213.
  • New York City, Negro population of, in
    1741, I, 94; headquarters of slave
    smugglers, 145; rights of free Negroes

    426

    Page 426
    in, 199; Negro crime in, II, 86; coloured
    schools of, 132, 133; Negro
    caterers in, 195, 196; homes of
    Negroes in, 254.
  • New York Herald, criticism of Henry
    O. Tanner's painting quoted, II,
    295.
  • Nickens, Owen T. B., aids in establishing
    first coloured schools in Cincinnati,
    O., II, 133.
  • Niles, Judge Alfred S., supports work
    of coloured Law and Order League,
    Baltimore, Md., II, 362.
  • North Carolina, life of free Negroes in,
    I, 199; mutual and provident associations,
    account of, II, 37; property
    of Negroes in, 145; number of Negro
    banks in, 211.
  • Northen, William J., organises league
    of white and Coloured men, II, 107,
    108.
  • North Pole, Negro accompanies Peary
    to, II, 386.
  • Northrup, C. F., referred to, I, 248.
  • North Star, Frederick Douglass's paper,
    I, 295.
  • Noyes Academy, Canaan, N. H., open
    to Negroes, II, 130.
  • Nupe, Negro translates Bible into language
    of, II, 336.
  • Oberlin Collegiate Institute, founded
    1833, I, 291.
  • Odd Fellows, coloured, of Mississippi,
    I, 188; first lodge of, II 152; under
    jurisdiction of England, 153; propperty
    owned by, 156, 157; charities of,
    158.
  • Ogden, Peter, secures charter from
    England for Negro Odd Fellows, II,
    153.
  • Oglethorpe, James Edward, reports
    slave conspiracy in New York,
    I, 92; opposes slavery in Georgia,
    116.
  • O'Hara, James E., coloured congressman,
    II, 25.
  • Ohio, rights of free Negroes in, I, 199;
    coloured settlements in, 226; black
    code in, 238; II, 19; first coloured
    school in, 133.
  • Oil mill, cotton-seed, erected at Mound
    Bayou, II, 248.
  • Oklahoma, number of Negro banks in,
    II, 211; Negro towns in, 250.
  • Old Folks Home, founded by True
    Reformers, Henrico County, Va.,
    II, 165.
  • Olmstead, Frederick Law, on free
    Negroes of Louisiana, I, 207, 208;
    on arrest of free Negroes, District of
    Columbia, 213; on Negro mechanics,
    II, 62, 63; on literacy of Negroes
    in the back country of Mississippi,
    125–127; on success of free coloured
    women, 301, 302.
  • Olustee, battle of, I, 330.
  • Oneida Institute, school for Negroes,
    Whitesboro, N. Y., I, 225, 294.
  • Ontario, Canada, Negro President
    Municipal Association, II, 246.
  • Oregon, Negro accompanies first explorer
    of, II, 386.
  • Orphanage for Negroes, founded by
    coloured woman at Atlanta, II, 109,
    110.
  • Orphans' Home, for coloured children
    at Harvey, Ill., founded by Amanda
    Smith, II, 325.
  • Osceola, Negro wife of, I, 133.
  • Otis, Joseph E., visits President Johnson
    in interest of Negro citizenship,
    II, 18.
  • Oviedo y Valdes, Gonzalo Fernandez
    de, Negroes in Spanish settlement
    of North Carolina with, I, 83.
  • Oxford University, African students at,
    II, 285; Negro receives degree from,
    336.
  • Pace, Dinah, founds industrial school
    and orphans' home, II, 309.
  • Packard, Joseph, President Board of
    School Commissioners, Baltimore,
    Md., supports work of Law and
    Order League, II, 362.
  • Page, Thomas Nelson, Negro characters
    of, referred to, I, 162–164.
  • Palmares, Negro state in South
    America, I, 75.
  • Panama, inhabitants of, mixed Spanish,
    Indian and Negro blood, I, 131.

  • 427

    Page 427
  • Paret, Rt. Rev. William, Baltimore,
    Md., supports work of Coloured Law
    and Order League, II, 362.
  • Paris Exposition, Negro gains prize
    at, for cotton, II, 53.
  • Park, Joshua, referred to, II, 347.
  • Park, Mungo, travels of, in Soudan, I,
    53; on African slave trade, 95–101;
    befriended by African woman, II,
    297, 298.
  • Parton, James, history of General
    Butler in New Orleans, II, 8.
  • Patterson, David, sends slaves to Haiti,
    II, 237.
  • Payne, Bishop Daniel A., befriended
    by free Coloured Society, Charleston,
    S. C., I, 211; founder of Wilberforce
    University, 237, 238; referred
    to, II, 347.
  • Peary, Robert E, Negro accompanies,
    to North Pole, II, 386.
  • Pemberton, James, manager Jefferson
    Davis plantation, I, 156.
  • Penn, I. Garland, brings about the
    first national meeting of Negro physicians,
    Atlanta Exposition, 1895, II,
    179, 180.
  • Pennington, Rev. James W. C., agent
    Underground Railway, I, 283, 284;
    presides at coloured political convention,
    Syracuse, 1863, II, 17.
  • Pennsylvania, Negro population of,
    1754, I, 94; rights of free Negroes
    in, 199; number of Negro banks in,
    II, 211.
  • Pennsylvania Young Men's Society,
    promotes Negro emigration to Africa,
    I, 244.
  • Perry, C. W., of Boley, Okla., II, 250.
  • Peterson, John, coloured principal
    first normal school for coloured
    teachers, New York, II, 133.
  • Pettiford, Rev. W. R., establishes
    Negro bank in Birmingham, II, 225–
    233.
  • Pharmacist, first Negro in the United
    States, II, 177.
  • Philadelphia, influx of coloured population
    to, I, 253; Negro crime in, II,
    86, 87; coloured secret orders of,
    II, 155, 156; Frederick Douglass
    Hospital in, 174; Negro caterers
    in, 195; homes of coloured people
    in, 254, 257; social work of Presbyterian
    Church in, 349.
  • Phillips, Ulrich B. on progress of
    slave mechanics in Charleston, II,
    79, 80.
  • Phillips, Wendell, referred to, II, 196;
    on Sojourner Truth's oratorical
    powers, II, 318.
  • Physicians and Surgeons, number of,
    II, 182.
  • Pierce, Edward L., starts Negro
    school at Beaufort, S. C., II, 9.
  • Pillsbury, Parker, Sojourner Truth
    replies to a young minister at meeting
    of, II, 316.
  • Pinchback, Pickney, B. S., soldier of
    Civil War, I, 324; lieutenant and
    acting Governor, 324; Reconstruction
    political leader, II, 22, 23.
  • Pinchback, Major William, father of
    P. B. S., II, 22.
  • Pinckney, Charles, on fidelity of slaves
    during Revolutionary War, I, 319.
  • Pine Bluff, Ark., coloured Masonic
    temple at, II, 157; street railway
    owned by Negro in, 209.
  • Pizarro, Francisco, Negro bodyguard
    of, I, 87, 88.
  • Plantation hymns, I, 13, 165; II, 263,
    264.
  • Planter, The, Confederate transport
    stolen by Negro crew, II, 20–22.
  • Planters' Journal, comment of, on
    Mound Bayou, II, 376.
  • Poindexter, coloured Underground
    Railway agent, I, 285.
  • Politics, Negro in, II, 193, 356.
  • Politics, see Ballot.
  • Political Rights, effect of loss of, on
    Negroes of Alabama, II, 190.
  • Pollard, L. M., director coloured bank,
    Savannah, Ga., II, 223.
  • Poor, Salem, in battle of Bunker Hill,
    I, 314.
  • Pope, Colonel Wyley, referred to, I, 318.
  • Port Cresson, Liberia, settled by
    Negro colonists, I, 245.
  • Port Hudson, Negroes' part in battle of,
    I, 327.

  • 428

    Page 428
  • Porter, Maggie (Mrs. Cole), early
    Fisk Jubilee singer, II, 269, 270.
  • Pratt, Harry T., supervisor Baltimore,
    Md., Public Schools, II, 359.
  • Presbyterian Church, among Negroes,
    I, 273; Afro-American, 275; North,
    number of ministers and presbyterys
    in Southern states, 275; of
    Canada, schools for fugitive slaves,
    started by, II, 241; Southern African
    missions of, 338, 339.
  • Price, Dr. Joseph C., I, 24; first President
    Livingstone College, II, 343.
  • Proctor, Rev. Henry Hugh, coloured
    member Atlantic Civic League, II,
    107; establishes institutional church,
    108, 109; referred to, 348.
  • Progress, of Negro, observations of Dr.
    George C. Hall, in Mobile, Ala., II,
    189; signs of, 212.
  • Property, of Negroes, value of, II 47;
    of secret orders, 156; in Jackson,
    Miss., 204; of individuals, 209, 210;
    in Chicago, 224.
  • Protestant Episcopal Church, first
    coloured minister in, I, 272; first
    Negro baptised in, 1624, I, 272;
    number of Negroes ordained in
    273; work of Domestic Missionary
    Society of, II, 308.
  • Provident Hospital, coloured, Chicago,
    II, 174.
  • Purvis, Dr. Charles B., army surgeon,
    I, 326; professor Howard University,
    326.
  • Purvis, Mrs. Charles B., granddaughter
    of James Forten, I, 290.
  • Purvis, Robert, chairman Philadelphia
    Vigilance Committee, I, 215; signs
    declaration First American Antislavery
    Convention, 284; John G.
    Whittier describes, 284, foot-note.
  • Pushkin, Alexander Sergeievich, national
    poet of Russia, African origin
    of, II, 289.
  • Pygmies, of Elgon and Semliki forests,
    I, 28.
  • Race Distinctions, made first on ground
    of religion, I, 114.
  • Race Prejudice in the South, I, 142.
  • Race War, in Memphis, Tenn., 1866;
    II, 19; in New Orleans, La., 19.
  • Racial Identity, Negroes sometimes
    ashamed of, I, 12, 16.
  • Racial Intermingling, in the South and
    West Indies, I, 131; some products of,
    132; Indian Territory, 134; Negroes
    and Indians, 142.
  • Rainey, Joseph H., Negro congressman,
    I, 325, II, 12.
  • Ram's Horn, anti-bellum coloured
    newspaper, I, 295.
  • Randolph Freedmen, attempt to settle
    in Mercer County, O., I, 235.
  • Randolph, John A., of Roanoke, Va.,
    on fear of Negro insurrection, I, 178;
    frees slaves, 194; provides for slaves
    in will, 235, 236; describes eloquence
    of slave woman, 279.
  • Rankin, John, abolitionist of Ripley,
    O., I, 240.
  • Rape, Negro and white commitments
    for, compared, II, 104; disposition of
    Negro to commit, II, 105, 106; Negro
    acquitted of, in Atlanta, Ga., 108.
  • Rapier, James T., coloured Congressman,
    II, 26.
  • Ray, Charles B., early editor Negro
    newspaper, I, 293.
  • Ray, Charlotte, first coloured woman
    lawyer, II, 184, 185.
  • Reason, Charles L., Negro educator,
    I, 294; in Philadelphia, Pa., II, 132.
  • Reck, John S., first coloured man
    admitted to United States Supreme
    Court, II, 185.
  • Reclus, Jean Jacques Elisée, on
    German labour in Brazil, South
    America, I, 121, 122.
  • Reconstruction, in Southern states,
    II, 19, 20; opinion of coloured man
    upon, 29; results of so-called, in
    Atlanta, Ga., 108, 109.
  • Redding, Joe, white man receives
    light sentence for murder, II, 98.
  • Redmond, S. D., coloured physician
    and business man in Jackson, Miss.,
    II, 205.
  • Reed, Joseph, letter to, from George
    Washington, concerning Phyllis
    Wheatley, II, 287, 288.

  • 429

    Page 429
  • Reed, Lindsay S., establishes insurance
    company in Savannah, Ga., II, 219,
    220.
  • Reed Home and School, conducted
    by Dinah Pace, at Covington, Ga.,
    II, 309.
  • Reformatory, for Negro children,
    Hanover Co., Va., II, 110; at Mt.
  • Meigs, Ala., 113, 330.
  • Refugees' Home, for fugitive slaves,
    Windsor, Ont., Canada, II, 240.
  • Reid, Dow, Negro farmer, Macon Co.,
    Ala., II, 194.
  • Reid, Frank, Negro farmer, Macon
    Co., Ala., II, 194.
  • Reilly, Barnard, advertises for runaway
    bond-servant, I, 107.
  • Relations of whites and blacks, peculiar
    in the South, I, 11.
  • Remond, Charles Lenox, agent Underground
    Railway and anti-slavery
    lecturer, I, 283; assists in raising
    coloured troops, 323.
  • Revels, Hiram R., first coloured U. S.
    Senator, II, 11.
  • Reynolds, R. J., tobacco manufacturer
    of Winston-Salem, assists in building
    coloured hospital, II, 252, 253.
  • Rhode Island, coloured regiment in
    battle of, I, 311.
  • Rhodes, James Ford, on slave labour,
    I, 152; on Negro delegates to Southern
    constitutional conventions, II, 19.
  • Rice culture, Negro labour necessary
    in, I, 117.
  • Richmond, Va., part of Negro troops
    in the fall of, I, 331; Negro banks of,
    II, 219.
  • Ridley, Mrs. U. A., officer National
    Federation of Coloured Women's
    Clubs, II, 329.
  • Riot, the Atlanta, effect upon coloured
    people of, II, 359.
  • Riot, see Race war.
  • Rischer, H. K., successful baker,
    Jackson, Miss., II, 203.
  • Roberts Family, Free Negro settlement
    of, in Ohio, I, 241.
  • Robin, discharged from servitude in
    Canada on writ of habeas corpus,
    II, 239.
  • Robinson, John, Tuskegee graduate
    in West Africa, I, 37.
  • Rockefeller, John D., contributed to
    coloured Y. M. C. A. Bldg., Washington,
    D. C., II, 353.
  • Rodin, Auguste, coloured sculptress's
    work attracts attention of, II, 293.
  • Root Doctor, The, in the country
    districts, II, 173.
  • Rose, John C., U. S. District Attorney,
    Baltimore, Md., legal adviser
    Coloured Law and Order League,
    II, 362.
  • Ross, Alexander, goes from Canada to
    Southern states to rescue slaves,
    I, 221, foot-note.
  • Ross, A. W., calls on President Johnson
    in interest of Negro citizenship, II,
    18.
  • Rough Riders, Negro soldiers go to
    support of at Las Guasimas, II,
    390.
  • Roman, Dr. C. B., coloured oculist,
    Nashville, Tenn., II, 175.
  • Royal Geographical Society, Negro
    made member of, II, 336.
  • Ruffin, Chief Justice, North Carolina,
    defines relation of master and slave,
    I, 148.
  • Ruffin, George, L., Judge of municipal
    court, Charlestown, Mass, II, 186.
  • Ruffin, Mrs. Josephine St. Pierre,
    coloured club, woman, II, 326–330.
  • Ruggles, David agent Underground
    Railway, I, 283; editor Mirror of
    Liberty
    , 283.
  • Rush, Dr. Benjamin, opinion of, concerning
    Harry Hosier, I, 257.
  • Russell, James S., archdeacon and
    principal of Episcopal school at
    Lawrenceville, Va., I, 273.
  • Russwurm, John B., edits first Negro
    newspaper in United States, I, 292,
    293.
  • Rutling, Thomas, of original Fisk
    Jubilee singers, II, 270; teacher of
    English in Switzerland, II, 270,
    271.
  • Salem, Peter, slayer of Mayor Pitcairn,
    I, 314.

  • 430

    Page 430
  • Salzburgers, see Moravians.
  • Sampson, Benjamin, teacher at Wilberforce,
    I, 204.
  • Sampson, James D., Free Negro in
    North Carolina, I, 204.
  • Sampson, John P., editor Coloured
    Citizen
    , I, 204.
  • Sampson, George M., teacher, Florida
    State Normal School, I, 205.
  • San Juan Hill, Negro soldiers in battle
    of, II, 391.
  • Sanderson, Thomas, one of founders
    Negro Masonry in America, II, 149.
  • Sandys, George, sells bond-servant for
    debt, I, 110, 111.
  • Sanifer, J. M., Negro farmer of Pickens
    County, Ala., I, 63, 64.
  • Santo Domingo, slaves introduced into,
    1505, I, 87; Indians sold as slaves to,
    130; revolt of slaves in, 172; refugees
    from, found St. Francis' Academy,
    Baltimore, 271, 272.
  • Sarbah, John Mensah, native African,
    author Fanti Customary Law, I, 70,
    71.
  • Saunders, Negro servant of John C.
    Fremont, II, 386.
  • Savannah, Ga., Negro crime in, II, 86;
    example of Negro business in, 219,
    220; Negro banks of, 219, 222; seat
    of Georgia State Industrial College,
    221; Negro business concerns of,
    219–223; mission work of Young
    Men's Sunday Club in, 350.
  • Savings and Loan Association,
    examples of, among Negro, II, 213.
  • Saxton, General Rufus, at Beaufort,
    S. C., II, 9.
  • Schofield School for Negroes, Aiken, S. C., II, 175.
  • School Farm, for support of rural Negro
    schools, II, 142.
  • School Law, separate, in Massachusetts,
    tested by coloured lawyer, II, 185.
  • School Suffrage Association, of Boston,
    coloured woman member of,
    II, 328.
  • Schools, ante-bellum for Negro, I,
    200, 212, 225, 236, 271, 280, 294; II,
    123, 129–132, 134–136, 197, 308–
    310, 319.
  • Schools, Negro, II, 175, 221, 227, 252,
    307, 344, 346, 349, 363, 380.
  • Schools, Negro, gifts to, by Negroes,
    II, 346–348; supported by Negro
    Baptists, 339–341; supported by
    Negro Methodists, 341–345.
  • Schweinfurth, George August, quoted
    on Africa, II, 283.
  • Scipio, North Carolina slave, blacksmith,
    owner of livery stable, I, 202.
  • Scott, Walter S., secretary and treasurer,
    coloured bank, Savannah, Ga., II,
    222.
  • Seaboard Slave States, Olmstead's
    journey through, referred to, II,
    398.
  • Sego, Capital of Bambara, West
    Africa, Mungo Park visits, II, 297.
  • Séjour, Victor, coloured musician, gains
    distinction in Paris, II, 276.
  • Selma University, of Selma, Ala., II,
    227.
  • Seme, Pixley Isaka, African student,
    gains oratorical honours at Columbia
    University, II, 285.
  • Seminoles, of Florida, intermingle
    with runaway slaves from Georgia,
    I, 133.
  • Serfdom, effort to re-establish, in
    Georgia, I, 116.
  • Servants, white, condition of, like
    Negro slaves in the colonies, I, 113.
  • Servitude, white in North Carolina,
    I, 113; in the colonies, 107–116.
  • Settle, Josiah T., political leader,
    Reconstruction Period, II, 22, 23.
  • Seven Wise Men, The, coloured secret
    order, II, 148.
  • Shaker Abolitionist, Seth Concklin, I,
    221.
  • Shaler, Nathaniel Southgate, on Negro
    as labourer, I, 139–142.
  • Shaw, Mrs. Mary E., coloured benefactress
    of Tuskegee Institute, II, 346.
  • Shaw, Robert Gould, white commander
    Negro regiment, Civil War,
    I, 248, 328; killed in assault on
    Fort Wagner, 328; bust of, by
    coloured sculptress, II, 293.
  • Shaw University, Raleigh, N. C., 1865,
    II, 140.

  • 431

    Page 431
  • Shepley, General George F., in New
    Orleans, II, 14.
  • Sheppard, William H., coloured missionary
    in Africa, II, 338.
  • Sheppard, Ella, of original Fisk
    Jubilee Singers, II, 267; wife of
    Rev. George W. Moore, 269.
  • Shiloh Church, Ante-bellum Negro,
    New York City, I, 284.
  • Shirley, Thomas, endows Negro school,
    Philadelphia, II, 131.
  • Shorter, Bishop James A., referred to,
    II, 347.
  • Siboney, Cuba, Negro soldiers at, II,
    391, 392.
  • Siebert, Wilbur H., on Underground
    Railway, I, 282, 285, 286.
  • Silk Mill, Fayetteville, N. C., Negro
    labour in, II, 75, 76.
  • Slater Industrial and State Normal
    School, Winston-Salem, N. C., II,
    252.
  • Slater, John F., makes first large gift
    for Negro education in the South,
    II, 129.
  • Slave Caravan, Mungo Park's description
    of, I, 97–101.
  • Slave Code, see Slave Laws.
  • Slave-consuming countries, I, 105.
  • Slave Girl Poet, Washington's kindness
    to, II, 288.
  • Slave-holders, efforts of Southern, to
    lessen evils of slavery, I, 249.
  • Slave in Business, with white man, II,
    81.
  • Slave Insurrection, effect of Northampton,
    on condition of slaves,
    I, 297; fear of, during Civil War,
    II, 4.
  • Slave Laws, distinguishing between
    Christians and heathen, I, 114–
    116; show slavery on its harsher
    side, 147; made emancipation
    difficult, 178; of North Carolina,
    restricting emancipation, 243, 244,
    300, 301; referred to, II, 62, 82, 83,
    118, 122–124.
  • Slave Mechanics, price of, II, 63;
    treatment of, 64; independent position
    of, 79; restrictions on intellectual
    powers of, 80.
  • Slave-raiders, visit of, to coast of
    Florida, I, 129.
  • Slavery, in Africa and America and
    America compared, I, 96–100; advantages
    derived from by Negro,
    135; judgment of Supreme Court,
    of North Carolina, on, 147, 148;
    the idea at bottom of, 149; on the
    small plantations, 149–151; on the
    large plantations, 152, 153; in Virginia,
    165; white, in Africa, 280,
    281; an industrial and political
    system, II, 82; real cause of downfall
    of, 83, introduction of, into
    Georgia, 121; in Canada, 239;
    in New York, Sojourner Truth's
    account of, 311–315; progress of
    Negro under, 396, 397.
  • Slaves, African, proportion of in population
    of America, I, 95.
  • Slaves, Fugitive, from industrious and
    ambitious class, II, 83.
  • Slaves, Negro, in the West Indies, 1501,
    I, 87; number of, in America, in
    1800, 95; price of, 1820–1830, 96;
    number of, brought to America,
    105, 106; light colour of, in
    Louisiana, 123; runaway, intermingle
    with Seminoles of Florida,
    133; treatment of, on plantation,
    146; plan of Mississippi planter for
    freeing, 194; public discussions of,
    297; freedom given those taking
    part in Revolutionary War, 313; invited
    to join King's Army in Revolutionary
    War, 319; some practically
    free, II, 80, 81; conspiracy of, in
    New York, 119; school for Indian
    and Negro, in New York, 119; education
    among, in Back Country, 137;
    New York Society for promoting
    manumission of, 132.
  • Slaves, proportion of, to free men in
    Africa, I, 95; twenty landed at
    Jamestown in 1619, 85.
  • Slave Ship, the last, I, 104.
  • Slave Songs, I, 100, 160; compared
    with African music, II, 261; study
    of, by Thomas Wentworth Higginson,
    262–264; origin of, 262; poetic
    language of, 264, 265; Creole, 276.

  • 432

    Page 432
  • Slave Trade, extent of, from West
    Coast of Africa, I, 57; corrupts
    native customs, 58, 59; in seventeenth
    century, 60; begun, 1442,
    by merchants of Seville, Spain, 86;
    transition of domestic into foreign,
    in Africa, 95; domestic, in United
    States, 98, note; foreign, made a
    crime in 1808, 101; loss of life from,
    102, note; survivors of last slave
    ship, 103; white, 111.
  • Smalls, Robert, carries off Confederate
    transport Planter, II, 20, 22; congressman,
    22; collector of customs at
    Beaufort, 22.
  • Smiley, Charles H., coloured caterer,
    Chicago, Il., II, 196.
  • Smith, Abiel, founder of "Smith
    School," Boston, Mass., II, 134.
  • Smith, Adam, Lott Cary reads "Wealth
    of Nations," of, II, 234.
  • Smith, Alfred, Negro "Cotton King,"
    Oklahoma, II, 52, 53.
  • Smith, Amanda, coloured evangelist,
    II, 321–325.
  • Smith, Benjamin R., aids Lunsford
    Lane to purchase freedom, I,
    298.
  • Smith, Boston, one of founders of
    American Negro Masonry, II, 149.
  • Smith, Gerrit, abolitionist, aids in the
    "Jerry Rescue," I, 225.
  • Smith, Dr. James McCune, agent
    Underground Railway, I, 283;
    speech of welcome to Lafayette, II,
    133; gains distinction as a physician,
    177.
  • Smith, James A., aids in the escape of
    fugitive slaves from Richmond, Va.,
    I, 217.
  • Smith, Dr. John Blair, of Hampton-Sydney
    College, Va., influence of,
    on Jack of Virginia, I, 267.
  • Smith, John D., statement concerning
    slave mechanics, II, 64, 65.
  • Smith, Robert H., attorney, supports
    work of Coloured Law and Order
    League of Baltimore, II, 362.
  • Smith, Robert L., founder of Farmers'
    Improvement Association, of Texas,
    II, 378–382.
  • Smith, Stephen, wealthy Negro endows
    Old Folks Home, Philadelphia, I,
    292.
  • Smithfield, O., ante-bellum coloured
    settlement in, I, 240, 241.
  • Smythe, John H., former minister to
    Liberia, founds reformatory for
    coloured children in Virginia, II, 110.
  • Snow Riot, Washington, D. C., 1835,
    II, 135.
  • Soldiers, Negro, number of, in Revolutionary
    War, I, 310; numbers of,
    in Confederate Army, 320; numbers
    of, in Federal Army, 326; first fight
    of, 322, 323; names of, 324–326; in
    Spanish-American War, II, 390, 392.
  • Sons and Daughters of Jacob, coloured
    secret order, II, 148.
  • Sons and Daughters of Peace, bank of,
    Newport News, Va., II, 219.
  • Sons of Saint Thomas, founded 1823,
    II, 155.
  • South Africa, African student's description
    of people of, I, 78, 79;
    desire of natives for education in, 80.
  • South America, slave-raiders visit, I,
    129.
  • South Carolina, Negro population of,
    1740, I, 94; rights of free Negroes
    in, 199.
  • Southampton County, Va., insurrection
    of slaves in, I, 173.
  • Southern States, Negroes' place in
    literature of, I, 7.
  • Solvent Savings Bank, of Memphis,
    Tenn., II, 23.
  • Spradley, Wash., agent Underground
    Railway, I, 285.
  • Squantum, Mass., hotel conducted by
    Negro at, II, 199.
  • St. Francis Academy, Baltimore, Md.,
    founded by Negroes, I, 271, II,
    346.
  • St. Louis, Mo., Negro crime in, II, 86.
  • St. Luke's Church, Washington, D. C.,
    Alexander Crummell, pastor of, I,
    273.
  • St. Luke's Penny Saving Bank, Richmond,
    Va., II, 219.
  • St. Philip's Church, slaves held by,
    Charleston, S. C., I, 207.

  • 433

    Page 433
  • St. Philip's Church, Episcopal, in New
    York City, II, 307.
  • St. Pierre, John, father of Mrs. Josephine
    St. Pierre Ruffin, II, 327.
  • St. Thomas Church, Philadelphia,
    1794, I, 255.
  • Stanley, John C., Free Negro in North
    Carolina, I, 201, 202.
  • Stark, Colonel W. Pinkney, on slavery
    in South Carolina, I, 150–152.
  • Statistics of Churches, I, 276, 277.
  • Steedman, General James B., commands
    Negro troops, battle of Nashville,
    Tenn., I, 330, 331.
  • Steele, Carrie, founder of coloured
    orphanage, Atlanta, Ga., II, 109, 110.
  • Steiner, Bernard C., on missionary
    school, Maryland, 1750, for poor
    white and Negro children, II, 121.
  • Sterrs, Dr. W. E., conductor of Cottage
    Home Infirmary, II, 172.
  • Stevens, Rev. William B., on the
    importation of white bondsmen into
    Georgia, I, 116, 119.
  • Stewart, Dr. F. A., coloured physicial,
    Nashville, Tenn., II, 175.
  • Stewart, Eliza, mother of P. B. S.
    Pinchback, II, 22.
  • Still, Peter, finds his brother William
    in Philadelphia, Pa., I, 219–221;
    efforts of, to rescue family, 221.
  • Still, William, secretary Philadelphia
    Vigilance Committee, I, 215, 216;
    author of "The Underground Railroad,"
    I, 216–221; chairman General
    Vigilance Committee, 284, 285.
  • Story, William Wetmore, statue of
    Sojourner Truth by, II, 318, 319.
  • Stow, George W., author of "Native
    Races of South Africa," quoted, I,
    19.
  • Stowe, Harriet Beecher, original of
    her "Uncle Tom" a refugee in
    Canada, II, 243.
  • Straight University, New Orleans, La.,
    1869, II, 140; gift to, by Thomy
    Lafon, 347.
  • Suggs, Daniel C., referred to, II, 221.
  • Sumner, Charles, on white slavery in
    Africa, I, 281; speech in favour of
    seating Negro senator, II, 12; aids
    coloured attorney to win admission
    to bar, 185; aids first coloured man
    to gain admission to U. S. Supreme
    Court, 185; referred to, 196; bust
    of, by coloured sculptress, 293.
  • Sunday School, Negro, started by
    Southern theological students, Lane
    Seminary, Cincinnati, O., I, 291.
  • Sunday Schools, gave Negroes first
    opportunity for education, II, 121.
  • Surgeons, coloured, progress of, II,
    174, 175.
  • Swaney, Negro playmate of John C.
    Calhoun, I, 150.
  • Syracuse, N. Y., station of Underground
    Railway, I, 224.
  • Talladega College, Talladega, Ala.,
    1869, II, 140, 227.
  • Taney, Chief Justice Roger B., frees
    slaves, I, 194.
  • Tanner, Bishop Benjamin T., referred
    to, II, 171; father of Henry O.
    Tanner, 294.
  • Tanner, Henry O., referred to, II, 171;
    coloured painter, II, 294–296.
  • Tappen, Arthur, buys land in New
    Haven for Negro industrial school,
    II, 130.
  • Taxation and Negro schools, paper
    on, by Charles L. Coon, superintendent
    of schools, Wilson, N. C.,
    II, 143.
  • Taylor, Dr. W. Benjamin, befriends a
    coloured woman doctor, II, 176.
  • Taylor, John Louis, Chief Justice
    Supreme Court, North Carolina,
    decision in case of Quakers prosecuted
    for freeing slaves, I, 243.
  • Taylor, Robert R., referred to, II, 81.
  • Taylor-Lane Hospital, coloured,
    Orangeburg, S. C., II, 175, 176.
  • Teachers, Negro, number of, II, 182.
  • Teage, Collin, companion of Lott Cary
    in Liberia, II, 235.
  • Tennessee, number of Negro banks in,
    II, 211.
  • Tenth Cavalry, coloured, at Las
    Guasimas, Cuba, II, 390.
  • Terrell, Mrs. Mary Church, coloured
    woman lecturer, II, 325.

  • 434

    Page 434
  • Terrell, Robert H., coloured city magistrate,
    Washington, D. C., II, 186.
  • Texas, number of Negro banks in, II,
    211.
  • The Genius of Universal Emancipation,
    Benjamin Lundy's anti-slavery
    paper, Mount Pleasant, O., I, 239.
  • The North Star, Frederick Douglass's
    paper, Rochester, N. Y., II, 187.
  • The True Reformer, organ of the True
    Reformers, Richmond, Va., II, 164.
  • Theatre, coloured cities where located, II, 283.
  • Thoburn, Bishop James Miles, life
    of Amanda Smith sketched by, II,
    322–325.
  • Thomas, James C., coloured undertaker,
    New York City, II, 201, 202.
  • Thomas, Rev. Samuel, first missionary
    to Indians and Negroes in America,
    II, 119.
  • Thompson, George, African missionary
    referred to, II, 337.
  • Thurman, Mrs. Lucy, in charge of
    coloured W. C. T. U. work, II, 326.
  • Tillman, Benjamin R., kindly personal
    relation sof, with Negroes, I, 179;
    II, 36, 37.
  • Togoland, West Africa, Tuskegee
    students in, I, 37.
  • Toronto, Canada, Negro acting Mayor
    of, II, 245.
  • Torrey, Rev. Charles T., goes South to
    rescue slaves, I, 221, foot-note.
  • Tougaloo University, Tougaloo, Miss.,
    1869, II, 140.
  • Trades Education, opportunities of
    Negroes for, II, 65.
  • Tribune, Savannah, coloured newspaper,
    II, 223.
  • Trotter, James M., history coloured
    musicians, quoted, II, 274–277.
  • Trower, John S., coloured caterer,
    Philadelphia, Pa., II, 195.
  • True Reformers, referred to, II, 148;
    property owned by, 156; history
    of, 163–168; report of U. S. department
    of labour on, 163; bank of,
    215–217.
  • Trumball, John, Negro portrait in
    picture of Bunker Hill by, I, 314.
  • Truth, Sojourner, sketch of, II, 310–
    319.
  • "Tuberculosis Centre," of Maryland,
    II, 360.
  • Tubman, Harriet, Underground Railway
    operator, I, 222, 223; graphic
    description of battle of Gettysburg
    by, II, 284, 285.
  • Tucker, Nathaniel Beverly, jurist,
    letter on Negro progress in Virginia,
    in 1801, II, 396, 397.
  • Tulane, Victor H., coloured grocer,
    Montgomery, Ala., II, 202.
  • Turkana, of Uganda, I, 28.
  • Turner, Benjamin S., coloured congressman,
    II, 26.
  • Turner, Bishop Henry M., first coloured
    chaplain in Federal Army,
    I, 324.
  • Turner, Nat, slave insurrection of,
    Northampton County, Va., 1831, I,
    172–175; sketch of, 182, 183;
    causes Jack of Virginia to stop
    preaching, 268; Negro banks started
    in home of, II, 213.
  • Tuscaroras, not wanted as slaves in
    Northern states, I, 130.
  • Tuskegee Institute, founding of, II,
    54, 55; work of, 56; in the early
    days, II, 192; support of, by former
    students of, 346; gift to, by coloured
    woman, 346.
  • Tuskegee Night School, started by
    Women's Club, II, 331.
  • Tuskegee Woman's Club, work of, II,
    330.
  • Twenty-fifth Infantry, coloured, II,
    390.
  • Twin City Realty Company, of
    Winston-Salem, II, 254.
  • Uganda, people of, I, 28; Winston
    Churchill on, 76, 77.
  • "Uncle Remus," prototype of, in
    Africa, I, 72; referred to, 162.
  • Underground Railway, records of,
    by William Still, I, 216; number
    of agents of, in the South, 232;
    part of Knights of Liberty in, II, 160;
    station at Albany, O., 197; station
    in Philadelphia, 320.

  • 435

    Page 435
  • United Brothers of Friendship, coloured
    secret order, II, 148; organised 1861,
    153.
  • United States Supreme Court, first
    Negro admitted to practice before,
    II, 185.
  • "Up from Slavery," I, 3.
  • Valladolid, Juan de, mayor of the
    Negroes of Seville, I, 86, 87.
  • Van Dyke, Peter, coloured caterer,
    New York, II, 195.
  • Vanlomen, Father, establishes seminary
    for coloured girls in Washington,
    D. C., II, 136.
  • Vardaman, James K., referred to, I,
    179; vetoes appropriation for State
    Normal School at Holly Springs, II,
    345.
  • Vei people, inventors of an alphabet, I,
    72.
  • Verner, Samuel P., African missionary,
    I, 48, 49.
  • Vesey, Denmark, leader of slave insurrection,
    Charleston, S. C., 1822,
    I, 172, 173; sketch of, 181, 182;
    conspiracy of, results in restrictions
    on the liberty of free Negroes,
    211.
  • Vigilance Committee, in Philadelphia,
    I, 215.
  • Virginia Manual Labour School, reformatory
    for Negro children, 1897, II,
    98.
  • Virginia, rights of Free Negroes in, I,
    199; number of Negro banks in, II,
    211.
  • Voorhees Industrial School, Denmark,
    S. C., hospital of, II, 173; founder
    of, 183, 184.
  • Walker, Agnes, referred to, II, 347.
  • Walker, Aida Overton, coloured
    comedienne, II, 281.
  • Walker, David, first Negro to attack
    slavery through the press, I, 292.
  • Walker, George, coloured comedian,
    II, 281; referred to, 347.
  • Walker, Molly, referred to, II, 347.
  • "Walker's Appeal," first anti-slavery
    tract issued by Negro, I, 292.
  • Wall, Captain O. S. B., Federal
    officer, Civil War, I, 326.
  • Walls, Josiah T., coloured congressman,
    II, 26.
  • Wanderer, carries 510 slaves to Georgia
    1858, I, 104.
  • Warburg, Eugène, coloured sculptor,
    II, 276.
  • Ward, Samuel R., coloured anti-slavery
    agitator, I, 295; anti-slavery editor,
    II, 25.
  • Waring, Dr. J. H. N., principal,
    Baltimore, Md., Coloured High
    School, II, 360.
  • Warrick, Meta Vaux, coloured sculptress,
    II, 293, 294.
  • Washington, D. C., freedmen's hospital
    in, II, 174; coloured Y. M. C.
    A., in 353, 354.
  • Washington, George, will of, frees
    slaves, I, 193, 194; Negro Masons
    attend funeral of, II, 151; letter of
    concerning Phyllis Wheatley, 287.
  • Washington, George, former slave,
    leaves $15,000 to Negro education,
    II, 347.
  • Washington, Mrs. Booker T., first
    president of National Federation of
    Coloured Women's Clubs, II, 329.
  • Washington, settlement of Free Negroes
    in Louisiana, I, 207.
  • Watkins, Frances Ellen, coloured antislavery
    lecturer and writer, II, 319–
    321.
  • Watkins, Rev. William, uncle of Ella
    Watkins Harper, II, 319.
  • Watterson, Colonel Henry, on Negro
    progress, II, 114.
  • W. C. T. U., work of, among the
    coloured people, II, 326.
  • Weitzel, General Godfrey, commander
    corps Negro soldiers, I, 331; letter
    to General Butler, objecting to Negro
    troop, I, 331.
  • Wells, Nelson, ante-bellum coloured
    schoolmaster, II, 124.
  • Wells School, Baltimore, Md., established
    by coloured men, II, 124.
  • West Hartford, Conn., birthplace of
    Lemuel Haynes, first coloured Congregational
    minister, II, 388.

  • 436

    Page 436
  • West Indies, Negro labour in, I, 118;
    slave insurrections in, 171; A. M. E.
    Church in, II, 332.
  • West Point, Negro students in, II,
    390.
  • Westons, wealthy family free coloured
    people, Charleston, S. C., I, 206, 207.
  • Wharton, Heber E., vice-principal
    coloured school, Baltimore, Md.,
    II, 359.
  • Wheatley, Mrs. John, purchases Negro
    girl, Phyllis Wheatley, II, 286.
  • Wheatley, Phyllis, Negro poetess, II,
    185–288.
  • Wheeler, Lloyd G., former business
    agent, Tuskegee Institute, I, 286.
  • Whipper, William, coloured lumber
    merchant, Columbia, Pa., agent
    Underground Railway, I, 284, 285;
    referred to, II, 18.
  • White, George H., coloured congressman,
    II, 26; valedictory speech of,
    26–28.
  • White, George L., teacher of Fisk
    Jubilee Singers, II, 266.
  • White, William S., biographer of Jack
    of Virginia, I, 267, 268.
  • Whitehead, Thomas, emancipates slave,
    John, I, 197.
  • Whitney, Eli, inventor of cotton gin,
    II, 122.
  • Whittier, John G., member antislavery
    convention, 1833, I, 215;
    description of Robert Purvis, 284;
    poem on the daughters of James
    Forten, 289, 290.
  • Wilberforce, O., Negro college town,
    I, 233; early settlement of, 234, 236;
    colony of free Negroes at, 236.
  • Wilberforce, Daniel Flickinger, native
    African missionary, educated, Dayton,
    O., II, 336–338.
  • Wilberforce University, Mary Church
    Terrell teacher at, II, 325; origin of,
    342; gifts to, by Negro, 347.
  • William, first Negro received into
    Presbyterian Church, I, 272.
  • Williams, Bert, Negro comedian, II,
    281.
  • Williams, Dr. Daniel H., Negro surgeon,
    II, 180.
  • Williams, George W., on religious
    and race prejudice in the colonies,
    I, 91; account of slave conspiracy
    in New York, 93; on first Negro
    Methodist preacher, 258; on Negro
    soldiers in Revolutionary War, 312;
    soldier in Civil War, 325.
  • Williams, Lucius E., president coloured
    bank, Savannah, Ga., II, 222.
  • Williams, Mrs. Sylvania, president
    coloured women's club, New Orleans,
    La., II, 326.
  • Willis, Edith, kidnapped and sold into
    slavery, II, 175.
  • Wilson, Henry, on Quaker abolitionists,
    I, 242; escorts first coloured U. S.
    Senator to take oath of office, II,
    12, referred to, 196.
  • Wilson, Rev. Hiram, aids in establishing
    manual labour school for Negro
    refugees in Canada, II, 243.
  • Wilson, Rev. Leighton, African
    Missionary of the Southern Presbyterian
    Church, I, 44, 45.
  • Winder, Ike, Negro criminal, cost of,
    to State of Maryland, Md., II,
    364.
  • Winsey, Dr. Whitfield, coloured physician,
    Baltimore, Md., II, 359.
  • Winston-Salem, visit to, in 1905, II,
    252.
  • Witch Doctors, I, 68–70.
  • Woods, Granville T., Negro inventor
    of electrical appliances, II, 79.
  • Woolman, John, early Quaker abolitionist,
    I, 242.
  • Woman's Era Club, coloured, Boston,
    Mass., II, 328.
  • Women, coloured, work for education
    of, II, 183; in poetry and arts, 286,
    292, 293; power of sympathy of,
    298; status of, in industries, 304;
    part in anti-slavery struggle, 310;
    represented at International Congress
    of Women, Berlin, Germany,
    325.
  • Women's Medical College, Philadelphia,
    Pa., coloured woman graduate
    of, II, 175.
  • Work, Henry, buys freedom of framily,
    I, 195.

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    Page 437
  • Work, Monroe N., referred to, I, 195; on
    Negro property holding, II, 42 224.
  • Wormeley, Ralph, slaves of, skilled
    tradesmen, II, 60.
  • Worth, Governor Jonathan, before
    North Carolina coloured political
    convention, 1866, II, 16.
  • Wortham, Dr. James L., of North Carolina,
    pupil of John Chavis; I, 274.
  • Wright, Elizabeth E. founder of,
    Voorhees Industrial Institute, Denmark,
    S. C., II, 183, 184.
  • Wright, Elizur, member anti-slavery
    convention of 1833, I, 215.
  • Wright, Richard R., on Negro
    explorers, II, 385.
  • Wright, Richard R., Jr., on land ownership
    in Indiana, I, 241; in Cass
    County, Mich., 248; on Negro
    property owning, Chicago, Ill., II,
    224; on Negro property owning,
    Philadelphia, Pa., 256.
  • Wylie, Douglas H., former President
    Chamber of Commerce Baltimore,
    Md., supports work Coloured Law
    and Order League, II, 362.
  • Yazoo-Mississippi Delta, Negro labourer
    in I, 118; Negro settlement
    in, II, 246; Negro town in, 371.
  • Y. M. C. A., story of, II, 351–355;
    work of, in Louisville, Ky., 354; of
    Baltimore, referred to, 358.
  • Yorubas, Negro translates Bible into
    language of, II, 336.
  • Young, Dr. Howard E., coloured druggist,
    Baltimore, Md., II, 359.
  • Young, First Lieutenant Charles, Negro
    graduate of West Point, II, 390.
  • Zulu, takes oratorial honours at
    Columbia University, II, 285.
  • Zuni, Indians, preserve legend of
    Negro explorer, Estevan, II, 385.