C.

Campbell, Judge, Lincoln gives reconstruction terms to, [67].
Canby, General, commands military department in South, [140-141 (note)], [163].
Cardozo, school official in Mississippi, [216].
Carpetbaggers, appointed to Federal offices, [80]; in radical Republican party, [149]; in conventions, [153]; and Union League, [193]; and religion, [205]; rule in South, [221] et seq.; use of term, [222]; and equal rights issue, [275]-[276]; government in hands of, [289 (note)]; against scalawags, [292].
Carter, Speaker of Louisiana Legislature, and railroad bills, [235].
Catholic Church, [23], [198].
Chamberlain, D. H., Governor of South Carolina, [225].
Charleston (S. C.), post-war condition, [5].
Chase, S. P., counsels against seizure of cotton, [9]; and negro suffrage, [28], [50], [132]; opposed to military reconstruction, [159]; advises Johnson against suspending Stanton, [163]; and impeachment of Johnson, [166]-[167].
Civil Rights Act, [84], [137], [141], [277].
Clanton, General J. H., of Alabama, on position of whites, [250].
Clayton, Judge, of Alabama, opinion of Freedmen's Bureau, [90].
Clayton, Mrs., Black and White under the Old Régime, quoted, [38]-[39].
Cleveland, soldiers' and sailors' convention at, [130]; Union League formed (1862), [176]-[177].
Clinton (Miss.), race conflict in, [237 (note)].
Cloud, school official in Alabama, [216].
Colfax, Schuyler, candidate for Vice President (1868), [168].
Colfax (La.), race conflict in, [237 (note)].
Columbia (S. C.), post-war condition, [5].
Congress, impatient of executive precedence, [65]-[66], [119]-[120]; and Southern representatives, [80], [86], [119]-[120], [128]; refuses to recognize reconstructed governments, [81]; Joint Committee on Reconstruction, [82], [84], [121], [125]-[126], [127], [129]-[130], [131], [198], [266 (note)]; Fourteenth Amendment, [82], [85], [130]; see also [Constitution]; radical reconstruction plans, [83]-[84]; radicalism, [83]-[84], [118] et seq., [285]; Civil Rights Act, [84], [137], [141], [277]; and Johnson, [126] et seq.; assumes control of reconstruction, [129], [142]-[143]; Tenure of Office Act, [134]; Army Appropriation Act, [134]; reconstruction acts, [134]-[137], [158]-[160]; supreme control, [140]; and Supreme Court, [158]-[159]; impeachment of President, [160] et seq.; and Grant, [171]; negro members, [230], [242]; Committee on the Condition of the South, [241]; Committee on the Late Insurrectionary States, [241]; enforcement acts, [260], [261]-[262], [290], [292], [303]; "Ku Klux Bill," [261], [262]; committee to investigate conditions in Southern States, [262]; Amnesty Act (1872), [288]-[289]; decline of radicalism, [289 (note)], [290]; investigates election, [294]; amnesty measure (1876), [295]; Electoral Commission, [299]-[300]; deadlocked by party issues, [302].
Connecticut and negro suffrage, [285].
Constitution, Johnson and, [72], [162]; Thirteenth Amendment, [79]; Fourteenth Amendment, [82], [84], [85], [130], [131]-[133], [135]-[136], [137], [156], [172]; Fifteenth Amendment, [169]-[170], [171], [172], [222], [290].
Constitutional conventions in South, [152] et seq.
Constitutional Union Guards, [245].
Conway, school official in Louisiana, [216].
Copperheads, [176].
Cotton, tax on, [8]; seized, [9]-[11]; destruction of, [11]; production (1880), [271-272 (note)].
Council of Safety, [245].
Coushatta (La.), race conflict in, [237 (note)].
Cowan, administration Republican, [122].
Credit Mobilier, [282].
Crittenden-Johnson resolutions, [55], [69].
Cuba, United States and, [284].
Cumberland Presbyterian Church, [204].
Cummings vs. Missouri, [159].
Curry, J. L. M., and negro education, [212], [214]-[215].
Curtis, B. R., counsel at impeachment, [166].