F.
Fessenden, General, Freedmen's Bureau official, [106].
Fessenden, W. P., moderate Republican, [122]; and negro suffrage, [132].
Finance, post-war condition in South, [2], [5]; war taxes, [8]; license taxes, [76]; repudiation of Confederate war debt, [77], [130]; under military governors, [145]-[146]; effect of bad government in South, [230]-[236]; credit system, [270]; readjustments, [283]; panic of 1873, [283].
Fish, C. R., The Path of Empire, cited, [284 (note)].
Fisk, General, criticism of Kentucky Legislature, [113].
Fisk, James, [283], [286].
Florida, negro colony in, [36]; negro legislation, [96]; and Fourteenth Amendment, [132]; negro voters, [151]; schools, [215]; recitation in negro school, [218]-[219]; and reconstruction government, [221]; corruption, [226]; taxes, [231]; decrease in property values, [233]; Equal Rights Law, [276]; and radicals, [294], [295]; election of 1876, [297], [298].
Forrest, General, Grand Wizard of Ku Klux, [248], [259].
Freedmen, see [Negroes].
Freedmen's Aid Societies, [177], [207], [213].
Freedmen's Bureau, [38], [81], [82], [85], [86], [90], [126], [161], [187]; confiscable property turned over to, [11]; official describes conditions in South, [13]-[14]; as relief agency, [15]; in Kentucky, [26]; as publicity agent, [28]; and contract labor, [46]; on relations between races, [48]; agitators from, [53]; extension, [74], [84], [128], [129]; and negroes, [80], [142], [149], [175]; views of North carried out in, [89]; influence on legislation and government, [94], [97], [143]; officials of, [97], [98]-[99]; character of, [98]; established (1865), [102]-[103]; functions, [103]-[104], [107]-[109]; objections to, [104]-[105], [112]-[113]; organization, [105]-[107]; courts, [110]-[111], [113]-[114]; educational work, [111]-[112]; political possibilities, [115]; results, [116]-[117]; and radicals, [131], [156]; Union League and, [177], [188], [194 (note)], [195]; negro education, [213].
Freedmen's Bureau Act, [128], [129], [137].
Freedmen's Inquiry Commission, [101].
"Freedmen's Readers," [218].
Frémont, J. C., and the radicals, [119].
Fullerton, General, and Freedmen's Bureau, [106], [113]; on treatment of negroes, [112]-[113].