M.

McCardle, ex parte, [159]-[160].
McCulloch, Hugh, Secretary of Treasury, and seizure of cotton in South, [9]-[10]; and Johnson, [74], [163].
McDowell, General Irvin, commands military district, [141 (note)].
McPherson, Edward, clerk of the House, [121].
Marvin, William, Governor of Florida, on status of negroes, [91], [92], [93].
Maryland, disfranchisement in, [25]-[26]; state emancipation in, [36]; and negro suffrage, [285].
Meade, General G. G., commands military district, [140-141 (note)].
Memminger, C. G., Governor of South Carolina, on status of freedmen, [90]-[91], [92]-[93].
Memphis (Tenn.), [185]; race riots in, [83], [131], [175]; convention of Confederate soldiers and sailors at, [130]; surrenders charter, [233].
Men of Justice, [245].
Methodist Church, [198], [199]-[201], [202], [203]-[204], [208].
Metropolitan Guard, [237].
Michigan rejects negro suffrage, [156], [285].
Milligan, ex parte, [159].
Minnesota rejects negro suffrage, [156], [285].
Mississippi, poverty in, [14]; rejects Thirteenth Amendment, [79]; negro legislation in, [94], [95]-[96]; treatment of negroes by army in, [99]; courts, [111]; military government, [143], [144], [157]; negro voters, [151], [222]; constitution, [153]-[154], [155]; suit against President, [159]; reconstruction fails in, [170]; and radicalism, [171]; schools, [215], [217], [218]; conservatives, [223]; negroes in legislature, [226]; taxes, [231]; negro militia, [236]; and enforcement acts, [261]; permits mixed marriages, [276]; unrepresented in Congress, [289 (note)]; Grant and interference in, [291]; elections (1875), [293].
Mississippi River, negro colonies along, [37].
Mississippi Shot Gun Plan, [263], [294].
Mississippi, University of, [216].
Missouri, and Confederates, [26]; state emancipation in, [36]; rejects negro suffrage, [285].
Mobile (Ala.), post-war condition, [5]; surrenders charter, [233].
Montgomery (Ala.), separate organization of Baptist Church in, [203]; negro education, [212]; Ku Klux proclamation, [257]-[258].
Montgomery Conference on Race Problems (1900), Proceedings quoted, [214]-[215].
Moore, Governor, and negro education, [212].
Morgan, E. D., Senator, and Freedmen's Bureau Act, [129].
Morton, O. P., of Indiana, [125]; on negro suffrage, [300]-[301].
Moses, F. J., Jr., Governor of South Carolina, [224].
Moses, Judge, in South Carolina, [225].