N.

Nash, negro officeholder, [242 (note)].
Nation, New York, [180 (note)]; editorial on post-war church situation quoted, [201 (note)]; on corruption of government, [226].
National Teachers Association meeting (1865), [208].
National Union party, Republican party becomes, [70]; Whigs and Douglas Democrats join, [70]-[71]; convention at Philadelphia, [130]; nominates Grant, [168].
Negro Affairs, Department of, [177].
Negroes, as soldiers in South, [21]-[22]; problems of reconstruction, [34] et seq.; health conditions among, [41]-[42]; morals and manners, [42]-[43]; poverty, [44]-[45]; education, [44]-[45], [209], [211]-[220]; relations with whites, [47]-[48], [277]-[278]; lawlessness, [48]-[49]; suffrage, [49]-[52], [58], [66]-[67], [78], [84], [85], [134], [169], [284]-[285], [300]-[301], [304]; Lincoln urges deportation of freedmen, [66]; legislation concerning, [77]-[78], [89]-[90], [93]-[98], [115]-[116], [127], [141]; status at close of war, [89] et seq.; Freedmen's Bureau supervises, [109]; Union League and, [181] et seq.; religion, [201]-[206]; rule in South, [221] et seq.; in Congress, [230], [242]; and state offices, [242]; and Ku Klux, [258]; anti-negro movements, [263]; labor, [266], [272]; "privileges," [269]; advantages, [270]-[271]; as farmers, [271]-[274]; change in condition during reconstruction, [274]-[275]; mixed marriages, [276].
Nelson, counsel at impeachment, [166].
New England, and negro suffrage, [156], [285]; Freedmen's Aid Society, [209].
New Orleans, negro soldiers in, [21]-[22]; riots in, [83], [131], [175], [237 (note)]; Northern teachers in, [210]; public debt, [232]; Federal officials at, [241].
New York, charity for relief of South, [14]; and negro suffrage, [156], [284].
New York City, Union League organized, [177]; headquarters for Union League, [181]; corruption in, [282].
Nordhoff, Charles, [291]; The Cotton States in the Spring and Summer of 1875, cited, [232 (note)].
Norfolk, "contraband" camp, [36].
North, free negroes of, [35]-[36]; planters from, [49]; capital and labor from, [268]; change in attitude toward South, [282]; politics, [291].
North Carolina, negro colonies in, [36], [99]; Johnson proclaims restoration of, [75]; committee on laws for freedmen, [91], [92]; courts, [111]; negro voters, [152]; Union League, [185], [186], [194]; carpetbag rule, [221]; public debt, [232]; negro militia, [236]; Democratic in 1870, [260]; and enforcement acts, [261]; conservatives gain control of, [290].
North Carolina, University of, [216].