P.
Pale Faces, [245], [251].
Patton, R. M., Governor of Alabama, [174], [175]; and negro suffrage, [51], [78]; and contract labor, [110]; and negro education, [212].
Peabody Board, [217]-[218].
"Peace Societies," [149], [179], [245].
Perry, B. F., Governor of South Carolina, and negro suffrage, [78]-[79].
Pettus, General, quoted, [250].
Phelps, J. S., military governor of Arkansas, [65].
Philadelphia, convention of National Union party at, [130]; Union League organized (1863), [177].
Phillips, Wendell, Johnson and, [128].
Pike, J. S., [291]; account of conditions in South Carolina, [16]-[17]; The Prostrate State, quoted, [227]-[230].
Pinchback, P. B. S., negro officeholder, [242 (note)].
Pittsburgh, soldiers' and sailors' convention at, [130].
Politics, theoretical basis of, [54]-[55]; see also names of parties.
Pope, General John, commands military district, [140-141 (note)].
Poverty, of South after Civil War, [13]-[14]; among negroes, [44].
Presbyterian Church, [198]-[199], [204].
Prescript, constitution of Ku Klux Klan, [248], [249].
Professions in South after Civil War, [16].
Propaganda, campaign of misrepresentation against South, [82]-[83]; by Union League, [177]-[178]; see also Publicity.
Publicity, newspaper correspondents in South, [27]-[29].
Pulaski (Tenn.), Ku Klux Klan originates at, [246]; Ku Klux incident, [255].