R.

Radicalism, [118] et seq.; decline of, [289]-[294].
Railroads, post-war condition in South, [6]-[7]; dishonest speculation, [234]-[236].
Rainey, negro officeholder, [242 (note)].
Randolph, Ryland, editor of Tuscaloosa Independent Monitor, [146], [243]-[244].
Raymond, administration Republican, [122].
Reconstruction, problems in South, [1] et seq., [86]; negro as central figure, [34] et seq.; executive plans for, [54] et seq.; Crittenden-Johnson resolutions, [55]; Democratic party on, [69]; Joint Committee on, [82], [84], [121], [125]-[126], [127], [129]-[130], [131], [198], [266 (note)]; congressional policy of, [134]-[139]; political issue, [169], [294]-[295]; results of radical policy, [302]-[304]; bibliography, [305]-[307].
Red String Band, [179], [245].
Reed, Governor of Florida, [276].
Refugees, [14], [108].
Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, Bureau of, [102]; see also [Freedmen's Bureau].
Reid, Whitelaw, relates incident of Confederate uniforms, [20]-[21]; as newspaper correspondent, [28]; interview with Hampton, [51]-[52].
Relief agencies, after Civil War, [14]-[15]; Freedmen's Bureau, [15], [107]-[109]; Government, [15].
Religion, separation of Northern and Southern churches, [23]; among negroes, [43]-[44]; in South, [196]-[208]; military censorship in church matters, [197]; see also names of denominations.
Republican party, and reconstruction, [63], [295]; during Civil War, [69]-[70]; secures negro vote, [115]; majority in Congress, [138]; in South, [148]-[149], [151], [292]; platform (1868), [169]; and the North, [284]; negro suffrage, [284]-[285]; loses control in House, [286]; Liberal Republican movement, [287]; issues (1876), [295]-[296]; and Electoral Commission, [300]; decline of strength, [303].
Revels, negro officeholder, [242 (note)].
Rhodes, J. F., on congressional policy of reconstruction, [118]-[119].
Richmond (Va.), post-war condition, [5]; Halleck's order in regard to marriage, [20]; incident of Lee and a negro in church, [43]-[44]; Lincoln and Confederate Government in, [67].
Rifle Clubs of South Carolina, [245]-[246], [263].
Roads in Tennessee after Civil War, [4].