History of the United States of America, Volume 2 (of 9)
Henry Adams
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  • Hamilton, Alexander, i. [85], [86], [108], [277];
  • Talleyrand’s remark concerning, [352]; ii. [168];
  • opposes Burr for governor, [176];
  • not in favor of disunion, [177];
  • projects, [184];
  • his opposition to Burr, [185] et seq.;
  • his duel with Burr, [186] et seq.;
  • mourned by the Federalists, [190].
  • Harper, Robert G., ii. [154], [228], [232].
  • Harrowby, Lord, British Foreign Secretary, ii. [418];
  • receives Monroe, [420];
  • instructions as to impressments and the boundary convention, [423] et seq.
  • “Hartford wits,” i. [101].
  • Harvard College, i. [77], [78], [90].
  • Hastings, Warren, trial of, ii. [226].
  • Hawkesbury, Lord, British Foreign Secretary, ii. [344], [410].
  • Henry, Patrick, i. [143].
  • Higginson, Stephen, ii. [164].
  • Hillhouse, James, senator from Connecticut, ii. [160].
  • Hopkins, Lemuel, i. [102].
  • Hopkinson, Joseph, ii. [228], [231].
  • Horses and horse-racing in New England, i. [50];
  • in New York and Virginia, [51].
  • Hosack, Dr. David, i. [111].
  • Hospitals and asylums in 1800, i. [128].
  • Hull, Isaac, at Tripoli, ii. [428].
  • Hunt, Samuel, member of Congress from New Hampshire, ii. [160].
  • Impeachment. (See [Pickering] and [Chase].)
  • Impeachment, a scarecrow, ii. [243].
  • Impressment of seamen, ii. [335] et seq., [358], [384], [393], [394], [421], [423];
  • Act of Congress punishing, ii. [397], [420].
  • Indian corn, i. [58].
  • Indian tribes in 1800, i. [4].
  • Ingersoll, C. J., i. [123].
  • Ingersoll, Jared, ii. [259].
  • Inns of New England and New York, i. [21].
  • Inquisitiveness, American, i. [55].
  • Insane, the, treatment of, in 1800, i. [128].
  • Irving, Peter, editor of the “Morning Chronicle,” i. [121].
  • Irving, Washington, i. [110].
  • Jackson, Andrew, i. [54].
  • Jackson, Francis James, his reputation, ii. [360].
  • Jackson, James, senator from Georgia, and the Yazoo sale, i. [305]; ii. [95], [238].
  • Jackson, John G., member of Congress from Virginia, ii. [211];
  • replies to Randolph’s attack on Madison, [215].
  • Jackson, Mr., editor of the “Political Register,” ii. [265];
  • discloses Yrujo’s attempt to use him, [266].
  • Jacmel, siege of, i. [385].
  • Jay, Chief-Justice, i. [108];
  • sent to England by Washington, ii. [323];
  • negotiates treaty with Lord Grenville, [326].
  • Jay’s treaty. (See [Treaties.])
  • Jefferson, Thomas, i. [13], [32], [59], [65], [67], [72], [73];
  • Federalist opinion of, [80] et seq., [83], [112], [114];
  • opposed to manufactures, [138];
  • chief author of the Kentucky Resolutions, [140] et seq.;
  • leader of the Virginia school, [143];
  • characteristics of, [144] et seq.;
  • his political doctrines, [146] et seq., [156];
  • Thomas Moore’s verses on, [167];
  • visionary, [170];
  • his ideas of progress, [178], [179];
  • personal characteristics, [185] et seq.;
  • his dress, [187];
  • social pre-eminence, [188];
  • his inauguration, [191];
  • his antipathy to Marshall, [192], [194];
  • purity of his life, [196];
  • his inaugural address, [199] et seq.;
  • his conception of government, [210] et seq.;
  • his foreign policy, [214] et seq.;
  • his Cabinet, [218] et seq.;
  • his plans for the navy, [222] et seq.;
  • his treatment of patronage, [224], [294];
  • his New Haven letter, [226];
  • his first annual message, [248];
  • his course with regard to the Judiciary, [255] et seq.;
  • his abnegation of power, [262];
  • his power, [266];
  • his theory of internal politics, [272];
  • contradictions in his character, [277];
  • his hopefulness, [307] et seq.;
  • as a man of science, [310];
  • his dislike for New Englanders, [310] et seq.;
  • his letter to Paine, [316];
  • attacked by Callender, [322];
  • sensitiveness of, [324];
  • his relations with Callender, [325] et seq.;
  • sends Lear to St. Domingo, [389];
  • ignorant of Bonaparte’s schemes, [403] et seq.;
  • his eyes opened, [409];
  • his letter to Dupont de Nemours, [410];
  • writes to Livingston defining his position with respect to France and Spain, [424];
  • his annual message, 1802, [427];
  • ignores the war party, [428];
  • replies to their demand for papers touching the right of deposit at New Orleans, [430];
  • quiets the West, [432];
  • attempts the purchase of New Orleans, [432] et seq.;
  • his language to Thornton, [436];
  • prefers Natchez to New Orleans as a seat of trade, [443];
  • his apparent inconsistency, [443] et seq.;
  • the essence of his statesmanship, [445];
  • proposes alliance with England, ii. [1], [78];
  • instructs Pinckney to offer a consideration to Spain for New Orleans and Florida, [22];
  • writes a defence of his use of patronage for the Boston “Chronicle,” [82];
  • his amendment to the Constitution regarding Louisiana, [83];
  • his letter to Breckenridge on the subject, [84];
  • to Paine, [86];
  • draws up a new amendment, [86];
  • his reply to W. C. Nicholas, [89];
  • his message, Oct. 7, 1803, [92];
  • his bill for the administration of Louisiana, [119];
  • his view of the Louisian treaty and legislation, [130];
  • requests Congress to enlarge the Mediterranean force, [140];
  • interview with Burr, [175];
  • declines to appoint Burr to an executive office, [176];
  • his knowledge of Federalist schemes, [192];
  • his confidence in his popularity, [202];
  • receives the electoral votes of Massachusetts and New Hampshire, [204];
  • his message, November, 1804, [206];
  • his disappointment at the acquittal of Justice Chase, [243];
  • his authority in foreign affairs, [245];
  • desires to obtain West Florida, [245];
  • explains to Senator Breckenridge his course toward Spain, [248];
  • his plan to obtain West Florida, [249];
  • instructs Monroe with regard to the Spanish claims, [250];
  • the harvest season of his life, [252];
  • sends troops to Natchez, [254];
  • makes no demand for West Florida when Louisiana is delivered, [256];
  • declares Mobile within the United States, [263];
  • entertains Yrujo at Monticello, [266];
  • his conviction of the power of American commercial interests, [330];
  • anxious for friendship with England, [342];
  • his intimacy with Thornton, [347];
  • his opinion of Bonaparte, [347], [353], [381];
  • decides to maintain the neutral rights of the United States more strictly, [356];
  • his social habits, [363];
  • establishes a new social code, [365];
  • receives Merry, [366];
  • invites him to dinner with Pichon, [369];
  • sends list of impressments to the Senate, [384];
  • improves his style of dress, [405];
  • his enemies, [409].
  • Judiciary Act, the, i. [274] et seq.;
  • repeal of, moved, [278] et seq., [284] et seq.;
  • repealed, [298].
  • Judiciary system, the, Jefferson’s recommendations concerning, i. [255].
  • Kentucky in 1800, i. [2], [43];
  • Resolutions of 1798, [140] et seq., [205].
  • Key, Philip Barton, ii. [228].
  • King, Rufus, American minister in London, i. [109];
  • sends the treaty of the retrocession of Louisiana to Jefferson, [409]; ii. [23], [178] et seq.;
  • obtains from Pitt a definition of neutral importation, [328], [340];
  • his negotiations with the British government, [345], [347];
  • returns with favorable conventions, [358];
  • opinion of F. J. Jackson and Anthony Merry, [361];
  • leaves England, [410].
  • Langdon, John, i. [220].
  • Latrobe, Benjamin H., report on steam-engines, i. [68], [70], [112];
  • letter of, to Volney, [130].
  • Laussat, prefect in Louisiana, ii. [5];
  • arrives at New Orleans, [10], [13];
  • defines the boundaries of the Louisiana purchase, [255];
  • declares the Rio Bravo the western limit of Louisiana, [298].
  • Lea, Thomas, i. [257].
  • Lear, Tobias, consul to St. Domingo, i. [389];
  • quits St. Domingo, [407];
  • negotiates a treaty with the Pacha of Tripoli, ii. [434].
  • Leclerc, General, in command of the expedition against Louverture, i. [378];
  • seizes Toussaint Louverture, [396];
  • insults American shipmasters, [407];
  • reports French losses, [414];
  • blamed by Napoleon, [416];
  • his death, [418]; ii. [13].
  • Lee, Charles, ii. [228].
  • Leib, Michael, member of Congress from Pennsylvania, i. [298]; ii. [123], [194], [196] et seq.
  • Lewis, Morgan, i. [108].
  • Lewis, William, i. [127].
  • Liancourt, Duc de, describes Philadelphia, i. [28], [117];
  • on the Virginians, [33];
  • on life in Pennsylvania, [42], [45], [52];
  • on Virginia culture, [133], [157], [165].
  • Libraries, i. [61], [63], [129], [152].
  • Lincoln, Abraham, i. [171].
  • Lincoln, Levi, Attorney-General, i. [219], [304]; ii. [2];
  • on the acquisition of new territory by the United States, [78].
  • Linn, James, member of Congress from New Jersey, i. [295].
  • Linn, John Blair, i. [123].
  • Liston, Robert, British minister, ii. [340], [367].
  • Literature, American, in 1800, i. [41], [75] et seq., [93].
  • Livingston, Edward, district-attorney and mayor of New York, i. [233], [295]; ii. [259].
  • Livingston, Robert R., Chancellor, i. [69], [108], [112], [219];
  • appointed minister to France, [233], [295], [404];
  • discusses the price of Louisiana, ii. [31];
  • his claims convention, [46];
  • his estimate of the importance of the cession of Louisiana, [67];
  • claims West Florida, [68] et seq.;
  • his plan of gaining West Florida, [246], [275];
  • his situation after the treaty, [289];
  • distrusts Napoleon, [290].
  • Logan’s Act, ii. [259].
  • Longstreet, Judge, author of “Georgia Scenes,” i. [52].
  • Louisiana, loss of, regretted by France, i. [353];
  • retrocession by Spain to France, [363];
  • Talleyrand’s projet of treaty, [368];
  • treaty of retrocession signed, [370];
  • Bonaparte plans an expedition to occupy, [399];
  • boundaries fixed by Decrès, ii. [5];
  • commercial relations and sentiments prescribed toward the United States, [8];
  • treaty of cession to the United States signed, [42];
  • price of, [45];
  • importance of cession, [49];
  • Napoleon’s reasons for selling, [53];
  • Talleyrand’s explanation of, [55];
  • treble invalidity of sale, [56];
  • Constitutional question debated in Congress, [96] et seq.;
  • plans with regard to the status of, [116];
  • admitted without an amendment, [118];
  • bill for temporary government of, [120];
  • Breckenridge’s bill defining boundaries and government, [120] et seq.;
  • bill defining territorial government of, [125], [130];
  • Spain protests against sale of, [252] et seq.;
  • people regarded as unfit for self-government, [399];
  • they urge the execution of the treaty, [400];
  • report of Randolph upon their claims, [400].
  • “Louisianacide,” Napoleon’s, ii. [37].
  • Louverture, Toussaint, i. [354];
  • story of, [378] et seq.;
  • champion of Republican principles, [392];
  • seized and sent to France, [396];
  • his dependence on the United States for supplies, [406], [416];
  • his death, ii. [20].
  • Lowndes, William, i. [151].
  • Luisa, Queen of Spain, i. [345] et seq.
  • Lyman, Theodore, ii. [169].
  • Lyon, Matthew, member of Congress from Vermont, i. [295];
  • from Kentucky, his attack on Randolph, ii. [123], [216].
  • McKean, Thomas, Governor of Pennsylvania, i. [228];
  • declines to remove Judge Brackenridge, ii. [196], [259].
  • Maclay, William, senator from Pennsylvania, his description of Jefferson, i. [185].
  • Macon, Nathaniel, of North Carolina, i. [149], [261];
  • chosen Speaker of the House, [267]; ii. [95], [123];
  • opposed to the impeachment of Judge Chase, [150].
  • Madison, Bishop, of Virginia, i. [136].
  • Madison, James, and the Virginia Resolutions, i. [140] et seq., [148], [177];
  • personal characteristics of, [188] et seq.;
  • appointed Secretary of State, [218];
  • makes no removals in the Department of State, [236];
  • distrust of, [248], [261];
  • a commissioner in the Yazoo sale, [304], [322], [332];
  • instructions of, respecting the retrocession of Louisiana, [405];
  • asks Pichon to remonstrate with Leclerc, [408];
  • writes to Livingston, [423], [426];
  • his orders to Pinckney, [427], [432];
  • invokes Pichon’s aid, [438], [439], [441];
  • writes instructions for Livingston and Monroe, ii. [2];
  • conversation with J. Q. Adams respecting the Louisiana treaty, [117];
  • favors Yazoo compromise, [211];
  • instructs Monroe to bargain with Spain for West Florida, [248], [251];
  • explains the failure to demand West Florida, [256];
  • sends the ratified claims convention to Madrid, [260], [278], [279];
  • hopes to be relieved of Yrujo, [267];
  • communicates with Livingston respecting West Florida and Yrujo, [262];
  • attempts to cajole Turreau, [273];
  • Turreau’s description of him, [274];
  • compromised by Pinckney, [276];
  • recalls Pinckney and hurries Monroe to Spain, [286];
  • denies that the Government aids desertion of seamen, [345];
  • communications to Thornton, [362];
  • proposes a convention with regard to impressments and the blockade, [385];
  • remonstrates with Merry respecting impressments, [393].
  • Mail routes in 1800, i. [15].
  • Maine, convention for fixing the boundary between, and Nova Scotia, ii. [358], [383].
  • Maitland, General, at St. Domingo, i. [385].
  • Malbone, Edward G., i. [149].
  • Manhattan Company of New York city, i. [65], [70].
  • Manners and morals, American, in 1800, i. [48] et seq.
  • Manufactures in New England in 1800, i. [22].
  • Marbois, Barbé, favors the cession of Louisiana, ii. [26].
  • Marbury against Madison, case of, ii. [145] et seq.
  • Marietta, Ohio, in 1800, i. [2].
  • Marshall, Chief-Justice, i. [133];
  • Jefferson’s antipathy to, [192];
  • personal characteristics of, [193];
  • detests Jefferson, [194];
  • his views of the Constitution, [260], [275], [290];
  • opinion of, respecting the powers of Government in the Louisiana case, ii. [125];
  • appointment of, obnoxious to Jefferson, [145];
  • his decision in the Marbury case, [146];
  • his decision in the Yazoo case, [214].
  • Martin, Luther, his view of impeachment, ii. [223], [227], [231].
  • Mason, George, i. [133].
  • Massachusetts society in 1800, i. [76].
  • Meade, Bishop, of Virginia, i. [193].
  • Mediterranean Fund, the, ii. [141].
  • Merry, Anthony, appointed British minister to the United States, ii. [360];
  • his arrival and reception by Jefferson, [361] et seq., [380], [381], [390];
  • dines at the White House, [369];
  • considers himself affronted and declines the President’s invitations, [375];
  • union of, with Burr, [390];
  • writes to his Government, [392];
  • remonstrates with Madison respecting the enlistment of deserters, [393];
  • receives a message from Burr, [395];
  • communicates Burr’s plan to his Government, [403].
  • “Messenger,” stallion, i. [51].
  • Milledge, Governor, and the Yazoo sale, i. [305].
  • Mint, opposition to, i. [299]; ii. [77].
  • Mississippi, district of, created, ii. [257].
  • Mitchill, Dr. Samuel L., i. [69], [93], [110]; ii. [153], [218], [238].
  • Mobile treated as a part of the United States, ii. [255], [257], [260–263], [291], [293], [304], [380].
  • “Modern Chivalry,” i. [125].
  • Monroe, James, and the Callender scandal, i. [325];
  • nominated minister extraordinary to France and Spain, [433];
  • his instructions, [442];
  • sails for France, ii. [1];
  • his arrival in France, [26];
  • illness of, in Paris, [39];
  • his draft of claims convention, [41];
  • his share in the negotiation, [50];
  • under the influence of other men, [67];
  • commissioned to negotiate with Spain for West Florida, [248];
  • takes Rufus King’s place in London, [275], [288], [410];
  • his distrust of Livingston, [289];
  • returns to Paris, [292], [301];
  • is instructed to insist upon the right to West Florida, [301];
  • writes to Talleyrand, [304];
  • starts for Madrid, [307], [422];
  • receives answer from Talleyrand, [313];
  • in ignorance of Pitt’s schemes, [419];
  • interview with Lord Harrowby, [420];
  • warns the President to expect a change in British policy, [422].
  • Moore, Thomas, i. [48];
  • lines of, on the Philadelphia literati, [122];
  • his verses on Jefferson, [167].
  • Morfontaine, treaty of, i. [362], [370], [388]; ii. [21], [42], [46], [47], [293], [296], [297], [383].
  • (See [Treaties].)
  • Morocco, ii. [137].
  • Morris, Commodore, dismissed, ii. [137].
  • Morris, Gouverneur, i. [93], [279];
  • assails the Government, [435]; ii. [99], [101], [283].
  • Morse, Jedediah, i. [78], [93].
  • Napoleon, i. [334];
  • and Talleyrand, [359];
  • restores peace in Europe, [360];
  • obtains retrocession of Louisiana, [363–370];
  • his anger with Godoy, [373–375];
  • makes peace with England, [374];
  • attacks Louverture, [390];
  • fears a war with the United States, ii. [2];
  • abandons his colonial system, [14] et seq.;
  • scene with Lord Whitworth, [19];
  • reveals his determination to cede Louisiana, [25];
  • angry scene with his brothers, [34] et seq.;
  • his projet of a secret convention respecting Louisiana, [40];
  • objects to the payment of claims, [51];
  • his inducement to sell Louisiana, [52];
  • his conduct toward Spain, [56];
  • his avowal as to the sale of Louisiana, [61];
  • his reasons for betraying Charles IV., [63];
  • for selling Louisiana, [63] et seq.;
  • repudiates drafts on the public Treasury, [270];
  • his irritation at Jerome’s marriage, [379].
  • Nash, Thomas, ii. [333].
  • Natchez delivered to the United States, i. [355].
  • “National Intelligencer,” i. [121].
  • Naturalization law adopted, i. [301].
  • Naturalization, the law of, in England and America, ii. [337] et seq.
  • Navigation laws, British, ii. [318], [321], [413].
  • Navy, Jefferson’s opinion of, i. [222], [223], [238];
  • Gallatin’s views on, [222], [240], [252];
  • Giles’s views on, [287];
  • Leib’s proposal to abolish, [299];
  • condition in 1801, [242–245];
  • economies in, [272];
  • four sloops-of-war and fifteen gunboats built in 1803, ii. [77];
  • cost and estimates, [77], [136];
  • at Tripoli, [137–141], [425–436].
  • Nelson, Roger, ii. [229].
  • New England in 1800, i. [18];
  • school-houses, [19];
  • population, [20];
  • poverty, [21];
  • commerce and manufactures, [21] et seq.;
  • social system, [76];
  • schools, [76];
  • society, organization of, [108].
  • New Haven, i. [75].
  • Newspapers, American, in 1800, i. [41], [120].
  • New York city in 1800, tax valuation of, i. [23];
  • behind New England, [23];
  • population, [24];
  • like a foreign seaport, [24];
  • expenses and sanitary condition, [25];
  • business, [25] et seq.;
  • society of, [113].
  • New York State in 1800, i. [3], [6], [23], [108–114].
  • Nicholas, Wilson Cary, i. [221];
  • dissuades the President from raising Constitutional question, ii. [88], [94], [111], [221].
  • Nicholson, Joseph H., i. [261], [268], [433]; ii. [95], [100], [124], [144];
  • and the attack upon Judge Chase, [149], [225], [228];
  • offers an amendment to the Constitution, [240].
  • North Carolina in 1800, i. [36];
  • cotton planting, [37], [148].
  • Offices, Jefferson’s removals from, i. [230] et seq.
  • Ohio, admitted, i. [302].
  • Ohio River settlements in 1800, i. [2].
  • Ohio, Territory of, ii. [121].
  • Olcott, Simeon, senator from New Hampshire, ii. [160].
  • Orleans, Territory of, ii. [121].
  • Osgood, Samuel, i. [108].
  • Otis, Harrison Gray, ii. [163].
  • Paine, Robert Treat, i. [330].
  • Paine, Thomas, Jefferson’s letter to, i. [316], [327].
  • “Palladium,” the, i. [314].
  • Parker, Admiral, ii. [340].
  • Parliament. (See [Acts of].)
  • Parma, Duchy of, i. [363], [371].
  • Parsons, Chief-Justice Theophilus, i. [48], [87], [89], [93]; ii. [164].
  • Party, the Federalist, in New England, i. [76], [82–89], [329]; ii. [160], [170], [202];
  • in New York, i. [109]; ii. [171], [191];
  • views on government, i. [252];
  • on the Judiciary, [273–275], [279], [290], [297];
  • on the treaty-making power, ii. [99–100], [105], [110], [111].
  • Party, the Republican, in New England, i. [76], [329], [330]; ii. [81], [201], [202];
  • in New York, i. [108], [109], [113], [229–236], [331]; ii. [171–191];
  • in Pennsylvania, i. [116], [194–200];
  • in Virginia, [138–143], [145–148], [179];
  • in North Carolina, [148];
  • in South Carolina, [152–154];
  • political principles of, [199–217], [238–243], [247], [251], [272], [287]; ii. [77], [78], [130], [134], [142], [203], [205], [254–262];
  • leaders of, in Congress, i. [264–269];
  • views of, on the Judiciary, [275], [276], [288–290], [297]; ii. [143–159], [221–244];
  • on the treaty-making power, [78–80], [83–91], [94–99], [100–104], [106–112];
  • on the power of Congress over territories, [116–129];
  • on exclusive privileges, [208–210];
  • on British relations, [349], [355], [356];
  • success in 1803, [74–77];
  • in 1804, [201].
  • Patronage, public, Jefferson’s course regarding, i. [224], [294].
  • Patterson, Elizabeth, ii. [377].
  • Paulus Hook, i. [11].
  • Peace, Prince of. (See [Godoy].)
  • Pêle-Mêle, ii. [365], [372], [390].
  • Pellew, Captain, of the “Cleopatra,” ii. [340].
  • Pennsylvania in 1800, i. [29], [114], [115];
  • schism, the, ii. [194] et seq.
  • Perkins, Jacob, i. [182].
  • Philadelphia in 1800, i. [28], [29];
  • library company, [61];
  • intellectual centre in 1800, [117].
  • “Philadelphia,” the frigate, captured, ii. [138].
  • Physick, Dr., i. [127].
  • Pichon, French chargé d’affaires, remonstrates with Leclerc and is superseded, i. [408]; ii. [268];
  • complains to Talleyrand of the attitude of the United States, [437], [439];
  • observes Jefferson’s close relations with Thornton, [354];
  • invited by Jefferson to meet Merry at dinner, [369].
  • Pickering, Judge John, impeachment of, ii. [143] et seq.;
  • trial of, [153] et seq.;
  • irregularity of trial, [158].
  • Pickering, Senator Timothy, i. [88];
  • and Yrujo, [425];
  • on the admission of Louisiana to the Union, ii. [105], [110] et seq., [160];
  • his letter to George Cabot on the impending dangers, [161], [164];
  • receives Cabot’s reply, [166] et seq.;
  • letter of, to Rufus King on Burr’s candidacy for the governorship, [179], [390], [391].
  • Pinckney, Charles, i. [152];
  • appointed minister to Madrid, [294], [427];
  • obtains a convention for Spanish depredations, ii. [249] et seq.;
  • indiscretions of, at Madrid, [275];
  • compromises Madison, [276];
  • adopts a high tone with Cevallos, [279];
  • sends him a threatening letter, [280];
  • excuse for his conduct, [281];
  • in an awkward situation, [284];
  • his recall asked for, [286];
  • asks the Spanish government to be permitted to resume relations, [315].
  • Pitt, William, ii. [316], [320], [324], [326], [328], [330], [336], [342];
  • restored to power, [396], [418];
  • determined to re-establish the former navigation laws, [419].
  • Pittsburgh in 1800, i. [2].
  • Plumer, William, senator from New Hampshire, ii. [160], [364], [405].
  • “Polly,” case of the, ii. [328], [340].
  • Population of the United States in 1800, i. [1];
  • centre of, near Baltimore, [1];
  • west of the Alleghanies in 1800, [3];
  • of cities, [59].
  • “Portfolio,” the, i. [85], [119], [121].
  • Postal system of the United States in 1800, i. [61].
  • Pozzo di Borgo, ii. [66].
  • Preble, Commodore Edward, appointed in command of the Mediterranean squadron, ii. [137];
  • at Tripoli, [426].
  • Prevost, J. B., ii. [220].
  • Priestley, Dr. Joseph, i. [157].
  • Prince of Peace. (See [Godoy].)
  • Princeton College in 1800, i. [129].
  • Prisons in 1800, i. [128].
  • Ramsay, David, i. [151].
  • Randolph, John, i. [143], [209];
  • in favor of anti-Federal declarations, [260], [267], [296], [338];
  • demands papers relating to the right of deposit at New Orleans, [429]; ii. [95];
  • defends the President in Congress, [97], [120], [124], [133], [142], [144];
  • impeaches Judge Chase, [151];
  • opposes remission of duties on school-books, [208];
  • decline of his influence, [210];
  • on the Yazoo claims, [210];
  • his violent temper, [213];
  • supported by the Administration, [220];
  • opens the trial of Judge Chase, [229];
  • his closing speech, [236];
  • his amendment to the Constitution, [240], [241];
  • asserts title to West Florida, [255];
  • complains of Jefferson’s credulity, [409].
  • Randolph, Thomas Mann, ii. [95], [124].
  • Rawle, William, i. [127]; ii. [259].
  • Reeve, Judge Tapping, ii. [168].
  • Representation, ratio of Congressional, fixed, i. [301].
  • Republicans. (See [Party].)
  • Retaliation acts, ii. [397] et seq.
  • Rhode Island, roads in, i. [64].
  • Rigaud, i. [384], [386].
  • Roads in 1800, i. [2], [5], [11] et seq., [14], [63], [64];
  • over the Alleghanies in 1800, [2].
  • Robbins, Jonathan, case of, ii. [333].
  • Rochambeau, General, succeeds Leclerc at St. Domingo, ii. [15].
  • Rodgers, John, at Tripoli, ii. [429].
  • Rodney, Cæsar A., elected to Congress in place of James A. Bayard, ii. [76], [95];
  • a Republican leader, [100];
  • defends the Louisiana treaty, [102];
  • reports Jefferson’s bill for administering Louisiana, [119];
  • shares in the trial of Judge Chase, [219], [228], [234].
  • Rose, George, vice-president of the board of trade, ii. [419].
  • Roume, Citizen, French agent in St. Domingo, i. [384], [387].
  • Rule of the war of 1756, ii. [322], [323], [329].
  • Rutledge, John, i. [269], [271].