Страница - 78Страница - 80- 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].