Calhoun, J. C., agricultural college founded on plantation of, [42].
Carlisle, J. G., of Kentucky, [29].
Carnegie Foundation and college standards, [189].
Carolinas, differing economic conditions, [6]; Scotch-Irish in, [6]; see also [North Carolina], [South Carolina].
Carpetbaggers' rule overthrown, [9], [12].
Catholic Church, [214].
Charleston (S. C.), party management in, [39]; Tillman and, [40].
Child labor, state restrictions, [97], [118]; in cotton mills, [109], [114]-[115], [117]; Federal Child Labor Act, [118].
Civil service, Cleveland and, [29].
Civil War, blockade as reason for South's defeat, [3]; effect on South, [196].
Cleveland, Grover, election (1884), [28]; and the South, [29].
"Cleveland Democracy," [40].
Congregational Church, [a]216 (note)].
Congress, ex-Confederate soldiers in, [13], [26]; negroes in, [20]; reëlection of Senators, [28]; "Force Bill" (1890), [48]; Southern representation, [200]-[201].
Congressional Record, cited, [13].
Constitution, Fourteenth Amendment, [22].
Corn, price in South, [35]; as crop in South, [64]; boys' corn clubs, [78]-[79].
Cotton, price and production, [35]; favorite crop, [63], [197]; mills, [88]-[98], [108]-[121], [195]; cottonseed products, [99]-[100]; "linters," [100]; need of cotton-picking machine, [197]-[198].
Coxe, Tench, Statement of Arts and Manufactures, cited, [86].
Curry, Dr. J. L. M., [27], [169]-[170].
D.
Daughters of the Confederacy, [210].
Debt, see [Finance].
Delaware as Southern State, [5]; Grange in, [32]; school fund (1796), [157]-[158 (note)]; foreign born in, [194]; surplus of wheat (1917), [199]; Catholics in, [214]; churches, [214].
Democratic party, at end of Reconstruction period, [9]; called Conservative party, [11]-[12]; and political consolidation, [12]; Farmers' Alliance and, [36]; Georgia convention (1890), [37]; controlling influence of, [38]; Populist party and, [42]-[43], [47], [201]; nature of, [201]; split in Arkansas, [231].
Disciples' Church, [a]216 (note)].
Durham (N. C.), tobacco industry in, [103].
E.
Education, Blair Bill, [27]; in South Carolina, [42]; Populist attitude toward, [46]; negro schools, [57]; agricultural colleges and experiment stations, [75]; county demonstrators, [75]-[77], [184]; boys' and girls' clubs, [76], [78]-[81]; General Education Board, [76]-[77], [183]-[184], [186], [189]; college students, [83]; mills aid schools, [119]; progress, [157] et seq.; country schools, [164]; academies, [164]-[165], [171]; colleges, [165]-[166], [187]; graded schools, [166]; taxation for, [170], [172], [185], [186]; opposition to public schools, [171]-[172]; normal schools, [172]; better buildings, [172]; small districts, [173]; length of school term, [173], [184]; funds for negro, [182]-[183]; secondary schools, [186]; preparation for college, [188]; bibliography, [240]-[241]; see also [Negroes].
Education, Bureau of, Report on Negro Education, [174], [178].
Elections, intimidation of negroes, [18]-[19]; frauds, [19]-[20]; North threatens Federal control, [21]; (1896), [44]; (1900), [45]-[46]; primaries, [47], [199]; "Force Bill" (1890), [48].
Episcopal Church, [215].
F.
Farm Loan Act, [84].
Farmers' Alliance, [30], [33].
Farmers' Union of Louisiana, [34].
Fiction on the South, bibliography of, [241]-[242].
Field, Marshall, and Company own mills in North Carolina, [95].
Finance, problem in South, [22]; repudiation of state debts, [22], [227]-[233]; economies of new state governments, [24]-[25]; platform of National Alliance and Knights of Labor on, [34]; subtreasury plan, [34]-[35]; merchants as bankers, [61]-[65]; crop lien, [62]-[63]; Farm Loan Act, [84]; see also [Tariff], [Taxation].
Fisk University, [179].
Fleming, W. L., The Sequel of Appomattox, cited, [2 (note)], [27 (note)]; Civil War and Reconstruction in Alabama, cited, [227 (note)].
Florida, end of carpetbag rule in, [9]; mines, [102]; cigar industry, [104]; bonds as part of Peabody Fund, [167]; migration to, [194]; debt, [227].
Freedmen's Aid Societies, schools for negroes opened by, [173].
Freedmen's Bureau, [27].
French in Louisiana, [6].
Friends, Society of, influence in South, [16].
G.
Garland, A. H., of Arkansas, [28].
General Education Board, [76]-[77], [183]-[184], [186], [189].
Georgia, Democratic convention (1890), [37]; Populist party (1892), [42]; cotton mills, [88], [97]; knitting industry, [98]; cottonseed oil industry, [100]; fertilizer industry, [100]; lynchings in, [155]; school fund (1817), [158 (note)]; imports, [195]; Catholics in, [214]; repudiation of debt, [229].
Girls' canning clubs, [80].
Gordon, J. B., [13], [37].
Grady, H. W., uses expression "New South," [7]-[8]; editor of Atlanta Constitution, [223].
Grange movement, [29], [31]-[33].
Great War, negroes in knitting mills during, [126]; migration of negroes to North during, [132]-[133]; negro women in Red Cross work, [149]; and capital in South, [196]; South and, [201]; and nationalism, [210]-[211].
Greenback movement, [25], [29]-[30].