Education in Virginia, [5].

Ellsworth, Oliver, appointed envoy to France, [412].

Episcopal Church, established in Virginia, [37];
its increasing unpopularity, [43], [57];
virtually disestablished by declaration of rights, [209];
its incorporation proposed by Henry, [294];
Henry a member of, [391], [392].

Fauquier, Governor Francis, condemns Henry’s speech against the Stamp Act, [86].

Federalist party, at first viewed with suspicion by Henry, [397];
later sympathized with by him, [398], [399];
sincerity of its leaders in offering Henry office questioned by Jefferson, [404];
its folly in passing alien and sedition acts, [408].

Fleming, John, Henry’s assistant in introducing the Virginia Resolves, [69].

Fontaine, Edward, gives Roane’s description of Henry’s speech for organizing militia, [146], [150].

Fontaine, Mrs. Martha, with Henry in last illness, [421].

Fontaine, Colonel Patrick Henry, statement as to Henry’s classical training, [15];
finds his examinations rigorous, [16];
tells story of his grandfather’s conversation in Latin with a French visitor, [16], [17];
describes his grandfather’s preparation in British debts case, [361];
describes his abstemiousness, [386].

Ford, John, defended by Henry in a murder case, [374], [375].