INDEX
JOURNAL OF NEGRO HISTORY
VOLUME VIII
A
- A Negro Pioneer in the West, [333-335]
- Abram Hannibal, the Favorite of Peter the Great, [359-366]
- Africa and the Discovery of America, review of, [233-238]
- African Institution, the interest of, in colonization, [168], [169], [170], [178], [182], [200], [204], [215]
- African Methodist Episcopal Church, organization of, [303]
- African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, the organization of, [303]
- African slave, the status of, in the colonies, [250], [251]
- Alabama, the movement of Negroes to, [367], [370], [373], [379-381];
- Cotton culture in, [372]
- Allen, Philip, owner of land near Dartmouth, [155]
- Allen, Richard, the work of, [51];
- anti-colonization meeting in church of, [216]
- Allen, William, interest of, in African colonization, [174], [182], [186], [189], [195], [200], [201], [205], [206]
- Alvord, J. W., Assistant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, [13]
- American Catholic Historical Society, the prize offered by, [351]
- American Freedmen's Union Commission, [16]
- American Magazine, extract from, [91-92]
- American Missionary Association, the work of, in South Carolina, [7], [8], [15], [16], [25], [26]
- Anderson, Joseph, of Montreal, purchase of a slave by, [329]
- Anderson, Lymus, a teacher of Negroes at Port Royal, [38]
- André, a Negro, suit of, for freedom, [326], [327]
- Andrew, Governor, interest of, in Negro education, [35]
- Anna Murray-Douglass--My Mother As I Recall Her, [93-101]
- Antoine, C. C., sketch of, by W. O. Hart, [84-87];
- how he made money, [86]
- Arkansas, cotton culture in, [372]
- Arnett, Bishop B. W., the statistics of A. M. E. Church by, [310]
- Arnold, Thomas, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Arthur, Stanley Cisby, sketch of Isaiah T. Montgomery by, [87-91]
- Asbury, Bishop, organizer of a mixed Sunday school, [302]
- Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, proceedings of
- Auger, Jean-Baptiste, a sale of a slave by, [322]
- Auguste, Tancrede, a ruler of Haiti, [138]
- Avery Institute, the establishment of, [19]
B
- Ba Mangwato, a native in South Africa, [288]
- Babcock, Colonel, effort of, to annex Santo Domingo, [145]
- Baganda, the morality of, [286-287], [288], [289];
- art of, [291]
- Bailly, Augustin, a vendor of a slave, [321]
- Baltimore, Spring Conference in, [353-357];
- Baptist Home Mission Society, the work of, [26]
- Baptists, the efforts of, among the freedmen, [18]
- Barahona, a plantation in Santo Domingo, [139], [140]
- Barbadoes, the progress of, [249]
- Beaufort, South Carolina, Negro schools at, [22], [24], [26]
- Beauvais, reference to, [286], [289]
- Bell, J. W., address of, at the annual meeting, [117], [122], [123-127]
- Benedict, Mrs., the gift of, [26]
- Benefit of clergy as applied to slaves, [443-447]
- Bent, reference to, and quotations from, [288], [292], [293], [294]
- Betty, a Negro servant, one of the first Methodists, [301]
- Bickel, Beatrice, review of Das Unbekannte Afrika by, [453-458]
- Bigelow, A. M., a teacher of a Negro school at Aiken, [31]
- Biography, Negro, by P. W. L. Jones, [128-133]
- Biron, an enemy of Abram Hannibal in Russia, [364]
- Bishop, Josiah, a preacher in Virginia, [51]
- Blaney, Mary, the owner of a slave in Montreal, [330]
- Blyd, Cornelius Winst, the achievements of, in Dutch Guiana, [448-453]
- Bond, James, participation of, in the annual meeting, [118]
- Book of American Negro Poetry, The, review of, [347-348]
- Booker, S. S., participation of, in the Spring Conference of the Association in Baltimore, [353]
- Border States, the movement of Negroes from, [367-383]
- Bornu, the kings of, [296];
- the rise of, [297]
- Boston Education Commission, [6]
- Boston, Negro servants in, [260], [261];
- Negroes in domestic service in, [429]
- Botume, Elizabeth Hyde, a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [11]
- Boutton, Louis Philippe, a sale of slaves by, [322]
- Bowles, Mrs. Emma Castleman, facts of, on the origin of Wilberforce, [335-337]
- Boyd, Wm. K., Benefit of Clergy as applied to Slaves by, [443-447]
- Boyer, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Boy's Life of Booker T. Washington, A, review of, [463-464]
- Bragg, George F., The History of the Afro-American Group of the Episcopal Church by, [107-109];
- remarks of, [355-356]
- Brass, a Negro held in Virginia, [258-259], [278]
- British America, the status of the Negro in, [276-277]
- Breeding of slaves for market, [374]
- Brooks, John, the purchaser of a slave in Montreal, [329]
- Brooks, W. H., a prominent Negro minister, [313]
- Brown, George W., an instructor in history, [115];
- Haiti and the United States by, [134-152]
- Brown, John, a vendor of a slave from Saratoga, [327]
- Brown, Moses, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Brown, Thomas E., remarks of, [356]
- Brownell, David, the owner of land at Dartmouth, [154]
- Bryan, Andrew, a Negro preacher, [50]
- Bryan, Sampson, a preacher, [50]
- Bryan, William J., efforts of, to encroach upon Haiti, [143]
- Bryant, William Cullen, interest of, in freedom, [7]
- Buffum, a co-worker of Prudence Crandall, [74]
- Bulkley, Ichabod, an attorney against Prudence Crandall, [78]
- Bureau of Refugees, establishment of, [3]
- Bush, W. O., a Negro farmer of fame in the West, [333]
- Bush, George, a Negro pioneer in the West, [333-335]
- Butler, B. F., at Fortress Monroe, [2-3]
- Byrne, William, disposal of slaves by, [329]
C
- Caesar, a slave sold in Montreal, [327]
- Campbell, William, the purchase of slaves by, [328]
- Came, Amable-Jean-Joseph, sale of a slave by, [319]
- Canada, slavery in, [316-330]
- Canal, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Canterbury, Connecticut, the people of, arrayed against Prudence Crandall, [76-80]
- Capers, Bishop, the missionary work of, [303]
- Carberry, Daniel, of Montreal, a purchaser of slaves, [329]
- Cardoza, F. L., an educator of Negroes in South Carolina, [39]
- Carter, Frank, a teacher of Negroes at Camden, S. C., [38]
- Carter, E. A., participation of, in the annual meeting, [116]
- Cary, Lott, a missionary in Africa, [304]
- Castor, John, a slave owned by Anthony Johnson, a Negro, [259], [278]
- Chaboille, Sir Charles, a purchaser of slaves, [329]
- Champlin, G. C., a supporter of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Chavigny, Joseph, a vendor of slaves, [322]
- Channing, Walter, a supporter of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Charleston, John, a Negro preacher, [302]
- Charleston, South Carolina, the Negro schools of, [18], [19], [20], [21], [22-40]
- Chase, Salmon P., interest of, in the freedmen, [7]
- Chêne, Mary Josephine, slaves of, by marriage, [329]
- Chicago, race commission of, [112-114];
- Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago by, [112-114]
- Christophe, a ruler of Haiti, [136]
- Cincinnati, the treatment of Negroes in, [331-332]
- Clair, Bishop Matthew W., recognition of, by Methodists, [315]
- Claflin University, the establishment of, [26]
- Clark, Peter H., quotation from, [102-103]
- Clarkson, Thomas, interest of, in colonization, [168];
- efforts of, [195]
- Clifford, John R., the achievements of, [338-341]
- Coppin, Mrs. L. J., interest of, in training domestic workers, [399]
- Coggeshall, John, a supporter of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Coker, Daniel, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [185]
- Collins, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [185]
- Colored Methodist Episcopal Church, the organization of, [312]
- Columbia, South Carolina, the Negro schools of, [18], [19], [20], [21]
- Columbus, Christopher, the discoverer of Haiti and Santo Domingo, [135]
- Colvis, Joseph, the record of, [132]
- Comparative Study of the Bantu and Semi-Bantu Languages, A, by Sir Harry H. Johnston, [241-242]
- Caucasians in domestic service in the United States, [386-387]
- Concerning the Origin of Wilberforce, [335-337]
- Congregationalists, educational efforts of, [15], [16]
- Connecticut, Negro servants in, [265-266], [280]
- "Contraband of War," at Fortress Monroe, [2-3]
- Cooke, Edward, quotation from letter of Paul Cuffe to, [221]
- Cotterill, R. S., participation of, in the annual meeting, [118]
- Cotton, the rise of cotton culture, [370-374];
- Cowan, Philip, petition of, for freedom, [279]
- Cox, a missionary to Africa, [304]
- Cramahé, Hector-Theophile, purchase of a slave by, [323-324]
- Crenshaw, David, a mixed Sunday School in the home of, [302]
- Croder, Josiah, a merchant connected with Paul Cuffe, [203]
- Cromwell, John W., letter of, [338-341]
- Cuffe, Paul, early life of, [153-156];
- Cuffe, John, a brother of Paul Cuffe, [155];
- Cureux, Louis, purchaser of slaves, [319]
- Curry, Thomas, a purchaser of slaves in Montreal, [327]