D
- Daggett, Judge, decision of, in the Prudence Crandall case, [78-80]
- Daguille, Jacques-François, a vendor of a slave, [322]
- Damien, Jacques, sale of a slave by, [319]
- Das Unbekannte Africa, review of, [455-458]
- Dassier, Estienne, sale of slave by, [320]
- Davis, T. R., Negro Servitude in the United States by, [247-283]
- Davis, Jefferson, befriended by Isaiah T. Montgomery, [87-91]
- Dayly, Dennis, vendor of a slave, [324]
- Deane, Major E. L., work of, under the Freedmen's Bureau, [13]
- De Chalet, François, the hire of a slave by, [323]
- De Champigny, Intendant, proposal of, [316]
- De la Chevrotière, Joseph Chavigny, purchase of an Indian slave by, [321]
- Decline of border States, [367-383]
- De Grasse, John V., the example of, [132]
- De la Tesserie, Joseph, the sale of a Negro by, [318]
- Delaware, Lord, the orders of, [267-268]
- Delaware, the movement of Negroes from, [367]
- Delaware River, status of Negroes along, [262], [263]
- Delzenne, Ignace-François, purchase of a slave by, [320]
- Denonville, Governor, proposal of, [316]
- Dessalines, the emperor of Haiti, [136]
- Detroit, Negroes in domestic service in, [390], [405]
- Detweiler, Frederick G., The Negro Press in the United States by, [238-239]
- De Vitre, Mathieu-Theodore, a purchaser of a slave, [322]
- Director of the Association, the annual report of, [466-471]
- Discovery of Gold in California, the result of, [377]
- Disfranchisement of Negro servants, [272]
- Disruption of Virginia, The, review of, [239-241]
- District of Columbia, the movement of the Negroes from, [367];
- Dolgorukovs, friends of Abram Hannibal, [363]
- Dominican Republic, the history of, [135-142]
- Domingue, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Domestic service in the United States, Negroes in, [384-442]
- Douglass, Frederick, story related by, [54];
- Dregis, Emanuel, a Negro servant, [260]
- Dumoulin, François, of Montreal, a vendor of slaves, [329]
- Dunière, Louis, sale of slaves by, [319], [320]
- Dutch frigate, slaves brought to Jamestown in, [249]
- Dutch law with regard to slavery, [253]
E
- Edie, Colonel J. R., Assistant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, [13]
- Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872, [1-40]
- Edwards, G. A., participation of, in the Spring Conference in Baltimore, [354], [355]
- El Bekri, the author of Tarikh-es-Soudan, [296]
- Elizabeth, Empress, a friend of Abram Hannibal, [364]
- Elizabeth, Queen, the attitude of, toward slavery, [251], [256]
- Elkonhead, Jane, the owner of Francis Pryne, [259]
- Ellsworth, W. W., an attorney for Prudence Crandall, [78]
- Ely, General, daughters of, teachers of Negroes, [21]
- Embury, Philip, a meeting of Methodists at the home of, [301]
- Employment agencies as they concern Negro domestic workers, [436-440]
- Ethics of Africans, [286-290]
- Evans, Henry, a pioneer preacher, [51]
- Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia), extract from, [81-84]
F
- Farando, Bashasar, a Negro servant, [260]
- Fay, Thomas, inquiry of, into the affairs of Africa, [207]
- Featherstonhaugh, quotation from, [375]
- Fetishism, the religion of Africa, [43-45]
- Finley, Robert, the correspondence of, with Paul Cuffe, [212-213], [215]
- Fisher, Miles Mark, an instructor at Virginia Union University, [115]
- Fisher, Samuel R., proposal of, to establish a Negro school, [206]
- Flora, a slave sold in Montreal, [327]
- Forten, Charlotte S., a teacher in South Carolina, [10-11]
- Forten, James, correspondence of, with Paul Cuffe, [205-206], [207];
- Fouse, W. H., participation of, in the annual meeting, [118], [121]
- Free Negroes in Baltimore, [94]
- Free Society of Traders, attitude of, toward freedom, [263]
- Free Will Baptists, educational efforts of, in South Carolina, [15], [16], [18]
- Freedmen's Bureau, the work of, in South Carolina, [1-40]
- Freedmen's Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, the schools of, in South Carolina, [26]
- Frederick Douglass in Ireland, [102-107]
- French Canada, slavery in, [316-330]
- Friends, the work of, among freedmen in South Carolina, [27];
- Friendly Society of Sierra Leone, the efforts of, [186], [193], [200], [206]
- Frobenius, Leo, reference to, [286], [287], [295];
- Das Unbekannte Africa of, [455-458]
- Furley, Benjamin, opposition of, to slavery, [263]
G
- Gainesville, Georgia, occupations of, graduates of schools of, [400]
- Gannett, W. C., a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [8]
- Garneau, François-Xavier, quotations from, [316], [317]
- Garrettson, Freeborn, attitude of, toward slavery, [301]
- Garrison, William Lloyd, interest of, in the freedmen, [7];
- Gautier, Pierre, purchase of a slave by, [319]
- Gay, Sydney Howard, in the home of Frederick Douglass, [97]
- Geaween, John, a Negro servant, [260]
- Geffrard, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Georgia, restriction upon slavery in, [254-255];
- Germantown, Friends of, protest of, against slavery, [263]
- Ghana, the kings of, [296];
- the rise of, [296]
- Gibbons, William, inquiry of, into the affairs of Sierra Leone, [207-208]
- "Gideonites," the efforts of, [7]
- Gifford, Enos, owner of land near Dartmouth, [155]
- Gifford, Isaac, quotation from letter of Paul Cuffe to, [221-222]
- Gilbert, a settler from Antigua, [301]
- Gloucester, Duke of, interest of, in colonization, [169], [195]
- Goddard, Calvin, an attorney for Prudence Crandall, [78]
- Gold, the discovery of, in California, the effect of, [377]
- Grant, U. S., effort of, to annex Santo Domingo, [145]
- Guérin, Danielle Marie-Anne, vendor of a slave, [319]
- Guerrier, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Guillaume, a ruler of Haiti, [138]
- Gulf States, migration to, [367-383]
- Gummere, Amelia Mott, The Journal of John Woolman by, [349-350]
H
- Haiti, relations of, with the United States, [134-152];
- Haiti and the United States, by George W. Brown, [134-152]
- Hale, Edward Everett, interest of, in freedmen, [7]
- Hammond, Anna Eliza, a pupil of Prudence Crandall, [76];
- the arrest of, [76]
- Hammond, L. H., In the Vanguard of a Race by, [111-112]
- Hammond, John, of Saratoga, the sale of a slave by, [327-328]
- Hancock, Gordon B., Three Elements of African Culture by, [284-300]
- Hannibal, Ivan, a son of Abram Hannibal, [365]
- Hannibal-Pushkin, Nadejda, the mother of Alexander Pushkin, [365]
- Hannibal, Ossip, a son of Abram Hannibal, [365]
- Harris, Sara, a pupil of Prudence Crandall, [73]
- Harris, William, quotation from letter of Paul Cuffe to, [221]
- Hart, W. O., sketch of C. C. Antoine by, [84-87]
- Hartford, interest of, in the training of domestic workers, [399]
- Hartzell, Bishop J. C., Methodism and the Negro in the United States by, [301-315]
- Hawkins, Sir John, the trading of, [251];
- argument of, in favor of slavery, [255-256]
- Hawkins, M. A., participation of, in the Spring Conference of the Association in Baltimore, [353], [354]
- Hawkins, John R., address of, in Baltimore, [353-354]
- Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, [145-146]
- Haynes, Elizabeth Ross, Negroes in Domestic Service in the United States by, [384-442]
- Haynes, George E., The Trend of the Races by, [109-111]
- Health of Negro domestic workers, [432-433]
- Henrique y Carvajol, Frederico, nomination of, [144]
- Herard, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Hicks, Mrs. C. M., a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [37]
- Hicks, Jenkins, and Company, merchants connected with Paul Cuffe, [203]
- Higginson, T. W., quotations from, [55], [56], [57]
- Hill, L. P., address of, in Baltimore, [356-357]
- Hilton Head, capture of, [4];
- educational efforts at, [5]
- Hippolyte, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Hipp, George, sale of a slave by, [323]
- History, the teaching of, [123-127]
- History of the Afro-American Group of the Episcopal Church, review of, [107-109]
- History of the United States since the Civil War, A, review of, [458-461]
- Hodge, LeRoy, a letter of, [343-344]
- Holly, Bishop Theodore, the lineage of, [454]
- Hopkins, Charles, a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [37-38]
- Hopkins, Samuel D., interest of, in colonization, [168]
- Hosier, Harry, a Negro preacher, [49]
- Howard, Horatio P., the death of, [243];
- Howard, O. O., the head of the Freedmen's Bureau, [13]
- Howard School, the establishment of, [21]
- Hume, Naethan, the owner of slaves in Montreal, [330]
- Hunter, General David, in command in South Carolina, [8]
- Hunter, William, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [185]
- Hurst, Bishop John, participation of, in the Spring Conference in Baltimore, [356]
- Hutchinson, Samuel, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [184]