I
- Importation of slaves, restriction on, [252-253], [375]
- Impostor posing as the relative of Paul Cuffe, [208-210]
- In the Vanguard of a Race, review of, [111-112]
- Indian slaves in Canada, [320-323]
- Indianapolis, occupations of graduates of schools of, [400], [401], [405], [434]
- Ireland, Frederick Douglass in, [102-107]
- Isabella, the slave of Hector-Theophilie Cramahé, Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec, [323], [324], [325]
- Isthmian Canal, the seizure of, [146];
- the completion of, [146]
J
- Jack, a pioneer Negro preacher, [50-51]
- Jackson, John H., the services of, [132]
- Jackson, L. P., Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872 by, [1-40];
- an instructor at the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, [115]
- Jackson, W. C., A Boy's Life of Booker T. Washington by, [463-464]
- James, John, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [184];
- inquiry of, into the condition of Sierra Leone, [207]
- James, L. S., address of, in Baltimore, [355]
- Jamestown, the introduction of slavery at, [249]
- Jessop, Joseph, visit to, by impostor, [209]
- Johnson, Anthony, a Negro owner of slaves, [259], [278]
- Johnson, James Weldon, The Book of American Negro Poetry by, [347-348]
- Johnson, Richard, a Negro brought to Virginia, [260]
- Johnston, Sir Harry H., A Comparative Study of the Bantu and Semi-Bantu Languages by, [241-242]
- Jones, Absalom, the opposition of, to colonization, [219]
- Jones, J. McHenry, the services of, [132]
- Jones, Laurence C., Piney Woods and Its Story by, [346-347]
- Jones, P. W. L., participation of, in the annual meeting, [117];
- Negro Biography by, [128-133]
- Jones, Bishop R. E., recognition of, by Methodists, [315]
- Jordan, L. G., participation of, in the annual meeting, [117]
- Journal of John Woolman, The, review of, [349-350]
- Judson, A. T., an opponent of Prudence Crandall, [75], [76], [77], [78]
K
- Keith, George, opposition of, to slavery, [263]
- Kentucky, Colonization Society of, the establishment of, [211];
- Khama, an honest native of South Africa, [288]
- Kizell, John, a settler in Sierra Leone, [193]
L
- Labart, Guillaume, a vendor of slaves, [329]
- Ladoga Canal Commission, Abram Hannibal a member of, [364]
- Lane College, the establishment of, [312]
- La Promenade, Paul, a purchaser of a slave in Montreal, [328]
- Larger Canal Zone, a reality, [143], [146], [150], [151], [152]
- Larned, E. D., quotation from, concerning Prudence Crandall, [73]
- Lecompte Cincinnatus, a ruler of Haiti, [138]
- Lee, Barnard K., a founder of a school for Negroes, [8]
- Legitime, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Lepage Louis, a slave in Quebec, [322]
- Le Pailleur, Charles, a purchaser of a slave in Montreal, [327], [329]
- Levy, Gershon, owner of André, a Canadian slave, [326]
- Levy, Solomon, a purchaser of slaves, [327]
- Lewis, Edmonia, the achievements of, [132]
- Liberia, part played by Philadelphia in founding, [81-84]
- Lifland, Abram Hannibal in, [364]
- Light, George, an early owner of slaves in Virginia, [279]
- Living conditions of Negro domestic workers, [428-429]
- Locke, Perry, a minister going to Africa, [198], [201];
- interest of, in colonization, [217]
- London Freedmen's Aid Society, [15], [16]
- Los Angeles, domestic workers in, [435]
- Louisiana, the movement of Negroes to, [367], [370], [373], [379], [381];
- cotton culture in, [372]
- Louison, a slave in Canada, [319]
- Lucas, Charles, a slaveholder in Virginia, [279]
- Lucas, Sir Charles, The Partition of Africa by, [461-463]
- Lugard, Lady, quotation from, [294-295], [298-299], [300]
- Lurker, King, the grandson of, [205]
M
- McAdam, Hugh, a vendor of slaves in Saratoga, [327]
- McCoy, L. M., participation of, in the Spring Conference of the Association in Baltimore, [353]
- McGill, James, a vendor of slaves, [327]
- McGregor, James C., The Disruption of Virginia by, [239-241]
- McKinley and Roosevelt Administrations, The, review of, [348-349]
- McLachlan, R. W., memorandum of, on the sale of slaves, [327]
- Macaulay, Zachariah, interest of, in colonization, [169-170]
- Madison, President James, visit to, by Paul Cuffe, [184-185], [186]
- Mansa Musa, a noble of Ghana, [296]
- Maryland, early slavery in, [260-261];
- Martin, Governor Simeon, an endorser of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Mashonaland, natives of, discussed, [288], [289], [292]
- Massachusetts, early slavery in, [252], [260], [261], [262];
- Mather, Mrs. Rachel C., the establishment of a school by, [26]
- Matthews, W. B., participation of, in the annual meeting, [117]
- May, Samuel, a coworker of Prudence Crandall, [74], [75], [76]
- May, Samuel J., in the home of Frederick Douglass, [97]
- Mazoe Valley, art in, [294]
- Meade, Bishop, interest of, in colonization, [217]
- Melle, a kingdom of Africa, [296]
- Methodist Churches, early difficulties of the races in, [302]
- Methodism and the Negro in the United States, [301-315]
- Menshikov, ruler of Russia, [363]
- Michaels, Myer, of Montreal, a purchaser of slaves, [329]
- Michigan Freedmen's Relief Association, [15]
- Migration to the lower South and Southwest, [367-383]
- Miller, Kelly, address of, in Baltimore, [354]
- Miller, Thomas E., Ex-Congressman, remarks of, at the Baltimore Spring Conference, [356]
- Mills, Samuel J., interest of, in colonization, [213-216]
- Miner Normal School, the occupation of the graduates of, [400], [401]
- Minich, Field Marshall, the friend of Abram Hannibal, [364]
- Minimum wage legislation, [424-425]
- Missionary efforts in the South, the success of, [304-305]
- Mississippi, the movement of Negroes to, [367], [373], [380], [379-381];
- cotton culture in, [372]
- Missouri, the culture of tobacco in, [368];
- breeding of slaves in, [374]
- Mole St. Nicholas, a prospective naval base, [143]
- Mona Passage, the, significance of, [148-150]
- Monroe Doctrine as it concerns Haiti and Santo Domingo, [135], [143], [144], [145], [146], [147], [148], [149], [150]
- Montgomery, Isaiah T., sketch of, [87-91]
- Monsaige, Jean, purchase of a slave by, [319]
- Morality of Africans, [286-291]
- Morgan, Peter G., the record of, [341-344]
- Morisseaux, Marie-Josephe, sale of a slave by, [322]
- Morrison, James, a vendor of a slave in Montreal, [327], [328-329]
- Morse, Dr. Jedekiah, inquiry of, into the affairs of Africa, [206]
- Morse, P. A., quotations from, [372]
- Moses, Ruth, an Indian girl, marriage of, to Cuffe Slocum, [154]
- Mossell, Mrs. N. F., remarks of, [355]
- Mtokoland, natives of, discussed, [294]
- Munro, Abby D., a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [27]
- Murray, Ella Spencer, remarks of, [356]