S
- Saget, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Salnave, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Salomon, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Sam, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- Samaná Bay, the desire of the United States for, [145]
- Santo Domingo, a brief account of, [138-142]
- Sara, a slave from Saratoga, sold in Canada, [327]
- Saxton, Major Rufus, work of, among the freedmen, [8], [9];
- Assistant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, [13]
- Schism in the Churches of the United States, [303], [304], [305], [306]
- Schofield, Martha, efforts of, for the uplift of Negroes, [27]
- Scott, Bishop I. B., mission of, to Africa, [314]
- Scott, General R. K., Assistant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, [13]
- Secretary-Treasurer, financial statement of, [466]
- Selenginsk, the flight of Abram Hannibal from, [363]
- Servitude distinguished from slavery, [247-260]
- Sewall, Judge, work of, against slavery, [262]
- Seward, F. W., efforts of, to secure Samaná Bay, [145]
- Sharp, Granville, interest of, in colonization, [168]
- Shaw, Francis G., interest of, in the freedmen, [7]
- Sherman, T. W., operations of, in South Carolina, [3]
- Sherman, W. T., field order of, [35-36]
- Sherbro, proposal to purchase land there, [208]
- Sherwood, H. N., Paul Cuffe by, [153-229]
- Sierra Leone, an objective of colonizationists, [168], [169], [182], [189]
- Slavery in the United States distinguished from servitude, [247-260];
- Slocum, Cuffe, ancestor of Paul Cuffe, [153], [154]
- Slocum, Ebenezer, the owner of Paul Cuffe's ancestor, [153]
- Slocum, Ruth, the wife of Cuffe Slocum, the death of, [155]
- Smith, A. H., the retirement of, from the service of the Association, [351], [471]
- Smith, Georgine Kelly, participation of, in the Spring Conference of the Association in Baltimore, [353]
- Social life of Negro domestic workers, [434]
- Songhay, the civilization of, [295], [296], [297], [298], [299], [300]
- Soudan, the governments of, [295-300]
- Soulouque, a ruler of Haiti, [137]
- South, the movement of Negroes in, [367-383]
- South Carolina, refugees in, [1-6];
- Southern Methodists supreme over slavery, [306], [307], [308]
- Southwest, the movement of Negroes to, [367-383]
- Sowle, Jonathan, an owner of land near Dartmouth, [155]
- Spanish explorers, Negroes with, [249]
- Spencer, J. O., address of, in Baltimore, [353], [354]
- Spingarn, A. B., a letter of, [344-345]
- Sprague, Rosetta Douglass, Anna Murray-Douglass--My Mother as I Recall Her by, [93-101]
- Spring Conference of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, the proceedings of, [353-357]
- Springfield, Massachusetts, occupations of Negroes in, [405]
- St. Helena, Negro school at, [11]
- St. Louis, Negroes in domestic service in, [393-394]
- St. Petersburg-Moscow Canal, the plan for, submitted by Abram Hannibal, [365]
- Steward, T. G., extracts from The Friend supplied by, [331-333];
- a letter from, [453]
- Steward, W. H., participation of, in the annual meeting, [116]
- Stiles, Ezra, interest of, in colonization, [168]
- Stiles, Joshua, a vendor of slaves in Montreal, [329]
- Stoll, C. C., address of, at the annual meeting, [117]
- Strong, Henry, an attorney for Prudence Crandall, [78]
- Strouds, Giles, a sale of slaves by, [322]
- Sullivan, John, the purchaser of a slave in Montreal, [330]
- Sumner, Charles, quotation from, [262]
- Sumner High School, St. Louis, the occupations of the graduates of, [400]
- Survance, Antony, a native of Senegal, [199]
- Swedish Company, ordinance of, with respect to slavery, [263]
T
- Taber, Judge Constant, a supporter of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Taber, Philip, a minister known to the Cuffes, [154]
- Tappan, Arthur, a supporter of Prudence Crandall, [78]
- Tarikh-es-Soudan, the author of, [296]
- Taylor, A. A., The Movement of Negroes from the East to the Gulf States from 1830 to 1850 by, [367-383];
- Tennessee, the culture of tobacco in, [368];
- breeding slaves in, [374]
- Teaching of Negro History, The, by J. W. Bell, [123-127]
- Texas, admission of, stimulus to slave trade, [377]
- The Friend, extracts from, [331-333]
- The Item (New Orleans), extract from, [87-91]
- The Movement of Negroes from the East to the Gulf States from 1830 to 1850, by A. A. Taylor, [367-383]
- The States (New Orleans), extract from, [84-87]
- Thérèse, an Indian slave girl in Quebec, [321]
- Thomas, York, a Negro serving under an indenture, [330]
- Thompson, A. Eugene, participation of, in the annual meeting, [116]
- Thornton, William, interest of, in colonization, [168]
- Three Elements of African Culture, [284-300]
- Tillinghast, reference to, [286], [289]
- Tobacco, the production of, from 1830 to 1850, [368-369]
- Todd, Andrew, a purchaser of a slave, [329]
- Tomlinson, Reuben, work of, under the Freedmen's Bureau, [13];
- Tomsk, the service of Abram Hannibal at, [363]
- Towne, Laura M., a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [11]
- Training of domestic service workers in England, [397];
- in the United States, [398-404]
- Transition from white servitude to slavery, [266-276];
- from Negro servitude to Negro slavery, [277-283]
- Treatment of Negroes in Ohio, [331-332]
- Trend of the Races, The, review of, [109-111]
- Turner, John, a vendor of a slave in Montreal, [329]
- Turner, George, a soldier, the owner of a slave in Canada, [330]
- Tyson, Elisha, a friend of Paul Cuffe, [185]
U
- Union American Methodist Episcopal Church organized, [303]
- Union Humane Society, the establishment of, [211]
- United States in the Larger Canal Zone, [145-146]
V
- Vallée, Jean Baptiste, a sale of slaves by, [322]
- Vase, John, an attorney employed by Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Vederique, François, purchase of a Negro by, [318]
- Venture, Thomas, the owner of a slave called Isabella, [324]
- Vernon, I., a supporter of Paul Cuffe, [184]
- Virginia, memorial of legislature of, [212];
- Von Sheberg, Christina Regina, the wife of Abram Hannibal, [364]
W
- Wallace, Henry A., the death of, [243];
- his services, [243-244]
- Ward, William, of Vermont, sale of slaves by, [328]
- Washington, Booker T., a quotation from, [49]
- Washington, D. C, Negroes in domestic service in, [390], [391], [393], [394], [395], [400], [401], [402], [403], [404], [407], [408], [409-413], [414], [415], [419], [425], [426]
- Webster, Dr. A., an educator in South Carolina, [26]
- Welch, Jonathan A., an attorney against Prudence Crandall, [78]
- Wesley, John, the baptism of a Negro by, [301]
- Wesleyan Methodists, educational efforts of, [15], [16]
- Westport, Friends at, [195]
- Wheatley, Phyllis, the story of, [44-45]
- Wheaton, Laban, presentation of Memorial of Paul Cuffe by, [196]
- White, Ned Lloyd, a teacher of Negroes in South Carolina, [39]
- Whittier, John G., interest of, in the Freedmen's education, [10-11]
- Wiener, Leo, Africa and the Discovery of America by, [233-238]
- Wilberforce, William, interest of, in colonization, [168], [174], [195]
- Wilberforce, the establishment of, [308], [335-337]
- Wilhelmina, Queen, a friend of Cornelius Winst Blyd, of Dutch Guiana, [451-452]
- Williams, Noah W., participation of, in the annual meeting, [117]
- Williams, Peter, inquiry of, into colonization prospects, [207];
- Wilmington, Delaware, independent Negro Methodists of, [303]
- Wilson, G. R., The Religion of the American Negro Slave: His Attitude toward Life and Death by, [41-71]
- Wilson, Samuel, interest of, in colonization, [217]
- Windward Passage, the, significance of, [148-150]
- Woman's Home Missionary Society, the work of, [17], [26]
- Woodson, Carter G., quotation from, [47-48];
- World War and Negro domestic labor, [384-442]
- Wormley, G. Smith, Prudence Crandall by, [72-80];
- address of, in Baltimore, [355]
- Wyatt, Sir Francis, the owner of a Negro named Brass, [259]
- Wright, Irene A., the assistance of, in research, [465]
- Wright, John F., a founder of the original Wilberforce, [308]
- Wright, T. G., a founder of a Negro School, [20-21]