F.

Fessenden, General, Freedmen's Bureau official, [106].
Fessenden, W. P., moderate Republican, [122]; and negro suffrage, [132].
Finance, post-war condition in South, [2], [5]; war taxes, [8]; license taxes, [76]; repudiation of Confederate war debt, [77], [130]; under military governors, [145]-[146]; effect of bad government in South, [230]-[236]; credit system, [270]; readjustments, [283]; panic of 1873, [283].
Fish, C. R., The Path of Empire, cited, [284 (note)].
Fisk, General, criticism of Kentucky Legislature, [113].
Fisk, James, [283], [286].
Florida, negro colony in, [36]; negro legislation, [96]; and Fourteenth Amendment, [132]; negro voters, [151]; schools, [215]; recitation in negro school, [218]-[219]; and reconstruction government, [221]; corruption, [226]; taxes, [231]; decrease in property values, [233]; Equal Rights Law, [276]; and radicals, [294], [295]; election of 1876, [297], [298].
Forrest, General, Grand Wizard of Ku Klux, [248], [259].
Freedmen, see [Negroes].
Freedmen's Aid Societies, [177], [207], [213].
Freedmen's Bureau, [38], [81], [82], [85], [86], [90], [126], [161], [187]; confiscable property turned over to, [11]; official describes conditions in South, [13]-[14]; as relief agency, [15]; in Kentucky, [26]; as publicity agent, [28]; and contract labor, [46]; on relations between races, [48]; agitators from, [53]; extension, [74], [84], [128], [129]; and negroes, [80], [142], [149], [175]; views of North carried out in, [89]; influence on legislation and government, [94], [97], [143]; officials of, [97], [98]-[99]; character of, [98]; established (1865), [102]-[103]; functions, [103]-[104], [107]-[109]; objections to, [104]-[105], [112]-[113]; organization, [105]-[107]; courts, [110]-[111], [113]-[114]; educational work, [111]-[112]; political possibilities, [115]; results, [116]-[117]; and radicals, [131], [156]; Union League and, [177], [188], [194 (note)], [195]; negro education, [213].
Freedmen's Bureau Act, [128], [129], [137].
Freedmen's Inquiry Commission, [101].
"Freedmen's Readers," [218].
Frémont, J. C., and the radicals, [119].
Fullerton, General, and Freedmen's Bureau, [106], [113]; on treatment of negroes, [112]-[113].

G.

Garfield, J. A., [132].
Garland, ex parte, [159].
Geneva Arbitration (1872), [283].
Georgetown (D. C.), vote on negro suffrage in, [134].
Georgia, poverty in, [14]; government relief, [15]; negro colony in, [36]; courts, [111], [113]; military government, [143], [144]; suit against Stanton, [159]; military rule resumed, [170]; reconstruction in, [171]-[172], [221]; legislature, [172], [240]; representatives in Congress, [172], [289 (note)]; negro voters, [222]; Godkin characterizes officials of, [226]; holds mixed marriages illegal, [276]; conservatives gain control in, [290]; election (1868), [299].
Gillem, General, commands military department, [141 (note)].
Godkin, E. L., quoted, [180 (note)]; on Georgia politicians, [226].
Gordon, J. B., and negro education, [212].
Gould, Jay, [283], [286].
Grant, U. S., [186], [224], [280], [297]; urges use of white troops in South, [21]; orders arrest of paroled Confederates, [22]; report on South, [28], [29]; protests arrest of Southern military leaders, [74]; and captured slaves, [99]; and Freedmen's Bureau, [106]; Army Appropriation Act, [134]; radicalism, [141 (note)], [239]-[240]; Congress gives full powers to, [143]; temporarily Secretary of War, [163]; and Stanton, [163], [165]; nominated by National Union party, [168]; elected President, [169]; reconstruction, [171]; and enforcement acts, [260]-[261]; expansionist, [283]-[284]; vote for, [285]-[286]; appointees, [286]; reëlection, [288]; refuses to interfere in Mississippi, [291]; restores Kellogg to office, [294].
Greeley, Horace, candidate for Presidency, [287]-[288].
Greene, S. S., quoted, [208].
Groesbeck, W. S., counsel at impeachment, [166].
Guthrie, James, Democratic leader, [122].

H.

Hahn, Michael, Governor of Louisiana, Lincoln's letter to, [66]-[67].
Hail Columbia sung at Union League initiation, [183].
Halleck, General H. W., orders in regard to marriage, [20].
Hampton, General Wade, [174], [175]; letter to Johnson, [31]; and negro suffrage, [51]; and Freedmen's Bureau, [107].
Hampton Institute, [220]; teacher's remark on negro education, [211]-[212].
Hancock, General W. S., commands military department, [141 (note)], [163].
Hardee, General W. J., quoted, [244].
Harlan, James, resigns from Cabinet, [131].
Harris, I. G., on Johnson, [72].
Hayes, R. B., candidate for presidency, [296], [297], [298]; elected, [300], [301]; and radicalism, [302].
Hell Hole Swamp, [234].
Hendricks, T. A., Democratic leader, [122].
Herald, New York, Knox as correspondent of, [28]; on radical reconstruction, [148].
Heroes of America, [179], [245].
Hill, B. H., of Georgia, and "Jim Crow" theory, [277].
Hill, General D. H., of North Carolina, [279 (note)].
Hill, Thomas, President of Harvard, [209].
Holden, W. W., provisional governor of North Carolina, [75], [77], [224], [232]; and Union League, [185], [189].
Home Guards, [245].
Howard, General O. O., head of Freedmen's Bureau, [105].
Humphreys, B. G., Governor of Mississippi, opinion of Freedmen's Bureau, [90]; advocates civil equality, [91].

I.

Immigration to South, negroes against, [268].
Impeachment of President, [160] et seq.
Irish, South Carolina imports, [271].

J.

Jackson (Miss.), post-war condition, [5].
Jews in South, [23], [274].
Jillson, school official in South Carolina, [216].
"Jim Crow," car, [95]; theory of "separate but equal" rights, [277].
John Brown's Body sung in Union League initiation, [184].
Johnson, Andrew, amnesty proclamation, [9], [75]; policies opposed by Andrews, [28]; and negro suffrage, [50], [78]; reconstruction policy, [57]-[58], [73] et seq., [83]; military governor of Tennessee, [65]; nomination, [70]; personal characteristics, [71]-[72], [73]; adopts Lincoln's policy, [73], [88]; and Congress, [80] et seq., [118], [119], [120]-[121], [126] et seq., [288]; use of pardoning power, [87]; speechmaking tour to the West, [131]; impeachment, [158] et seq.; and Stanton, [163]-[165].
Johnson, Reverdy, [122].