Colonization Society,
organization of;
renewed efforts of,
Colonizationists,
opposition of, to the migration to the
West Indies,
Columbia, Pa.,
friends of fugitives in,
Compagnie de l’Occident in control of Louisiana,
Condition of fugitives in contraband camps,
Congested districts in the North,
Connecticut,
exterminated slavery;
law of;
against teaching Negroes,
Conventions of Negroes,
Cook, Forman B.,
a broker,
Crandall, A.W.,
interest in checking the exodus to Kansas,
Crandall, Prudence,
imprisoned because she taught Negroes,
Credit system,
a cause of unrest,
Crozat, Antoine,
as Governor of Louisiana,
Cuffe, Paul,
an actual colonizationist,
Davis,
comment on freedmen’s vagrancy,
De Baptiste, Richard,
father of, in Detroit,
Debasement of the blacks after Reconstruction,
Delany, Martin R.,
interest of, in colonization,
De Tocqueville,
observation of, on the condition of free
Negroes in the North,
Delaware,
disfranchisement of Negroes in,
Detroit,
Negroes in;
friends of fugitives in;
a gateway to Canada;
the Negro question in;
mob of, rises against Negroes;
successful Negroes of,
Dinwiddie, Governor,
Fears of, as to servile insurrection,
Diseases of Negroes in the North,
Distribution of intelligent blacks,
Douglass, Frederick,
the leading Negro journalist;
advice of, on staying in the South to
retain political power;
comment of, on exodus to Kansas,
Downing, Thomas,
owner of a restaurant,
Drain of laborers to Mississippi and Louisiana;
to Arkansas and Texas,
Eaton, John,
work of, among the refugees,
Economic opportunities for the Negro in the North;
economic opportunities for Negroes in
the South,
Educational facilities,
the lack of,
Elizabethtown,
friends of fugitives in,
Elliot, E.B.,
return of, from Boston to South Carolina,
Elmira,
friends of fugitives in,
Emancipation of the Negroes in the West Indies,
the effect of,
Epstein, Abraham,
an authority on the Negro migrant in Pittsburgh,
Exodus, the,
during the World War;
causes;
efforts of the South to check it;
Negroes divided on it;
whites divided on it;
unfortunate for the South;
probable results;
will increase political power of Negro;
exodus of the Negroes to Kansas,
Fear of Negro domination to cease,
Ficklen,
comment on freedmen’s vagrancy,
Fiske, A.S.,
work of, among the contrabands,