Mercer County, Ohio,
successful Negroes of;
resolutions of citizens against Negroes,
Miami County,
Randolph’s Negroes sent to,
Michigan,
Negroes transplanted to;
attitude of, toward the Negro,
Migration, the,
of the talented tenth;
handicaps of;
of politicians to Washington;
of educated Negroes;
of the intelligent laboring class;
effect of Negroes’ prospective political
power;
to northern cities,
Miles, N.E.,
interest in stopping the exodus to Kansas,
Mississippi,
drain of laborers to;
exodus from;
refugees in;
slaves along,
Morgan, Senator,
of Alabama, interested in sending the
Negroes to Africa,
Movement of the blacks to the western territory;
promoted by Quakers,
Movements of Negroes during the Civil War;
of poor whites,
Mulber, Stephen,
a contractor,
Murder of Negroes in the South,
Natural rights,
the effect of;
the discussion of, on the condition of
the Negro,
Negro journalists,
the number of
Negroes,
condition of, after Reconstruction;
escaped to the West;
those having wealth tend to remain in
the South;
migration of, to Mexico;
exodus of, to Liberia;
no freedom of speech of;
not migratory;
leaders of Reconstruction, largely from
the North;
mechanics in Cincinnati;
servants on Ohio river vessels,
New Hampshire,
exterminated slavery,
New Jersey,
abolished slavery
New York,
abolition of slavery in;
friends of fugitives in;
mobs of, attack Negroes;
Negro suffrage in;
restrictions of, on Negroes,
North Carolina,
Negro suffrage in;
Quakers of, promoting the migration of
the Negroes;
reaction in,
North,
change in attitude of, toward the Negro;
divided in its sentiment as to method
of helping the Negro;
favorable sentiment of;
trade of, with the South;
fugitives not generally welcomed;
its Negro problem;
housing the Negro in;
criminal class of Negroes in,
loss of interest of, in the Negro;
not a place of refuge for Negroes;
Northwest,
few Negroes in, at first;
hesitation to go there because of the
ordinance of 1787,
Noyes Academy,
broken up because it admitted Negroes,
Nugent, Colonel W.L.,
interest in stopping the exodus to Kansas,
Occupations of Negroes in the North,
Ohio,
Negro question in constitutional convention
of;
in the legislature of 1804;
black laws of;
protest against Negroes,
Oklahoma,
Negroes in;
discouraged by early settlers of,
Ordinance of 1784 rejected,