Ordinance of 1787,
passed;
meaning of sixth article of;
reasons for the passage of;
did not at first disturb slavery;
construction of,
Otis, James,
on natural rights,
Pacific Railroad,
proposal to build, with refugee labor,
Palmyra,
race prejudice of,
Pelham, Robert A.,
father of, moved to Detroit,
Penn, William,
advocate of emancipation,
Pennsylvania,
effort in, to force free Negroes to support
their dependents;
effort to prevent immigration of Negroes;
increase in the population of free Negroes
of;
petitions to rid the State of Negroes
by colonization;
era of good feeling in;
exterminated slavery;
the migration of freedmen from North Carolina
to;
Negro suffrage in;
passed laws against Negro mechanics;
successful Negroes of,
Peonage,
a cause of migration,
Philadelphia,
Negroes rush to;
race friction of;
woman of color stoned to death;
Negro church disturbed;
reaction against Negroes;
riots in;
successful Negroes of;
property owned by Negroes,
Pierce, E.S.,
plan for handling refugees in South Carolina,
Pinchback, P.B.S.,
return of, from Ohio to Louisiana to enter
politics,
Pittman, Philip,
account of West, of,
Pittsburgh,
friends of fugitives in;
Negro of, married to French woman;
kind treatment of refugees;
respectable mulatto woman married to a
surgeon of Nantes;
riot in,
Platt, William,
a lumber merchant,
Political power,
not to be the only aim of the migrants;
the mistakes of such a policy,
Polities,
a cause of unrest,
Pollard, N.W.,
agent of the Government of Trinidad, sought
Negroes in the United
States,
Portsmouth,
friends of fugitives of,
Portsmouth, Ohio,
mob of, drives Negroes out;
progressive Negroes of,
Prairie du Rocher,
slaves of,
Press comments on sending Negroes to Africa,
Puritans,
not much interested in the Negro,
Quakers,
promoted the movement of the blacks to
Western territory;
in the mountains assisted fugitives,
Race prejudice,
the effects of;
among laboring classes,
Randolph, John,
a colonizationist;
sought to settle his slaves in Mercer
County, Ohio,
Reaction against the Negro,
Reconstruction,
promoted to an extent by Negro natives
of North,
Redpath, James,
interest of, in colonization,
Refugees assembled in camps;
in West;
in Washington;
in South;
exodus of, to the North;
fear that they would overrun the North;
development of;
vagrancy at close of war,