Don Quixote, quoted, 43
Dorsey, Thomas, opposed colonization, 282
Dotty, Duane, Miss Fannie M. Richards’s first superintendent of
schools, 31
Douglass, Frederick,
opposed to colonization, 295;
controversy of, with the National Council, 300
Dove, Dr., owner of James Derham, 103
Dow, Lorenzo,
journeys of, 266;
writings of, discussed, 271;
attitude of, toward slavery, 273
Drayton, Daniel, in charge of the Pearl, 245
Drummond, Henry, quoted, 42
Du Bois, The Negro of, reviewed, 217
Dunbar-Nelson, Alice, People of Color in Louisiana of, 361
Dunmore, Lord, issued proclamation of freedom to loyal Negroes, 115
Dyson, Walter,
review of, of Ellis’s Negro Culture in West Africa, 95;
of Gouldtown, 221
East, the attitude of, toward the West, 119
Edmondson children, the, 243; family tree of, 261
Edmondson, Hamilton, sold in New Orleans, 253
Edmondson, Richard, heroic efforts of, 248
Edmondson, Samuel, married Delia Taylor, 256
Education of the Negroes in Cincinnati, 6, 10
Education, The, of the Negro Prior to 1861, reviewed,
96
Edwards, Mrs., taught Negroes in South Carolina, 350-351
Effect of slaveholding in Louisiana, 368
Eighteenth Century Slaves as advertised by their
Masters, 163
Ellis, Geo. W., Negro Culture in West Africa of,
reviewed, 95
Emancipating Baptists in Kentucky, 143
Emancipation, the, and the arming of slaves, urged,
119
English, Chester, sailor on the Pearl, 246
Enlisting Negroes in the American Revolution, 112,
113, 114;
considered by a council of war, 114;
urged and allowed, 117
Ermana, a slave owned by her husband, 241
Erroneous opinions concerning the Negro, 34
Essadi Abdurrahman, a writer of the Sudan, 41
Essays on Negro slavery, 49, 54
Established Church of England, the ministrations of,
349
Ethiopia, ruled Egypt, 37
Evans, M. S., Black and White in Southern States
of, reviewed, 437
Fausett, Jessie, review of,
of T. G. Steward’s Haitian Revolution,
93;
of A. H. Abel’s The Slaveholding
Indians, 339
Ferguson, Joseph, a physician, 103
Fleet, Dr., educated in Washington, 105
Fleetwood, Bishop, urged the proselyting of Negroes,
350
Foote, John P., his opinion of Negroes, 19
Foote, Senator, effect of the speech of, at the Louis-Phillipe
celebration, 245
Foster, James, opposed to colonization, 290
Free Negroes,
power of, to manumit limited, 241-242;
transplanted to free soil, 302;
litigation concerning, in Louisiana, 368;
aristocracy of, 395
Free Soilers attacked “Black Laws” of
Ohio, 16
Freedman, a rich one of Guatemala, 395
Freedom in a Free State, 311
“Friends of Humanity” organized in Kentucky,
144
Frink, Rev. Mr., toiled among Negroes of Augusta,
354
Fugitives,
going to the Northwest Territory, 1;
from British territory to Michigan, 27
Fugitives of the Pearl, The, 243
Fuller, Betsey, owned her husband, 241