Ohio, Negroes owned land in, 8-9;
“Black Laws” of, 4;
Law of 1849, 12;
Negroes transplanted to, 302;
protest against, 308;
Negroes an issue in the Constitutional
Convention of, 4
Ordinance of 1787, interpretation of, 377
“Othello,” letters of, on slavery, 49-60
Otis, James, influence of, in the uplands, 138
Palomeque, a hard master, 396
Parham, William, a teacher of Negroes, 19
Park, Dr. R. E., review of Race Orthodoxy of,
439
Patoulet, M., decision of, 366
Patterson, Senator, speech at Louis-Philippe celebration,
245
Payne, Daniel A., on colonization, 296
Pearl, The Fugitives of, 246
Pelhams moved to Detroit, 26, 29
Pennington, J. W. C., opposed colonization, 293
People of Color in Louisiana, 361
Perier, Governor,
fought Indians with Negroes 368, 369;
tribute to Negroes
Philadelphia,
anti-colonization meetings of, 277, 279;
Convention of Free People of Color at,
290, 291
Philanthropist, The, office of, destroyed,
8
Physicians, Negro, the number of, 107
Piatt, James W., efforts with Cincinnati mob, 14
Pittsburgh, anti-colonization meetings of, 287, 292
Pittsylvania County, Virginia, Negroes from, 4
Point Bridge, Negro soldiers behaved well at battle
of, 129
Political History of Slavery, The, by James
Z. George, reviewed, 340
Political theories of Appalachian America, discussed,
129
Polk, invaded Kentucky, 390
Prejudice against the colored people in Cincinnati,
12-13
Presbyterians, anti-slavery, in Kentucky, 143
Pressly, J., a colored photographer, 20
Prince William County, Virginia, a Negro of, owned
his family, 241
Professions, Negroes in, 99-101
Protests against African colonization, 277-296
Providence, anti-colonization meeting of, 293
Pugh, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in Pennsylvania,
355
Puritan, attitude of, toward Negro, 359
Purvis, Dr. Charles B., a Negro surgeon in the Civil
War, 107
Quakers,
interested in colonizing Negroes in the
Northwest, 3;
work of, among Negroes of Appalachian
America, 133, 134
Quickly, Mary, owner of slaves, 238
Race Orthodoxy in the South, reviewed, 447
Racial characteristics on the frontier, 135
Racial elements in Appalachian America, 133
Radford, James, sold a Negro, 238
Radford, George, purchased a Negro woman, 238
Ramsey’s estimate of Negroes lost to British,
116
Randolph, John, the slaves of, sent to Ohio, 308,
310, 311, 312
Ransford, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes in North Carolina,
353
Redpath, James, appointed commissioner of emigration
of Haiti, 300
Richards, Adolph,
came to Fredericksburg for his health,
23;
married Maria Louise Moore, 23
Richards, Fannie M.,
studied in Toronto, 30;
taught in Detroit, 31
Richmond, meeting of, to denounce the American Colonization