Rider, Sidney, opinion of the services of Negro troops, 128
Ripley, Dorothy, letters received, 436
Riots,
in Cincinnati, in 1836, 8;
in 1841, 13-16;
in New York, 357
Robert, M., decision of, with reference to Negroes, 366
Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, “l’esclavage” of, 430
Rochester, anti-colonization meeting of, 293
Roman, C. V., The American Civilization of, reviewed, 218
Ross, Rev. G., commended Mr. Yeates for work among Negroes, 354, 355
Rumford, Rev. Mr., baptized Negroes, 353
Rush, Benjamin, talks with James Derham, 103
Rutledge, Governor, freed a slave for his valor in battle, 129
Ryall, Anne, teacher in Cincinnati, 19
St. John de Crevecoeur, observations of, 404
Salem, Peter, killed Major Pitcairn, 112
Sanderson, Bishop, urged the instruction of Negroes,
350
Sankore, the university of, 40
Savannah, a freedman of, favored colonization, 280
Sayers, Captain, owner of the Pearl, 246
Sayers, W. Berwick, Samuel Coleridge-Taylorof,
reviewed, 438
Sayre, Rev. J., instructed Negroes, 358
Schoepf, Johann D., impressions of, 405
Schuyler, M., opposed the instruction of Negroes,
359
Secession in Kentucky, 377, 378, 385, 389, 390
Secker, Bishop, appeal in behalf of the enlightenment
of Negroes, 352
Seward, W. H., offered to aid in defending Daniel
Drayton, 251
Sewell, Samuel, endeavored to aid Daniel Drayton when
accused, 251
Shelby County, Ohio, Negroes in, 309
Shelton, Rev. Wallace, a preacher of Cincinnati, 20
Simon, a Negro officer in Louisiana, 391
Simon, the Negro doctor, 102
Simpson, Henry, a preacher in Ohio, 20
Slaveholding Indians, The, reviewed, 339
Slavery,
in North Carolina, 142;
in Western Virginia, 142;
in Tennessee, 143;
in Kentucky, 144
Slaves of the 18th century,
learning a modern language, 164;
learning to read and write, 175;
educated ones, 185;
in good circumstances, 189;
brought from the West Indies, 191;
various kinds of servants, 194;
relations between the Negroes and the
British during the Revolution, 200;
relations between the blacks and the French,
201;
colored Methodist preachers among the
slaves, 202;
slaves in other professions, 205;
close relations of the slaves and indentured
servants, 206
Smith, Dr. James McCune,
physician in New York, 104;
opposed to colonization, 293
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
Parts,
organized, 349
work of, 350
Songhay, empire of, discussed, 41
South Carolina,
the enlistment of Negroes in, 122;
Hamilton’s letter on, 121-122;
resolutions of Congress concerning, 123-124;
efforts to instruct Negroes of, 350-352
Spaniards, attitude of, toward slavery, 361
Stafford, A. O., African Proverbs and Antar
of, 42, 151