Hughson, Sarah, her connection with the
New York Negro plot, 152;
trial, 157;
respited, 164;
testimony, 165, 166, 168.
Human race, the unity of, 443.
Humphreys, David, recruits a company of
colored infantry in
Connecticut, 361.
Hutchinson, a commissioner to treat with king of Ashantee, 39.
Hutchinson, Gov. Thomas, refuses
to sign bill to prevent the
importation of
slaves from Africa, 223.
Indians, taxable, 122, 123;
not treated as slaves, 123;
declared slaves, 124, 125;
denied the right to appear
as witnesses, 129;
act to baptize, 141;
proclamation against the harboring,
141;
alarmed on seeing a Negro,
173;
exchanged for Negroes, 173;
sent to Bermudas, 173;
held in perpetual bondage,
178;
marriage with Negroes, 180;
introduction of, as slaves,
prohibited in Massachusetts, 186;
importation of, prohibited,
259, 311, 314;
slavery of, legalized, 259.
Ishogo villages in Africa described, 52.
Jacksonburgh, S.C., Negro insurrection at, 299.
Jamaica, slaves from, sold in Virginia, 328.
James, Gov., commissioner to treat with king of Ashantee, 39.
James City, Va., buildings destroyed, 126.
Jameson, David, volunteers to prosecute the negroes in New York, 151.
Japan, negro idols in, 17.
Jefferson, Thomas, author of instructions
to the Virginia delegation
in Congress, 1774,
on the abolition of slavery, 328;
letters to Dr. Gordon relative
to the treatment of Negroes in
Cornwallis’s
army, 358;
to Benjamin Banneker, 396;
his recommendation in regard
to slavery in the Western Territory,
416.
Jeffries, John P., declares there are
no reliable data of the Negro
race, 15.
Johnson, David, accused of conspiracy in New York, 163.
Jones, William, his genealogy of Noah, 11.
Joseph, the selling of, a memorial by
Samuel Sewall, 210;
answered by John Saffin, 214.
Josselyn, John, describes attempt to breed
slaves in Massachusetts,
174.
Kane, William, accused of conspiracy in
New York, 162;
testimony of, in the Negro
plot, 162-164, 168.
Kench, Thomas, letters to the General
Assembly of Massachusetts on
the enlistment
of Negroes, 350, 351.
Kendall, Capt. Miles, deputy governor
of Virginia, receives Negro
slaves in exchange
for supplies, 118;
dispossessed of the same,
returns to England to seek equity, 118;
portion of the Negroes allotted
to him, 118;
none of which he receives,
119.
Kentucky, admitted into the Union, 437;
constitution revised, 441.
Keyser, Elizur, emancipates his slave, 207.