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INDEX TO VOLUME VI

A

A Benevolent Slaveholder of Color,
115-116

A Negro Colonization Project in
Mexico, 1895, 66-73
Ableman v. Booth, cited, 5
Abolition of the slave trade, a ques-

tion in Virginia, 139

Abolition Societies, the appeals of
the American Convention of, to Ne-
groes, 200-241

Advice given Negroes a Century ago,
103-112

African Free Schools in New York,
191, 192, 193

Africa, the culture of, 261-295
Agricultural, Industrial, and Coloniza-
tion Company of Tlahualilo, Lim-
ited, 67

Alabama, the migration from, 394,
403, 412, 413, 424, 471

An American History, reviewed, 376-
377

Anderson, Osborn, connection of, with
the John Brown Raid, 175
Anderson, Perry, an accomplice of
John Brown, 180

Arabic, Islamic theory as to the ori-
gin of African culture, 290–294
Arkansas, the effect of the migra-
tion on, 479

Association for the Study of Negro
Life and History, proceedings of
the 1920 annual meeting of, 126-
130
Associated Publishers, Incorporated,
the organization of, 259, 380
Attitudes of leaders, 426-435
Autobiography of Martin Van Buren,
reviewed, 377-378

B

Alexandria, abolition society of, 317, | Baker, Ray Stannard, comment of,
322

Alexandria, Virginia, report on the
Negroes of, 318-319, 320, 321
Almagro, De, Pedro, saved by a
slave, 185

on the migration, 402, 404
Balance, Le, a newspaper of Mauri-
tius, 59, 60

Baltimore, migrants of, 473

Bantu, The, a people of Africa, 298

Alvarado, De, Pedro, Negroes with, Baptism of Slaves in Prince Edward

184

American Colonization Society, 1817-
1848, The, reviewed, 119-120.
American Convention of Abolition So-
cieties, Minutes of, quoted, 103-
112; reports of, on Negroes and on
Slavery, 310-374; ways and means
of, 310, 374

American Federation of Labor, posi-
tion of, on the migration, 440; on
Negro labor, 440-443
American Unity Labor Union, 467
An Address to the People of West
Virginia by a Slaveholder of West
Virginia, 139

Island, 307-309

Barth, travels of, in Africa, men-
tioned, 264

Battelle, Gordon, an antislavery agi-

tator in the West Virginia Conven-
tion, 149, 151, 152, 153, 151
Batuta, Ibn, An Arabian writer, 263
Bautista, Cesar, Juan, an undistin-
guished Negro, 113–115

Beard, Mary, A Short History of the
American Labor Movement, by, re-
viewed, 500-501

Bekri, El, an Arabian writer, 263
Bell, Philip A., a Negro in business
in New York, 197, 199

Benin, an African city, 262; bronzes
of, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 273,
278, 279, 294

Berea College v. The Commonwealth

of Kentucky, 45

Bidwell, Edward, a Negro in business

in New York, 198
Birmingham, Alabama, Negro Mexican
Colonists from, 68; mining district
of, affected by the migration, 385,

413

Blomert, Sam, writings of, on Africa,
267

Boers in Africa, 298-299

Boisragon, Captain, a survivor of the

Benin expedition, 268

Boll-weevil, a cause of the migration,

412

Borah, William E., quoted on the
League of Nations, 296; interest of,
in Africa, 296

Botts, of Richmond, in the Conven-
tion of 1850, 142

Bowditch, a student of African art,
280, 291-292

Bradley, Justice, opinion of, as to the
Fourteenth Amendment, 13, 14, 15,
18, 19, 20

Brewer, Justice, opinion of, in the
Mississippi case, 26-27; on suf-
frage for Negroes, 39-40; on the
Berea College charter, 45-47
British in Mauritius, 54; in control
of South Africa, 298-299
British South Africa, The Negro in,
296-306

Brown, Justice, opinion of, on rights
of Negroes, 31

Brown, of Kanawha, a proslavery ad-
vocate in West Virginia, 148, 152;
attitude of, on the admission of
West Virginia, 168, 169, 170
Brown, Owen, connection of, with the
John Brown Raid, 175

Bryce, of Goochland County, in the
Virginia Assembly, 138

Burlin, Natalie Curtis, Songs and
Tales from the Dark Continent, of,
reviewed, 254–255

Burton, Jesse, review of, of the speech
of Thomas Marshall, 138-139
Bush v. The Commonwealth of Ken-
tucky, 34

Butler, E. C., chargé of the United
States in Mexico, 70

C

Cabell, Joseph C., Madison's letter
to, 94

Cabeza de Vaca, accompanied by Es-
tevanecito, 186

Canadian Negroes and the John
Brown Raid, 174-182

Cape Colony, attitude of, toward the
Negro, 299

Carey, Matthew, Madison's letter to,
95-96

Carlile, John S., a Unionist in West

Virginia, 146; attitude of, on the
admission of West Virginia, 147,
161, 162, 163, 168
Carter v. Texas, 35
Casas, las, a predicator, 183
Cassey, Joseph C., a Negro in busi-
ness in New York, 198

Cerneen, Le, a newspaper of Mauri-
tius, 59, 62

Chatham Convention, connection of,
with the John Brown Raid, 176
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Com-
pany v. Kentucky, 30–32
Chester, migrants to, 439; riot at, 439
Chicago, the migration to, 434; riot
in, 439, 492

C. B. and I. R. R. Company v. Iowa,
24

Chile, Negroes in, 184

Chiles v. Chesapeake and Ohio R. R.
Company, 32

Chilton, plan of, presented in the
Convention of 1850, 142
Choptank, abolition society of, 317;

report on the Negroes of, 318
Cibola, the Indian town attacked by
Estevanecito, 187

Cincinnati, the migration to, 434, 439
Citizenship of the Negro, 1–53
Civil Rights, 5-22

Civil Rights Bill, 5-6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
11-22

Civil Rights Cases, 12-33

Clark, Edward V., a Negro in busi-

ness in New York, 197

Clarke, J. F., book of, on the con-
dition of the people of color,
quoted, 199

Clarksburg, Union meeting at, 146
Clarkson, Thomas, an antislavery ora-
tor, 55

Clay, Henry, Madison's letter to, 101-
102

Cleveland, the migrants in, 456, 460,
462

Code Noir, in vogue in Canada, 307-
308

Cole, the case of, 9

Collamer, of Vermont, attitude of,
on the admission of West Vir-
ginia, 158

Colonization of Negroes in Mexico,
66-73

Colored Employees of America, organ-
ization of, 448

Conclusions as to the migration, 485–
498

Congress, memorials of the abolition

societies to, 338-349

Connecticut, report on the Negroes
of, 320, 322; the migrants to, 405
Conquistadores, the exploits of, 183
Constitution of the United States as

it concerns the Negro, 1-10, 10-53
Convention of 1829-30 in Virginia,
132-136; convention of 1850–51,
141-144; convention of 1861, 145-
148

Coolies, Indian, in Mauritius, 55-60
Cooper, Charles C., comment of, 464-
465, 467

Coxe, Tench, Madison's letter to, 83
Corbin, F., Madison's letter to, 84-85
Cornish, Samuel F., an editor in New
York, 199

Cortez, Herman, Negroes with, 184
Count Maurice of Nassau, 55
Creole Families of New Orleans, re-
viewed, 502-503

Crutcher v. Kentucky, 29
Cumming v. The Board of Education
of Richmond County, 43-45

D

Dalton, O. M., opinion of, on Africa,
273, 288, 289, 298

Dapper, an African description by,

267; quotation from, 267, 268
Day, Justice, opinion of, in South
Carolina case, 33

De Almagro, Diego, slave of, saved
him, 185

De Alvarado, Pedro, Negroes with, 184
D'Epinay, Adrien, an agitator in
Mauritius, 56

De Niza, Fray Marcos, along with
Estevanecito, 186

De Olano, Nuflo, a Negro with the
Spanish Pioneers, 183–189

De Vaca, Cabeza, an explorer as-
sisted by Estevanecito, 186
Delaware and the migration, 471
Desplaynes, Louis, report of, on Ni-
geria, 264

Detroit, migrants to, 434, 452, 456
Dew, Thomas R., attitude on slavery,

138; a review of the Debates in
the Virginia Legislature by, 138-
139; Madison's letter to, 98-101
Dillard, James H., a student of the
migration of 1916, 385, 404
Donald, H. H., The Negro Migration
of 1916-1918, by, 383-499
Dorantes, Andres, master of Estevane-
cito, 186

Dougall, John, connection of, with the

John Brown Raid, 177
Douglass, Frederick, an editor, 199
Downing, a Negro in business, 197
Dred Scott decision, 3, 4, 5
DuBois, W. E. B., Estimate of the
number of migrants by, 403–404;
attitude of, on the migration, 432-
433

Dumas, Alexander, a play of, at-
tacked, 59; defended by Remy Ol-
lier, 59

E

Eagle Pass, Negroes at, 72

492

East St. Louis, riot at, 439,
Economic Conditions of the Negroes
of New York Prior to 1861, 190-
199

Educational Adaptations, reviewed,
255-256

Educational privileges of Negroes in

South Africa, 303-305
Educational privileges limited by ju-
dicial interpretation, 43

El Bekri, an Arabian writer, 263
Ellis, H., A Negro colonizer in Mex-
ico, 67-73

Ellsworth, Alfred M., connection of,
with the John Brown Raid, 175
Epstein, Abraham, work of, on the
migration, 458

Estevanecito, a slave of Andres Do-
rantes, 186; with Cabeza de Vaca,
186, 187, 188, 189; with Fray Mar-
cos de Niza, 186

Evans, Robert J., Madison's letter
to, 78-79

Ex Parte, Siebold, 37

Ex Parte, Virginia, 9

Ex Parte, Yarborough, 37

F

Fawckner, Captain James, description
of African art works by, 280
Fee, John G., the founder of Berea
College, 45

Fessenden of Maine, attitude of, on

the admission of West Virginia, 159
Fifty Years of Negro Citizenship as
qualified by the United States Su-
preme Court, 1-53

Fitzpatrick, John C., The Autobi-
ography of Martin Van Buren, of,
reviewed, 377-378
Fletcher v. Peck, 15

Florida, the migration from, 403, 426;

the effect of the migration on, 475;
Floyd, S. X., The Life of Charles T.
Walker, of, reviewed, 499-500

Forbes, Hugh, close contact of, with
John Brown, 182

Fourteenth Amendment discussed, 8,

9, 12, 13, 14, 27

Fox, Early Lee, The American Col-
onization Society, of, reviewed, 119–
120

Frances, Abner H., a Negro in busi-
ness in New York, 197

Franklin v. South Carolina, 36-37
Free Africans, address of the Ameri-
can Convention of Abolition Socie-
ties to, 103-112

Free persons of color, addresses of
the American Convention of Aboli-
tion Societies to, 103-112

French East India Company in con-
trol of Mauritius, 55
French in Mauritius, 54
Frobenius, Leo, quotations from, 261-
262; revelations of, 264, 269, 271,
276, 277, 278, 279, 281, 282, 283,
285, 295

Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, 4-5

G

Garrett, James, a Negro in business
in New York, 197

Garrison, William Lloyd, report of,
on the condition of Negroes in New
York, 174

Georgia, the migration from, 394, 403,

412, 414, 415, 416, 425

German element in Virginia, 140
Gibbons v. Kentucky, 34
Giles v. Harris, 38

Gill, George B., connection of, with

the John Brown Raid, 175
Globe, The, of Toronto, on the John
Brown Raid, 176-177

Gold Coast, of Africa, the culture of,
280, 290

Gordon, of Albemarle, in the Con-

vention of 1829-30, 133-134
Governor Letcher, work of, for se-
cession of Virginia, 145
Governor Wise, plan of, to connect
Virginia with the South, 144
Gray, Justice, opinion of, 35

Griffin, Georgia, Negro Mexican col-

onists from, 68

Grimké, A. W., Rachel, of, reviewed,
248-254

Guatemala, Negroes in, 184

Gunn v. United States, 42
Gurley, R. R., Madison's letter to,
on colonization, 96-97

Hagar,

H

Robert, an antislavery
preacher in West Virginia, 148
Hale, of New Hampshire, attitude of,
on the admission of West Virginia,
157

Hall v. DeCuir, 22-24, 26
Hall, of Marion, in the West Vir-
ginia Union Convention, 151, 152
Hansberry, William Leo, The Ma-
terial Culture of Ancient Nigeria,
by, 261-295

Hamilton, Thomas, an editor in New
York, 199

Harlan, Justice John M., opinion of,

on Thirteenth and Fourteenth
Amendments, 16-18, 19, 20, 21, 28;
dissenting opinions of, 40, 47-48
Harrisburg, the migrants to, 461, 462
Harrison, Thomas, an advocate of
slavery, 151

Hartford, migrants to, 449, 457
Harvard University, Varia Africana
of, 265

Haworth, Paul, The United States in
Our Own Times, of, reviewed, 118-
119

Hennington v. Georgia, 27
Herodotus, facts from, on Africa, 281
Hodges v. United States, 49-50, 51
Holton, L. H., connection of, with
the John Brown Raid, 177
Homestead, migrants to, 439
Houdas, M., comment of, on the
Tarikh es Soudan, 263-264
House of Representatives of the
United States, memorials of the
Abolition Societies to, 338-349

Hughes, Justice Charles E., opinion
of, on separation of races on rail-
roads, 32

Huntington v. Werthen, 47
Hunton, Addie W., and Katherine M.
Johnson, Two Colored Women with
the American Expeditionary Forces,
of, reviewed, 378-379

I

Ibn Batuta, an Arabian writer, 263
Ibn Khaldoun, an Arabian writer, 263
Ilife, a city in Africa, 270, 278, 279,
281-282

Illinois, the migrants to, 405, 406
Inconsistency of the United States
Supreme Court, 22-23

Indian Coolies in Mauritius, 55-60
Indiana, the migrants to, 405, 406
Indians, Mexican, small-pox among,
introduced by a Negro, 184; coun-
try of, explored by Estevanecito, 187
In re Coy, 37

J

Jackson, Mississippi, and the migra-
tion, 429
James Madison's Attitude toward the
Negro, 74-102; opposed to slavery,
in favor of gradual emancipation,
74, 75; an advocate of coloniza-
tion, 74-75; doubts of, as to aboli-
tion, 75; sympathetic toward anti-
slavery persons, 75; letters of, on
the Negro, 75-102

Jones, E. K., comment of, on the
migration, 454

Jones, Thomas Jesse, Educational
Adaptations, of, reviewed, 255–256
Justice in the courts, as it concerns
Negroes, 33-37

K

Kagi, J. H., connection of, with the
John Brown Raid, 175
Kansas, the migration to, 393, 394
Kentucky, separate car law of, 30-31,
32

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