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Reconstruction

Page 89

by Brooks D. Simpson


  Bell, James H., 162

  Bell, Madison, 598

  Belmont, August, 334

  Belmont, Tenn., 127

  Bergen, N.J., 360–61

  Bible, 11, 141, 162–64, 169, 171–72, 238, 243–44, 268, 278–79, 297, 309, 355, 408, 431, 474, 487, 492, 502, 510, 513–14, 535–37, 561, 568, 587, 595

  Big Black, Miss., 80

  Big Spring, Tenn., 74

  Bingham, John, 345

  Black, Jeremiah S., 95, 433

  Black Codes, 2–4, 131, 151, 234, 238

  Black Warrior River, 76

  Blaine, James G., 400, 409, 459, 479, 490, 554, 561, 586

  Blair, Francis Preston, 104; letter to Andrew Johnson, 61–70

  Blair, Frank P., 104, 228, 354, 356, 506; letter to James O. Broadhead, 350–51

  Blair, Montgomery, 104, 289

  Blockades, 93

  Booker, Mr. (of Haralson County), 422

  Booth, John Wilkes, 108, 265, 626

  Bossier Banner, 343

  Boston, Mass., 5, 44, 373, 514, 539, 567, 570, 625

  Boston Journal, 509–14, 535–39

  Boston Post, 510

  Boutwell, George S., 345, 348, 579, 597, 622

  Bowles, William A., 265

  Bradley, Joseph P., 447

  Brannon, Mike, 454

  Brentsville, Va., 167

  Brightly, Frederick C., 415, 493

  Brim, Benjamin: testimony in Colfax massacre trial, 452–55

  Britain, 9–10, 87, 205, 276, 333, 504, 570, 608, 623; emancipation of slaves in West Indies, 90–91; feudalism in, 102; and French incursion in Mexico, 61, 70; legal system of, 338; and martial law, 415–17; possible recognition of Confederacy by, 69; public debt of, 100; and Revolutionary War, 231, 283, 320; rule of India, 572; and War of 1812, 45, 457; women’s rights in, 357

  Broadhead, James O., 350

  Broglie, Jacques-Victor de, 504

  Broomall, John M., 256

  Brown, Gamaliel, 604

  Brown, Mac, 451

  Brundage, David: letter to Ulysses S. Grant, 632–33

  Bryant, William Cullen, 163

  Buckland, J., 450

  Buffalo Express, 376

  Bullock, Rufus B., 531

  Bull Run, first battle of, 538, 573

  Burke, Edmund, 57, 231

  Burns, Robert, 132

  Butler, Benjamin F., 345–46, 485, 499, 561–62, 564–66, 585, 622

  Butler, Roderick R., 492

  Butler, William F., 34

  Buttles, Albert, 635

  C

  Cabaniss, Edwin W., 599, 601–2

  Cabell, Buck, 600

  Cabinet (Grant administration), 592–93

  Cabinet (Johnson administration), 52, 56, 65–70, 227

  Cabinet (Lincoln administration), 15, 64–65

  Cain, Richard Harvey: speech in Congress on Civil Rights Bill, 479–89

  Caldwell, Charles, 597–605

  Caldwell, Margaret Ann: testimony to Select Senate Committee, 597–605

  Caldwell, Sam, 597, 599–600, 605

  Calhoun, John C., 403

  California, 64, 214, 358

  Caligula, 401

  Camden, S.C., 456

  Camden & South Amboy Railroad, 245

  Cameron, Simon, 21–22

  Campbell, Thomas, 51

  Camp Morton (Union prisoner of war camp), 263

  Canada, 102, 273

  Canby, Edward R. S., 381–82

  Capitalists, 38, 83, 89, 100, 148, 185, 193, 223, 299, 355, 511, 515, 517, 617, 643–44, 656

  Capital punishment, 240

  Cardozo, Francis L., 491–92

  Carpet-baggers, 350–51, 512, 581, 589, 595, 613, 624, 648

  Carter, George, 75

  Carter, Jasper, 419–21, 424

  Carter, John, 454

  Carter, Maria: testimony to Joint Select Committee, 419–24

  Casey, James F., 624

  Cash, Mr. (Memphis rioter), 253

  Caswell County, N.C., 385–86

  Catholics, 355, 629

  Cazabat, Mr. (Colfax massacre participant), 544

  Cedar Creek, Va., 529

  Celts, 10

  Census of 1870, 532

  Chamberlain, Daniel H., 619, 637, 658–61

  Chandler, Daniel T., 111–12

  Chandler, Maria F.: letter to Thaddeus Stevens, 229–30

  Chandler, Zachariah, 621

  Charlemagne, 105

  Charles I, 320

  Charles II, 416

  Charles X, 320

  Charleston, S.C., 28, 41, 43, 132, 141, 158, 162, 481, 517–18

  Charlotte, N.C., 142

  Chase, Salmon P., 15, 64, 284–85, 330–31, 353, 417–18; letter to Andrew Johnson, 28–31

  Chatham County, N.C., 386

  Chattanooga, Tenn., 264, 555

  Chesterfield, Earl of (Philip Stanhope), 504

  Chicago, Ill., 264, 288, 643

  Chicago Tribune, 642–44

  Chickasaws, 616

  Chilton, Mr. (Clinton shopkeeper), 598–99, 601

  China, 299

  Chinese Americans, 64, 214, 650

  Christianity, 34, 46, 73, 117, 129, 265, 315, 334, 336, 492, 494, 544, 572

  Cincinnati, Ohio, 366, 425, 433, 641

  Cincinnati Commercial, 74

  Citizenship, 1, 142, 169, 303–4, 383, 390, 464–65, 471, 509, 582; defined in Fourteenth Amendment, 258; federal, 214, 300, 466; and former Confederates, 19–20, 394; for freedmen, 11–12, 24, 28, 30, 90, 108, 110, 118, 125, 131–32, 148, 215–16, 315, 379, 392, 405, 412, 428, 434, 440–41, 463, 466–67, 497, 501, 524, 561, 563, 584, 587, 609–10, 657; for Indians, 371; state, 214, 300, 466–67, 473; and women, 357, 362

  Civil rights, 142, 147, 214, 226, 231–34, 315, 425–26, 458–59, 494, 508–9, 606, 620, 628–30; for freedmen, 3–4, 8, 12, 90, 108, 148–50, 156, 160, 170, 189, 215–16, 224, 237, 251, 267, 291, 300, 303, 319, 377, 405, 412, 428, 440–41, 489, 491, 502, 553–54, 559, 563, 580, 582, 607, 610, 619, 645

  Civil Rights Bill (later Act, 1866), 4, 214–24, 225, 232, 291, 294, 319

  Civil Rights Bill (later Act, 1875), 446, 456–74, 479–508, 553–88

  Civil service, 366, 426, 442, 533, 625, 634

  Civil War, 1, 6, 8, 10–11, 13–14, 19–21, 23–24, 44–45, 48, 51, 57, 59, 61, 63–64, 66–67, 81–82, 84, 92–95, 98–99, 101, 105–6, 110–12, 117–18, 120, 123, 125, 132–35, 140, 142, 145–49, 152, 155–56, 158–59, 163–64, 170, 174–75, 182, 188, 191, 199–200, 202–4, 209, 228, 231, 233, 235, 244–45, 249–51, 258–69, 276, 294–96, 298–99, 302–6, 308, 314, 323–26, 329, 332, 352, 354–56, 359, 362, 365, 369–70, 376, 378–79, 392, 394–95, 397–98, 401, 407, 411, 415, 418, 425, 430, 436, 438, 440, 443, 462–63, 470, 474–75, 479–81, 489, 498–501, 507, 515–17, 519, 535, 538, 567–69, 573–75, 587, 606–7, 610, 612, 621, 624, 627–28, 630, 633, 636–37, 646, 655–56

  Clark, Jerome (“Sue Mundy”), 265

  Clay, Clement, 111

  Clay, Henry, 28, 296

  Clemenceau, Georges: letters to Le Temps, 108–12, 377–78

  Cleveland, Ohio, 289, 335

  Clinton, Miss., 595–605

  Cobb, Howell, 142, 355

  Cockburn, Alexander, 416

  Cole, George W., 361

  Cole, Mary Barto, 361

  Colfax, La., 445, 449–55, 543–44

  Colfax, Schuyler, 259, 301, 337, 356, 364

  Colonization (emigration), 27, 63, 104, 178, 180, 486–87

  Colored Orphan Asylum (New York City), 265

  Colored State Convention (South Carolina), 129–32

  Colston, Mr., 162

  Columbia, S.C., 36, 142, 151, 435, 658

  Columbia Daily Union, 396–97

  Columbus, Ohio, 635

  Columbus Herald, 634

  Columbus Sunday Morning News, 634

  Commerce, 370–71, 440–42, 515, 517, 570–71, 624, 644, 648–49

  Compton, Dr. (Colfax massacre participant), 450


  Concord, Mass., 624–25

  Confederacy, 1, 3–4, 11, 30, 51, 69, 92–94, 99, 101–2, 106, 303–5, 341, 471, 501, 608, 612–13, 647

  Confederate debt, 571

  Congo, 439

  Congress, U.S., 3–4, 19, 27, 44–45, 50, 52, 55, 57, 61, 63–68, 90, 95–97, 102–4, 106, 108, 110, 122, 134–35, 138–39, 152, 158, 174–75, 200, 203–4, 206, 225–29, 233–34, 261, 264, 276–78, 280–83, 285–86, 288–94, 296–300, 313–15, 321, 325, 327, 350–51, 357–58, 366, 369, 381, 389–90, 426, 434, 442, 445–47, 477, 525, 538–39, 591, 610, 636–37; and amnesty, 394–99; apportionment, 115–16, 226, 233, 258, 306, 308; Carl Schurz’s speech on Louisiana in, 526–34; Charles Eldredge’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 574–85; Civil Rights Bill (later Act, 1866), 4, 214–25, 232, 291, 294, 319; Civil Rights Bill (later Act, 1875), 446, 456–74, 479–508, 553–88; and election of 1876, 447, 639–42, 644; Enforcement Bill (later Act), 366, 400–418, 623; and Fifteenth Amendment, 364, 383–84; former Confederates as delegates in, 59–60, 64, 259, 266, 310; and Fourteenth Amendment, 235–41, 258–59; Freedmen’s Bureau Act (1865), 182, 194; Freedmen’s Bureau Bill (1866), 3–4, 181, 188–97, 294, 319; Fugitive Slave Law, 237, 536; and Hinds County riot, 597–605; impeachment of President Johnson, 227, 318–20, 329–42, 344–49; James Garfield’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 586–88; James Garfield’s speech on Enforcement Bill in, 409–18; James Rapier’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 490–508; John Lynch’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 553–60; John Lynch’s speech on Mississippi in, 611–18; Joseph Rainey’s speech on Enforcement Bill in, 400–408; Joseph Rainey’s speech on South Carolina elections in, 658–61; and Memphis riot, 253–57; Military Reconstruction Acts, 226–27, 301, 319, 496; and murder of John Walthall, 419–24; President Grant’s 1874 annual message to, 520–24; President Grant’s message on Fifteenth Amendment to, 383–84; President Grant’s message on Louisiana to, 540–42; President Lincoln’s 1863 message to, 14–15; Richard Cain’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 479–89; Robert Elliott’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 456–74; Tenure of Office Act, 227, 334, 338–41, 346–47; Thaddeus Stevens’s speech on Fourteenth Amendment in, 235–41; Thaddeus Stevens’s speech on impeachment in, 337–42; Thaddeus Stevens’s speech on reconstruction in, 301–12; and Thirteenth Amendment, 17, 183; Thomas Whitehead’s speech on Civil Rights Bill in, 561–73

  Congressional Globe, 396

  Connecticut, 108–9, 123, 143, 146, 169, 456

  Conscription, 11, 21–22, 250, 262, 626

  Conservatism, 231–34, 321–23

  Constitution, Arkansas, 522

  Constitution, Connecticut, 109–10

  Constitution, French, 458

  Constitution, Kansas, 359

  Constitution, Kentucky, 497

  Constitution, Louisiana, 15, 17, 225, 270, 272–74, 277, 343

  Constitution, Massachusetts, 108, 468, 497

  Constitution, Mississippi, 77–78

  Constitution, New Hampshire, 108

  Constitution, New York, 109

  Constitution, North Carolina, 29, 315–16

  Constitution, Pennsylvania, 293

  Constitution, South Carolina, 131, 466

  Constitution, Tennessee, 195

  Constitution, Texas, 133–34

  Constitution, U.S., 9, 11, 45, 50–52, 56–57, 62–64, 66–67, 69, 71–72, 90, 92, 94–96, 98, 106, 130, 198–204, 209–12, 233, 273, 298, 302, 305, 336, 350–51, 369, 383, 390, 404–6, 411–12, 414, 426, 441, 456, 484, 496–97, 534, 558, 562, 569, 582, 618, 620, 640; amendments to, 205, 208, 238–39, 309, 357, 373, 458; and citizenship, 300; and Civil Rights Bill (1866), 214–15, 219–21, 224, 262, 266–67, 274, 277, 281–83, 286–87, 290; congressional powers, 306–8, 384, 413, 457; and Freedmen’s Bureau Bill, 188–97; and impeachment of President Johnson, 318–20, 330–31, 337–42, 344; and maintenance of law and order, 520–21, 526–29, 542, 545, 550–51, 591, 593–94; and martial law, 417–18; presidential powers, 306–8, 520–21, 542, 545, 550–51, 591, 593–94; and republican form of government, 527; and secession, 93, 101, 134; and slavery, 105, 115, 473; and states’ rights, 61, 78; and woman suffrage, 357, 373. See also Fifteenth Amendment; Fourteenth Amendment; Thirteenth Amendment

  Constitution, Virginia, 327, 570–71

  Constitutions, state, 15, 17, 29, 47, 50–52, 55, 59, 96, 108–110, 226, 293, 309, 327, 365, 466, 556. See also individual state constitutions

  Contraband, slaves as, 311

  Contracts, and freedmen, 4, 35–36, 38, 43, 88–89, 165–66, 183

  Cook, James, 167–68

  Coomassie (Kumasi), 622

  Cooper Institute, 428

  Copperheads, 56, 78, 106–8, 238, 251, 268, 275, 291, 304, 308, 310

  Corfield v. Coryell, 493

  Cornell, Alonzo B., 621

  Cornwell, John, 167

  Corruption, 333, 346, 348, 366, 445, 476, 478, 623, 625, 649, 659–60

  Cotton, 41, 76, 84, 486, 570–71, 648–49

  Cotton Bureau, Mississippi, 82

  Cotuit, Mass., 56

  Courts: federal, 190, 197, 219–22, 366, 389, 445, 540–43, 563; southern, 3–4, 29, 49, 71–72, 79, 81–82, 131–32, 134, 149, 182–84, 315, 317, 403, 405, 414, 462, 496, 555, 564–66, 646; state, 193, 218–21, 262, 389, 555, 563–66. See also Supreme Court, U.S.

  Coushatta, La., 509, 517, 544

  Covington, Ky., 127

  Cox, Samuel S., 489, 615

  Coyle, John F., 331

  Crawford, T. S., 544

  Crédit Mobilier, 476, 649

  Creighton, John, 248

  Critchfield, Leander J., 635

  Croly, David G., 375

  Cruikshank, William, 449–52

  Cuba, 649

  Curtis, Benjamin R., 345

  Curtis, George Ticknor, 338

  Cushing, Caleb, 477

  Cushman, Edwin C., 623

  D

  Dana, Napoleon, 82

  Dana, Richard Henry, 3; speech at Boston, 44–55, 63

  Darwin, Charles, 377–78

  Davidson, John W., 86

  Davis, David, 416–17, 447

  Davis, Jefferson, 8, 94, 111–12, 139, 204, 267, 284–85, 313, 332, 430, 500, 537, 655

  Dawes, Henry L., 467, 622

  Dayton, Ohio, 74–75

  Declaration of Independence, 56, 96, 129, 132, 172, 229, 235, 238, 272, 383, 484, 558, 627

  Delaware, 648

  Democracy, 32, 104, 316, 335, 365–66, 437

  Democratic Party, 67, 227, 321, 378, 609, 618, 636, 655; during Civil War, 261–64, 267–69, 621, 626–27; in Congress, 64, 68, 226, 261, 308, 505, 554, 559, 637; as Copperheads, 56, 78, 106–8, 238, 251, 268, 275, 291, 304, 308, 310; and election of 1865, 66, 68; and election of 1867, 275; and election of 1868, 350–56; and election of 1872, 366, 396, 430–34; and election of 1874, 445; and election of 1876, 446–47, 623, 632–35, 638–40; and freedmen, 405, 506, 533–34, 538, 604, 617; and presidency of Abraham Lincoln, 56, 64, 66, 627; and presidency of Andrew Johnson, 66, 108, 113, 275, 332–34; in the North, 226, 228, 251, 261, 266, 275, 308, 332–33, 401, 510, 517, 537–39, 630; Oliver Morton’s attack on, 260–69; Robert Ingersoll’s attack on, 626–31; in the South, 266, 310, 332–33, 336, 355, 365, 396, 406, 445–47, 496, 506, 518, 532, 538, 546, 548, 604, 613, 615, 639, 645, 658–61; and woman suffrage, 357

  Democratic Republican Party, 67

  Demopolis, Ala., 76

  Dennison, William, 635

  Dickens, Charles, 566

  Dickerson, Fayette, 254

  Dickey, Sarah A.: letter to Ulysses S. Grant, 595–96

  Dionysius the Tyrant, 108

  Discrimination, 216–17, 226, 238, 243–45, 447, 464–67, 472–74, 491–93, 495, 506–7, 554–55, 558, 562–63

  District of Columbia. See Washington, D.C.

  Dodd, Harrison H., 265

  Dodge, George S., 28

  Doolittle, James R., 289, 291

  Dorr Rebellion, 106

  Douglas, Stephen A., 335
<
br />   Douglass, Frederick, 3, 507; exchange with Andrew Johnson, 169–80; exchange with Susan B. Anthony on suffrage, 372–75; “Reconstruction,” 294–300; speech at New York City, 428–34; “What the Black Man Wants,” 5–13; “The Work Before Us,” 352–56

  Douglass, Margaret Crittenden, 482

  Downing, George T., 169–70, 175–77

  Draco, 536

  Draft riots, 265–66, 538, 627

  Drake, Charles D., 284

  Dred Scott decision, 244, 365, 383

  Dudley, Nathan A. M., 127–28

  Durell, Edward H., 530, 542, 624

  E

  Edgefield County, S.C., 637–38

  Edisto Island, S.C., 125–26

  Education, 143–44, 192, 226, 335, 383–84, 446, 469; for freedmen, 3, 7, 12, 17, 39, 75, 89, 131–32, 165, 182, 191, 315, 317, 343, 377–78, 403, 441, 480–84, 496, 505, 556–59, 577, 650; for Indians, 442; for women, 229–30, 243

  Edwards, Miss., 602

  Eilbech, Mr., 162

  Eldredge, Charles: speech in Congress on Civil Rights Bill, 574–85

  Election of 1860 (presidential), 515, 646

  Election of 1864 (presidential), 64–65, 68

  Election of 1865 (state), 108–9, 146

  Election of 1866 (congressional), 65–68, 226, 234, 260, 275, 345

  Election of 1867 (state), 227, 234, 362

  Election of 1868 (presidential), 227–238, 322, 327–28, 331, 334, 344, 350–56, 365, 443, 505–6, 516–17, 540, 579

  Election of 1870 (congressional), 240, 391

  Election of 1872 (presidential), 366–67, 425–34, 443, 506, 520, 540, 550, 639

  Election of 1874 (congressional), 445, 511, 521, 532, 545–47

  Election of 1875 (state), 446, 512, 589–90

  Election of 1876 (presidential), 240, 446–47, 519, 538, 621–44, 656

  Election of 1878 (congressional), 658–59

  Electoral College, 226, 447, 634, 657

  Electoral Commission, 447

  Elliott, Robert Brown, 366; exchange with Horace Greeley on amnesty, 394–99; speech in Congress on Civil Rights Bill, 456–74

  Ellis, Ezekiel J., 659

  Ellison, Hilliard, 396–97

  Emancipation of slaves, 1–4, 15, 24, 26, 46–48, 50, 87–88, 102, 104, 133, 156, 194, 279–80, 300, 366, 379–80, 436, 438, 440, 472, 480, 484–85, 515, 570, 575–76, 584, 607, 610, 624. See also Abolition of slavery

  Emancipation Proclamation, 5, 14–15, 37, 46–47, 57, 102, 125, 134, 150, 207, 224, 627

  Emory, William H., 347

 

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