Read Bound for Canaan Online

Authors: Fergus Bordewich

Bound for Canaan (108 page)

Mann, Horace

Mansfield, Lord

manumission

in North Carolina

in Philadelphia

Marriott, Charles

Mars, James

Marshall, John

Martin, Peter

Maryland: emancipation in

free blacks in

Quakers in

slavery in

slave trade in

underground railroad in

Mason, James

Mason-Dixon line

Massachusetts: free blacks' rights in

personal liberty laws in

slavery outlawed in

slave trade in

Massachusetts
(cont.)
underground railroad in

Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society

Mather, Cotton

May, Samuel J.

Mayflower,

Mayo, Joseph

Mendenhall, Dinah

Mendenhall, Isaac

Mennonites

Methodists

prayer meetings of

Tennessee Conference of

Mexican War

Miccosukees

Michigan

underground railroad in

Miller, John Chester

Miller family

Mingo (African farmhand)

Minkins, Shadrach

Mississippi

secession of

slavery in

Missouri:

John Brown's raid into

Kansas slavery issue and

slave population in

slavery in

Missouri Compromise (1820)

Modern Medea: A Family Story of Slavery and

Child-Murder from the Old South

(Weisenburger)

Monroe, William

Montpelier, Vt.

Moore, Jeremiah

Morse, Samuel F. B.

Mott, James

Mott, Lucretia

Munroe, William C.

Murrow, Joshua

 

Nalle, Charles

Nantucket, Mass.: as abolitionist center

antislavery convention at

Napoleon I, emperor of France

National Era,

National Intelligencer,

National Reformer,

Native Americans

disease decimation of

enslavement of

fugitive slaves and

removal of

slaves owned by

Nebraska

Nelson, Daniel

Nevitt, John

New Bedford, Mass.

as “Gibraltar of the fugitive,”

Newburyport Herald,

Newby, Dangerfield

New England: abolitionist beginnings in

slavery in

underground railroad in

see also specific states and cities
New England Anti-Slavery Society

New Garden Meeting (Indiana)

New Garden Meeting (North Carolina)\

New Hampshire

New Jersey: slave trade in

underground railroad in

Newman, Francis

Newman, William

New Orleans, La., slave trade in

Newport, R. I.: anti-abolitionist violence in

slave trade in

underground railroad in

Newport (Fountain City), Ind.

New York, N. Y.

black population of

in Cotton Triangle

Five Points section of

gangs of

growth of

kidnappings of blacks in

racism in

slave trade in

underground railroad in

New York Anti-Slavery Society

formation of

Smith-Cooper debate for

New York Kidnapping Club

New York Manumission Society

New York Mirror,

New York state: abolitionist movement in

black population of

Burned Over District of

as destination for fugitives

Quaker activism in

slavery in

underground railroad in

New York
Sun,

New York Times,

New York Tribune,

Niagara County Anti-Slavery Society
Niagara
(ship)

Nigeria

Nine Partners Meeting, Dutchess County,

N. Y.

Norcom, James

Norfolk, Conn.

North: anti-abolitionist violence in

free blacks in

Fugitive Slave Law opposed by,

fugitive slaves in

growth of antislavery societies in,

Harpers Ferry raid and

personal liberty laws in,

slavery in

slave trade in

see also specific states and cities

North American colonies: slavery's introduction to

slave trade by

North American Convention of Colored

People

North Carolina: abolitionist movement in

emancipation in

free blacks in

fugitive slave laws in

fugitive slaves in

manumission laws in

Quaker migration from

Quakers in

secession of

slavery in

slave trade in

North Carolina Manumission Society,

North Carolina Yearly Meeting

as trustee for slave emancipation

North Star,

Northwest Ordinance (1787)

“Notes on the State of Virginia” (Jefferson)

Nott, Josiah C.

Nottingham, Samuel

 

Oberlin College

Ogden, Samuel

Ohio:

Quakers in

racial discrimination in

underground railroad in,

Ohio Anti-Slavery Society

Ohio River, as division between slave and free states

Oickle, Alvin F.

Oneida Institute

Ontarian,
S. S.

Orthodox (Quakers)

sawatomie, Kans.

Osborne (slave holder)

Otis, James

Ottoman
(brig)

Outland, Thomas

Overrals, James

 

Paden, H. F.

Paine, Thomas

Panic of 1819

Parker, Bird

Parker, Eliza

Parker, John

Parker, Theodore

Parker, William

Patriot War

patrollers

Patton, “Jolly Bob,”

Paul Anderson
(steamboat)

Paxson, Jacob

Pearce, Thomas

Pearl
incident

Pease, Nathaniel

Pennington, James (Jim Pembroke),

Pennsylvania: abolitionist movement in

emancipation law passed by

and Fugitive Slave Act

slavery in

slave trade in

underground railroad in

Pennsylvania Freeman,

Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the

Abolition of Slavery

Pennypacker, Elijah

Pensacola Gazette,

Peter (Harriet Jacobs's friend),

Peterboro, N. Y.

abolitionist convention in

John Brown at

underground railroad in

Pettibone, Giles

Pettijohn (abolitionist)

Pettis, F. H.

Pettit, Eber

Philadelphia, Pa.: first abolitionist convention at

as first abolitionist stronghold

free blacks in

John Brown in

underground railroad in

vigilance committee in

Philanthropist,

Philomathian Society

Pierce, Franklin

Pinckney, Alexander

plantation system

Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Plymouth Rock,
S. S.

Polk, James K.

popular sovereignty

Portugal, slave trade by

Postl, Karl Anton

Pottawatomie, Kans., massacre (1856)

Poughkeepsie Journal,

Prendergast, Lieutenant

Presbyterians

Price, Benjamin

Price, Philip

Project Rescue

Providence, R. I., slave trade in

Provincial Freeman,
386

Purvis, Robert

utnam, David

 

Quakers:

in Civil War

in Delaware

early antislavery activities of,

education as priority for

in Indiana

in Maryland

in North Carolina

in Ohio

in organized antislavery movement,

prejudice among

 

racism among

theological rift within

 

racism

railroads

Ramsey, Mark

Randolph, John

Rankin, Adam Lowry

Rankin, Calvin

Rankin, Jean

Rankin, John

antislavery essays of

attack on home of

David Ruggles compared with

death of

fugitive slave “Eliza” and

Liberty Party and

Rankin, John, Jr.

Rankin, John P.

Rankin, Samuel

Rankin family

attack on

in Civil War

fugitives aided by

Rapier, William

Ray, Charles M.

Reconstruction

Reed, Enoch

Reeve, William

Refugee Home Society

Remond, Charles L.

Republican Party

Douglass in

Revere, Paul

Rhett, Robert B.

Rhode Island, slave trade in

Rce, David

Rice, Isaac J.

Richmond Palladium,

Ricketson, Gilbert

Riker, Richard

Riley, Amos (father)

Riley, Amos (son)

Riley, Hugh

Riley, Isaac

financial troubles of

Henson betrayed by

Henson's relationship with

Riley, Isaac (fugitive)

Riley, Jerome

Riley, Matilda

Riley, Patrick

riots, race

Ripley, Ohio

attack on Rankins in

Ripley Bee,

Risely (farmer)

Robb, Adam

Roberts, Richard

Robinson, Rowland T.

Rochester, N. Y.

Rockville Sentinel,

Rogers, Timothy

Roper, Moses

Ross, Araminta,
see
Tubman, Harriet Ross, Ben

Ross, Ben, Jr.

Ross, Mary

Ross, Moses

Ross, Rit

Ross, Robert

Ross, William Henry

Ross (Logue neighbor and helper)

Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

Royal African Company

Royall, Isaac

Ruggles, David

attempted kidnapping of

background of

Ruggles, David
(cont.)
death of

failing health of

John Rankin compared with

Tappan's break with

and Tom Hughes case

Rush, Benjamin

 

Sabine, Joseph F.

St. Catharines Refugee Slaves' Friend

Society

Salmon, William

Sam (fugitive)

Sanborn, Franklin

Sandusky, Mansfield & Newark Railroad,

Sanitary Commission, U.S.

Sante-Domingue (Santo Domingo), slave uprising in

Savannah, Ga., slave trade in

Savannah Republican,

Sawyer, Samuel T.

Sayres, Edward

Scoble, John

Scomp, Samuel

Scott, Dred

Scott, George

Scott, Henry

Scott, Silas

Scott, Walter

secession

Northern threat of

of Southern states

Secret Six

Seminoles

Seminole War, First

Senate, U.S.

assault on Sumner in

and Compromise of 1850,

Southern representation in

Senegambians

Seventy, The (lecturers)

Sewall, Samuel

Seward, William H.

Shadd, Abraham

Shadd, Isaac

Shadd Cary, Mary Ann

Shadrach rescue

Sharpe, Mary Ellen Graydon

Shaw, Chancey

Shawnees

Shepherd, Hayward

Shotwell, A. L.

Siebert, Wilbur

Sierra Leone

Simon (fugitive)

Simons, Peter Paul

Sims, Mark

Sims, Thomas

slavery:

African ethnic groups preferred for,

African repatriation as solution to

auctions under

beginnings of

cotton industry and growth of

and education of slaves

family separations under

fugitives from, hunting of,

growth of

laws on

manumission and

Missouri Compromise and

occupations of slaves in

punishments under

rationales for

rebellions against

sexual exploitation under

transatlantic slave trade and growth of,

in Washington, D. C.

westward expansion and

women's exploitation under

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