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THE NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL REVIEW INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 A full citizenship, 162; work as watermen, 10-13. See also Black citizenship; Blacks; Black troops; Abbot, W. W.: his The Papers of George Washing- Free blacks; Freedmen; Negro education; Ne- ton. Colonial Series. Vol. 8 reviewed, 482; his groes; Slaves The Papers of George Washington. Confederation African Americans in the Early Republic, 1789- Series. Vols. 1-2 reviewed, 89 1831: reviewed, 345 Abercrombie, James: given assurances about African-American women: found organizations Granville District, 107; named boundary com- to improve schools, 323. See also Black women missioner, 106 African Brigade: to be formed in N.C., 268; com- Abolitionism: affects recruitment of black troops, position of, 292; officers of, selected, 276-278; 266 ordered to Charleston, S.C., 290; recruitment Abolitionists: promote enlistment of black of, 266; transferred to Fortress Monroe, 291. troops, 268 See also North Carolina Colored Volunteers; Abrams, Douglas Carl: his Conservative Con- United States Colored Troops straints: North Carolina and the New Deal re- African Methodist Episcopal Zion church, 49; at- viewed, 71; reviews The New Deal and tracts J. C. Price to its ministry, 41; General American Youth: Ideas and Ideals in a Depression Conference of, 47, 48; influences J. C. Price’s Decade, 357 religious views, 42; proffers bishopric to J. C. Addresses and Public Papers of James Grubbs Mar- Price, 145 tin, Governor of North Carolina. Vol. 1, 1985- Africans, native: resent immigrants, 439 1989: reviewed, 207 Africans, recaptured: prey on colonizers, 461 Africa: missionaries for, sought by J. C. Price, 47; Africans in Colonial Louisiana: The Development of as part of J. C. Price’s educational mission, 137; Afro-Creole Culture in the Eighteenth Century: site of colony for free blacks, 430. See also Libe- reviewed, 480 ria Afro-American League: dissolves, 144; meeting African-American architecture: evident in mul- of, pictured, 140; planned by T. Thomas For- let camps, 2, 9 tune, 138; supported by J. C. Price, 141; to African-American culture: suppressed by slave- unite with civil rights association, 140 holders, 10 Ager, John Curtis: his We Plow God’s Fields: The African-American dwellings: resemble those of Life of James G. K. McClure reviewed, 206 West Africa, 9 Agnes Scott College: meets criteria for accredita- “African-American Intellectuals Confront the tion, 319 ‘Silent South’: The What the Negro Wants Con- Agrarian Origins of Capitalism, The: reviewed, 341 troversy,” 153-179 African Americans: convince Union to let them Agriculture: improved through farm demonstra- serve as soldiers, 268; demand end to segrega- tion programs, 310 tion, 154; disfranchisement of, 134, 142-143, Agriculture, Geology, and Society in Antebellum 149, 163; educational problems of, 306; initia- South Carolina: The Private Diary of Edmund tives by, threaten white liberals, 166, 178; mi- Ruffin, 1843: reviewed, 72 grate from N.C., 137; not invited to meeting Alabama: charters college for women, 310; public on “Negro problem,” 142; organize association normal schools in, 311; segregates races on rail- for civil rights, 140; protest segregation, 56; road cars, 144 public normal schools for, 311; recruited for Albemarle, County of: site of first permanent set- Union army, 266; southern attitudes toward, tlement in Carolina, 365 harden, 166; subject of books by UNC Press, Albemarle region: early settlement of, 398-399 154; regarded as inferior, 168, 173-174; want Albemarle Sound, 105 VOLUME LXX ¢ NUMBER 4 ¢ OCTOBER 1993 508 INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 Albright, Alex: reviews Segregated Skies: All-Black Anderson, William L.: reviews From Revivals to Combat Squadrons of World War II, 234 Removal: Jeremiah Evarts, the Cherokee Nation, Alderman, Edwin: academic credentials of, 312; and the Search for the Soul of America, 347 campaigns for public education, 304, 305; pic- Andrew, John A.: pictured, 268; role of, in rais- tured, 304 ing African Brigade, 268, 269, 274, 275, 276, Alexander, John K.: reviews Jeffersonian Legacies, 296 487 Andrew, John A., III: his From Revivals to Re- Algonquians: depicted in White drawings, 380- moval: Jeremiah Evarts, the Cherokee Nation, 381; destroyed by disease, 379; said to be peace- and the Search for the Soul of America reviewed, ful, 373. See also Indians 346 Allen, Adoniram: death of, noted, 403, 407; Andrews, CharleMs. : quoted, 390 guides Elisha Mitchell, 245 Angley, Wilson: reviews Patriots, Pistols, and Petti- Allen, Eleazer: appointed boundary commis- coats: “Poor Sinful Charles Town” during the sioner, 105; notes advantages of Granville Dis- American Revolution, 501; reviews Travels in the trict, 107 Colonies in 1773-1775: Described in the Letters Allen, Nathaniel (land grantee): sued by Gran- of William Mylne, 483 ville heirs, 124 Annie Oakley of the Wild West: reviewed, 102 Allen, Nathaniel (son of Adoniram Allen): inter- Anson County, 120 viewed by Z. B. Vance, 411 Anthony, Robert G., Jr.: his N.C. bibliography, Alligator River, 104, 105 181-203; reviews The Kentucky Encyclopedia, Along the Trail: A Reader about Native Americans: 338 reviewed, 236 Arkansas: public normal schools in, 311; segre- Amadas, Philip: searches for site to plant colony, gates races on railroad cars, 144 371 Armstrong, Samuel C., 147; founds Hampton In- Ambrose, Douglas: reviews The Papers of Henry stitute, 137 Laurens. Voi. 13, 342 Arsenault, Raymond: reviews The First New America: published, 376 South, 1865-1920, 87 American Citizens’ Civil Rights Association of Arundel and Surrey, earl of: holds Heath patent, the United States: dissolves, 144; elects J. C. 392 Price president, 140 Asheville, N.C., 134, 247, 248, 265; mourns American Colonization Society (ACS): assumes death of Elisha Mitchell, 404 responsibility for immigrants’ first months, Asheville News: agrees highest peak should be 437; colonizes blacks in Liberia, 465; forma- named after T. L. Clingman, 421; notes reinter- tion of, 430; keeps record of expenses for reset- ment of Elisha Mitchell on “Clingman’s Peak,” tling free blacks, 431; named in will freeing 416; organ for T. L. Clingman’s debate with slaves, 434; sends agents to South, 431; sup- Elisha Mitchell, 249, 257, 261; predicts hang- ports appointment of J. C. Price to diplomatic ing of Edward Isham, 31; publishes balanced as- post, 135, 136 sessment of Clingman-Mitchell controversy, American Dilemma, An: The Negro Problem and 427 Modem Democracy: supersedes work of Howard Asheville Spectator: announces T. L. Clingman’s al- Odum, 165; theories of, attacked, 173, 174 leged discovery of highest peak, 421; credits American Home Life, 1880-1930: A Social History S. B. Buckley with measuring Smoky Moun- of Spaces and Services: reviewed, 354 tains, 422; half-owned by Z. B. Vance, 402; of- American Journal of Science and Arts: publishes fers tribute to Elisha Mitchell, 405; organ for Elisha Mitchell’s 1835 findings, 246 Elisha Mitchell’s debate with T. L. Clingman, American party. See Know-Nothing party 257, 258, 262; opposes T. L. Clingman, 254, American Populism: A Social History, 1877-1898: 255; publishes Z. B. Vance’s account of search reviewed, 495 for Elisha Mitchell, 403; suffers financial re- American Women and the U.S. Armed Forces: A verses, 405; urges Z. B. Vance to challenge Guide to the Records of Military Agencies in the T. L. Clingman for congressional seat, 406 National Archives Relating to American Women: Association for the Study of Negro Life and His- reviewed, 239 tory: founded by Carter Woodson, 155 Ames, Jessie Daniel: urges Durham Conference, Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools 159 of the Southern States: to effect uniform en- Anderson, Eric: reviews American Populism: A So- trance requirements, 318; reforms of, do not cial History, 1877-1898, 496 benefit blacks, 323; sets criteria for colleges, Anderson, Marian, 168 318-319 THE NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL REVIEW INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 509 Atkin, Thomas W., 418; agrees highest peak students at, pictured, 315. See also Meredith should be named for T. L. Clingman, 421; as College ally to T. L. Clingman, 257, 258, 262; attrib- Baptists: oppose appropriations for higher educa- utes W. W. Avery’s defeat to murder of Samuel tion, 313 Flemming, 417; defends T. L. Clingman after Baradell, Lang: reviews Before Antietam: The Bat- Elisha Mitchell’s death, 405; extols T. L. tle for South Mountain, 350; reviews Berry Clingman’s role in measuring Smoky Moun- Benson’s Civil War Book: Memoirs of a Confeder- tains, 422; notes reinterment of Elisha Mitch- ate Scout and Sharpshooter, 362; reviews “For the ell on “Clingman’s Peak,” 416; questions Sake of My Country”: The Diary of Col. W. W. scientific prowess of S. B. Buckley, 424 Ward, 9th Tennessee Cavalry, Morgan’s Brigade, Atkins, Simon G.: blocks Jim Crow legislation, C.S.A., 238 145; edits Southland, 141 Barkley, Henry, 30 Atlanta, Ga., 141 Barksdale, Marcellus C.: reviews Black Scholar: “Atlanta Compromise”: offered by B. T. Washing- Horace Mann Bond, 1904-1972, 221 ton, 147 Barlow, Francis C., 274 Atlanta Constitution: promotes industrial New Barlowe, Arthur: describes New World, 373; South, 55 searches for site to plant colony, 371 Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad: called the Barrett, Partnenia. See Nelson, Partnenia “Old Mullet Road,” 3 Barrier islands: desertlike ecology of, 7 Atlantic Monthly: publishes article by Virginius Barrow, Robert M.: reviews Lachlan McGillivray, Dabney, 172 Indian Trader: The Shaping of the Southern Fron- Austin, Samue!: guides Elisha Mitchell, 245; tier, 77 tracked down by Z. B. Vance, 403 Bath Town, 105, 106 Avery, William W.: congressional defeat of, attrib- Batts, Nathaniell: first permanent settler of Albe- uted to his murder of Samuel Flemming, 416- marle Sound, 396; map locating house of, 397 418 Ayers, Edward L.: cited, 302; his The Promise of Bayard, Thomas Francis: offers J. C. Price posi- the New South: Life after Reconstruction re- tion in Liberia, 136 viewed, 326; quoted, 33, 322 Bear grass (yucca): used in construction of mullet camps, 4 B Beaty, Thomas: testifies at murder trial, 34 Beaufort, N.C., 3; recruits from, in African Bri- Bacigal, Ronald J.: his May It Please the Court: A gade, 281 Biography of Judge Robert R. Mehridge, Jr. re- viewed, 222 Beaufort County: black recruits from, 283 Back Sound, 3, 10 Beaumont College: lacks academic standards, 320 Badger, George E.: opposed by T. L. Clingman, Beecher, James Chaplin: chosen to lead black 254 regiment, 277; pictured, 279; protests discrimi- Bailey, Fred Arthur: reviews Glorious Content- nation against black troops, 293; sees crucial ment: The Grand Army of the Republic, 1865- role of religion, 285-286 1900, 94 Before Antietam: The Battle for South Mountain: re- Bailey, Lisa D.: reviews Ersatz in the Confederacy: viewed, 350 Shortages and Substitutes on the Southern Home- Belton, Tom: reviews American Women and the front, 503; reviews Women’s Voices in the South- U.S. Armed Forces: A Guide to the Records of ern Oral History Program Collection, 359 Military Agencies in the National Archives Relat- Balaquier, John Anthony: trustee and executor of ing to American Women, 239; reviews Military Granville estate, 117 Fortifications: A Selective Bibliography, 363 Baldwin, Ann, 24 Benson, Susan Williams: her Berry Benson’s Civil Baldwin, Karen: her Herbal and Magical Medicine: War Book: Memoirs of a Confederate Scout and Traditional Healing Today reviewed, 71 Sharpshooter reviewed, 362 Ballard, Stephen: donates funds to Zion Wesley Benson, T. Lloyd: reviews A Confederate Lady Institute, 134 Comes of Age: The Journal of Pauline Ballard Hall: on campus of Livingstone College, DeCaradeuc Heyward, 1863-1888, 92 137 Bergeron, Arthur W., Jr.: his The Civil War Remi- Baltimore, Lord: proprietor of Maryland, 392 niscences of Major Silas T. Grisamore, C.S.A. re- Baltimore, Md., 434, 449 viewed, 488 Baptist Female University: describes its educa- Bergeron, Paul H.: his The Papers of Andrew John- tional objectives, 317; overcrowding at, 315; son. Vol. 10 reviewed, 490 VOLUME LXX ¢ NUMBER 4 ¢ OCTOBER 1993 510 INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 Bergstrom, Peter V.: reviews The Papers of James Black Press in Mississippi, 1865-1985, The: re- Madison. Presidential Series. Vol. 2, 344 viewed, 498 Berkeley, Dorothy Smith: her The Correspondence Black Republicans: hold convention, 52-53 of John Bartram, 1734-1777 reviewed, 75 Blacks: aid Union efforts in N.C., 272; consid- Berkeley, Edmund: his The Correspondence of John ered source of sectional conflict, 50; disfran- Bartram, 1734-1777 reviewed, 75 chised in Mississippi, 142-143; education of, Berkeley, William: governor of Virginia, 393; is- dependent on own race, 53; face white opposi- sues first land patents in Albemarle, 399 tion to their education, 303; help defend Wash- Berlin, Ira: his Slaves No More: Three Essays on ington, N.C., 273; only marginally affected by Emancipation and the Civil War reviewed, 349 educational reforms, 324; rates of illiteracy Bernhard, Virginia: her Southern Women: Histo- among, 303, 323; role of, in prohibition cam- ries and Identities reviewed, 474 paign, 52; urged to develop mental and moral nature, 44; work at civilian jobs in Union-oc- Bertie County: black recruits from, 287; free cupied New Bern, 289. See also African Ameri- blacks from, immigrate to Liberia, 431 cans Beth, Loren P.: his John Marshall Harlan: The Last Black Scholar: Horace Mann Bond, 1904-1972: re- Whig Justice reviewed, 353 viewed, 221 Bethune, Mary McLeod: contributes to anthol- Blackstock, Nehemiah: 1845 survey of, confirms ogy, 158; essay by, discussed, 160-162; pictured, T. L. Clingman’s measurements, 257; finds 161; political views of, characterized, 158n equipment left by Elisha Mitchell, 252, 261, Biblical Recorder (Raleigh): criticizes “colleges,” 411 317 Black troops: to be raised in N.C., 269; to defend Bickford, Charlene Bangs: her Documentary His- Union soldiers, 273; demonstrate willingness tory of the First Federal Congress of the United to serve, 296; experience of, compared with States of America. Vols. 10-11 reviewed, 225 whites’, 283-284; lose identification with state, Biggs, Asa: resigns from U.S. Senate, 416, 424 293; ordered out of N.C., 291; recruitment of, Big Tom: in Black Mountains, 245, 262 disagreeable to white officers, 267; take part in Billinger, Robert D., Jr.: reviews Silent Wings at raid on Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, War: Combat Gliders in World War II, 233 288; threatened with execution by Confeder- Billings, Leonard Lorenzo: chosen as officer in Af- ates, 278. See also African Brigade rican Brigade, 277 Black watermen: play important role in fisheries, Bird, Francis W.: promotes enlistment of black 10-11. See also Black fishermen troops, 268 Black women: encourage black men to enlist in Bishir, Catherine W.: reviews Washington on African Brigade, 283. See also African-Ameri- View: The Nation’s Capital since 1790, 80 can women Bissett, James: reviews The Confederacy Is on Her Bladen County, 433 Way up the Spout: Letters to South Carolina, Blair, Henry W.: sponsors education bill, 134 1861-1864, 335 Blair education bill: dies in Senate, 142; sup- Black Abolitionist Papers, The. Vol. 4, The United ported by J. C. Price, 134, 138 States, 1847-1858; Vol. 5, The United States, Blake, Debra A.: reviews Secession Debated: 1859-1865: reviewed, 90 Georgia’s Showdown in 1860, 333 “Black Brothers”: in Black Mountains, 245, 262 Bland, Edward: plans settlement of Albemarle re- Black citizenship: under attack, 134; defended by gion, 394-395 J.C. Price, 137, 141-142; promoted by J. C. Blethen, H. Tyler: reviews The Georgia Gold Price, 42-43 Rush: Twenty-niners, Cherokees, and Gold Black fishermen: adopt ancestors’ building tech- Fever, 472 niques, 11. See also Black watermen Block, Susan: her The Wrights of Wilmington re- Black militancy: concerns southern liberals, 171, viewed, 100 172 Blood Brothers: A Short History of the Civil War: re- Black Mountains: controversy over highest peak viewed, 347 in, 241, 243, 246, 249; Elisha Mitchell’s 1835 Blue-Eyed Child of Fortune: The Civil War Letters visit to, 256; Elisha Mitchell's exploration of, of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw: reviewed, 215 415; maps of, 260, 414, 415, 424, 428; mea- Blue Ridge: explored by T. L. Clingman, 245 sured by T. L. Clingman, 248-249, 257; viewed Bodley, Joshua: serves as agent for Earl Granville, by T. L. Clingman, 245 114 Black needlerush: pictured, 7; used in construc- Bogle, Archibald: concerned about poor equip- tion of mullet camps, 4 ment of African Brigade, 286 THE NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL REVIEW INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 Bogue Banks, 1, 3 Brown, Caroline, 25 Bogue Sound, 3, 10 Brown, F K.: his Miners and Medicine: West Vir- Bolster, W. Jeffrey: comments on racial equality ginia Memories reviewed, 336 in maritime trades, 12 Brown, Hiram, 25 Bond, James E.: his I Dissent: The Legacy ofJ ustice Brown, Richard D.: his The Republican Synthesis James Clark McReynolds reviewed, 232 Revisited: Essays in Honor of George Athan Bone, Hardaway. See Isham, Edward Billias reviewed, 340 Bonners Field Plantation, 106 Brown, Stephen W.: reviews Kentucky’s Road to Book-of-the-Month Club: considers selecting Statehood, 82 What the Negro Wants, 168-169 Brown, Sterling: contributes to anthology, 157; Boone, Daniel: camp of, in Watauga County, 245 political views of, characterized, 158n; refuses Boritt, Gabor S.: his Why the Confederacy Lost re- to revise article, 170 viewed, 93 Brown, W. H. R.: denied appointment as officer Boston, Mass., 132, 141; noncommissioned offi- in African Brigade, 277 cers of black regiment from, 295 Brownell, Charles E.: his The Making of Virginia Boston Tea Party: compared to modern race riots, Architecture reviewed, 328 161 Browning, Wilt: his The Rocks: The True Story of Bowling, Kenneth R.: his Documentary History of the Worst Team in Baseball History reviewed, 101 the First Federal Congress of the United States of Bryan, James L.: his will frees slaves for coloniza- America. Vols. 10-11 reviewed, 225 tion, 434 Bowman, Charles H., Jr.: reviews The Florida Buckley, Samuel B.: defends his scientific creden- Negro: A Federal Writers’ Project Legacy, 498 tials, 425; measures peaks in Smoky Moun- Boykin, John: deed to land of, backdated, 116 tains, 421; tries to discredit T. L. Clingman, Brabham, Robin: his Guide to the Manuscript Col- 422-423 lections, J. Murrey Atkins Library, University of Buckmaster, Henrietta: her Let My People Go: North Carolina at Charlotte reviewed, 359 The Story of the Underground Railroad and the Brady, Patricia: her George Washington's Beautiful Growth of the Abolition Movement reviewed, 361 Nelly: The Letters of Eleanor Parke Custis Lewis Buel, Richard, Jr.: reviews The Republican Synthe- to Elizabeth Bordley Gibson, 1794-1851 re- sis Revisited: Essays in Honor of George Athan viewed, 210 Billias, 341 Bragg, Thomas: appoints T. L. Clingman to U.S. Bullock, Wiliiam: relies on descriptions of Senate, 416, 423 Roanoke, 391-392 Branch, John: founder of Raleigh colonization so- Bunche, Ralph: black intellectual, 155 ciety, 431 Buncombe County, 254, 257 Brandon, Betty: her Southern Women: Histories Burden of Dependency, The: Colonial Themes in and Identities reviewed, 474; reviews South Caro- Southern Economic Thought: reviewed, 471 lina in the Modem Age, 208 Bureau of Colored Troops: determines rank of offi- Bratton, Mary Jo: reviews Slaves No More: Three cers, 276 Essays on Emancipation and the Civil War, 350; Bureau of Relief: plans national convention, 138 reviews Theodore Roosevelt and the Idea of Race, 504 Burial customs: from West Africa, 12 Braund, Kathryn E. Holland: her Deerskins and Burns, Augustus, III: reviews Simple Decency and Duffels: Creek Indian Trade with Anglo-America, Common Sense: The Southern Conference Move- 1685-1815 reviewed, 480 ment, 1938-1963, 220 Brearley, H. C.: reviews What the Negro Wants, Burnside, Ambrose E.: establishes pay scale for ci- 176 vilians, 289; forms black pioneer corps, 272; re- Brereton, John: mimics earlier reports on coloni- placed as Union commander in N.C., 271 zation, 385-386 Burnside, John: appointed to collect Granville Briefe and True Relation of the Discoverie of the records, 120; forced to flee to Virginia, 121 North Part of Virginia, A: mimics earlier reports Burnsville, N.C., 412 on colonization, 385-386 Bushman, Richard L.: his The Refinement of Amer- Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of ica: Persons, Houses, Cities reviewed, 229 Virginia, A: published, 374 Bushong, William: his North Carolina’s Executive Brindletown, N.C., 27 Mansion: The First Hundred Years reviewed, 99 Brook, David L. S.: reviews Kentucky Illustrated: Business of May Next, The: James Madison and the The First Hundred Years, 361 Founding: reviewed, 343 Brooklyn, N.Y., 56 Bute County, 120, 121 VOLUME LXX ¢ NUMBER 4 ¢ OCTOBER 1993 512 INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 Butler, Benjamin: reluctant to enlist black troops, Carrott, M. B.: reviews I Dissent: The Legacy of 267 Justice James Clark McReynolds, 233 Butler, Lindley S.: reviews Did Pocahontas Save Carson, Charlie, 30 Captain John Smith?, 469 Carter County, Tenn., 31 Carteret, Lord: inquires about his lands in N.C., oe 125 Carteret, George: original Lord Proprietor, 103 Cain, Christian: letter by, 444 Carteret, Henry Frederick: confirms instructions Cain, Edward: letter by, 444 to Granville agent, 123. See also Thynne, Cain, Henry: letters by, 442, 444, 445, 446, 448 Henry Frederick Cain, Hugh: letters by, 444, 446 Carteret, John, Earl Granville: boundaries of his Cain, John: letters by, 442, 444, 445, 446. See also district set, 104-106; boundaries of his district McKay, John surveyed, 106; inherits title Earl Granville, Cain, Robert J.: reviews How Much Is That in 107; names boundary commissioners, 105-106; Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as petitions king for share of Carolina, 103; pic- a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the tured, 105; political prominence of, 104; re- United States, 502 ceives one-eighth share of Carolina, 107. See Caldwell, Beck, 24 also Granville, Earl Calumet and Fleur-de-Lys: Archaeology of Indian Carteret, Sophia: beneficiary of Granville estate, and French Contact in Midcontinent: reviewed, 117 236 Carteret County, 10, 11; cultural isolation of, 12; Camden, William: supports overseas expeditions, fisheries of, 1; mullet fishery in, 2-3 366 Case of Odell Waller and Virginia Justice, 1940- Camden County: black recruits from, 283; free 1942, The: reviewed, 218 blacks from, immigrate to Liberia, 431 Cashin, Edward J.: his Lachlan McGillivray, Indian Cameron, Paul C.: defeated in race for state sen- Trader: The Shaping of the Southern Frontier re- ate, 419 viewed, 76 Campion, Saunders A.: serves as amanuensis for Castel, Albert: his Decision in the West: The At- African colonizers, 444, 445, 447 lanta Campaign of 1864 reviewed, 351 Cane River, 411, 414; borders Black Mountains, Catanzariti, John: his The Papers of Thomas Jeffer- 262; searched for body of Elisha Mitchell, 265. son. Vol. 25 reviewed, 484 See also “Caney River” Catawba County, 14, 27; detail of map of, 26 “Caney River”: borders Black Mountains, 246; Catawba River, 17, 30 central to Clingman-Mitchell debate, 259. See Catawba Trading Path, 106 also Cane River Catchmaid, George: receives land in Albemarle Cape Fear, 1 region, 398, 399 Cape Fear River, 113 Cecelski, David S.: article by, 1-13 Cape Mesurado, Africa: deeded to colonization Cecil-Fronsman, Bill: his Common Whites: Class society, 430 and Culture in Antebellum North Carolina re- Cape Mount, Africa, 437 viewed, 68; reviews Victorian America and the Careysburg, Liberia, 450 Civil War, 348 Caribbean: West African building traditions of, Cedar Island, 1, 3 10 Chaffins Bluff, Va., 296 Carlton, Charlie, 27 Chamberlain, A. G.: commands black regiment, Carolana: name given Heath patent, 390; subject 295 of promotional literature, 393, 394 Chambers, Jeff, 22 Carolina charters: of 1663, affected by promo- Chancellorsville, 1863: The Souls of the Brave: re- tional literature on Roanoke voyages, 365; of viewed, 489 1663 and 1665, 103 Chapel Hill Gazette: publishes tribute to Elisha Carolina Rice Kitchen, The: The African Connec- Mitchell, 405 tion: reviewed, 235 Charles I: grants patent to Robert Heath, 390 Carpenter, Barbara: her Ethnic Heritage in Missis- Charles II: grants Carolina to Lords Proprietors, sippi reviewed, 470 103, 398; used to justify Granville heirs’ claim, Carr, Julian S.: sponsors address by J. C. Price, 138 124 Carroll County, Ga., 17, 20, 21, 25 Charleston, $.C., 125, 290; to be attacked by Carrollton, Ga., 21 Union, 272 Carrot Island, 3 Chattanooga, Tenn., 22, 24, 25 THE NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL REVIEW INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 513 Chesnutt, David R.: his The Papers of Henry Cline, Jonas: testifies at murder trial, 34 Laurens. Vol. 13 reviewed, 342 Clingman, Thomas Lanier: accused of distorting Chester County, Pa., 41 Elisha Mitchell’s argument, 258-259; accused Chicago, IIl.: site of meeting of Afro-American of stealing honors from Elisha Mitchell, 409, League, 138 415; appointed to U.S. Senate, 416, 423; asks Chicago Defender: honors R. W. Logan, 177 Joseph Henry not to publish Elisha Mitchell’s Chickinacomack Inlet, 106 letter, 252; attacked by Elisha Mitchell, 256; Child, Thomas: appointed agent for Granville challenges claims for “Mount Mitchell,” 413; District, 110; keeps record of grants, 127; challenges testimony of William Wilson, 412; leaves N.C., 116; returns to England, 117; claims highest peak in Smoky Mountains, 421; speeds up grant process, 116; told of com- depicted as villain, 241-242; disputes testi- plaints about Granville agents, 114 mony of William Wilson, 412; early career of, Childs, William R.: reviews The Men and Vision 243-244; elected to U.S. Senate, 425; errs in of the Southern Commercial Conventions, 1845- placing highest peak in Smoky Mountains, 1871, 331 426; forced to rely on Elisha Mitchell’s state- Chowan County, 114; free blacks from, immi- ments to defend his claims, 409-410; hard-core grate to Liberia, 431 supporters of, 408; hopes to avoid fight with Chowan River: first settlers along, 396; visited by Elisha Mitchell, 253; measures Black Moun- John Pory, 387 tains, 248-249, 257; pictured, 255; political ca- Christman, Margaret C. S.: her “The Spirit of reer of, 253-255; receives summary of Elisha Party”: Hamilton and Jefferson at Odds re- Mitchell’s 1844 exploration, 248; reluctantly viewed, 236 enters debate with Elisha Mitchell, 242; reputa- Churton, William: subagent for Earl Granville, tion of, hurt by controversy with Elisha Mitch- 110 ell, 427; responds to Elisha Mitchell’s attack, Citadel: criticism of, 308-309 257-258; says Elisha Mitchell never ascended Civilian jobs: more attractive than military ser- highest peak, 250-251; tours Mountains, 245; uses political skills to overwhelm Elisha Mitch- vice to blacks, 289 Civil rights: abandoned by Republicans, 52; asso- ell, 263; uses testimony of Elisha Mitchell’s guide to discredit scientist, 261-262, 402 ciation for, organized, 140; for blacks, opposed, 51; no longer protected by federal government, “Clingman’s Dome”: highest peak in Smoky 144 Mountains, 426 Civil Rights Act (1875): ruled unconstitutional, “Clingman’s Peak,” 412; claims for, discredited, 53 409; identified as highest mountain on state Civil rights movement: and impact of What the map, 404; named by Joseph Henry, 249; noted Negro Wants, 153; tactics of, debated, 159 as site of Elisha Mitchell’s reinterment, 416; Civil War Reminiscences of Major Silas T. shown on W. D. Cooke’s state map, 257; use Grisamore, C.S.A., The: reviewed, 488 of, in bill, challenged, 425; W. D. Cooke’s use of, 420 Claflin University: established for black South Carolinians, 309 Clyde, Robert: reviews Sojourners in the Sun: Scot- Clapp, Henry A.: compiles census of freed peo- tish Migrants in Jamaica and the Chesapeake , ple, 269, 281 1740-1800, 478 Clauser, John W., Jr.: reviews Calumet and Fleur- Cobb, Collier, 3; describes mullet camps, 3-4; vis- de-Lys: Archaeology of Indian and French Con- its site of hurricane, 6 tact in Midcontinent, 236 Cobb County, Ga., 24 Claxton, Philander Priestly: emphasizes commu- Coffin, O. J.: opposes publication of What the nity service, 311 Negro Wants, 164-165; pictured, 166 Clay, Henry: founder of American Colonization Coffman, Suzanne E.: her The Papers of John Mar- Society, 430 shall. Vol. 7 reviewed, 487 Clayton, Louisa: issues new instructions to Josiah Coldwater Creek, 106 Martin, 119. See also Farmer, Louisa Coleman, David: defeats Z. B. Vance for state sen- Clayton, William: issues new instructions to ate, 406; enters contest for congressional seat, Josiah Martin, 119 416; loses congressional race to Z. B. Vance, Cleveland, Grover: offers J. C. Price position in 419; withdraws from congressional race, 417 Liberia, 136 Collins, Josiah: sued by Granville heirs, 124 Clifton, James M.: reviews Agriculture, Geology, Colonization: central themes of, 368; economic and Society in Antebellum South Carolina: The potential of, 369; English attempts at, 365; by Private Diary of Edmund Ruffin, 1843, 73 free blacks in Africa, promoted, 430; of freed VOLUME LXX * NUMBER 4 * OCTOBER 1993 514 INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 slaves, affected by N.C. Supreme Court deci- Copland, Patrick: delivers sermon in support of sions, 432-434; lessons for, learned from Virginia Company, 387, 389 Roanoke voyages, 385; seen as outlet for Corbin, Francis: abducted by rioters, 114; accused England’s lower classes, 370 of business irregularities, 114; agent of Earl Color of Their Skin, The: Education and Race in Granville, 107, 110; dismissed by Earl Gran- Richmond, Virginia, 1954-1989: reviewed, 88 ville, 114; fails to send grants to Earl Gran- Colton, Elizabeth Avery: evaluates southern col- ville, 127; gives grants in Henry McCulloh’s leges for women, 320-322; hopes to eliminate lands, 111, 113; issued instructions for granting inferior colleges, 324; pictured, 321 land, 111; keeps Earl Granville’s records in his Commission on Interracial Cooperation: exam- house, 114; ordered to suspend land grants, 111 ple of southern liberalism, 159 Core Banks, 3, 10 Commoners, Tribute, and Chiefs: The Development Core Sound, 3, 10 of Algonquian Culture in the Potomac Valley: re- Cornelius, Ann, 28 viewed, 469 Cornelius, Austin: finds wounded brother, 30; Common Whites: Class and Culture in Antebellum holdings of, 28; notice of, pictured, 31; pub- North Carolina: reviewed, 68 lishes notice of brother's stabbing, 32; receives Concord, N.C., 48, 50 bulk of brother’s estate, 37; reports murder of Confederacy Is on Her Way up the Spout, The: Let- brother, 29; testifies at murder trial, 34, 35; ters to South Carolina, 1861-1864: reviewed, threatened by Edward Isham, 31 334 Cornelius, Henry EF, 28, 30 Confederate Congress: orders execution of white Cornelius, James: burial of, 37; death of, 30; officers of black troops, 278; to treat black sol- gravestone of, pictured, 37; hires Edward diers as insurrectionary slaves, 278 Isham, 27; holdings of, 28; murder of, 14, 28-29 Confederate High Command, The: Themes in Cornelius, James H., 28 Honor of T. Harry Williams: reviewed, 237 Cornelius, Jesse, 30; testifies at murder trial, 35 Confederate Lady Comes of Age, A: The Journal of Correspondence of John Bartram, 1734-1777, The: Pauline DeCaradeuc Heyward, 1863-1888: re- reviewed, 75 viewed, 91 Cosmography: induces overseas expeditions, 366 Confederate troops: attack Washington, N.C., Cotten, Alice R.: reviews Freedom’s Lawmakers: 273; capture runaway slaves, 288; execute A Directory of Black Officeholders during Recon- black spies, 272 struction, 492 Conference for Education in the South: discusses Couch, William Terry: accused of duplicity, 178; tegion’s problems, 306 advises R. W. Logan to include leftist blacks, Confiscation acts: do not include Granville Dis- 156-157; attacks theories of racial equality, trict, 122, 124 167-168; blames R. W. Logan for impasse over Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO): as book, 172; criticized by black reviewers, 177; ally of NAACP, 162 deplores miscegenation, 163, 163n; judges Conley, Patrick T.: his The Bill of Rights and the R. W. Logan’s manuscript unpublishable, 164; States: The Colonial and Revolutionary Origins of as national leader on race problem, 154, 178; American Liberty reviewed, 226 pictured, 157; proposes anthology to R. W. Conscription: of black troops, alarms ex-slaves, Logan, 156; receives conflicting advice regard- 267 ing publication of What the Negro Wants, 165- Conservative Constraints: North Carolina and the 167; seeks advice from southern liberals, 171; New Deal: reviewed, 71 shocked by content of anthology, 158; threat- Constitution, Law, and American Life, The: Criti- ens not to publish What the Negro Wants, 168, cal Aspects of the Nineteenth-Century Experi- 170; writes introduction to What the Negro ence: reviewed, 231 Wants, 166, 172-174 “Convergent evolution”: describes ecosystem of Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.): supports segrega- barrier islands, 7 tion, 171 Converse College: advertisement for, pictured, Court of Conference: hears Granville heirs’ suit, 316; degree offerings of, 317; meets criteria for 124 accreditation, 319 Coventry, George William, earl of: beneficiary of Cooke, William D.: compiles state map identify- Robert, Earl Granville’s estate, 12!; confirms ing “Clingman’s Peak,” 257, 404; defends his instructions to Granville agent, 123 use of “Clingman’s Peak,” 420; testimony of, Covington, Joseph P.: reviews Meadows of Mem- cited, 413 ory: Images of Time and Tradition in American Coosa River, 27 Art and Culture, 99 THE NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL REVIEW INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 515 Cowdrey, Albert: quoted, 395 144-145; pictured, 146; receives letter from Cozzens, Peter: his This Terrible Sound: The Battle Frederick Douglass, 147 of Chickamauga reviewed, 217 Daniel Boone: The Life and Legend of an American Craig, James U., 32 Pioneer: reviewed, 479 Craven, Wesley Frank: his Princetonians, 1784- Daniels, Josephus: heckled by white audience, 133 1790: A Biographical Dictionary reviewed, 227 Daniels, William B.: captains colonization ship to Craven County, 434 Africa, 437 Crawford, Martin: his William Howard Russell’s Dartmouth, earl of: approves Josiah Martin’s serv- Civil War: Private Diary and Letters, 1861-1862 ing as Granville agent, 119 reviewed, 213 Davis, Jackson: advises W. T. Couch, 171; ap- Creating the Modern South: Millhands and Manag- plauds W. T. Couch’s introduction, 174 ers in Dalton, Georgia, 1884-1984: reviewed, Davis, Lenwood G.: his A Travel Guide to Black 473 Historical Sites and Landmarks in North Carolina Creeke, John Ellis: letters by, 444, 446 reviewed, 100 Crisis: reviews What the Negro Wants, 177 Davis, Oroondates: holds Granville records, 123 Croft, James: enrolling officer for African Bri- Davis, Robert R.., Jr.: reviews Sherman: A Soldier’s gade, 281 Passion for Order, 353 Cromwell, Oliver, 391 Dawson, Joseph G., III: reviews The First Day at Cross, Jeanne Kerr: her The Papers of James Madi- Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union son. Presidential Series. Vol. 2 reviewed, 343 Leadership, 215 Crossings: The Great Transatlantic Migrations, De Bry, Theodor: engravings by, faithful to White 1870-1914: reviewed, 355 drawings, 380; engravings by, pictured, 374, Crow, Jeffrey J.: his A History of African Ameri- 377, 381, 382, 383, 384; publishes America, 376 cans in North Carolina reviewed, 204 Decision in the West: The Atlanta Campaign of Crow, Terrell Armistead: reviews Unheard Voices: 1864: reviewed, 351 The First Historians of Southern Women, 476 Declaration of Independence: its meaning for ra- Crymble, Murray: receives land grant from cial equality debated, 167-168 George Il, 113 Declaration of Rights: defines N.C.’s boundaries, Culclasure, Scott P.: article by, 14-39 122; said to have extinguished Granville Dis- Cumberland County, 120 trict, 124 Cumming, William P.: cited, 382 Dee, John: supports overseas expeditions, 366 Cunningham, Noble E., Jr.: reviews Hail to the Deerskins and Duffels: Creek Indian Trade with Candidate: Presidential Campaigns from Banners Anglo-America, 1685-1815: reviewed, 480 to Broadcasts, 98 De Grasse, John V.: cashiered from army, 293- Current, Richard Nelson: his Lincoln’s Loyalists: 295; chosen as officer in African Brigade, 277- Union Soldiers from the Confederacy reviewed, 278 85 DeKalb County, Ga., 19, 22 Currie-McDaniel, Ruth: reviews Gender, Class, Democrats: appeal to racial fears, 134; gain Race, and Reform in the Progressive Era, 96 strength in Mountains, 416; invoke white su- Currituck Inlet, 104 premacy, 51; joined by T. L. Clingman, 254; op- pose funding for black schools, 43-44 Currituck Sound, 1, 4 Cuyler, Theodore L.: compares J. C. Price to Fred- Dennis, Henry Wesley: agent of colonization soci- erick Douglass, 133 ety, 450, 453, 456, 458, 459, 460, 461, 464 Derby, William P.: comments on blacks’ fighting D ability, 273; reports on recruitment of African Brigade, 266; says black women encourage men Dabney, Virginius: advises W. T. Couch, 171, to enlist, 283 172, 173; applauds W. T. Couch’s introduction, Detroit, Mich.: riot in, compared to Boston Tea 174 Party, 161 [Dagget?], Mary, 24 De Vorsey, Louis, Jr.: his Keys to the Encounter: A Dallas, N.C., 32 Library of Congress Resource Guide for the Study Dallas, Tex., 134 of the Age of Discovery reviewed, 97 Dalton, Robert E.: his South Carolina Architects, Diamond City, N.C., 3 1885-1935: A Biographical Dictionary reviewed, Dick, Everett: his The Dixie Frontier: A Social His- 467 tory of the Southern Frontier from the First Trans- Dancy, John C.: blocks Jim Crow legislation, 145; montane Beginnings to the Civil War reviewed, helps establish technical college for blacks, 502 VOLUME LXX ¢ NUMBER 4 ¢ OCTOBER 1993 516 INDEX TO VOLUME LXX—1993 Dickey, Andrew Jackson, 32 Douglas Southall Freeman on Leadership: reviewed, Dickey, John Miller: founder of Lincoln Univer- 488 sity, 41 Dove, James A., Jr.: reviews Genius in the Garden: Dickinson, Samuel: sued by Granville heirs, 124 Charles F. Gillette and Landscape Architecture in Did Pocahontas Save Captain John Smith?: re- Virginia, 221 viewed, 468 Downs, Alan C.: reviews Noland’s Cherokee “Discourse How Her Majesty May Meet with and Diary: A U.S. Soldier’s Story from inside the Annoy the King of Spain, A”: presented by Cherokee Naticn, 83 Humphrey Gilbert, 368 Down to Now: Reflections on the Southern Civil “Discourse of Western Planting”: promotes colo- Rights Movement: reviewed, 504 nization, 371 Dozier, Charles, 41 Discovery of New Brittaine, The: intended for set- Dozier, Emily Pailin, 41 tlement of Albemarle region, 395 Drake, Francis: rescues Lane colony, 374 Disease: malaria, kills African colonizers, 439; Draper, Alonzo G.: officer in African Brigade, measles, 450 287; tries to recruit black troops, 291 Disfranchisement: adopted in southern states, Draper, William EF: favors emancipation of slaves, 149; affects public education, 305; in Missis- 271 sippi, 142-143; as related to Fourteenth Du Bois, W. E. B.: article by, pleases R. W. Logan, Amendment, 163; Southern Conference on 159; comments on interracial marriage, 164; Human Welfare silent on, 178 contributes to anthology, 157; mentor to R. W. District of North Carolina: commanded by John J. Logan, 155; pictured, 164; political views of, Peck, 291 characterized, 158n; refuses to revise article, Divers Voyages touching the Discouerie of America 170 and the Ilands Adiacent: publication of, 369-370 Ducktown, Tenn., 27 Dixie Frontier, The: A Social History of the South- Dudley, William S.: his The Naval War of 1812: ern Frontier from the First Transmontane Begin- A Documentary History. Vol. 2 reviewed, 344 nings to the Civil War: reviewed, 502 Duelling in America: reviewed, 361 Dobbs, Arthur: complains about boundaries of Duncan, Russell: his Blue-Eyed Child of Fortune: Carteret’s district, 106; notes offenses of Earl The Civil War Letters of Colonel Robert Gould Granville’s agents, 114 Shaw reviewed, 215 Documentary History of the First Federal Congress Duplin County: black recruits from, 287 of the United States of America: Debates in the Durant, George: one of first patentees in Albe- House of Representatives, First Session. Vol. 10, marle, 399; receives land grant from Indians, April-May 1789; Vol. 11, June-September 1789: 398 reviewed, 225 Durham, N.C., 138; public school system for, pro- Documentary History of the Ratification of the Con- moted, 304 stitution, The. Vol. 10, Ratification of the Consti- Durham Conference: meeting of African-Ameri- tution by the States. Virginia (3): reviewed, 484 can leaders, 159 Dodge, David: donates funds to Zion Wesley In- Durham Manifesto: critiqued by R. W. Logan, stitute, 131 162; issued by African-American leaders, 159 Dodge, William E.: donates funds to Zion Wesley Dye, Nancy S.: her Gender, Class, Race, and Re- Institute, 131; gives funds to J. C. Price, 44, 48; form in the Progressive Era reviewed, 95 pictured, 45 Dyer, Thomas G.: his Theodore Roosevelt and the Dodge Hall: erected at Zion Wesley Institute, Idea of Race reviewed, 503 132, 134; pictured, 136 Domestic Novelists in the Old South: Defenders of E Southern Culture: reviewed, 329 Donley, Richard W.: reviews Blood Brothers: A Eagles, Charles W.: his The Mind of the South: Short History of the Civil War, 347 Fifty Years Later reviewed, 335 Doolittle, Oscar: comments on activities of Ed- Earll, R. Edward: describes mullet camps, 3-4; ward Wild, 282 notes frugality of mullet fishermen, 6n; ob- Dougan, Michael B.: reviews Pea Ridge: Civil War serves many blacks in mullet fishery, 11; photo- Campaign in the West, 351 graphs mullet fishermen, 2; tours fisheries, 1 Douglass, Frederick: compared to J. C. Price, 133, Ebenezer Academy: trains T. L. Clingman, 243 149-150; eulogizes J. C. Price, 147; historical Ecology: of barrier islands, 1, 6-7, 9 prominence of, 40 Ecumenical Conference: held in London, 49 THE NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL REVIEW

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