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Liberty’s Chain: INDEX

Liberty’s Chain
INDEX
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Jay Family Trees
  2. List of African American Individuals in Jay Households
  3. Maps
  4. A Note to the Reader on Language
  5. Prologue
  6. Part One: Slavery and Revolution
    1. 1. Disruptions
    2. 2. Rising Stars
    3. 3. Negotiations
    4. 4. Nation-Building
    5. 5. Mastering Paradox
    6. 6. Sharing the Flame
  7. Part Two: Abolitionism
    1. 7. Joining Forces
    2. 8. A Conservative on the Inside
    3. 9. Breaking Ranks
    4. 10. The Condition of Free People of Color
    5. 11. Soul and Nation
  8. Part Three: Emancipation
    1. 12. Uncompromised
    2. 13. Parting Shots
    3. 14. Civil Wars
    4. 15. Reconstructed
  9. Epilogue
  10. Acknowledgments
  11. Appendix
  12. Notes
  13. Bibliography
  14. Index

INDEX

  • Abbe (enslaved person), 50–51, 53, 66–71, 188
  • Adams, John, 59–61, 62
  • Adams, John Quincy, 241–42, 280–82
  • Africa: African slave trade, 124–25, 140, 350; Jay family business in, 11–12, 18–19, 20; return of Amistad slaves to, 242–44. See also colonizationism/colonizationists
  • African Americans: activism of, 201–3; free, as Jay household servants, 177–80; freedom for, behind British lines, 43–44; military service for, as war aim, 344–45, 346–48, 349, 359; mob violence against, in New York City, 164–65; violence against, in the draft riots, 357–58. See also citizenship, Black; free Black people; freedom, Black; resistance, Black; rights of free Blacks
  • African Free School(s), 114, 118, 122, 249
  • African Repository: “Judge Jay Against Colonization,” 181
  • agency, Black, 87–88, 114–15, 174–75, 196–97
  • Allinson, Samuel, 44–45
  • American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society (AFAS), 226–27, 229
  • American Anti-Slavery Society (AAS): on candidates for governor in 1838, 205; Constitutional disagreement of, 206–9; racial integration of, 163–66, 169, 190; in rebuttals to Inquiry, 182; and William Jay, 169, 173, 176, 190–94, 209–10, 212, 225–29; women’s rights and participation in, 214–15, 227–28
  • American Bible Society (ABS), 150, 152–53, 322
  • American Colonization Society (ACS), 169–73, 180–81, 183–84
  • American Convention for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, 114, 117–18, 149–50, 153–54
  • American Freedmen’s Aid Union, 365
  • American Geographical and Statistical Society, 311–12
  • American Historical Association, 392
  • American Missionary Association, 322
  • American Peace Society (APS), 258–60, 276
  • American Tract Society, 322, 324–25
  • La Amistad, 239–44
  • “An Act concerning slaves and Servants,” 118–19
  • Andrew, John A., 375–76
  • Anglican Church, 16
  • animalization of Black people, 293–94
  • Antietam National Cemetery, 377–79
  • anti-institutionalism, 259–60
  • anti-Protestant terror, France, 12
  • antiracism: in activism on the Episcopal Church, 265, 266; of the AFAS, 226–27; in conflict with elites and neighbors, 305–6; in the reputation of John Jay II, 286–88; of the ULC, 359–60; in work of William Jay, 234–36, 249
  • antislavery constitutionalism, 247
  • Army of the Potomac, 344
  • arson plot of 1741, 21–25, 412n35
  • Articles of Confederation, 1–2, 83–88, 326, 328
  • Auboyneau, Prince, 22
  • Austria, 379–80, 465n40
  • Ball, Charles: A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Charles Ball, a Black Man, 194, 197, 199–201, 440n21
  • Banyer, Maria Jay, 53, 104–5, 165–66, 223, 443n12
  • baptism of slaves, 16–17
  • Barnett, James P., 300–301
  • Barney, Hiram, 318, 393
  • Beakley, Jacob: “Progress of the Caucasian Race in Science and Civilization,” 287–88
  • Bedford, New York, 382
  • Bedford Estate, 130–33, 135–36
  • Belt, Joseph, 290
  • Ben (enslaved person), 22–25, 26–27
  • Benevolent Empire, 322, 338
  • Benezet, Anthony, 34, 44–46, 49; Serious Considerations on several Important Subjects, 45–46
  • Benoit (enslaved person), 50–51, 53–54, 70–71
  • Benson, Egbert, 48–49, 80, 115
  • The Bible, 193, 236–37, 251–53, 276–77, 304, 322–25. See also American Bible Society
  • Bill of Rights, 207
  • Birney, James G., 230, 231–32, 269–70
  • Black Codes, 372
  • Black Regiments, 359
  • Blair, Henry W., 390
  • Boggs, Edward, 355–56
  • Book of Negroes, 64–65
  • Boudinot, Elias, 141, 152, 326
  • Boudinot, Tobias, 141, 142–43, 202
  • Bowditch, Henry, 272
  • boycotts of slave labor products, 193–94
  • Bradish, Luther, 204–5
  • Brash (enslaved person), 22–25, 26–27
  • Briggs, Olney, 147–48
  • Britain: abolitionism of, 96, 196–97, 212–13, 259; evacuation of slaves by, 58–62, 64–65, 82–83, 85–86, 93–96, 99–100. See also Peace of Paris; Revolutionary War
  • Brooks, Preston, 310
  • Buchanan, James, 320–21
  • Buckley, Theodore, 289
  • Bucktails, 144, 147
  • Burton, Mary, 23
  • Bush, George, 194, 195
  • Butler, Benjamin, 342
  • Cabinet of Freedom, The, 194–201
  • Caesar (enslaved person), 109–12, 134–35
  • Calhoun, John C., 268–69
  • California, 274, 279–80, 293, 295
  • Carleton, Guy, 64
  • Carmichael, William, 51, 52–53
  • caste system, racial, 3, 236, 253–54, 262–67, 286, 324–25. See also racism
  • Catholic Church/Catholicism, 7–8, 15, 36–37, 318–19, 368, 385, 391, 397. See also Christianity; religion
  • cemetery plots, 253–54
  • centennial celebrations, 383–85
  • Chapman, Eleanor Jay, 338
  • Chapman, John Jay, 394–95, 396–400, 397, 469n20; Causes and Consequences, 396; “The Grandfather,” 397
  • Chapman, Maria Weston, 225–26, 396–97
  • Chase, Salmon P.: in antislavery party politics, 312, 316–17, 319; and the Civil War, 337, 339, 350, 354, 362; in the fight for soul and nation, 255–56, 266, 272, 274–75, 282; as reader of View, 213
  • Child, David Lee, 234–35
  • Child, Lydia Marie, 228
  • children: enslaved, in rural New York, 26; indenture of, 136; mandatory service period for, 138–39; in Pennsylvania’s gradual emancipation plan, 48; Peter Jay trafficking in, 20–21; sale of, 20–21, 43–44; in separation of slave families, 109; in the transition to abolition in New York, 118–19, 121–22
  • Chisolm v. Georgia, 90
  • Christianity, 125, 200, 294–95, 324. See also Catholic Church/Catholicism; Episcopal Church/Episcopalians; religion
  • Cinqué, Joseph, 236, 239–40, 242, 244, 249, 254
  • citizenship, Black: in antislavery organizing, 76–77; as Civil War aim, 347, 349; in the Dred Scott decision, 325, 328; in end to gradualism, 140; in gradual abolition law, 114, 116, 117; in Reconstruction, 365, 366–68, 372–73; in the St. Domingue insurrection, 174; undermined by racism, 237–39
  • civil rights, 143, 144–48, 347, 369–70, 372–73, 382, 386. See also rights of free Blacks
  • Civil Service Commission, New York, 391
  • civil service reform, 386, 388
  • Civil War: aims of, 7, 344–49, 361; diplomatic service and foreign policy in, 350–52; draft riot and racism in NYC, 356–62; succession and secession in, 338–41; vindication of abolitionism in, 362–64; in Westchester County, 352–56; William Jay II on frontlines of, 341–44
  • Claas (enslaved person), 42–43, 58
  • Clarinda (enslaved person), 3, 90, 109, 130–34, 139–40, 156, 177–78, 187–88
  • Clarkson, Thomas, 80, 272–73, 333; The History of the Rise, Progress, and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave Trade, 194, 195–97
  • class, socioeconomic: in 1850s antislavery politics, 315; in the arson plot of 1741, 23; ascent in, 15–16, 17–19, 26–27; in attacks on William Jay, 235, 302–8; Black labor in, 112; in Civil War frontline service, 342–44; in the draft riots, 358–59; of the Grimké sisters, 216–17; in lives of household servants, 177–78, 179–80
  • Clay, Henry, 269, 293
  • Clinton, DeWitt, 144
  • Clopper, Catherine, 44
  • Coercive Acts, 33, 36
  • Colden, Cadwallader D., 138–39
  • College of Physicians and Surgeons, NYC, 300–301
  • colonizationism/colonizationists: in the Amistad case, 243–44; in The Cabinet of Freedom, 194, 196; in Condition of the Free People of Color, 237; countering of Inquiry by, 180–87; and the end of gradualism, 140; in immediatism, 126, 163, 165; rejection of, 149, 169–77, 335; in remembrances of William Jay, 331–33, 335
  • Colored American, 203
  • Colored Orphan Asylum, 347–48
  • Columbia College, 123, 166–67, 385. See also King’s College
  • Combs, Hester, 110
  • come-outerism, 265–67, 282
  • Committee for Detecting Conspiracies, 28
  • Committee of Vigilance, 201–3
  • compensation: in The Creole case, 245–46, 247–48; to free Blacks, for kidnapping, 271–72; in gradualist acts and laws, 113, 116, 117; in the Laurens plan, 47–48; monetary, in resistance of Abbe, 66–67; in the Peace of Paris, 58–62, 64–66, 82–83, 92–96, 99–101; in Reconstruction, 370; in rejection of colonizationism, 175–76
  • compromise: Fugitive Slave Act as, 293–95; in implementing the Peace of Paris, 82–83; Missouri Compromise, 141–44, 209–10, 316–18, 320, 325, 343; moral gaps in, 6–7, 211; necessity of, 208; Republican opposition to, 341; in the U.S. Constitution, 83–88
  • Confederate war dead, 377–79
  • Congress, U.S.: and abolition in Washington, D.C., 154; authority of, in issues of slavery, 141–42, 206–9; in The Cabinet of Freedom, 195–96; gag rules by, 196, 201, 207–8, 211, 229–30, 238, 241–42, 281; limitations of, in state procedures for fugitives, 204–5; and the Mexican War, 277; power of, in the migration of slaves, 326
  • Congressional Congress, New York Delegation, 36
  • Conkling, Roscoe, 386
  • Connecticut, 170–71
  • conservatism: and the Cabinet of Freedom, 194–201; in celebration of the American centennial, 384–85; and commitment to abolitionism, 190–94; in constitutional conflict, 206–9; in education of William Jay, 107, 123–24; of the Episcopalian Church, 324; and the Fugitive Slave Act, 297–98; in the Harlem Plains address, 384; and the New York constitution, 144; in the politics of abolitionism, 203–6; and radicalism, 5–6, 8, 180, 261, 370–71; in Reconstruction, 370–71, 372, 374–75; and the sins of federalism, 209–13; in vigilance on the rights of free Blacks, 201–3; of William Jay, 174, 180, 189–90, 237–38, 266
  • constitution, New York, 39–42, 144–50, 328
  • Constitution, United States: AAS conflict over abolition power of, 206–9; in admission of Missouri, 141–42; annexation of Texas in violation of, 271–72; Civil War aims for amendments to, 349; compromises on slavery in, 83–88; fugitives in, 289; and the Fugitive Slave acts, 294–95, 307–8; ratification of, 1–2; in rebutting the Dred Scott decision, 326
  • Continental Congress, 1–2, 32–33, 36–37, 45–46, 47–48, 65–66
  • conversion, Christian, 14, 16–17
  • Cooper, James Fenimore, 107, 162–63, 319–20
  • cooperation, interracial, 102, 163–64, 372–75
  • copyright law, 311
  • Cornish, Samuel, 203, 251
  • correspondence, Jay family, 4–5
  • Correspondence and Public Papers of John Jay, 393
  • corruption: of the Episcopal Church, 266; in expansion of slavery, 321, 322–23; in partisan politics, 272, 280; in reckoning, 396; and Reconstruction, 375–76, 385–86, 387–88, 391–93
  • da Costa, Jose and Maria, 291–93
  • Council of Safety, New York, 44
  • Cousins, George, 342
  • Covode, John, 377–79
  • Cox, Abraham L., 164, 167
  • Cox, Samuel H., 164, 176, 213
  • Crandall, Prudence, 170–71, 215
  • The Creole, 245–48, 260–61
  • crown/colonial tensions, 32
  • cruelty, 108–9, 132–33, 194, 249, 253–54, 268, 277–78
  • Crummell, Alexander, 236, 248–51, 252, 254, 262, 264, 299
  • culture: democratic, 261, 277–78; Gilded Age culture wars, 389–93; interracial, in New York City, 23; proslavery, threat of, 310–11
  • Cusno, Joseph, 135, 139, 223, 334–35, 343
  • Davis, Jefferson, 375
  • Dawson, Henry, 313–14
  • De Bow’s Review, 3, 336–37
  • Declaration of Independence, 40–41, 117, 142, 143–44, 241, 326
  • “Declaration of Rights” (Vermont), 41
  • Democratic Party/Democrats: abolitionist skepticism of, 229–30; in the Civil War, 361; in Gilded Age culture wars, 390; and the Kansas-Nebraska Act, 318–19, 320–21; in partisan politics and disunion, 269–70; in Reconstruction, 370, 378–79, 385–87; in Westchester County, 352–55
  • dependence and slavery, 20, 53–54, 69–70, 89–90, 176, 177–78
  • Dinah (enslaved person), 108–9, 121–22
  • diplomatic service, 50–51, 379–82
  • discipline of enslaved, 68, 70–71, 109–10. See also punishment of enslaved
  • discrimination, racial. See racism
  • disunion/disunity, 267–73, 281, 327–28, 340
  • Dolphin, 20
  • domestic order/disorder, 130–36, 224–25, 227–28
  • Dongan, John C., 91
  • Douglas, Stephen A., 340–41
  • Douglass, Frederick, 3, 330–31, 332–35, 366–67
  • Downing, George T., 295–97
  • draft riots, 357–58
  • Dred Scott decision, 325–29
  • due process, 206–9, 271, 293–94, 295, 372–73
  • Durer, William Alexander, 166–67
  • Dwight, Timothy, 123–24, 125–26
  • economics: in alliances between northerners and southern slaveholders, 192; dependency on slavery in, 20; in free states, 279–80; in Huguenot migration and use of slaves, 13, 17; of immediatism, 176; of slave ownership, 31, 54–55, 75–76, 108; of slavery in Northern colonies, 2–3; of slavery in the nation’s founding, 5–6; of the slave trade, 18–19, 238–39
  • Edict of Nantes, 12
  • Edmonds, John W., 290, 291–92
  • education: for African American servants, 137; and anti-Catholic sentiment, 391; Blair bill on, 390; denied to southern slaves, 200; for indentured servants, 135–36; of John Jay, 29–31; of John Jay’s daughters, 104–5; racism as impediment to, 186–87, 248–51, 447n33; in the Reconstruction agenda, 366–69, 370–71; in transition to abolition, 118; of William Jay, 107, 123–27; of William Jay’s daughters, 221–22; Young Men’s Society in, 168–69. See also literacy
  • egalitarianism: in antiracist activism, 236; in arguments against the Missouri Compromise, 142; centennial references to, 384; in critique of colonizationism, 173–74; in gradual abolition law, 117; in immediatism, 163, 166, 167–68; in Jay family activism, 6–7; of the NYMS, 76–77; as Reconstruction goal, 379; in the split with the AAS, 227–28
  • elderly slaves: ethics of caring for, 97, 109–10, 257–58; support for in New York legislation, 138
  • elites/elite classes: in anti-abolition violence, 193–94; antislavery activism in conflict with, 7; in the Civil War era, 357–61; in class conflict, 302–8; in Gilded Age culture wars, 389–90; in New York, 15, 20–21, 24–25, 30, 33, 92, 302–8, 357–61; in Reconstruction, 365–66, 368–71, 375–76; slavery in life of, 20–21, 30; Southern, in Charles Ball’s slave narrative, 199–200
  • Ellison, Thomas, 107
  • Emancipation Proclamation, 348–49, 354
  • Emancipator, The, 286
  • Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 396
  • Ennals, Abram, 120
  • Episcopal Church/Episcopalians: in the abolition movement, 447–48n3; battle for soul of, 262–67; Black, 218, 248–51, 262–65, 332, 338; fight for Black equality in, 248–51, 255–56; moral compromises of, 6–7; public dispute with, 324; racism of, 236–37, 248–51; recognition of St. Phillips by, 299–300; in Rye, 355–56. See also Christianity; religion
  • equality/inequality: in antislavery organizing, 77; in colonizationism, 173–74; and conservatism, 8; in the Episcopal Church, 248–51, 255–56; equal protection in law, 2, 90, 372–73, 386; gendered, 214–15, 217, 227–28; in the gradual emancipation era, 136; in the Harlem Plains address, 383–84; household, 4–5; in immediatism, 166; in paternalism, 54; radical, 3–4; in Reconstruction, 365, 370, 371–72; in tributes on William Jay, 331–32; and voting rights in New York state, 146–47, 148; West Indian experience of, 287
  • ethnicity, 14–15, 384, 392
  • evacuation of slaves, 58–62, 64–65, 82–83, 85–86, 93–96, 99–100
  • Evangelical Alliance, 391
  • exceptionalism, American, 323–24, 388
  • expansion of slavery: in compromise for trade with Spain, 85; in Kansas, 316–17, 320; and the Mexican War, 269, 274, 275, 277, 279–81; in the Missouri crisis, 141–44; as a religious problem, 321
  • export bans, 73–74, 78–88, 110, 118–19
  • family separation, 90, 108–9, 130–34, 136, 199
  • fanatics/fanaticism, 161–62, 173–74, 180–83, 184, 193, 202–3, 305, 329–30
  • federalism, 209–13
  • Federalist Papers, 85–86
  • Federalists/Federalist Party, 86–87, 92–93, 98, 104, 113, 117, 147
  • female bodies, Black, 294
  • feminism, 225–26
  • Fenton, Reuben, 377–79
  • Fifth Amendment, U.S. Constitution, 206–9
  • First Amendment, 190–92
  • First Confiscation Act, 342
  • Fish, Hamilton, 380
  • Flanders, Henry, 305
  • Flournoy, J. J., 251–53
  • foreign policy, U.S., 1–2, 6, 350–52
  • Fortress Monroe, 342–44
  • founders/founding fathers: in analysis of the Dred Scott decision, 328; in antislavery politics, 318; avoidance of slavery in nation-building by, 74; in the Broadway Tabernacle speech, 314–16; legacy of, 2–4, 129–30, 167–68, 185–86, 304–5, 333–34, 384–85; pragmatism and piety of, 44–49; proslavery sentiments of, in nation-building, 420n3. See also Jay, John
  • Fourteenth Amendment, 372–73
  • France, 12–13, 58–71
  • Franklin, Benjamin, 2, 59–61, 62, 65, 67–68, 76
  • Franklin, William Temple, 69
  • free Black people: assertiveness and agency of, 115; and colonizationism, 140, 169–71; in domestic order, 135–36; and the fugitive slave laws, 295–302; insults to, 251–54; as Jay household servants, 177–80; kidnapping of, 6, 78–80, 201–3, 238–39, 271–72, 290, 291–92, 296–97; legal defense of rights of, 119–21; in Missouri, 129–30, 143; in New York colony’s slave regime, 19; in the New York Constitution, 144–48; in New York’s gradual abolition law, 115–16, 117, 119; in post-Revolutionary War New York, 78–81; racism in condition of, 235–36; rejection of colonizationism by, 169–70; threat to home and family of the Fugitive Slave Act, 296–97; white fear of, 174, 175–76, 191. See also African Americans; citizenship, Black; Jay, William: On the Condition of the Free People of Color; rights of free Blacks
  • Free Democratic League of the City & County of New York (FDL), 312–16
  • Free Democrats. See Republican Party/Republicans
  • Freedmen’s Aid Union/Association, 365, 366–68
  • Freedmen’s Bureau, 368
  • freedom, Black: Black agency in achieving, 114–15; in British war policy, 58–66; in international law, 81–83, 97; and national liberty, 76–77; paired with citizenship, 116; in post-war New York, 80–81; presumption of, in the Belt case, 290; in the Reconstruction agenda, 368–69; transitional period in, 118–22
  • “freedom national” principle, 312–13, 314–15
  • free labor, 162–63, 176, 287, 311–12, 318, 372–73
  • free soil, 67, 290, 301–2, 310–11, 325
  • Free Soil Party, 275–76, 312–13, 318
  • free states, 143, 271–72, 279–80, 293, 295, 317–18, 325–26, 454–55n44
  • Frelinghuysen, Theodore, 269
  • Frémont, James C., 320–21
  • fugitives, slave: in Civil War policy, 342; compensation for, in negotiations with Britain, 93–96; in the Constitution, 84, 85, 87–88, 210; in Jewish law, 323; John Jay II’s role with, 285; jury trials for, 204–5, 210, 231; in kidnappings, 202–3, 291–92; in laws, 153–54, 288–99, 304–5; in New York City, 115; in vindication of John Jay, 304–5; in the will of William Jay, 329–30
  • Fussell, Rose, 119–20
  • gag rules, Congressional, 196, 201, 207–8, 211, 229–30, 238, 241–42, 281
  • Gallatin, Albert, 268–69
  • Garnet, Henry Highland, 250
  • Garrison, William Lloyd, 6–7, 163–64, 208, 366, 398; Thoughts on African Colonization, 170
  • Garrisonians/Garrisonianism: in the AAS conflict over the Constitution, 206; anti-institutionalism of, 232, 259–60; criticism of John Jay II by, 286; cross-factional alliance with, 290, 314; and peace advocacy, 259–60; radicalism of, 189–90, 225; rapprochement with, 338; on the women question, 214, 217, 225–26, 227–29
  • Gay, Sydney Howard, 302, 314
  • gender: in attachment to household servants, 178; in domestic patriarchy, 217–19; economy of, 180; equality/inequality of, 214–15, 217, 227–28; in expectations of Jay family women, 219–25; and the Fugitive Slave Act, 294; in Jay family roles, 219–25, 443n12; norms of, 214–15, 228–29, 294
  • government, federal: in The Condition of Free People of Color, 238, 245; in expansion of slavery, 141–42, 279–80; and fugitive slaves, 210, 288–89, 293, 308; jurisdiction of, 206, 325, 346; power of, on slavery, 206–9, 313–14, 348–49; in Reconstruction, 372–73, 387; and slavery in Washington, D.C., 154–55, 163; A View of the Action of the Federal Government in Behalf of Slavery, 209–13. See also Congress, U.S.; Constitution, United States
  • governorship of John Jay, 113–18
  • gradualism/gradualists: in the Broadway Tabernacle speech, 315–16; of John Jay, 3–4, 50–51, 103–4, 109–10, 162, 183, 185–86, 305; in joining forces, 167–68, 172, 175–76, 182–84; in nation-building, 77–78, 87, 91; in the New York constitution, 39–42, 148–50; in New York State law, 1–2, 3, 113–18, 136–40; in the paradox of slave ownership and abolitionism, 102–4, 109–10, 111–12, 113–22, 124–25, 127–28; in Pennsylvania, 48–49; as resource for abolitionism, 8; in sharing the flame, 130–40, 141, 142, 143–44, 148–50, 151, 154; transition to immediatism of, 4–5, 161–62; in William Jay’s education, 123, 124–25, 126
  • Graham, Lewis, 44
  • Grant, Ulysses S., 379
  • Greeley, Horace, 375
  • Gregoire, Henri, 153
  • Grenville, Lord, 93–94, 95–96
  • Grimké, Angelina, 215–17, 225–26
  • Grimké, Sarah, 215–16, 225–26; Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Women, 217
  • Grimké, Thomas, 124
  • Haight, Edward, 354
  • Haiti, 174–75, 211
  • Hale, John P., 312, 318
  • Hamilton, Alexander, 2, 46–48, 80, 86–87, 100–101, 120–21
  • Hamilton, Robert, 347–48
  • Hamilton, William, 102–3, 115, 127–28
  • Harpur, Robert, 30
  • Harrison, William Henry, 230, 232–33
  • Haskin, John B., 353
  • Hayes, Rutherford B., 386–89
  • heroism, Black military, 359
  • Heyrich, Elizabeth, 153, 215
  • historical education, Euro-centered, Protestant, 392
  • Hobart, John Henry, 262–63
  • Hornblower, Joseph Coerten, 306–8
  • Horsmanden, Daniel, 22–25
  • Horton, Gilbert, 153, 238–39
  • House of Representatives, 84, 191–92. See also Congress, U.S.
  • Hughson, John, 22
  • Huguenots, 12–14, 15–16, 17–19
  • ideology: of British antislavery, 94; of the FDL, 313–14; free labor, 176, 287; Garrisonian, on gender, 215, 217; of nonresistance, 228–29; and the paradox of abolitionism and slaveholding, 112; Quaker, 76
  • immediatism/immediatists: in breaking ranks, 215–16, 221; in the Broadway Tabernacle speech, 315–16; in class conflict, 305; and conservatism, 189, 193, 194, 197; Jay family’s embrace of, 3–4, 6–7; of John Jay II, 166–69, 287; as official government policy, 358; in the paradox of slaveholding and abolition, 124–25, 126, 127–28; as radicalism, 6–7; as reckoning, 399–400; in sharing the flame, 146, 153–54; transition to, 4–5, 161–62; of William Jay, 161–66, 169–77, 186, 333. See also radicalism/radical abolitionism
  • immigration, 313, 318–19, 391, 469n20
  • import of slaves, 18–19, 73–74, 78, 88, 110, 118–19
  • indenture/indentured servitude, 19, 117, 122, 135–36
  • Independent Democratic Party, 316–17
  • indignities, 250, 254, 262–63
  • indignities of slavery and racism, 98
  • infrastructure, antislavery, 312–14
  • insurrection, slave: in Civil War policy, 346, 347; in the Constitution, 84; in Manhattan, 19; in South Carolina, 21–22; on St. Domingue, 113, 115, 120–21; in William Jay’s critique of colonizationism, 174–75
  • integration, racial, 163–66, 169, 190, 249–50, 265, 384
  • intermarriage/racial intermixing, 126, 165, 183–84, 251–53, 262
  • international court proposal, 259–60
  • international relations: The Creole case in, 245–48; in diplomatic ambitions of John Jay II, 350–52; John Jay in, 1–2, 50–54, 58–66, 81–83, 92–101
  • Ives, Silliman, 265
  • Jackson, Andrew, 191, 277
  • Jackson, James Caleb, 227
  • James II, King of England, 14–15
  • Jay, Ann (“Nancy”), 104–5, 135, 326, 443n12
  • Jay, Anna, 179, 217–19
  • Jay, Anna Marie Bayard, 15
  • Jay, Anna Marika, 81
  • Jay, Augusta McVickar, 130, 165–66, 177–78, 219–25, 224, 326–27
  • Jay, Auguste (Augustus), 6, 11–14, 15, 18–19
  • Jay, Eleanor Kingsland Field, 221, 351, 353, 389
  • Jay, Françoise, 20
  • Jay, Frederick, 54–56, 114
  • Jay, James, 29–30
  • Jay, John: advocacy for the U.S. Constitution by, 83–88; An Address to the People of the State of New York, on the Subject of the Constitution, 86; anti-slavery in national service of, 73–74; in antislavery organizing, 74–81, 152–53; early life and elite ambitions of, 31–33; final years and death of, 155–57; as governor, 1–2, 3, 91–92, 98–101, 113–18; as gradualist, 1–2, 3–4, 113–18; legacy and record of, 129–30, 181–86, 247–48, 261, 303–5, 307; national vision of, 311–14; in negotiations on compensation with the British, 92–101; in negotiations with slaves, 50–51, 71–72; and the New York constitution, 39–42, 415–16n35; opposition to expansion of slavery in Missouri, 141–42; ownership and management of slaves by, 2–3, 6, 50–51, 54–58, 66–72, 107–12, 130–33; as parent, 103–7; paternalism towards slaves by, 54–58; and the Peace of Paris, 50–54, 58–66, 81–83; portraits of, 63, 99; pragmatism and piety of, 44, 45–46, 48–49; revolutionary path of, 36–39; as Supreme Court Chief Justice, 88–90; in the transition to abolition in New York, 121–22
  • Jay, John II: abolitionism in politics, 205–6; in advocacy for fugitive slaves, 285, 288–93, 298–99, 301–2; American Centennial address by, 383–85; on the Amistad, 241; as an immediatist, 3, 6–7, 166–69; anti-corruption work of, 388–89, 391; and Antietam National Cemetery, 377–79; and Charles Sumner, 309–10, 339; and the Civil War, 7, 337–40, 344–49; in class conflict, 306, 307; death of brother in importance of, 225; in defense of Inquiry, 184–85; departure from focus on Black rights, 386–88; diplomatic ambitions and service of, 350–52, 379–80; on the Dred Scott decision, 325–26; and the Episcopal Church, 236–37, 250–51, 262–65, 299–300; family history in will of, 392–93; and free household servants, 179–80; in Gilded Age culture wars, 389–93; marginalization of, in Westchester County, 352–56; and the New York elite, during the Civil War, 357–62; in party politics, 268–69, 310–11, 312–14, 316–21; on political abolitionism, 314–16; portrait of, 367; Protestant-centered vision of, 385, 391–92; in public disputes, 180–86, 206–9, 323–24, 377–80; in Reconstruction, 374; Reconstruction agenda of, 7–8, 365–68; uncompromising reputation of, 286–88; as witness to the Thirteenth Amendment, 362–64; and the YMAS, 187, 227
  • Jay, John II: writings of: “American Free—or American Slave,” 319–20; Caste and Slavery in the American Church, 262; “Enlistment of slaves in the Army,” 346; “Our Duty to the Freedmen,” 366–68; Thoughts on the Duty of the Episcopal Church in Relation to Slavery, 236–37; “Why We Resist and What We Resist,” 336–37, 340
  • Jay, Maria (daughter of William and Augusta), 165–66
  • Jay, Mary Duyckinck, 134, 155
  • Jay, Mary Van Cortlandt, 20
  • Jay, Peter (brother of John), 56, 133–35
  • Jay, Peter (father of John), 20, 24, 25–27, 30–31, 35, 42, 57–58
  • Jay, Peter Augustus: on colonialization, 433n55; death and will of, 257–58; legal and political activism of, 104; in New York abolition, 119–20, 121–22, 136–38, 140; in the New York constitutional convention of 1821, 144–50; in NYMS activism, 113–14; opposition to expansion of slavery in Missouri, 141; on rebuttals to Inquiry, 184–85; on sale of disruptive slaves, 97–98; as slaveowner, 3, 109–10
  • Jay, Pierre, 11–13
  • Jay, Sarah Louisa, 104–7, 106, 151
  • Jay, Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (“Sally”), 31–32, 43–44, 51–54, 89–90, 106
  • Jay, William: and the AAS, 169, 173, 176, 190–94, 209–10, 212, 214–15, 225–29; on the annexation of Texas, 267–68, 270–71; as antislavery activist, 6–7; in the battle for the soul of the church, 265–67; bequest for fugitive slaves by, 329–30; and The Cabinet of Freedom, 194–201; childhood of, 105–7, 106; in class conflict, 303–5, 306–7; and colonialization, 169–77, 180–87; and the Committee of Vigilance, 201–3; conservatism in abolitionism of, 189–94; conservatism of, 174, 180, 189–90, 237–38, 266; in constitutional conflict, 206–9; death of, 328–29, 330–34; on disunion, 271–73; early antislavery expressions of, 129–30, 143, 150–55; education of, 107, 123–27; in electoral politics, 203–6; forebodings of civil war, 309, 310; and the Free Soil Party, 275–76; on fugitive slaves and fugitive slave law, 288–89, 293–98, 307–8; gendered expectations for family of, 217–25; health problems as impediment to, 128; as immediatist, 3, 6, 161–66, 168–77, 186, 333; peace advocacy by, 258–61; portrait of, 177, 355; racism in personal attacks against, 234–36; in rebutting the Dred Scott decision, 327–29; on religion and slavery, 317, 321, 322–25; as social critic, 310–11; and the Underground Railroad, 302; on the war with Mexico, 273–74; will and testament of, 334–35; on women in activism, 215–17
  • Jay, William: On the Condition of the Free People of Color: Amistad case in, 239–44; The Creole case in, 245–48; impediments to education in, 248–51; insults and outrage in, 251–54; northern racism as inspiration for, 234–36; racism by church and state in, 237–39, 248–51
  • Jay, William: writings of: Address to the Inhabitants of New Mexico and California, 279–80; An Examination of the Mosaic Laws of Servitude, 322–23; Inquiry into the Character and Tendency of the American Colonization, 169–77; The Life of John Jay, 161, 171–72, 328; “On the Profession of Lawyering,” 126–27; “Reply to a Letter from a Clergymen of the Episcopal Church,” 262; A Review of the Causes and Consequences of the Mexican War, 256–57, 276–82; A View of the Action of the Federal Government in Behalf of Slavery, 209–13; War and Peace, 258–61
  • Jay, William II, 341–44
  • Jay Gardoqui Treaty, 85
  • Jay Homestead, 131, 338
  • Jay Treaty, 1–2, 95–96, 98–101
  • Jefferson, Thomas, 2, 3–4, 129; Notes on the State of Virginia, 77
  • Johnson, Andrew, 368–69, 371, 375–76
  • Johnson, Peter, 134. See also Peet (enslaved person)
  • Johnson, Samuel, 30
  • Joseph, Peter, 120
  • jury trials, 204–5, 210, 231
  • Kansas, 309–10, 316–21
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act, 317–18
  • Kelley, Abby, 214, 225–26
  • Kerry, Margaret, 23
  • kidnapping of free Black people, 6, 79, 201–3, 238–39, 271–72, 290, 291–92
  • King, John A., 375
  • King, Joseph, 119–20
  • King’s College, 30
  • Kirk, George, 289–90
  • Kissam, Benjamin, 31
  • Know Nothing Party, 318–19, 320
  • La Rochelle, France, 11–12
  • Laurens, Henry, 59–61, 65, 248
  • Laurens, John, 46–48
  • Laurens Plan, 46–48, 58, 346
  • law, international: in The Creole case, 245–48; Lebranca case in, 291–92
  • laws and legislation: anti-Black, and colonizationists, 170–71; federal, in perpetuating slavery, 209–13; on fugitive slaves, 84, 85, 87–88, 153–54, 210, 288–99, 304–5; gradual abolition acts and laws, 113–18; personal liberty law, 231; required for emancipation, 171–72; Somerset decision in, 35
  • Leavitt, Joshua, 213
  • Lee, Peter, 201–3, 238–39
  • legacy, Jay family: defense of, on the war with Mexico, 273–74; evoked against expansion of slavery, 129–30; founding and slavery in, 2–4; of John Jay, 181–86, 247–48, 261, 303–5, 307; in the question of disunion, 272, 327–28; Thirteenth Amendment as vindication of, 363–64; in William Jay’s biography, 392–93
  • Leisler, Jacob, 15
  • Leisler Movement and Rebellion, 15
  • Lemmon, Juliet and Jonathan, 301–2
  • The Liberator, 161–62
  • Liberia, 171, 186–87, 347
  • Liberty Party, 232, 255–56, 267–68, 269–70, 274–76, 286–87
  • Lieber, Francis, 328
  • Lincoln, Abraham and administration, 339–41, 342, 343, 344–45, 350–51, 365
  • literacy, 54, 125, 137, 146, 200, 279–80, 323–24. See also education
  • Littlepage, Lewis, 52
  • Livingston, Brockholst, 51, 52–53, 81
  • Livingston, Robert R., Jr., 31–32, 59–60
  • Livingston, William, 32–33, 42–43, 44–45, 81
  • Long, Henry, 298
  • Louis XIV, King of France, 12
  • Loyal National League, 357–58
  • loyalty: in the Civil War and Reconstruction, 354–55, 357, 366–67, 371; in culture wars, 391; oaths of, as enslavement, 37–38; of slaves and masters, 4–5, 58, 134, 155, 334–35
  • Ludlow, Henry, 164, 165, 168–69
  • Lushington, Richard, 78–79
  • lynching, 199, 268, 305, 357–58, 394–96
  • Madison, James, 2, 59–60
  • Maine, 143
  • Manhattan, 21–25, 32, 42, 64, 340–41
  • manumission: and antislavery activism, 76–78, 80–81; behavior in, 68–69; in gradualism, 76–78, 87; in Jewish law, 323; laws on, 19, 73–74, 76, 78, 118–19; negotiations for, 50, 109; purchase price in terms of, 108; societies in activism for, 315–16; in the transition to abolition, 119–20, 121–22, 136, 138–39; violations of, 114–15. See also New-York Manumission Society
  • Marcy, William, 202–3, 205
  • marriage: interracial, 126, 165, 183–84, 251–53, 262; of slaves, 54, 265
  • Martinique, 51–52, 80
  • Mary (enslaved person), 57–58, 75–76, 97, 110–11
  • Maryland, 377–78
  • Massachusetts, 35
  • McVickar, John, 166–67, 331
  • medical school, 299–300
  • Mexican War, 256–57, 273–80
  • migration: Black, post-Reconstruction, 395; of free Blacks, 146, 238; of slaves, 141–42, 325–26
  • Milbourne, Jacob, 15
  • militarism, critique of, 277–78
  • military emancipation doctrine, 344, 348
  • military service: for African Americans, 344–45, 346–48, 349, 359; in the Laurens Plan, 46–48, 58, 346; of William Jay II, 341–44
  • Miller, Samuel, 115–16
  • miscegenation. See intermarriage/racial intermixing
  • Missouri and the Missouri Compromise, 129–30, 141–44, 209–10, 316–18, 320, 325, 343, 344–45
  • Moll (enslaved person), 75–76
  • Montgomery, Zilpah (enslaved person), 3, 130–33, 139, 177–79, 187–88, 334–35, 381–82
  • morality/immorality: in a Civil War slave trade treaty, 351; in immediatism, 163, 167; in the Mexican War, 276–77, 278; in the paradox of slaveholding and abolitionism, 103, 104–5, 123, 124–25; and partisanship, 280; and patriotism, 8, 45; in public commitment to abolition, 192–93; in rebutting the Dred Scott decision, 327; of reenslavement, 100–101; of resistance to the Fugitive Slave Act, 295; of slavery and founding ideals, 5–6, 58; southern, 199–200; in William Jay’s critique of colonizationism, 171
  • Moran, Richard, 253
  • Morris, Gouverneur, 39–42, 44, 84
  • Morris, Richard, 26
  • Morris, William, 299
  • Morrison, John, 176
  • Mosaic Law, 322–23
  • Munro, Peter Jay, 68–69, 70, 113–15, 119–21, 136–37, 144, 149, 427–28n47
  • Murray, John Jr., 31
  • Murray, Lindley, 31
  • Myers, Stephen A., 302
  • Napoleon, Louis, 289, 291–92
  • Nash, Daniel D., 202, 203
  • National Anti-Slavery Standard (NASS), 228, 292
  • nationalism: in the Harlem Plains address, 384; of John Jay II, 7–8, 311–12, 379–80, 388–90; as the key to preserving the union, 341; merged with abolitionism, 361–62; in the Mexican War, 277–78; and social justice, in Reconstruction, 365–66; of the Young Men’s Anti-Slavery Society, 167–68
  • nativism, 318–19, 366, 391
  • natural law, 34–35, 40–41, 83, 93–94, 238–39, 247. See also positive law
  • Neau, Elias, 16–17, 19
  • Nebraska, 316–18
  • necessity, military, 345, 346, 348–49
  • New England Anti-Slavery Society (NEAS), 189–90
  • New Jersey, 44–45, 308
  • Newkirk, Barnet, 119–20
  • New Mexico, 274, 279–80, 293
  • New Rochelle, New York, 17, 30
  • New York: constitution of, 39–42, 144–50, 328; export bans in, 73–74, 78–88, 118–19; manumission laws in, 73–74; politics in, 84, 113, 376, 385–86; slave population in, 77–78
  • New York Anti-Slavery Society (NYAS), 169, 204–6
  • New York City: Black population of, 357–58; as the national capital, 74–75; riots in, 164–65, 356–62; slave codes in, 40–41; slave population of, 17
  • New York Colony, 14–15, 16–17, 18–19
  • New York Federalism, 144
  • New-York Historical Society, 287–88
  • New-York Manumission Society (NYMS): in advocacy for gradualism, 102, 113–16; in the Broadway Tabernacle speech, 315–16; on colonialization, 433n55; in defense of rights of free Blacks, 78–79; in the end of gradual abolition, 136–37, 139; in enforcement of antislavery statutes, 113–14; and John Jay, 76–81, 88, 91; and the Philadelphia constitutional convention, 84–85, 87; in the transition to abolition in New York, 120–21, 122. See also manumission
  • New York State law: gradual emancipation in, 1–2, 3, 113–18, 136–40; on slavery and emancipation, sojourn loophole in, 204–5
  • New-York Young Men’s Anti-Slavery Society. See Young Men’s Anti-Slavery Society
  • nonresistance, theory of, 225, 226–27, 259–60
  • norms, gendered, 214–15, 228–29, 294
  • Northwest Ordinance, U.S. Constitution, 85
  • Ohio, 238, 239, 326, 329. See also Salmon P. Chase
  • Olmstead, Frederick Law, 357
  • Onderdonk, Benjamin, 248–51, 263–64
  • Onderdonk, Henry, 250–51
  • Oswald, Richard, 59–60
  • pacifism, 45–46, 76, 225, 258–61, 272–73
  • Paine, Elijah, 301
  • Paine, Thomas, 34
  • Paley, William: The Principals of Moral and Political Philosophy, 124–25
  • partisanship: and the Civil War, 339–40; and disunion, 267–73; in government service, 387–88; in gradualism, 116; in the Harlem Plains centennial address, 385; in the Missouri crisis, 129, 143; and morality, 280; in nation-building, 92–93, 98–100; in parting remarks of John Jay II, 385; perils of, in 1858, 310–11; in political appointments, 313–14; in removal of John Jay’s portrait, 355. See also political parties
  • paternalism: in approaches to antislavery activism, 6–7; in bequests to former slaves, 257–58; in domestic order, 135; in household equality, 4–5; long-distance, 54–58; of the NYMS, 77, 124–25; toward Abbe, 66; toward women in abolitionism, 215–16
  • Paton, David, 156
  • patriarchy, 6–7, 55–56, 97, 214–15, 217–19, 228, 294, 296–97
  • patriotism: in the American Centennial address, 383–84; in Civil War military service, 341–42; invoked in politics, 319–20; of John Quincy Adams, 280–82; and metaphors of enslavement, 38–39; and morality, 8, 45–46; in peace advocacy, 259–60; in rebuttals to Inquiry, 183, 184; and Reconstruction, 369–70, 378; redefining, 276–79
  • patronage, political, 354, 355, 388, 391
  • peace advocacy of William Jay, 258–61, 272–73
  • Peace of Paris, 58–66, 81–83
  • Peet (enslaved person), 89, 96–97, 133–34
  • Pennington, J. W. C., 244, 298–99
  • Pennsylvania, 48–49
  • persuasion: antislavery evidence in, 196; moral, 166, 171, 190–94, 207–8, 211, 213, 232, 261; wartime as opportunity for, 345
  • Philipse, Cuffee, 22
  • Philipse, Frederick, 18, 26
  • Phillis (enslaved person), 111
  • Phoenix Society, 168–69
  • piety, 44–49, 77, 147–48, 152–53, 172–73, 303–4, 308, 330–31
  • Pine, Jack, 135–36
  • plantation society, 51–52
  • Plato (enslaved person), 42–43, 56, 57–58, 75–76
  • Plato, young (enslaved person), 97–98
  • poetry, antislavery, 115
  • political abolitionism, 232–33, 256, 314–15
  • political parties: alliance building with, 310–11; antislavery, 226–27, 229–33, 256, 274–76, 316–21. See also under name of party; partisanship
  • political tyranny-as slavery-trope, 37–39
  • politics: anti-administration, in the draft riots, 358; antislavery, 266, 267–73, 275–76, 316, 318; electoral, 203–6, 229–33; New York, 84, 113, 376, 385–86; racial, in Douglass’s eulogy of William Jay, 332–33; in Reconstruction, 371–73, 376; revolutionary, in critiques of slavery, 34; of slavery and disunion, 267–73; as temptation from abolitionism, 189; in Westchester County, 353
  • Polk, James and administration, 269–70, 273
  • positive law, 35, 40–41, 83. See also natural law
  • poverty, 151, 311–12
  • Powell, William P., 291–92, 295–97
  • pragmatism, 44–49, 95–96, 193–94, 274–75, 345–46
  • prejudice, color. See racism
  • Preliminary and Conditional Articles of Peace, 60–61
  • Preston, Horace, 298–99
  • Prigg v. Pennsylvannia, 288–89
  • property: in The Creole case, 245–46; in English liberty, 33–34; in the Fugitive Slave Act, 297; human, in wills and estates, 57–58; in negotiations on compensation, 95; in the Peace of Paris, 59–66; in pragmatism on slavery, 44; rights to, 34–35, 36–37, 65, 245–46; slaves in Jay’s survey of, 107–8; in voting rights, 144–45, 147
  • Protestant Church. See Episcopal Church/Episcopalians; Huguenots
  • public opinion: and The Cabinet of Freedom, 201; danger of Black violence in, 296; European, on the Civil War, 350, 351; and moral leadership, 256–57; as moral standard, 280, 281–82, 304; northern, and nonviolent resistance, 196; overseas, in Civil War foreign policy, 350; in peace advocacy, 259; power of moral suasion in, 232; in the sins of federalism, 212–13; Southern, on abolition, 199
  • punishment of enslaved, 24–25, 97–98, 109–10, 200. See also discipline of enslaved
  • Pyne, Thomas, 212, 259
  • Quakers, 31, 44–46, 216
  • Quincy, Edmund, 286
  • race: in constitutional rights, 204–5; environmentalist ideas on, 125; in the Harlem Plains address, 384; in hypocrisy of the Episcopal Church, 265–66; integration of, in the AAS, 163–66, 169, 190; and service in the Jay household, 156; and voting rights in the New York constitution, 144–50
  • racism: in attitudes on William Jay, 234–36; in colonizationism, 169–70; in De Bow’s Review, 336–37; in disfranchisement, 144–47; in the draft riots, 358; of the Episcopal Church hierarchy, 236–39, 262–65; in failure of gradual emancipation bills, 77–78; graveyard, 335; as impediment to education, 186–87, 248–51, 447n33; institutional, 236–39; in the Missouri Compromise, 143; Northern, in abolitionism, 204; as obstacle to American progress, 186–87; patterns of, 254; proslavery militancy in, 324–25; ULC’s attempts to reverse, 359–60
  • radicalism/radical abolitionism: of the AAS, 163–64, 225; in antislavery fusion politics, 318; and conservatism, 5–6, 189–90; embrace of, 6–7; joining forces with, 169; in Reconstruction, 371, 373–75. See also immediatism/immediatists
  • Randolph, Edmund, 93–96
  • ratification of the Constitution, 86–87
  • rebellions, slave: aboard La Amistad, 239–44; as an argument for abolition, 175; in the Constitution, 84; aboard The Creole, 245–47, 260–61; New York arson plot, 21–25, 412n35; in South Carolina, 21–22; St. Domingue insurrection, 113, 174
  • reckoning, 394–400
  • Reconstruction: burying the past in, 377–79; and the election of Hayes, 385–89; elite agenda in, 366–68; hopes for social justice and equality in, 365–66; intervention and contention in, 372–76
  • reenslavement, 87–88, 100–101, 111–12, 204
  • Reese, David M., 181–86
  • refugees: French West Indian, 120–21; Huguenot, 13–14; slaves freed by the British as, 64–65, 93–94; Southern slaves as, in the Civil War, 342, 344–45; white, from St. Domingue, 113, 115
  • religion: denial of, to slaves, 323; in excusing slavery, 322–25; in the life of Jay family women, 221–22, 223; in metaphors of enslavement, 38–39; in patriarchy, 217–18; in the Reconstruction agenda, 366–68; renunciation of, 265–67. See also Catholic Church/Catholicism; Christianity; Episcopal Church/Episcopalians
  • Renwick, Henry, 233
  • Republican Party/Republicans, 7, 318–19, 320–21, 336–37, 339–40, 345, 353, 372–76
  • reputation: of the Jay family, defense of, 233; and the Jay family daughters, 104–5; of John Jay, 273–74, 303–5; of John Jay II, 286–88, 292–93; social, of the Grimké sisters, 216–17; of William Jay, in rebuttals to Inquiry, 181–82
  • resistance, Black: of Abbe, 66–71; aboard The Creole, 245–47; on the Amistad, 239–40; Black, against racism, 236; Civil War potential for, 347; to the Fugitive Slave Act, 294–96; and gradualism, 77–78, 113–14, 115; as inspiration for activism, 254; in international conflict, 260; by New York slaves, 24–25; public, to fugitive slave rendition, 293
  • responsibility: to elderly slaves, 97, 110–11; of Great Britain to former slaves, 100–101; personal of John Jay toward family slaves, 54–58; of slaveholders toward slaves, 75–76, 89; in the transition to abolition, 122
  • Revolutionary War, 42–44, 58–66, 141, 261, 318, 320, 326, 346
  • Rice, Edgar, 395
  • Ridley, Matthew, 71–72
  • rights of free Blacks: in The Creole case, 245–46; defense of, 119–21, 201–3; kidnapping as violation of, 238–39; in the Missouri Compromise, 143; NYMS in defense of, 78–79; right to testify, 117, 239, 244, 295; violations of, in the north, 237–39; voting rights, 137–38, 144–50, 237–38
  • riots in New York City, 164–65, 356–62
  • Robertson, Henry, 354
  • Robertson, James, 120–21
  • da Roche, Jose, 291–93
  • Romme, Elizabeth, 23
  • Romme, John, 23
  • Roosevelt, Quaco, 22
  • Ross, John Z., 145
  • Rou, Louis, 16
  • Ruggles, David, 170, 201–3
  • rule of law, 207, 297
  • Rush, Benjamin, 34
  • Rye, New York, 26–27
  • St. Domingue insurrection, 113, 174
  • St. Philips Church, 164–65, 250, 262–65, 299–300
  • sale of slaves: as discipline, 111; in domestic order, 133–34; in family separation, 56, 199; gradualism in, 168; interstate, in the transition to abolition in New York, 119; paternalism in, 55–56; by Peter Jay, 20–21; in Peter Jay’s will, 57–58; sale of children, 20–21, 43–44
  • Sanders, Thomas, 120
  • schisms, abolitionist, 314–16
  • Scott v. Sanford, 325–29
  • secession/secessionists, 336–37, 340–41, 386–87, 390
  • sectionalism: in disunion, 270–71; in the election of 1854, 317; expansion of slavery in, 282; in the Fugitive Slave Act, 293; in the Harlem Plains address, 383–84; in nation-building, 74, 84–85, 420n3; in Reconstruction, 378–79, 386–88
  • Sedgwick, Theodore II: The Practicability of the Abolition of Slavery, 162–63
  • segregation, 358–60, 382, 390
  • servitude, Biblical, 322–23
  • Seward, William H., 205–6, 230, 231, 350–51
  • sex, interracial, 43–44
  • Seymour, Horatio, 354–55, 357
  • Sharp, Granville, 34–35, 73–74, 87
  • Sidney, Thomas, 250
  • Sierra Leone colonial project, 96
  • Silliman, Benjamin, 123
  • sins of federalism, 209–13
  • slave codes, 19, 40–41, 85, 199
  • slaveholders/slaveholding: colonizationism in abetting, 171–72; in The Creole case, 245–46; ethics of, 110–11; federal government in interests of, 209–10, 212–13; influence of, 282; interests of, in the Constitution, 84–88; obligations to slaves of, 75–76, 89, 97, 110–11, 122, 155, 257–58; post-Revolutionary organizing in rights of, 79–80; and religious organizations, 322; slaves in socioeconomic status, 17–18; in the war with Mexico, 277; on the will of William Jay, 329–30; at Yale, 123
  • slave narratives, 194, 197, 199–201, 440n21
  • “Slave Power,” 277, 278, 312–13, 317, 353, 355–56, 363, 370
  • slave states: admission of Texas as, 269; in constitutional crisis, 207–8; disadvantages of, 278–79; gradualism in, 175–76; in the Missouri crisis and compromise, 129–30, 141–42, 143, 145; reversion to territories, 346
  • slave trade: bans in, 73–74, 78–88, 110, 118–19; British, abolition of, 212–13; in The Cabinet of Freedom, 195–96, 199; in Civil War diplomacy, 350, 351; in the Compromise of 1850, 293; in the Constitution, 73; international, 84, 210–11, 260–61; interstate, and Texas statehood, 270; Jay family in, 18–19, 20–21; John Jay’s social connections to, 33; La Rochelle, France in, 11–12; reckoning with, 398; as sin of federalism, 210–11
  • Smith, Elihu H., 115–16
  • Smith, Gerrit: and the AFAS, 226–27; and The Cabinet of Freedom, 194–95; election to Congress, 317; in electoral politics, 203–6; and the Liberty Party, 274, 275; in party politics, 230, 232; in posting bond for Jefferson Davis, 375; in support of Crummell, 251; William’s alliance with, 6–7, 193
  • Smith, Melancton, 86–87
  • Snowden, James P., 299
  • society: colonial, 30; connections in, 15, 31–33; postwar, in the Reconstruction agenda, 369–70; southern, un-Christian characteristics of, 200
  • Society for the Encouragement of Faithful Domestics, 156
  • Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG), 16
  • Somerset, James, 34–35
  • Somerset decision (Lord Mansfield), 34–35, 93–94
  • South Carolina, 13–14, 21–22, 47–48, 162–63, 247, 324
  • sovereignty: national, 65–66, 149, 184; personal, 90, 132; popular, 317, 318–19, 324; state, 372–73
  • Spain, 52, 87–88
  • Stamp Act Crisis of 1765, 31
  • Stewart, Alvan, 206–9, 230
  • Stewart, Charles, 34–35
  • Stiles, Ezra, 123
  • Stone, William L., 180–81, 186
  • Stouppe, Pierre, 29–30
  • Strong, George Templeton, 292–93, 300, 302–3, 379–80
  • Strong, Josiah, 391
  • Stuart, Moses, 303–6
  • Sturge, Joseph, 245–46, 259
  • suffrage, universal, male, 144–45, 147, 148, 370–71, 378–79
  • sugar production, West Indies, 17–18
  • Sumner, Charles: “The Barbarism of Slavery” speech, 339–40; in the battle for soul and nation, 274–75; in the Civil War, 339–40, 345, 346, 350–52; connection to John Jay II of, 309–10, 339
  • Supreme Court, U.S.: in the Amistad case, 243–44; Dred Scott decision by, 325–29; John Jay as chief justice, 88–90; on jurisdiction over fugitives, 288–89; Salman Chase appointed to, 362; as threat to Civil War aims, 348
  • Susan (enslaved person), 75–76
  • Sykes, George, 344
  • Tallmadge, James Jr., 141, 148–49
  • Taney, Roger, 325–29, 362
  • Tappan, Arthur, 164, 329
  • Tappan, Lewis, 164, 165, 194, 225, 226, 240, 243–44
  • Tappanites, 227, 228–29
  • Taylor, John S., 194
  • Taylor, Zachary, 275–76
  • Tea Act, 33
  • Tea Parties, 36–37
  • testify, right to, 117, 239, 244, 295
  • Texas, 211, 256, 267–73
  • theft, organized, 21
  • third-party movement, 229–33
  • Thirteenth Amendment, 362
  • three-fifths clause, 84, 86–87, 209–10, 270–71
  • Tilden, Samuel, 386–87
  • Tompkins, Daniel D., 136–37
  • tracts, antislavery, 190–92
  • transitions to freedom from slavery, 118–22
  • Trinity Church, New York, 16, 324
  • Tuckerman, Bayard: William Jay and the Constitutional Movement for the Abolition of Slavery, 392–93
  • Tyler, John, 269, 270–71
  • Underground Railroad, 285, 302, 338. See also fugitives, slave
  • Union Club of NYC, 306, 308
  • Union Defense Committee, 353
  • Union League Club (ULC): in the draft riot, 358–59; founding of, 357; and President Hayes, 387–89; in Reconstruction, 369–70, 373, 374, 375–76; as voice of reform, 386; in witnessing the Thirteenth Amendment, 362–63
  • Union Missionary Society, 244
  • unity/disunity: in advocacy for the Constitution, 86; and the Dred Scott decision, 327–28; fears of, in the election of 1860, 340; in the Harlem Plains address, 383–84; politics of slavery in, 267–73; in Reconstruction, 372, 374–75; in rhetoric of John Quincy Adams, 281; as wartime aim, 345
  • Upshur, Abel, 268–69
  • Ury, John, 22, 24
  • US Peace Commission, 60–66
  • Utah, 293
  • Valentine, Caesar, 3, 257–58
  • Valette, Marie (Jay), 20
  • Valette, Pierre, 20
  • Van Buren, Martin and administration, 148, 230, 232–33, 275–76, 277
  • Van Cortlandt, Françoise Jay, 20
  • Van Cortlandt, Frederick, 20
  • Van Cortlandt, Mary, 20
  • Varick, Caesar, 22
  • Vermont, 41
  • vindication, 363–64, 369
  • violence: against the AAS in New York City, 164–65; anti-abolition, elite classes in, 193–94; against Charles Sumner, 310; in the draft riots, 357–58; racism in patterns of, 254; in support for immediatism, 168–69
  • Virginia, 35, 373–75, 395
  • voting rights: colonizationists against, 170; for free Black men, 137–38, 144–50, 237–38; in the gubernatorial election of 1838, 204–5; John Quincy Adams belief in, 281–82; in the New York constitutional convention of 1821, 144–48; in rebutting the Dred Scott decision, 328; in Reconstruction, 370–71, 372–73; universal male suffrage, 144–45, 147, 148, 370–71, 378–79
  • wages, 120, 132–34, 135–36, 176
  • Walker, Zachariah, 394–96, 398–400
  • war: for freedom in the West Indies, 174–75; Mexican War, 256–57, 273–80; Revolutionary War, 42–44, 58–66, 141, 261, 318, 320, 326, 346; against whites as fear of immediatism, 126; William Jay’s advocacy against, 258–61
  • Washington, D.C., 153–55, 293, 295, 347
  • Washington, George, 2, 3–4, 48, 64
  • Washington, Madison, 245, 248
  • Watkins, Judith Livingston, 112, 130
  • wealth: in anti-abolitionism, 193–94; in conflict in New York colony, 15; in lives of household servants, 179–80; and slavery in New York City, 75; slaves as marker of, 112; slaves as repositories of, 107–8
  • Webster, Daniel, 245, 246–47, 294, 303
  • Westchester County, 25–27, 42–44, 136, 319–20, 340–41, 352–56
  • West Indies, 17–19, 174, 287
  • West Virginia, 377–78
  • Wheatley, Phillis, 34
  • Whigs, 32–33, 204–6, 232–33, 269–70, 274, 312–13, 318–19
  • white supremacy, 288, 365–66, 385–86, 390
  • white-washing, 384
  • Wilberforce, William, 96, 122, 125, 173–74, 333
  • Williams, Peter Jr., 164–65, 218, 262–63
  • Williams, Peter Sr., 108–9, 115
  • Wilmot, David, 274
  • women: Jay family, 215, 217–19; women question, 214–17, 225–29
  • Wool, John Ellis, 342–44
  • working class, white, 357–58
  • Yaff (enslaved person), 89–90
  • Yale College, 123–27
  • Yonkers Overseers of the Poor, 138
  • Young Men’s Anti-Slavery Society, 166–69, 208, 227, 286, 441n31
  • Young Men’s Colonization Society, 186–87
  • Young Ralph, 120
  • Zilpah. See Montgomery, Zilpah
  • Zilpha (enslaved person), 56, 57–58, 75–76

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