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INDEX Abolitionists, 143 Adams, Henry, 124, 290 Adams, Herbert Baxter, 441*42 Addams, Jane, 423 Aftermath, 433 Agricultural colleges, 238, 409 Agricultural societies, 176 Agricultural Wheel, 191-92 Agriculture, myths of, 175, 178; condition of, in eighties, 177; revolution in, 178-79; lien system of, 180-83; depression in, 185-88; condition of, in nineties, 269-70; demonstration techniques in, 409-12 Alabama, Redeemers of, 8-10; party discipline in, 51; government of, 67; treasury scandal in, 68, 73; Independents in, 78, 81; Greenbackers in, 84, 102; debt controversy in, 87, 89; poverty in, 108; public land in, 115-17; iron industry in, 126-29; cotton textiles in, 131-35; urban growth of, 139; homicide in, 159, 160; agricultural depression in, 177; land tenure in, 178-79; lien law in, 183; Farmers' Alliance enters, 191; Alliance victories in, 203; Negro farmer in, 205; share system in, 206-208; Jim Crow in, 212; convict lease in, 213; woman and child workers in, 226; Populist districts of, 247; race and politics in, 257, 262; strikes in, 266-68; depression in, 269; election law of, 275; Morgan enters, 299-302; disfranchisement in, 330-31, 336-37, 342; miners' strike in, 362-64; reform in, 375-76; prohibition in, 389-91; education movement in, 405, 406; Underwood campaign in, 476 Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad, rivalry of, with L and N, 8-10 Alamance County, N.C., textile workers strike in, 422 Alderman, Edwin A., 397, 398; on Virginia puritans, 170; and hookworm commission, 426; and university funds, 436-37 Aldrich, Truman H., 128 Alldredge, J. Haden, 314-15 Allen, James Lane, on success, 168-69; as novelist, 432-34 Allen, Sen. William V., 286 Altgeld, Gov. John P., 266, 269, 284 Aluminum Company of America, 305 American Cotton Manufacturers' Association , 416 American Cotton Oil Trust, 135 American Federation of Labor, in New Orleans, 231; and Populists, 253-54; and the Negro, 361-62; and child labor, 417-18 American Plutocracy, 249 American Railway Union, 265 American Steel and Wire Company, 3'5 American Tobacco Company, holdings of, 308-309; Black Patch War on, 3868 ? Anderson County, Tenn., strike in, 234 Anniston, Ala., 127, 136; Knights of Labor government of, 230 Anse-la-Butte, La., oil pool, 303 Anti-Saloon League, 390 629 INDEX Architecture, 163, 454 Arkansas, Hayes hopes to carry, 46; ballot-box stealing in, 56; treasury scandal in, 69; Greenbackers in, 85, 102; debt controversy in, 87, 89, 90; immigration to, 108; public land in, 11517 ; land tenure in, 178-99; Farmers' Alliance enters, 191, 203; farm wages in, 207;Jim Crow in, 212; convict lease in, 214; Lily-whites in, 219; Knights of Labor in, 230; adopts poll tax, 275, 321; silver movement in, 281; bauxite of, 305; Jeff Davis in, 376-77; education movement in, 404; prison reform in, 424 Arkansas State Bar Association, 181 Arkwright Club, 307 Armes, Ethel, 127 Armstrong, Louis, 455 Armstrong, Gen. Samuel C, 401 Arp, Bill, 208 Arthur, Chester A., 216; Southern policy of, 101-103 Ashby, Harrison Sterling Price ("Stump"), as Populist orator, 245-46 Ashby, Irene, 417 Atalanta in the South, 167 Atkinson, Edward, missionary of industry , 143, 146 Atlanta, Ga., 7, 108, 133, 135, 144, 260; careers of Carpetbaggers in, 17; backs Pacific railroad, 34; Hayes speaks in, 46; Exposition of 1881, p. 124; Piedmont Exposition, 124; Cotton States Exposition, 124; U.D.C. in, 156; Harris on, 169; Methodism in, 172; factories close in, 265; race riot in, 350-57; segregation in, 355; Taft in, 467; Wilson in, 472-73 Atlanta Compromise, 323, 357-60, 367 Atlanta Constitution, 145, 198; growth of, 146-47; on force bill, 254-55 Atlanta University, 367 Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, reorganization of, 292-94, 295 Atlantic Monthly, 163, 168; justifies Mississippi Plan, 325 Audrey, 432 Augusta, Ga., 34, 162; textile mills of, 131; factories close in, 265; Knightsof Labor in, 230; strikes in, 422 Augusta Chronicle, against Western alliance , 235; denounces farmers' movement , 240 Austin Manifesto, 238 Aycock, Charles B., 330, 418; and race violence, 350; as reform governor, 375; at education conference, 402, 405 Bacon, Augustus O., on Southern policies , 460 Bailey, Joseph W., breaks with Cleveland, 279; and Waters-Pierce case, 385; opposes Wilson, 474 Bailey, Thomas Pearce, on Southern credo, 355-56 Baker, Ray Stannard, 353, 462 Baldwin, William H., Jr., and Booker Washington, 358; and education movement , 402 Baltimore, Md., as crossroads of old and new, 162; Democratic convention of 1912 in, 478 Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, 96 Bankhead, John H...

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