,
address of the, 1789, 431.
Pequod Indians captured in war exchanged for Negroes, 173;
as slaves, 177.
Peters, John, married to Phillis Wheatley, 200.
Peters, Phillis, see Wheatley, Phillis.
Pheron, king of Egypt, 458.
Philadelphia, Federal Convention meet at, 417;
Anti-slavery Convention held at, 438;
see Pennsylvania.
Phut, Africa, description of, 452.
Pickering, Timothy, representative of Salem, Mass., instructed to
vote against the importation of slaves, 220.
Pinny, J.B., missionary to Liberia, 100.
Pitcairn, John, killed at Bunker Hill by a Negro soldier, 364.
Plant, Matthias, missionary of the Propagation Society in Mass., 189.
Po, Fernando, locates Portuguese colony in Africa, 26.
Poor, Salem, a Negro soldier, his bravery at Bunker Hill, 365.
Popish plot in England concocted by Titus Gates, 144.
Portugal, engages in the slave-trade, 26, 31, 463;
locates colony at Benin, Africa, 26, 27.
Prescott, Richard, captured by Lieut.-Col. Barton, 366.
Presbyterian Board of Missions establish missions in Liberia, 100.
Price, Arthur, arrested for theft in New York, 152;
testimony in the Negro plot, 152,154.
Prichard, John C., varieties of the human race, 4.
Prince, a Negro, assists in the capture of Gen. Prescott, 367.
Protestant Episcopal Church establishes first mission at Sierra Leone,
89;
in Liberia, 100.
Proteus, king of Egypt, 458.
Psammetichus, king of Egypt, 455.
Psammis, king of Egypt, 456.
Pul, Africa, description of, 452.
Quakers, opposed to slavery, 218;
memorial of, against slavery in Pennsylvania, 313;
the friends of the Negroes, 315;
memorial to Congress relative to slavery, 439.
Rameses, Miamun, king of Egypt, 458.
Raffles, T. Stanford, his researches on the Negro race, 19.
Reade, W. Winwood, describes patriarchal government of Africa, 55;
beauty of the Negro, 60, 61;
people of Sierra Leone, 87.
Revere, Paul, Negroes placed in his charge at Castle Island, Mass.,
377.
Rhampsinitus, king of Egypt, 458.
Rhode Island, slavery in, 262-281;
colonial government, 262;
Act of 1652 to abolish slavery not enforced, 262;
Negroes and Indians prohibited the use of the streets, 264;
impost-tax on slaves, 265;
entertainment of slaves prohibited, 266;
Negro slaves sold in, 269;
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