INDEX OF CONTENTS. 



841 



claims arising out of the Price raid, 457; geological sur- 

 vey, 457; soil and climate, 457; rain, 457; extensive 

 coal formation, 457 ; leedsof gypsum, 457; iron ore, 457; 

 deposits of lead, 457 ; railroad enterprises, 457 ; produc- 

 tion and manufacture of wool, 456 ; salt springs, 453 ; 

 colored convention at Leavenworth, 458. 



KASSON, JOHN A. Representative from Iowa, 205 ; on civil 

 prisoners, 239. 



KELLEY, W. D. Representative from Pennsylvania, 205 ; on 

 reconstruction, 248. 



KERNAN, FRANCIS. Representative from New York, 205; 

 on Freedmen's affairs, 292. 



Kentucky. Population decreased, 458; troops furnished to 

 the Federal armies, 458,459 ; claims against the Federal 

 Government, 459 ; public debt, 459 ; sinking fund, 459 ; 

 table showing the decline in value of taxable property, 



459 ; measures for the reorganization of the militia, 459, 



460 ; unsettled condition of affairs at the beginning of the 

 year, 460; guerrilla bands and internal disorders, 460; act 

 of the Legislature reorganizing the militia, 460; repealed 

 at the extra session in May, 461 ; order of Gen. Palmer in 

 relation to arrests and the protection of colored people, 

 etc., 461 ; surrender of Col. Getner to Gen. Hobson, 461 ; 

 surrender of Patterson, Norwood, Roddy, Malone, and 

 Harper, 461; question as to the "homes" of disbanded 

 Southern soldiers, 461 ; opinion of the Attorney-General, 



461 ; order of the Secretary of "War, 461 ; disorganization 

 of labor, 461 ; condition of the colored population, 462 ; 

 order of Gen. Palmer making free the wives and children 

 of colored soldiers, 462 ; amendment to the Federal Con- 

 stitution rejected by the Legislature in February, 462 ; 

 remarks of Gov. Bramlette, 462 ; compensation to owners 

 of enlisted slaves, 462, 463 ; great decline in the value of 

 slave property, 463 ; effect of emancipation on the value 

 of real estate, 463 ; State election, 463 ; views of the Con- 

 servatives, 463; speech of Gen. Palmer, 463; order of 

 Gen. Palmer in relation to the elections, 464 ; proclama- 

 tion of Gov. Bramlette as to the qualifications of voters, 

 464; result of the election, 465; complaints of interference 

 of the military, 465 ; difficulties between civil and mil- 

 itary authorities, 465; interference of Gen. Palmer in 

 several cases, 465; application by the Governor for his 

 removal, 465 ; order of Gen. Palmer after the adoption of 

 the constitutional amendment by three-fourths of the 

 States, 466; withdrawal of martial law, 466; correspond- 

 ence of Gen. Palmer with Secretary Stanton in relation 

 to the migration of negroes, 466 ; order retaining Gen. 

 Palmer in command of the department, 466; meeting of 

 the Legislature in November, 466 ; constitutional amend- 

 ment again rejected, 466 ; Freedmen's Bureau, 466 ; char- 

 itable institutions, 466. 



KING, DAN. Birth, 466; professional and political career, 



467; works, 467. 



KING, PBESTON. Birth, 467; political career, 467; death, 468. 

 KING, THOMAS STARK. Birth, 468 ; ministerial labors, 468 ; 



works, 468; death, 468. 

 KNIGHT, JONATHAN. Birth, 468 ; professional career, 469 ; 



death, 469. 

 KOLLOCK, SHEPAKD Kosciusoo. Birth, 469 ; ministerial la- 



bors, 469 ; death, 469. 



LAMOKICIEEE, C. L. L. J. DE. Birth, 470 ; services in Algeria, 



France, Rome, etc., 470 ; death, 470. 

 Laueriburg. Area and population, 470; chief towns, 470; 



religion, 470 ; separation from Denmark, 470 ; taken pos- 



session of by Prussia, 471 ; royal proclamation, 471 ; spe- 



cial minister, 471. 

 Liberia. Settlement, 471 ; recognized by what powers, 471 ; 



approximate area and population, 471 ; counties, 471 ; 

 Government and Legislature, 471 ; presidents, 471 ; rela- 

 tions with foreign powers, 471 ; exports of oil, 471 ; Com- 

 pany of African Merchants, 471 ; Commercial Company 

 of Africa, 472 ; American immigrants in 1865, 472. 



Lichtenstetn. Reigning prince, 472 ; area and population, 

 472 ; new constitution, 472. 



LINCOLN, ABRAHAM. Message on the joint resolution rela- 

 tive to the electoral vote, 274 ; letter relative to freed- 

 men, 296 ; birth, 472 ; parentage, 472 ; education, 

 472 ; removals to Indiana and Illinois, 472 ; experiences 

 in the Black Hawk war, 472 ; postmaster, 472 ; govern- 

 ment surveyor, 472 ; in the Illinois Legislature, 472 ; 

 admitted to the bar, 472 ; sent to Congress, 473 ; course 

 in Illinois in 1848-'59, 473 ; contest with Judge Douglas 

 for the Senatorship in 1858, 473 ; speeches in Ohio, Kan- 

 sas, and New York, 473 ; nominated for the Presidency 

 by the Chicago Convention, 473 ; opponents divided, 474; 

 electoral votes, 474 ; popular vote, 474 ; Southern seces- 

 sion ordinances, 474; proceedings of the Montgomery 

 Convention, 474 ; journey of Mr. Lincoln from Springfield 

 to Washington, 474 ; assassination plot, 474 ; inaugural 

 address, 474; condition of the Government, 474; Fort 

 Sumter, 475; first call for troops, 475; action of various 

 States, 475 ; Bull Run, 475 ; reverses and victories, 475 ; 

 emancipation, 475; arrests, 475; campaigns of Grant, 

 Sherman, an^Thomas, 475 ; second election and inaugu- 

 ration, 475 ; virtual cessation of the war, 476 ; the assas- 

 sination, 476 ; the conspirators, 476 ; unparalleled excite- 

 ment, 476; universal mourning, 476; funeral honors at 

 Washington, 476; at Baltimore, 476; at York, 477; at 

 Harrlsburg, 477 ; at Philadelphia, 477; at Newark, 477; 

 at Jersey City, 477; at New York, 477, 478; at Albany, 

 478; at Buffalo and Cleveland, 478 ; at Columbus, 478 ; 

 at Chicago, 478 ; grief in Europe and Asia, 478 ; character 

 as a man and a magistrate, 479; Inaugural Address. 

 March 4, 1865, 710 ; speech after the passage of the con- 

 stitutional amendment, 796; speech in relation to the 

 proposed arming of slaves by the Confederates, 796 ; reply 

 to Judge Campbell, 797 ; order of Gen. Weitzel in rela- 

 tion to the Virginia Legislature, 797 ; speech in relation 

 to restoration, 798; assassination announced to Vice- 

 President Johnson by the Cabinet, 800. 



LANE, HENEY 8. Senator from Indiana, 205 ; on exchange 

 of prisoners, 226 ; on trials by military commission, 241. 



Last Appeal of the Confederate Congress to the People, 

 195-198. 



LEE, GENERAL ROBERT E. Order on assuming command of 

 all the Confederate armies, 198 ; address to his soldiers, 

 193 ; views as to the future, 193. 



LEOPOLD L See Belgium. 



LINDLEY, JOHN. Birth, 479 ; botanical researches, 479 ; works, 

 479 ; death, 479. 



Literature and Literary Progress. Number of works pub- 

 lished in 1865, 479 ; number of reprints, 480 ; military and 

 naval science, 480 ; histories of the war, 480 ; histories of 

 particular battles and campaigns, 480 ; works relating to 

 the war, not strictly historical, 481 ; American local and 

 other histories not connected with the war, 481-484; his- 

 tories of other countries and times, 484; historical re- 

 prints, 484 ; historical periodicals and transactions of his- 

 torical societies, 484 ; ecclesiastical history, 4S4 ; biog- 

 raphy, 485-487; collective biographies, 487; theological 

 works, 487 489 ; polemic theologv, 488; religious works 

 not theological, 4S9 ; moral and intellectual science, 490 ; 

 physical science, 490, 491 ; astronomy and meteorology 

 490; zoology, 490; natural philosophy and chemistry, 

 491 ; political and social science, 491 ; financial and sta- 

 tistical science, 492 ; philology, 492 ; mining, technology, 

 and mechanical science, 493; agriculture, 494; medical 



