JOHNSON, ALEXANDER G. 



JOHNSON, ANDREW. 



253 



ment in Germany, 559 ; other parts of Europe, 

 559 ; a Congress in Italy, 559. 



IX. Board of Delegates of American Isra- 

 elites, its objects, 370; Palestine fund, 370; 

 amendment of Sunday laws, 370 ; Jewish pub- 

 lications, 370; Jewish College at Philadel- 

 phia report of the committee, 370 ; Rabbin- 

 ical conference of reformed Jews, 371 ; pro- 

 ceedings, 371 ; free-school organization in New 

 York, 372 ; schools of the Universal Israelitish 

 Alliance, 371 ; report of Joseph Halevy on the 

 Falasha Jews, 371 ; Israelite Congress in Hun- 

 gary, 372 ; condition of the Israelites in the 

 Danubian principalities, 372; joint resolution 

 of Congress relative to persons holding civil 

 offices in Virginia and Texas, 190. 



XI. Meeting of board of delegates, 423; 

 report of executive committee, 424 ; education, 

 424 ; Rabbinical conference, 424 ; Jews in Lon- 

 don, 424 ; theological faculty in University of 

 Vienna, 424, 425 ; Synod of German Israelites, 

 425. 



JOHi\SOX, ALEXANDER G. XV. Biographical 

 sketch of, 56i. 



JOHNSON, ANDREW. I. Senator in Thirty- 

 sixth Congress, 166; proposes three amend- 

 ments to the Constitution, 183 ; remarks, 184; 

 on the right of Senators from Western Virginia 

 to their seats, 235 ; on the object of the war, 

 241. 



V. Proclamation relative to Alabama, 11 ; 

 restores Bishop Wilmer, 21 ; orders the Pro- 

 visional Governor of Alabama to be relieved, 

 20 ; succeeds President Lincoln, 21 ; dispatch to 

 the Governor of Arkansas, 28 ; communication 

 to Congress in relation to Colorado, 180 ; proc- 

 lamation raising the blockade, 185 ; proclama- 

 tions removing restrictions on trade, 186 ; re- 

 ply to an address of the National Congrega- 

 tional Council, 203 ; takes the oath as Vice- 

 President, 300; his address, 300; reply to 

 Colonel Roberts in relation to the release of 

 John Mitchel, 334 ; letters to Provisional Gov- 

 ernor Holden, 627, 628 ; dispatches to Provi- 

 sional Governor Johnson, 396-399 ; dispatch to 

 General Thomas in relation to pretended Treas- 

 ury agents, 419 ; in relation to Dexter's case, 

 419 ; proclamation restoring the writ of habeas 

 corpus in certain States, 421 ; reply to mem- 

 bers of the bar in Lee County, Iowa, 442 ; proc- 

 lamation restoring the civil authority in Ken- 

 tucky, 466 ; order for the trial of the assassins, 

 573 ; orders in relation to sentences, 576 ; dis- 



patch to Governor Sharkey, 581 ; dispatch to 

 General Carl Scburz, 583 ; message at the first 

 session of the Thirty-ninth Congress, 710-717; 

 dispatches to Governor Perry, 760-762 ; dis- 

 patch to Governor Brownlow, 779 ; remarks 

 on taking the oath of office, 800 ; reply to an 

 address of a delegation from New Hampshire, 

 800; to delegations from Indiana and Ohio, 

 April 21st, 801 ; to a delegation of exiles from 

 the South, 801 ; to a delegation of colored per- 

 sons, 802 ; to a delegation from South Carolina, 

 June 24th, 802 ; proclamation appointing a day 

 of humiliation, 802 ; proclamation offering a 

 reward .for the apprehension of Jefferson Davis 

 and others, 802 ; proclamation stating terms of 

 restoration, 802, 803 ; views expressed to a 

 delegation from the Southern States, Septem- 

 ber llth, 805, 806 ; views relative to the 

 African race, 807, 808; on the condition of 

 affairs in the Southern States, 808 ; order re- 

 establishing United States authority in Vir- 

 ginia, 815. 



VI. Message on the condition of the South, 

 131 ; message on sending constitutional amend- 

 ment to States, 195 ; his veto of second bill 

 amending Freedmen's Bureau, 213 ; message 

 on the restoration of Tennessee, 224 ; veto of 

 the Colorado bill, 235 ; dispatch to the post- 

 master of Connecticut, 254; dispatch to the 

 Mayor of New Orleans, 449-453; letter to 

 General Sheridan, 456 ; on the trial of Jeffer- 

 son Davis, 513-517 ; annual message to Con- 

 gress, 630 ; letter to the Governor of Texas, 

 743 ; states his views to Senator Dixon, 748 ; 

 do. to colored delegation, 749 ; do. to a com- 

 mittee of the Virginia Legislature, 750; do. 

 on February 22d, 751 ; do. to a Kentucky del- 

 egation, 753 ; tour to Chicago, 758. 



VII. Vetoes the bill for suffrage in the 

 District of Columbia, 144; vetoes Nebraska 

 bill, 170; do. Colorado bill, 172; protest 

 against second section of the army appropria- 

 tion bill, 244 ; messages and vetoes, 633, 642, 

 646, 648, 650, 652, 658, 665, 666 ; orders to 

 commanders of military districts, 739 ; vetoes 

 supplement to reconstruction act, 740 ; cor- 

 respondence with General Grant, 740, 741 ; 

 suspends Secretary Stanton, 744; appoints 

 General Grant Secretary ad interim, 744 ; 

 reasons for removing the Secretary of War, 

 744-749 ; proclamation respecting affairs in 

 Texas, 749, 750 ; proclamation with reference 

 to the supremacy of the Constitution, 750 ; 



