SHENFESSEL, PETER. 



XI. Representative from Ohio, 132; re- 

 ports a bill to enforce fourteenth amendment, 

 184; offers an amended bill, 204; on report of 

 conference committee on the bill to enforce 

 fourteenth amendment, 221. 



SHENFESSEL, PETER, pioneer settler. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 569. 



SHERIDAN, General PHILIP H. VII. Course 

 in Louisiana, 454 ; dispatch to General Grant, 

 740 ; removed from Fifth Military District, 742. 



VIII. Suggestions relative to the Indians, 

 382. 



X. Report of operations against Indians on 

 "Western border, 34; letter to General Sher- 

 man concerning public criticism of the Indian 

 campaign, 35. 



XIV. Ordered to New Orleans, 493; in- 

 structions, 493 ; his report, 494 ; letter to Sec- 

 retary of War on the state of affairs, 498 ; on 

 the White-Leaguers, 498 ; further communica- 

 tions, 499; reassertions and statements, 500; 

 his telegrams from New Orleans to the Secre- 

 tary of War, 735, 736. 



SHERMAN, JOHN. I. Member of the Senate, 

 225 ; on the acts of the President, 234 ; on the 

 conduct of the war, 236, 237; on the cause of 

 the war, 243. 



II. Senator from Ohio, 256 ; on the legal- 

 tender Treasury notes, 326. 



III. Senator from Ohio, 237; remarks on 

 arrests, 237; on a national currency, 294; on 

 gradual emancipation in Missouri, 313, 314. 



IV. ^Senator from Ohio, 219; on repealing 

 the fugitive-slave laws, 249 ; on the emancipa- 

 tion of the wives and children of colored sol- 

 diers, 269 ; on bounty to volunteers and pay 

 to soldiers, 315 ; on the commutation clause of 

 the enrolment act, 321. 



V. Senator from Ohio, 205 ; on the admis- 

 sion of a Senator from Virginia, 277. 



VI. Senator from Ohio, 124 ; on exclusion 

 of Southern members, 162 ; on the President's 

 power to remove office-hoiders, 242-250. 



VII. Senator from Ohio, 131 ; on the veto 

 of the suffrage bill, 144 ; introduces a recon- 

 struction bill, 229;. on reconstruction, 231, 

 233, 238-240, 242. 



VIII. Senator from Ohio, 124 ; on the ex- 

 clusion of Alabama, 178 ; on the action of 

 Ohio, 196 ; on the cotton-tax, 199. 



IX. Senator from Ohio, 120 ; on fifteenth 

 amendment, 164 ; on the public debt, 187 ; on 

 the public credit, 196. 



SHERMAN, WILLIAM T. 38? 



X. Senator from Ohio, 117; "offers an 

 amendment to Georgia bill, 146; on the en- 

 forcement bill, 179 ; offers amendment, 179 ; 

 on naturalizing Chinese, 189. 



XI. Senator from Ohio, 132, 168 ; on the 

 condition of affairs in the Southern States, 171. 



XII. Senator from Ohio, 119 ; on retrench- 

 ment, 128 ; on amendment to civil-rights 

 amendment, 165, 166. 



XIII. Senator from Ohio, 137 ; on the sal- 

 ary bill, 159; relative to finances, 167, 176; 

 on the Louisiana government bill, 202. 



XIV. Senator from Ohio, 150 ; on the sal- 

 ary law, 170; on specie payments, 179, 190, 

 196 ; on the Louisiana bill, 230. 



XV. Senator from Ohio, 138 ; reports the 

 bill for the resumption of specie payments, 

 146; remarks, 146-152; on education in the 

 District of Columbia, 173. 



SHERMAN, General THOMAS W. I. Proclama- 

 tion to inhabitants of South Carolina, Novem- 

 ber 8, 1861, 644; biographical notice of, 724. 



SHERMAN, General WILLIAM T. I. Takes com- 

 mand in Kentucky, 406; biographical notice 

 of, 723. 



III. Address to his troops after the repulse 

 on the Yazoo, 38. 



IV. Letter relative to recruiting agents sent 

 from the North to insurrectionary States for 

 negroes, 35 ; letter on the course to be pursued 

 by subordinate commanders of military dis- 

 tricts to the inhabitants, 42; address to his 

 troops, and instructions, 45 ; assigned to com- 

 mand Departments of Ohio, Tennessee, and 

 Cumberland, 67 ; address to his troops on the 

 capture of Atlanta, 88 ; reply to General Hood, 

 89 ; reply to the appeal of the civic authorities 

 of Atlanta, 90 ; letter to the Louisville agent 

 of the New York Associated Press, 91 ; letter 

 on the draft, 135 ; order relative to his march 

 through Georgia, 141; his order to march, 

 143 ; dispatch to the Secretary of War, 149 ; 

 his order for the government of Savannah, 

 151 ; letter on raids in Kentucky, 451. 



V. His march from Savannah, 41; letter 

 to Wade Hampton, 48 ; correspondence with 

 Johnston, 69 ; farewell to his troops, 74 ; spe- 

 cial field order putting negroes in possession 

 of islands, etc., 370 ; congratulatory address 

 to the armies in Georgia and Tennessee, 391 ; 

 dispatches in relation to Hood's movements, 

 731. 



VI. Appointed lieutenant-general, 34. 



