J. W. Alvord, Letters from the South, Relating
to the Condition of Freedmen, Addressed to Major General O.
O. Howard, Commissioner Bureau R., F., and A. L. by J. W.
Alvord, Gen. Sup't Education, Bureau R., F., & A. L.
(Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1870).
Howard University,
Washington, D. C., March 17, 1870.
The letters in this pamphlet, written by Mr. J. W. Alvord, General
Superintendent of Education of the Freedmen's Bureau, furnish, in
a small compass, late information bearing upon the education, the
industrial interests, and the present state of society amongst the
Freedmen. I have thought it wise to print them together. These letters
were written with a view to correct the false impressions which
have gone abroad with regard to the colored people of the South.
We find it a very easy task on the part of those who predict evil,
and earnestly desire it, to deceive travelers from the north, even
old and tried abolitionists; to have rehearsed in their ears, on
the cars, in hotels, in steamers, everywhere they go, stories enunciating
such propositions as these: "They are all dying off."
"They are killing their children." "They are guilty
of inebriation." "They are guilty of infanticide."
"The whole population is diseased and degraded." "They
cannot rise." "They are thriftless and idle." "They
will not work," and so forth
It is wonderful with what pertinacity, and how universally such
stories are reiterated. They have been told so often that they are
doubtless believed by themselves.
I hope the letters will be carefully read, for they are discriminating
and truthful, having been written from the field of actual observation.
O. O. HOWARD,
Bvt. Maj. Gen. U.S.A., Commissioner.
Columbia, S. C., January 7, 1870.
Dear General: I will not report in detail the Schools in Columbia,
as you were an eye witness to their condition.
The absence of advanced and older pupils, is said to be from the
fact that young colored men here, who were boys during the war,
grew up especially vicious, and are now, therefore, comparatively
indifferent to an education. From the younger class we are undoubtedly
to expect the largest results in all parts of the South, as well
as in this city.
These colored schools are the only public schools of the Capital
of South Carolina, and in their well arranged and spacious building,
under the fine direction of so efficient a corps of teachers, will
certainly accomplish great good.
The older colored people of the city and surrounding country, as
I learned, are unusually intelligent and prosperous--one man, a
skillful mechanic, being worth $50,000. More than forty heads of
families have within the last six months purchased city property
for homes, at from $500 to $1,200 each. It is the testimony of well-informed
gentlemen that the whole colored population of upper South Carolina
is, in general, in a thriving condition--with better houses, clothing,
and family comforts from year to year.
South Carolina appropriated last year $200,000 to buy land in the
upper part of the State which has been sold to Freedmen for homesteads.
Upwards of 40,000 acres of this land have been actually sold during
the year to poor men of all colors. The Governor says he intends
this year to recommend for the same purpose an appropriation of
$400,000. Colored members of the Legislature, whom I met in the
interior counties, asked me earnestly for more schools for their
children, which were promised as strongly as I dared.
I have been much interested in witnessing the social elevation
of the Freedmen at this place. The Governor, General R. K. Scott,
in his receptions makes no distinction among the members of the
Legislature, (125 of whom are colored); all are taken equally by
the hand with the graceful urbanity for which his honor is distinguished.
All alike, on such occasions, crowd around his luxurious refreshment
tables, where, as his accomplished lady told me, no invidious distinctions
are made.
You will remember at the dinner party given on your account by
the Governor, and at which I had the honor of being a guest, his
Secretary of State, the Hon F. L. Cardozo and lady, (both colored,)
received equal attention with other officials, and ladies and gentlemen
of the highest standing. I could but feel as I looked around upon
that agreeable circle that equality of character and culture were
the true conditions of equality in social life. I learned of other
occasions when the Governor had followed the same rule, and in conversation
he assured me he could allow himself to adopt none other.
His opinion is that in our higher institutions of learning cultured
youth of both colors will come, at length, to associate on equal
terms, and that scholarship and general refinement on each side
will gradually settle the whole question of mixed schools.
At Orangeburg I found the Claflin University in the large and beautiful
building (late the Orangeburg Female Academy, bought recently by
the Methodist Episcopal Society, and repaired by Major Deane, of
the Bureau, at an expense of $2,500,) with about one hundred students,
under the efficient training of Dr. Webster. This is a very promising
Institution, and in a commanding and well chosen locality. It will
probably ask for further assistance from the Bureau.
Will write you next from Charleston.
I have the honor to be yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
Gen. Supt. Ed., Bu. R., F., & A. L.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Charleston, S. C., January 11, 1870.
Dear General: In Charleston I have visited the schools, eight in
number, with, in all, about 2,500 pupils, and, with one or two exceptions
find them in good condition. The "Avery Institute" and
the "Shaw Memorial" rank first. Each of these have an
enrollment of about 300 pupils. The Morris Street School, with 800
pupils, in charge of the City Board, is conducted on the Southern
plan; strict in discipline, but with less that cultivates the mind
and heart. It is, however, an honor to the city. The Orphan School,
(100 inmates,) now in charge of the State, is much neglected. The
lady manager, Miss Boorn, is energetic, but needs assistants and
more means. I have directed Mr. Cook to send her books, and will
see the trustees to-day. South Carolina is at present too much immersed
in politics to care thoroughly for orphans.
The "Freedmen's Pay School," (150 pupils,) with colored
teachers, is a landmark, showing the progress of these people. All
its expenses are met by the Freedmen. The school of the Episcopal
Society, in the old Marine Hospital, is respectable in conduct and
attainment, with 160 pupils, but the building needs repairs. I went
thoroughly through Rev. A. T. Porter's "Parochial Orphan School"
with much interest; eighty boys, well kept and taught, and the whole
Institution on a larger scale than I expected. Mr. Porter deserves
much credit for his earnest labors, and in my judgment what you
have done for him has been within the law and well deserved.
Since I was in Charleston, three years ago, there has been great
progress in our educational work, seen not only in the schools themselves,
but in the general elevation of the whole colored population.
We are not to contrast these people with the white race, long favored
with opportunities. Their history of utter demoralization is to
be constantly kept in mind, and progress only (in comparison) from
that stand-point noted.
In this advancing civilization, nothing is more apparent than the
altered apparel of the Freedmen. From linsey wolsey, ragged garments,
clumsy brogans, or bare feet of former times, we notice the change
to clothes of modern material; shoes or gaiters on the feet of boys
and girls; whole schools as tidily dressed as most of the common
schools at the North. While the same make of clothing, bought with
their own money from the shops, or skilfully made with their own
hands, is everywhere to be seen. It gives the adult population in
the streets and churches an air strikingly in contrast with the
menial raiment with which slavery had clothed them. It is the costume
of freedom, each choosing his or her dress, according to taste,
and all mainly in the respectable raiment of society around them.
The point to be gained in our schools is to retain more permanently
the advanced pupils; they pass away t0o soon, called by the stern
necessities of life.
Some liberal fund is needed to keep choice, select scholars for
two or three years until they can be thoroughly prepared as teachers
and leaders of the people.
The Normal Schools and classes, of all the Northern Associations,
should be more thorough, with special effort and expenditure to
carry pupils entirely through the course.
On the whole, I am satisfied that educational matters in this State
are running in the right direction, and if the new State school
bill passes, we shall be able to accomplish much more than at present.
With respect, yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
SEA ISLANDS.
Savannah, Ga., January 13, 1870.
Dear General: In Charleston and on Sea Island plantations I had
excellent opportunity of seeing the Freedmen's condition. The statements
of Mr. Pillsbury are exaggerations; extreme cases, as there are,
would not justify his account of things.
I have visited the same class of plantations and negroes, and from
all parties, have usually, a flat contradiction and denial of such
allegations as he made, especially from the old planters and the
more intelligent Freedmen. As a very respectable old colored preacher
said to me, "Whoever say such tings don't speak de trut."
Possibly, mothers and babes do not have the care which slavery gave
them when the birth and life of the latter was of such pecuniary
advantage; but in spite of neglect and poverty, I have invariably
seen around cabin doors respectable squads of juveniles--"children
enough," everybody says.
Infanticide, as such, is never known. An eminent Southern physician,
whom I consulted, remarked that "the negroes, with their strong
domestic affection, were incapable of such a crime."
Similar testimony comes from planters, freedmen, preachers, cotton-factors
on the wharves, and officials of both parties. Among the latter
are the mayors and both chiefs of police in Charleston and this
city. The people are poor, and their children die, as do the suffering
poor everywhere, but not as the result of deliberate barbarity.
As to intemperance there is certainly quite too much of it among
the Freedmen. Three reasons have been given me for its prevalence:
1st. In the interior the "whiskey wagons" perambulating
the country; 2d. The unrestrained sale of liquors in towns and cities;
3d. The negroes now have money. The general admission, however,
is that there is not as much drunkenness among the blacks as whites.
Your friend, Gen. Robt. Anderson, chief of police of this city,
(as did his first lieutenant,) assured me that this was so. The
arrests for this crime may be greater among the negroes, for as
these officers said, "they are usually boisterous when intoxicated."
"We do not," said they, "arrest a drunken man who
is quietly trying to get home."
I will send you soon a synopsis of the police reports of crime
from Charleston and Savannah for the last three months as in comparison
between the whites and blacks. It will show you the precise facts,
which are vouched for respectively as correct by both the mayors.
Also, I will send the mortuary reports from the officers of the
city clerks showing how Freedmen do not "die off" as reported.
It is remarkable what a general reputation the Freedmen have for
good behavior and industry. "They work well when paid,"
is a universal remark. "We don't want Chinamen," said
a planter to me, and he pointed around to the cabins of his laborers,
saying, "these people are used to our work, and we are used
to them." Mr. Wm. Whaley, acknowledges that "the people
on Edisto are industrious and well behaved," and, said he,
"we are satisfied with their labor." He will plant next
season six hundred acres.
The Freedmen are very eager for land. The savings they have placed
in our Banks, and the profits of cotton this year, are enabling
them to make large purchases. In Orangeburg County, South Carolina,
hundreds of colored men have bought lands and are building and settling
upon them. In a single day, in our Charleston Savings Bank, I took
the record of seventeen Freedmen who were drawing their money to
pay for farms they had been buying, generally forty or fifty acres
each, paying about $10 per acre. I met at at a cotton merchant's
in that city ten Freedmen who had clubbed together with the proceeds
of their crop and bought a whole Sea Island plantation of seven
hundred acres. The merchant was that day procuring their deed. He
told me that the entire purchase price was paid in cash from the
balance due them on the crop of the season. Here, then, besides
supporting their families with provisions raised, these men had
each, by the profits of a single year, bought a farm of seventy
acres. What northern laborer could do better?
I found on the Islands other clubs forming to do the same thing,
and this in a season when the caterpiller has destroyed one-half
their cotton. A leading cotton broker in Charleston told me that
he thought nearly half the cotton on the Islands belonged to colored
men. He had himself already 126 consignments from them, and the
amount of his sales on their account had reached over $30,000. As
I learned, the average of the Freedmen's crop, or share of crop,
of Sea Island cotton is from three to six hundred pounds each.
Much excitement prevails here in political matters, and we are
seeing the worse side of things. Much, indeed, to be deplored among
all classes, but leading men are preparing, as I can see, to accept
what Congress will give them; these men will gradually allow the
Freedmen all their immunities. Wages for labor are too low, but
prices must improve as the large cotton crop of the next season
goes in.
The planters beg off strongly on payment for the "supplies,"
yet acknowledge that this is a debt of honor, and must be met, unless
Congress grant them relief. Mr. Bennett, your agent, is hopeful
of immediate collections.
General Anderson sends his compliments to you--a fellow student,
I believe, at West Point--and assures me that he is interested in
our work. He has aided me most cheerfully in obtaining facts, and
testifies strongly to what he says is "the magnificent conduct
of the negroes." I presented him with your last report.
I have the honor to be yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
Gen. Supt. Ed. Bu. R., F., & A. L.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Savannah, Ga., January 14, 1870.
Dear General: I am obliged to give testimony counter to that of
parties who of late have been disparaging the character and conduct
of the Freedmen.
The enclosed letter is from the Hon. Gilbert Pillsbury, Mayor of
the city of Charleston, South Carolina. He has resided in the State
from its first occupancy by Northern men after the rebellion, and
during all these years has been actively engaged in Freedmen's affairs.
His position gives him opportunities of knowing facts which the
visitor of a few weeks at the South cannot comprehend.
Parker Pillsbury, esquire, of Massachusetts, who has recently been
writing on the subject, is a brother of the Mayor.
The following is the Mayor's letter:
Mayor's Office, City Hall,
Charleston, South Carolina, January 10, 1870.
Dear Sir: In reply to some of the questions which you proposed
to me yesterday, I have only time and proper information to answer
briefly. As to comparative intemperance between whites and colored,
I will say that while intemperance is the crying evil in our community
amongst all classes, it is evidently most prevalent amongst the
whites. I think the cases before the Mayor's Court are fully as
two to one; perhaps the proportion is even greater than that.
As to larceny, vagrancy, and other petty violations of the law,
I can only speak with regard to the city. Here the preponderance
is much against the colored. This fact can be readily accounted
for. The colored population is not only much the largest in the
city, but is crowded into the uncomfortable, unhealthy, and secluded
portions. Then, the demand for labor is extremely moderate, and
as a general rule preference is given to the white laborer; not
because he works more willingly and earnestly, but because he
is white. Then, private charities are more readily bestowed upon
the whites, because the white population is not only the most
able to bestow, but they are sure to supply the white sufferer
first, and the colored, never. Hence, poverty and neglect among
the colored are great inducements to crime.
As to the public charities of the city, they are sought more
generally by the whites, as well as bestowed more extensively
upon them than upon the blacks.
As to schools they are wofully behind even our degenerate age.
Still, in the city, I think quite as large a proportion of colored
as white children attend schools. We have at least five schools
largely attended by colored children, hut these are sustained
almost wholly by Northern charities while I know of but one school,
and that a small one, supported by the colored population of the
city. Our white schools do not excel, if they equal, the colored,
either in numbers or in efficiency. Several of our colored schools
would do credit to any age or latitude.
I think, in the few particulars I have mentioned, the State generally
is upon about the same footing as the city. It struggles against
poverty and ignorance. Give us schools and fair inducements to
labor, and we will cheerfully risk the consequences. The old inclination
to crush and rob and keep in ignorance the colored race, is as
strong as ever. Although nominally free, yet if abandoned by their
great northern deliverers to their "old friends" of
the south, their liberty, which cost the nation so dear, would
not long exist, even in name.
As to your inquiry whether the colored element is dying out and
wasting away, I am certain it is not the case. Emigration from
certain localities may diminish the population there, but they
are somewhere. This southern country is full of them, and I believe
they are still on the increase. It is true there is room for the
Chinese and Coolie here, but their is no need of them, if we will
but do simple justice to the laborers at our door. Slavery has
left them in most deplorable condition; but liberty can and must
restore them.
The work may be termed what the lamented Lincoln denominated
a "big job;" but it must be done, and that largely by
the strong, benevolent arm of the north. It will never do to give
it up so. You have taken us from the "horrible pit and miry
clay," but you must steady us, or we shall merge back again.
We have made great general progress on the whole; but don't leave
us alone. I would write more, but have not time now.
Yours, most respectfully,
G. PILLSBURY,
Mayor of Charleston, S. C.
Rev. Mr. Alvord.
The Mayor subsequently assured me that all he had stated in this
letter could be relied upon, and that he was satisfied with the
moral and educational condition of the Freedmen in the city.
To substantiate his statements in regard to crime he gave me access
to the police records for the last three months, from which I made
a detailed transcript of all crimes committed in Charleston under
their several titles, as in comparison of the two races. The whole
table is interesting, but I give you only a summary of the months
of October, November, and December, 1869:
Crimes committed by whites, 246; crimes committed by blacks, 222;
total in above months, 468. The principal of these crimes were:
Larceny--whites, 21; colored, 68; total, 89. Violation of city ordinances--white,
35; colored, 8; total, 43. Drunk--white, 72; colored, 14; total,
86. Drunk and disorderly conduct--white, 74; colored, 81; total,
155. Applied for lodgings--white, 22; colored, 11; total, 38. Crimes
of all other kinds--white, 22; colored, 40; total 62.
These statistics reveal the actual state of things better than
any general statements, and are certainly creditable to the colored
population.
The census for Charleston gives 42,000 population, the colored
slightly in the majority.
Very respectfully, yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard,
Savannah, Ga., January, 14, 1870.
Dear General: I find in this city the "Beach Institute,"
with three hundred pupils and seven teachers in the different departments,
all in excellent condition and making good progress. The building
is large, (erected by the Bureau,) of the most improved modern construction,
and well kept. Although the children and colored population generally
here, are not as far advanced as in Charleston, yet this Institute
is a credit to our work, and seems to command the respect of all
classes.
This is a continuation of the schools we started when your army
from Atlanta met us on the coast. Changes have taken place but the
organization, as you recollect, with a colored educational committee
and ten colored teachers, was placed under the general patronage
of the American Missionary Association, occupying, by leave of General
Geary, who was left in command of the city, the old "Bryan
Slave Mart." Now we have a permanent Institution, under the
best possible direction and well endowed, having had a total expenditure
by the Association and Bureau of over $40,000. One thousand dollars
were given by the Freedmen at the time of starting.
I called together the old colored educational committee (these
are the men whom Secretary Stanton met and conferred with when at
Savannah in 1865,) for examination of these schools These fathers
were highly gratified with the wonderful exhibition and progress
made, and promised to visit the Institution, in an advisory way,
on the first Tuesday of each month. This will continue their own
interest and help the association in the estimation of all the colored
people.
I visited the private schools taught by colored men. They are quite
respectable, with, in all, about one hundred and twenty pupils.
The Catholics have a school of sixty pupils, managed by the Bishop
and taught by the St. Joseph Sisters, an order in France trained
expressly for African missions. By especial dispensation of the
Pope a band of them have been seat here, and others to St. Augustine
and Jacksonville, Florida; they have a small school, as I should
have informed you, at Charleston. After looking in upon one of these
schools, with very polite reception by the teacher, I called upon
the acting bishop. The call was in every way agreeable. He complained,
however, that your officers had refused to their church the aid
given, under the law, to other parties.
I promised, on his invitation, to examine the school more thoroughly,
and if found to be teaching the elements of an English education
would report in favor of its receiving such assistance. But knocking
for admission next morning, the teacher held the door partly open
and positively forbade my entrance--said "the father (after
my call) had ordered her so to do." I was of course surprised,
but parleyed pleasantly; told her that "the father" had
invited me to "visit the school whenever I wished," but
in vain. She "presumed the permission had been reconsidered,"
and said that "the teachers were a priesthood," "took
no pay," "were mainly teaching religion," &c.,
and reiterated her positive refusal to admit me. I could only express
my regrets, and on leaving sent my official card to "Father
Hamilton," with the message that I was very sorry not to be
able to see the school; that our government made no distinction
in religious denominations, and that if the school could be reported
on our blanks, the usual Bureau aid would be most cheerfully granted.
On the back of the card I noted that I should be happy to see him
at the Beach Institute at any time during the day, but he did not
call. This bishop should not complain of you hereafter.
The general testimony of the citizens of Savannah (I saw all classes)
is that our schools are a great benefit to the Freedmen. Old families
exclude our teachers from their social circles, yet no longer denounce
their Christian work.
The industry of the Freedmen is also admitted, and the good influence
of the Savings Bank. The mayor and other officials were quite surprised
when I told them the branch in their city had on deposit over $80,000.
A prominent physician assured me that in constitutional health negroes
had suffered from the influences of slavery; that in their extreme
poverty, no doubt, many infants died from want of care. "In
the old time," he said, "they were cared for as animals
to be bred."
I went through the public market, along the wharves, out into the
suburbs, noting carefully the conduct of the colored population,
and can only say there are signs of constant improvement. I was
in business in this city when a young man, nearly forty years ago;
often visiting the place since, and cannot be mistaken.
The general condition of the Freedmen along all this coast, (city,
county, and islands,) is comparatively low, but so far as my observation
goes, they compare favorably with other laboring classes in moral
conduct, temperance, chastity, especially in a desire for quiet
home-life, wherever they can buy and settle upon lands. The taxes
upon their accumulating property and homesteads are already swelling
the revenue of both the city and surrounding parishes. And these
Freedmen have just reached a condition to make, if elevating influences
are continued, still more rapid progress.
I have the honor to be yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard, Commissioner, &c.
Augusta, Ga., January 17, 1870.
Dear General: Arrived at this place, by night train, yesterday
morning.
The schools in Augusta are among the best I have seen, not so much
in advancement as in high tone and enthusiasm. The older classes
are well sustained.
They are under the care, as you know, of the "Baptist Home
Mission Society," with the exception of one (sixty pupils)
supported by county commissioners, and two smaller schools, the
expenses of which are paid by the Freedmen themselves. I am happy
to report the above society as doing so well. The superintendent,
Rev. W. D. Seigfreid, appears, in all ways to be the right man.
Their seven teachers (three of whom are colored) are accomplished
and thorough. Mr. S. has also a class of seventeen men who are studying
the Scriptures, in order to become preachers. The county school
is well conducted by one of the excellent teachers of the American
Missionary Association, but she fails of prompt pay from the county
commissioners Excellent singing was noted in this school.
In the evening we had an enthusiastic meeting in one of the churches,
when the subjects of education, savings bank, and general prosperity
of the Freedmen were the themes; a number of the speakers were colored;
audience deeply interested.
One half the population of Augusta, numbering in all 12,000, is
colored. With much to struggle against, and some division among
themselves in religious matters, the Freedmen here are fully meeting
our expectations. As a body they are more intelligent and enterprising
than those on the coast.
Just out of the city is a settlement of about one hundred families-something
like the Barry Farm at Washington--where small homesteads have been
purchased and are being paid for; average value of each from $100
to $500. These families are joyously cultivating their own gardens
and provision grounds, also finding work in the city. The Bureau
has erected for them a convenient house, now used for a school and
chapel.
Further in the interior the Freedmen are buying or renting land
and raising their own crops. A community of such families, about
thirty miles out, (in South Carolina,) came in, a few days since,
to market their crops for the season. They had chartered a railroad
car for $140 the round trip, and loading it with cotton, corn, &c.
exchanged the same for clothing, furniture, implements of husbandry,
and supplies for putting in their next crop. They came to us on
returning, and begged very hard that a teacher might be sent to
their settlement, promising to pay all expenses. These are indications
of the drift of these people towards independent home life and profitable
labor. Although the savings bank here is one of the most recently
established, it has had deposited over $60,000, of which 31,000
is still to their credit
One of the worse habits of Freedmen in Augusta is spending money
for lottery tickets. Lottery offices are on every business street,
tempting the unwary, and by an occasional prize, these ignorant
people (not all of them) are lured to this species of gambling.
Mr. Ritter, the cashier of the bank, told me that probably more
was thus wasted than is brought to the bank
A trifling incident at the above meeting may interest you. Without
my expecting it, one of the prominent colored men rose at the close
of the addresses, and said he had heard that "the Bureau was
to be abolished," and wished all who were opposed would raise
their hands. Instantly their came up a whole forest of arms from
all parts of the house. Of course I gave assurances that their request
should be reported to Congress
I regret to find that the educational association in Georgia, spoken
of in my former reports, composed of both white and colored men,
is embarrassed by the political conflicts of the State. The colored
men are greatly incensed that some of their leaders are tampering
with the rebel element. Almost to a man the entire freed people
of the State are intensely loyal; and colored members-elect of the
approaching Legislature will vote to sustain the action of Congress,
and the enactment of a code of laws providing for universal education.
I have the honor to be yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Macon, Ga., January 18, 1870.
Dear General: I enclose to you a synopsis of criminal arrests from
records of the Mayor's court in Savannah. You perceive cases marked
"colored" predominate. This differs from the record at
Charleston, a copy of which, made with great care, I sent you, which
showed nearly an equality as to color. The disparity is more apparent
than real: 1. At this season of the year laborers come, in great
numbers, from the plantations outside of Savannah to help in shipping
cotton. They become what are called "long-shoremen;" have
small jobs on the wharves at twenty-five-cents per hour, and are
exposed to every species of temptation. I counted twenty-five square-rigged
cotton ships in port, with crews of idle sailors on shore demoralizing
both sexes. This greatly swells the criminal calender of the city
at the present time.
2. The authorities and police in Savannah are of the old rebel
class, (Charleston has Northern men,) and the colored race in court
suffers in comparison with the white. You notice the record is one
of "arrests." A negro with firearms about him, and many
now feel obliged to carry them, or any considerable sum of money
in his hand, is liable to arrest on suspicion. Not so with white
men. The latter also, when intoxicated, are often conveyed home,
while the former are sure to be held for trial, when comparatively
far less testimony convicts the black. The old slavery feeling remains,
and, from past negro habit and character, presupposes that the accused
is surely guilty; respectable parties declare that in Southern cities,
if still governed by a native magistracy, at least twenty-five per
cent. should on this account be abated from the colored criminal
list. It has been to me a noticeable fact that where recorded crime
is against color, the verbal admission of magistrates has been that
"there is less drunkenness with Freedmen than among the white
population."
Allow me to add my own observation. I have now travelled 1,200
miles, through city and country, conversing with fellow passengers,
mingling with numerous colored assemblies, making excursions on
the coast and islands by row-boat, carriages, and on foot, always
going in the lowest purlieus and carefully observing all classes,
and I declare to you, General, I have not seen one colored man or
woman who appeared intoxicated. I did see white men in this condition.
Before reaching my hotel, as I entered Charleston, two gentlemen
of high (political) standing, whose names I could give, were pointed
out to me reeling in locked arms along the street, helping each
other home!
I beg you will note that those who make statements in regard to
the morality of Freedmen seem to have forgotten the deplorable influences
of slavery; the embruted condition from which these people have
been so lately taken. A few months, or years, even, are only sufficient
to make the first stand against such moral ruin. Give us time to
rally them, so as to start fair in the race with the hitherto privileged
class. A generation at least should be granted for an even chance,
and all judgment (as to comparison at present) should be stayed,
or else made with this reasonable allowance.
Those of us who have often seen the negro, both before and since
emancipation, feel assured that such progress as has already been
made is evidence of a vitality prophetic of a rapidly rising people.
Notwithstanding delinquencies and admissions, we must not ignore
the evidences of improvement in all private, social, industrial,
educational, moral, and religious life.
The following is the abstract above referred to:
To J. W. Alvord:
Arrests by police force of the City of Savannah, from October
1 to December 31, 1868, inclusive:
Month
No. White
No. Colored
Total
October......................................
61
90
151
November...................................
101
156
257
December....................................
144
173
317
306
419
725
R. H. ANDERSON, Chief of Police.
If space permitted I would state in specific detail the various
crimes in the abstract here given.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Atlanta, January 18, 1870.
Dear General: My Sabbath was in Macon visiting colored schools
and congregations, observing the religious habits of this people,
and addressing them. On Monday examined schools, banks, business
marts, police stations, &c.
More general prosperity is apparent than in the lower part of the
State; cotton crop abundant, and of the 80,000 bales already sent,
to the Macon market, 10,000 bales are the property of Freedmen.
Not less than $1,000,000 (as the brokers say) have been paid them
in that city for this crop the present season. It is supposed by
good judges that one-third of the cotton in all upper Georgia belongs
to colored men. This has been raised generally on shares or rented
land. There are three method of working on shares: 1. The laborer
has one-third of the corn and one-fourth of the cotton, with all
supplies found. 2. He has one-third of all crops and found. 3. One-half
of all, and shares equally in expenses.
Rents of land are from $1 to $2 per acre. These rentals are much
more common than heretofore. With the proceeds of the present crop
a large amount of land will be purchased.
I find the following history of the Freedmen's labor: The first
year they worked for bare subsistence; second year they bought stock--mules,
implements, &c.; third year many rented lands; and now, the
fourth year, large numbers are prepared to buy. This is the record
of the most industrious, others are following at a slower pace.
In this process difficulties have been encountered--low wages, fraud,
ill-treatment, &c., some becoming discouraged, but the majority
are determined to rise. As illustrations: Several Freedmen in Houston
county have bought from 100 to 600 acres of land each. One man is
now planting for fifty bales of cotton. A colored company (called
Peter Walker's) own 1,500 acres. Two brothers (Warren) saved in
the bank $600, and with it obtained a title to 1,500 acres, having
credit for the balance, and both are now building houses and preparing
to make a crop which they expect will clear off their whole debt.
In Americus fully one hundred houses and lots belong to colored
people.
Wages in this part of the State are better than below, usually
$12 per month, and for the coming season promise to be still higher.
I saw a group of laborers at the mart contracting with planters
for from $150 to $175 per year. Emigration for laboring purposes
is rapidly going from Georgia to the west and southwest especially
to the lower Mississippi. The train on which I came to this city
had a large company--poor whites as well as blacks. This will soon
relieve the depressed population of the coast, and help to increase
wages throughout the State.
The testimony of all parties in Macon is that the freed people
are industrious, more sober than the whites; though there are worthless
characters, and all spend too much money in childish shows, circuses
and lotteries, yet as a people they are becoming saving and thrifty.
Mr. William P. Goodall, cashier of the city bank--a southern man--with
whom I conferred on banking affairs, spoke of the Freedmen, as a
whole, in terms of high commendation.
The Speaker of the State Senate, Mr. Conly, of Augusta, said to
me: "I have been in this State forty years, and I never knew
a Christmas and New Years pass off with so little intemperance among
the colored population as the recent one. "I was travelling,"
he said, "and saw hundreds about the depots, but none were
drunk"
Our schools in Georgia have silenced open opposition, even in
this time of fearful political excitement. I, as yet, hear of no
increased violence to teachers. In Macon the schools of the American
Missionary Association, (five hundred pupils,) under the care of
Mr. Sawtell, are in excellent order, and the large and substantial
building which the Bureau has erected, is admirably arranged and
kept in good repair. I could not find a pin scratch on a single
desk. Some others, especially the private schools, are not in as
good condition.
The thing to be deplored is that the older classes cannot be retained
and carried forward to the completion of their studies. The "fund,"
to which I alluded in a former letter, for the support of worthy
youth is great needed. These are almost sure now to be forced away
by the incessant calls of actual life. Who can be drawn upon? Will
the Northern people do this or the General Government? I asked Mr.
C. R. Robert, of New York, whom I met at Macon, if he could not
start such an educational fund. He admitted its urgent necessity,
but pointed to his "Lookout Mountain" enterprise. These
Southern States may do well in legislation, but if left to themselves
will not take earnest hold of this school work for years to come.
The bank is starting well--a colored cashier of good ability. On
deposit, $15,000. Chapel and church enterprise by the American Missionary
Association promising. We had delightful services on the Sabbath,
with more special religious interest than I have before seen.
Of the political status in this city (Atlanta) you are, of course,
informed by the daily press. General Terry is very firm and the
commission on membership is earnestly at work. One old friend of
ours (I need not give his name) seems to be foolishly selling himself
and his party, if he can, to the opposition. Not a colored member
goes with him in either House. Even though he were honest in saying
that he "can now hold the balance of power and afterwards turn
it into the hands of the Republicans," he greatly over-estimates
his strength. His best friends in all the State will drop him.
Passing through the halls of the House, I overheard a group of
Democratic leaders cursing him in the most blasphemous terms, and
then, in an undertone, saying, "but we've got to use him; can
then throw him out," &c. Don't credit his telegrams and
letter-writers. I have had a number of interviews with him, and
he told me distinctly "he'd rather the whole Republican party
in Georgia should be a failure than that Bullock should triumph."
His more intimate advisers, I have seen, and know their character,
and can assure you that no true Republican here stands by him.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard
Atlanta, Ga., January 20, 1870.
Dear General: * * * Do not suppose I have been much occupied with
the political situation; I imagined you would like to know the facts
Georgia will be very wretched if such chicanery as is now going
on at its capital prevails.
I have to-day finished the examination of schools in and around
this city. The American Missionary Association schools have their
usual excellence, and the Methodist's are doing well. There are
two or three small private schools, but of little note. Catholics,
so far as I can learn, are as yet doing nothing here, though promising
much in the future by extensive buildings in progress. By far the
most important institution here is the new "Atlanta University."
The location is beautiful, overlooking the city, on the precise
ground where the rebels intrenched in resistance to Sherman's approach.
The building is very substantial, economically constructed, and
has about one hundred and forty pupils in all, sixty of whom are
boarders, and well advanced in all the English branches. I am stopping
with them. The order and neatness in rooms and halls, good behavior,
even high culture at meals and elsewhere is very striking. We scarcely
equal it at our own University.
Teachers are interspersed at table with the students, and all seem
like one great well-bred and happy family. It is a remarkable fact
that most of the pupils have come provided with money for self-support.
I can now see that, in view of the coming prosperity of these people,
more, many more, will hereafter be able to do this throughout all
the South than I had anticipated. The great majority, as yet, are
very poor; but in a few years, Freedmen who are children; continued
eagerness for learning is our guarantee that saving money and buying
land, will be able to school their own they will do this. Previous
to the full endowment of this school, Howard University may expect
many talented youth, graduated here, to join its higher professional
departments.
We had a pleasant interview with Governor Bullock. [Editor's
note: Gap in text] us that our schools were a great blessing
to the country. "They help," he says, "all our institutions;
our political prosperity must be based upon intelligence; the Freedmen
will be upon the right side if they are well instructed." But
the Georgia people, in his opinion, "will not, in any event,
be prepared to sustain their schools for the present." Your
Bureau," he added, "will be wanted for a long time to
come." He spoke with great interest and intelligence on general
educational matters, and promised to use his influence in continuance
of our work in his own State.
The new savings bank opened on Saturday under the most favorable
auspices. Some of the influential white men (old residents) are
upon the advisory committee. Deposits already amount to some thousands
of dollars.
I regret to learn to-day of recent atrocious outrages in some of
the counties by organized bands, generally in the night time. Their
attacks are invariably upon innocent and loyal men. The recent bold
assumptions of certain political leaders, who expect to gain control
of the State, have given countenance to these outlaws; though it
should be said the better class of citizens in their declarations
utterly condemn them; yet the laws seem powerless in their punishment.
A colored member elect of the Georgia Legislature was lately taken
from his house and beaten nearly to death. One of our teachers was
driven away from Greensborough, and the man with whom he boarded
(white) was taken out of his house at night and whipped unmercifully.
When will such inhumanity cease?
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard, Commissioner, &c.
Atlanta, Ga., January 21, 1870.
Dear General: I may perhaps write oftener than you wish, but you
desired of me short letters rather than one lengthy report at the
end of my tour. My impressions at the moment are also more distinct
and accurate than they would be after delay.
I am carefully collecting statistics of industry, mortality, crime,
&c., as well as general information. City clerks and chiefs
of police do not hesitate to answer all my queries, but are slow
in making the transcripts from their records. I will forward the
full documents by subsequent mails. Below you have my notes of the
general facts in Savannah, Macon, and this city:
Comparative mortality among whites
and blacks.
SAVANNAH
Deaths from
White.
Colored.
Total.
October, 1865, to October, 1866
622
993
1,615
October, 1866, to October, 1867
598
720
1,318
October, 1867, to October, 1868
570
639
1,209
October, 1868, to October, 1869
528
473
1,001
2,318
2,825
1,001
From 1866 to 1869 the colored population was in excess of the white
nearly in the ratio of 9 to 8. Now they are estimated as equal;
if any difference the colored still predominate.
MACON.
White.
Colored
Deaths in 1869...........................................................
161
125
Population equal.
ATLANTA.
Deaths from
White.
Colored.
Total.
October, 1865, to October, 1866
622
993
1,615
October, 1866, to October, 1867
598
720
1,318
October, 1867, to October, 1868
570
639
1,209
October, 1868, to October, 1869
528
473
1,001
2,318
2,825
1,001
Colored population about equal to white.
It will be seen by the above, that since the close of the war the
ratio of deaths among both colors has steadily decreased, but especially
among the blacks. Atlanta has increased 10,000 since 1866, and yet
deaths have actually decreased. All its population is now suffering
less from exposure to disease and unhealthful influences.
If statistics of births could be gathered in any part of the South
it would be seen that these are most numerous among the colored
population.
I consult also the colored preachers and sextons, who of course
attend all burials. None of them are aware of increased mortality
among their race, though they admit that many children died during,
or soon after, the war. Conditions of comfort into which the people
are now coming, will undoubtedly prevent infantile disease, and
tend hereafter to the more rapid increase of these people. Let no
one fear lest this population of "African descent" will
fail of being abundant. The primary departments of our schools are
always the the most crowded. Teachers and missionaries who daily
visit the homes of Freedmen, while mourning over remaining degradation,
all testify of gradual elevation in domestic comfort, social life,
morals, and manners.
There is a species of internal evidence which we do well to notice.
With all that has depressed this race, and still is to be deplored
in their condition and habits, they are themselves full of hope,
expect to live, are planning for improvement, and anticipate having
a place, as a people, in the future affairs of our country.
All these facts leave us but one question: What shall be the character
of these Freedmen? how fitted to be an element of well-directed
power? Politicians, philanthropists, and Christians should be thoroughly
interested in this single inquiry. Inferior obstacles besetting
their pathway will soon be cleared away, and who can doubt that
their improvement, under right appliances, is to be far more rapid
than at present? That Divine Being who has watched over past oppression
and brought deliverance, has on their behalf a fast-coming and brighter
history.
We had a public meeting on Wednesday evening at Storr's chapel--parents,
children, members of the legislature, &c., of much interest.
I still find evidence of thrift among the Freedmen. From returns,
made at the capital, it appears that in nearly every county of Georgia
they have purchased land and commenced farming on their on account.
In Athens seventy colored families are living in houses recently
bought and paid for.
In this city a large number have purchased lots and built cottages.
They have also erected for themselves convenient and well arranged
church buildings. I saw in Macon a colored church edifice going
up, of brick, to cost $10,000. It was planned and constructed by
their own mechanics--tasteful in style, and to be paid for wholly
by themselves. The Freedmen give more liberally for church purposes
than even towards the support of their schools. During the months
of October, November, and December, there were paid by the colored
people of the State nearly $5,000 for tuition. This is usually out
of extreme poverty. We have now in Georgia, as reported by Colonel
Lewis nearly 10,000 pupils under instruction.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Atlanta University, January 22, 1870.
Dear General: I look out upon these entrenchments, which flank
the grounds of this university, in wonder at the change which four
short years have made. These earth-works, where rebels defied the
approach of freedom, have now risen in walls of brick and stone
to shelter the children of the free, and endow them with the power
of knowledge. The roar of batteries is now exchanged for the music
of school songs and recitations.
We are asked for progress! Such altered position is enough. Is
not this progress? The institution of such a school in such a place
and these fine classes of students, is but the beginning of the
end. I have listened to them from the model department to the highest
in languages and mathematics, and can testify to the accuracy and
enthusiasm of both pupils and teachers. Blackboard demonstrations
especially showed ready brains and skillful fingers.
At the opening of the evening session in the large public hall
the pupils requested in childlike simplicity permission to sing
for me "We are rising," evidently supposing the song at
least, if not the incident, to which the genius of Whittier has
given world-wide fame, would be new to me. They rendered it in exact
time and with much spirit. At the close, I suggested that this must
not merely be true in song but in fact; that it is true, perhaps,
far beyond what they were aware of. I then made a brief statement
of our three thousand or four thousand colored schools of different
kinds, varying grades, advancement, &c., from the lowest primary
to those of full college classes. I described commencement graduations
of such classes which I had witnessed, and positions which the graduates
are now occupying; mentioned your honored name as commissioner,
and the interest you feel in regard to all, especially Atlanta University.
The whole school bent forward as I spoke, every face beaming with
intense interest. I could not avoid the remark, in closing, that
if any had messages to send you I should be most happy to bear them.
A silent pause of about half a minute, and a tall boy, in a distant
corner, slowly arose, stood a moment in thought, and then said,
"Tell General Howard we are all thankful for what he is doing
for us. We will endeavor to improve these privileges, and prepare
ourselves for usefulness;" a short pause, and he added, "socially,
religiously, and politically." I give his exact words as pencilled
at the moment, uttered with deliberation and most appropriate emphasis.
Before leaving next morning the enclosed written messages, each
in the handwriting of its author, accumulated in my hands. I send
them without correction, expressed as you see in great simplicity,
but they are the voice of those young hearts to yours.
The lad who in this school two years ago gave you the message immortalized
by Whittier, is now a half-grown young man and a promising scholar.
I am sorry to say he was not present. His mother aids him in all
her power, but a step-father (an intemperate man) has taken him
from school, insisting that he help support himself and the family.
I did not hesitate to sanction measures to have him returned. Will
not some one become patron of this interesting boy? His name is
Richard B. Wright. He was pointed out to me to-day in front of our
Savings bank, (just being opened,) gazing up at the new sign. "Have
you any money here?" I inquired. "No, sir," said
he, "but I mean to have."
To Chattanooga in the morning.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard, Commissioner, &c.
The following are specimens of the messages to General Howard referred
to in the above letter:
FROM THE MODEL SCHOOL.
Atlanta, Ga., 21st January.
Gen. Howard--Sir: It is true that we were in bondage, and if
it had not been for the kind people of the North we should have
been slaves this day. Instead, we are free. Oh, how thankful I
feel because we have learned to pray. Wright Kemp.
[Wright Kemp, the above boy, has lost his right arm, and is about
fourteen years old.]
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 21, 1870.
Sir: You will please tell Gen. Howard we are trying to rise as
fast as possible, and I hope we shall soon be able to do much
good among our people. And I hope his name will ever be remembered
among our people as one that has done much good.
Yours respectfully, Melinda A. Griffin,
Of Augusta, Ga.
Atlanta University, Jan. 21, 1870.
Sir: Will you please to tell the General that we have been expecting
him for some time in our city with great joy. I hope we are rising
as a people. We are striving with all our strength and minds to
progress, both in our books and also in our duty to God. We will
ever remember him in our prayers, and do return him sincere thanks
for his kindness in aiding us so much.
Respectfully, Lucy Sauey, Of Macon, Ga.
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 21.
Dear Sir: We are glad to hear you have done so much for us, and
we will never forget you so long as the world stands.
Your friend.
J. W. Marlow.
Marietta, Ga., January 22, 1870.
Dear General: Left Atlanta a few hours since, and here under the
shadow of Kenesaw and Lost mountains, still bearing on their flanks
the great scars of your victories, I stop to look about and make
a few notes. The town (county seat of Cobb county) was much torn
by troops in the rebellion, but is now rebuilding, in a region,
as you remember, beautifully picturesque, and by the war made classic
ground. This mountain region (so New England like) gives to the
traveler refreshing relief from the piney levels or slightly rolling
country on the coast, and slopes of this Alleghany range. From Atlanta
the way is thick with localities of interest. Tourists will hereafter
often trace its scenes of thrilling history. Marietta has two colored
day schools and two on the Sabbath. They are not large, but will
increase as the town recovers its former population.
We have seen along the road more emigration to the West and Southwest.
Yesterday a train with 150 freedmen passed through the capital,
and to day we met another train, well loaded. Labor agents go through
the country, contract with and conduct these laboring people to
their destination. These agents have much opportunity for fraud.
Some, with whom I conversed, appeared heartily interested in their
welfare--told me that first-class hands would get $15 per month.
One had them in families, and his whole company were stopping a
day for the funeral of one of their children.
A recent tour of Colonel Lewis, superintendent, to the States on
the Mississippi river, reveals some contrasts to what is found in
Georgia. More general immorality prevails. Frauds on colored soldiers
having claims against the Government are attempted, and so complicated
that their fellow-freedmen are often involved in them. As accomplices
of dishonest men, they are taught to deceive and cheat each other.
Would it not be wise to have pensions and bounties for colored soldiers,
which sharpers are so apt to get from them, (even after the money
is in their own hands,) placed, in some way, in the savings bank
as a depositary or receiver, thus affording these soldiers its friendship
and some legal hindrance against their enemies?
Your officers in Georgia are excellent and efficient men, diligently
at work in all the interests of the freedmen.
On that most interesting of questions, the industry and economy
of these people, permit me to add another fact: Mr. Harris, our
inspector, who resides at Beaufort, S. C., and whom I find earnestly
examining the freedmen's banks in this region, has given me the
record of nearly two thousand families now settled on Sea Island
lands owned by themselves. For these purchases most of them had
saved their money in the savings bank, at Beaufort.
I distributed bank papers to-day from the cars which were eagerly
taken by the younger freedmen who could read.
Our train is off in a few minutes.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Chattanooga, Tenn., January 24, 1870.
Dear General: I came over the "fighting ground" between
here and Atlanta by daylight to see your line of march, entrenched
positions, battle-fields, &c. My companion, Rev. S. P. Smith,
former field agent of the Christian Commission, could point me to
each locality of struggle, hospital work, and Christian labor. Thus
I spent one of the most interesting days of my life, in this long
review of one hundred and thirty miles up to the broader battlegrounds
and fastnesses of Chattanooga.
Here bad weather for a day has prevented much out-door work. Saturday
evening and Sabbath I addressed the people, and have now visited
the schools in town, and on Lookout mountain.
Tennessee is paralyzed by the late political revulsion. You feel
it as soon as you cross the line. Georgia struggles manfully, but
this State succumbs--perhaps can only do this. A gleam of hope comes
from the fifteenth amendment, and some possible further action in
Congress.
The assistant superintendent lately had fifteen or twenty schools
in this (Hamilton) county, doing well; all of which he has been
forced to close, and is now confined to diminished members within
the limits of this city. It would not be safe, he says, to at present
go beyond. General enterprise feels the shock; capital shrinks from
investment; good men are cast down, and though the freedmen struggle
to stem the tide, yet they are planning for emigration to the Southwest;
many have already gone.
About one hundred pupils are in the Chattanooga schools, with teachers
worn by toil and anxiety. The colored church, with commendable zeal,
still sustains its excellent pastor, Rev. Mr. Tade.--He has a Sabbath
school of two hundred; a "Band of Hope," (temperance,)
of an equal number, besides a temperance league of sixty adults
Both parents and children in these associations are pledged to abstinence
from tobacco; a remarkable fact, when we consider the almost universal
custom in Tennessee of smoking, chewing, and "dipping."
More general intemperance, however, prevails in Chattanooga among
the freedmen than I have previously seen. Low drinking saloons are
numerous, and, as I observed, in the back streets, too well patronized
by colored customers. The present depression of the people is demoralizing,
and greatly increases this evil.
More money should be appropriated for this place by the educational
societies, and perhaps by the Government, if we are to retain the
foothold we now have, and especially if to make a vigorous advance.
The Bank, though suffering from large drafts from laborers out of
employment, is holding on its way; probably at the present time
is doing more for the people than the schools.
On Lookout I had a hearty reception and a fortunate mountain view.
Above where Hooker fought (and the day I went up literally "above
the clouds") stands the "Lookout Mountain Institute."
As I reached the summit, dark masses, for days having deluged the
country, were struck by a west wind, and in broken fragments like
retreating squadrons, were rolled up and over the topmost crest,
revealing below and around that most magnificent panorama. The wide,
low valley, the city in its bosom, the grey hillsides, and loftier
peaks of blue beyond were sharply defined, and through rifted clouds
flecked with huge patches of glittering sunlight. Old mountain residents
expressed admiration, and declared that a view so striking was very
rare.
Pity that slavery should ever have blighted the beauty of such
a land. Missionary Ridge in distant view, up which lately swept
the long line of our victorious army, had once a redeeming feature;
its missionary station and work among the Cherokees, often read
of with interest in my boyhood. Noble men there struggled long against
environing influences; obliged finally to abandon the field. Its
school buildings and mill are now nearly in ruins.
This institute at present is in vacation, but numbers of pupils
remain and the general routine continues. Mr. Bancroft, superintendent,
and his corps of teachers appear without fault; buildings well cared
for; the recent appropriation by Colonel Compton economically expended,
and so far as the design of the generous founder is concerned, the
school is a fine success. It may be hoped that its youth, mostly
from the poor and middle class of Southern whites, will, in after
life, cleave to principles they are now imbibing. Its whole catalogue,
male and female, numbers sixty pupils. Those now present are working
daily in self-support, and at our Sunday evening prayer meeting
the young men showed ability, and an active christian spirit. If
the bureau has funds still to aid white schools in the South, I
feel assured this institute is well worthy of your patronage.
Very respectfully, yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Nashville, Tenn., January 26, 1870.
Dear General: Impressions at Chattanooga are somewhat modified
here. This city is the centre of culture and political influence
in Tennessee, and is now quite astir with the State convention and
Legislature. Both bodies indicate within the last few days some
advance in the right direction, as seen in the discussion of further
educational provisions and enactments against that nuisance now
beginning to be universally felt--the Ku-Klux," or, as they
are here called, "masked marauders."
The excellent system of schools which by law had favored all colors
are, as you know, now set aside, leaving in a loose way the whole
subject of education to the counties, only two of which, out of
the eighty-five in the State, have voted for any public instruction.
But there is undoubtedly reaction. The people, of both colors, will
have schools. A taste has been had, the dawn of light seen, and
they will not go wholly back to the old starvation and darkness.
Public leaders feel the pressure, and pushed also by national events,
are making promises. All this is well; still the more thoughtful
Union men evidently lack confidence. Indeed I notice general mistrust,
forebodings of the future, and a disposition on the part of freedmen
to leave the State.
We spent an hour in the Legislature to-day where there seems to
be but one party, of course having things their own way. Tomorrow
we look in upon the Convention and examine schools.
Our bank, and the bounty office have been obliged to leave their
excellent location. Objection, I understand, was made to the crowd
of claimants and depositors in that aristocratic locality. Their
present offices, however, are convenient and eligible.
A gathering of the colored preachers of the city and vicinity,
whom we met to-day in the chapel of the University, indicated unusual
intelligence. They expressed great interest in you personally, and
in our educational work, desiring it to go on. This is the sentiment
of all leading colored men. They would feel "wholly unprotected,"
they say, "if the Bureau should cease." I assured them
that the Government would provide some agency to care for their
interests, and that the schools will doubtless be continued.
January 25.--Found the Convention composed of middle-aged, well
educated men, from the older class of citizens; the Legislature
more nearly representing all classes.
They were on the suffrage question, the debate covering the entire
political status, professing love of former times and dislike to
northern influence. Said a member (late a rebel colonel): "I'd
as soon have asked my regiment, after the surrender, what they expected
to do about the Southern Confederacy, as to inquire what we are
to do. We went into the war and lost, and now what Congress are
determined on they'll have, and we must submit." This appeared
to be the prevailing animus, with more or less of insubmission.
Both Convention and Legislature will endeavor to please the General
Government and pacify union people--freedmen especially. They say:
"It's dead sure, the niggers are to vote." This vote is
to be secured; but while promising knowledge, they will take advantage
of ignorance, keeping up fair appearances; subsequently, I fear,
to disappoint and betray. Controlling events and a constituency
demanding justice will alone hold these leaders to what the times
demand.
Examined with much satisfaction, the three well-known colored institutions
of this city, namely, Fisk University, Central Tennessee College,
and National Theological Institute. There are three hundred pupils
in the former, and about one hundred each in the two latter, a portion
of their young men preparing for the University. All have substantial
and commodious buildings, with convenient furniture, and teachers
of ability. I heard accurate reading and spelling in the lower departments,
good classes in English branches, and recitations in mathematics
and languages which would have done honor to students and professors
of any institution.
All the above schools are under the patronage of Northern societies,
and now are increasing in numbers on account of the closing of so
many public schools.
In regard to other freedmen's education in the city and county
I can only repeat what has already been said. It is where all would
be throughout the the South, if the influence of the General Government
should be withdrawn--drooping, discouraged; teachers with blasted
hopes, working hard, desperately, but pulling only against the current.
Here at the capital, our schools are certainly among the most flourishing
of the State; but even these are running with weary pace and clogged
wheels.
I regret to be obliged to write thus. It makes the heart ache to
see the late flourishing system of this State so suddenly overturned.
At Christmas vacation teachers in Nashville were told by the school
board that "no time could be fixed for commencing the schools,
and perhaps they would not commence at all." It was thought
this would induce these devoted Northern ladies to leave, but with
admirable courage they determined to remain; consequently about
half were employed, and still have in all about five hundred pupils,
showing how high had been the standard. Five hundred similar children,
equally advanced and promising, and whose parents pay full taxes,
have been turned loose upon the streets. The city, it is true, has
but little school money, yet makes less effort to obtain it. There
seems to be no heart in the work.
After all, the freed people of Tennessee, though cast down in many
of their hopes, are yet exhibiting the same patience as in times
past. I saw less appearance of demoralization in Nashville than
at Chattanooga. The remark to me was, "the people are industrious;
far less drunkenness among colored than white men."
I should add, more are paying for tuition than is generally supposed.
Even in the schools of the charitable societies it is the custom
to have pupils pay fifty cents per month. There is no complaint
of this, such is the unabated desire for learning.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Louisvllle, Ky., January 28, 1870.
Dear General: Desirous of seeing the whole line of interior cities
and towns, I have taken this northern route.
It is painful to observe in many places between this and Nashville,
a large colored population and yet only an occasional school. This
is accounted for, partly by the recent abandonment of schools in
Tennessee, and in part by hindrances still existing in the rural
districts through the whole South.
After all we have accomplished, only about one-seventh of the children
of Freedmen, of school age, are as yet under instruction. Groups
of these children are seen by the traveler gathered around railroad
stations, idly in the way, or offering services not wanted; learning,
from the low influences of such premises, only vice.
In this city the proximity of free institutions is very apparent.
General education is far better appreciated than below. The colored
people themselves have a species of public school system. Aided
by the Bureau, and in connection with the several colored churches,
some fifteen schools, under care of the colored assistant of General
Runkle, are in operation. They are in good condition; teachers all
colored, though the places in which they are kept are inconvenient.
I took great interest in visiting these schools. They show what
the people can do themselves. What is here accomplished, may become
universal as soon as the Freedmen have, from their own color, a
sufficient number of competent teachers.
The "Ely School," in care of the American Missionary
Association, has seven teachers and 300 pupils, in the commodious
house built mainly by the Bureau.
It was gratifying to find among the pupils a good degree of religious
interest; teachers tenderly devoted to their welfare, and some recent
conversions. The building, of brick, needs repair and better ventilation.
"The colored people of Kentucky," as the Hon. Bland Ballard
remarked to me "have no civil rights." The more enterprising
struggle manfully, but all are heavily burdened. In the first place
their property is assessed and taxed like that of the whites; then,
in case of the colored, is added a tax of two dollars per capita
to support their paupers, the whole of which tax actually goes for
that purpose, i. e.: they help pay for white pauperism, education,
&c., and then are obliged to support their own poor and schools
too, or remain destitute. At the same time, I was assured by the
above gentleman that the Freedmen are undoubtedly gaining in means
of livelihood and character. Their taxable property in 1868 was
$136,902, in 1869 $167,458, showing an increase of $30,556. This
increase is mainly on the part of the recently freed population.
The savings bank in Louisville has on deposit over $80,000. Met
the very intelligent committee in consultation at the Bank, with
invited colored preachers of the city. Some of the latter are men
of considerable education. I addressed them on the history of our
Savings and Trust Company, its benevolent object, careful management
and success. They resolved to make increased effort throughout the
city and State. It was also earnestly recommended that we open a
branch at Lexington. Mr Horace Morris, (colored,) cashier of the
bank in this city, is an accomplished accountant; his books and
entire premises in perfect order.
I omitted to mention, in my last, that the branch at Nashville
has on deposit nearly $60,000. Its cashier, Mr. John J. Cary, recognized
me as his teacher in a colored school at Cincinnati thirty-five
years ago. It was a pleasant meeting to both parties; I had wholly
lost sight of John during these long years, but the boy had persevered,
and is now a man of culture and influence. Had, quite recently,
a similar surprise at Raleigh, North Carolina, the cashier there
having been my pupil at the same school. We do not, General, labor
in vain. As years pass on, and you become as gray in the beard as
I am, thousands of prominent colored men will take you by the hand--as
did these two boys of mine--and thank you for having been their
early benefactor.
The entire number of Freedmen's schools in Louisville is about
25; pupils from 1,200 to 1,500.
The recent "suffrage" news from Washington creates much
excitement. The liberty of voting thrills the Freedmen with hope,
while the old ruling class are equally animated with disgust. I
hear rank cursing of the negro--his "ignorance," "unfitness,"
"rascality;" cursing engendered of rage rather than reason.
To one of these excited men, who had had two sons in the confederate
army, I said, "Then you'd better educate the negroes."
He looked me steadily in the eye a moment and replied, "that's
so," and after a short conversation, fully admitted that, so
far as they were capable of improvement, advantages should be given
them. This is all we ask: give the colored man a fair chance.
Some portions of Kentucky teem with loyal men and large-hearted
philanthropists. These enter heartily into all our plans, and the
worst class have, after all, a conviction that when the colored
man comes actually to be a voter, their best policy will be to grant
him privileges.
I regret since coming here to be informed of increasing outrages
in Tennessee.
The morals of Freedmen in Louisville compare well with other places
I have visited. A late city paper in giving a weekly report from
one of the police stations, says, "There were 42 cases of crime--21
being American, 11 Irish, 10 colored." Is it possible that
this report does justice to the white race?
Freedmen's schools in Kentucky number, in all, about 8,000 pupils.
From hence I go into the midland counties of the State.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Richmond, Ky., January 29, 1870.
Dear General: I wrote on leaving Louisville; then, on a fast train,
soon found myself in what is called the "Blue Grass Region"
of Kentucky. No part of the country--perhaps of the world--excels
in fertility this remarkable belt. Herds of high bred cattle and
horses, even at this cold season, are grazing the meadows and rich
pasture slopes. Thick stacks of hemp cover large fields, and on
every side is the appearance of wealth. These natural advantages,
however, are not equalled by actual thrift or comfort. Occasionally
a tasteful residence and well kept farm are passed, but in general,
even in larger towns where we stop, there is, to a northern eye,
an air of unthrift and discomfort; a painful discrepancy between
means and ends, as though some strange blight had passed over the
land and people, leaving everywhere its poison.
Stopping for the night in this county seat, (Madison County,) we
are at a diminutive hotel, not temperance, kept by an ex-rebel.
Headquarters of the ku-klux or "marauders" are not far
from here; no one is supposed to know where. Many cases of violence
have occurred recently. At Christmas, a white man was hung to a
tree in the court-house yard within a stones throw of our present
apartment. Six or seven colored men near the town have been whipped
and one killed within a few weeks. A feeble civil government and
whiskey are the immediate incentives, though rebel blood and negrohate
are the radical cause of such outrages.
The people seemed excited on learning thai we were from Washington;
a rumor in town during the day being that the 15th amendment had
passed. While making, after supper, our observations along the main
street, a suspicious looking crowd watched us; glowering faces peered
through street windows where we entered, and on our return the aforesaid
hotel accommodated more bar-room loungers than was agreeable. Our
landlord, though evidently having imbibed freely, was attentive,
but his son, in terms not to be repeated, positively refused to
wait on the yankees; the room jarred with muttered curses. "Is
Congress going to set the niggers to voting?" harshly inquired
one. Nevertheless, after answering all inquiries, we found the "guest
chamber," locked ourselves in, and, barring an occasional street
yell during the night, slept soundly.
Find two schools here kept by colored teachers, with a local association
of colored men in charge; very good specimens of this class of schools.
The chairman of the committee, a man of some education, told us
there was no special opposition to schools conducted by such teachers.
These had been partially educated in Ohio, and with the allowance
of Colonel Runkle, and what they obtain from tuition, have a fair
support. They together number 70 pupils. It would be gratifying
if, while waiting for better schools, only such as these could be
carried on throughout all destitute regions of the South.
Grossest intemperance prevails in this county among both colors.
An immense distillery in the suburbs of the town turns out, as the
owner himself told me, 35 barrels of whiskey daily; a constant river
of death, pouring its ruin everywhere. Do you wonder there are murders?
Our landlord said "It's lucky you didn't come last evening;
there was a row in the streets all night, half the town was drunk."
The Freedmen of this region seem industrious, and, to live, are
obliged to be so. But, with low wages, few can save anything, and
many are discouraged as to bettering their condition. If uneducated
they are still almost wholly in subjection to the whites; the "ku-klux"
power being intended to keep them so. It is intended to compel all,
if suffrage is granted, to vote only by dictation of their employers.
The expectation of such use of these people, goes, for the moment,
far towards reconciling the ruling class to their enfranchisement.
The forces of freedom will, however, ultimately find their true
limit, and sion, as such, must cease. Even during the existence
of the dominant party, there will be internal feud; rivalries for
office, each seeking the major vote, thus ensuring to colored possessors
of the franchise enlarged privileges and better treatment. The ballot
is the grand hope; we must hasten to educate, that it may be a power
used intelligently.
Very respectfully, yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard, Commissioner, &c.
Berea, Ky., January 29, 1870.
Dear General: From Richmond I came by stage to this place: fifteen
miles through a charming agricultural country, the scene of some
hard fighting during the war.
Berea is upon the crest of the Kentucky hills, as they skirt the
blue grass region. An undulating ocean and rugged coast are not
in appearance more diverse than are these two regions; their precise
line of demarcation equally distinct. The base of gravelly and rock
elevations rises abruptly from the alluvial below, and the whole
vegetable kingdom--tree, plant, and flower--instantly change.
Here, on a more sterile soil, and among a hardier but loyal people,
this institution originated in 1858. Its founder, Rev. John G. Fee,
a native Kentuckian, proposed, at that early day, to educate irrespective
of race or color. The school at once evoked the adjacent mob spirit,
violent at times--but survived and prospered until the rebellion.
Its teachers then, in daily peril of life, were compelled to abandon
the premises, and students fled to their homes among the hills When
hostilities ceased, the institution was reopened, still admitting
both colors, and has since stood its ground with increased prosperity,
though, from its location and poverty, laboring under many embarrassments.
These worthy men, Fee, and his equally faithful colleague, J. A.
R. Rodgers, with their assistants, meek in Christian spirit, cultured
as scholars, and with apostolic courage, have braved the storm until,
we may hope, it has nearly spent its fury.
I regret, however, to report threats and a species of guerrilla
warfare still existing. At 10 o'clock last night we were startled
amidst the darkness, with the loud cry, ringing through the forest
"Hurrah for Jeff. Davis." "Jeff. Davis was a white
man," &c. But "ku-klux" know that every male
student here carries a revolver--in line on the first alarm, and
they did not choose to leave the beaten path.
Berea has now about 200 pupils, one-third females, nearly equally
divided between the two colors: some from abroad or distant parts
of the State, but mostly from the immediate neighborhood. The white
portion are of the best Kentucky fibre; mountain boys, born, many
of them, in counties where scarcely a slave was ever known. They
come, therefore, to the school with the common prejudice either
greatly lessened or easily uprooted. It is a novel sight to witness
all colors in the same class-room vigorously competing. I could
not decide on relative superiority.
As a body, these students are more advanced than any I have seen
this side of Howard University. Recitations listened to in mathematics,
latin and greek composition, and other higher branches evinced thorough
scholarship and the best instruction.
The boys working in self-support greatly need shops and the privileges
of skilled labor. Female pupils, in charge of lady teachers, take
care, by turns, of the kitchen and table, (ninety boarders;) male
students are now clearing away the sturdy forests. All labor with
greatest cheerfulness.
The new college edifice, by the Bureau, costing $17,000, stands,
three stories with attic and tower, upon the brow of the high semicircle
sweeping out into "the Glades:" a most commanding position,
and in all respects a noble and complete school structure.
It is pleasant to find the older pupils, who for years have occupied
little shanties, often only the attics in these, now in comfortable
though plainly furnished rooms; all are redoubling self-reliant
efforts. Inquiring of two fine looking colored fellows in one of
the rooms. "How do you pay your way?" They replied, pointing
proudly to their axes glittering from use, "We have each cut
and piled two cords of wood to-day, (it was Saturday,) and on recitation
days work all we can" I happened to know that this wood was
the tough solid oak of these side hills. Such hard handed youth
of whatever color, will surely, with trifling help, hew their way
to manly character and good positions.
We passed the Lord's day here, with delightful services in Sabbath
school, Bible-class, sermon and evening meeting for prayer, and
since primitive piety such Christian spirit is, I am sure, seldom
seen. Prayer in this place of peril is full of meaning, like that
of the ancient builders when in the midst of their enemies, "with
one hand they wrought in the work and with the other held a weapon."
About 250 people are gathered in families around the institution
kindred in spirit, and making in all quite a congregation.
The trustees, professors, and pupils are hearty in their thanks
for what you have done, but will soon be again crowded for room,
even now needing a hall for girls, including steward's apartments
and culinary conveniences. A chapel is also wanted, though application
is to be made to special friends and the churches for this.
These lands (400 acres) owned by the institution, will be, when
cleared, much more fertile than has been anticipated.
Such an enterprise as Berea, so in advance, in many respects, of
all others, must not be suffered to languish. Just these institutions
are needed all over the Southern country--founded in faith, impartial
in privileges, economical and thorough--to send forth hardy native
men and women of both races, commingled and united by culture, to
work for God, humanity, and country, in reaching the results to
be achieved.
The place is soon to be brought into notice by the "Cincinnati
and Chattanooga railroad," which will have a depot within a
quarter of a mile of the college buildings.
Pardon me for saying so much of this one institution. I thought
you would be interested, as I certainly have been, in these details,
especially as you have not been upon the ground to examine it in
person.
Very respectfully, yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Lexington, Ky., January 31, 1870.
Dear General: The past twenty-four hours have been in the midst
of "ku-klux." They were out in force on the road as we
returned from Berea to Richmond. Three colored men were taken from
their beds, cruelly whipped, dragged over the flinty road, until,
with bodies lacerated and torn, it is doubtful if they can recover.
These were leading men, and the outrage evidently was to deter them
and friends from any attempt at political effort or influence.
The news, as we drove into Richmond, was: "Berea has been
attacked, a number of its citizens badly beaten, and nine houses
burned." This story we, of course could contradict, but excitement
was on every face--evidently mischief was brewing. The driver of
our carriage out on Saturday, came to us much agitated, saying,
"If that had been true I know you'd think I had set them on."
Perhaps we should, for we knew him to have been in a previous mob
at Berea. He, however, took us to his so-called "hotel"
and gave the best it afforded.
But bad men prowled about the premises. They crowded inside to
scrutinize and question; we, still obliged to hold them in mystery
as to our mission. However, we very distinctly intimated that "the
General Government would be obliged to suppress these atrocities;"
"life, person, and property must be held sacred;" "it
would be much better to have this done by their own laws and influence
than by United States soldiers." At this moment a fierce yell,
directly in my ear, wheeled me half round with its stunning force.
I had before heard the same (multitudinous) on rebel battle-fields.
Recovering, I looked the fellow quietly in the face and continued
my conversation with bystanders. If this was a "signal"
it had no effect. Some power held restraint over the crowd, and
soon I had numerous apologies for such rudeness.
The night wore away, and at early dawn, still environed by suspicious
men, we entered the stage for Lexington. I may say our courage rose
by a number of degrees as we drove rapidly out of this Kentucky
"Richmond."
The road from thence to this place is through the beautiful and
productive country before described. Plantations large and continuous,
some well cultivated. Colored laborers are, at this season, scattered
through wide fields "breaking out" stacks of hemp, the
scene lively and picturesque.
Ashland, former residence of Henry Clay, a magnificent domain
three miles out of Lexington, still gives evidence of the comprehensive
plans of that great man. The old mansion stands amidst embowering
trees, rare and varied in species, and out upon smooth meadows graze
the high bred animals, for which he had such fondness. An air of
neglect, however, is upon lawn, garden, circling walks, and drives;
tangled weeds crowd the choice shrubbery. The eye that tastefully
designed, and the feet which often trod these grounds are gone.
I was informed that the State had purchased the premises and on
one portion there has been established a large public school.
In this city are about 12,000 colored population, in better condition
than usual. Large numbers of them have plots of ground and houses
of their own, generally one story with three rooms, many two stories
with an increased amount of comfort. It is supposed that the aggregate
of property owned by colored people in Lexington is about half a
million of dollars. It need not be said they are industrious and
saving. Besides all common labor, they are the cartmen, carriage-drivers,
small shop-keepers, and mechanics of the city. I am told they were
treated with unusual consideration while in slavery. This morning
I met many on the road outside the town, with clean white aprons,
going to the plantations for labor at "hempbreaking."
Schools here are well arranged, but in poor buildings. The largest,
with seven teachers and two hundred and fifty pupils, is in care
of the American Missionary Association. This will, during the coming
year, enter the new building, 60 x 45 feet, erected by the Bureau.
I still hear of "ku-klux" outrages. A negro was hung
just outside of the city last Sunday night, but there is much less
danger here than in the country below. In this centre of culture
for the State, are a large number of men of high birth and standing,
ever true to the country in sentiment, who utterly condemn all such
proceedings.
An excellent loyal paper, "Kentucky Statesman," is publish sd
here, and a savings bank for the Freedmen is earnestly asked for;
it would do well among so industrious and thrifty a people.
Very respectfully, yours, &c.,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
Cincinnati, February 2, 1870.
Dear General: My inspection work on this tour is now finished,
and I return to-morrow by way of Pittsburg and Baltimore.
I need not recapitulate. A grouping of the general facts observed
would be: Emancipation has been safe; Freedmen exhibit good conduct;
have become industrious; save their earnings; are not "dying
out;" are capable of being educated; are loyal to the government;
as free from immorality and intemperance as the whites; schools
of all kinds improve rapidly.
At the same time, the Freedmen are still, in some quarters, oppressed
and ill-treated; a majority are poor and ignorant; many are immoral;
intemperance is by far too prevalent; teachers are needed on all
subjects, and help from all quarters. But the 2,571 day and night
schools with 122,317 pupils; the 1,456 Sabbath schools with 88,300
pupils; the 38 normal or high schools with 3,834 pupils; the 5,973
pupils in higher branches, give promise of their future intelligence;
while the $12,605,782 put in savings banks; and the $10,948,775
drawn out and used mainly in important purchases, making that amount
of social comfort and taxable capital, all show the importance of
our work, and that much more should be done for its full accomplishment.
Yours, &c., very respectfully,
J. W. ALVORD,
General Superintendent of Education.
Major General O. O. Howard.
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