MISSION TO THE FREEDMEN.
On the 8th of August, 1861, a letter was addressed to Major-General
Butler, then in command at Fortress Monroe, Virginia, by the treasurer
of the American Missionary Association, respecting the people whom
he had denominated "contrabands." In this letter, the
writer communicated to General Butler the wishes of some persons
in the free states, that, as considerable embarrassment was felt
by the public authorities with regard to the increasing numbers
of colored persons who had fled and were fleeing for protection
to the forts and camps of the United States, they should be sent
into the free states to obtain employment. A prompt and courteous
reply was received, and, in reference to the desire expressed, General
Butler stated that the "contrabands" would be protected;
that many of them would be employed in government service; that
there was land enough to cultivate in Virginia; and as the freedmen
would never be suffered to return into bondage, there was no necessity
for sending any of them to the Northern States.
The executive committee of the association, feeling highly encouraged
by these assurances, at once determined to commence a mission at
Fortress Monroe. Rev. Lewis C. Lockwood was commissioned as their
first missionary to the freedmen. He repaired to Washington, where
ho received encouragement from the government, and recommendation
to the commanding general, Wool, who had succeeded General Butler.
General Wool received him cordially, heartily approved the plan,
and afforded him all needful facilities.
Mr. Lockwood conferred with the leading persons among the freedmen,
investigated the condition and wants of the people, made arrangements
for week-day and Sabbath meetings, organized week-day and evening
schools, employed several of the most intelligent and gifted colored
people as assistants, and through the committee in New York made
urgent appeals for clothing, &c., for the destitute, and also
for additional missionaries and teachers. The late lamented Mrs.
Mary S. Peake was the first teacher employed. She continued to teach
as long as her health permitted, and near to the time of her decease.
Other teachers have been employed; chaplains in the army and pious
soldiers have proffered their occasional services, and the religious
meetings, Sabbath schools, and week-day schools, have been well
attended. Mr. Lockwood labored there thirteen months, and then removed
to another field. In his final report, he states that he had ministered
to a congregation at Hampton, where the average attendance was four
hundred; and to a congregation at Fortress Monroe, where the average
attendance was about the same.
A day school was kept in a house, near Hampton, formerly the residence
of Ex-President Tyler, which was wholly given up for the use of
the freedmen. This school was subsequently removed to the old Court
House at Hampton, which had been fitted up for the purpose, government
furnishing a portion of the lumber. This school became the largest
under the care of the freedmen's teachers,and numbered at one time
five hundred scholars. Among the ruins of Hampton, which bad, at
an early period of the rebellion, been burned by the rebels, the
colored people erected rude cottages, the materials being gathered
from the vacated camps, the deserted dwellings of fugitive slaveholders,
&c.
Such of the freedmen as were not employed by government have obtained
a living by fishing, oystering, huckstering, carting, washing, etc
INTERESTING FACTS.
Many highly interesting facts have been communicated with regard
to the freedmen—their natural endowments, their facility in
acquiring knowledge in letters and urine, their industrial habits,
their shrewdness in business transactions, their gratitude, their
courage, their acquaintance with passing events, their confidence
that the result of the rebellion will be the liberation of their
people, and their piety. Some of these facts have been extensively
published, and have been read with high gratification. It is thought
that a few of these facts may add to the value of this little publication.
SCHOOLS FOR THE CHILDREN.
A young teacher at Hampton, Virginia, writes as follows:
"When I first commenced the school here, I found the children
such as slavery makes—quarrelsome, thievish, uncleanly in
their persons and attire, and seemingly inclined to almost every
species of wickedness; and it appeared to me that they were too
far gone to be ever raised to any thing like intelligent children
at the North. But I found that I had reckoned without my host in
the persons of these children.
"At the end of the first week there was a decided
improvement manifested, and in four weeks you hardly ever saw one
hundred and fifty children more cleanly in their persons and apparel.
Their lessons were, in most cases, quickly and correctly learned,
and their behavior was kind and affectionate toward each other,
while in singing the sweet little Sabbath school songs, I should
not hesitate to put them side by side with the best of our Sabbath-school
scholars at the North. And they so fully appreciate my humble efforts
in their behalf, that my table in the school room is loaded, morning
and noon, with oranges, lemons, apples, figs, candies, and other
sweet things too numerous to mention, all testifying their love
to me, although I can do so little for them."
Another teacher, at Beaufort, South Carolina, writes
"My school numbered about forty of the children. Most of them
were very dirty and poorly dressed, all very black in tailor. A
happier group of children I never expect to witness than those who
composed my school: bright eyes, happy looks, kind and patient dispositions,
undo them look attractive to my eyes, though they were horribly
black,' as some have called them, and very dirty at first. But they
were so innocent, so despised by others, and withal so anxious to
learn, that I felt a true sympathy for them.
"Their masters have kept them in darkness and
degradation. This is only the result of slavery.
"They are very eager to learn. Every one wishes
to In taught first; yet, unlike some white children, they are patient
and willing to wait. They do not easily tire of study, but are very
diligent in getting their lessons. I have known them to teach each
other, or sit alone and drill over a lesson for two hours at a time.
"Let me relate to you a little incident that
will illustrate what I have just said. One day, at Beaufort, soon
after we landed, while walking through the upper portion of the
town, I heard a little voice saying the alphabet, while another
wee voice, scarcely audible, was repeating it after the first. I
looked quickly around to discover front whence the voice came; and
what do you think I saw? Why, seated on the piazza of a large empty
house were two of the blackest little negro children, one about
seven, the other not more than three years old. The elder had his
arm thrown lovingly around the almost naked form of the other, and
with an open primer in the lap of one, they were at their study.
An hour after, I returned by the some spot, and was both pleased
and surprised to find them still at it. God bless the little ones!
"This desire, or rather eagerness, to learn
to read, is manifested by all. I have stopped by the wayside many
a time, and have immediately collected a group of old and young
about me, :tad have made them repeat the alphabet after me slowly,'
letter by letter. They esteem it the greatest kindness I can show
them, and as I turn to depart, the fervent 'God bless you, massa.,''
Tank de Lord, massa,' reach my ears."
MORALS OF THE FREEDMEN.
After the mission but been established, one of the
officers' wives remarked to another, "I do not miss my things
nowadays."
Nearly all the church members had taken temperance
pledge.
"They have their vices," writes a northern
physician on one of the plantations on Port Island; "deception
and petty thieving They are careless, indolent, and improvident.
They have a miserable habit of scolding and using authoritative
language to one another. All these vices are clearly the result
of slave education, and will gradually disappear under improved
conditions. . . . If one is honest with them, and gets their confidence,
the rest is easily accomplished."
MARRIAGE.
A very large portion, probably, at least, more than
hall' of the "married" freed people, had been married
only in slave fashion, by "taking up together," or living
together by mutual agreement. without any marriage ceremony. The
missionary proposed to such that they should be married agreeably
to the usages in the free states. The leaders of the colored people
were conversed with, and they, with-out exception, agreed as to
the propriety of the measure. One, now advanced in life, said, that
when he proposed to his companion to go to a minister and be lawfully
married, she replied, "Oh, what use will it be ? Master can
separate us to-morrow." But he coincided folly in the propriety
of the proposed course.
Mr. Lockwood, alter preaching on the sanctity of
the marriage relation, proceeded to unite in wedlock several couples,
among whom were some who had lived together for years. He gave each
of the parties a certificate, in handsome form, which they seemed
to prize very highly. It appeared to have a most beneficial effect
upon the parties themselves, and the whole population.
NATIVE ELOQUENCE.
Not a few of the freedmen, though illiterate, exhibit
remarkable powers of eloquence. The missionary, in describing the
address of one of them, after a discourse by the former, says, "The
address was a masterpiece. It melted every heart. He appealed to
the soldiers present who were in rebellion against God, striving
to put down rebellion this land, and asked them how they, who hail
been taught to read the Bible, and had learned the Lord's Prayer
in infancy from a mother's lips, could stand in judgment, when a
poor, despised, and inferior race, who, though denied the Bible,
had been taught of God, and found their way to Christ, should rise
up and condemn them. He then tuned to his fellow 'contrabands,'
and entreated them to embrace thankfully, and improve, the boon
already given. He considered the present a pledge of the future
—the virtual emancipation of fifteen or eighteen hundred the
promise of the emancipation of fur millions. The Lord works from
little to great."
CHURCH MEETING.
The missionary wrote: "Last Thursday I had an
opportunity to observe the intellectual state of a considerable
number of the brethren at a church meeting. I was surprised at their
understanding and wisdom in regard to church order and propriety,
and tone of discipline. As the church records had been burned up
in the church edifice at Hampton, I inquired how far any of them
could recall their contents. One or two replied that they could
almost repeat the church regulations from memory.
"In the discussion, high ground was taken in
regard to the Sabbath, the temperance cause, and other matters of
Christian morality. In discipline, stress was laid on the propriety
and duty of private admonition, in its successive scriptural steps,
before public censure. On this point one brother said he had privately
admonished a neighbor of the impropriety of taking articles to the
camp on the Sabbath, and lie had acknowledged his fault, and promised
amendment. The duty of for-giving offenders, and undoing wrongs,
was also insisted on. Several had been improperly excluded from
church privileges through the influence of white power. It was,
therefore, decided to-day that those who had the confidence of the
church should be restored to church-fellowship unconditionally."
One of the members, and an aged leader, stated that
he had on one occasion been seized by a white deacon, dragged down
from the gallery, and threatened with thirty-nine lashes, because
there was a little of the Methodist in his composition, and he had
"got happy and shouted in meeting."
On another occasion, William Davis concluded some
remarks as follows: "I hope that all of you, old and young,
will learn to read, as I did. When I was converted, I was anxious
to learn to read God's book. I kneeled down by my book, [he here
kneeled by the table,] and prayed that Gal would teach me to read
it — if only a little, I would be thankful. And I learned,
and yon can if you will, for you have no one to hinder you, as I
had. We should all show that we are worthy of freedom. Only educate
on, and we will show ourselves capable of knowledge. Some say we
have not the same faculties and feelings with white folks. All we
want is cultivation. What would the best soil produce without cultivation?
We want to get wisdom. That is all we need. Let us get that, and
we are made for time and eternity."