FOR twenty-six years
the Negro has had his freedom, and now the question is, What use has he made of
it? I have just returned from an extended trip through the South, arranged and
made solely for the purpose of getting an answer to the question, What is the
colored man doing for himself? I have traveled through Virginia, the Carolinas,
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, returning through Tennessee, the
District of Columbia, and Maryland. In the course of this journey, covering
3500 miles, I have visited schools, colleges, and industrial institutions in
most of the large centres of the South, from Baltimore to New Orleans. I have
gone through the Black Belt, inspected the agricultural districts, visited
farms and cabins, and have seen every phase of Negro life, from the destitution
of the one-room cabin to the homes of the comfortable and prosperous, and every
degree of social standing, from the convicts in the chain gang in the New
Orleans Parish prison and the Birmingham mines to ministers, lawyers, doctors,
and bankers on the top round of the social ladder. As a result of this
observation and experience, I have some interesting evidence as to what the
Negro is doing for himself.
Under slavery the Negro
was mainly a plantation laborer. Freedom found him where slavery left him.
While there has been some transmigration to the South and North, the shifting
of population since the war has not been great. The Negro and his descendants
remain pretty much in the places where they lived when the war closed. Three
courses were open to him as a free man: first, to rent his own labor; secondly,
to rent and work the land of his former master; thirdly, to buy and work a farm
for himself. All these courses have in turn been accepted. As a simple farm
laborer the Negro has small opportunity to accumulate. His wages do not average
over fifty or sixty cents a day. Two tendencies are observable in the agricultural
districts of the South: one is the exceptional aggregation of immense farms
under white ownership, worked by Negro laborers; the other is the segmentation
of the old plantations into small farms let out to Negro tenants. In Georgia,
for example, one white farmer owns 20,000 acres of land, and employs a vast
number of Negroes. But in the districts I have visited the breaking up of the
old plantations into small farms has been the more common process. All through
the Black Belt and the adjacent country, plantations have been cut up and
rented to Negroes in "one-mule farms" of from twenty-five to thirty
acres each. Other things being equal, the step from the position of a man who
simply lets out his own labor to the position of one who hires a field for its
exercise is a step in advance. It furnishes conditions which stimulate
intelligence, self-interest, and power of self-help; it is the roadway towards
earning a farm and a home. Great numbers of Negroes have taken this initiative.
But the transition is not easily made. Farms are not to be had for the asking.
The Negro was not a capitalist. He was without credit, and his capacity for
managing his own affairs was distrusted. He has had to contend, and is still
contending, with an onerous system of commercial oppression which keeps him
down. This is the mortgage system, or the lien on the crop, which prevails very
extensively in the Black Belt. The colored man who hires twenty- five or thirty
acres of land pays at the lowest one bale of cotton, worth about $50; or
sometimes he pays as much as two or two and a half bales, equivalent to $100 or
$125 rent. When we know that land can be bought at from five to seven dollars
an acre, we see that the rent in some cases equals half the value of the farm.
If the Negro raised all his own corn, meat, and vegetables, he would still be
able to make progress, but he is dependent for clothes and much of his
provisions upon the storekeeper. As he cannot buy with ready money, he
mortgages his crop, paying twenty and twenty-five per cent, and in exceptional
cases one hundred per cent, interest on the amount of his bill. It matters not
that he does not begin to draw his goods for three months after the contract is
made; he pays interest just the same on the whole amount from the beginning.
Add to this that the Negro is charged in the first instance three or four
prices for what he buys, and it can easily be seen that when the crop is all
gathered little or nothing of it belongs to him. "I go to
Pennsylvania," said a colored farmer, "and can buy sugar for six and
a half cents a pound, but in North Carolina it is eleven cents. The merchant is
making a vast profit." The colored race has emerged from civil bondage.
The next step will be to come out of a bondage which is financial.
To know, therefore,
what the colored man is doing for himself we must know the conditions from
which he has to rise. These are hard enough, but not beyond the capacity of the
Negro to break through them, as is shown in thousands of instances. Thus in Virginia
and Kentucky and Tennessee the condition of things is much better than further
south, and the colored man, in spite of these obstacles, is rapidly becoming a
farmowner and householder. "In North Carolina," said Bishop Moore,
"our people are buying land wherever they can get it." Land ranges
from ten to fifteen dollars an acre, in some places running as low as eight
dollars. The bishop himself has a little farm of thirty-three acres, near
Salisbury, that cost thirty-four dollars an acre. "I am so anxious to see
my race improve," he said, "that I should like to have a great deal
more done, but in view of the small wages we get for labor we are doing pretty
well." In Tennessee, experts assured me that the colored people are buying
land throughout the country, and the mortgage system does not prevail
extensively. As we go south and enter the Black Belt, the conditions vary with
the fertility of the soil, the intelligence of the people, and the degree of
education. A great difference is sometimes apparent in different counties in
the same State. Thus in Lee County, Georgia, the people are largely laborers,
working for wages. But in Marion County fifty per cent of the people own homes,
and some of them have large plantations. In Sumter and Terrell counties, they
likewise live mostly on farms. In the latter county, I was told that in a small
city of 10,000 nearly all the colored people own their homes, and live in
cabins or houses varying in size from one room to eight. The same difference is
seen in Alabama. In Russell County the blacks are much behind those of Pike
County, where there are better schools and more freedom from the mortgage
system. In Bullock County, much government land has been preempted by the
Negroes. In one section of that county the colored people are prosperous, one
man of exceptional thrift owning 300 acres, twelve good mules, and four horses,
and raising his own meat and potatoes. In Coffee County, the people are just
beginning to rent their homes. In Elmore County, many have farms of fifty
acres. In Macon County, not much land is owned. In Barbour County, land is
mainly rented, but there are many who have stock. In the southern part of
Randolph County, about half of the blacks own their land. In one township of
Lee County, nearly all the colored people own their homes. At Notasulga, about
half the people have farms ranging from twenty-five to one hundred and fifty
acres. Here I learned of one prosperous woman farmer, who raises three or four
bales of cotton, as well as potatoes, chickens, and cows. In the vicinity of
Birmingham, farms are owned ranging from fifty to two hundred acres.
The home-buying that is
going on in the agricultural districts is going on also in the cities. In
Montgomery, street after street is owned by colored people. In Chattanooga, one
third of the colored people own their homes. Suburban lots range in cost from $350
to $400. A cottage costs in the neighborhood of $600 to $650. In Birmingham,
colored people pay $10 or $12 a month rent. A number of householders have
gardens with two or three acres of land. Some were fortunate enough to purchase
land before the prices went up, and have profited by the rise.
The Negro is also
venturing as a tradesman. In all the large cities, and even in the smaller
towns, in the South, he is hanging out his sign. Two young men have engaged in
the grocery business at Tuskegee, Alabama. Their credit is good at the bank,
and I was told that they were doing more for their race by their industry and
thrift than could be done by any amount of talk. The colored grocers in
Birmingham are sharing the prosperity of this thriving city. Near a little
place which I visited in the Black Belt, a colored school-teacher, who got his
education with hand and brain at Tuskegee, had bought for $225 a lot of land,
and established a grocery store. At Tuscaloosa, the livery stable man who drove
me owns several horses and carriages, and is doing well. Thus, in whatever
direction one goes, he can find Negroes who are rising by force of education
and of character. The influence of such schools as Hampton, Atlanta, and
Tuskegee is felt all through the South in the stimulus given to industrial
occupations. Tuskegee has turned out a number of printers, who have made
themselves independent, and get patronage from both white and colored
customers. One has a printing office in Montgomery. Another has opened an office
in Texas. The growth of journalism and the gradual reduction of illiteracy
among the colored people will make a way for many printers. In all the
mechanical trades, colored men are finding places as blacksmiths, wheelwrights,
masons, bricklayers, carpenters, tinsmiths, harnessmakers, shoemakers, and
machinists. In Washington, colored brickmakers are earning from four to five
dollars a day. Hod-carriers receive $1.50. A boy trained in the industrial
department of Atlanta University has built a schoolhouse in Alabama on
contract. This boy can earn $2.50 a day with his hands and tools, and is
besides a college graduate.
In slavery times there
was no stimulus to Negro inventiveness. Before the war, an application made at
the United States Patent Office for a patent for a Negro inventor was denied,
on the ground that he was a slave. With industrial education and diversified
mechanical pursuits, the Negro brain is becoming adaptive and creative. The
records of the United States Patent Office make no distinction between white
and colored inventors. It is impossible to furnish statistics, therefore,
showing how much the colored man has done in this direction. The chief of the
issue division surmises that there may be between five and ten thousand colored
patentees, but this estimate has no reliable basis, being derived simply from
the casual reports of attorneys in paying their fees. A colored assistant
examiner in the Patent Office department has, however, placed at my service a
list of some fifty patents taken out by colored people, which show the scope of
their inventive genius. In the list of things represented are an improved
gridiron, a locomotive smokestack, a cornstalk harvester, a shield for infantry
and artillery, a fire extinguisher, a dough kneader, a cotton cultivator,
life-preserving apparatus, a furniture caster, a biscuit cutter, a rotary
engine, a printing press, a file holder, a window ventilator for railroad cars,
an automatic switch for railroads, and a telephone transmitter. The electric
inventions are said to have a good deal of merit, and have been assigned to a
prominent company. In Birmingham, a colored inventor is making money out of his
patent.
With the purchase of
homes and the accumulation of property, the colored people are gradually changing
their condition of living. It is seen at its worst in the miserable one-room
cabins of the country districts, and in the alley population of such cities as
Washington and Baltimore. In the Black Belt, the typical home is a rude log
cabin, without windows, and with one door and a stick chimney. The door is
usually kept open during the day, in fair weather, to admit light, which at
night is furnished by a pine knot. Into such cabins a whole family is
frequently crowded. In Alabama, I heard of twenty-five persons living in three
rooms. The genial climate permits a good deal of outdoor living, and the babies
need no sand yards to be made for their benefit. The mother sets them out on
the ground, and lets them roll. Bad as the one- room cabin is, it is not so bad
as the tenement house in the slums of the great cities. The Negro, too, can
rival the Chinaman in practicing economy. Sixty cents a week, spent in pork,
meal, and syrup, will keep him well alive. At Athens, Georgia, a colored man
testified in court that "a man can live mighty good on thirty-five cents a
week."
The social evolution of
the Negro can be seen even by the casual observer. A house with a window, even
if closed with a shutter, is an improvement over one which has only a door, and
a double-room house is an improvement over one with a single room. The
influence of new ambition is seen later in the growth of the cabin into a
two-story house, and at the dinner table in a more varied bill of fare. At
Pensacola, where the wages received for loading vessels are unusually good, the
laborer is prosperous, and a colored censor said, deprecatingly: "The live
'most too high as far as eating is concerned; some of them eat as fine food as
millionaires." A Methodist bishop told me that in Montgomery $24,000 was
spent annually on excursions. The Negro is surely learning how to earn his
dollar, but he has not learned how to spend it. He is buying his experience
dear. The patent-medicine vender and the sewing-machine peddler draw no
distinctions in regard to color, and the black often insists on spending his
money as foolishly as his white brother. In one little country cabin stood a
wooden clock worth about $1.25, for which a woman had paid $10, giving new
sarcasm to the proverb that "time is money." Yet the Negro's
knowledge of what a dollar will buy is growing.
New social ambitions
are manifest even in the humblest cabins. The illustrated newspaper furnishes
decoration for the walls. The old people can admire the pictures, and the
younger ones can read the text. The cheap chromo follows, until by and by the
evolution of taste produces a house such as one I visited in Washington, in
which three beautiful copies of celebrated Madonnas were hanging on the walls.
In the cities social development is going on more rapidly, though here we also
find greater social degradation. With all their destitution, the people in the
country cabins are not tempted by the liquor saloons.
The social progress of
the Negro is well illustrated by two historic cities,--the federal capital at
Washington and the former capital of the Confederacy at Montgomery. The casual
traveler, who sees the alley districts and the settlements around the
railroads, forms no better idea of the social development of the Negro than he
does of Northern whites, if he confines his inspection to similar localities.
In Montgomery, under the guidance of Dr. Dorsette, a colored physician and a
respected citizen, I had an opportunity to see the homes of the colored people
at their best. In some of the streets, the whites occupy one side, and the
blacks the other. Occasionally the colors alternate, like the squares on a
checkerboard. It is not easy externally to tell one from the other. The
interiors of these homes, especially of the younger and more progressive people,
are comfortably and tastefully furnished. The rooms are as high as those of
their white neighbors, well carpeted and papered, while the piano or the
cabinet organ suggests loftier musical tastes than that of the plantation
banjo. While in most respects the movement or development of the white and
colored races runs on parallel lines, in music they seem to be going in
opposite directions. Though I traveled all through the South, in urban,
suburban, and agricultural districts, from Baltimore to New Orleans, the only
banjo I heard was played in Atlanta by a white man. Returning to Boston, one of
the first sights which met my eyes was that of a fashionable young lady
carrying the instrument the Negro is discarding. I was twice serenaded at
Tuskegee, once by a brass band, once by a string band, and I slept well after
both performances. In New Orleans, I was astounded at the strange phenomenon of
a colored hand-organ grinder. Whether this represents a state of musical
development or degeneracy, as compared with the banjo, I will not undertake, in
the present state of Northern fascination, to decide. It is estimated that
there are from 250 to 300 pianos and cabinet organs in the homes of colored
people in Montgomery.
The pride of the
colored people in buying these homes and furnishing them is a healthful form of
domestic ambition, requiring sacrifice and resolute concentration of purpose. A
fine house on a corner lot was shown me which had been bought with the savings
of a hackman. Even in the poorer districts it is interesting to note the
ambition to improve. "I have seen these houses grow," said the
doctor. "There is one in which lives an old woman. She began with one
room, then built on another; then finished off one, and now has just finished
off the other. It has taken her some time, but she has done it."
Immediately after the
war I lived at the national capital. Thousands of destitute blacks from
Virginia and further south had settled in the barracks around the city. They
owned little more than the clothes on their backs, and most of these had been
given to them. The change in these districts is remarkable. Large numbers of
people live in their own homes. There is not much squalor outside of the alley
population. Even the poorest houses have some comforts and show some endeavor
to improve. A similar story may be told of Baltimore.
Standards among the
negroes are becoming as varied as among the whites. In some districts I was
informed that a colored man had very little standing with his own people unless
he had a trade or profession. It is inevitable, too, that cliques and
affiliations should be formed, with the advantage and disadvantage which come
from such social differentiation. Two aristocracies are appearing in the
colored race,--the aristocracy of culture and the aristocracy of wealth.
Fortunately, at present, in the younger generation culture and prosperity are
moving together. The colored man's standard of wealth is relatively much
smaller than that of the white man. There are no Negro millionaires that I know
of; but there is growing up a class of men with fortunes ranging from $15,000
to $100,000. This accumulation has been going on in recent years with
increasing rapidity. The colored people in North Carolina are said to have
amassed more in the last five years than they did in the twenty years
preceding. In most of the States, there are no data from which the amount of
taxes paid by the Negroes can be separated from that paid by the whites, or the
valuation of their property ascertained. It is one good result of the
Fourteenth Amendment that no distinction is made in law between property owned
by whites and that owned by blacks. Georgia is the only State in which the
comptroller is able to furnish the figures for 1890. The amount of taxes paid by
the whites in that State was $1,599,977.75; by the colored people, $48,795.13.
The property of whites was assessed at a valuation of $404,287,311; the
property of blacks, at a valuation of $12,332,003. The Census Bureau at
Washington has the material for making these comparisons in the different
States, and as the question is now one of sociology, and not of politics, it is
to be hoped that the figures which illustrate the progress of the Negro may be
published. The total valuation of Negro property in the South has been given as
$150,000,000 or $200,000,000. There are those who maintain that the colored man
does not receive full credit for what he is paying. In North Carolina, a daily
Democratic paper claimed, about two months ago, that the colored people are
paying about three times the tax they are credited with by actual statistics.
There are conspicuous
cases of individual prosperity in nearly all the large centres and in the
agricultural districts. Thus, in Montgomery, Alabama, a colored barber, originally
a slave, has accumulated property amounting to $75,000 or $100,000. An ex-slave
in Mississippi has bought one of the plantations that formerly belonged to
Jefferson Davis. The colored people of Maryland are said to possess property to
the amount of $9,000,000. In Baltimore, there are several colored men worth
$15,000 each, three or four worth from $40,000 to $60,000, and the estate of a
Negro recently deceased was appraised at $100,000. In Washington, also, colored
men have profited by the rise of real estate, and a few are possessed of ample
fortunes. These instances might be greatly multiplied from my notes.
The subject of Negro
education is vast and absorbing. Among its varied aspects two are of special
and correlative interest: first, What is education doing for the Negro;
secondly, What is the Negro doing for education? In this paper I can refer only
to the latter topic. But these questions cannot be absolutely separated. No man
"receives an education" who does not get a good deal of it himself.
The student is not so much inert material; he reacts on the forces which
impress him. The Negroes are showing their awakened and eager interest in
education by the zeal with which they are embracing their opportunities.
Everywhere I found in colleges, normal institutes, and district schools fresh,
live interest. In some sections, the eagerness of the colored people for
knowledge amounts to an absolute thirst. In Alabama, the state superintendent
of education, a former Confederate major, assured me that the colored people in
that State are more interested in education than the whites are. Nothing shows
better this zeal for education than the sacrifices made to secure it. President
Bumstead, of Atlanta University, asks, "Where in the history of the world
have so large a mass of equally poor and unlettered people done so much to help
themselves in educational work?" This challenge will long remain
unanswered. The students of Atlanta University pay thirty-four per cent of the
expenses of that institution. A letter from the treasurer of Harvard College
informs me that about the same proportion of its expenses is paid from tuition
fees. If we compare the wealth represented by the students of Harvard with that
represented by the colored students of Atlanta, we shall find how large a
sacrifice the latter are making in order to do so much. It must be remembered,
also, that at Harvard tuition fees and other expenses are mostly paid by
parents and guardians; at Atlanta they are paid by the students themselves, and
to a large degree by personal labor. President Bumstead calculates that for
every million dollars contributed by the North at least a half million is
contributed by the colored people for educational purposes. Though it is
difficult to get the material for such large and general totals, it is easy to
furnish a vast number of facts illustrating the truth that in the very process
of getting his education the Negro is learning the lesson of self-help. Among
the denominational colleges, the Livingston Institute at Salisbury, North
Carolina, is a good illustration of this capacity for self-help. It receives no
state aid. The colored people of the Zion Methodist Episcopal church give $8000
towards the support of this school. The students give towards their own support
not less than $6000 more. The president, Dr. Price, one of the ablest colored
orators of the South, is a conspicuous example of what the colored man can do
for himself.
Another remarkable
illustration is furnished by the Tuskegee Normal School. This institution was
started in 1881 by a Hampton graduate, Mr. Booker T. Washington, on a state
appropriation of $2000. It has grown from 30 pupils to 450, with 31 teachers.
During the last year 200 applicants had to be turned away for want of room.
Fourteen hundred acres of land and fourteen school buildings form a part of the
equipment. While friends of education, North and South, have generously helped
its growth, the success of the school is due largely to the executive ability
of Mr. Washington and his officers. General Armstrong says, "I think it is
the noblest and grandest work of any colored man in the land." All the
teachers are colored. Of the fourteen school buildings, eight have been
erected, in whole or in part, by the students. The school is broadly unsectarian.
It is teaching the colored people the dignity of labor and how to get out of
debt. It is an agricultural and industrial school combined. Its stimulating and
renovating influence is felt all through the Black Belt.
One of the most
important results of the excellent work done by Hampton, Atlanta, and Tuskegee
is seen in the radiating influence they exert through the country in
stimulating primary education. In most of the communities of the lower Southern
States, the money derived from local taxation is not sufficient to keep the
school more than three months in the year, and the pay of teachers is poor. The
interest of these communities is so quickened by a good teacher that the people
raise money to extend the school time and supplement the pay of the teacher. A
few examples taken from many will illustrate. In one district in Alabama, the
school time was thus extended by private subscription from three months to
seven. In Coffee County, the teacher's salary was increased from ten to
twenty-five dollars a month. In many cases the raising of this extra sum means
a good deal of self- denial. As the State makes no appropriation for
school-houses, most of the schools in the Black Belt are held in churches,
which gives rise to sectarian jealousy and disturbance. To overcome these
difficulties and build school-houses, additional sacrifice is required. In a
district of Butler County, Alabama, the children formed a "one cent
society." They brought to the teacher a penny a day. About thirty dollars
was raised to buy land, and the school-teacher, a colored girl, helped to clear
it and burn the brush. In one township, where the school fund is sufficient for
seven or nine months, the teachers are paid thirty-five dollars a month. In Lee
County, the people "supplement" for an assistant teacher. One
district school which I visited, eighteen miles from Tuskegee, taught by a
graduate of its institute, well illustrated the advantage of industrial
education. Having learned the carpenter's trade at the normal school, he was
able, with the help of his pupils, to build a fine new school-house. The girls
often do better than the men. One, who teaches about twenty-five miles from
Tuskegee, has now a good two-story school building with four rooms. She has two
assistant teachers, who live with her in the building. She has revolutionized
that section of the country. A Hampton student whom I met once applied for a
school in his district, as he wished to learn to read and write. He was told
that there was not a sufficient number of children. Then he offered to give a
school building, if the town would furnish a teacher. With the aid of his
father he carried out the plan, and established a good school. Samuel Smiles
might easily make a library of books on Self-Help out of thousands of
individual examples furnished by the colored people.
The interest in
education is seen also in the self-denial and sacrifice which parents make to
keep their children at school. This sacrifice falls chiefly on the mothers. A
student told me that two thirds of the younger scholars at Tuskegee were sent
by their mothers. Very often the mother is a widow. She may get twenty dollars
a month, or eight, or only four, for her labor. Out of this small sum she sends
to college and clothes her boy or girl. "I know mothers," said a
student, "who get three dollars a month, and out of that pay one dollar
for the rent, and yet send their children to school." To do this they will
wash all day and half the night. Said a colored clergyman in Chattanooga:
"Sometimes, when I go about and see how hard many of these mothers work, I
feel almost inclined to say, 'You ought to keep your child at home;' but they
hold on with wonderful persistence. Two girls graduated from Atlanta
University. Their mother had been washing several years to keep them in school.
She came up to see them graduate. She was one of the happiest mothers I ever
saw." At Selma University, some of the students walk from ten to fifteen
miles a day in going to and from the university.
There is one education
which the children get; there is another which they give to their parents. The
influence of the normal school reacts on the home life. The boys and girls at
Hampton and Tuskegee are taught to keep house. They are not satisfied to live
in the old way, when they go home. "I have seen," says Professor
Washington, "the influence of the daughter so potent, when she got home,
that the father has torn down the old house, and built another and better
one."
The result of higher
education is seen in the rise of a professional class. I remember the time when
a colored doctor was a curiosity even in Washington; but colored physicians,
lawyers, journalists, college professors, dentists, educated clergymen, and
teachers are now to be found in all the large cities of the South. In
Montgomery, Dr. Dorsette has built up a thriving practice. He has erected a
three-story brick building, on the lower floor of which are two stores, one of
them a large and well- equipped drug store. A hall above is used for the
accommodation of colored societies. In Birmingham, there are two practicing
physicians, one dentist, and one lawyer. At Selma, the practicing physician is
a graduate of the university. There is also a pharmacist, owning his drug
store, who studied at Howard University. There are six colored lawyers and
seven colored physicians in Baltimore. The professional men command the
confidence and support of their own people.
Journalism is growing
slowly. There are now about fifty-five well established Negro newspapers and
journals. Thirty-seven are in the Southern States; seven are monthlies and two
are semi- monthlies. The aggregate weekly circulation of all is about 805,000
copies. There are other ephemeral journals, not included in this list. The
largest circulation, 15,000, is claimed for the Indianapolis Freeman.
The colored people are
determined to have their churches, and they subscribe, in proportion to their
means, large sums to sustain them. Last year the Zion Methodist Episcopal
church in North Carolina raised $84,000 to support its religious institutions.
This amount represents but one State and but one denomination. The churches
built reflect fairly the social standard of the people. In the comparatively
new city of Birmingham, there are seven comfortable colored churches, ranging
in cost from $2000 to $15,000. In Washington, two churches cost nearly $30,000
each, and the money has been raised almost exclusively by the colored people.
In Baltimore, there are forty-four colored churches, holding a large amount of
property. The old-time preacher still fills the pulpit in many communities, and
the old slaves are loath to give up the hysteric emotionalism of revival
preaching. The younger and progressive Negroes are breaking away from it, and
demanding preachers whose intelligence and education secure respect. They are
giving up, too, the old slave melodies. Modern Protestant hymnology is
substituted. The universities and theological schools are meeting the demand
for better preachers. The colored people are also ambitious to pay their
preachers as much as the whites pay theirs. In Montgomery, one colored preacher
has a salary of $1200 a year with a parsonage. In another city in Alabama,
$1800 is paid.
The standard of
morality is rising, also. There is more respect for property now that the Negro
is learning what mine and thine mean. An eminent judge of Louisiana assured me
that intoxication among the colored people is the principal cause of crime, but
that crime does not exist to the same extent that it formerly did. Marriage, he
said, had changed largely the condition of their society. The Negroes are
seeking to make this a matter of importance, so that their rights of property
may be respected. The temperance movement makes headway. In Methodist
conferences in North Carolina, and possibly elsewhere, no one is admitted to
the ministry who uses liquor or tobacco.
The colored people do
more towards taking care of their unfortunate classes than is generally
realized. With all the destitution that exists, there is almost no mendicancy.
When one considers how much is done in the North for hospitals, homes, and
institutions of every sort, and how little in the South, it is apparent that
aid must come from some other quarter. The colored orphan asylum established by
Mrs. Steele in Chattanooga is, I am told, the only Protestant colored orphan
asylum south of Washington. What, then, becomes of orphan children? They are
adopted. I have met such children in many homes, and their love and respect for
their foster parents refute the charge that the Negro is incapable of
gratitude. Thus the colored people have instinctively and of necessity adopted
the placing-out system for orphans, which, other things being equal, is the
best disposition that can be made of them.
In other respects the
colored people have developed a laudable disposition to take care of their own
poor. In addition to the Odd Fellows, Masons, and Knights of Pythias,
benevolent and fraternal organizations are multiplying. The city churches are
feeling a new impulse to such work. Brotherhoods, Good Samaritan societies, and
mutual benefit organizations are established. Members of these organizations
are allowed a regular stipend when sick. In New Orleans, the colored people
have started a widows' home, and have collected enough money to buy a piece of
ground and to put up a respectable building. In Montgomery, I visited the Hale
Infirmary, founded by the late Joseph Hale and his wife, leading colored
citizens. It is a large two-story building, especially designed by the son-in-law
of the founder for hospital purposes. Such gifts and such organizations show
that there is a disposition among the colored people to adopt the practices of
a higher order of society. It is charged that the Negro imitates the vices of
the white; it is often overlooked that he also imitates his virtues. A good
illustration of practical Christianity was given by the Young Men's Christian
Association at Tuskegee, in building, last year, a little house for an old
colored woman. A colored teacher paid the cost of the lumber, and the young men
gave the labor. They are planning more work of this kind. One interesting case
of Negro generosity shows the reverses of fortune which followed emancipation.
An ex- slave in Louisiana bought a farm, paid for it, and became prosperous.
Not long after his old master came to him in a state of destitution. The Negro
took him in, kept him for a week, and gave him a suit of clothes on his
departure.
Under slavery the
Negroes were not organized, except in churches. The organic spirit must have
time for growth. Cooperation has made no great headway. In various States and
counties the Farmers' Alliance is attracting attention, many of the Negroes
hoping to find relief through it from the bondage of the mortgage system. Small
stock companies for various purposes exist in a number of cities. A little has
been done in the way of building associations. There is one at Atlanta, with
branches and local boards elsewhere; others at Tuskegee, Montgomery, Selma,
Baltimore, and Washington. In Baltimore there are three or four such
associations, but the German organizations, managed by white people, have had
much more of their patronage. A daily paper of Charlotte, North Carolina, in
speaking of the loan associations there, said that the colored shareholders
were outstripping the white. It was noticeable that they paid more promptly. A
penny savings bank, chartered under state law, was organized at Chattanooga
about ten months ago. It has already one thousand depositors, the amounts
ranging from two cents to one thousand dollars. The white as well as the
colored children are being educated to save by this bank. In Birmingham, a
similar institution was opened last October, and has about three thousand
depositors. A school savings bank or postal savings bank system, as recommended
by the Mohonk Negro conference, would be of great benefit to the colored
people.
A full report of what
the colored man is doing for himself within the old slave States can be given
only when the census reports are elaborated, or when such a thorough record of
his progress is made in every State as Dr. Jeffrey A. Brackett has made for the
State of Maryland. All that has been attempted in this article is to give such
indications and evidence as can readily be obtained by one who travels through
the South, on this mission, with his eyes and ears open.
To sum up, then, the
facts which show what the Negro is doing for himself, it is clear that the new
generation of Afric-Americans is animated by a progressive spirit. They are raising
and following their own leaders. They are rapidly copying the organic,
industrial, and administrative features of white society. They have discovered
that industrial redemption is not to be found in legislative and political
measures. In spite of oppressive usury and extortion, the colored man is buying
farms, building homes, accumulating property, establishing himself in trade,
learning the mechanic arts, devising inventions, and entering the professions.
Education he sees to be the pathway to prosperity, and is making immense
sacrifices to secure it. He is passing into the higher stages of social
evolution. In religion the "old-timer" is giving way to the educated
preacher. Religion is becoming more ethical. The colored people are doing much
to take care of their own unfortunate classes. The cooperative spirit is slowly
spreading through trades unions, building associations, and benevolent guilds.
In no way is the colored man doing more for himself than by silently and
steadily developing a sense of self-respect, new capacity for self-support, and
a pride in his race, which more than anything else secure for him the respect
and fraternal feeling of his white neighbors.
Samuel J. Barrows.