登陆注册
5149700000026

第26章 THE WARDS OF THE NATION(4)

It was planned that the Bureau should have a brief existence, but the institution and its wards became such important factors in politics that on July 16, 1866, after a struggle with the President, Congress passed an act over his veto amplifying the powers of the Bureau and extending it for two years longer.This continuation of the Bureau was due to many things: to a belief that former slaveholders were not to be trusted in dealing with the Negroes; to the baneful effect of the "Black Laws" upon Northern public opinion; to the struggle between the President and Congress over reconstruction; and to the foresight of radical politicians who saw in the institution an instrument for the political instruction of the blacks in the proper doctrines.

The new law was supplementary to the Act of 1865, but its additional provisions merely endorsed what the Bureau was already doing.It authorized the issue of medical supplies, confirmed certain sales of land to Negroes, and provided that the promises which Sherman made in 1865 to the Sea Island Negroes should be carried out as far as possible and that no lands occupied by blacks should be restored to the owners until the crops of 1866 were gathered;it directed the Bureau to cooperate with private charitable and benevolent associations, and it authorized the use or sale for school purposes of all confiscated property; and finally it ordered that the civil equality of the Negro be upheld by the Bureau and its courts when state courts refused to accept the principle.By later laws the existence of the Bureau was extended to January 1, 1869, in the unreconstructed States, but its educational and financial activities were continued until June 20, 1872.

The chief objections to the Bureau from the conservative Northern point of view were summed up in the President's veto messages.The laws creating it were based, he asserted, on the theory that a state of war still existed;there was too great a concentration of power in the hands of a few individuals who could not be held responsible; with such a large number of agents ignorant of the country and often working for their own advantage injustice would inevitably result; in spite of the fact that the Negro everywhere had a status in court, arbitrary tribunals were established, without jury, without regular procedure or rules of evidence, and without appeal; the provisions in regard to abandoned lands amounted to confiscation without a hearing; the Negro, who must in the end work out his own salvation, and who was protected by the demand for his labor, would be deluded into thinking his future secure without further effort on his part; although nominally under the War Department, the Bureau was not subject to military control; it was practically a great political machine; and, finally, the states most concerned were not represented in Congress.

The Bureau was soon organized in all the former slaveholding States except Delaware, with general headquarters in Washington and state headquarters at the various capitals.General O.O.Howard, who was appointed commissioner, was a good officer, softhearted, honest, pious, and frequently referred to as "the Christian soldier." He was fair-minded and not disposed to irritate the Southern whites unnecessarily, but he was rather suspicious of their intentions toward the Negroes, and he was a believer in the righteousness of the Freedmen's Bureau.He was not a good business man; and he was not beyond the reach of politicians.At one time he was seriously disturbed in his duties by the buzzing of the presidential bee in his bonnet.The members of his staff were not of his moral stature, and several of them were connected with commercial and political enterprises which left their motives open to criticism.

The assistant commissioners were, as a rule, general officers of the army, though a few were colonels and chaplains.* Nearly half of them had during the war been associated with the various attempts to handle the Negro problem, and it was these men who shaped the organization of the Bureau.While few of them were immediately acceptable to the Southern whites, only ten of them proved seriously objectionable on account of personality, character, or politics.

Among the most able should be mentioned Generals Schofield, Swayne, Fullerton, Steedman, and Fessenden, and Colonel John Eaton.The President had little or no control over the appointment or discipline of the officials and agents of the Bureau, except possibly by calling some of the higher army officers back to military service.

* They numbered eleven at first and fourteen after July 1866, and were changed so often that fifty, in all, served in this rank before January 1, 1869, when the Bureau was practically discontinued.

As a result of General Grant's severe criticism of the arrangement which removed the Bureau from control by the military establishment, the military commander was in a few instances also appointed assistant commissioner.Each assistant commissioner was aided by a headquarters staff and had under his jurisdiction in each state various district, county, and local agents, with a special corps of school officials, who were usually teachers and missionaries belonging to religious and charitable societies.The local agents were recruited from the members of the Veteran Reserve Corps, the subordinate officers and non-commissioned officers of the army, mustered-out soldiers, officers of Negro troops, preachers, teachers, and Northern civilians who had come South.As a class these agents were not competent persons to guide the blacks in the ways of liberty or to arbitrate differences between the races.

同类推荐
  • 指武

    指武

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 救度佛母二十一种礼赞经

    救度佛母二十一种礼赞经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黄箓斋十天尊仪

    黄箓斋十天尊仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 脚气集

    脚气集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 閫外春秋

    閫外春秋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 总统们:民国总统的另一面

    总统们:民国总统的另一面

    《总统们:民国总统的另一面》是一本评介民国早期总统的通俗图书。包括北洋政府的5位总统(袁世凯、黎元洪、冯国璋、徐世昌、曹锟)和缔造民国、出任临时大总统的孙中山先生,共6位总统。书稿以视角独特勾划出了这几位人物,全书兼具客观思辨性和故事趣味性,使读者看到一群鲜活的面孔。
  • 英雄联盟之竞技之心

    英雄联盟之竞技之心

    “5L代打,中野求位,不送包赢,谢谢合作。”而在蓝色方的1到4楼,全部都是艾欧尼亚的最强王者玩家,打到现在还没听过谁在这个段还敢称“代练”的。这个神秘的王牌代练到底是谁……谁曾想过王者局的神秘代练会是乡下来的神级天才呢?王牌代练,神级天才,顿然间燃起的竞技之心,又会在这片职业圈中掀起怎样的风波巨浪?
  • 运镖三国

    运镖三国

    穿越到三国没金手指,那你混个屁啊!《运镖三国》游戏系统在手,天下我有!爆笑!升级!打怪!一个都不能少。你四世三公,声名显赫?那也得乖乖同我镖局签约;你仁义满天下,刘皇叔威武?少一分钱也不给你运!乱世奸雄曹操,最爱就是你,你手下的寒门谋士、出名大将,都跳槽来我这里打工了……这是一个带着运镖游戏系统,将整个三国搅得天翻地覆的故事。那个主角,很可能就是你。
  • 隐世佛仙

    隐世佛仙

    江湖,一片叶,一飞花,最是佛陀,也无情。强者,掌握命运和规则,弱者何以谈生何以忘死。
  • 叶霜传

    叶霜传

    武术少女误落湖中,穿越找到美男,可是却会消失。不敢面对少主的喜欢,一声哥哥凉透心。
  • 斗破苍穹之绝世天才

    斗破苍穹之绝世天才

    陈建穿越斗破苍穹,改名萧殇,筑,无上修为,屠,万恶之人,行,正义之道,做,磊落之事。一生行走于斗气大陆,在那场旷世之战之后,与其爱人,归隐山林……
  • 在火影世界写小说

    在火影世界写小说

    本书重修中……书群qq群聊号码:713249227
  • 九重宫闱:王妃太暴力

    九重宫闱:王妃太暴力

    天下之大无奇不有!南楚太子妃温瑜,留下一封血书死在除夕夜宴那日,东周京都,一道圣旨降罪镇国公府,白玉兰从名门贵女成了罪臣之女。一朝重生。她心中只剩仇恨,誓要查明真相,颠覆这天下!白家将三个女儿送入皇宫,她被天子指婚给三皇子,嫁入了恭王府。恭王龙璟宸,天之骄子,姿容绝世,恨不能宠她上天,她却一心只想浪迹江湖无拘无束。龙璟宸表示:夫人太暴力,本王……心悦之!
  • 数学的诅咒

    数学的诅咒

    王晋康中短篇科幻作品之一。到今年的11月24日,我的曾爷爷就满100岁了。他曾是一个著名的科幻作家,中国科幻史上记着:世纪之交的著名科幻作家何慈康先生……不过所有论及到他的文章都是使用过去时,没人提到他还健在。甚至有一篇文章是这样介绍他的:何慈康,生于1964年,卒年不详。
  • 不瞎忙,不穷忙:哈佛时间管理课

    不瞎忙,不穷忙:哈佛时间管理课

    本书所涉及的方法简单易行、科学可靠,它们都是哈佛的学者,智者,各界成功人士经过大量的实践应用之后汇聚而成的宝贵经验。时间管理,并不是要用最短的时间去做最多的事情,而是教会如何在正确的时间做正确的事情,让人生的分分秒秒都过得充实而有意义。