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ouisiana and South Carolina did the constitutions actually forbid separate schools; in Mississippi; Florida; Alabama; and Arkansas the question was left open; to the embarrassment of the whites。 Generally the blacks showed no desire for mixed schools unless urged to it by the carpetbaggers。 In the South Carolina convention; a mulatto thus argued in favor of mixed schools: 〃The gentleman from Newberry said he was afraid we were taking a wrong course to remove these prejudices。 The most natural method to effect this object would be to allow children when five or six years of age to mingle in schools together and associate generally。 Under such training; prejudice must eventually die out; but if we postpone it until they become men and women; prejudice will be so established that no mortal can obliterate it。 This; I think; is a sufficient reply to the argument of the gentleman。〃

The state systems were top…heavy with administrative machinery and were officered by incompetent and corrupt officials。 Such men as Cloud in Alabama; Cardozo in Mississippi; Conway in Louisiana; and Jillson in South Carolina are fair samples of them。 Much of the personnel was taken over from the Bureau teaching force。 The school officials were no better than the other officeholders。

The first result of the attempt to use the schools as an instrument of reconstruction ended in the ruin of several state universities。 The faculties of the Universities of North Carolina; Mississippi; and Alabama were made radical and the institutions thereupon declined to nothing。 The Negroes; unable to control the faculty of the University of South Carolina; forced Negro students in and thus got possession。 In Louisiana the radical legislature cut off all funds because the university would not admit Negroes。 The establishment of the land grant colleges was an occasion for corruption and embezzlement。

The common schools were used for radical ends。 The funds set aside for them by the state constitutions or appropriated by the legislatures for these schools seldom reached their destination without being lessened by embezzlement or by plain stealing。 Frequently the auditor; or the treasurer; or even the legislature diverted the school funds to other purposes。 Suffice it to say that all of the reconstruction systems broke down financially after a brief existence。

The mixed school provisions in Louisiana and South Carolina and the uncertainty of the educational situation in other States caused white children to stay away from the public schools。 For several years the Negroes were better provided than the whites; having for themselves both all the public schools and also those supported by private benevolence。 In Mississippi; Louisiana; and South Carolina the whites could get no money for schoolhouses; while large sums were spent on Negro schools。 The Peabody Board; then recently inaugurated;* refused to cooperate with school officials in the mixed school states and; when criticized; replied: 〃It is well known that we are helping the white children of Louisiana as being the more destitute from the fact of their unwillingness to attend mixed schools。〃

* To administer the fund bequeathed by George Peabody of Massachusetts to promote education in the Southern States。 See 〃The New South〃; by Holland Thompson (in 〃The Chronicles of America〃)。


As was to be expected; the whites criticized the attitude of the school officials; disapproved of the attempts made in the schools to teach the children radical ideas; and objected to the contents of the history texts and the 〃Freedmen's Readers。〃 A white school board in Mississippi; by advertising for a Democratic teacher for a Negro school; drew the fire of a radical editor who inquired: 〃What is the motive by which this call for a 'competent Democratic teacher' is prompted? The most damning that has ever moved the heart of man。 It is to use the vote and action of a human being as a means by which to enslave him。 The treachery and villainy of these rebels stands without parallel in the history of men。〃

A Negro politician has left this account of a radical recitation in a Florida Negro school:

After finishing the arithmetic lesson they must next go through the catechism:

〃Who is the 'Publican Government of the State of Florida?〃 Answer: 〃Governor Starns。〃

〃Who made him Governor?〃 Answer: 〃The colored people。〃

〃Who is trying to get him out of his seat?〃 Answer: 〃The Democrats; Conover; and some white and black Liberal Republicans。〃

〃What should the colored people do with the men who is trying to get Governor Starns out of his seat?〃 Answer: 〃They should kill them。〃 。 。 。 。

This was done that the patrons; some of whom could not read; would be impressed by the expressions of their children; and would be ready to put any one to death who would come out into the country and say anything against Governor Starns。

The native white teachers soon dropped out of Negro schools; and those from the North met with the same social persecution as the white church workers。 The White League and Ku Klux Klan drove off obnoxious teachers; whipped some; burned Negro schoolhouses; and in various other ways manifested the reaction which was rousing the whites against Negro schools。

The several agencies working for Negro education gave some training to hundreds of thousands of blacks; but the whites asserted that; like the church work; it was based on a wrong spirit and resulted in evil as well as in good。 Free schools failed in reconstruction because of the dishonesty or incompetence of the authorities and because of the unsettled race question。 It was not until the turn of the century that the white schools were again as good as they had been before 1861。 After the reconstruction native whites as teachers of Negro schools were impossible in most places。 The hostile feelings of the whites resulted and still result in a limitation of Negro schools。 The best thing for Negro schools that came out of reconstruction was Armstrong's Hampton Institute program; which; however; was quite opposed to the spirit of reconstruction education。



CHAPTER X。 CARPETBAG AND NEGRO RULE

The Southern States reconstructed by Congress were subject for periods of varying length to governments designed by radical Northerners and imposed by elements thrown to the surface in the upheaval of Southern society。 Georgia; Virginia; and North Carolina each had a brief experience with these governments; other States escaped after four or five years; while Louisiana; South Carolina; and Florida were not delivered from this domination until 1876。 The states which contained large numbers of Negroes had; on the whole; the worst experience。 Here the officials were ignorant or corrupt; frauds upon the public were the rule; not the exception; and all of the reconstruction governments were so conducted that they could secure no support from the respectable elements of the electorate。

The fundamental cause of the failure of these governments was the character of the new ruling class。 Every state; except perhaps Virginia; was under the control of a few able leaders from the North generally called carpetbaggers and of a few native white radicals contemptuously designated scalawags。 These were kept in power by Negro voters; to some seven hundred thousand of whom the ballot had been given by the reconstruction acts。 The adoption of the Fifteenth Amendment in March 1870; brought the total in the former slave states to 931;000; with about seventy…five thousand more Negroes in the North。 The Negro voters were most numerous; comparatively; in Louisiana; Mississippi; South Carolina; Alabama; and Georgia。 There were a few thousand carpetbaggers in each State; with; at first; a much larger number of scalawags。 The latter; who were former Unionists; former Whigs; Confederate deserters; and a few unscrupulous politicians; were most numerous in Virginia; North Carolina; Texas; Arkansas; and Tennessee。 The better class; however; rapidly left the radical party as the character of the new regime became evident; taking with them whatever claims the party had to respectability; education; political experience; and property。

The conservatives; hopelessly reduced by the operation of

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