Thursday, December 22, 2016

Part I - What if 40 Acres Were Given Permanently



   
What if 40 Acres Were Given Permanently?
A Historical Fiction Scenario

On January 16, 1865, General William Sherman issued Special Field Order No. 15.  The order provided the Union confiscated 400,000 acres of coastal land from Charleston, South Carolina to St. John’s River, Florida to the freed slaves.  Pressure from Northern Abolitionists to provide slaves that successfully fled and join the Union Army some form of living in the devastated South.  Land Management of the confiscated land was a high priority after the basic medical care and food were provided.  Congress agreed that the land would not be given away, but sold at a marginal sell price.  Tens of thousands of Blacks purchased the available land through the Federal Freedman’s Bureau.  On March 3, 1865 Congress chartered the Freedman’s Savings Bank headed up by Henry Cooke, the brother of Jay Cooke.  The bank’s charter was to capture the new earnings from freed Blacks and to teach basic financial education and banking skills through employment.  Up to 7% was given on deposits.
On May 29, 1865 President Andrew Johnson passed an Amnesty Proclamation giving the ex-Confederates their land back and forfeiting the previous purchases by Blacks.  Instead Blacks were encouraged to seek employment from the very Confederate Former Masters that they were held under slavery.  Many rented the newly taken land and the Confederate owners created controversy by withholding farm earnings from Blacks.  President Johnson who was born in Raleigh, North Carolina had a sympathetic ear for the Southerners and reversed all of Lincoln’s efforts.  
Let us begin by changing the key course of events.  President Johnson’s brother William Johnson, was captured by the Union Army for the slaughter of Slaves that were fleeing to join the Union Army.  Secretary of War, Simon Cameron of Pennsylvania heard of this slaughter and would team up with Vice President Hannibal Hamlin of Maine, and Jay Cooke Principal Financier of the Union military effort in the Civil War, to become President Johnson’s fiercest adversaries. Andrew Johnson originally a Southern Democrat, switched parties to become Lincoln’s new Vice President replacing Hannibal Hamlin.  Johnson was a supporter of slavery.  Johnson eventually made this statement early in his Presidency. “This is a country for white men, and by God, as long as I am President, it shall be a government for white men,” he wrote in 1866The reason for the capturing of William Johnson was not known except for Lincoln cabinet members and Jay Cooke.  Cooke wanted to insure the success of the Non-Profit Freedmen’s Savings & Trust Company led by his brother Henry.  Cooke would use this information to pressure Johnson until his eventual impeachment by the House of Representatives.
Fredrick Douglass was inserted as a Board of Directors and work closely with the Bank Operations Executives because of the possible appearance of conflict of interest between Henry Cooke and Jay Cooke & Company.  Douglass was urged by the original creators of the Freedmen’s Bank, A.M. Sperry, an Abolitionist and Treasurer and Congregational Minister J.W. Alvord to work closely with the Bank given the large number of Black depositors and deposits. Those depositors would eventually swell to 100,000 with deposits totaling more than $50 million in June 1873.  That would be the equivalent of almost $1 Billion in 2007 dollars.
The most pressing concern from the Black Leadership with the newly acquired land was federal protection.  The delegation from South Carolina was Richard Cain, the first Black to serve in the House of Representatives in 1873 -1875 and 1877 -1879.  Robert Elliot served in the House of Representatives in 1871 and South Carolina Attorney General in 1877.  Elliot opposed granting amnesty to ex-Confederate civilians and ranking military leaders.  Robert Smalls, 1862 Navy War hero, Brigadier General in South Carolina militia, also served in the House of Representatives in 1874.  Fredrick Douglass was painfully aware that the ex-Slave owners would not accept the financial and social losses that they would incur because of the Sherman Order No. 15.  Douglass introduced a unique proposition that he presented to Secretary of War, Simon Cameron.  Douglass needed continued troop presence and continuous military training for Blacks that occupied the land.  Douglass vision was that Blacks will continue to patrol the land with Union forces.  In exchange for troop access, Douglass would provide 1% of the Freedman’s Bank deposit interest and 1% of the gross profits on the output of crops from the land to cover the costs. Until the total costs were reached each year with an extra 3% also at the end of each year.  Douglass knew that Cameron would only be interested if there was an “upside” for the military access.  The stakes were high.  In 1835, the core cotton producing states of South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, and Georgia produced 500 million pounds of cotton which were ready for export to London, Paris, Liverpool, New Orleans, and New York.  That amount made up 55% of the entire U.S. export market.  In 1860, 2 billion pounds of “Petit Gulf” cotton were produced which amounted to more than 60% of the U.S. exports for that year.  
The benchmarks for the industry during the early 1860’s in New Orleans was about .12 cents per pound and the yield was about 1,000 to 1,200 pounds per acre.  Each person had the capacity to work 10 acres.  Cotton was the engine to the textile industry, as was American slave labor was to the global cotton industry.  New England had 75% of the 5.14 million spindles in operation and 52% of manufacturing operations in 1860.  New England had 67% of the mill consummation, or 283.7 million pounds of the 422.6 million pounds of all cotton used by all U.S. mills.  The interwoven aspect of New England’s successful economy and Slave labor of cotton was undeniable.
From a global perspective, Britain’s textile mills accounted for 40% of the country’s exports. Twenty percent of Britain’s 22 million people where directly or indirectly involved in the cotton textile industry.  Britain relied on American cotton for over 80% of the raw industrial material.  American cotton was also the engine for Britain’s economy.  These points drove home the fact that Douglass needed to build a strong coalition of leaders to successful transform the state of freed Blacks.
More to come………..
Sources:
Myers, Barton. (2005, September 25).  Sherman’s field order No. 15.
Hurst, Ryan. (n.d.). Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and abandon lands (1865 – 1872)

Stiller, Jesse. (n.d.). The Freedman’s Savings Bank: Good Intentions Were Not Enough; A Noble Experiment Goes Awry.  https://www.occ.gov/about/what-we-do/history/freedman-savings-bank.html

NCC Staff. (2015, July 15).  Andrew Johnson: The most criticized President Ever? http://blog.constitutioncenter.org/2015/07/marking-the-passing-of-maybe-the-most-criticized-president-ever/

Levy, John Ira. (n.d.).  The Ways of Providence: Capitalism, Risk and Freedom in America 1841 -1935.  https://books.google.com/books?id=gPOXe09ePBMC&pg=PA182&lpg=PA182&dq=bibliography+of+henry+cooke+and+freedman%27s+bank&source=bl&ots=glYF_Z3iSi&sig=n7UA11ssSKoOvPzqxRRF0iXE_hk&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjxjpSF8IXRAhVLjFQKHQ0XCTAQ6AEIKjAD#v=onepage&q=bibliography%20of%20henry%20cooke%20and%20freedman's%20bank&f=false

The American Yawp. (n.d.). The Cotton Revolution. http://www.americanyawp.com/text/11-the-cotton-revolution/
Cho, Nancy. (n.d.). Elliott, Robert Brown (1842 – 1884). http://www.blackpast.org/aah/elliott-robert-brown-1842-1884


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