Upon the occupation of this District by the U.S. troops, affairs were found
to be in a very unsettled state. The "scouts" who had latterly enforced
local order and preserved discipline upon the plantations, were disbanded; no
civil magistrates had power to act; the planters, uncertain as to the wishes
of the United States authorities, were afraid even to defend themselves against
aggression and robbery;--while the negro laborers, who in this neighborhood
outnumber the whites five to one, already excited by the prospect of freedom,
were urged to lawlessness and acts of violence by the advice of many of the
colored soldiers. Not only was there every prospect that the crops would be
neglected, but it also seemed probable that the negroes would revenge themselves,
by theft, insults, and violence, upon their former owners. To avert disorder
and starvation, officers detailed for the purpose were sent into the country
to explain to white and black alike their condition under the new state of affairs,
and to induce the laborers, if possible, to resume work upon the crops,--which
are now in the most critical stage. It was soon found, however, that uniformity
was needed in these operations; and during the last week in May, Brevet Brigadier
General Hartwell, commanding the Brigade, appointed a Special Commission to
have charge over all the relations between proprietor and laborer; to supervise
contracts, made under Brig. Gen'l. Hatch's orders,2 and to act also as Provost
Judges in cases of disorder or crime upon the plantations. The commission originally
consisted of four members; afterwards of five; and this number is at present
reduced to two by the establishment of an auxiliary board in Columbia, S.C.
The limits of jurisdiction are indefinite, and cases are frequently brought
to our notice from remote districts of the State.
It is found that the office work alone,--merely
answering questions, deciding disputes, and administering justice, occupies
the attention of two officers and a clerk; while several officers are needed
to visit the different sections of the neighboring country, to assemble the
planters and the negroes at convenient points, and to explain,--to the former,
the necessity of making equitable contracts with their workmen, of discontinuing
corporal punishment, and of referring all cases of disorder and idleness to
the military authorities:--to the latter, in plain and simple terms their new
position as freedmen, their prospects, their duties, and their continued liability
to punishment for faults and crimes. In the two weeks which have passed since
the Commission was appointed, several hundred contracts have been approved,
as many plantations visited, and probably two thousand whites and ten thousand
blacks have been addressed. The officers engaged in this work have frequently
ridden alone and unarmed twenty-five miles, or further, from the Post, and have
almost invariably met with courteous and hospitable treatment at the hands of
the planters,--most of whom seem desirous to comply in good faith with the wishes
and orders of the Government, and to make the best of a system of labor in which,
notwithstanding, they thoroughly disbelieve.
It is found very difficult to disabuse the negroes
of the false and exaggerated ideas of freedom they have received, in a great
measure, from our own colored troops. They have been led to expect that all
the property of their former masters was to be divided out to them; and the
most reasonable fancy which prevails, is that besides receiving their food,
clothes, the free rent of houses and gardens, and the privilege of keeping their
hogs and poultry, they are to take for themselves all day Saturday and Sunday,
and to receive half the crops. Their long experience of slavery has made them
so distrustful of all whites, that on many plantations they persist still in
giving credit only to the rumors set afloat by people of their own color, and
believe that the officers who have addressed them are rebels in disguise. Even
where they are satisfied that the idea of freedom comprehends law, order, and
hard labor, there are many whom the absence of the usual restraint and fear
of punishment renders idle, insolent, vagrant and thievish. Owing to the entire
want of cavalry in this Department, it has been found possible to investigate
a few only of the cases brought before the board in its judicial capacity; and
the members view with solicitude the alarming increase of vagrancy throughout
the country, and the idleness, half-way-work, and turbulence of a large portion
of the negro population,--which they are powerless to check, except in the immediate
vicinity of a military force.
  In the opinion of a majority of the Commission,
little danger to the welfare of society, or of the country, need be apprehended
from the former slaveowners, who appear generally desirous to become good citizens.
It is the ignorance, the prejudice, the brutality, and the educated idleness,--if
so it can be termed--of the freedmen,--all attributable, not so much to their
race, as to the system of slavery under which they have lived,--that are mainly
to be watched and placed under restraint. To supply the place of the rigid plantation
discipline now suddenly done away with. Some well digested code of laws and
punishments, adapted to the peculiar position of affairs, should be applied
throughout the entire South. The impossibility of attaching, in future, money
value to the former slaves, will break up, in practice, as the Emancipation
proclamation has done in theory. the system of slavery; and the interests of
the capitalists and landowners of the South will lead them to make the best
possible use of freed labor: but it will be more difficult to convince the freedmen
themselves of their true position and prospects. Only actual suffering, starvation,
and punishment will drive many of them to work. It is a general complaint on
the part of the planters that although the laborers have had fair offers made
to them of compensation, including a share of the crops, they nearly all have
shortened their day's work several hours, and persist in taking to themselves
every Saturday.
In districts remote from our posts of occupation
the plantation discipline still prevails, and cases of flogging and shooting
are continually brought to the notice of the Commission from places sixty or
eighty miles from Orangeburg. Nor are the planters always to be blamed for such
measures of self-defence. There must be some restraint in every community, and
where there are but two classes, the one educated and intelligent, the other
ignorant and degraded, it is preferable, if one class must govern, that it be
the former. It is to be hoped, however, that civil or military authority will
soon supplant such an exercise of irresponsible power, which is liable to great
abuse.
  A form for making contracts, adapted after consultation
with a number of planters, is enclosed herewith. It was found, at the outset
of our operations, that half the crop,--which General Hatch had recommended
as fair compensation, was too much to give, if the laborers were also to be
fed and clothed until the end of the year. At the wish of General Hartwell,
therefore, the planters have been left to make their own proposals, the Commission
reserving the right to disapprove such contracts as seemed unjust to the workmen.
It has been found, however, that in almost every instance, the offers have been
very liberal. It is usual to promise food, and as far as possible, clothing,
to all the people on the plantations, both workers and dependents; and in addition,
either a certain share of the crop, varying according to circumstances from
one-tenth to one-half (the latter in very rare instances), to be divided among
the laborers only;--or, so many bushels of corn to every "hand",--usually
a year's supply. In consideration of the fact that only one third of the people
supported, on the average, are laborers, and that General Sherman's armies have
destroyed the fences, taken the stock, and devastated the whole region hereabouts,
the Commission are of opinion that these contracts are very favorable to the
workmen. It would appear that so low, uneducated and inefficient a class of
laborers as these now suddenly freed, should not receive more pay than Northern
farm laborers,--allowance being made for difference of circumstances. A day
laborer at the North, with a large family, usually has to pay all his wages
for food, clothing, and house-rent. If he can have his own little garden, and
a stock of poultry and pigs,--as most of the freedmen have, he is fortunate;
and if in addition to all this he gets a share of the crops--say a year's supply
of food, over and above expenditures, he is prospering beyond most of his fellows.
Were the freedmen to receive more, the relation between capital and labor would
be disturbed, and an undue value placed upon the latter, to the prejudice and
disadvantage, in the end, of the laborers themselves.
For the present year, a better condition of affairs
than that now prevailing can hardly be looked for. An influx of immigrants from
Europe and from the Northern States, increasing the proportion of the white
inhabitants to the blacks, dividing into smaller farms the arable lands of the
South, and introducing a system of money payments for labor, together with the
gradual education of the negroes themselves, will, it is to be hoped, bring
order out of this chaos. The plan adopted by the Commission is only meant to
compose matters, as far as possible, in order that the crops may be tilled and
reaped. It will give the members great satisfaction to be relieved by the adoption
of some general plan, from duties which are very arduous and responsible, and
in the discharge of which, through the want of a mounted police force, they
cannot avoid disappointing many applicants, and neglecting a large number of
cases which should properly demand their attention.
In addition to the form for contracts, is enclosed
an address to the colored people of the District, which embodies all that the
visiting officers include in their speeches. All the points upon which any doubt
or question has arisen are touched upon and explained in the simplest and most
familiar terms which can be used.
Awaiting instructions for the future, I have
the honor, General, to remain Your obedient servant,
ALS Charles C. Soule
Enclosure] [Orangeburg, S.C. June 1865]
To the Freed People of Orangeburg District.
You have heard many stories about your condition
as freemen. You do not know what to believe: you are talking too much; waiting
too much; asking for too much. If you can find out the truth about this matter,
you will settle down quietly to your work. Listen, then, and try to understand
just how you are situated.
  You are now free, but you must know that the only
difference you can feel yet, between slavery and freedom, is that neither you
nor your children can be bought or sold. You may have a harder time this year
than you have ever had before; it will be the price you pay for your freedom.
You will have to work hard, and get very little to eat, and very few clothes
to wear. If you get through this year alive and well, you should be thankful.
Do not expect to save up anything, or to have much corn or provisions ahead
at the end of the year. You must not ask for more pay than free people get at
the North. There, a field hand is paid in money, but has to spend all his pay
every week, in buying food and clothes for his family. and in paying rent for
his house. You cannot be paid in money,--for there is no good money in the District,--nothing
but Confederate paper. Then, what can you be paid with? Why, with food, with
clothes, with the free use of your little houses and lots. You do not own a
cent's worth except yourselves. The plantation you live on is not yours, nor
the houses, nor the cattle, mules and horses; the seed you planted with was
not yours, and the ploughs and hoes do not belong to you. Now you must get something
to eat and something to wear, and houses to live in. How can you get these things?
By hard work--and nothing else, and it will be a good thing for you if you get
them until next year, for yourselves and for your families. You must remember
that your children, your old people, and the cripples, belong to you to support
now, and all that is given to them is so much pay to you for your work. If you
ask for anything more; if you ask for a half of the crop, or even a third, you
ask too much; you wish to get more than you could get if you had been free all
your lives. Do not ask for Saturday either: free people everywhere else work
Saturday, and you have no more right to the day than they have. If your employer
is willing to give you part of the day, or to set a task that you can finish
early, be thankful for the kindness, but do not think it is something you must
have. When you work, work hard. Begin early--at sunrise, and do not take more
than two hours at noon. Do not think, because you are free you can choose your
own kind of work. Every man must work under orders. The soldiers, who are free,
work under officers, the officers under the general, and the general under the
president. There must be a head man everywhere, and on a plantation the head
man, who gives all the orders, is the owner of the place. Whatever he tells
you to do you must do at once, and cheerfully. Never give him a cross word or
an impudent answer. If the work is hard, do not stop to talk about it, but do
it first and rest afterwards. If you are told to go into the field and hoe,
see who can go first and lead the row. If you are told to build a fence, build
it better than any fence you know of. If you are told to drive the carriage
Sunday, or to mind the cattle, do it, for necessary work must be done even on
the Sabbath. Whatever the order is, try and obey it without a word.
There are different kinds of work. One man is
a doctor, another is a minister, another a soldier. One black man may be a field
hand, one a blacksmith, one a carpenter, and still another a house-servant.
Every man has his own place, his own trade that he was brought up to, and he
must stick to it. The house-servants must not want to go into the field, nor
the field hands into the house. If a man works, no matter in what business,
he is doing well. The only shame is to be idle and lazy.
You do not understand why some of the white people
who used to own you, do not have to work in the field. It is because they are
rich. If every man were poor, and worked in his own field, there would be no
big farms, and very little cotton or corn raised to sell; there would be no
money, and nothing to buy. Some people must be rich, to pay the others, and
they have the right to do no work except to look out after their property. It
is so everywhere, and perhaps by hard work some of you may by-and-by become
rich yourselves
Remember that all your working time belongs to
the man who hires you: therefore you must not leave work without his leave not
even to nurse a child, or to go and visit a wife or husband. When you wish to
go off the place, get a pass as you used to, and then you will run no danger
of being taken up by our soldiers. If you leave work for a day, or if you are
sick, you cannot expect to be paid for what you do not do; and the man who hires
you must pay less at the end of the year.
Do not think of leaving the plantation where you
belong. If you try to go to Charleston, or any other city, you will find no
work to do, and nothing to eat. You will starve, or fall sick and die. Stay
where you are, in your own homes, even if you are suffering. There is no better
place for you anywhere else.
You will want to know what to do when a husband
and wife live on different places. Of course they ought to be together, but
this year, they have their crops planted on their own places, and they must
stay to work them. At the end of the year they can live together. Until then
they must see each other only once in a while.
In every set of men there are some bad men and
some fools; who have to be looked after and punished when they go wrong. The
Government will punish grown people now, and punish them severely, if they steal,
lie idle, or hang around a man's place when he does not want them there, or
if they are impudent. You ought to be civil to one another, and to the man you
work for. Watch folks who have always been free, and you will see that the best
people are the most civil.
The children have to be punished more than those
who are grown up, for they are full of mischief. Fathers and mothers should
punish their own children, but if they happen to be off, or if a child is caught
stealing or behaving badly about the big house, the owner of the plantation
must switch him, just as he should his own children.
Do not grumble if you cannot get as much pay
on your place as some one else, for on one place they have more children than
on others, on one place the land is poor, on another it is rich; on one place,
Sherman took everything, on another, perhaps, almost everything was left safe.
One man can afford to pay more than another. Do not grumble, either, because,
the meat is gone or the salt hard to get. Make the best of everything, and if
there is anything which you think is wrong, or hard to bear, try to reason it
out: if you cannot, ask leave to send one man to town to see an officer. Never
stop work on any account, for the whole crop must be raised and got in, or we
shall starve. The old men, and the men who mean to do right, must agree to keep
order on every plantation. When they see a hand getting lazy or shiftless, they
must talk to him, and if talk will do no good, they must take him to the owner
of the plantation.
In short, do just about as the good men among
you have always done. Remember that even if you are badly off, no one can buy
or sell you: remember that if you help yourselves, God will help you, and trust
hopefully that next year and the year after will bring some new blessing to
you.
HD
Washington D.C. June 21, 1865
Captain Your report has been received and carefully read. I doubt not
the Commission is to do all you can to secure harmony and good will in society,
and that you must meet many difficulties. my views are set forth in the accompanying
Circulars. I do not expect to meet every difficulty arising under the new State
of things. The belief on the part of old masters, that freedmen is impracticable,
shows the existence of a prejudice, which time and experience alone can cure.
The sophistries of planters are often insidious and hard to refute ¡If
they cannot get slavery, they try for a despotism next to it. Equality before
the law is what we must aim at. I mean a black, red, yellow or white thief should
have punishment for his theft without regard to the color of his skin. The same
equitable rule applies with regard to rights of property. Under the guise of
a desire to secure order the planter wishes United States Officers to put into
his hands absolute power, or at the best he asks us to exercise that power.
Now while we show the freedmen, how freemen support themselves at the North
by labor, we ought to let him taste somewhat of the freemans privileges. The
masters are prejudiced and mostly ignorant of the workings of free labor. you
had better therefore draw up an address to them, also explaining their duties
and obligations--
I have provided in my Circular No 5. for cases in dispute not taken cognizance
of by military tribunals.3 Punishments are not prescribed. It will be necessary
to call upon the military or police force for the execution of such punishment--
An order No 102 of 1865 from the War Dept. will enable you to do this.4 Your
form of contract is good. Genl Saxton is the Asst Commissioner for S.C. Please
send reports to him or his Agent at Charleston,
(Signed) O. O Howard
P.S. Why are wheat and rye excepted in the contract?
HLcSr
Capt. Charles C. Soule to Maj. Gen'l. O. O. Howard, 12 June 1865, enclosing
a speech "To the Freed People of Orangeburg District," [June 1865];
Maj Gen. O. O Howard to Captain Charles C. Soule, 21 June 1865, all filed as
S-17 1865, Letters Received, ser. 15, Washington Hdqrs., RG 105 [A-7308]. Soule
signed as a captain in the 55th Massachusetts Infantry, a black regiment. The
contract form said to have been enclosed in his letter is not in the file, nor
are the circulars referred to in Howard's reply.
1 The circular letter, which is dated May 15 in the records of the Freedmen's Bureau commissioner, had asked "[a]ll Commissioners however appointed who have the charge of Freedmen" to report "the character and extent of their work." (Circular Letter, Commissioner Refugees. Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, 15 May 1865, vol. 139, p. 1, Circulars, ser. 24, Washington Hdqrs., RG 105 [A-10701].)
2 John P. Hatch was the commander of the Northern District of the Department of the South. His principal order concerning contracts is printed below, as doc. 62.
3 Paragraph 7 of Circular 5, issued by the commissioner on May 30, authorized Freedmen's Bureau assistant commissioners and their designated subordinates to adjudicate cases involving freedpeople wherever civil law had been interrupted or local courts, "by reason of old codes, . . . disregard the negro's right to justice before the laws, in not allowing him to give testimony"--but only when such cases were "not taken cognizance of by the other tribunals, civil or military, of the United States." ("Freedmen's Bureau Orders," House Exec. Doc. 70, pp. 180-81.)
4 Issued on May 31, the order directed military commanders to detail officers and soldiers for service in the Freedmen's Bureau and to render any aid that assistant commissioners or other bureau agents required in discharging their official duties. (General Orders, No. 102, War Department, Adjutant General's Office, Orders & Circulars, ser. 44, RG 94 [DD-57].)