The Freedman’s Bank (December 1993 | Volume: 44, Issue: 8)

The Freedman’s Bank

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Authors: John Steele Gordon

Historic Era: Era 5: Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877)

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December 1993 | Volume 44, Issue 8

It was a banking system. The act that made it possible slipped through Congress with hardly any debate and little attention to economic reality. Many of its highest-ranking officials knew little or nothing about the peculiar nature of the banking business. More than a few were incompetent, and some were plain crooks. When it failed to flourish, Congress expanded the sorts of investments it was permitted to make, without regard to the risk involved. It collapsed at great cost.

 

No, it was not the savings and loan industry in the 1980s. It was the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company in the 1860s and 1870s. But to read Carl R. Osthaus’s worthy book on its sad history, Freedmen, Philanthropy, and Fraud, is to know déjà vu on a historical time scale.

When the Civil War ended, social and economic chaos reigned throughout the devastated South, and no one felt the effects of this chaos more than the freed blacks. How were they to make a living? The former slaves had no property and, hardly surprisingly, were very reluctant to work under the old system of gang labor, regardless of the wages they might be paid. And the landowners, their liquid assets wiped out by the war, usually lacked the cash to pay wages in any event. Over the next decade the sharecropper system would evolve to accommodate the new realities, allowing the barter of land use for labor.

But ironically, many of the blacks, who had hardly ever seen cash money in the days of slavery, now had some cash in their pockets. Hundreds of thousands of the men had joined the Union Army and received both bonuses for joining up and regular pay. Many people, educated blacks and whites alike, feared that unless a safe place was quickly devised where these soldiers could store their army pay, they would quickly be fleeced out of it by the camp followers and other lowlifes who inevitably surrounded Civil War armies.

On January 27, 1865, the Reverend John W. Alvord, a Congregational minister and dedicated abolitionist, but no banker, invited 22 prominent New Yorkers to a meeting to discuss the creation of a permanent banking institution to serve the needs of the freedmen. This group, which included such nationally prominent men as Peter Cooper and William Cullen Bryant, decided to act at once and sent Alvord to Washington to ask Congress for a banking charter.

Congress was near adjournment by the time the bill reached the floor of the Senate on March 2, 1865, introduced by the abolitionist Charles Sumner of Massachusetts. Sumner’s bill would have allowed, in the words of one objecting senator, “a kind of roving commission for these persons to establish a savings bank in any part of the United States.” Sumner quickly agreed to limit the bank’s charter to the District of Columbia, and it passed the Senate.

The bill then became law as Sumner had originally introduced it.