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The American Negro
Religious
Instinct.-Loyal And Patriotic.-The
Freedman.-Homeless And Illiterate When Emancipated.-First
Schools During The Civil War.-50th Anniversary.
"All nations whom thou hast made shall come
and worship before thee and glorify thy
name." David.
Religious
Instinct
In commendation of woman's loyalty and sense
of obligation to our Lord Jesus, it has been
said of her, "She was last at his cross and
first at his grave, she staid longest there
and was soonest here." In recognition of
this fact when he rose from the dead he
appeared first to one of them, Mary
Magdalene.
To the credit of men of African descent, it
may be said, that one of them performed the
last act of kindness to our Lord Jesus, and
the first individual conversion, of which we
have an account in the book of Acts, relates
to another one.
Simon, who assisted Jesus to bear his cross
to the place of crucifixion, was a native of
Cyrene in North Africa. The eastern Church
canonized him as Simon, the Black one,
because his was the high and holy honor of
bearing for the weary Christ, his cross of
shame and pain. Our Lord Jesus was not long
in the black man's debt. A few hours later,
he paid it back by bearing for him all his
weary burdens, on the very cross the African
had borne for him. That was a good start for
the Black man.
Philip, directed by an angel of the Lord to
go south and join himself to the chariot
occupied by the Eunuch, a man of great
authority under the Queen of Ethiopia, found
him reading the prophet Isaiah. Explaining
the scriptures to him the eunuch confessed
his faith in Jesus, was baptized with water
found at the roadside and resumed his
journey, homeward from Jerusalem, rejoicing.
The record of this Black man's conversion is
the first one of an individual in the book
of Acts.
The religious trait of the American Negro
has often been the subject of favorable
comment. He has never, in all his history,
been swayed by the false teachings of
infidels, atheists or anarchists.
Dan Crawford, a Scotch missionary, the
successor of Livingstone in the central part
of the dark continent, recently stated he
had discovered the fact, that the most
ignorant and degraded natives of central
Africa, have a religious instinct, that
includes a belief in one God and the
immortality of the soul.
Penetrating the jungles of the interior
beyond the reach of a previous explorer, he
found a tribe of nearly nude cannibals. He
saw one of them eating human flesh. Meeting
Ka la ma ta, their chief, the next day in
the presence of several hundred of his
tribe, he made special inquiry in regard to
their knowledge of God. The result was an
astounding surprise.
Kalamata, gave their name of God as Vi de Mu
ku lu the Great King. When further
questioned he said:
"We know there is a God for the same reason
we know where the goats went on a wet night,
when we see their deep foot-prints in the
mud. We see the sun and the sun sees us. We
see the wonderful mountains and the flowing
streams, and both tell us there is a God. He
is the one who sends the rain. No rain,
nothing to eat; no God, no anything."
Concerning a future life he expressed the
thought; the body is the cottage of the
soul. The dead do not really die. When one
dies they do not say, "he departed", but "he
has arrived."
The American Negro, like his native
ancestor, has always manifested this
religious instinct.
Under the influence of a natural instinct
the bee invariably builds its cell in the
same form for the next brood and the storage
of honey for it; the butterfly prepares the
cradle and food for offspring it never sees,
and the migratory birds follow the sun
northward in the spring and southward on the
approach of winter. All this is natural
instinct.
Religious instinct is something very
different from the natural instinct of any
creature. It is a natural power possessed by
man alone, and has its sphere in the human
conscience. Paul, writing to the Romans in
regard to the barbarians of his day,
observed, "God is manifest in them, for the
invisible things of God, even his eternal
power and God-head, are clearly seen by the
things that are made."
Loyal And Patriotic
The Negro in America has always been loyal
and patriotic. He has rendered a voluntary
service in the army and navy of the United
States that is worthy of special
commendation. The records of the war
department show that the number of colored
soldiers, participating in the several wars
of this country was as follows:
| Revolutionary
War, 1775-1781 |
3,000 |
| War of 1812 |
2,500 |
| Civil War,
1861-1865 |
178,975 |
In the war with Spain in
Cuba in 1898 the first troops that were sent
to the front were four regiments of colored
soldiers, and the service they rendered was
distinguished by bravery and courage.
The Freedman, Homeless And
Illiterate
In 1860 the number of Negroes that were in a
state of slavery was 3,930,760. In 1910
their number in the southern states had
increased to 9,000,000; and in the northern
states to 1,078,000.
The Emancipation Proclamation of President
Lincoln was issued January 1, 1863, but it
was preceded by a preliminary one on
September 22, 1862, that gave the public a
notice of 100 days of the coming event.
The Act of Emancipation that severed the
relation binding them to their masters, left
them in a very forlorn and deplorable
condition. They were homeless and penniless
in a country that had been rendered more or
less desolate, by the ravages of war and
bloodshed. No provision had ever been made
for the spread of intelligence among them.
It has been estimated that only about five
per cent of them at that time could read and
write. Their homeless and illiterate
condition rendered them comparatively
helpless and dependent.
In 1885 the number of voters enrolled among
the Freedmen was 1,420,000 and of these as
many as 1,065,000 were then unable to read
and write. These illiterate voters then
represented the balance of power in eight
southern states and one sixth of the
national electoral vote. This was a matter
of vital importance to the nation as well as
the states.
In 1900 the percentage of the Freedmen that
could read and write had been increased to
55.5 per cent and in 1910 to 69.3 per cent.
At this latter date however only 56.3 per
cent of their children, of a school age,
were enrolled as attending school, which
left more than one million yet to be
provided for.
First Public School
The first day school among the Freedmen was
established at Fortress Monroe, Virginia, by
the American Missionary Association on
September 17, 1861. This school became the
foundation of Hampton Institute, to which
the ragged urchin wended his way on foot and
slept the first night under a wooden
pavement that has since been known as Booker
T. Washington.
In 1862 similar schools were established at
Portsmouth, Norfolk, and Newport News,
Virginia; Newbern and Roanoke Island, North
Carolina, and Port Royal, South Carolina. In
December of that year Gen. Grant assigned
Col. John Eaton the supervision of the
Freedmen in Arkansas, with instruction to
establish schools where practical.
After the Emancipation Proclamation of
January 1, 1863, schools for the Negroes
began to be established in those parts of
the south occupied by the Federal armies,
General Banks establishing the first ones in
Louisiana.
In 1865 the Freedman's Bureau was
established, and it made the maintenance of
schools one of its objects until 1870, when
it was discontinued. The work has since been
left to the supervision of the several
states, aided by the generosity of the
friends of Christian education through the
missionary agencies of their respective
Churches.
It is estimated that since 1870 the
Freedmen, who constitute nearly one half the
population of the southern states have
received for the support of their schools,
only one eighth of the public funds
appropriated for the maintenance of common
schools. In the rural districts teachers
only are furnished, and these are supplied
on the condition the Freedmen in the
district build, furnish and maintain the
school building, the same as they do their
Church buildings.
The number of free Negroes in the United
States in 1860 was 487,970. The states
having the greatest number of them were
Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Maryland,
Virginia and North Carolina.
A few of these had become graduates of
colleges before the war and were thus fitted
for intelligent leadership. The beginning
and increase in number of these colored
college graduates has been as follows; In
1829, 1; in 1849, 7; in 1859, 12; in 1869,
44; in 1879, 313; in 1899, 1,126; and in
1909, 1,613. About 700 of them have
graduated from our northern colleges the
largest number having attended Oberlin
College at Oberlin, Ohio, and Lincoln
University at Oxford, Pennsylvania. In 1910
the whole number that had graduated was
3,856.
50th Anniversary
The 50th anniversary of the Emancipation
Proclamation was observed by a number of the
states in September, 1913. In Pennsylvania
it consisted of an exposition at the city of
Philadelphia that lasted one month. The
exhibit, showing the progress of the Negroes
from their infantile condition of 50 years
ago, was characterized as "wonderful", and
the occasion, one for devout thanksgiving
and encouragement on the part of those, who
have labored patiently and faithfully for
their civil, social, moral or religious
development.
The Presbyterian was the only one of the
white Churches that attempted an exhibit of
its work at this exposition. Its exhibit
consisted of photographs of Churches and
schools, and accounts of the results of the
work. It included specimens of industrial
work done in the schools by the sewers,
cabinet workers and other artisans. It was
under the direction of Rev. John M. Gaston,
field secretary of the Presbyterian Board of
Missions for Freedmen.
Choctaw Freedmen
This site
includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied .
Choctaw Freedmen and Oak Hill Industrial
Academy, 1914, Robert Elliott Flickinger
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