Page:W. E. B. Du Bois - The Gift of Black Folk.pdf/263

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The Gift of Black Folk
251

Some farms were set apart in each state as homes for the destitute and helpless and a portion was cultivated by freedmen prior to its restoration. . . .

"Notice the appropriations by Congress:

For the year ending July 1st, 1867. $6,940,450.00
For the year ending July 1st, 1868. 3,936,300.00
For the relief of the destitute citizens in District of Columbia 40,000.00
For relief of destitute freedmen in the same 15,000.00
For expenses of paying bounties in 1869. 214,000.00
For expenses for famine in Southern states and transportation. 1,865,645.00
For support of hospitals. 50,000.00
Making a total received from all sources of $12,961,395.00

"Our expenditures from the beginning (including assumed accounts of the 'Department of Negro Affairs' from January 1st, 1865, to August 31, 1869) have been eleven million two hundred and forty-nine thousand and twenty-eight dollars and ten cents ($11,249,028.10). In addition to this cash expenditure the subsistence, medical supplies, quartermasters stores, issued to the refugees and freedmen prior to July 1st, 1866, were furnished by the commissary, medical and quartermasters department, and accounted for in the current expenses of those departments; they were not charged to nor paid for by my officers. They amounted to two million three hundred and thirty