thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight dollars
and seventy-two cents ($2,330,788.72) in original
cost; but a large portion of these stores being
damaged and condemned as unfit for issue to
troops, their real value to the Government was
probably less than one million dollars ($1,000,000). Adding their original cost to the amount
expended from appropriations and other sources,
the total expenses of our Government for refugees and freedmen to August 31, 1869, have been
thirteen million five hundred and seventy-nine
thousand eight hundred and sixteen dollars and
eighty-two cents ($13,579,816.82). And deducting fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) set apart as
a special relief fund for all classes of destitute
people in the Southern states, the real cost has
been thirteen million twenty-nine thousand eight
hundred and sixteen dollars and eighty-two cents
($13,029,816.82).”[1]
By 1875, Negroes owned not less than 2,000,000 and perhaps as much as 4,000,000 acres of land and by 1880 this had increased to 6,000,000.
Notwithstanding the great step forward that the Negro had made this sinister fact faced him and his friends: he formed a minority of the population of the South. If that population was
- ↑ O. O. Howard, Autobiography., New York, 1907, Vol. 2, pp. 7, 371-2.