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{{Short description|US agency assisting freedmen in the South}}
{{Copyedit|date=November 2007}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2021}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}


[[Image:Freedman bureau harpers cartoon.jpg|thumb|300px|A Bureau agent stands between an armed group of Southern whites and a group of freed slaves in this 1868 picture from ''Harpers' Weekly'']]
[[File:The Freedmen's Bureau - Drawn by A.R. Waud. LCCN92514996.tif|thumb|300px|right|A Bureau agent stands between a group of whites and a group of freedmen. ''[[Harper's Weekly]]'', July 25, 1868.]]
The '''Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands''', usually referred to as simply the '''Freedmen's Bureau''',<ref>{{Cite web |title=A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875 |url=http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsl&fileName=013/llsl013.db&recNum=536 |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=[[Library of Congress]]}}</ref> was a [[Federal government of the United States|U.S. government]] agency of early post [[American Civil War]] [[Reconstruction era of the United States|Reconstruction]], assisting [[freedmen]] (i.e., former slaves) in the South. It was established on March 3, 1865, and operated briefly as a federal agency after the War, from 1865 to 1872, to direct "provisions, clothing, and fuel... for the immediate and temporary shelter and supply of destitute and suffering refugees and freedmen and their wives and children".<ref>{{Cite book |title=U.S., Statutes at Large, Treaties, and Proclamations of the United States of America |date=1866 |volume=13 |location=Boston |pages=507–509}} published at {{cite web |title=Freedmen's Bureau Bill |url=http://www.freedmen.umd.edu/fbact.htm |access-date=27 July 2017 |website=[[University of Maryland]]: Freedmen & Southern Society Project |publisher=}}</ref>
On March 3, 1865, Congress established the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. Also known as the '''Freedmen's Bureau''', it was a federal agency that was formed during [[Reconstruction]] to aid distressed refugees of the [[American Civil War]]. The Freedmen's Bureau Bill was initiated by Abraham Lincoln and intended to last for one year after the end of the Civil War. It became primarily an agency to help the [[Freedmen]] (freed former [[History of slavery in the United States|slaves]]) in the South. The Bureau was part of the [[United States Department of War]], and headed by [[Union Army|Union]] General [[Oliver O. Howard]]. Fully operational{{Fact|date=April 2007}} from June 1865 through December 1868, it was disbanded by President [[Andrew Johnson]].


==Background and operations==
== Overview ==
In 1863, the [[American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission]] was established. Two years later, as a result of the inquiry<ref>{{Cite book |last=Foner |first=Eric |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cwVkgrvctCcC&pg=PA68 |title=Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877 |date=2011-12-13 |publisher=Harper Collins |isbn=978-0-06-203586-8 |language=en |via=Google Books}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=February 2024}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rodriguez |first=Junius P. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4X44KbDBl9gC&pg=PA165 |title=Slavery in the United States: A Social, Political, and Historical Encyclopedia |date=2007-03-20 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |isbn=978-1-85109-544-5 |volume=1 |language=en |via=Google Books}}</ref> the [[Freedmen's Bureau bills|Freedmen's Bureau Bill]] was passed, which established the Freedmen's Bureau as initiated by [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Abraham Lincoln]]. It was intended to last for one year after the end of the Civil War.<ref name="pbs.org" /> The Bureau became a part of the [[United States Department of War]], as Congress provided no funding for it. The War Department was the only agency with funds the Freedmen's Bureau could use and which had an existing presence in the South.
On March 3, 1865, the Freedmen's Bureau was created by Congress to aid former slaves through education, health care and employment. $17,000 was spent to help establish 4,000 schools, 100 hospitals and also homes and food for past slaves. This bureau was also designed to help these former slaves find new jobs and improve their education and health.


Headed by [[Union Army]] General [[Oliver O. Howard]], the Bureau started operations in 1865. From the beginning, its representatives found its tasks very difficult, in part because Southern legislatures passed [[Black Codes (United States)|Black Codes]] that restricted movement, conditions of labor, and other civil rights of [[African American]]s, nearly replicating the conditions of slavery. Also, the Freedmen's Bureau only controlled a limited amount of arable land.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kelley |first=Robin D. G. |url=https://archive.org/details/freedomdreamsbla00kell_0 |title=Freedom Dreams |publisher=Beacon Press |year=2002 |isbn=9780807009789 |location=Boston |pages=116 |url-access=registration |via=Archive.org}}</ref>
At the end of the war, its main role was providing emergency food, housing and medical aid to refugees. It could also help find families. By late 1865, it focused its work on helping the Freedmen adjust to their conditions of freedom. Its main job was setting up work opportunities and supervising labor contracts. It soon became, in effect, a military court that handled legal issues. By 1866, it was attacked by former [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] leaders for organizing Blacks against the ruling of used Blacks that the plantation lands of their former employers. Although some of their subordinate agents were unscrupulous or incompetent, the majority of local Bureau agents were hindered in carrying out their duties by the opposition of former Confederates, the lack of a military presence to enforce their authority, and an excessive amount of paperwork <ref>Cimbala 1992</ref>.


The Bureau's powers were expanded to help African Americans find family members from whom they had become separated during the war. It arranged to teach them to read and write—skills considered critical by the freedmen themselves as well as by the government.<ref name="ReferenceA" /> Bureau agents also served as legal advocates for African Americans in both state and federal courts, mostly in cases dealing with family issues.<ref name="ReferenceA" /> The Bureau encouraged former major [[Planter class|planters]] to rebuild their [[Plantation complexes in the Southern United States|plantations]] and pay wages to their previously enslaved workers. It kept an eye on the contracts between the newly free laborers and planters, given that few freedmen had yet gained adequate reading skills, and pushed whites and blacks to work together in a free-labor market as employers and employees rather than as masters and slaves.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite book |last1=Carson |first1=Clayborne |title=The Struggle for Freedom: A History of African Americans |last2=Lapsansky-Werner |first2=Emma J. |last3=Nash |first3=Gary B. |pages=256}}</ref>
[[Howard University]] was also established in Washington in 1867 with the help of the Freedmen’s Bureau.
The university was named after General [[Oliver Howard]], a Civil War hero and Bureau commissioner.
Nearly a year after the bureau was put into effect, the Radical Republicans who put the bureau into action, attempted to increase the powers of the bureau. President [[Andrew Johnson]] vetoed this request in February of 1866.


In 1866 [[United States Congress|Congress]] renewed the charter for the Bureau. President [[Andrew Johnson]], a [[Southern Democrat]] who had succeeded to the office following Lincoln's assassination<ref name="DK2015">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wcobBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA338 |title=The Civil War: A Visual History |date=2015 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1-4654-4065-5 |pages=338ff |via=Google Books}}</ref> in 1865, vetoed the bill, arguing that the Bureau encroached on [[states' rights]], relied inappropriately on the military in peacetime, gave blacks help that poor whites had never had, and would ultimately prevent freed slaves from becoming self-sufficient by rendering them dependent on public assistance.<ref name="pbs.org"/><ref>{{Cite web |last= |first= |title=The Freedmen's Bureau Bill |url=https://www.nps.gov/anjo/learn/historyculture/freedmens-bureau.htm |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=[[U.S. National Park Service]]: [[Andrew Johnson National Historic Site]]}}</ref> Though [[Radical Republicans|the Republican]]-[[39th United States Congress|controlled Congress]] overrode Johnson's veto, by 1869 Southern Democrats in Congress had deprived the Bureau of most of its funding, and as a result it had to cut much of its staff.<ref name="pbs.org" /><ref name="deShazo2018">{{cite book |author= |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E_NjDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT35l |title=The Racial Divide in American Medicine: Black Physicians and the Struggle for Justice in Health Care |publisher=University Press of Mississippi |year=2018 |isbn=978-1-4968-1769-3 |editor-last=deShazo |editor-first=Richard D. |location=Jackson |pages=35ff |via=Google Books}}</ref> By 1870 the Bureau had been weakened further due to the rise of [[Ku Klux Klan]] (KKK) violence across the South; members of the KKK and other terrorist organizations, attacked both blacks and sympathetic white [[Republican Party (United States)|Republicans]], including teachers.<ref name="pbs.org">{{Cite web |last=Wormser |first=Richard |author-link=Richard Wormser |date=2002 |title=The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow. Jim Crow Stories: Freedmen's Bureau |url=https://www.thirteen.org/wnet/jimcrow/stories_events_freed.html |access-date=2013-07-28 |website=[[Thirteen.org]] |publisher=[[PBS]]}}</ref> Northern Democrats also opposed the Bureau's work, painting it as a program that would make African Americans "lazy".<ref name="AlexanderRucker2010">{{cite book |last1=Alexander |first1=Leslie M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Uhh7GggNxQoC&pg=PA777 |title=Encyclopedia of African American History |last2=Rucker |first2=Walter C. |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2010 |isbn=978-1-85109-769-2 |pages=777ff |via=Google Books}}</ref>
== Achievements ==
=== Day-to-day duties ===
One of the more important but rarely emphasized motives of the Bureau was to help solve everyday problems of the freed slaves. They urgently needed clothing, food, medicine, communication with family members, and jobs. The Bureau gave out about 15 million rations of food to blacks<ref>Goldhaber 1992</ref>. Also, the Bureau set up a system where planters could borrow rations in order to feed freedmen they employed. Though the Bureau set aside $350,000 for this service, only $35,000 (10%) was borrowed.{{Fact|date=April 2007}}


In 1872 Congress abruptly abandoned the program, refusing to approve renewal legislation. It did not inform Howard, whom [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Ulysses S. Grant]] had transferred to Arizona to settle hostilities between the [[Apache]] and settlers. Grant's Secretary of War [[William W. Belknap]] was hostile to Howard's leadership and authority at the Bureau. Belknap aroused controversy among Republicans by his reassignment of Howard.{{sfnp|Zuczek|2006|pp=271-274}}
The Bureau attempted to strengthen existing medical care facilities as well as expand services into rural areas through newly established clinics. The Bureau succeeded in giving medical care to over one million people. Medical assistance and supplies as well as food were in short supply, and civil authorities often were reluctant to cooperate with the Bureau in aiding the former slaves. Despite the good intentions, efforts, and limited success of the Bureau, medical treatment of the freedmen was severely deficient. <ref>Pearson 2002</ref>


==Achievements==
=== Gender roles ===
Freedmen's Bureau agents at first complained that freedwomen were not working as they should and were refusing to contract their labor. They attempted to make freedwomen work by insisting that their husbands sign contracts obligating the whole family to work on cotton, and by declaring that unemployed freedwomen should be treated as vagrants just as men were. The Bureau did allow some exceptions such as certain married women with employed husbands and some "worthy" women who had been widowed or abandoned and had large families of small children and thus could not work. "Unworthy" women, meaning the unruly and especially prostitutes, were the ones usually subjected to punishment for vagrancy. <ref>Farmer-Kaiser, 2004</ref> Under slavery, marriages were informal; slavery disrupted many families as did wartime chaos. Many Freedmen attempted to find their spouses and children, and the Bureau agents helped. The Bureau had an informal regional communications system that allowed agents to send inquiries and provide answers. It sometimes provided transportation to reunite families. Freedmen and freedwomen turned to the Bureau for assistance in resolving issues of abandonment and divorce.
=== Education ===
[[Image:Freedmen richmond sewing women.jpg|thumb|250px|Women sewing at the Freedmen's Union Industrial School, [[Richmond, Virginia]]]]
The most widely recognized among the achievements of the Freedmen’s Bureau are its accomplishments in the field of education. Prior to the Civil War, there was not a universal, state supported educational system in the southern states. Former slaves wanted such a system while the wealthier whites strongly opposed the idea. Former slaves had a strong desire to learn to read and write and worked hard to establish schools in their communities prior to the advent of the Freedmen's Bureau.


===Day-to-day duties===
The first Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner was Oliver Otis Howard. He believed in government aided industrial and academic training and was known for his humanity and strong character. Through his leadership the bureau was divided into four divisions which included: Government Controlled Lands, Records, Financial Affairs, and Medical Affairs. Education was considered part of the Records division. Mr. Howard then turned over confiscated property, government buildings, books, and furniture to those superintendents to be used in the education of freedmen. In addition, he provided transportation, room and board for teachers.
[[File:Freedmens Bureau 1866.jpg|thumb|250px|The Freedmen's Bureau office in Memphis, Tennessee, 1866.]]
[[File:Manson marriage certificate Bureau Refugees Freedmen and Abandoned Lands 1866.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Marriage certificate]] issued by the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, [[Wilson County, Tennessee]], 1866.]]
The Bureau mission was to help solve everyday problems of the newly freed slaves, such as obtaining food, medical care, communication with family members, and jobs. Between 1865 and 1869, it distributed 15 million rations of food to freed African Americans and 5 million rations to impoverished whites, and set up a system by which planters could borrow rations in order to feed freedmen they employed. Although the Bureau set aside $350,000 for this latter service, only $35,000 (10%) was borrowed by planters.<ref name="Baptiste2015">{{cite book |author=Baptiste |first=Tracey |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TTA2CgAAQBAJ&pg=PA48 |title=The Civil War and Reconstruction Eras |date=2015 |publisher=Britannica Educational Publishing |isbn=978-1-68048-041-2 |location=New York |page=48}}</ref>


The Bureau's humanitarian efforts had limited success. Medical treatment of the freedmen was severely deficient,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Downs |first=Jim |title=Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction |date=2012 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780199758722 |location=New York}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=February 2024}} as few Southern doctors, all of whom were white, would treat them. Much infrastructure had been destroyed by the war, and people had few means of improving sanitation. Blacks had little opportunity to become medical personnel. Travelers unknowingly carried epidemics of [[cholera]] and [[yellow fever]] along the river corridors, which broke out across the South and caused many fatalities, especially among the poor.
Congress created The Freedmen's Bureau but did not fund it for the first year. By 1866, there were numerous missionary and aid societies working in conjunction with the Freedmen's Bureau to provide an education for former slaves. The primary focus of these groups was to raise funds to pay teachers and manage schools while the secondary focus was the day to day operation of individual schools. After 1866, some funds were appropriated by Congress to use in the Freedmen's schools but the real source of educational revenue for these schools came through a Congressional Act that gave the Freedmen's Bureau the power to seize Confederate property for educational use.


===Gender roles===
George Ruby, an African American, served as teacher and school administrator and as a traveling inspector for the bureau, observing local conditions, aiding in the establishment of black schools, and evaluating the performance of Bureau field officers. His efforts met with enthusiasm for education on the part of blacks and bitter opposition, including physical violence, from many planters and other whites. <ref>Crouch 1997</ref> Overall, the Bureau spent five million dollars to set up schools for blacks. By the end of 1865, more than 90,000 former slaves were enrolled as students in public schools. The [[Ku Klux Klan]] and various other similar groups had been created by that time. Attendance rates at the new schools for freedmen were between 79 and 82 percent. An important educator was Brigadier General [[Samuel Chapman Armstrong]]; as an agent of the Bureau, he created and led [[Hampton University|Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute]].
[[File:Certificate of Matrimony from the Freedmen's Bureau.gif|thumb|A certificate of marriage issued by the Freedmen's Bureau]]
Freedmen's Bureau agents initially complained that freedwomen were refusing to contract their labor. One of the first actions black families took for independence was to withdraw women's labor from fieldwork. The Bureau attempted to force freedwomen to work by insisting that their husbands sign contracts making the whole family available as field labor in the cotton industry, and by declaring that unemployed freedwomen should be treated as vagrants just as black men were.<ref name=":0">{{cite journal |last1=Farmer-Kaiser |first1=Mary |date=2004 |title='Are they not in some sorts vagrants?': Gender and the Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau to Combat Vagrancy in the Reconstruction South |url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=12624891&site=eds-live&scope=site |journal=[[Georgia Historical Quarterly]] |volume=88 |issue=1 |pages=25–49 |access-date=19 February 2018}}</ref> The Bureau did allow some exceptions, such as married women with employed husbands, and some "worthy" women who had been widowed or abandoned and had large families of small children to care for. "Unworthy" women, meaning the unruly and prostitutes, were usually the ones subjected to punishment for vagrancy.<ref name=":0" />


Before the Civil War the enslaved could not marry legally, and most marriages had been informal, although planters often presided over "marriage" ceremonies for their enslaved. After the war, the Freedmen's Bureau performed numerous marriages for freed couples who asked for it. As many husbands, wives, and children had been forcibly separated under slavery, the Bureau agents helped families reunite after the war. The Bureau had an informal regional communications system that allowed agents to send inquiries and provide answers. It sometimes provided transportation to reunite families. Freedmen and freedwomen turned to the Bureau for assistance in resolving issues of abandonment and divorce.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Farmer-Kaiser |first=Mary |title=Freedwomen and the Freedmen's Bureau: Race, Gender, and Public Policy in the Age of Emancipation |date=2010 |publisher=Fordham University Press |isbn=9780823232116 |series=Reconstructing America |location=New York |chapter=1}}</ref>
The Freedmen's Bureau published their own Freedmen's text book which was referred to as a reader. The Freedmen's Bureau pushed their particular philosophy of education for African Americans through the south by controlling the curriculum and resources that were provided to these schools.


===Education===
The Freedmen's readers represented the compromise reached between the groups wanting to educate African Americans and the white communities where these schools were located. These readers were written using forgiveness as a theme. African Americans were encouraged to forgive their former masters, understand the anger of their former masters, and live on good terms with them. Generally, these readers were sympathetic with the owners of former slaves without ever mentioning slavery. Furthermore, these readers emphasized what was called the bootstrap philosophy meaning that everyone had the ability to work hard and pull themselves up by their bootstraps and do better in life.
The most widely recognized accomplishments of the Freedmen's Bureau were in education. Prior to the Civil War, no Southern state had a system of universal, state-supported public education; in addition, most had prohibited both enslaved and free blacks from gaining an education. This meant learning to read and write, and do simple arithmetic. Former slaves wanted public education while the wealthier whites opposed the idea. Freedmen had a strong desire to learn to read and write; some had already started schools at refugee camps; others worked hard to establish schools in their communities even prior to the advent of the Freedmen's Bureau.{{sfnp|Zuczek|2006|pp=216-219}} The Freedmen's Bureau schools were also open to poor whites, however, almost no whites attended because "Despite the absence of statewide systems in most Southern states, most parents preferred to consign their children to illiteracy rather than to see them educated alongside black children."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.friendsofthelincolncollection.org/lincoln-lore/reconstruction-what-went-wrong/ | title=Reconstruction: What Went Wrong? }}</ref>


[[Oliver Otis Howard]] was appointed as the first Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner. Through his leadership, the bureau set up four divisions: Government-Controlled Lands, Records, Financial Affairs, and Medical Affairs. Education was considered part of the Records division. Howard turned over confiscated property including planters' mansions, government buildings, books, and furniture to superintendents to be used in the education of freedmen. He provided transportation and room and board for teachers. Many Northerners came south to educate freedmen.
These readers had some traditional literacy lessons and other lessons aimed at former slaves which included among other things: the life and works of [[Abraham Lincoln]], exercepts from the Bible which were focused on forgiveness, biographies of famous African American with emphasis on their piety, humbleness and industry, and full essays on loving your enemies, humility, the work ethic and temperance.


[[File:Freedman Bureau Richmond VA.jpg|thumb|250px|The Misses Cooke's school room, Freedmen's Bureau, Richmond, Virginia, 1866.]]
By 1870, there were more than 1,000 schools for freedmen in the South.{{Fact|date=April 2007}} J. W. Alvord, an inspector for the Bureau, wrote that the freedmen "have the natural thirst for knowledge," aspire to "power and influence&nbsp;… coupled with learning," and are excited by "the special study of books." Among the former slaves, both children and adults indulged in this new opportunity to learn. It helped African Americans find jobs and homes. About 150 schools were opened in Texas, and 4,300 schools in all were opened for African Americans. After the Bureau was abolished, its achievements collapsed under the weight of white violence against schools and teachers and the gutting of funds for all schools by Southern white [[Redeemer]] legislatures devoted to limited government.<ref>Goldhaber 1992</ref>
By 1866, Northern missionary and aid societies worked in conjunction with the Freedmen's Bureau to provide education for former slaves. The [[American Missionary Association]] (AMA) was particularly active, establishing eleven "colleges" in Southern states for the education of freedmen. The primary focus of these groups was to raise funds to pay teachers and manage schools, while the secondary focus was the day-to-day operation of individual schools. After 1866, Congress appropriated some funds to operate the freedmen's schools. The main source of educational revenue for these schools came through a Congressional Act that gave the Freedmen's Bureau the power to seize Confederate property for educational use.


[[George Ruby]], an African American, served as a teacher and school administrator and as a traveling inspector for the Bureau, observing local conditions, aiding in the establishment of black schools, and evaluating the performance of Bureau field officers. Blacks supported him, but planters and other whites opposed him.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Crouch |first=Barry A. |date=1997 |title=Black Education in Civil War and Reconstruction Louisiana: George T. Ruby, the Army, and the Freedmen's Bureau |journal=[[Louisiana History]] |volume=38 |issue=3 |pages=287–308 |jstor=4233415 |issn=0024-6816}}</ref>
By 1871, northeners' interest in reconstructing the south had waned. Northeners were beginning to tire of the effort that reconstruction required and were ready for the south to take care of itself. In all of the southern states, there were now written provisions for universal publicly funded education. The financial underpinning of the schools run by the Freedmen's Bureau came from groups based in the north and they began to redirect their money toward universities and colleges founded to educate African American leaders.
[[File:Freedmen's School, James Plantation, North Carolina.png|thumb|Freedmen's School, James Plantation, North Carolina]]
Overall, the Bureau spent $5 million to set up schools for blacks. By the end of 1865, more than 90,000 former slaves were enrolled as students in such public schools. Attendance rates at the new schools for freedmen were about 80%. Brigadier General [[Samuel Chapman Armstrong]] created and led [[Hampton University|Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute]] in Virginia in 1868. It is now known as Hampton University.


The Freedmen's Bureau published their own freedmen's textbook. They emphasized the bootstrap philosophy, encouraging freedmen to believe that each person had the ability to work hard and to do better in life.{{clarify|date=November 2013}} These readers included traditional literacy lessons, as well as selections on the life and works of [[Abraham Lincoln]], excerpts from the Bible focused on forgiveness, biographies of famous African Americans{{Example needed|date=February 2024}} with emphasis on their piety, humbleness, and industry; and essays on humility, the work ethic, temperance, loving one's enemies, and avoiding bitterness.<ref>{{cite journal |author=West |first=Earle H. |year=1982 |title=Book review of ''Freedmen's Schools and Textbooks'' |journal=[[Journal of Negro Education]] |volume=51 |pages=165–167 |doi=10.2307/2294682 |jstor=2294682}}</ref>
The building and opening of schools of higher learning for African Americans coincided with the shift in focus for the Freedmen's Aid Societies from an elementary education for all African Americans to a high school and college education for African American leaders. Both of these events worked in concert with concern on the part of white officials working with African Americans in the south. These officials were concerned about the lack of a moral or financial foundation seen in the African American community and traced that lack of foundation back to slavery.


J. W. Alvord, an inspector for the Bureau, wrote that the freedmen "have the natural thirst for knowledge," aspire to "power and influence&nbsp;… coupled with learning," and are excited by "the special study of books." Among the former slaves, both children and adults sought this new opportunity to learn. After the Bureau was abolished, some of its achievements collapsed under the weight of white violence against schools and teachers for blacks. Most Reconstruction-era legislatures had established public education but, after the 1870s, when white Democrats regained power of Southern governments, they reduced funds available to fund public education, particularly for blacks. Beginning in 1890 in Mississippi, Democratic-dominated legislatures in the South passed new state constitutions [[Disfranchisement after Reconstruction era|disenfranchising most blacks]] by creating barriers to voter registration. They then passed [[Jim Crow laws]] establishing legal segregation of public places. Segregated schools and other services for blacks were consistently underfunded by the Southern legislatures.<ref name="Goldhaber 1992">{{cite journal |last1=Goldhaber |first1=Michael |year=1992 |title=A Mission Unfulfilled: Freedmen's Education in North Carolina, 1865–1870 |journal=[[Journal of Negro History]] |volume=77 |issue=4 |pages=207 |doi=10.2307/3031474 |jstor=3031474 |s2cid=141705550}}</ref>
Generally, they found that African Americans had no sense of marital fidelity or temperance and had not been taught any wise financial strategies. Different heads of local American Missionary Associations which sponsored various educational and religious efforts for African Americans, Samuel Chapman Armstrong of the Hampton Institute and Booker T. Washington began the call for institutions of higher learning so black students could leave home and "live in an atmosphere conducive not only to scholarship but to culture and refinement (Morris, 1981, p. 160.)"


By 1871, Northerners' interest in reconstructing the South had waned. Northerners were beginning to tire of the effort that Reconstruction required, were discouraged by the high rate of continuing violence around elections, and were ready for the South to take care of itself. All of the Southern states had created new constitutions that established universal, publicly funded education. Groups based in the North began to redirect their money toward universities and colleges founded to educate African-American leaders.{{sfnp|Zuczek|2006|pp=270-277}}
Most of these colleges, universities and normal schools combined what they believed were the best fundamentals of a college with that of the home. At the majority of these schools students were expected to bathe a prescribed number of times per week, maintain an orderly living space, and present a particular appearance. At many of these institutions, Christian principles and practices were also part of the daily regime.


==Teachers==
=== Church establishment ===
{{Slavery}}
The freedmen sought the Bureau's aid in establishing churches. After the war, control over existing churches was a highly contentious issue; Northern [[Methodism|Methodists]] seized control of Southern Methodist buildings in some cities. Whereas whites and blacks had worshiped together before the war, now they mutually agreed{{Fact|date=April 2007}} to separate. The Bureau, with close ties to Northern Methodist and other churches, facilitated new buildings, though it did not spend any government money on churches. Northern mission societies collected of funds for land, buildings, teachers' salaries, and basic necessities such as books and furniture.<ref>Morrow 1954</ref>
Written accounts by northern women and missionary societies resulted in historians' overestimating their influence, writing that most Bureau teachers were well-educated women from the North, motivated by religion and abolitionism to teach in the South. In the early 21st century, new research has found that half the teachers were southern whites; one-third were blacks (mostly southern), and one-sixth were northern whites.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Butchart |first=Ronald E. |title=Schooling the Freed People: Teaching, Learning, and the Struggle for Black Freedom, 1861–1876 |date=2010 |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |isbn=9780807834206 |location=Chapel Hill}}</ref> Few were abolitionists; few came from New England. Men outnumbered women. The salary was the strongest motivation except for the northerners, who were typically funded by northern organizations and had a humanitarian motivation. As a group, the black cohort showed the greatest commitment to racial equality; and they were the ones most likely to remain teachers. The school curriculum resembled that of schools in the north.<ref>{{Citation |last=Krowl |first=Michelle A. |title=Review of Butchart, Ronald E., Schooling the Freed People: Teaching, Learning, and the Struggle for Black Freedom, 1861-1876 |date=September 2011 |url=https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=32584 |access-date=2024-02-02 |publisher=[[H-Net]]}}</ref>


== Opposition ==
===Colleges===
The building and opening by the AMA and other missionary societies of schools of higher learning for African Americans coincided with the shift in focus for the Freedmen's Aid Societies from supporting an elementary education for all African Americans to enabling African-American leaders to gain high school and college educations. Some white officials working with African Americans in the South were concerned about what they considered the lack of a moral or financial foundation seen in the African-American community and traced that lack of foundation back to slavery.


Generally, they believed that Blacks needed help to enter a free labor market and rebuild a stable family life. Heads of local [[American Missionary Association]]s sponsored various educational and religious efforts for African Americans. Later efforts for higher education were supported by such leaders as [[Samuel Chapman Armstrong]] of the [[Hampton Institute]] and [[Booker T. Washington]] of the [[Tuskegee Institute]] (from 1881). They said that black students should be able to leave home and "live in an atmosphere conducive not only to scholarship but to culture and refinement".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Morris |first=Robert C. |title=Reading, 'Riting, and Reconstruction: The Education of Freedmen in the South, 1861–1870 |date=1981 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226539287 |location=Chicago |pages=160}}</ref>
[[Image:Freedman's bureau.jpg|250px|thumb|Poster attacking Freedmen's Bureau]]
Most of the assistant commissioners, realizing that blacks would not receive fair trials in the civil courts, tried to handle black cases in their own Bureau courts. Southern whites objected loudly and said this was unconstitutional. In [[Alabama]], state and county judges were commissioned as Bureau agents. They were to try cases involving blacks with no distinctions on racial grounds. If a judge refused, [[martial law]] could be instituted in his district. All but three judges accepted their unwanted commissions, and the governor urged compliance.<ref>Foner 1988</ref>


Most of these colleges, universities and normal schools combined what they believed were the best fundamentals of a college with that of the home, giving students a basic structure to build acceptable practices of upstanding lives. At many of these institutions, Christian principles and practices were also part of the daily regime.
Perhaps the most difficult region was [[Louisiana]]'s Caddo-Bossier district. It had not experienced wartime devastation or Union occupation. Understaffed and weakly supported by federal troops, well-meaning Bureau agents found their investigations blocked and authority undermined at every turn by recalcitrant planters. Murders of freedmen were common, and suspects in these cases generally went unprosecuted. Bureau agents did manage to negotiate labor contracts, build schools and hospitals,{{Fact|date=April 2007}} and provide the freedmen a sense of their own humanity through the agents' willingness to help.<ref>Smith 2000</ref>


===Educational legacy===
In 1872, Congress terminated the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. The Depression of 1873, combined with the violence of the Ku Klux Klan, drove many northerners out of the south. By 1877, white southerners had regained control of the south and repealed most of the legislation put into place by reconstruction replacing it with laws that were punitive to the freedmen.
Despite the untimely dissolution of the Freedmen's Bureau, its legacy influenced the important [[historically black colleges and universities]] (HBCUs), which were the chief institutions of higher learning for blacks in the South through the decades of segregation into the mid-20th century. Under the direction and sponsorship of the Bureau, together with the American Missionary Association in many cases, from approximately 1866 until its termination in 1872, an estimated 25 institutions of [[Higher education|higher learning]] for black youth were established.{{sfnp|Howard|1907}} The leaders among them continue to operate as highly ranked institutions in the 21st century and have seen increasing enrollment.<ref name="nytimes_2018-04-26">{{Cite news |last=Weiland |first=Noah |date=2018-04-26 |title=Howard University Stares Down Challenges, and Hard Questions on Black Colleges |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/us/howard-university-black-colleges.html |access-date=2024-02-02 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> (Examples of HBCUs include [[Howard University]], [[St. Augustine's College (North Carolina)|St. Augustine's College]], [[Fisk University]], [[Johnson C. Smith University]], [[Clark Atlanta University]], [[Dillard University]], [[Shaw University]], [[Virginia Union University]], and [[Tougaloo College]]).
==Notes==

<references/>
{{As of|2009}}, there exist approximately 105 HBCUs that range in scope, size, organization, and orientation. Under the Education Act of 1965, Congress officially defined an HBCU as "an institution whose principal missions were and are the education of Black Americans". HBCUs graduate over 50% of African-American professionals, 50% of African-American public school teachers, and 70% of African-American dentists. In addition, 50% of African Americans who graduate from HBCUs pursue graduate or professional degrees. One in three degrees held by African Americans in the natural sciences, and half the degrees held by African Americans in mathematics, were earned at HBCUs.<ref>Data from United Negro College Fund.</ref>{{full citation needed|date=August 2018}}

Perhaps the best known of these institutions is [[Howard University]], founded in Washington, D.C., in 1867, with the aid of the Freedmen's Bureau. It was named for the commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, General [[Oliver Otis Howard]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Harrison |first=Robert |date=2006 |title=Welfare and Employment Policies of the Freedmen's Bureau in the District of Columbia |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27648987 |journal=[[The Journal of Southern History]] |volume=72 |issue=1 |pages= 75–110|jstor=27648987 |issn=0022-4642}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=February 2024}}

===Church establishment===
After the Civil War, control over existing churches was a contentious issue. The Methodist denomination had split into regional associations in the 1840s prior to the war, as had the Baptists, when [[Southern Baptists]] were founded. In some cities, Northern [[Methodism|Methodists]] seized control of Southern Methodist buildings. Numerous northern denominations, including the independent black denominations of the [[African Methodist Episcopal]] (AME) and [[African Methodist Episcopal Zion]], sent missionaries to the South to help the freedmen and plant new congregations. By this time the independent black denominations were increasingly well organized and prepared to evangelize to the freedmen. Within a decade, the AME and AME Zion churches had gained hundreds of thousands of new members and were rapidly organizing new congregations.<ref name="docsouth.unc.edu">{{cite web |last=Maffly-Kipp |first=Laurie F. |date=2001 |title=The Church in the Southern Black Community |url=http://docsouth.unc.edu/church/intro.html |access-date=15 January 2009 |work=[[Documenting the American South]] |publisher=University of North Carolina}}</ref>

Even before the war, blacks had established independent Baptist congregations in some cities and towns, such as Silver Bluff and Charleston, South Carolina; and Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. In many places, especially in more rural areas, they shared public services with whites. Often enslaved blacks met secretly to conduct their own services away from white supervision or oversight.<ref name="docsouth.unc.edu" /> After the war, freedmen mostly withdrew from the white-dominated congregations of the Baptist, Methodist and Presbyterian churches in order to be free of white supervision. Within a short time, they were organizing black Baptist state associations and organized a national association in the 1890s.

Northern mission societies raised funds for land, buildings, teachers' salaries, and basic necessities such as books and furniture. For years they used networks throughout their churches to raise money for freedmen's education and worship.<ref>Morrow 1954</ref>{{Full citation needed|date=February 2024}}

==Continuing insurgency==
[[File:Freedman's bureau.jpg|245px|thumb|An 1866 poster attacking the Freedmen's Bureau.]]
Most of the assistant commissioners, realizing that African Americans would not receive fair trials in the civil courts, tried to handle black cases in their own Bureau courts. Southern whites objected that this was unconstitutional. In [[Alabama]], the Bureau commissioned state and county judges as Bureau agents. They were to try cases involving blacks with no distinctions on racial grounds. If a judge refused, the Freedmen's Bureau could institute [[martial law]] in his district. All but three judges accepted their unwanted commissions, and the governor urged compliance.<ref>Foner 1988</ref>

Perhaps the most difficult region reported by the Freedmen's Bureau was [[Louisiana]]'s [[Caddo Parish|Caddo]] and [[Bossier Parish|Bossier]] parishes in the northwest part of the state. It had not suffered wartime devastation or Union occupation, but white hostility was high against the black majority population. Well-meaning Bureau agents were understaffed and weakly supported by federal troops, and found their investigations blocked and authority undermined at every turn by recalcitrant plantation owners. Murders of freedmen were common, and white suspects in these cases were not prosecuted. Bureau agents did negotiate labor contracts, build schools and hospitals, and aid freedmen, but they struggled against the violence of the oppressive environment.<ref>Smith 2000</ref>

In addition to internal parish problems, this area was reportedly invaded by insurgents from Arkansas, described as Desperadoes by the Bureau agent in 1868.<ref name="freedmen"/> In September 1868, for example, whites arrested and convicted 21 blacks accused of planning an insurrection in Bossier Parish. Henry Jones, accused of being the leader of the purported insurrection, was shot and left to burn by whites, but he survived, badly hurt. Other freedmen were killed or driven from their land by Arkansas Desperadoes.<ref name="freedmen"/> Whites were anxious about their power as blacks were to receive the franchise, and tensions were rising over land use. In early October, blacks arrested two whites from Arkansas "accused of being part of a mob ... that killed several Negroes." The agent reported 14 blacks had been killed in this incident, then said that another eight to ten had been killed by the same Desperadoes. Blacks were reported to have killed the two white men in the altercation.<ref name="freedmen"/> The whites' Arkansas friends and local whites went on a rampage against blacks in the area, resulting in more than 150 blacks being killed.<ref>Burton, Wilie. ''On the Black Side of Shreveport: A History'' (1983; 2nd edition, 1993)</ref><ref name="freedmen">[http://www.freedmensbureau.com/louisiana/outrages/bossierandcaddo.htm "Parishes of Bossier and Caddo" Synopsis of Murder &c. Committed in Parishes of Caddo and Bossier September and October 1868"], The Freedmen's Bureau Online; accessed 6 May 2018</ref>

In March 1872, at the request of President [[Ulysses S. Grant]] and the Secretary of the Interior, [[Columbus Delano]], General Howard was asked to temporarily leave his duties as Commissioner of the Bureau to deal with Indian affairs in the west. Upon returning from his assignment in November 1872, General Howard discovered that the Bureau and all of its activities had been officially terminated by Congress, effective as of June.{{sfnp|Howard|1907}} While General Howard was dealing with Indian affairs in the west, the Freedmen's Bureau was steadily losing its support in Congress. President Johnson had opposed the Freedmen's Bureau and his attitude encouraged many people, especially white Southerners, to challenge the Bureau. But insurgents showed that the war had not ended, as armed whites attacked black Republicans and their sympathizers, including teachers and officeholders. Congress dismantled the Bureau in 1872 due to pressure from white Southerners.<!-- Need better source for this --> The Bureau was unable to change much of the social dynamic as whites continued to seek supremacy over blacks, frequently with violence.<ref>{{cite web|author=PBS|title=Freedmen's Bureau|url=https://www.pbs.org/wnet/jimcrow/stories_events_freed.html|website=PBS|publisher=PBS Public Broadcasting Service|access-date=April 23, 2017}}</ref><!-- Seems poorly sourced compared to sound of discussion in earlier section of article -->

In his autobiography, General Howard expressed great frustration about Congress having closed down the bureau. He said, "the legislative action, however, was just what I desired, except that I would have preferred to close out my own Bureau and not have another do it for me in an unfriendly manner in my absence."{{sfnp|Howard|1907|p=447}} All documents and matters pertaining to the Freedmen's Bureau were transferred from the office of General Howard to the War Department of the United States Congress.

==State programs==

===Alabama===
The Bureau began distributing rations in the summer of 1865. Drought conditions resulted in so much need that the state established its own Office of the Commissioner of the Destitute to provide additional relief. The two agencies coordinated their efforts starting in 1866. The Bureau established depots in eight major cities. Counties were allocated aid in kind each month based on the number of poor reported. The counties were required to provide transportation from the depots for the supplies. The ration was larger in winter and spring, and reduced in seasons when locally grown food was available.

In 1866, the depot at Huntsville provided five thousand rations a day. The food was distributed without regard to race. Corruption and abuse was so great that in October 1866, President Johnson ended in-kind aid in that state. One hundred twenty thousand dollars was given to the state to provide relief to the end of January 1867. Aid was ended in the state. Records show that by the end of the program, four times as many White people received aid than did Black people.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Flynt|first1=Wayne |title=Poor But Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites|location=Birmingham|publisher=University of Alabama Press |date=1989}}</ref>

===Florida===
The Florida Bureau was assessed <!-- by whom? -->to be working effectively. [[Thomas Ward Osborne]], the assistant commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau for Florida, was an astute politician who collaborated with the leadership of both parties in the state. He was warmly praised by observers on all sides.<ref>Joe M. Richardson, "An Evaluation of the Freedmen's Bureau in Florida," ''Florida Historical Quarterly'' (1963) 41#3 pp. 223–238 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/30139938 in JSTOR]</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bentley |first1=George R. |year=1949 |title=The Political Activity of the Freedmen's Bureau in Florida |jstor=30138730 |journal=Florida Historical Quarterly |volume=28 |issue=1 |pages=28–37}}</ref>

===Georgia===
The Bureau played a major role in Georgia politics.<ref>Paul A. Cimbala, ''Under the Guardianship of the Nation: the Freedmen's Bureau and the Reconstruction of Georgia, 1865–1870'' (University of Georgia Press, 2003); For an online review see John David Smith, "'The Work It Did Not Do Because It Could Not': Georgia and the 'New' Freedmen's Bureau Historiography," ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' (1998) pp: 331–349. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/40584057 in JSTOR]</ref> It was especially active in setting up, monitoring, and enforcing labor contracts for both men and women.<ref>Sara Rapport, "The Freedmen's Bureau as a Legal Agent for Black Men and Women in Georgia: 1865–1868," ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' (1989): 26–53. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/40581929 in JSTOR]</ref> It also set up a new system of healthcare for the freedmen.<ref>Todd L. Savitt, "Politics in Medicine: The Georgia Freedmen's Bureau and the Organization of Health Care, 1865–1866," ''Civil War History'' 28.1 (1982): 45–64. [http://mtw160-198.ippl.jhu.edu/journals/civil_war_history/v028/28.1.savitt.pdf Project MUSE Online]</ref> Although a majority of the agency's relief rations went to freedpeople, a large number of whites also benefited. In Georgia, poor whites received almost one-fifth of the Bureau's rations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/freedmens-bureau|title=Freedmen's Bureau|last=Hatfield|first=Edward|date=July 1, 2009|website=New Georgia Encyclopedia|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref>
<!-- Add Louisiana -->

===North Carolina===
In North Carolina, the bureau employed: 9 contract surgeons, at $100 per month; 26 hospital attendants, at average pay each per month $11.25; 18 civilian employees, clerks, agents, etc., at an average pay per month of $17.20; 4 laborers, at an average pay per month of $11.90, for a total annual salaries of $18,596.40, which is approximately $595,000 in 2024 dollars; enlisted men are detailed as orderlies, guards, etc., by commanding officers of the different military posts where officers of the Bureau were serving.<ref>{{cite book|title=The United States Army and Navy Journal and Gazette of the Regular and Volunteer Forces|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7KNMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA616|access-date=18 September 2013|year=1865|publisher=Army and Navy Journal Incorporated|page=616}}</ref>
Some misconduct was reported to the bureau main office that bureau agents were using their posts for personal gains. Colonel E. Whittlesey was questioned but said he was not involved in nor knew of anyone involved in such activities. The bureau exercised what whites believed were arbitrary powers: making arrests, imposing fines, and inflicting punishments. They were considered to be disregarding the local laws and especially the statute of limitations. Their activities resulted in resentment among whites toward the federal government in general. These powers invoked negative feelings in many southerners that sparked many to want the agency to leave. In their review, Steedman and Fullerton repeated their conclusion from Virginia, which was to withdraw the Bureau and turn daily operations over to the military.<ref name="memory.loc.gov" />

===South Carolina===
In South Carolina, the bureau employed nine clerks, at average pay each per month $108.33, one rental agent, at monthly pay of $75.00, one clerk, at monthly pay of $50.00, one storekeeper, at monthly pay of $85.00, one counselor, at monthly pay of $125.00, one superintendent of education, at monthly pay of $150.00, one printer, at monthly pay of $100.00, one contract surgeon, at monthly pay of $100.00, and twenty-five laborers, at average pay per month $19.20. Total annual salaries of $25,679.64 which is $821,600 in 2024 dollars.
General Saxton was head of the bureau operations in South Carolina; he was reported by Steedman and Fullerton to have made so many "mistakes and blunders" that he made matters worse for the freedmen. He was replaced by Brigadier General R. K. Scott. Steedman and Fullerton described Scott as energetic and a competent officer. It appeared that he took great pains to turn things around and correct the mistakes made by his predecessors.
The investigators learned of reported murders of freedmen by a band of outlaws. These outlaws were thought to be people from other states, such as Texas, Kentucky and Tennessee, who had been part of the rebel army ([[Ku Klux Klan]] chapters were similarly started by veterans in the first years after the war.) When citizens were asked why the perpetrators had not been arrested, many answered that the Bureau, with the support of the military, had the primary authority.<ref name="memory.loc.gov"/>
In certain areas, such as the [[Sea Islands]], many freedmen were destitute. Many had tried to cultivate the land and began businesses with little to no success in the social disruption of the period.<ref>Charles F. Kovacik, and Robert E. Mason. "Changes in the South Carolina Sea Island Cotton Industry," ''Southeastern Geographer'' (1985) 25#2 pp: 77–104.</ref>

===Texas===
Suffering much less damage in the war than some other Deep South states, Texas became a destination for some 200,000 refugee blacks from other parts of the South, in addition to 200,000 already in Texas. Slavery had been prevalent only in [[East Texas]], and some freedmen hoped for the chance of new types of opportunity in the lightly populated but booming state. The Bureau's political role was central, as was close attention to the need for schools.<ref>Claude Elliott, "The Freedmen's Bureau in Texas." ''Southwestern Historical Quarterly'' (1952): 1–24. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/30235092 in JSTOR]</ref><ref>William Lee Richter, ''Overreached on all sides: the Freedmen's Bureau Administrators in Texas, 1865–1868'' (Texas A&M University Press, 1991)</ref><ref>Barry A. Crouch, ''The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Texans'' (University of Texas Press, 2010)</ref>

===Virginia===
The Freedmen's Bureau had 58 clerks and superintendents of farms, paid average monthly wages $78.50; 12 assistant superintendents, paid average monthly wages 87.00; and 163 laborers, paid average monthly wages 11.75; as personnel in the state of Virginia. Other personnel included orderlies and guards.<ref name="memory.loc.gov">see [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/rbaapc:@field(DOCID+@lit(rbaapc31600div0)) "Reports of Generals Steedman and Fullerton on the condition of the Freedmen's Bureau in the Southern States"]</ref>

During the war, slaves had escaped to Union lines and forts in the Tidewater, where contraband camps were established. Many stayed in that area after the war, seeking protection near the federal forts. The Bureau fed 9,000 to 10,000 blacks a month over the winter, explaining:
:"A majority of the freedmen to whom this subsistence has been furnished are undoubtedly able to earn a living if they were removed to localities where labor could be procured. The necessity for issuing rations to this class of persons results from their accumulation in large numbers in certain places where the land is unproductive and the demand for labor is limited. As long as these people remain in the present localities, the civil authorities refuse to provide for the able-bodied, and are unable to care for the helpless and destitute among them, owing to their great number and the fact that very few are residents of the counties in which they have congregated during the war. The necessity for the relief extended to these people, both able-bodied and helpless, by the Government, will continue as long as they remain in their present condition, and while rations are issued to the able-bodied they will not voluntarily change their localities to seek places where they can procure labor.'<ref>from [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/rbaapc:@field(DOCID+@lit(rbaapc31600div0)) "Reports of Generals Steedman and Fullerton on the condition of the Freedmen's Bureau in the Southern States"], date</ref>

==Bureau records==
In 2000, the U.S. Congress passed the Freedmen's Bureau Preservation Act, which directed the National Archivist to preserve the extensive records of the Bureau on microfilm, and work with educational institutions to index the records.<ref>[http://uscodebeta.house.gov/statutes/2000/2000-106-0444.pdf 114 Stat. 1924]{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> In addition to those records of the Bureau headquarters, assistant commissioners, and superintendents of education, the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]] now has records of the field offices, marriage records, and records of the Freedmen's Branch of the Adjutant General on microfilm. They are being digitized and made available through online databases. These constitute a major source of documentation on the operations of the Bureau, political and social conditions in the Reconstruction Era, and the genealogies of freedpeople.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.archives.gov/research/african-americans/freedmens-bureau/|title=African American Records: Freedmen's Bureau|date=15 August 2016}}</ref><ref>[https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2005/spring/freedman-marriage-recs.html Reginald Washington, "Sealing the Sacred Bonds of Holy Matrimony/ Freedmen's Bureau Marriage Records"], ''Prologue Magazine'', Spring 2005, Vol. 37, No. 1.</ref>{{efn|For access and inquires about the use of the records, researchers should visit or write (e-mail) the Old Military and Civil Branch, 700 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20408. For the location of previously filmed and future Freedmen's Bureau microfilm publications, researchers should contact the nearest regional archives or visit the NARA online microfilm catalog. By 2014, under arrangement with the National Archives, records are available online through [[FamilySearch]]<ref>[https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/United_States_Freedmen%E2%80%99s_Bureau_Marriages_%28FamilySearch_Historical_Records%29#Record_Description"United States Freedmen’s Bureau Marriages"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151122170445/https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/United_States_Freedmen%E2%80%99s_Bureau_Marriages_(FamilySearch_Historical_Records)#Record_Description |date=November 22, 2015 }}, FamilySearch Historical Records.</ref> and [[Ancestry.com|Ancestry]].}}
The Freedmen's Bureau Project<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.discoverfreedmen.org/|title=Freedmen's Bureau Project|website=www.discoverfreedmen.org}}</ref> (announced on June 19, 2015) was created as a set of partnerships between [[FamilySearch International]] and the [[National Archives and Records Administration]] (NARA), the [[Smithsonian]]'s [[National Museum of African American History and Culture]], the [[Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society]] (AAHGS), and the [[California African American Museum]]. With the help of more than 25,000 volunteers, the project was completed on June 20, 2016.<ref>{{Cite web |title=What was the Freedmen's Bureau |url=https://www.familysearch.org/en/info/freedmens-bureau-records |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220630201936/https://www.familysearch.org/en/info/freedmens-bureau-records |archive-date=June 30, 2022 |website=FamilySearch}}</ref> Information about millions of African Americans is now accessible, allowing families to build their family trees and connect with their ancestors.

In October 2006, Virginia governor [[Tim Kaine]] announced that Virginia would be the first state to index and digitize Freedmen's Bureau records.<ref>{{cite news |first=Catherine |last=Cheney |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/22/AR2009072201500_pf.html |title=Bringing Their Lives To Light: Virginia's Online Records Help Blacks ID Ancestors |newspaper=Washington Post |date=July 23, 2009}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
* [[History of African-American education]]
* [[Race and health]]
* [[United States House Committee on Freedmen’s Affairs]]
* [[Freedmen's Savings Bank]]
* [[Freedmen's Savings Bank]]
* [[Forty acres and a mule]]
* [[Freedmen's Cemetery (Louisiana)|Freedmen's Cemetery]] Chalmette, Louisiana
* [[Freedmen's Schools]]


== Bibliography ==
==Notes==
{{Notelist}}
* see also [[Reconstruction: Bibliography]]
=== Primary sources ===
* Berlin, Ira, ed. ''Free at Last: A Documentary History of Slavery, Freedom, and the Civil War'' (1995)
* [http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/freedmen/freedmen.html ''Minutes of the Freedmen's Convention, Held in the City of Raleigh, [North Carolina] ...October, 1866'']
* [http://freedmensbureau.com/ Freedmen's Bureau Online]
* [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/aap:@field(SUBJ+@band(Freedmen+)) Reports and Speeches]
* [http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/1997/summer/slave-emancipation.html Slave Emancipation Through the Prism of Archives Records (1997) by Joseph P. Reidy]
* [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/amlaw/ General Howard's report for 1869: The House of Representatives, Forty-first Congress, second session]
* Freemans Bureau http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAslavery.htm


=== General ===
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
* Bentley George R. ''A History of the Freedmen's Bureau'' (1955)
* Carpenter, John A.; ''Sword and Olive Branch: Oliver Otis Howard'' (1999) full biography of Bureau leader
* Cimbala, Paul A. and Trefousse, Hans L. (eds.) ''The Freedmen's Bureau: Reconstructing the American South After the Civil War.'' 2005. essays by scholars
* [http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/moa/sgml/moa-idx?notisid=ABK2934-0087-50 W. E. Burghardt Du Bois, "The Freedmen's Bureau" (1901)] by leading black scholar
* Foner Eric. ''Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877'' (1988) general history
* Litwack, Leon F. ''Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery.'' 1979. Winner of Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award.
* McFeely, William S. ''Yankee Stepfather: General O.O. Howard and the Freedmen''. 1994.


=== Education ===
==Sources==
===General===
* Anderson, James D. ''The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935'' (1988)
* {{Cite book |last=Bentley |first=George R. |url=https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015002382383 |title=A History of the Freedmen's Bureau |date=1955 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania |location=Philadelphia |hdl=2027/mdp.39015002382383 |via=[[HathiTrust]]}}; a scholarly history
* Bond, H. (1934). The education of the negro in the American social order. New York: Prentice-Hall.
* {{Cite book |last=Carpenter |first=John A. |title=Sword and Olive Branch: Oliver Otis Howard |date=1999 |publisher=Fordham University Press |isbn=9780823296705 |location=New York |doi=10.1515/9780823296705 |s2cid=244946261 |author-link=John A. Carpenter}}; full biography of Bureau leader
* Butchart, Ronald E. ''Northern Schools, Southern Blacks, and Reconstruction: Freedmen's Education, 1862-1875'' (1980)
* {{Cite book |last=Cimbala |first=Paul A. |title=The Freedmen's Bureau: Reconstructing the American South after the Civil War |date=2005 |publisher=Krieger |isbn=9781575240947 |series=Anvil series |location=Malabar, Fla.}}
* Crouch, Barry A. "Black Education in Civil War and Reconstruction Louisiana: George T. Ruby, the Army, and the Freedmen's Bureau" ''Louisiana History'' 1997 38(3): 287-308. Issn: 0024-6816
* {{Cite book |title=The Freedmen's Bureau: Reconstructing the American South After the Civil War |date=2005 |editor-last=Cimbala |editor-first=Paul A. |editor-last2=Trefousse |editor-first2=Hans L.}}; essays by scholars.
* Goldhaber, Michael. "A Mission Unfulfilled: Freedmen's Education in North Carolina, 1865-1870" ''Journal of Negro History'' 1992 77(4): 199-210. Issn: 0022-2992
* {{cite journal |last1=Colby |first1=I. C. |year=1985 |title=The Freedmen's Bureau: From Social Welfare to Segregation |journal=Phylon |volume=46 |issue=3|pages=219–230 |doi=10.2307/274830 |jstor=274830}}
* Jones, Jacqueline. ''Soldiers of Light and Love: Northern Teachers and Georgia Blacks, 1865-1873'' U of North Carolina Press 1980
* {{Cite magazine |last=Du Bois |first=W. E. B. |author-link=W. E. B. Du Bois |date=March 1901 |title=The Freedmen's Bureau |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/issues/01mar/dubois.htm |magazine=[[The Atlantic Monthly]] |pages=354–365 |volume=87 |issue=519}}
* Morris, Robert C. ''Reading, 'Riting, and Reconstruction: The Education of Freedmen in the South, 1861-1870'' 1981.
* {{Cite book |last=Foner |first=Eric |title=[[Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877]] |date=1988 |publisher=Harper & Row |isbn=9780060158514 |series=New American nation |location=New York |author-link=Eric Foner}}
* Overview of reconstruction. Retrieved October 23, 2007. www.graves.k12.ky.us/schools/GCHS/sbradley/documents/Reconstruction.htm.
* {{Cite book |last=Goldberg |first=Chad Alan |title=Citizens and Paupers: Relief, Rights, and Race, from the Freedmen's Bureau to Workfare |date=2007 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226300764 |location=Chicago}} Compares the Bureau with the [[Works Progress Administration]] in the 1930s and welfare today. [https://www.amazon.com/Citizens-Paupers-Relief-Freedmens-Workfare/dp/0226300773/ Excerpt and text search]
* Richardson, Joe M. ''Christian Reconstruction: The American Missionary Association and Southern Blacks, 1861-1890'' U of Georgia Press, 1986
* {{Cite book |last=Howard |first=O. O. |url=https://archive.org/details/autobiographyofo02howa |title=Autobiography of Oliver Otis Howard, Major General, United States Army |date=1907 |publisher=The Baker & Taylor Company |volume=2 |location=New York |oclc=1637484 |via=Archive.org}}
* Span, Christopher M. "'I Must Learn Now or Not at All': Social and Cultural Capital in the Educational Initiatives of Formerly Enslaved African Americans in Mississippi, 1862-1869," ''The Journal of African American History'', 2002 pp 196-222
* {{Cite book |last=Litwack |first=Leon F. |title=[[Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery]] |date=1979 |publisher=Knopf |isbn=9780394743981 |author-link=Leon Litwack}}
* Swint, Henry Lee. ''The Northern Teacher in the South: 1862-1870'' (New York, 1967).
* {{Cite book |last=McFeely |first=William S. |url=https://archive.org/details/yankeestepfather0000will |title=Yankee Stepfather: General O.O. Howard and the Freedmen |date=1994 |publisher=W.W. Norton |isbn=9780393311785 |location=New York |author-link=William S. McFeely |url-access=registration |via=Archive.org}}; biography of Bureau's head.
* Williams, Heather Andrea; "'Clothing Themselves in Intelligence': The Freedpeople, Schooling, and Northern Teachers, 1861-1871" ''The Journal of African American History'' 2002. pp 372+.
* {{Cite book |last=McPherson |first=James M. |url=https://archive.org/details/struggleforequal00mcph |title=The struggle for equality: Abolitionists and the Negro in the Civil War and Reconstruction |date=1964 |publisher=Princeton University Press |location=Princeton |url-access=registration |via=Archive.org}}
* Williams, Heather Andrea. ''Self-Taught: African American Education in Slavery and Freedom'' U of North Carolina Press, 2006
* {{Cite book |last=McPherson |first=James M. |url=https://archive.org/details/abolitionistlega0000mcph |title=The abolitionist legacy: From reconstruction to the NAACP |date=1995 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=9780691100395 |location=Princeton |url-access=registration |via=Archive.org}}
*{{Cite book |title=Encyclopedia of the Reconstruction Era |date=2006 |publisher=Greenwood Press |editor-last=Zuczek |editor-first=Richard |location=Westport |pages=271–274}}


===Supporting education===
=== Specialized studies ===
* Bethel, Elizabeth . "The Freedmen's Bureau in Alabama," ''Journal of Southern History'' Vol. 14, No. 1, Feb., 1948 pp. 49-92 [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-4642%28194802%2914%3A1%3C49%3ATFBIA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-%23 online at JSTOR]
* Abbott, Martin. "The Freedmen's Bureau and Negro Schooling in South Carolina," ''South Carolina Historical Magazine'', Vol. 57#2 (Apr., 1956), pp.&nbsp;65–81 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/27566050 in JSTOR]
* Anderson, James D. ''[[The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860–1935]]'' (1988).
* Cimbala, Paul A. "On the Front Line of Freedom: Freedmen's Bureau Officers and Agents in Reconstruction Georgia, 1865-1868". ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' 1992 76(3): 577-611. Issn: 0016-8297.
* Butchart, Ronald E. ''Northern Schools, Southern Blacks, and Reconstruction: Freedmen's Education, 1862–1875'' (1980).
* Cimbala, Paul A. ''Under the Guardianship of the Nation: the Freedmen's Bureau and the Reconstruction of Georgia, 1865-1870'' U. of Georgia Press, 1997.
* Cimbala, Paul, and Randall Miller, eds. ''The Freedmen's Bureau and Reconstruction'' (Fordham University Press, 2020). [https://repository.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol1/iss2/23/ online book review]
* Click, Patricia C. ''Time Full of Trial: The Roanoke Island Freedmen's Colony, 1862-1867'' (2001)]
* Hornsby, Alton. "The Freedmen's Bureau Schools in Texas, 1865–1870," ''Southwestern Historical Quarterly'', Vol. 76#4 (April, 1973), pp.&nbsp;397–417 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/30238207 in JSTOR]
* Crouch, Barry. ''The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Texans'' (1992)
* Crouch; Barry A. "The 'Chords of Love': Legalizing Black Marital and Family Rights in Postwar Texas" ''The Journal of Negro History'', Vol. 79, 1994
*Jackson, L. P. "The Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862–1872," ''The Journal of Negro History'' (1923), vol 8#1, pp 1–40. [https://www.jstor.org/pss/2713458 in JSTOR]
* Jones, Jacqueline. ''Soldiers of Light and Love: Northern Teachers and Georgia Blacks, 1865–1873'' (1980).
* Durrill, Wayne K. "Political Legitimacy and Local Courts: 'Politicks at Such a Rage' in a Southern Community during Reconstruction" in ''Journal of Southern History'', Vol. 70 #3, 2004 pp 577-617
* Myers, John B. "The Education of the Alabama Freedmen During Presidential Reconstruction, 1865–1867," ''Journal of Negro Education'', Vol. 40#2 (Spring 1971), pp.&nbsp;163–171 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2966728 in JSTOR]
* Farmer-Kaiser, Mary. "’Are They Not in Some Sorts Vagrants?’ Gender and the Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau to Combat Vagrancy in the Reconstruction South” ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' 2004 88(1): 25-49. Issn: 0016-8297
* Finley, Randy. ''From Slavery to Uncertain Future: the Freedmen's Bureau in Arkansas, 1865-1869'' U. of Arkansas Press, 1996.
* Parker, Marjorie H. "The Educational Activities of the Freedmen's Bureau" (PhD dissertation, The University of Chicago; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1951. T-01438).
** Parker, Marjorie H. "Some Educational Activities of the Freedmen's Bureau," ''Journal of Negro Education'', Vol. 23#1 (Winter, 1954), pp.&nbsp;9–21. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2293242 in JSTOR]
* Gerteis, Louis S. ''From Contraband to Freedmen: Federal Policy toward Southern Blacks, 1861-1865'' 1973.
* Richardson, Joe M. ''Christian Reconstruction: The American Missionary Association and Southern Blacks, 1861–1890'' (1986)
* Kolchin, Peter. ''First Freedom: The Responses of Alabama's Blacks to Emancipation and Reconstruction'' 1972.
* Lieberman, Robert C. "The Freedmen's Bureau and the Politics of Institutional Structure" ''Social Science History'' 1994 18(3): 405-437. Issn: 0145-5532
* Richardson, Joe M. "The Freedmen's Bureau and Negro Education in Florida," ''Journal of Negro Education'', Vol. 31#4 (Autumn, 1962), pp.&nbsp;460–467. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2293965 in JSTOR]
* Span, Christopher M. "'I Must Learn Now or Not at All': Social and Cultural Capital in the Educational Initiatives of Formerly Enslaved African Americans in Mississippi, 1862–1869," ''The Journal of African American History'', 2002, pp.&nbsp;196–222.
* Lowe, Richard. "The Freedman's Bureau and Local Black Leadership" ''Journal of American History'' 1993 80(3): 989-998. Issn: 0021-8723
* Tyack, David, and Robert Lowe. "The Constitutional Moment: Reconstruction and Black Education in the South," ''American Journal of Education'', Vol. 94#2 (February 1986), pp.&nbsp;236–256 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/1084950 in JSTOR]
* Morrow Ralph Ernst. "The Northern Methodists in Reconstruction". ''Mississippi Valley Historical Review'' 41 (September 1954): 197-218. in JSTOR
* Vaughn, William Preston, "Schools for All: The Blacks and Public Education in the South, 1865–1877" (1974). [https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_african_american_studies/18 online]
* May J. Thomas. "Continuity and Change in the Labor Program of the Union Army and the Freedmen's Bureau". ''Civil War History'' 17 (September 1971): 245-54.
* Williams, Heather Andrea; "'Clothing Themselves in Intelligence': The Freedpeople, Schooling, and Northern Teachers, 1861–1871", ''The Journal of African American History'', 2002, pp.&nbsp;372+.
* Oubre, Claude F. ''Forty Acres and a Mule: The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Land Ownership'' 1978.
* Williams, Heather Andrea. ''Self-Taught: African American Education in Slavery and Freedom'' (2006). [https://web.archive.org/web/20110810170658/http://www.questia.com/PM.qst;jsessionid=LDwCshDZqHTl3p4p2nCh7sJgHzFpPX8ZPxxLpLlDZVvpkvTvj242!58126583!-165273011?a=o&d=5021640598 online edition]
* Pearson, Reggie L. "'There Are Many Sick, Feeble, and Suffering Freedmen': the Freedmen's Bureau's Health-care Activities During Reconstruction in North Carolina, 1865-1868" ''North Carolina Historical Review'' 2002 79(2): 141-181. Issn: 0029-2494 .

* Quarles, Benjamin. ''The Negro in the Civil War'''. Russell & Russell. (1953)
===Specialized studies===
* Richter, William L. ''Overreached on All Sides: The Freedmen's Bureau Administrators in Texas, 1865-1868'' 1991.
* Bethel, Elizabeth . "The Freedmen's Bureau in Alabama," ''Journal of Southern History'' Vol. 14, No. 1, (February 1948) pp.&nbsp;49–92 [https://www.jstor.org/pss/2197710 in JSTOR].
* Ransom, Roger L. ''Conflict and Compromise''. Cambridge University Press. 1989. economic history
* Bickers, John M. "The Power to Do What Manifestly Must Be Done: Congress, the Freedmen's Bureau, and Constitutional Imagination", ''Roger Williams University Law Review'', Vol. 12, No. 70, 2006 [https://ssrn.com/abstract=1014105 online at SSRN].
* Oubre, Claude F. ''Forty Acres and a Mule''. Louisiana State University Press. Baton Rouge and London. 1978.
* Cimbala, Paul A. "On the Front Line of Freedom: Freedmen's Bureau Officers and Agents in Reconstruction Georgia, 1865–1868," ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' 1992 76(3): 577–611. {{ISSN|0016-8297}}.
* Rodrigue, John C. "Labor Militancy and Black Grassroots Political Mobilization in the Louisiana Sugar Region, 1865-1868" in ''Journal of Southern History'', Vol. 67 #1, 2001 pp 115-45
* Cimbala, Paul A. ''Under the Guardianship of the Nation: the Freedmen's Bureau and the Reconstruction of Georgia, 1865–1870'' (1997).
* Schwalm, Leslie A. "'Sweet Dreams of Freedom': Freedwomen's Reconstruction of Life and Labor in Lowcountry South Carolina'' ''Journal of Women's History'', Vol. 9 #1, 1997 pp 9-32
* Click, Patricia C. ''Time Full of Trial: The Roanoke Island Freedmen's Colony, 1862–1867'' (2001).
* Smith, Solomon K. "The Freedmen's Bureau in Shreveport: the Struggle for Control of the Red River District" ''Louisiana History'' 2000 41(4): 435-465. Issn: 0024-6816
* Crouch, Barry. ''The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Texans'' (1992).
* Williamson, Joel. ''After Slavery: The Negro in South Carolina during Reconstruction, 1861-1877'' 1965.
* Crouch; Barry A. "The 'Chords of Love': Legalizing Black Marital and Family Rights in Postwar Texas," ''The Journal of Negro History'', Vol. 79, 1994.
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/FF/ncf1.html Freedmen's Bureau in Texas]
* Downs, Jim. ''Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction'' (Oxford University Press, 2012)
--------
* Durrill, Wayne K. "Political Legitimacy and Local Courts: 'Politicks at Such a Rage' in a Southern Community during Reconstruction," in ''Journal of Southern History'', Vol. 70 #3, 2004 pp.&nbsp;577–617.
<references/>
* Farmer-Kaiser, Mary. "'Are They Not in Some Sorts Vagrants?' Gender and the Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau to Combat Vagrancy in the Reconstruction South," ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' 2004 88(1): 25–49. {{ISSN|0016-8297}}.
* Farmer-Kaiser, Mary. ''Freedwomen and the Freedmen's Bureau: Race, Gender, and Public Policy in the Age of Emancipation'' (Fordham University Press, 2010); describes how freedwomen found both an ally and an enemy in the Bureau.
* Finley, Randy. ''From Slavery to Future: the Freedmen's Bureau in Arkansas, 1865–1869'' (1996).
* Lieberman, Robert C. "The Freedmen's Bureau and the Politics of Institutional Structure," ''Social Science History'' 1994 18(3): 405–437. {{ISSN|0145-5532}}.
* {{cite journal |last1=Lowe |first1=Richard |year=1993 |title=The Freedman's Bureau and Local Black Leadership |journal=Journal of American History |volume=80 |issue=3|pages=989–998 |doi=10.2307/2080411|jstor=2080411}}
* Morrow Ralph Ernst. ''Northern Methodism and Reconstruction'' (1956)
* May J. Thomas. "Continuity and Change in the Labor Program of the Union Army and the Freedmen's Bureau," ''Civil War History'' 17 (September 1971): 245–54.
* Oubre, Claude F. ''Forty Acres and a Mule''. (1978).
* Pearson, Reggie L. "'There Are Many Sick, Feeble, and Suffering Freedmen': the Freedmen's Bureau's Health-care Activities During Reconstruction in North Carolina, 1865–1868," ''North Carolina Historical Review'' 2002 79(2): 141–181. {{ISSN|0029-2494}} .
* Richter, William L. ''Overreached on All Sides: The Freedmen's Bureau Administrators in Texas, 1865–1868'' (1991).
* Rodrigue, John C. "Labor Militancy and Black Grassroots Political Mobilization in the Louisiana Sugar Region, 1865–1868" in ''Journal of Southern History'', Vol. 67 #1, 2001, pp.&nbsp;115–45.
* Schwalm, Leslie A. "'Sweet Dreams of Freedom': Freedwomen's Reconstruction of Life and Labor in Lowcountry South Carolina," ''Journal of Women's History'', Vol. 9 #1, 1997 pp.&nbsp;9–32.
* Smith, Solomon K. "The Freedmen's Bureau in Shreveport: the Struggle for Control of the Red River District," ''Louisiana History'' 2000 41(4): 435–465. {{ISSN|0024-6816}}.
* Williamson, Joel. ''After Slavery: The Negro in South Carolina during Reconstruction, 1861–1877'' (1965).
* [http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/ncf01 Freedmen's Bureau in Texas], ''Texas Handbook of History'' online

===Primary sources===
* Berlin, Ira, ed. ''Free at Last: A Documentary History of Slavery, Freedom, and the Civil War'' (1995)
* Stone, William. ''"Bitter Freedom:" William Stone's Record of Service in the Freedmen's Bureau'', edited by Suzanne Stone Johnson and Robert Allison Johnson (2008), memoir by white Bureau official
* [http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/freedmen/freedmen.html ''Minutes of the Freedmen's Convention, Held in the City of Raleigh, North Carolina, October, 1866'']
* [http://freedmensbureau.com/ Freedmen's Bureau Online]
* [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/aap:@field(SUBJ+@band(Freedmen+)) Reports and Speeches] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200805024006/http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem%2Faap%3A%40field%28SUBJ+%40band%28Freedmen+%29%29 |date=August 5, 2020 }}
* [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/amlaw/ General Howard's report for 1869: The House of Representatives, Forty-first Congress, second session]{{failed verification|date=April 2021}}


== External links ==
==External links==
{{Wikisource|Freedmen's Bureau}}{{commons category}}
*[http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-634&sug=y Georgia: Freedmen's Education during Reconstruction]
*[http://www.africanaheritage.com/Freedmens_Bureau.asp Africana Archives: Freedmen's Bureau Records at the USF Africana Heritage Project]
* [https://archive.today/20130116055656/http://www.africanaheritage.com/Freedmens_Bureau.asp Africana Archives: Freedmen's Bureau Records at the USF Africana Heritage Project]
* [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1942-27424-39426-52?cc=1989155&wc=94K7-3TG:266076801,266080201 Criminal Offenses] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304200258/https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1942-27424-39426-52?cc=1989155&wc=94K7-3TG:266076801,266080201 |date=March 4, 2016 }} Texas, Freedmen's Bureau ...Office Records, 1865–1870, Sumpter, Roll 26, Letters sent, vol (158), June–Dec 1867, Apr–Dec 1868 .p.&nbsp;112 Image 60
*[http://freedmensbureau.com Freedmen's Bureau Online]
* [http://freedmensbureau.com Freedmen's Bureau Online]
* [http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1231 "Freedmen's Bureau Marriage Records, 1815–1866"], 2007, Ancestry.com website
* [https://47thpennsylvaniavolunteerinfantryfreedmen.wordpress.com/ Freedmen of the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry], retrieved online September 2022.
* [https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/freedmens-bureau Freedmen's Bureau in Georgia], ''New Georgia Encyclopedia''
* * [https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/1997/summer/slave-emancipation.html Joseph P. Reidy, "Slave Emancipation Through the Prism of Archives Records"], ''Prologue Magazine'', (1997)


{{American Civil War}}
{{History of slavery in the United States}}
{{Reconstruction era}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Freedmen's Bureau| ]]
[[Category:38th United States Congress]]
[[Category:Defunct agencies of the United States government]]
[[Category:Defunct agencies of the United States government]]
[[Category:Reconstruction]]
[[Category:Reconstruction Era]]
[[Category:Slavery]]
[[Category:1865 establishments in the United States]]
[[Category:United States Department of War]]
[[Category:1872 disestablishments in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 21:08, 25 May 2024

A Bureau agent stands between a group of whites and a group of freedmen. Harper's Weekly, July 25, 1868.

The Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, usually referred to as simply the Freedmen's Bureau,[1] was a U.S. government agency of early post American Civil War Reconstruction, assisting freedmen (i.e., former slaves) in the South. It was established on March 3, 1865, and operated briefly as a federal agency after the War, from 1865 to 1872, to direct "provisions, clothing, and fuel... for the immediate and temporary shelter and supply of destitute and suffering refugees and freedmen and their wives and children".[2]

Background and operations[edit]

In 1863, the American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission was established. Two years later, as a result of the inquiry[3][page needed][4] the Freedmen's Bureau Bill was passed, which established the Freedmen's Bureau as initiated by U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. It was intended to last for one year after the end of the Civil War.[5] The Bureau became a part of the United States Department of War, as Congress provided no funding for it. The War Department was the only agency with funds the Freedmen's Bureau could use and which had an existing presence in the South.

Headed by Union Army General Oliver O. Howard, the Bureau started operations in 1865. From the beginning, its representatives found its tasks very difficult, in part because Southern legislatures passed Black Codes that restricted movement, conditions of labor, and other civil rights of African Americans, nearly replicating the conditions of slavery. Also, the Freedmen's Bureau only controlled a limited amount of arable land.[6]

The Bureau's powers were expanded to help African Americans find family members from whom they had become separated during the war. It arranged to teach them to read and write—skills considered critical by the freedmen themselves as well as by the government.[7] Bureau agents also served as legal advocates for African Americans in both state and federal courts, mostly in cases dealing with family issues.[7] The Bureau encouraged former major planters to rebuild their plantations and pay wages to their previously enslaved workers. It kept an eye on the contracts between the newly free laborers and planters, given that few freedmen had yet gained adequate reading skills, and pushed whites and blacks to work together in a free-labor market as employers and employees rather than as masters and slaves.[7]

In 1866 Congress renewed the charter for the Bureau. President Andrew Johnson, a Southern Democrat who had succeeded to the office following Lincoln's assassination[8] in 1865, vetoed the bill, arguing that the Bureau encroached on states' rights, relied inappropriately on the military in peacetime, gave blacks help that poor whites had never had, and would ultimately prevent freed slaves from becoming self-sufficient by rendering them dependent on public assistance.[5][9] Though the Republican-controlled Congress overrode Johnson's veto, by 1869 Southern Democrats in Congress had deprived the Bureau of most of its funding, and as a result it had to cut much of its staff.[5][10] By 1870 the Bureau had been weakened further due to the rise of Ku Klux Klan (KKK) violence across the South; members of the KKK and other terrorist organizations, attacked both blacks and sympathetic white Republicans, including teachers.[5] Northern Democrats also opposed the Bureau's work, painting it as a program that would make African Americans "lazy".[11]

In 1872 Congress abruptly abandoned the program, refusing to approve renewal legislation. It did not inform Howard, whom U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant had transferred to Arizona to settle hostilities between the Apache and settlers. Grant's Secretary of War William W. Belknap was hostile to Howard's leadership and authority at the Bureau. Belknap aroused controversy among Republicans by his reassignment of Howard.[12]

Achievements[edit]

Day-to-day duties[edit]

The Freedmen's Bureau office in Memphis, Tennessee, 1866.
Marriage certificate issued by the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, Wilson County, Tennessee, 1866.

The Bureau mission was to help solve everyday problems of the newly freed slaves, such as obtaining food, medical care, communication with family members, and jobs. Between 1865 and 1869, it distributed 15 million rations of food to freed African Americans and 5 million rations to impoverished whites, and set up a system by which planters could borrow rations in order to feed freedmen they employed. Although the Bureau set aside $350,000 for this latter service, only $35,000 (10%) was borrowed by planters.[13]

The Bureau's humanitarian efforts had limited success. Medical treatment of the freedmen was severely deficient,[14][page needed] as few Southern doctors, all of whom were white, would treat them. Much infrastructure had been destroyed by the war, and people had few means of improving sanitation. Blacks had little opportunity to become medical personnel. Travelers unknowingly carried epidemics of cholera and yellow fever along the river corridors, which broke out across the South and caused many fatalities, especially among the poor.

Gender roles[edit]

A certificate of marriage issued by the Freedmen's Bureau

Freedmen's Bureau agents initially complained that freedwomen were refusing to contract their labor. One of the first actions black families took for independence was to withdraw women's labor from fieldwork. The Bureau attempted to force freedwomen to work by insisting that their husbands sign contracts making the whole family available as field labor in the cotton industry, and by declaring that unemployed freedwomen should be treated as vagrants just as black men were.[15] The Bureau did allow some exceptions, such as married women with employed husbands, and some "worthy" women who had been widowed or abandoned and had large families of small children to care for. "Unworthy" women, meaning the unruly and prostitutes, were usually the ones subjected to punishment for vagrancy.[15]

Before the Civil War the enslaved could not marry legally, and most marriages had been informal, although planters often presided over "marriage" ceremonies for their enslaved. After the war, the Freedmen's Bureau performed numerous marriages for freed couples who asked for it. As many husbands, wives, and children had been forcibly separated under slavery, the Bureau agents helped families reunite after the war. The Bureau had an informal regional communications system that allowed agents to send inquiries and provide answers. It sometimes provided transportation to reunite families. Freedmen and freedwomen turned to the Bureau for assistance in resolving issues of abandonment and divorce.[16]

Education[edit]

The most widely recognized accomplishments of the Freedmen's Bureau were in education. Prior to the Civil War, no Southern state had a system of universal, state-supported public education; in addition, most had prohibited both enslaved and free blacks from gaining an education. This meant learning to read and write, and do simple arithmetic. Former slaves wanted public education while the wealthier whites opposed the idea. Freedmen had a strong desire to learn to read and write; some had already started schools at refugee camps; others worked hard to establish schools in their communities even prior to the advent of the Freedmen's Bureau.[17] The Freedmen's Bureau schools were also open to poor whites, however, almost no whites attended because "Despite the absence of statewide systems in most Southern states, most parents preferred to consign their children to illiteracy rather than to see them educated alongside black children."[18]

Oliver Otis Howard was appointed as the first Freedmen's Bureau Commissioner. Through his leadership, the bureau set up four divisions: Government-Controlled Lands, Records, Financial Affairs, and Medical Affairs. Education was considered part of the Records division. Howard turned over confiscated property including planters' mansions, government buildings, books, and furniture to superintendents to be used in the education of freedmen. He provided transportation and room and board for teachers. Many Northerners came south to educate freedmen.

The Misses Cooke's school room, Freedmen's Bureau, Richmond, Virginia, 1866.

By 1866, Northern missionary and aid societies worked in conjunction with the Freedmen's Bureau to provide education for former slaves. The American Missionary Association (AMA) was particularly active, establishing eleven "colleges" in Southern states for the education of freedmen. The primary focus of these groups was to raise funds to pay teachers and manage schools, while the secondary focus was the day-to-day operation of individual schools. After 1866, Congress appropriated some funds to operate the freedmen's schools. The main source of educational revenue for these schools came through a Congressional Act that gave the Freedmen's Bureau the power to seize Confederate property for educational use.

George Ruby, an African American, served as a teacher and school administrator and as a traveling inspector for the Bureau, observing local conditions, aiding in the establishment of black schools, and evaluating the performance of Bureau field officers. Blacks supported him, but planters and other whites opposed him.[19]

Freedmen's School, James Plantation, North Carolina

Overall, the Bureau spent $5 million to set up schools for blacks. By the end of 1865, more than 90,000 former slaves were enrolled as students in such public schools. Attendance rates at the new schools for freedmen were about 80%. Brigadier General Samuel Chapman Armstrong created and led Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in Virginia in 1868. It is now known as Hampton University.

The Freedmen's Bureau published their own freedmen's textbook. They emphasized the bootstrap philosophy, encouraging freedmen to believe that each person had the ability to work hard and to do better in life.[clarification needed] These readers included traditional literacy lessons, as well as selections on the life and works of Abraham Lincoln, excerpts from the Bible focused on forgiveness, biographies of famous African Americans[example needed] with emphasis on their piety, humbleness, and industry; and essays on humility, the work ethic, temperance, loving one's enemies, and avoiding bitterness.[20]

J. W. Alvord, an inspector for the Bureau, wrote that the freedmen "have the natural thirst for knowledge," aspire to "power and influence … coupled with learning," and are excited by "the special study of books." Among the former slaves, both children and adults sought this new opportunity to learn. After the Bureau was abolished, some of its achievements collapsed under the weight of white violence against schools and teachers for blacks. Most Reconstruction-era legislatures had established public education but, after the 1870s, when white Democrats regained power of Southern governments, they reduced funds available to fund public education, particularly for blacks. Beginning in 1890 in Mississippi, Democratic-dominated legislatures in the South passed new state constitutions disenfranchising most blacks by creating barriers to voter registration. They then passed Jim Crow laws establishing legal segregation of public places. Segregated schools and other services for blacks were consistently underfunded by the Southern legislatures.[21]

By 1871, Northerners' interest in reconstructing the South had waned. Northerners were beginning to tire of the effort that Reconstruction required, were discouraged by the high rate of continuing violence around elections, and were ready for the South to take care of itself. All of the Southern states had created new constitutions that established universal, publicly funded education. Groups based in the North began to redirect their money toward universities and colleges founded to educate African-American leaders.[22]

Teachers[edit]

Written accounts by northern women and missionary societies resulted in historians' overestimating their influence, writing that most Bureau teachers were well-educated women from the North, motivated by religion and abolitionism to teach in the South. In the early 21st century, new research has found that half the teachers were southern whites; one-third were blacks (mostly southern), and one-sixth were northern whites.[23] Few were abolitionists; few came from New England. Men outnumbered women. The salary was the strongest motivation except for the northerners, who were typically funded by northern organizations and had a humanitarian motivation. As a group, the black cohort showed the greatest commitment to racial equality; and they were the ones most likely to remain teachers. The school curriculum resembled that of schools in the north.[24]

Colleges[edit]

The building and opening by the AMA and other missionary societies of schools of higher learning for African Americans coincided with the shift in focus for the Freedmen's Aid Societies from supporting an elementary education for all African Americans to enabling African-American leaders to gain high school and college educations. Some white officials working with African Americans in the South were concerned about what they considered the lack of a moral or financial foundation seen in the African-American community and traced that lack of foundation back to slavery.

Generally, they believed that Blacks needed help to enter a free labor market and rebuild a stable family life. Heads of local American Missionary Associations sponsored various educational and religious efforts for African Americans. Later efforts for higher education were supported by such leaders as Samuel Chapman Armstrong of the Hampton Institute and Booker T. Washington of the Tuskegee Institute (from 1881). They said that black students should be able to leave home and "live in an atmosphere conducive not only to scholarship but to culture and refinement".[25]

Most of these colleges, universities and normal schools combined what they believed were the best fundamentals of a college with that of the home, giving students a basic structure to build acceptable practices of upstanding lives. At many of these institutions, Christian principles and practices were also part of the daily regime.

Educational legacy[edit]

Despite the untimely dissolution of the Freedmen's Bureau, its legacy influenced the important historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), which were the chief institutions of higher learning for blacks in the South through the decades of segregation into the mid-20th century. Under the direction and sponsorship of the Bureau, together with the American Missionary Association in many cases, from approximately 1866 until its termination in 1872, an estimated 25 institutions of higher learning for black youth were established.[26] The leaders among them continue to operate as highly ranked institutions in the 21st century and have seen increasing enrollment.[27] (Examples of HBCUs include Howard University, St. Augustine's College, Fisk University, Johnson C. Smith University, Clark Atlanta University, Dillard University, Shaw University, Virginia Union University, and Tougaloo College).

As of 2009, there exist approximately 105 HBCUs that range in scope, size, organization, and orientation. Under the Education Act of 1965, Congress officially defined an HBCU as "an institution whose principal missions were and are the education of Black Americans". HBCUs graduate over 50% of African-American professionals, 50% of African-American public school teachers, and 70% of African-American dentists. In addition, 50% of African Americans who graduate from HBCUs pursue graduate or professional degrees. One in three degrees held by African Americans in the natural sciences, and half the degrees held by African Americans in mathematics, were earned at HBCUs.[28][full citation needed]

Perhaps the best known of these institutions is Howard University, founded in Washington, D.C., in 1867, with the aid of the Freedmen's Bureau. It was named for the commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, General Oliver Otis Howard.[29][page needed]

Church establishment[edit]

After the Civil War, control over existing churches was a contentious issue. The Methodist denomination had split into regional associations in the 1840s prior to the war, as had the Baptists, when Southern Baptists were founded. In some cities, Northern Methodists seized control of Southern Methodist buildings. Numerous northern denominations, including the independent black denominations of the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) and African Methodist Episcopal Zion, sent missionaries to the South to help the freedmen and plant new congregations. By this time the independent black denominations were increasingly well organized and prepared to evangelize to the freedmen. Within a decade, the AME and AME Zion churches had gained hundreds of thousands of new members and were rapidly organizing new congregations.[30]

Even before the war, blacks had established independent Baptist congregations in some cities and towns, such as Silver Bluff and Charleston, South Carolina; and Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. In many places, especially in more rural areas, they shared public services with whites. Often enslaved blacks met secretly to conduct their own services away from white supervision or oversight.[30] After the war, freedmen mostly withdrew from the white-dominated congregations of the Baptist, Methodist and Presbyterian churches in order to be free of white supervision. Within a short time, they were organizing black Baptist state associations and organized a national association in the 1890s.

Northern mission societies raised funds for land, buildings, teachers' salaries, and basic necessities such as books and furniture. For years they used networks throughout their churches to raise money for freedmen's education and worship.[31][full citation needed]

Continuing insurgency[edit]

An 1866 poster attacking the Freedmen's Bureau.

Most of the assistant commissioners, realizing that African Americans would not receive fair trials in the civil courts, tried to handle black cases in their own Bureau courts. Southern whites objected that this was unconstitutional. In Alabama, the Bureau commissioned state and county judges as Bureau agents. They were to try cases involving blacks with no distinctions on racial grounds. If a judge refused, the Freedmen's Bureau could institute martial law in his district. All but three judges accepted their unwanted commissions, and the governor urged compliance.[32]

Perhaps the most difficult region reported by the Freedmen's Bureau was Louisiana's Caddo and Bossier parishes in the northwest part of the state. It had not suffered wartime devastation or Union occupation, but white hostility was high against the black majority population. Well-meaning Bureau agents were understaffed and weakly supported by federal troops, and found their investigations blocked and authority undermined at every turn by recalcitrant plantation owners. Murders of freedmen were common, and white suspects in these cases were not prosecuted. Bureau agents did negotiate labor contracts, build schools and hospitals, and aid freedmen, but they struggled against the violence of the oppressive environment.[33]

In addition to internal parish problems, this area was reportedly invaded by insurgents from Arkansas, described as Desperadoes by the Bureau agent in 1868.[34] In September 1868, for example, whites arrested and convicted 21 blacks accused of planning an insurrection in Bossier Parish. Henry Jones, accused of being the leader of the purported insurrection, was shot and left to burn by whites, but he survived, badly hurt. Other freedmen were killed or driven from their land by Arkansas Desperadoes.[34] Whites were anxious about their power as blacks were to receive the franchise, and tensions were rising over land use. In early October, blacks arrested two whites from Arkansas "accused of being part of a mob ... that killed several Negroes." The agent reported 14 blacks had been killed in this incident, then said that another eight to ten had been killed by the same Desperadoes. Blacks were reported to have killed the two white men in the altercation.[34] The whites' Arkansas friends and local whites went on a rampage against blacks in the area, resulting in more than 150 blacks being killed.[35][34]

In March 1872, at the request of President Ulysses S. Grant and the Secretary of the Interior, Columbus Delano, General Howard was asked to temporarily leave his duties as Commissioner of the Bureau to deal with Indian affairs in the west. Upon returning from his assignment in November 1872, General Howard discovered that the Bureau and all of its activities had been officially terminated by Congress, effective as of June.[26] While General Howard was dealing with Indian affairs in the west, the Freedmen's Bureau was steadily losing its support in Congress. President Johnson had opposed the Freedmen's Bureau and his attitude encouraged many people, especially white Southerners, to challenge the Bureau. But insurgents showed that the war had not ended, as armed whites attacked black Republicans and their sympathizers, including teachers and officeholders. Congress dismantled the Bureau in 1872 due to pressure from white Southerners. The Bureau was unable to change much of the social dynamic as whites continued to seek supremacy over blacks, frequently with violence.[36]

In his autobiography, General Howard expressed great frustration about Congress having closed down the bureau. He said, "the legislative action, however, was just what I desired, except that I would have preferred to close out my own Bureau and not have another do it for me in an unfriendly manner in my absence."[37] All documents and matters pertaining to the Freedmen's Bureau were transferred from the office of General Howard to the War Department of the United States Congress.

State programs[edit]

Alabama[edit]

The Bureau began distributing rations in the summer of 1865. Drought conditions resulted in so much need that the state established its own Office of the Commissioner of the Destitute to provide additional relief. The two agencies coordinated their efforts starting in 1866. The Bureau established depots in eight major cities. Counties were allocated aid in kind each month based on the number of poor reported. The counties were required to provide transportation from the depots for the supplies. The ration was larger in winter and spring, and reduced in seasons when locally grown food was available.

In 1866, the depot at Huntsville provided five thousand rations a day. The food was distributed without regard to race. Corruption and abuse was so great that in October 1866, President Johnson ended in-kind aid in that state. One hundred twenty thousand dollars was given to the state to provide relief to the end of January 1867. Aid was ended in the state. Records show that by the end of the program, four times as many White people received aid than did Black people.[38]

Florida[edit]

The Florida Bureau was assessed to be working effectively. Thomas Ward Osborne, the assistant commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau for Florida, was an astute politician who collaborated with the leadership of both parties in the state. He was warmly praised by observers on all sides.[39][40]

Georgia[edit]

The Bureau played a major role in Georgia politics.[41] It was especially active in setting up, monitoring, and enforcing labor contracts for both men and women.[42] It also set up a new system of healthcare for the freedmen.[43] Although a majority of the agency's relief rations went to freedpeople, a large number of whites also benefited. In Georgia, poor whites received almost one-fifth of the Bureau's rations.[44]

North Carolina[edit]

In North Carolina, the bureau employed: 9 contract surgeons, at $100 per month; 26 hospital attendants, at average pay each per month $11.25; 18 civilian employees, clerks, agents, etc., at an average pay per month of $17.20; 4 laborers, at an average pay per month of $11.90, for a total annual salaries of $18,596.40, which is approximately $595,000 in 2024 dollars; enlisted men are detailed as orderlies, guards, etc., by commanding officers of the different military posts where officers of the Bureau were serving.[45]

Some misconduct was reported to the bureau main office that bureau agents were using their posts for personal gains. Colonel E. Whittlesey was questioned but said he was not involved in nor knew of anyone involved in such activities. The bureau exercised what whites believed were arbitrary powers: making arrests, imposing fines, and inflicting punishments. They were considered to be disregarding the local laws and especially the statute of limitations. Their activities resulted in resentment among whites toward the federal government in general. These powers invoked negative feelings in many southerners that sparked many to want the agency to leave. In their review, Steedman and Fullerton repeated their conclusion from Virginia, which was to withdraw the Bureau and turn daily operations over to the military.[46]

South Carolina[edit]

In South Carolina, the bureau employed nine clerks, at average pay each per month $108.33, one rental agent, at monthly pay of $75.00, one clerk, at monthly pay of $50.00, one storekeeper, at monthly pay of $85.00, one counselor, at monthly pay of $125.00, one superintendent of education, at monthly pay of $150.00, one printer, at monthly pay of $100.00, one contract surgeon, at monthly pay of $100.00, and twenty-five laborers, at average pay per month $19.20. Total annual salaries of $25,679.64 which is $821,600 in 2024 dollars.

General Saxton was head of the bureau operations in South Carolina; he was reported by Steedman and Fullerton to have made so many "mistakes and blunders" that he made matters worse for the freedmen. He was replaced by Brigadier General R. K. Scott. Steedman and Fullerton described Scott as energetic and a competent officer. It appeared that he took great pains to turn things around and correct the mistakes made by his predecessors.

The investigators learned of reported murders of freedmen by a band of outlaws. These outlaws were thought to be people from other states, such as Texas, Kentucky and Tennessee, who had been part of the rebel army (Ku Klux Klan chapters were similarly started by veterans in the first years after the war.) When citizens were asked why the perpetrators had not been arrested, many answered that the Bureau, with the support of the military, had the primary authority.[46]

In certain areas, such as the Sea Islands, many freedmen were destitute. Many had tried to cultivate the land and began businesses with little to no success in the social disruption of the period.[47]

Texas[edit]

Suffering much less damage in the war than some other Deep South states, Texas became a destination for some 200,000 refugee blacks from other parts of the South, in addition to 200,000 already in Texas. Slavery had been prevalent only in East Texas, and some freedmen hoped for the chance of new types of opportunity in the lightly populated but booming state. The Bureau's political role was central, as was close attention to the need for schools.[48][49][50]

Virginia[edit]

The Freedmen's Bureau had 58 clerks and superintendents of farms, paid average monthly wages $78.50; 12 assistant superintendents, paid average monthly wages 87.00; and 163 laborers, paid average monthly wages 11.75; as personnel in the state of Virginia. Other personnel included orderlies and guards.[46]

During the war, slaves had escaped to Union lines and forts in the Tidewater, where contraband camps were established. Many stayed in that area after the war, seeking protection near the federal forts. The Bureau fed 9,000 to 10,000 blacks a month over the winter, explaining:

"A majority of the freedmen to whom this subsistence has been furnished are undoubtedly able to earn a living if they were removed to localities where labor could be procured. The necessity for issuing rations to this class of persons results from their accumulation in large numbers in certain places where the land is unproductive and the demand for labor is limited. As long as these people remain in the present localities, the civil authorities refuse to provide for the able-bodied, and are unable to care for the helpless and destitute among them, owing to their great number and the fact that very few are residents of the counties in which they have congregated during the war. The necessity for the relief extended to these people, both able-bodied and helpless, by the Government, will continue as long as they remain in their present condition, and while rations are issued to the able-bodied they will not voluntarily change their localities to seek places where they can procure labor.'[51]

Bureau records[edit]

In 2000, the U.S. Congress passed the Freedmen's Bureau Preservation Act, which directed the National Archivist to preserve the extensive records of the Bureau on microfilm, and work with educational institutions to index the records.[52] In addition to those records of the Bureau headquarters, assistant commissioners, and superintendents of education, the National Archives now has records of the field offices, marriage records, and records of the Freedmen's Branch of the Adjutant General on microfilm. They are being digitized and made available through online databases. These constitute a major source of documentation on the operations of the Bureau, political and social conditions in the Reconstruction Era, and the genealogies of freedpeople.[53][54][a] The Freedmen's Bureau Project[56] (announced on June 19, 2015) was created as a set of partnerships between FamilySearch International and the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (AAHGS), and the California African American Museum. With the help of more than 25,000 volunteers, the project was completed on June 20, 2016.[57] Information about millions of African Americans is now accessible, allowing families to build their family trees and connect with their ancestors.

In October 2006, Virginia governor Tim Kaine announced that Virginia would be the first state to index and digitize Freedmen's Bureau records.[58]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ For access and inquires about the use of the records, researchers should visit or write (e-mail) the Old Military and Civil Branch, 700 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20408. For the location of previously filmed and future Freedmen's Bureau microfilm publications, researchers should contact the nearest regional archives or visit the NARA online microfilm catalog. By 2014, under arrangement with the National Archives, records are available online through FamilySearch[55] and Ancestry.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875". Library of Congress. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  2. ^ U.S., Statutes at Large, Treaties, and Proclamations of the United States of America. Vol. 13. Boston. 1866. pp. 507–509.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) published at "Freedmen's Bureau Bill". University of Maryland: Freedmen & Southern Society Project. Retrieved July 27, 2017.
  3. ^ Foner, Eric (December 13, 2011). Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-203586-8 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Rodriguez, Junius P. (March 20, 2007). Slavery in the United States: A Social, Political, and Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-85109-544-5 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b c d Wormser, Richard (2002). "The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow. Jim Crow Stories: Freedmen's Bureau". Thirteen.org. PBS. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  6. ^ Kelley, Robin D. G. (2002). Freedom Dreams. Boston: Beacon Press. p. 116. ISBN 9780807009789 – via Archive.org.
  7. ^ a b c Carson, Clayborne; Lapsansky-Werner, Emma J.; Nash, Gary B. The Struggle for Freedom: A History of African Americans. p. 256.
  8. ^ The Civil War: A Visual History. DK Publishing. 2015. pp. 338ff. ISBN 978-1-4654-4065-5 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ "The Freedmen's Bureau Bill". U.S. National Park Service: Andrew Johnson National Historic Site. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  10. ^ deShazo, Richard D., ed. (2018). The Racial Divide in American Medicine: Black Physicians and the Struggle for Justice in Health Care. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. pp. 35ff. ISBN 978-1-4968-1769-3 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Alexander, Leslie M.; Rucker, Walter C. (2010). Encyclopedia of African American History. ABC-CLIO. pp. 777ff. ISBN 978-1-85109-769-2 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ Zuczek (2006), pp. 271–274.
  13. ^ Baptiste, Tracey (2015). The Civil War and Reconstruction Eras. New York: Britannica Educational Publishing. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-68048-041-2.
  14. ^ Downs, Jim (2012). Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199758722.
  15. ^ a b Farmer-Kaiser, Mary (2004). "'Are they not in some sorts vagrants?': Gender and the Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau to Combat Vagrancy in the Reconstruction South". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 88 (1): 25–49. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
  16. ^ Farmer-Kaiser, Mary (2010). "1". Freedwomen and the Freedmen's Bureau: Race, Gender, and Public Policy in the Age of Emancipation. Reconstructing America. New York: Fordham University Press. ISBN 9780823232116.
  17. ^ Zuczek (2006), pp. 216–219.
  18. ^ "Reconstruction: What Went Wrong?".
  19. ^ Crouch, Barry A. (1997). "Black Education in Civil War and Reconstruction Louisiana: George T. Ruby, the Army, and the Freedmen's Bureau". Louisiana History. 38 (3): 287–308. ISSN 0024-6816. JSTOR 4233415.
  20. ^ West, Earle H. (1982). "Book review of Freedmen's Schools and Textbooks". Journal of Negro Education. 51: 165–167. doi:10.2307/2294682. JSTOR 2294682.
  21. ^ Goldhaber, Michael (1992). "A Mission Unfulfilled: Freedmen's Education in North Carolina, 1865–1870". Journal of Negro History. 77 (4): 207. doi:10.2307/3031474. JSTOR 3031474. S2CID 141705550.
  22. ^ Zuczek (2006), pp. 270–277.
  23. ^ Butchart, Ronald E. (2010). Schooling the Freed People: Teaching, Learning, and the Struggle for Black Freedom, 1861–1876. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807834206.
  24. ^ Krowl, Michelle A. (September 2011), Review of Butchart, Ronald E., Schooling the Freed People: Teaching, Learning, and the Struggle for Black Freedom, 1861-1876, H-Net, retrieved February 2, 2024
  25. ^ Morris, Robert C. (1981). Reading, 'Riting, and Reconstruction: The Education of Freedmen in the South, 1861–1870. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 160. ISBN 9780226539287.
  26. ^ a b Howard (1907).
  27. ^ Weiland, Noah (April 26, 2018). "Howard University Stares Down Challenges, and Hard Questions on Black Colleges". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  28. ^ Data from United Negro College Fund.
  29. ^ Harrison, Robert (2006). "Welfare and Employment Policies of the Freedmen's Bureau in the District of Columbia". The Journal of Southern History. 72 (1): 75–110. ISSN 0022-4642. JSTOR 27648987.
  30. ^ a b Maffly-Kipp, Laurie F. (2001). "The Church in the Southern Black Community". Documenting the American South. University of North Carolina. Retrieved January 15, 2009.
  31. ^ Morrow 1954
  32. ^ Foner 1988
  33. ^ Smith 2000
  34. ^ a b c d "Parishes of Bossier and Caddo" Synopsis of Murder &c. Committed in Parishes of Caddo and Bossier September and October 1868", The Freedmen's Bureau Online; accessed 6 May 2018
  35. ^ Burton, Wilie. On the Black Side of Shreveport: A History (1983; 2nd edition, 1993)
  36. ^ PBS. "Freedmen's Bureau". PBS. PBS Public Broadcasting Service. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
  37. ^ Howard (1907), p. 447.
  38. ^ Flynt, Wayne (1989). Poor But Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites. Birmingham: University of Alabama Press.
  39. ^ Joe M. Richardson, "An Evaluation of the Freedmen's Bureau in Florida," Florida Historical Quarterly (1963) 41#3 pp. 223–238 in JSTOR
  40. ^ Bentley, George R. (1949). "The Political Activity of the Freedmen's Bureau in Florida". Florida Historical Quarterly. 28 (1): 28–37. JSTOR 30138730.
  41. ^ Paul A. Cimbala, Under the Guardianship of the Nation: the Freedmen's Bureau and the Reconstruction of Georgia, 1865–1870 (University of Georgia Press, 2003); For an online review see John David Smith, "'The Work It Did Not Do Because It Could Not': Georgia and the 'New' Freedmen's Bureau Historiography," Georgia Historical Quarterly (1998) pp: 331–349. in JSTOR
  42. ^ Sara Rapport, "The Freedmen's Bureau as a Legal Agent for Black Men and Women in Georgia: 1865–1868," Georgia Historical Quarterly (1989): 26–53. in JSTOR
  43. ^ Todd L. Savitt, "Politics in Medicine: The Georgia Freedmen's Bureau and the Organization of Health Care, 1865–1866," Civil War History 28.1 (1982): 45–64. Project MUSE Online
  44. ^ Hatfield, Edward (July 1, 2009). "Freedmen's Bureau". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  45. ^ The United States Army and Navy Journal and Gazette of the Regular and Volunteer Forces. Army and Navy Journal Incorporated. 1865. p. 616. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  46. ^ a b c see "Reports of Generals Steedman and Fullerton on the condition of the Freedmen's Bureau in the Southern States"
  47. ^ Charles F. Kovacik, and Robert E. Mason. "Changes in the South Carolina Sea Island Cotton Industry," Southeastern Geographer (1985) 25#2 pp: 77–104.
  48. ^ Claude Elliott, "The Freedmen's Bureau in Texas." Southwestern Historical Quarterly (1952): 1–24. in JSTOR
  49. ^ William Lee Richter, Overreached on all sides: the Freedmen's Bureau Administrators in Texas, 1865–1868 (Texas A&M University Press, 1991)
  50. ^ Barry A. Crouch, The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Texans (University of Texas Press, 2010)
  51. ^ from "Reports of Generals Steedman and Fullerton on the condition of the Freedmen's Bureau in the Southern States", date
  52. ^ 114 Stat. 1924[permanent dead link]
  53. ^ "African American Records: Freedmen's Bureau". August 15, 2016.
  54. ^ Reginald Washington, "Sealing the Sacred Bonds of Holy Matrimony/ Freedmen's Bureau Marriage Records", Prologue Magazine, Spring 2005, Vol. 37, No. 1.
  55. ^ "United States Freedmen’s Bureau Marriages" Archived November 22, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, FamilySearch Historical Records.
  56. ^ "Freedmen's Bureau Project". www.discoverfreedmen.org.
  57. ^ "What was the Freedmen's Bureau". FamilySearch. Archived from the original on June 30, 2022.
  58. ^ Cheney, Catherine (July 23, 2009). "Bringing Their Lives To Light: Virginia's Online Records Help Blacks ID Ancestors". Washington Post.

Sources[edit]

General[edit]

Supporting education[edit]

  • Abbott, Martin. "The Freedmen's Bureau and Negro Schooling in South Carolina," South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 57#2 (Apr., 1956), pp. 65–81 in JSTOR
  • Anderson, James D. The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860–1935 (1988).
  • Butchart, Ronald E. Northern Schools, Southern Blacks, and Reconstruction: Freedmen's Education, 1862–1875 (1980).
  • Cimbala, Paul, and Randall Miller, eds. The Freedmen's Bureau and Reconstruction (Fordham University Press, 2020). online book review
  • Hornsby, Alton. "The Freedmen's Bureau Schools in Texas, 1865–1870," Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Vol. 76#4 (April, 1973), pp. 397–417 in JSTOR
  • Jackson, L. P. "The Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862–1872," The Journal of Negro History (1923), vol 8#1, pp 1–40. in JSTOR
  • Jones, Jacqueline. Soldiers of Light and Love: Northern Teachers and Georgia Blacks, 1865–1873 (1980).
  • Myers, John B. "The Education of the Alabama Freedmen During Presidential Reconstruction, 1865–1867," Journal of Negro Education, Vol. 40#2 (Spring 1971), pp. 163–171 in JSTOR
  • Parker, Marjorie H. "The Educational Activities of the Freedmen's Bureau" (PhD dissertation, The University of Chicago; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1951. T-01438).
    • Parker, Marjorie H. "Some Educational Activities of the Freedmen's Bureau," Journal of Negro Education, Vol. 23#1 (Winter, 1954), pp. 9–21. in JSTOR
  • Richardson, Joe M. Christian Reconstruction: The American Missionary Association and Southern Blacks, 1861–1890 (1986)
  • Richardson, Joe M. "The Freedmen's Bureau and Negro Education in Florida," Journal of Negro Education, Vol. 31#4 (Autumn, 1962), pp. 460–467. in JSTOR
  • Span, Christopher M. "'I Must Learn Now or Not at All': Social and Cultural Capital in the Educational Initiatives of Formerly Enslaved African Americans in Mississippi, 1862–1869," The Journal of African American History, 2002, pp. 196–222.
  • Tyack, David, and Robert Lowe. "The Constitutional Moment: Reconstruction and Black Education in the South," American Journal of Education, Vol. 94#2 (February 1986), pp. 236–256 in JSTOR
  • Vaughn, William Preston, "Schools for All: The Blacks and Public Education in the South, 1865–1877" (1974). online
  • Williams, Heather Andrea; "'Clothing Themselves in Intelligence': The Freedpeople, Schooling, and Northern Teachers, 1861–1871", The Journal of African American History, 2002, pp. 372+.
  • Williams, Heather Andrea. Self-Taught: African American Education in Slavery and Freedom (2006). online edition

Specialized studies[edit]

  • Bethel, Elizabeth . "The Freedmen's Bureau in Alabama," Journal of Southern History Vol. 14, No. 1, (February 1948) pp. 49–92 in JSTOR.
  • Bickers, John M. "The Power to Do What Manifestly Must Be Done: Congress, the Freedmen's Bureau, and Constitutional Imagination", Roger Williams University Law Review, Vol. 12, No. 70, 2006 online at SSRN.
  • Cimbala, Paul A. "On the Front Line of Freedom: Freedmen's Bureau Officers and Agents in Reconstruction Georgia, 1865–1868," Georgia Historical Quarterly 1992 76(3): 577–611. ISSN 0016-8297.
  • Cimbala, Paul A. Under the Guardianship of the Nation: the Freedmen's Bureau and the Reconstruction of Georgia, 1865–1870 (1997).
  • Click, Patricia C. Time Full of Trial: The Roanoke Island Freedmen's Colony, 1862–1867 (2001).
  • Crouch, Barry. The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Texans (1992).
  • Crouch; Barry A. "The 'Chords of Love': Legalizing Black Marital and Family Rights in Postwar Texas," The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 79, 1994.
  • Downs, Jim. Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction (Oxford University Press, 2012)
  • Durrill, Wayne K. "Political Legitimacy and Local Courts: 'Politicks at Such a Rage' in a Southern Community during Reconstruction," in Journal of Southern History, Vol. 70 #3, 2004 pp. 577–617.
  • Farmer-Kaiser, Mary. "'Are They Not in Some Sorts Vagrants?' Gender and the Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau to Combat Vagrancy in the Reconstruction South," Georgia Historical Quarterly 2004 88(1): 25–49. ISSN 0016-8297.
  • Farmer-Kaiser, Mary. Freedwomen and the Freedmen's Bureau: Race, Gender, and Public Policy in the Age of Emancipation (Fordham University Press, 2010); describes how freedwomen found both an ally and an enemy in the Bureau.
  • Finley, Randy. From Slavery to Future: the Freedmen's Bureau in Arkansas, 1865–1869 (1996).
  • Lieberman, Robert C. "The Freedmen's Bureau and the Politics of Institutional Structure," Social Science History 1994 18(3): 405–437. ISSN 0145-5532.
  • Lowe, Richard (1993). "The Freedman's Bureau and Local Black Leadership". Journal of American History. 80 (3): 989–998. doi:10.2307/2080411. JSTOR 2080411.
  • Morrow Ralph Ernst. Northern Methodism and Reconstruction (1956)
  • May J. Thomas. "Continuity and Change in the Labor Program of the Union Army and the Freedmen's Bureau," Civil War History 17 (September 1971): 245–54.
  • Oubre, Claude F. Forty Acres and a Mule. (1978).
  • Pearson, Reggie L. "'There Are Many Sick, Feeble, and Suffering Freedmen': the Freedmen's Bureau's Health-care Activities During Reconstruction in North Carolina, 1865–1868," North Carolina Historical Review 2002 79(2): 141–181. ISSN 0029-2494 .
  • Richter, William L. Overreached on All Sides: The Freedmen's Bureau Administrators in Texas, 1865–1868 (1991).
  • Rodrigue, John C. "Labor Militancy and Black Grassroots Political Mobilization in the Louisiana Sugar Region, 1865–1868" in Journal of Southern History, Vol. 67 #1, 2001, pp. 115–45.
  • Schwalm, Leslie A. "'Sweet Dreams of Freedom': Freedwomen's Reconstruction of Life and Labor in Lowcountry South Carolina," Journal of Women's History, Vol. 9 #1, 1997 pp. 9–32.
  • Smith, Solomon K. "The Freedmen's Bureau in Shreveport: the Struggle for Control of the Red River District," Louisiana History 2000 41(4): 435–465. ISSN 0024-6816.
  • Williamson, Joel. After Slavery: The Negro in South Carolina during Reconstruction, 1861–1877 (1965).
  • Freedmen's Bureau in Texas, Texas Handbook of History online

Primary sources[edit]

External links[edit]