RESUME
Should the question be asked “how
did the American Negroes act in the Spanish-American
war?” the foregoing brief account of their conduct
would furnish a satisfactory answer to any fair mind.
In testimony of their valiant conduct we have the
evidence first, of competent eye witnesses; second,
of men of the white race; and third, not only white
race, but men of the Southern white race, in America,
whose antipathy to the Negro “with a gun”
is well known, it being related of the great George
Washington, who, withal, was a slave owner, but mild
in his views as to the harshness of that system that
on his dying bed he called out to his good wife:
“Martha, Martha, let me charge you, dear, never
to trust a ‘nigger’ with a gun.”
Again we have the testimony of men high in authority,
competent to judge, and whose evidence ought to be
received. Such men as General Joseph Wheeler,
Colonel Roosevelt, General Miles, President McKinley.
If on the testimony of such witnesses as these we
have not “established our case,” there
must be something wrong with the jury. A good
case has been established, however, for the colored
soldier, out of the mouth of many witnesses.
The colored troopers just did so well that praise could
not be withheld from them even by those whose education
and training had bred in them prejudice against Negroes.
It can no longer be doubted that the Negro soldier
will fight. In fact such has been their record
in past wars that no scruples should have been entertained
on this point, but the (late) war was a fresh test,
the result of which should be enough to convince the
most incredulous “Doubting Thomases.”
The greater portion of the American
people have confidence in the Negro soldier.
This confidence is not misplaced the American
government can, in the South, organize an army of Negro
soldiers that will defy the combined forces of any
nation of Europe. The Negro can fight in any
climate, and does not succumb to the hardships of camp
life. He makes a model soldier and is well nigh
invincible.
The Negro race has a right to be proud
of the achievements of the colored troopers in the
late Spanish-American war. They were the representatives
of the whole race in that conflict; had they failed
it would have been a calamity charged up to the whole
race. The race’s enemies would have used
it with great effect. They did not fail, but
did their duty nobly a thousand hurrahs
for the colored troopers of the Spanish-American war!!
In considering their successful achievements,
however, it is well to remember that there were some
things the Negro had to forget while facing Spanish
bullets. The Negro soldier in bracing himself
for that conflict must needs forget the cruelties
that daily go on against his brethren under that same
flag he faces death to defend; he must forget that
when he returns to his own land he will be met not
as a citizen, but as a serf in that part of it, at
least, where the majority of his people live; he must
forget that if he wishes to visit his aged parents
who may perhaps live in some of the Southern States,
he must go in a “Jim Crow” car; and if
he wants a meal on the way, he could only get it in
the kitchen, as to insist on having it in the dining
room with other travelers, would subject him to mob
violence; he must forget that the flag he fought to
defend in Cuba does not protect him nor his family
at home; he must forget the murder of Frazier B. Baker,
who was shot down in cold blood, together with his
infant babe in its mother’s arms, and the mother
and another child wounded, at Lake City, S.C., for
no other offense than attempting to perform the duties
of Postmaster at that place a position
given him by President McKinley; he must forget also
the shooting of Loftin, the colored Postmaster at
Hagansville, Ga., who was guilty of no crime, but being
a Negro and holding, at that place, the Postoffice,
a position given him by the government; he must forget
the Wilmington MASSACRE in which some forty or fifty
colored people were shot down by men who had organized
to take the government of the city in charge by force
of the Winchester where two lawyers and
a half dozen or more colored men of business, together
with such of their white friends as were thought necessary
to get rid of, were banished from the city by a mob,
and their lives threatened in the event of their return all
because they were in the way as Republican voters-"talked
too much” or did not halt when so ordered by
some members of the mob; they must forget the three
hundred Negroes who were the victims of mob violence
in the United States during the year 1898; they must
forget that the government they fought for in Cuba
is powerless to correct these evils, and does not
correct them.
WHY THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT DOES NOT PROTECT ITS COLORED CITIZENS.
Is due to the peculiar and complicated
construction of the laws relating to STATES RIGHTS.
The power to punish for crimes against citizens of
the different States is given by construction of the
Constitution of the United States to the courts of
the several States. The Federal authorities have
no jurisdiction unless the State has passed some law
abridging the rights of citizens, or the State government
through its authorized agents is unable to protect
its citizens, and has called on the national government
for aid to that end, or some United States official
is molested in the discharge of his duty. Under
this subtle construction of the Constitution a citizen
who lives in a State whose public opinion is hostile
becomes a victim of whatever prejudice prevails, and,
although the laws may in the letter, afford ample
protection, yet those who are to execute them rarely
do so in the face of a hostile public sentiment; and
thus the Negroes who live in hostile communities become
the victims of public sentiment. Juries may be
drawn, and trials may be had, but the juries are usually
white, and are also influenced in their verdicts by
that sentiment which declares that “this is
a white man’s government,” and a mistrial
follows. In many instances the juries are willing
to do justice, but they can feel the pressure from
the outside, and in some instance the jurors chosen
to try the cases were members of the mob, as in the
case of the coroner’s jury at Lake City.
It is the duty of a State Governor,
when he finds public sentiment dominating the courts
and obstructing justice, to interfere, and in case
he cannot succeed with the sheriff and posse comitatus,
then to invoke National aid. But this step has
never yet been taken by any Governor of the States
in the interest of Negro citizenship. Some of
the State Governors have made some demonstration by
way of threats of enforcing the law against those
who organize mobs and take the law into their own
hands; and some of the mob murderers have been brought
to trial, which in most cases, has resulted in an acquittal
for the reason that juries have as aforestated, chosen
to obey public sentiment, which is not in favor of
punishing white men for lynching Negroes, rather than
obey the law; and cases against the election laws
and for molesting United States officials have to be
tried in the district where these offences occur,
and the juries being in sympathy with the criminals,
usually acquit, or there is a mistrial because they
cannot all agree.
THAT MOBOCRACY IS SUPREME in many
parts of the Union is no longer a mooted question.
It is a fact; and one that forebodes serious consequences,
not only to the Negro but to any class of citizens
who may happen to come into disfavor with some other
class.
WHAT THE NEGRO SHOULD do under such
circumstances must be left to the discretion of the
individuals concerned. Some advise emigration,
but that is impracticable, en masse, unless some
suitable place could be found where any considerable
number might go, and not fare worse. The colored
people will eventually leave those places where they
are maltreated, but “whether it is better to
suffer the ills we now bear than flee to those we
know not of,” is the question. The prevailing
sentiment among the masses seems to be to remain for
the present, where they are, and through wise action,
and appeals to the Court of Enlightened Christian
Sentiment, try to disarm the mob. There is no
doubt a class of white citizens who regret such occurrences,
and from their natural horror of bloodshed, and looking
to the welfare and reputation of the communities in
which such outrages occur, and feeling that withal
the Negro makes a good domestic and farm hand, will,
and do counsel against mob violence. In many places
where mobs have occurred such white citizens have
been invaluable aids in saving the lives of Negroes
from mob violence; and trusting that these friends
will increase and keep up their good work the Negro
has seldom ever left the scene of mob violence in
any considerable numbers, the home ties being strong,
and he instinctively loves the scene of his birth.
He loves the white men who were boys with him, whose
faces he has smiled in from infancy, and he would
rather not sever those friendly ties. A touching
incident is related in reference to a colored man
in a certain town where a mob was murdering Negroes
right and left, who came to the door of his place
of business, and seeing the face of a young white
man whom he had known from his youth, asked protection
home to his wife and five children; the reply came
with an oath, “Get back into that house or I
will put a bullet into you.” The day before
this these two men had been “good friends,”
had “exchanged cigars"-but the orders of the
mob were stronger in this instance than the ties of
long years of close friendship. Another instance,
though, will show how the mob could not control the
ties of friendship of the white for the black.
It was the case of a colored man who was blacklisted
by a mob in a certain city, and fled to the home of
a neighboring white friend who kept him in his own
house for several days until escape was possible,
and in the meantime, summoned his white neighbors
to guard the black man’s family-threatening to
shoot down the first member of the mob who should
enter the gate, because, as he said, “you have
no right to frighten that woman and her children to
death.” Such acts as this assures to the
Negroes in places where feeling runs against them
that perhaps they may be fortunate enough to escape
the violence of this terrible race hatred that is now
running riot in this country. In this connection
it is well to remark that kindness will win in the
long run with the Negro Race, and make them the white
man’s friend. Georgia and those States where
Negroes are being burned are sowing to the wind and
will ere long reap the whirlwind in the matter of
race hatred. Criminal assaults were not characteristic
of the Negro in the days of slavery, because as a rule
there was friendship between master and slave-the slave
was too fond of his master’s family but to do
otherwise than protect it; but the situation is changed-instead
of kindness the Negro sees nothing but rebuff on every
hand; he feels himself a hated and despised race without
country or protection anywhere, and the brute-spirit
rises in those, who, by their make-up and training,
cannot keep it down-then follows murder, outrage,
rape. It is true that only a few do these things,
but those few are the natural products of the Southern
system of oppression and the wonder is, when the question
is viewed philosophically, that there are so few.
The conclusion here reached is that Georgia will not
get rid of her brutes by burning them and taking the
charred embers home as relics, but rather by treating
her Negro population with more kindness and showing
them that there is some hope for Negro citizenship
in that State. The Negroes know that white men
have been known to rape colored girls, but that never
has there been a suggestion of lynching or burning
for that, and they feel despondent, for they know
the courts are useless in such cases, and this jug-handle
enforcement of lynch law is breeding its own bad fruits
on the Negro race as well as making more brutal the
whites. My advice, then, to our white friends
is to try kindness as a remedy for rape in the South,
and I am convinced of the force of this remedy from
what I know of the occurrence of assaults and murders
in those States where the Negroes are made to feel
that they are citizens and are at home.
WHAT COURAGE! WHAT AN EXAMPLE OF FAITHFULNESS TO DUTY
Did the colored troopers exhibit in
forgetting all these shortcomings to themselves and
race of their own government when they made those
daring charges on San Juan and El Caney!! They
were possessed with large hearts and sublime courage.
How they fought under such circumstances, none but
a divine tongue can answer. It was a miracle,
and was performed, no doubt, that good might come to
the race in the shape of the testimonials given them
as appears heretofore in this book. Their deeds
must live in history as an honor to the Negro Race.
Let them be taught to the children. Let it be
said that the Negro soldier did his duty under the
flag, whether that flag protects him or not.
The white soldier fought under no such sad reflections he
did not, after a hard-fought battle, lie in the trenches
at night and dream of his aged mother and father being
run out of their little home into the wintry blasts
by a mob who sought to “string them up”
for circulating literature relating to the party of
Wm. McKinley the President of the United
States this was the colored soldiers’
dream, but he swore to protect the flag and he did
it. The colored soldier has been faithful to
his trust; let others be the same. If Negroes
who have other trusts to perform, do their duty as
well as the colored soldiers, there will be many revisions
in the scale of public sentiment regarding the Negro
Race in America many arguments will be
overthrown and the heyday towards Negro citizenship
will begin to dawn there are other battles
than those of the militia.
THE SOLUTION OF THE PROBLEM IS MAINLY IN THE RACE’S OWN HANDS
They must climb up themselves with
such assistance as they can get. The race has
done well in thirty years of freedom, but it could
have done better; banking on the progress already
made the next thirty years will no doubt show greater
improvement than the past TIME, TIME, TIME,
which some people seem to take so little into account,
will be the great adjuster of all such problems in
the future as it has been in the past. Many children
of the white fathers of the present day will read
the writing of their parents and wonder at their short-sightedness
in attempting to fix the metes and bounds of the American
Negro’s status. We feel reluctant to prophesy,
but this much we do say, that fifty years from now
will show a great change in the Negro’s condition
in America, and many of those who now predict his
calamity will be classed with the fools who said before
the Negro was emancipated that they would all perish
within ten years for lack of ability to feed and clothe
themselves. The complaint now with many of those
who oppose the Negro is not because he lacks ability,
but rather because he uses too much and sometimes
gets the situation that they want. This is pre-eminently
so from a political standpoint and the reported arguments
used to stir the poorer class of whites to rally against
the Negroes in Wilmington during the campaign just
before the late MASSACRE there in the fall of 1898,
was a recital by impassioned orators of the fact that
Negroes had pianos and servants in their houses, and
lace curtains to their windows-this outburst being
followed by the question, “HOW MANY OF YOU WHITE
MEN CAN AFFORD TO HAVE THEM?” So as to the problem
of the Negro’s imbibing the traits of civilization,
that point is settled by what he has already done,
and the untold obstacles which are being constantly
put in his way by those who fear his competition.
The question then turns not so much on what shall
be done with the Negro as upon WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH
THE WHITE
Men who are so filled with prejudice
that neither law nor religion restrains their bloody
hands when the Negro refuses to get into what he calls
“his place,” which place is that of a menial;
and often there seems no effort even to put the Negro
in any particular place save the grave, as many of
the lynchings and murders appear to be done either
for the fun of shooting someone, or else with extermination
in view. There is no attempt at a show of reason
or right. The mob spirit is growing prejudice
is more intense. Formerly it was confined to the
rabble, now it has taken hold of those of education,
and standing. Red shirts have entered the pulpits,
and it is a matter boasted of rather than condemned the
South is not the only scene of such outrages.
Prejudice is not confined to one section, but is no
doubt more intense in the Southern State, and more
far-reaching in its effects, because it is there that
the Negroes, by reason of the large numbers in proportion
to the other inhabitants, come into political competition
with the whites who revolt at the idea of Negro officers,
whether they are elected by a majority of citizens
or not. The whites seem bent on revolution to
prevent the force and effect of Negro majorities.
Whether public sentiment will continue to endorse these
local revolutions is the question that can be answered
only by time. Just so long as the Negro’s
citizenship is written in the Constitution and he
believes himself entitled to it, just so long will
he seek to exercise it. The white man’s
revolution will be needed every now and then to beat
back the Negro’s aspirations with the Winchester.
The Negro race loves progress, it is fond of seeing
itself elevated, it loves office for the honor it
brings and the emoluments thereof, just as other progressive
races do. It is not effete, looking back to Confucius;
it is looking forward; it does not think its best
days have been in the past, but that they are yet
to come in the future; it is a hopeful race, teachable
race; a race that absorbs readily the arts and accomplishments
of civilization; a race that has made progress in
spite of mountains of obstacles; a race whose temperament
defied the worst evils of slavery, both African and
American; a race of great vitality, a race of the
future, a race of destiny.
In closing this resume of this little
work it is proper that I should warn the younger members
of the race against despondency, and against the looseness
of character and habits that is singularly consequential
of a despondent spirit. Do not be discouraged,
give up, and throw away brilliant intellects, because
of seeming obstacles, but rather resolve to BE SOMETHING
AND DO SOMETHING IN SPITE OF OBSTACLES.
“It was not by tossing feather
balls into the air that the great Hercules gained
his strength, but by hurling huge bowlders from mountain
tops ‘that his name became the synonymn of manly
strength.’ So the harder the struggle the
greater the discipline and fitness. If we cannot
reach success in one way, let us try another.
’If the mountain will not come to Mahomet let
Mahomet go to the mountain.’”
THE SOUTH IS A GOOD PLACE FOR THE
NEGRO TO LIVE, provided, however, the better class
of citizens will rise up and demand that lynchings
and mobs shall cease, and that the officers of the
law shall do their duty without prejudice. The
only way to suppress mob violence is to make punishment
for the leaders in it, sure and certain. The reason
we have mobs is because the leaders of them know they
will not be punished. The enforcement of the
law against lynchers will break it up.
The white ministers should take up
the cause of justice rather than endorse the red shirts,
or carry a Winchester themselves. They should
be the counselors of peace and not the advocates of
bloodshed. Most of them, no doubt, do regret
the terrible deeds committed by mobs on helpless and
innocent people, but it is a question as to whether
or not they would be suffered by public sentiment
to “cry aloud” against them. It takes
moral courage to face any evil, but it must be faced
or dire consequences will follow of its own breeding.
Our last word then, is an appeal to our BROTHERS IN
WHITE, in the pulpit, that they should rally the people
together for justice and; condemn mob violence.
The Negroes do not ask social equality, but civil
equality; let the false notions that confound civil
rights with social rights be dispelled, and advocate
the civil equality of all men, and the problem will
be solved.
Edmund Burke says that “war
never leaves where it found a nation.” applying
this to the American nation with respect to the Negro
it is to be hoped that the late war will leave a better
feeling toward him, especially in view of the glorious
record of the Negro soldiers who participated in that
conflict.