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Farewell Address to Congress
By George White
I want to enter a plea for the colored man, the colored woman, the colored
boy, and the colored girl of this country. I would not thus digress from the
question at issue and detain the House in a discussion of the interests of
this particular people at this time but for the constant and the persistent
efforts of certain gentlemen upon this floor to mold and rivet public sentiment
against us as a people and to lose no opportunity to hold up the unfortunate
few who commit crimes and depredations and lead lives of infamy and shame,
as other races do, as fair specimens of representatives of the entire colored
race...
In the catalogue of members of Congress in this House perhaps none have been
more persistent in their determination to bring the black man into disrepute
and, with a labored effort, to show that he was unworthy of the right of citizenship
than my colleague from North Carolina, Mr. Kitchin. During the first session
of this Congress, while the constitutional amendment was pending in North Carolina,
he labored long and hard to show that the white race was at all times and under
all circumstances superior to the Negro by inheritance if not otherwise, and
the excuse for his party supporting that amendment, which has since been adopted,
was that an illiterate Negro was unfit to participate in making the laws of
a sovereign state and the administration and execution of them; but an illiterate
white man living by his side, with no more or perhaps not as much property,
with no more exalted character, no higher thoughts of civilization, no more
knowledge of the handicraft of government, had by birth, because he was white,
inherited some peculiar qualification...
In the town where this young gentleman was born, at the general election last
August for the adoption of the constitutional amendment, and the general election
for state and county officers, Scotland Neck had a registered white vote of
395, most of whom, of course, were Democrats, and a registered colored vote
of 534, virtually if not all of whom were Republicans, and so voted. When the
count was announced, however, there were 831 Democrats to 75 Republicans; but
in the town of Halifax, same county, the result was much more pronounced. In
that town the registered Republican vote was 345, and the total registered
vote of the township was 539, but when the count was announced it stood 990
Democrats to 41 Republicans, or 492 more Democratic votes counted than were
registered votes in the township. Comment here is unnecessary, nor do I think
it necessary for anyone to wonder at the peculiar notion my colleague has with
reference to the manner of voting and the method of counting these votes, nor
is it to be a wonder that he is a member of this Congress, having been brought
up and educated in such wonderful notions of dealing out fair-handed justice
to his fellow man.
t would be unfair, however, for me to leave the inference upon the minds of
those who hear me that all of the white people of the State of North Carolina
hold views with Mr. Kitchin and think as he does. Thank God there are many
noble exceptions to the example he sets, that, too, in the Democratic party;
men who have never been afraid that one uneducated, poor, depressed Negro could
put to flight and chase into degradation two educated, wealthy, thrifty white
men. There never has been, nor ever will be, any Negro domination in that state,
and no one knows it any better than the Democratic party. It is a convenient
howl, however, often resorted to in order to consummate a diabolical purpose
by scaring the weak and gullible whites into support of measures and men suitable
to the demagogue and the ambitious office seeker, whose crave for office overshadows
and puts to flight all other considerations, fair or unfair...
I wish to quote from another Southern gentleman, not so young as my other
friends, and who always commands attention in this House by his wit and humor,
even though his speeches may not be edifying and instructive. I refer to Mr.
Otey, of Virginia, and quote from him in a recent speech on this floor, as
follows:
| Justice is merely relative. It can exist between equals. It can exist
among homogeneous people...It can exist among lions, but between lions
and lambs, never! If justice were absolute, lions must of necessity perish.
Open his ponderous jaws and find the strong teeth which God has made expressly
to chew lambs flesh! When the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals shall overcome this difficulty, men may hope to settle the race
question along sentimental lines, not sooner. |
I am wholly at sea as to just what Mr. Otey had in view in advancing the thoughts
contained in the above quotation, unless he wishes to extend the simile and
apply the lion as a white man and the Negro as a lamb. In that case we will
gladly accept the comparison, for of all animals known in God's creation the
lamb is the most inoffensive, and has been in all ages held up as a badge of
innocence. But what will my good friend of Virginia do with the Bible, for
God says that He created all men of one flesh and blood...
I regard his borrowed thoughts...as very inaptly applied. However,...I fear
I am giving too much time in the consideration of these personal comments of
members of Congress, but I trust I will be pardoned for making a passing reference
to one more gentleman -- Mr. Wilson of South Carolina -- who, in the early
part of this month, made a speech, some parts of which did great credit to
him, showing, as it did, capacity for collating, arranging, and advancing thoughts
of others and of making a pretty strong argument out of a very poor case. If
he had stopped there, while not agreeing with him, many of us would have been
forced to admit that he had done well. But his purpose was incomplete until
he dragged in the Reconstruction days and held up to scorn and ridicule the
few ignorant, gullible, and perhaps purchasable Negroes who served in the state
legislature of South Carolina over thirty years ago. Not a word did he say
about the unscrupulous white men, in the main bummers who followed in the wake
of the Federal Army and settled themselves in the Southern states, and preyed
upon the ignorant and unskilled minds of the colored people, looted the states
of their wealth, brought into lowest disrepute the ignorant colored people,
then hied away to their Northern homes for ease and comfort the balance of
their lives, or joined the Democratic party to obtain social recognition, and
have greatly aided in depressing and further degrading those whom they had
used as tools to accomplish a diabolical purpose.
These few ignorant men who chanced at that time to hold office are given as
a reason why the black man should not be permitted to participate in the affairs
of the government which he is forced to pay taxes to support. [Rep. Wilson]
insists that they, the Southern whites, are the black man's best friend, and
that they are taking him by the hand and trying to lift him up; that they are
educating him. For all that he and all Southern people have done in this regard,
I wish in behalf of the colored people of the South to extend our thanks. We
are not ungrateful to friends, but feel that our toil has made our friends
able to contribute the stinty pittance which we have received at their hands.
I read in a Democratic paper a few days ago, The Washington Times, an extract
[which] showed that the money for each white child in the State ranged from
three to five times as much per-capita as was given to each colored child.
This is helping us some, but not to the extent that one would infer from the
gentleman's speech.
If the gentleman to whom I have referred will pardon me, I would like to advance
the statement that the musty records of 1868, filed away in the archives of
Southern capitols, as to what the Negro was thirty-two years ago, is not a
proper standard by which the Negro living on the threshold of the twentieth
century should be measured.
Since that time we have reduced the illiteracy of the race at least 45 percent.
We have written and published nearly 500 books. We have nearly 800 newspapers,
three of which are dailies. We have now in practice over 2,000 lawyers, and
a corresponding number of doctors. We have accumulated over $12,000,000 worth
of school property and about $40,000,000 worth of church property. We have
about 140,000 farms and homes, valued in the neighborhood of $750,000,000,
and personal property valued about $170,000,000. We have raised about $11,000,000
for educational purposes, and the property per-capita for every colored man,
woman and child in the United States is estimated at $75. We are operating
successfully several banks, commercial enterprises among our people in the
South land, including one silk mill and one cotton factory. We have 32,000
teachers in the schools of the country; we have built, with the aid of our
friends, about 20,000 churches, and support 7 colleges, 17 academies, 50 high
schools, 5 law schools, 5 medical schools and 25 theological seminaries. We
have over 600,000 acres of land in the South alone. The cotton produced, mainly
by black labor, has increased from 4,669,770 bales in 1860 to 11,235,000 in
1899. All this was done under the most adverse circumstances.
We have done it in the face of lynching, burning at the stake, with the humiliation
of "Jim Crow" laws, the disfranchisement of our male citizens, slander
and degradation of our women, with the factories closed against us, no Negro
permitted to be conductor on the railway cars, whether run through the streets
of our cities or across the prairies of our great country, no Negro permitted
to run as engineer on a locomotive, most of the mines closed against us. Labor
unions--carpenters, painters, brick masons, machinists, hackmen and those supplying
nearly every conceivable avocation for livelihood--have banded themselves together
to better their condition, but, with few exceptions, the black face has been
left out. The Negroes are seldom employed in our mercantile stores. At this
we do not wonder. Some day we hope to have them employed in our own stores.
With all these odds against us, we are forging our way ahead, slowly, perhaps,
but surely. You may tie us and then taunt us for a lack of bravery, but one
day we will break the bonds. You may use our labor for two and a half centuries
and then taunt us for our poverty, but let me remind you we will not always
remain poor! You may withhold even the knowledge of how to read God's word
and learn the way from earth to glory and then taunt us for our ignorance,
but we would remind you that there is plenty of room at the top, and we are
climbing!
After enforced debauchery with many kindred horrors incident to slavery, it
comes with ill grace from the perpetrators of these deeds to hold up the shortcomings
of some of our race to ridicule and scorn.
Mr. Chairman, permit me to digress for a few moments for the purpose of calling
the attention of the House to a bill which I regard as important, introduced
by me in the early part of the first session of this Congress.
[It was intended] to give the United States control and entire jurisdiction
over all cases of lynching and death by mob violence. During the last session
of this Congress I took occasion to address myself in detail to this particular
measure, but with all my efforts, the bill still sweetly sleeps in the room
of the committee to which it was referred. The necessity of legislation along
this line is daily being demonstrated. The arena of the lyncher no longer is
confined to Southern climes, but is stretching its hydra head over all parts
of the Union.
"Sow the seed of a tarnished name-- You sow the seed of eternal shame!" It
is needless to ask what the harvest will be. You may dodge this question now;
you may defer it to a more seasonable day; you may, as the gentleman from Maine,
Littlefield puts it:
"Waddle in and waddle out, Until the mind was left in doubt, Whether
the snake that made the track Was going south or coming back."
This evil peculiar to America, yes, to the United States, must be met somehow,
some day...
Mr. Chairman, before concluding my remarks I want to submit a brief recipe
for the solution of the so-called "American Negro problem." He asks
no special favors, but simply demands that he be given the same chance for
existence, for earning a livelihood, for raising himself in the scales of manhood
and womanhood, that are accorded to kindred nationalities. Treat him as a man;
go into his home and learn of his social conditions; learn of his cares, his
troubles and his hopes for the future; gain his confidence; open the doors
of industry to him; let the word "Negro," "colored," and "black" be
stricken from all the organizations enumerated in the federation of labor.
Help him to overcome his weaknesses, punish the crime-committing class by the
courts of the land, measure the standard of the race by its best material,
cease to mold prejudicial and unjust public sentiment against him, and, my
word for it, he will learn to support, hold up the hands of, and join in with
that political party, that institution, whether secular or religious, in every
community where he lives, which is destined to do the greatest good for the
greatest number. Obliterate race hatred, party prejudice, and help us to achieve
nobler ends, greater results and become satisfactory citizens to our brother
in white.
This, Mr. Chairman, is perhaps the Negroes' temporary farewell to the American
Congress; but let me say, phoenix-like he will rise up some day and come again.
These parting words are in behalf of an outraged, heartbroken, bruised, and
bleeding, but God-fearing people, faithful, industrious, loyal people-rising
people, full of potential force.
Mr. Chairman, in the trial of Lord Bacon, when the court disturbed the counsel
for the defendant, Sir Walter Raleigh raised himself up to his full height
and, addressing the court, said, "Sir, I am pleading for the life of a
human being."
The only apology that I have to make for the earnestness with which I have
spoken is that I am pleading for the life, the liberty, the future happiness,
and manhood suffrage for one-eighth of the entire population of the United
States.
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