on the whole in an unfriendly atmosphere, and willing
hands have been stretched out to help him in his ambition
to rise. It is no doubt true, as has been often
said lately, that the negro at the North has been
crowded out of many occupations by more vigorous races,
newly come to this country, crowded out not only of
factory industries and agricultural, but of the positions
of servants, waiters, barbers, and other minor ways
of earning a living. The general verdict is that
this loss of position is due to lack of stamina and
trustworthiness. Wherever a negro has shown himself
able, honest, attentive to the moral and economic
duties of a citizen, either successful in accumulating
property or filling honorably his station in life,
he has gained respect and consideration in the community
in which he is known; and this is as true at the South
as at the North, notwithstanding the race antagonism
is more accentuated by reason of the preponderance
of negro population there and the more recent presence
of slavery. Upon this ugly race antagonism it
is not necessary to enlarge here in discussing the
problem of education, and I will leave it with the
single observation that I have heard intelligent negroes,
who were honestly at work, accumulating property and
disposed to postpone active politics to a more convenient
season, say that they had nothing to fear from the
intelligent white population, but only from the envy
of the ignorant.
The whole situation is much aggravated by the fact
that there is a considerable infusion of white blood
in the negro race in the United States, leading to
complications and social aspirations that are infinitely
pathetic. Time only and no present contrivance
of ours can ameliorate this condition.
I have made this outline of our negro problem in no
spirit of pessimism or of prejudice, but in the belief
that the only way to remedy an evil or a difficulty
is candidly and fundamentally to understand it.
Two things are evident: First, the negro population
is certain to increase in the United States, in a
ratio at least equal to that of the whites. Second,
the South needs its labor. Its deportation is
an idle dream. The only visible solution is for
the negro to become an integral and an intelligent
part of the industrial community. The way may
be long, but he must work his way up. Sympathetic
aid may do much, but the salvation of the negro is
in his own hands, in the development of individual
character and a race soul. This is fully understood
by his wisest leaders. His worst enemy is the
demagogue who flatters him with the delusion that all
he needs for his elevation is freedom and certain privileges
that were denied him in slavery.