Office Sub Asst Com Bu.R.F. & A.L
Liuet Allen H. Jackson
7th
Liuet
I have the honor to make the following report upon the condition of freedmen for the month ending Aug 31st 1867.
The
freedmen have been getting along very well this month but few complaints have
come to me from them or employers.— The Crops are
quite poor. The rain has done much
injury to the corn and the cotton crop this year will probably be a
failure. They are never-the-less very
cheerful and look upon this as one of their bad years for making much: a great
many of them think the coming year of settling upon Homesteads, and I feel very
sure many wont now do so well it no that the best lands belong to the State. The Government lands are worthless for any
purposes whatever. The most of them
being barren sand hills with little or no vegitation upon them: those who have
settled upon places of their own in
The disposition of the people towards the freedmen is becoming much less bitter in some localities while in others it is on the increase but the freedmen understand pretty well their situation and knowing themselves to be freemen now act as such and when abused in one place they try another till they are treated properly but I fell confident the planters know it is for their interest to treat them kindly and the majority are doing so, these people here now are also trying to bribe the freedmen to vote for candidates they will put up at the coming election but the freedmen have been taught to vote for the proper men and there is but little doubts but what they will do is men who will give them their rights as freemen.
The Schools have been closed for the last month but will be opened again this coming month (September). They are much interested in their Schools and seem willing to give both money and labor for the promotion of Education among them besides their schools they have a very good Sabbath School and they attend devine worship better than the white people. they have also Temperance Societies among them and they are exerting a good influence upon those who are inclined to drink. I have noticed but few cases of drunkenness among them of late. they are more temperate than the whites surrounding them. upon the whole the freedmen of this section of County can be called in a good and flourishing condition
As the County has been flooded with water and the roads almost impassable I have been unable to travel about the Country very much this month. consequently my report will be a short one.— No mails have been received at this place since July 3rd with but one exception. so we can neither send of or receive any mails till the Steamer Allison comes in or the mail route reestablished.—
I am Sir
Very Respectfully
Your Obs Servantt
Wm. G. Vance
Brt Cap’t O.R.C. Sub Assistant Com Bu.R.F. & A.L
** This report shows that there is still bitterness
between the freedmen and the whites in some areas of