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by Bean, Christopher B.


  Kiddoo’s policies worked would be another’s concern. In late January 1867

  Charles Griffi

  n, commander of the District of Texas, relieved him as Bureau

  chief. Since Griffi

  n’s arrival in Texas, their relationship was anything but cor-

  dial. Griffi

  n, Kiddoo’s superior, made it policy to communicate through his

  headquarters staff , rather than personally himself. Th

  is greatly annoyed Kid-

  doo. “I have never had any such trouble, or rec[eived] such discourtesy before,”

  Kiddoo complained to Commissioner Howard. Kiddoo also resented the

  way Griffi

  n treated the Freedmen’s Bureau. Although subordinate by law, the

  organization was allowed free rein by previous district commanders. Griffi

  n,

  however, consolidated the positions of district commander and assistant com-

  missioner under one man. Th

  is Kiddoo believed a “complete compromise of the

  dignity of the Bureau.” Th

  e relationship became unsalvageable when Kiddoo

  sent a letter to Howard criticizing Griffi

  n. Th

  is was the last straw for Griffi

  n,

  who relieved him from command. Remembering his own previous censure of

  Kiddoo “about his drinking and profane language in public” while visiting

  Washington in late 1866, Commissioner Howard supported the decision.

  Kiddoo had left his mark on the Bureau and on Texas. He oversaw its expan-

  sion into the interior and greater focus on freedmen education. Th

  is would be

  his historical legacy for many. For white Texans, however, Kiddoo’s legacy was

  his labor policy. Th

  ey much appreciated Circular No. 14, which returned the

  freedpeople to the cotton fi elds. “When Gen. Kiddoo came among us the people

  received him kindly, and in parting with him we are glad the same spirit pre-

  vails,” stated the Galveston Daily News. “Personally, our relations with him have

  been most agreeable . . . General Kiddoo has managed the Bureau rather satis-

  factorily which we think is more than can be said of any other of the heads of

  the . . . Bureau. ”

  Th

  e agency greatly expanded under Kiddoo, with order being (despite

  problems) brought to the labor situation in the state. Agents struggled with

  these problems. Planters and hands tried to fi nd a satisfactory relationship aft er

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  110

  The Bureau’s Highwater Mark

  slavery’s demise, as a new labor situation developed. As fi eld personnel dealt

  with labor, they also struggled to educate the emancipated to the ways of Vic-

  torian societal norms. Th

  e freed community needed to learn the sanctity of

  marriage. Freedmen were lectured about their manly duties. Behavior coun-

  tenanced during slavery, like promiscuity and “cohabitation,” was no longer

  acceptable. Freedwomen, on the other hand, were reminded of their womanly

  duties. At the time of Kiddoo’s departure, the Bureau had the look of a mod-

  ern bureaucracy. In fact, those under Kiddoo had become not only protectors,

  but information gatherers for headquarters. Th

  ey would continue this role

  under Kiddoo’s successor, Charles Griffi

  n, who, suspicious of his predeces-

  sor’s decisions and appointments, would continue the use of inspection tours

  to dismiss anyone not meeting his standards. But those under Griffi

  n would

  also spend a great deal of time on something that previous Bureau men had

  not, and something many in nineteenth- century white America believed

  would protect the freedmen: politics.

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  “Th

  ey must vote with the

  6

  party that shed their blood

  . . . in giving them liberty”

  Bureau Agents, Politics,

  and the Bureau’s New Order:

  Th

  e Charles Griffi

  n Era,

  January 1867–Summer 1867

  When Charles Griffi n assumed leadership in early 1867, the Bureau

  had reached its apex in power. At no other time would it be involved

  in more aspects of the freedpeople’s lives with as little civil and state

  interference. Griffi

  n, however, would reverse this by transferring much respon-

  sibility to civil authorities, believing Kiddoo’s policies caused unnecessary “col-

  lisions.” Th

  is delegation occurred at the very time Congress consolidated its

  own, wresting the Reconstruction process from the president and passing

  measures, making the governments created under Presidential Reconstruction

  provisional. Th

  e Reconstruction Act of 1867 called for voter registration of all

  white and black men who did not voluntarily aid the Confederacy. Griffi

  n

  hoped to use the newly enfranchised to create a “new order” in Texas. With

  voter registration, the Bureau would enter the maelstrom of politics.

  Reversing Kiddoo’s policies, Griffi

  n hoped his “new order” would further

  freedpeople’s self- reliance with little interference (beyond protection of their

  wages) by subassistant commissioners. Griffi

  n, however, was not going to leave

  them powerless. Th

  rough his “jury order,” they became jurors to help ensure

  their own justice and protection. Nor was Griffi

  n going to leave subordinates

  powerless. Although he transferred many responsibilities to civil authorities, he

  also consolidated the Bureau and the military under one central command in

  Texas. No longer were agents assigned to remote areas with little protection. Th

  is

  change in attitude would produce very suitable conditions in much of Texas.

  Graduated from West Point, Charles Griffi

  n served in an artillery regiment

  during the war. A native Ohioan, he participated in the First Battle of Bull Run

  in 1861. Th

  e next year, aft er marrying the daughter of an infl uential Maryland

  family, he transferred to an infantry regiment. With a “cool, quiet and precise”

  demeanor, Griffi

  n quickly rose through the ranks, receiving command of the V

  Corps in the Army of the Potomac. He participated in every major battle with

  the Army of the Potomac and was present for Robert E. Lee’s surrender at

  Appomattox in April 1865. Aft er the war, he was placed in command of the

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  112

  Bureau Agents, Politics, New Order

  District of Texas by his friend and staunch opponent of Presidential Recon-

  struction, Major General Philip H. Sheridan. His “gentle and generous disposi-

  tion” and “sense of humor” showed during the war. At the time of his

  appointment in Texas, Griffi

  n had a no nonsense reputati
on and was “quick to

  resent insult, fancied or real. ”

  Griffi

  n’s rather volatile temperament was, on several occasions, directed at

  Kiddoo. Aft er Kiddoo’s removal, Griffi

  n let it be known what he thought of his

  predecessor’s policies. In General Orders No. 5, he wiped the slate clean, com-

  pletely abrogating previous general and circular orders like the ban on entice-

  ment (Circular No. 14) and its enforcement (Circular No. 17), Kiddoo’s contract

  guidelines (Circular No. 25), and the order to agents to disregard the state’s

  labor law (General Orders No. 2). Th

  is policy simply conformed to the War

  Department’s General Orders No. 26. With consent from Commissioner How-

  ard, Griffi

  n also moved to cancel Kiddoo’s order for fees approving labor con-

  tracts. Although in place for only a couple of months, the payment order had

  already caused much confusion. Griffi

  n fi nally clarifi ed the boundaries for each

  subdistrict (pinnacle of 57 in July 1867). Since Gregory’s administration, subdis-

  trict boundaries remained unspecifi ed. Agents were simply informed their

  jurisdiction extended to any case they could reach. Friction, naturally, occurred

  when they investigated cases that another believed under his jurisdiction. Nev-

  ertheless, superiors still expected agents to act in “all cases occurring when it

  may be more convenient for you to act than any other sub asst com upon whose

  jurisdiction it may be possible you are encroaching on. . . .” Field personnel were

  either to render assistance, if possible, regardless of subdistrict boundaries, or

  inform the adjacent agent of the situation. Either way, they had to act. 

  Th

  is new course was laid down in General Orders No. 4, issued to bring

  about a “natural sense” believed to be lacking in Texas. Griffi

  n delineated

  changes closer to the essence of free labor, with as few constraints as possible on

  the choice of employment and compensation. Beyond ensuring that no labor

  contract lasted longer than one year, fi eld agents were not to hinder the freed-

  people’s choice of employer and wage. Griffi

  n allowed local offi

  cials, such as

  county judges and clerks and justices of the peace, as well as subassistant com-

  missioners, to approve contracts. Th

  is marked a departure from previous policy.

  Th

  e AC wanted to end the constant collisions between local offi

  cials and the

  agency about authority. He reiterated, however, the state’s vagrancy and appren-

  ticeship laws were to be enforced only if local offi

  cials impartially administered

  them. Agents still retained the right to annul any contract or interfere with any

  civil case they deemed illegal or discriminatory. “I now propose to make inter-

  ference with the state [authorities] the exception and not the rule,” Griffi

  n

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  The Charles Griffin Era, Early 1867

  113

  pledged, “but that every decision that the Bureau does make shall, if necessary,

  be instantly backed up by the Military force necessary to command obedience

  and respect.” 

  In early summer of 1867, Griffi

  n issued a circular to all fi eld personnel. He

  repeated his conviction that the path to success for the emancipated lay with

  contracting. “Whenever you may think it necessary,” he wrote, “you will address

  the freedmen urging . . . the necessity of industry & of close adherent [sic] to

  their contracts.” Acknowledging the former slaves’ choice in the system, the

  Bureau chief believed that choice should be an informed one. Finally, although

  he wanted them to pursue moral persuasion, Griffi

  n instructed subordinates, if

  necessary, not to refrain from more forceful remedies to change behavior.

  Simultaneous to altering the agency’s direction, he also moved to restructure

  its fi eld operations. Already joint commander in Texas, Griffi

  n further married

  the army and the Bureau through his Circular Order No. 3. With it, the number

  of fi eld personnel greatly increased. When Griffi

  n assumed control, there were

  29 men in the fi eld, including 2 civilian agents (those who had no military expe-

  rience during the war). At the time of his death in September 1867, the number

  had increased to 57 SACs, 10 ASACs, and 1 traveling agent, including 15 civil-

  ians. Th

  e circular order made all post commanders SACs (only if there was not

  already an assigned agent to the area), and greatly expanded the number of

  Bureau agents, peaking at 72 in July 1867 (61 SACs and 11 ASACs). Because most

  military posts ringed the extent of white settlement in the state, rarely was a

  civilian assigned to the frontier of Texas- Mexico border. Civilians were primar-

  ily, though not always, assigned to the interior and coastal regions.

  Griffi

  n also appointed the most agents with 70: that is slightly more than J. J.

  Reynolds’s 62 (his successor); signifi cantly higher than Kiddoo’s 44; and double

  Gregory’s 35. Twenty- nine percent were civilians, a number similar to Gregory

  and Reynolds. Despite his hostility toward civilian agents, Griffi

  n, surprisingly,

  had the highest number of appointed civilians. Overall, Griffi

  n’s appointments

  served slightly higher than the overall average: 8.6 compared to 7.8 months. Th

  is

  average correlates with Gregory’s 8.4 yet deviates from Kiddoo’s 10.2. Table 6- 1

  shows the average length of service for agents appointed by Griffi

  n.

  Table 6- 1 Length of Service for Agents Appointed by Griffi

  n

  Type of Bureau Agent

  Number

  Average Length of Service (Months)

  Civilian  .

  Military  .

  Note: Dates came from Freedmen’s Bureau Roster of Offi

  cers and Civilians.

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  Bureau Agents, Politics, New Order

  As Table 6- 2 shows, slightly more than 50 percent of Griffi

  n’s appointments

  left the agency for bureaucratic reasons (Bureau operations and military). Th

  is

  is similar to Gregory’s, but nearly two- thirds above Kiddoo’s. Despite having

  the highest number of civilians, Griffi

  n had the lowest percentage (compared to

  his predecessors’ 20 and 20.5 percent) terminated for criminality or unbecom-

  ing conduct. Of the Texas ACs, Griffi

  n had the highest percentage who died in

  service.

  Griffi

  n’s expansion placed an agent within reach of all citizens, something

  nearly one- half of Texans could not say under Kiddoo. General Orders No. 3

  further increased the protection for agents through easier access to the full

  weight of the United States A
rmy. No longer would they be unprotected. Each

  received an escort (fi ve men), and, of course, those simultaneously performing

  Bureau and post commander duties had their companies for assistance. Upon

  request, all post commanders were to render assistance to agents. According to

  William L. Richter, a student of the Bureau in Texas, “it was not merely the

  numbers that were important, it was an attitude.” Griffi

  n hoped to create a “new

  order” in place of, what he considered, his predecessor’s chaotic and misguided

  policies. 

  A change in attitude also came from Congress. Angered by a lack of remorse

  from the former Confederates and frustrated by a stubborn president, Radical

  Republicans wrested control of Reconstruction from him in early 1867. Both

  houses of Congress passed the Reconstruction Act of 1867 over the president’s

  veto. Under its provisions, all state governments in the former Confederate

  Table 6- 2 Reasons Agents Appointed by Griffi

  n Left Bureau Service

  Reason Number

  Percentage

  Bureau Operations: Bureau ended, consolidation,

  

  .

  and transferal or reassignment within the agency

  Military Operations: Mustered out or ordered to

  

  .

  new

  assignment

  Dropped on Request: Agent resigned appointment

  

  .

  Terminated: Dismissed for criminality, cruelty,

  

  .

  Confederate service, or appointment revoked

  N/A: Reason for leaving undetermined

  

  .

  Died: Murdered, disease, or accidents

  

  .

  Total: All Griffi

  n’s Agents

  n=

  

  Note: Th

  e information in this table came from various sources, but much of it came from the

  U.S. Census and the Freedmen’s Bureau’s Special Orders and Correspondences.

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  The Charles Griffin Era, Early 1867

  115

  states (except Tennessee) established under Presidential Reconstruction were

  now provisional. Congress divided those states into fi ve military districts, with

  a military offi

  cer heading each district. In early 1867 the former Confederacy

  was placed under martial law. Each district’s commander would call for a

 

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