“Th
   ey won’t have Negroes & they just as [soon] leave [than] have a Negro as a
   man that can take the Oath ‘i.e.’ they don’t want & won’t have either.” To counter
   local offi
   cials’ moves, he issued an order releasing all prisoners who had been
   held for more than three months in confi nement or those who had bonds of less
   than fi ve hundred dollars. Gregory Barrett in Tyler had a case of a court clerk
   refusing to impanel a jury with freedmen. J. U. Wright, the court clerk, who
   “swore publicly that before he would swear a ‘nigger’ as a juryman he would leave
   the Court,” further warned Barrett if he continued to insist he would get “his
   head shot off .” Barrett desired to accommodate the incorrigible clerk’s wish “to
   leave the court,” recommending J. K. P. Shelton be appointed in his place. Joshua
   L. Randall in Robertson County was frustrated by one judge who “rendered it
   [the order] impractical to empanel a jury” and simply ceased legal proceedings
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   Bureau Agents, Politics, New Order
   for the remainder of 1867. Even Byron Porter, very optimistic about the pros-
   pects of the order in June, reported a month later Judge John Ireland, a staunch
   Democrat, had blatantly violated the order by “preferring no doubt . . . a white
   man. ”
   Not all expressed complete happiness with this new course. Some orders
   from superiors, particularly those transferring responsibility to local offi
   cials,
   worried a few. John H. Morrison suggested everything “pertaining to Freedmen
   ought to be entirely in the jurisdiction of the Bureau,” admitting “I have to be
   . . . leniant [sic] on Rebellious people . . . [T]wo or three come to my offi
   ce and
   rase [sic] a row at a time and the crowd refuses to obey any summons of offi
   cers
   to qell [sic] disturbances.” J. P. Richardson predicted civil authorities would
   shirk their responsibilities, while James Oakes, although noting “a disposition
   to do justice to the freedperson in all cases . . . referred to them by this offi
   ce,”
   worried whites would believe “the Bureau has no authority except through the
   civil courts.” Oakes was not alone. Walter B. Pease at Houston noticed a “greater
   diffi
   culty in settling . . . claims” against planters for wages due, as they now
   “seem to think that the power of the Bureau is gone, and have openly defi ed its
   agents.” Even Commissioner Howard expressed concern, until Griffi
   n assuaged
   his mind. 
   When fi eld personnel confl icted with local offi
   cials, they attributed it partly
   to ignorance and confusion with the orders from headquarters. Local offi
   cials
   believed Griffi
   n’s orders transferred all responsibility to them, abrogating the
   agency’s power. James C. Devine at Huntsville, for example, who a month ear-
   lier noted the whites’ better disposition, had problems with local courts illegally
   apprenticing freed children. He informed a justice of the peace that he could
   bind out children only “under cover of vagrant laws and even then the stretch of
   authority is so great that an investigation by your superiors would pronounce
   your conduct not only false in the eyes of the laws, but reprehensible in morals.”
   Devine reminded him nothing had stripped “the agent of the Bureau of all pow-
   ers” but simply redefi ned them “to be supervisory, except when fl agrant cases of
   injustice occur when it becomes his duty to act.” Others had few complaints
   with Griffi
   n’s orders. According to them, the new policy, along with the Recon-
   struction Act of 1867, greatly reduced problems in their subdistricts. Consider
   two examples. Enon M. Harris admitted conditions “are good [and] very few
   disturbances have occurred during the month.” Later that summer, he again
   reported the same, with a few “trifl ing civil cases.” He attributed it to the “fear
   of removal,” which had “stricken almost all offi
   cials.” In June 1867 Patrick F.
   Duggan stated whites in Columbia had shown “a disposition to have as few
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   The Charles Griffin Era, Early 1867
   127
   diffi
   culties as possible, treating [the freedmen] in a manner best calculated to
   create a greater degree of harmony.” Th
   at same month, aft er seeing conditions
   in another section in his subdistrict, he admitted the recent bill from Congress
   and the orders from headquarters seemed “to have a soothing eff ect upon the
   most turbulent spirits. 
   Aft er the order, those in the fi eld throughout Texas reported race relations
   that ranged from “very bitter,” “indiff erent,” and “apathetic” to “as good as
   could be expected,” “honest,” “well disposed,” and “quiet,” if not completely
   “amicable.” In a few places, it was nothing short of “good.” To be sure, it was so
   “good” in some places they admitted not needing troops. Th
   ose stationed along
   the Mexican border and the Texas frontier reported such occurrences (mainly
   due to so few freedpeople), but more than a few in the interior, especially coastal
   counties, reported the same. Seventeen counties were quiet enough that those
   stationed there reported no need for troops. Certainty is diffi
   cult, primarily
   because so many things, such as the eff ect of the Reconstruction Act of 1867 to
   the white community’s need for labor to the ability of the Bureau man, infl u-
   ence the conditions. But a generalization can be made. Of the seventeen coun-
   ties, all but four were located near or on the coast (Upshur, Kaufman, Leon, and
   Bosque were exceptions). Th
   ese generally had either higher percentages of
   freedpeople or much lower percentages compared to noncoastal counties and
   the state as a whole. For example, in Wharton and Refugio Counties freedpeople
   represented 84 percent and 10 percent of the total population in these counties,
   respectively. Nearly two- thirds of the counties in which the agent reported not
   needing troops had freed populations either below 30 percent or above 50
   percent. 
   A former U.S.C.T. offi
   cer and one of the most respected and longest tenured
   agents in Texas, William H. Rock had no troops in his district. Th
   roughout the
   spring and summer of 1867 and continuing into 1868, the Richmond agent
   claimed their presence was unnecessary as long as local offi
   cials were coopera-
   tive. An Ohioan and offi
   cer in the 35th Infantry Regiment, J. R. Fitch observed
   white attitudes toward the freedpeople that ranged from “indiff erent” to “kindly
   disposed” and “friendly” in Refugio, a costal county north of Corpus Christi.
   Although he encountered little diffi
   culty during re
gistration, he believed the
   presence of troops necessary as a show of force. With voter registration’s con-
   clusion in the late summer of 1867, Fitch no longer thought them necessary: “I
   do not think there would be any diffi
   culty.” He now believed the only thing the
   county needed was a good magistrate. Should superiors appoint one, he sug-
   gested, the man “should also be the Sub Asst Comm.” and that “would be all
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   Bureau Agents, Politics, New Order
   that is necessary and be much more effi
   cacious than a military comdr.” A. H.
   Mayer noticed “Slave on the brain.” Th
   us, he did not need troops until perhaps
   when registration began. 
   In mid- 1867 Hiram Clark, a “carpetbagger” from Illinois, had little trouble in
   his coastal subdistrict. “I have no troops and think none are necessary,” he
   reported that July. “Th
   e people seem to realize the condition they are in and
   promptly comply with all requests and obey all orders.” Th
   is continued for the
   rest of the year. In La Grange, Isaac Johnson, a native Pennsylvanian and late
   captain in the 114th U.S.C.T., had no troops at his post. Despite acknowledging
   white’s hostile disposition (words not actions) toward the freedpeople, Johnson
   could “get along without them until the settlement [time].” To Johnson, the situ-
   ation was due to “the present system of procuring juries.” Edward Miller, a man
   who impressed superiors enough to be reappointed aft er his muster out, cred-
   ited the calm situation in Bryan City, Brazos County, to the Reconstruction Act
   of 1867. A “carpetbagger” from New York and VRC offi
   cer, he believed “there is
   no necessity” for troops in Bryan City, oft en repeating in subsequent reports
   that local offi
   cials “are always willing to assist me in the execution of my
   duties. ”
   At Huntsville, James P. Butler was surprised by the good race relations.
   Th
   roughout the spring and early summer, he reported local offi
   cials doing their
   job. He believed his presence in the district was all that was required to keep the
   situation calm. Troops were needed only for the “unavoidable pleasure” of
   arresting those who refused to settle with their hands. A similar situation
   existed in Beaumont. John H. Archer, an Englishman, saw no need for troops in
   mid- to late 1867. When he applied to the Bureau, he confi dentially informed
   Commissioner Howard he wished to “make my home in the South.” Archer was
   adamant that he would go anywhere “except in the State of Texas.” Apparently
   no longer fearful of the Lone Star State, he attributed the situation to coopera-
   tive civil offi
   cials and that most freedpeople in the area worked in the lumber
   business, not on plantations. “I can say they [would be better to] never have
   been freed than to remove the troops,” reported Philip Howard at Meridian in
   June 1867. Th
   e “scalawag” agent was considered by one Texas AC one of the
   best civilian agents in the state. By year’s end, aft er the troops left , Howard had
   changed his tune. With one exception in October (due to registration), he
   reported good race relations and few complaints by freedmen. So good were
   relations, he reported he did not “kneed [sic]” any troops.
   Instances of not needing troops continued until the agency’s end in late 1868.
   Even as the Bureau wound down and violence increased throughout the state in
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   The Charles Griffin Era, Early 1867
   129
   1868, there were districts that remained orderly enough not to necessitate
   troops. In the summer of 1868 A. K. Foster had a very eff ective sheriff in Hal-
   lettsville. Foster repeatedly informed superiors he had no troops, “nor can I say
   that there is a necessity for any.” According to Fred W. Reinhard, no troops were
   desired because the “civil authorities in [the county] do their duty.” In Colum-
   bus, New Yorker Louis W. Stevenson described white attitudes toward the
   emancipated “generally as expressed, the feelings [were] good.” He thus did not
   need troops. At Lockhart, Th
   omas H. Baker, throughout the summer and fall of
   1868, informed superiors he thought troops unnecessary in his district, while
   Hamilton C. Peterson, Baker’s predecessor at Lockhart, also believed protec-
   tion by soldiers was unnecessary: the “feeling between white & freedpeople is
   pretty good,” he wrote. Th
   omas C. Griffi
   n experienced some problems with
   rowdies in Kaufman in late summer 1868. By year’s end, he had a competent
   sheriff and things had calmed down enough that he could do without troops.
   Hiram Clark had few troubles in 1868: “I have no troops” and “none are desired
   for the protection of the Freedpeople.” Th
   ough he had no troops in late 1868,
   William Holt believed the freedpeople in La Grange were “as safe as other men.”
   For much of 1868, the SACs at Victoria and Goliad admitted no troops were
   needed to perform their duties. 
   Some historians would dismiss this as evidence of shirking: painting an
   overly optimistic picture to hide their misdeeds. For example, historian John A.
   Carpenter concluded “monthly reports provide the best way of sizing up the
   offi
   cer, what his prejudices and reactions were, what kind of job he was doing.”
   But when the reports contain virtually no information or when the agent
   month aft er month wrote briefl y that all was going very well, then it must be
   concluded either that the agent was careless in making out his reports, or,
   more likely, was not doing a conscientious job. It is always possible that their
   reports refl ected the true situation, yet, with other agents reporting atroci-
   ties, unfair treatment, and other forms of hostility to the freedmen, the
   objective observer can only assume that some of these agents were lax in the
   performance of their duty. 
   Not wanting to be accused of incompetence if conditions changed for the worse,
   these men also could have believed it better to report all was good. In his study
   of an agent in Virginia, William F. Mugelston found such discrepancies when
   he compared the man’s monthly reports to his private diary. So it is possible that
   all who stated they did not need troops were “exaggerating” or “lying.” But this
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   Bureau Agents, Politics, New Order
   does not hold up upon scrutiny. Just as historians have begun to discover that
   “the South,” “Southerners,” and “Confederates” are narrow defi nitions imply-
   ing consensus, with little diff erence and diversity, so too perhaps are the claims
   
about violence within all subdistricts and experienced by all agents. Many fac-
   tors infl uenced violence: such as political events from Austin and Washington,
   D.C.; economic forces, like a bad crop; the number of freedpeople in the district;
   presence of U.S. troops; the planters’ acceptance of the freedpeople’s changed
   political status; and even the actions of the Bureau agent toward the citizens in
   his district. As reasons diff ered over time, it should be expected so too would
   the level of violence and resistance reported by agents during the Freedmen’s
   Bureau’s existence in Texas.
   Furthermore, such claims do not consider the attitudes of many at head-
   quarters in Galveston: suspicion toward the former Rebel community and
   state’s reputation. It would not make sense to report something diff erent. A
   report contrasting what superiors believed or greatly diff ering from other
   agents, who reported chaotic conditions and repeatedly requested troops, would
   defi nitely have raised superiors’ eyebrows. In the agency’s voluminous records
   there exist no instances of superiors questioning these reports. Nor do dis-
   patches reminding of the importance of accurately reporting conditions exist.
   No inspectors were ever sent to confi rm or refute claims of not needing troops.
   By all accounts, superiors unsuspiciously accepted these assertions. Agents
   were proud, taking off ense at any suggestion of dereliction of duty. Shirking
   their responsibilities was not an option and very diffi
   cult to accept when com-
   pared to their reactions when their performance was, in their judgment, unfairly
   questioned. To claim such reports as false indicts the organization as a whole: it
   requires a leap to conclusion that the Bureau was a conspiracy against those
   under their protection—the freedpeople. 
   In the fi rst half of 1867, as Congressional Reconstruction commenced, SACs
   entered politics. Th
   e Reconstruction Act of 1867 made Th
   rockmorton’s govern-
   ment provisional and called for registration to elect delegates to draft a new
   state constitution. Agents had to ensure an orderly process and protect freed-
   men’s suff rage rights. Further, they became Republican “foot soldiers,” because
   a strong Republican party in Texas would ease their job and protect the freed-
   people. Griffi
   n transferred much responsibility to local offi
   cials to reduce fric-
   
 
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