48 THE FREEDMEN’S SAVINGS BANK
Englishman, who in 1870 and 1871 closely in-
vestigated economic conditions in the South, was
favorably impressed with the good influence of
the bank. He says: “Go in any forenoon and the
office is found full of Negroes depositing little
sums of money, drawing small sums, or remitting
to distant parts of the country where they have
relatives to support or debts to discharge. ...
[The literature of the bank] contains an amount
of general matter very suitable to the Negroes
and very desirable for them to read . . . the
Freedmen’s Savings and Trust Companies do
for the Negroes what our National Savings
Banks do for the working classes of England,
Scotland, and Ireland. . . . The Negro begins
to deposit usually with some special object in
view. He wishes to buy a mule or a cow, or a
house, or a piece of land, or a shop, or simply
to provide a fund against death, sickness, or
accident, and pursues his object frequently until
it has been accomplished.” !!
THE DEPOSITS AND THE DEPOSITORS
Only those in the vicinity of the larger towns
were directly affected by the bank, but the num-
ber of depositors within a few years reached a
total of 75.000, who were scattered all over the
South. About 30,000 of these had deposited
sums of $50.00 and under; about 3,000 of them
had rather large deposits. The average single
deposit in the bank at one time was about $50.00.
The average total deposit during the life of the
Ho. Misc. Doc. No. 16, 43 Cong., 2 Sess.; Report of Meigs, National
Bank Inspector, Feb. 1874.
11 Somers, Southern States, pp. 54, 55,