50 THE FREEDMEN’S SAVINGS BANK
reports of the bank and from the United States
public documents, shows the entire business to
1874:
TOTAL BUSINESS OF THE FREEDMEN’S BANK
Year
Ending
with Total Deposits Balance Due Gain
March Deposits Each Year Depositors Each Year
1866 $ 305,167.00 % 305,167.00 $ 199,283.42 3 199,283.42
1867 ~ 1,624.853.33 1319,686.33 366,338.33 167,054.91
1868 3.582,378.36 1957,535.03 638,338.33 271,960.67
1869 7.257.798.63 3,675420.27 1,073,465.31 435,166.31
1870 12,605.781.95 5.347,983.32 1,657,006.75 583,541.44
1871 19.592,947.36 7.347,165.41 2,455,836.11 798,827.67
1872 31260,499.97 11,281,313.06 3,684,739.97 1,227,927.67
1873 - er 4,200,000.00 ee
1874 57,000,000.00 te 3,299,201.00 are
The interest paid on deposits amounted to the
sums given in the following table:
INTEREST PAID BY FREEDMEN’S BANK
To January 1, 1867. ee tra. DR OBE 47
Por Loo. cana Ty nhl TE 9eeren
Tor 1365. to November 1... ve. cosas rls slihio N04,544.08
November 1, 1868 to November 1, 1869.................. 43,896.98
November 1, 1869 to November 1, 1870.................. 59,376.20
November 1, 1870 to November 1, 1871................. 20,840.32
March 1, 1871 to January 1, 1873... ................ .SNI22,215.17
The bank, according to the above showing,
had a promising future, and the friends of the
Negroes were justified in relying upon it to assist
the former slaves to economic freedom. The
credit of the institution was rated A-1 to June,
1874, a month before it closed its doors. The
strongest branches were located at Augusta,
Baltimore, Charleston, Louisville, Memphis,
Nashville, New York, Norfolk, Richmond, Sa-
vannah, Vicksburg, and Wilmington.
3 Ho. Misc. Doc. No. 16, 43 Cong., 2 Sess., pp. 61, 91; Bruce Report,
p. 256; Williams, History of the Negro Race, 11, 403-411; Hoffman, Race
Traits and Tendencies, pp. 289, 290.