24 THE FREEDMEN’S SAVINGS BANK While connected with the Freedmen’s Bank, Alvord was also general superintendent of edu- cation for the Freedmen’s Bureau, an institution which attracted a great deal of unfavorable criticism.® After his return to the North from Savannah, Alvord and his associates worked out a plan for a Negro savings bank which should be conducted under the patronage of the United States govern- ment, and on January 27, 1865, he secured a meeting of interested business men and philan- thropists at the National Exchange Bank in New York City. To them he explained the pro- posed bank and convinced them of the necessity for it and of its practicability. Those present at the meeting were: Peter Cooper, W. C. Bryant, Hiram Barney, Charles Collins, Thomas Denny, Walter S. Griffith, William Allen, Abraham Baldwin, R. S. Barnes, S. B. Caldwell, R. R. Graves, A. S. Hawch, Walter S. Hatch, EF. A. Lambert, Roe Lockwood, R. H. Manning, R. W. Ropes, A. H. Wallis, George Whipple and Albert Woodruff. They adopted plans for the organiza- tion of the bank and for its incorporation by Congress.’ The action of these prominent men would, it seems, endorse the respectability, if not the business capacity, of Alvord. INCORPORATION OF THE FREEDMEN’S SAVINGS BANK The next step was to secure a charter from 8 See Peirce, Freedmen’s Bureau. 9Bruce Rept., p. 246; Rept. of J. J. Knox, Comptroller of the Cur- rency, Feb. 21, 13%. in Sen. Misc. Doc., No. 88, 43 Cong. 2 Sess.