26 THE FREEDMEN S SAVINGS BANK been inserted. The House then added an amend- ment slightly different from the Senate amend- ment, though believed by Eliot to be identical. Objection was made that the District of Colum- bia was not represented on the board of trustees named in the bill, and Eliot met this objection by inserting the name of Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase. Thus amended the bill passed the House.X Since the bills as passed by the Senate and the House were not exactly alike, the action of a conference committee would, under ordinary cir- cumstances, be necessary in order to harmonize them; but it seems that no one noticed the slight differences. The record states that the bill was signed by President Lincoln on the same day, March 3. It is said that when Lincoln signed it he remarked: “This bank is just what the freedmen need.” He signed at the same time the act creating the Freedmen’s Bureau." The bill which was presented to President Lincoln for his approval was neither the bill passed by the Senate nor the one passed by the House but was the original bill introduced into the Senate by Senator Wilson with the words “in the City of Washington, in the District of Columbia” inserted by some one in the body of the bill. The name of Salmon P. Chase as a member of the Board of Trustees was omitted. This was the bill that was published as law. In 1 Cong, Globe, 38 Cong., 2 Sess., pt. I, p. 776, and pt. II, pp. 885, 1311; Senate Misc. Doc., No. 88, 43 Cong., 2 Sess. 1 Cong. Globe, 38 Cong., 2 Sess., pt. II, p. 1403; Booklet, Freedmen’s Savings and Trust Company, 1872; Fleming, Documentary History of Reconstruction, 1, 319.