MISMANAGEMENT AND OTHER TROUBLES 55 said that “every colored politician down South was the enemy of the Bank.” Robert Somers, the English traveler, after observation of the workings of the bank pointed out in 1870 certain weaknesses and predicted trouble. He called attention to the fact that, although the bank was established under the patronage of the United States government, the latter was not bound to make good any losses; that these would fall upon the depositors alone.’ The state governments in the South opposed the operation of the branch banks because they were not under local control, and because they sent money away from the local communities, while the white men’s banks were often un- friendly to the objects and methods of the Negro bank. There is evidence that debtors were slower in settling with the Freedmen’s Bank than with other banks, that the Freedmen’s Bank would get what was left after the others had made choice of what they wanted. Many white men disliked the Freedmen’s Bank because they be- lieved that it was connected with the Freedmen’s Bureau, and all who disliked the Negro disliked the Negro bank. It was a “race bank,” as Fred- erick Douglass said, and it aroused “race opposition.’ There was a persistent belief which came to be shared by depositors, that the bank officials took too much part in southern politics. In 1872 a rumor that funds of the institution were being 2 Douglas Report, p. 78 (statement of Purvis, of Philadelphia). 3 Somers, Southern States, p. 55. 4 Douglas Report, pp. 20, 21, 181, 240, 248, 249; Ho. Ex. Doc. No. #4, 44 Cong., 1 Sess., p. 5.