MISMANAGEMENT AND OTHER TROUBLES 83 examiner’s report showed that the institution had actually been insolvent for a year.# But for several weeks the conclusions of this report were not generally known. When the bank began to show signs of weak- ness the few trustees and officials who had money on deposit withdrew it, while at the same time the management tried to evade investigation by Congress, and to delude the Negroes into making more deposits. Some of those most interested in the welfare of the institution, among whom was Sperry, endeavored in 1873-1874 to secure an investigation by Congress. But somehow it de- veloped that anyone who expressed doubt of the bank’s policy was suspected of hostility to the Negro race. President Alvord and the trustees were also opposed to any investigation. This at- titude was, on the part of most of them, due probably to ignorance of actual conditions. Sperry was of the opinion that an investigation by Congress, if it had been made in time, would have saved the bank, but he said, “We could not get the help from Congress at the time we needed it.”® During the runs the trustees neglected the affairs of the bank; only one of them—Purvis, a Negro—came in to advise and assist the actuary, who during the crisis had to act most of the time on his own responsibility. The clique of specu- lators had resigned in good time and left affairs to the well-meaning incompetents and the Ne- 4 Douglas Report, p. 180; Meig’s reports in Report of Comptroller of the Currency, 1873-1874. % Douglas Report, pp. 254-256; Bruce Report, pp. 178, 179, 238.