THE NEGRO AT THE CLOSE OF THE CIVIL WAR 15
Charitable societies and individuals of the
North undertook much other work for the Negro
but little of it had any economic bearing. The
work of extremists in churches and in schools
had bad results in irritating the races, while the
natural effect of the gift in 1867 of political
privilege was unsettling from an economic stand-
point. The Negro received much advice and
assistance to help him get his political and social
rights, but little attention was paid to his
material condition.
ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT OF THE
EMANCIPATED NEGRO
The influences surrounding the emancipated
Negro were contradictory; some tended to ele-
vate him, others to lower him. Until the strict
drawing of race lines by the prejudices arising
out of Reconstruction there was. a noticeable
tendency among the emancipated to separate
into economic and social classes. Between the
more intelligent mulattoes and the blacks there
was a slight antipathy. Most of those who were
free before the war were mulattoes and many of
them had property; in Louisiana they formed an
important part of the colored population, hold-
ing property valued in 1860 at $13,000,000. The
house servants held themselves superior to the
field workers. The natural aristocrats of the col-
ored people, with the better training and the
superior intelligence, might have been expected
under favorable conditions to become the eco-
nomic leaders.
There was a universal desire to own land, to