Full text: The Freedmen's Savings Bank

30 THE FREEDMEN’S SAVINGS BANK 
given the power to fill vacancies in their ranks, 
at least ten votes being necessary for the election 
of a trustee. Meetings of the board were to be 
held once a month or oftener, and if a trustee 
neglected for six months to attend the meetings 
his successor might be appointed. The trustees 
were to elect from their number a president and 
two vice-presidents. Nine trustees, of whom one 
must be the president or a vice-president, con- 
stituted a quorum, and at least seven affirmative 
votes were required to authorize any investment, 
sale, or transfer of securities. The list of trustees 
contained the names of many prominent men, 
but the Douglas Report (1876) on the affairs of 
the bank asserted that some of them did not 
consent to the use of their names and did not 
accept or exercise office.’ 
The business of the institution was to be con- 
fined to the Negro race. The object of the corpo- 
ration, as stated in the act, was to receive de- 
posits offered “by or in behalf of persons hereto- 
fore held in slavery in the United States, or their 
descendants.” At least two-thirds of the deposits 
must be invested in securities of the United 
States, one-third being held on deposit or other- 
wise as an ‘“‘available fund” for current needs. 
2¢Many of the distinguished and eminently worthy gentlemen who 
figure in the Charter never gave the use of their names and never ac- 
cepted or undertook to execute the trust it created. They were thrust in 
for appearance’s sake and to make the delusion attractive and complete. 
Some who really believed in the good professions of the projectors of the 
scheme and its adaptability to promote the welfare of those for whose 
benefit it was apparently intended, and who at first took seats at the 
board of trustees, quickly vacated them in disgust and the whole man- 
agement devolved, as was manifestly the intention that it should do, 
upon a cabal in Washington consisting of a small minority of the acting 
trustees.” —Ho. Rest. No. 502, 44 Cong., 1 Sess. 
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