<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
<p class="center">THE PROGRESSIVES AND THE REACTIONARIES</p>
<div class="drop">
<ANTIMG src="images/drop_i2.jpg" alt="I" width-obs="90" height-obs="90" class="cap" />
<p class="cap_1">IT is not commonly known by the white
people at large that a great number of
colored people are against Mr. Washington.
Being an educator and philanthropist,
it is hard to conceive any reason why they
should be opposed to him, but the fact remains
that they are.</p>
</div>
<p>There are two distinct factions of the negro race,
who might be classed as Progressives and Reactionaries,
somewhat like the politicians. The
Progressives, led by Booker T. Washington and
with industrial education as the material idea, are
good, active citizens; while the other class distinctly
reactionary in every way, contend for more equal
rights, privileges, and protection, which is all very
logical, indeed, but they do not substantiate their
demands with any concrete policies; depending
largely on loud demands, and are too much given
to the condemnation of the entire white race for
the depredations of a few.</p>
<p>It is true, very true indeed, that the American
negro does not receive all he is entitled to under
the constitution. Volumes could be filled with the
many injustices he has to suffer, and which are not
right before God and man; yet, when it is considered
that other races in other countries, are persecuted
even more than the negro is in parts of the United
States, there should be no reason why the American
negro allow obvious prejudice to prevent his taking
advantage of opportunities that surround him.</p>
<p>I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</SPAN></span>
have been called a "radical," perhaps I am, but
for years I have felt constrained to deplore the negligence
of the colored race in America, in not seizing
the opportunity for monopolizing more of the many
million acres of rich farm lands in the great northwest,
where immigrants from the old world own
many of acres of rich farm lands; while the millions
of blacks, only a few hundred miles away, are as
oblivious to it all as the heathen of Africa are to
civilization.</p>
<p>In Iowa, for instance, where the number of farms
total around two hundred and ten thousand, and
include the richest land in the world, only thirty-seven
are owned and operated by negroes, while
South Dakota, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North
Dakota have many less. I would quote these facts
to my father-in-law until I was darker in the face
than I naturally am. He could offer no counter
argument to them, but continued to vituperate the
sins of the white people. He was a member in
good standing of the reactionary faction of the
negro race, the larger part of which are African M.E.
ministers.</p>
<p>Since Booker T. Washington came into prominence
they have held back and done what they could
to impede and criticize his work, and cast little
stones in his path of progress, while most of the
younger members of the ministry are heart and
soul in accord with him and are helping all they can.
The older members are almost to a unit, with some
exceptions, of course, against him and his industrial
educational ideas.</p>
<p>A few years ago a professor in a colored university
in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</SPAN></span>
Georgia wrote a book which had a tremendous
sale. He claimed in his book that the public had
become so over-enthused regarding Booker T.
and industrial education, that the colored schools
for literary training were almost forgotten, and,
of course, were severely handicapped by a lack of
funds. His was not criticism, but was intended to
call attention of the public to the number of colored
schools in dire need of funds, which on account of
race prejudice in the south, must teach classics.
This was true, although industrial education was
the first means of lifting the ignorant masses into
a state of good citizenship. Immediately following
the publication of the volume referred to, thousands
of anti-Booker T.'s proceeded to place the writer
as representing their cause and formed all kinds of
clubs in his honor, or gave their clubs his name.
They pretended to feel and to have everyone else
feel, that they had at last found a man who would
lead them against Booker T. and industrial education.</p>
<p>They made a lot of noise for a while, which soon
died out, however, as the author of the book was
far too broad minded and intelligent in every way,
to be a party to such a theory, much less, to lead
a lot of reckless people, who never had and never
would do anything for the uplifting of their race.</p>
<p>The Reverend and I could not in any way agree.
He was so bitter against industrial education and the
educator's name, that he lost all composure in
trying to dodge the issue in our argument, and found
himself up against a brick wall in attempting to
belittle Mr. Washington's work. Most of the
trouble<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</SPAN></span>
with the elder was, that he was not an intelligent
man, never read anything but negro papers,
and was interested only in negro questions. He was
born in Arkansas, but maintained false ideas about
himself. He never admitted to having been born
a slave, but he was nearly sixty years of age, and
sixty years ago a negro born in Arkansas would have
been born in slavery, unless his parents had purchased
themselves. If this had been the case, as
vain as he was, I felt sure he would have had much
to say about it. He must have been born a slave,
but of course had been young when freed. He had
lived in Springfield, Missouri, after leaving Arkansas,
and later moving to Iowa, where, at the
age of twenty-seven years, he was ordained a minister
and started to preach, which he had continued
for thirty years or more. He never had any theological
training. This was told me by my wife, and
she added despairingly:</p>
<p>"Poor papa! He is just ignorant and hard-headed,
and all his life has been associated with
hard-headed negro preachers. He reads nothing
but radical negro papers and wants everybody to
regard him as being a brilliant man, and you might
as well try to reason with two trees, or a brick wall,
as to try to reason with him or Ethel. I'm so sorry
papa is so ignorant. Mama has always tried to
get him to study, but he would never do it. That's
all."</p>
<p>We went up to the claims, taking the elder along.
My sister had married and her husband was making
hay on the claims.</p>
<p>I might have been more patient with the Reverend,
if<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</SPAN></span>
he had not been so full of pretense, when
being plain and truthful would have been so much
better and easier. I had quit talking to him about
anything serious or anything that interested me,
but would sit and listen to him talk of the big
preachers, and the bishops, and the great negroes
who had died years before. He seemed fond of
talking of what they had done in the past and what
more could be done in the future, if the white people
were not so strongly banded against them. After
this, his conversation would turn to pure gossip,
such as women might indulge in. He talked about
the women belonging to the churches of his district,
whether they were living right or wrong, and could
tell very funny stories about them.</p>
<p>In Dakota, like most parts of the west, people
who have any money at all, carry no cash in the
pocket, but bank their money and use checks.
The people of the east and south, that is, the common
people, seldom have a checking account, and,
with the masses of the negroes, no account at all.
During the summer Orlean had sent her father my
checks with which to make purchases. The Reverend
told me he checked altogether, but my wife
had told me her father's ambition had always been
to have a checking account, but had not been able
to do so. I had to laugh over this, for it was no
distinction whatever. We discussed the banking
business and the elder tried to tell me that if a
national bank went broke, the government paid all
the depositors, while if it was a state bank, the
depositors lost. As this was so far from correct, I
explained the laws that governed national banks
and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</SPAN></span>
state banks alike, as regards the depositors, in
the event of insolvency. I did not mean to bring
out such a storm but he flew into an accusation,
exclaiming excitedly:</p>
<p>"That's just the way you are! You must have
everything your way! I never saw such a contrary
man! You won't believe anything!"</p>
<p>"But, Reverend," I remonstrated. "I have no
'way' in this. What I have quoted you is simply
the law, the law governing national and state bank
deposits, that you can read up on yourself, just the
same as I have done. If I am wrong, I very humbly
beg your pardon."</p>
<p>The poor old man was so chagrined he seemed
hardly to know what to do, though this was but one
of many awkward situations due to his ignorance
of the most simple business matters. Another time
he was trying to listen intelligently to a conversation
relating to the development of the northwest, when
I had occasion to speak of Jim Hill. Seeing he
did not look enlightened, I repeated, this time
referring to him as James J. Hill, of the Great
Northern, and inquired if he had not heard of the
pioneer builder.</p>
<p>"No, I never heard of him," he answered.</p>
<p>"Never heard of James J. Hill?" I exclaimed,
in surprise.</p>
<p>"Why should I have heard of him," he said,
answering my exclamation calmly.</p>
<p>"O, no reason at all," I concluded, and remained
silent, but my face must have expressed my disgust
at his ignorance, and he a public man for thirty
years.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i282" name="i282"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i282.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="ctext">Ernest Nicholson takes a hand. <SPAN href="#Page_186">(Page 186.)</SPAN></p> </div>
<p>After<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</SPAN></span>
this conversation I forced myself to remain
quiet and listen to common gossip. Instead of
being pleased to see us happy and Orlean contented,
he would, whenever alone with her, discourage her
in every way he could, sighing for sympathy, praising
Claves and telling her how much he was doing
for Ethel, and how much she, Orlean, was sacrificing
for me.</p>
<p>The contest trial occurred while he was with us,
and cost, to start with, an attorney's fee of fifty
dollars, in addition to witnesses' expenses. I had
bought a house in Megory and we moved it onto
Orlean's claim. The Reverend helped with the
moving, but he was so discouraging to have around.
He dug up all the skeletons I left buried in M—pls
and bared them to view, in deceitful ways.</p>
<p>We had decided not to visit Chicago that winter.
The crop was fair, but prices were low on oats and
corn, and my crops consisted mostly of those cereals.
I tried to explain this to the Reverend when he
talked of what we would have, Christmas, in
Chicago.</p>
<p>"Now, don't let that worry you, my boy," he
would say breezily. "I'll attend to that! I'll
attend to that!"</p>
<p>"Attend to what?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Why, I'll send both of you a ticket."</p>
<p>"O, really, Reverend, I thank you ever so much,
but I could not think of accepting it, and you must
not urge it. We are not coming to Chicago, and I
wish you would not talk of it so much with Orlean,"
I would almost plead with him. "She is a good
girl and we are happy together. She wants to help
me,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</SPAN></span>
but she's only a weak woman, and being so far
away from colored people, she will naturally feel
lonesome and want to visit home."</p>
<p>He paid no more attention to me than if I had
never spoken. In fact, he talked more about
Chicago than ever, saying a dozen times a day:</p>
<p>"Yes, children, I'll send you the money."</p>
<p>I finally became angry and told him I would not,
under any circumstances whatever, accept such
charity, and that what my money was invested in,
represented a value of more than thirty thousand
dollars, and how could I be expected to condescend
to accept charity from him.</p>
<p>He had told me once that he never had as much
as two hundred dollars at one time in his life. I
did not want a row, but as far as I was concerned,
I did not want anything from him, for I felt that he
would throw it up to me the rest of his life. I was
convinced that he was a vain creature, out for a
show, and I fairly despised him for it.</p>
<p>At last he went home and Orlean and I got down
to business, moving more of our goods onto the
claim, and spending about one-third of the time
there. We intended moving everything as soon
as the corn was gathered. As Christmas drew near,
her folks wrote they were looking for her to come
home, the Reverend having told them that she was
coming, and that he was going to send her the money
for her to come. Her mother wrote about it in
letter, saying she didn't think it was right. Just
before Christmas, she wrote that maybe if she
wrote Cousin Sam he would send her the money.
Cousin Sam was a porter in a down town saloon.
I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</SPAN></span>
felt so mortified that I swore I would never again
have anything to do with her family. They never
regarded my feelings nor our relations in the least,
but wrote a letter every few days about who was coming
to the house to see Orlean Christmas, of who
was going to have her at their homes for dinner
when she came home, until the poor girl, with a
child on the way, was as helpless as a baby, trying
to be honest with all concerned. It had never been
her lot to take the defensive.</p>
<p>My sister came down from her claim and took
Orlean home with her. While she was in Tipp
county a letter came from her father for her, and
thinking it might be a matter needing immediate
attention, I opened it and found a money order for
eighteen dollars, sent from Cairo, with instructions
when to start, and he would be home to meet her
when she arrived, suggesting that I could come
later.</p>
<p>I was about the maddest man in Megory when
I was through reading the letter, fairly flying to the
post office, enclosing the money order and all, with
a curt little note telling what I had done; that
Orlean was out on her claim and would be home in
a few days, but that we were not coming to Chicago.
I would have liked to tell him that I was running
my own house, but did not do so. I was hauling
shelled corn to a feeder in town, when Orlean came.
She was driving a black horse, hitched to a little
buggy I had purchased for her, and I met her on
the road. I got out and kissed her fondly, then told
what I had done. My love for her had been growing.
She had been gone a week and I was so glad to see
her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</SPAN></span>
and have her back with me. I took the corn
on into town and when I returned home she had
cleaned up the house, prepared a nice supper and
had killed a chicken for the next day, which was
Christmas. She then confessed that she had
written her father that he could send the money.</p>
<p>"Now, dear," she said, as though a little frightened,
"I'm so sorry, for I know papa's going to
make a big row."</p>
<p>And he did, fairly burned the mail with scorching
letters denouncing my action and threatening what
he was liable to do about it, which was to come out
and attend to me. I judged he did not get much
sympathy, however, for a little while after
Orlean had written him he cooled down and wrote
that whatever Orlean and I agreed on was all right
with him, though I knew nothing of what her letter
contained.</p>
<p>The holidays passed without further event,
excepting a letter from Mrs. Ewis, to my wife, in
which she said she was glad that she had stayed in
Dakota and stuck by her husband. The letter
seemed a little strange, though I thought nothing
of it at the time. A few months later I was to know
what it meant, which was more than I could then
have dreamed of. We were a lone colored couple,
in a country miles from any of our kind, honest,
hopeful and happy; we had no warning, nor if we
had, would we have believed. Why, indeed, should
any young couple feel that some person, especially
one near and dear, should be planning to put
asunder what God had joined together?</p>
<p>It was now the last of February and we
expected<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</SPAN></span>
our first-born in March. My wife had
grown exceedingly fretful. Grandma was with us,
having made proof on her homestead. Orlean kept
worrying and wanting to go to her claim, talking
so much about it, that I finally talked with some
neighbor friends and they advised that it would
be better to take her to the homestead, for if she
continued to fret so much over wanting to be there,
when the child was born, it might be injured in some
way. When the weather became favorable, I
wrapped her and grandma up comfortably, and
sent them to the claim in the spring wagon, while
I followed with a load of furniture, making the trip
in a day and a half. We had close neighbors who
said they would look after her while I went back
after the stock. A lumber yard was selling out
in Kirk, and I bought the coal shed, which was strongly
built, being good for barns and granaries. Cutting
it into two parts, I loaded one part onto two wagons
and started the sixty miles to the claim. A thaw
set in about the time I had the building as far as
my homestead south of Megory. I decided to leave
it there and tear down my old buildings and move
them, instead. I received a letter from Orlean
saying they were getting along nicely, excepting
that the stove smoked considerably; and for me
to be very careful with Red and not let him kick
me. Red was a mule I had bought the summer
before and was a holy terror for kicking.</p>
<p>My sister arrived that night from a visit to
Kansas, and on hearing from Orlean that she was
all right, I sent my sister on to her claim, and hiring
more men, moved the balance of the building onto
the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</SPAN></span>
old farm, tore down the old buildings, loaded
them onto wagons, and finally got started again for
Tipp county. That was on Saturday. The wind
blew a gale, making me feel lonely and far from home.
Sunday morning I started early out of Colone
planning to get home that night, but the front axle
broke and by the time we got another it was growing
late. We started again and traveled about two
miles, when the tongue broke, and by the time that
was mended it was late in the afternoon. About
six o'clock we pulled into Victor, tired and weary.
The next day, when about five miles from home, we
met one of the neighbors, who informed me that he
had tried to get me over the phone all along the
way; that my wife had been awfully sick and that
the baby had been born, dead. It struck me like
a hammer, and noting my frightened look, he spoke
up quickly:</p>
<p>"But she's all right now. She had two doctors
and didn't lack for attention."</p>
<p>On the way home I was so nervous that I could
hardly wait for the horses to get there. I would
not have been away at this time for anything in the
world. I knew Orlean would forgive me, but we
had not told her father. Orlean had told her
mother and thought she would tell him. He made
so much ado about everything, we hoped to avoid
the tire of his burdensome letters, but now, with the
baby born during my absence, and it dead, when
we had so many plans for its future. It was to
have been the first colored child born on the Little
Crow, and we thought we were going to make history.</p>
<p>When<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</SPAN></span>
I got to the claim I was weak in every
way. My wife seemed none the worse, but my
emotions were intense when I saw the little dead
boy. Poor little fellow! As he lay stiff and cold
I could see the image of myself in his features. My
wife noticed my look and said:</p>
<p>"It is just like you, dear!"</p>
<p>That night we buried the baby on the west side
of the draw. It should have been on the east, where
the only trees in the township, four spreading
willows, cast their shadows.</p>
<p>"Well, dear, we have each other," I comforted
her as she cried.</p>
<p>Between sobs she tried to tell me how she had
prayed for it to live, and since it had looked so much
like me, she thought her heart would break.</p>
<p>When the child was born they had sent a telegram
to her father which read:</p>
<p>"Baby born dead. Am well."</p>
<p>This was his first knowledge of it. We received
a telegram that night that he was on the way and
the next day he arrived, bringing Ethel with him.
When he got out of the livery rig that brought them
I could see Satan in his face. A chance had come
to him at last. It seemed to say:</p>
<p>"Oh, now I'll fix you. Away when the child was
born, eh?"</p>
<p>His very expression seemed jubilant. He had
longed for some chance to get me and now it had
arrived. He did not speak to me, but bounded
into the room where my wife was, and she must
have read the same thing in his expression, for,
as he talked about it later, I learned the first thing
she said was:</p>
<p>"Now,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</SPAN></span>
papa. You must not abuse Oscar. He
loves me and is kind and doing the best he can, but
he is all tied up with debt."</p>
<p>He would tell this every few hours but I could
see the evil of his heart in the expression of his eyes,
leering at me, with hatred and malice in every look.
He and Ethel turned loose in about an hour. From
that time on, it was the same as being in the house
with two human devils. They nearly raised the
roof with their quarreling. Of the two, the Reverend
was the worst, for he was cunning and deceitful,
pretending in one sentence to love, and in the next
taking a thrust at my emotions and home. I shall
never forget his evil eyes.</p>
<p>Ethel would cry out in her ringing voice:</p>
<p>"You're practical! You're practical! You and
your Booker T. Washington ideas!"</p>
<p>Then she would tear into a string of abusive words.
One day, after the doctor had been to the house, he
called me aside and said:</p>
<p>"Oscar, your wife is physically well enough, but
is mentally sick. Something should be done so
that she may be more quiet."</p>
<p>"Is she quite out of danger?" I asked.</p>
<p>He replied that she was. That night I told my
wife of our conversation and the next day I left for
Megory county.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />