Chapter 10
The Civilization That Has Survived Contact With Colored Races: The United States

It has been made clear that the intensity of civilization in Latin America is in inverse ratio to the numerical proportion of the Negro in the populations of the various cultural centers. That where the whites are in greater preponderance the culture is more advanced. The Negro's depressing influence upon civilization is observable, not in Latin America alone, but in the portions of the United States where his numbers are great; in South Africa, Southern Europe, or wherever else the Caucasian and the Negro are in contact.

Intensity of civilization in its material phase is almost identical with intensity of industrialism, and the black has not proved himself the industrial equal of the white man. In the North of the United States, the Negro's cultural inferiority has resulted in his practical elimination from the industries, and apparently he is to suffer the same fate in the South. The Negro is generally absent from the Southern textile factories. The whites of the South produce a good deal more than half of the cotton. As the whites increase, the Negro in the South will suffer gradual elimination from the industries and possibly even from agriculture.

The Negro in the United States, or elsewhere, cannot compete with white labor if Caucasian standards of remuneration are maintained. The Negro may eliminate the white from a field of labor, but invariably such results are obtained by substituting Negro standards of life.

Because of war-time cessation of immigration and the consequent scarcity of labor, there was a demand for Negro labor even at white standards to pay. To protect himself, the white laborer attempted to unionize the Negro. But when the labor market is congested and there is not work for all, it is inconceivable that the white man, who has excluded the Asiatic and who vigorously opposes the incoming of the lower types of Europeans, will allow high remuneration to millions of Negroes whereby they may sustain themselves and increase their numbers and by so doing prevent just so many whites from securing employment, thereby limiting the increase of white Americans.

Let us take time to survey the history of the Negro in American civilization in order that we may better understand his present position.

A Dutch vessel brought twenty African Negroes to Jamestown, Virginia, and sold them to the settlers there in the year of 1619. This was the beginning of the slave trade and of slavery in British North America. As the development of the colonies in the New World proceeded, it became a universal custom to secure African Negroes from the slave traders and employ them as slaves in doing menial service. The slave traffic became immensely profitable, and most of the civilized nations took part in it. Wars were fought in Europe, and the choicest fruit of victory was the privilege of monopolizing the slave traffic from the coasts of Africa to the Americans.

Queen Elizabeth avowed that the wrath of an offended God would descend upon the head of the doughty John Hawkins who, in spite of the Spanish monopoly, succeeded in eluding the Spaniards and bringing Negroes to the New World. (John R. Spears, The American Slave Trade, p. 15) But when the queen discovered that the said John was successfully defying the Spanish and making enormous profit from the slave traffic, she reversed her attitude and became partner with that slaver, knighting him and furnishing him her ship, "The Jesus," with which to augment his fleet. At a later date, she licensed Dudley, Earl of Leicester (for twenty-five years a favorite of the queen), and others to transport slaves to America. Certain English writers have affected to believe that "Good Queen Bess" was not informed of Sir John Hawkins' true activities, but the fact that the chapter under which Lord Dudley was to operate expressly stipulated that slaves might be carried to America seems to leave another item for them to consider in their effort to exempt Queen Elizabeth from knowledge of and profit through the slave traffic.

The truth is that the white world believed it was doing the Negro a great service by bringing him from savage Africa. The Negro's chief cultural advancements have been wrought through his contact with the Caucasian. There is agreement on this point among Negroes as well as among whites, New England had early developed the shipping industry, and numerous vessels of the New Englander soon entered competition with European nations in bringing slaves from Africa to the Western colonies. It was not uncommon for the stern Puritan to meet the incoming slavers and pray, thinking God for sending the heathen to a land of Christianity.

Before the American Revolution, certain of the colonies had besought their king to stay the slave traffic. There were men even at that early date who had begun to appreciate what the presence of the Negro in the colonies would eventually mean. But the English monarch denied the petition, for the reason that vast British investments were in the trans-Atlantic trade, of which the slave was the most profitable cargo. We saw in the previous chapter that the British did not abolish the slave traffic until the year prior to the closing of the American market (1808). The date of the closing of the United States to the slaver had been known for some twenty years. (See Constitution of the United STates, Art. 1, Sec. 9.)

At the time of the Revolution there were less than a million Negroes in the Thirteen Colonies, and slavery was rapidly dying out in the New England colonies. The New Englander was possessed of that highest human endowment, creative genius, and this led to an industrialism which was to be the material making of America. With the development of shipping and factories the Negro became not only useless, but a burden.

Since the abolition of the slave traffic in 1808, the American Negro has increased from one to eleven millions. If this increase remains normal we may best illustrate the gravity of the Negro problem by pointing to the fact that there are individuals now living who will witness the presence of thirty million Negroes in the United States. It is quite possible that the great-grand-children of some now living will witness the presence of more than a hundred million Negroids in the New World.

The Negro has not increased in freedom as he did in slavery, for the reason that the master enforced sanitation and regularity. In slavery, his increase was greater than the Southern whites; since the Civil War, the Southern whites have increased faster than the Negro. But the increase of the Southern white has been great indeed, possibly as great as the percentage of increase of North and West, though the South has received but a small proportion of the immigrants to the United States.

It is a mistake to assert that the Negro will die out in America as a result of influences which may now be detected. If the decline in the rate of increase of the Negro implies ultimate extinction of that race, we may presume that the white man will become extinct, for the same principles underlie the decrease of both races. In those communities in which the Negro dwells with the Caucasian, the latter must remedy the Negro's high death rate or else the diseases of the Negro will be communicated to the whites, and the whites themselves be endangered by their neglect of the Negro.

The Negro is not a dying race. He is bounteously fecund in a normal environment. If he is to die out in America, it may be only as a result of hopeless competition with the white race, in an environment of the white man's making. The Negro is adaptable, and under a favorable environment he will have the advantage in competition with a higher race; but it is conceivable that the white man's diseases, communicated to the Negro, together with a possible adverse economic situation, may retard the increase of the Negro, may even exterminate him. We do not believe the white man will consciously destroy a people whom he brought by force in his midst, even though this be possible. Sanitation and economic opportunity will insure a normal increase among the Negroes, and elemental justice requires that the white man afford the Negro these advantages as long as he retains the Negro in his midst.

The most sanguine temperament cannot look upon the results of Caucasian contact with colored races in the past and feel secure as to America's future. Civilization has never survived intimate and prolonged contact with the colored races, and, though the United States will outrank all other civilizations in the successful preservation of the physical type form which civilization proceeds, there are present in America implications as to the eventual disintegration of this cultural stock. The American problem is not beyond the possibility of permanent solution, but such successful solution will probably depend upon the attitude of the present and the succeeding generation of whites. America may successfully cope with her color problem when her colored population become twice its present numerical strength, or three times its present strength, but as the colored increase in number there is less likelihood of America's attempting a radical and permanent address.

The nation should realize this and should be led to understand that the permanency of the Caucasian race and its institutions depends upon measures taken in the next few decades. Our danger possesses that seductive quality which renders it invisible to the many and but dimly appreciated by the few. Were there immediate peril to the flag, America would be in arms, ready for any sacrifice of blood and treasure. But the danger is not from the threat of military conquest, which would arouse all, but from the slow and ill-appreciated disintegration, or replacement, of the physical type which has made America great. We need those who can read and understand history and who can visualize the future in America. Those who believe in and will spread the cult of Caucasianism. Those who have become conscious that our civilization will decline as the numerical proportion of the pure Caucasian is reduced. Those who will sink sectionalism in national patriotism. Those who forget past differences between North and South in a common purpose to preserve a common civilization.

Let us take stock of the Caucasian assets in the impending struggle for Caucasian permanency. Look to Latin America and to South Africa and behold the inroads of miscegenation which threaten the permanency of these civilizations. Are we not conscious that the "color line" in the United States has preserved us, while other white nations in contact with the black and red races are immediately imperiled as a result of blood admixture with these races? Whites of these countries have freely interbred with colored peoples. An incalculable debt we owe to our ancestors who preserved our race and culture in the United States. Most of the Europeans who settled in Latin America betrayed race and culture; our ancestors preserved us white through three hundred years of race contact. Latin Americans bartered Caucasian birthright for temporary gain. North Americans, surrounded by similar environment of equal intensity, maintained race and institutions. Shall we not resolve to bequeath to our posterity the race type and culture received from our fathers; the one unshorn of its potentiality, the other undiminished in its splendor? We have survived for three centuries, but thirty centuries are before us, and the future will try us as the past has not.

The chief Caucasian asset in the struggle for permanency of civilization, then, is race. There has been less miscegenation in the United States than elsewhere in the world. Race we owe entirely to those who have lived before us. Had they possessed less intelligence and feebler morals, we, at the present time, would be a mixbreed people.

The second asset is the still prevailing color line, which is a national ideal. Subsequent events have proved that the color line was in the hearts of Americans even when the abolition of slavery appeared to carry with it the abolition of the color line. The North, having less knowledge of the physical and mental characteristics of the Negro, and subject for the time to an idealism which was saving that portion of the white world which dwelt apart from the Negro and which was intensified by sympathy for an enslaved race, did preach "equality," but this equality did not extend to miscegenation.

Not only has there been a social color line throughout American history, but it appears that a political color line has persisted as well. The satisfaction with which the white North views the white South's elimination of the Negro from politics can be understood when one grasps the fact that not the people of the North, but a few powerful politicians, forced Negro control upon the South.

"The opposition to universal Negro suffrage was so great throughout the North during the agitation of the question, which was subsequently embodied in the Fifteenth Amendment, that, excluding the enforced acquiescence of the Southern States, it was, when submitted to the people, defeated in every state except Iowa and Minnesota," writes Thomas Nelson Page, in The Negro: The Southerner's Problem.

Mr. Page, continuing, says (basing his data upon The Fifteenth Amendment; An Account of its Enactment, by A. Caperton Braxton),

"In December, 1865, when the question of the establishment of Negro suffrage in the District of Columbia was submitted to the voters there, the vote stood, in Georgetown, 1 vote for and 812 votes against the measure, and in Washington, 35 votes for and 6,521 votes against the measure.

In September, 1865, the question was submitted to the voters of the Territory of Colorado. The vote stood 476 for and 4,192 against it.

In June, 1866, the people of Nebraska adopted a constitution which limited suffrage to the whites. In October, 1867, the proposition for Negro suffrage in Ohio was voted down by over 50,000 majority.

In Michigan, in 1868, when the Republican Party carried by nearly 32,000 majority, the question of Negro suffrage was voted down by nearly 39,000 majority.

In 1869, the people of New York defeated the proposed measure by over 32,000 majority, and the Legislature of that State rescinded a former act of previous Legislature, which had, by a majority of two, ratified the Fifteenth Amendment.

On the 4th of March, 1869, in Indiana, seventeen Senators and thirty-six Representatives resigned from the Legislature to break a quorum and prevent the ratification of the amendment. Every one of these, with a single exception, was subsequently reelected by the people.

Meantime, under the Reconstruction Acts,' the amendment was forced on the South. Seven of the Southern Stats ratified it by the Negro vote, the whites being generally disfranchised, while in three of them; Virginia, Mississippi and Texas, ratification was assented to as a condition of readmission to the Union."

There were but few Negroes in Minnesota (246 adults, according to the Census of 1870), while the State of Iowa had 1,542 Negroes as compared to 289,162 whites. Yet in these states Negro suffrage was carried by narrow margins. Certain it is that the whites of the United States have never favored giving the Negro joint control in the civilization which proceeds from the Caucasian.

There were some whites in the North who advocated miscegenation, as there were some whites in the South who practiced it. After three centuries of contact, one-third, or less, of the Negro population is mixed with the blood of the whites. If we compare the United States with other nations which have been in contact with colored races, we shall be greatly encouraged. But few of the present number of mixbreeds are the product of a first crossing with the white race of the South. The mulatto, the quadroon, the octoroon, and the still lighter colored, have injected into the Negro race an overwhelming proportion of the Caucasian blood which his race manifests.

The situation is not hopeless at present. But will not history repeat itself in the United States? We know the long continued dwelling together of blacks and whites during the past sixty centuries has had but one ending; amalgamation. Changing social conditions, civil wars, invading armies without a sense of the color line, the lust of the white man, the mix-breeds' clamor for equality; such influences, throughout the centuries, have nullified every attempt of the white race to remain white when dwelling with the colored.

The color line as applied in the United States accredits to the white race only those who are purely white, while to the black race is given those who are partly white. In this respect the color line, as interpreted by the Untied States, stands separate and distinct from the "color line" as interpreted by other white people. The nearest approach to identical interpretation is found in the former German colonies, but there the half-breeds are few, and it remains for these possessions to be tested by centuries.

Australia and New Zealand, while forbidding the incoming of colored races, do not apply a strict color line to those now there.

While the color line as a national ideal in the United States has never been transgressed, it has been departed from by a few white individuals in each community and over so long a period of time that the cumulative effects of its transgression is destined to eventually weaken its application throughout the nation. First crosses and unions of the partly white with the full black and with the full white have resulted in the production of approximately three million mixbreeds, ranging through all shades of complexion from the near white to the near black. This mixbreed population is a result of a total of three centuries of race contact. Numerically it furnishes indisputable evidence that the color line has been, from the first, a national ideal. The average white has not contributed to the mixing of the races, but has held sternly aloof, through miscegenation has ever appealed to the fundamental instincts and could have been a nation-wide phenomenon at a word from the white man.

When contemplating the American mulatto, the white American may well realize that his future is imperiled by the mixbreed; but at the same time he should take what consolation he may from the knowledge that during the period of time that the mulatto has been produced, certain other white communities have been almost obliterated by miscegenation. Race, the color line, and knowledge of the results to the white man of his centuries of dealing with the colored, may be said to be the chief assets of the white in the effort to secure a white America.

What then are some of the disadvantages confronting Caucasian civilization in the United States?

The chief disadvantage lies in the failure of the all-powerful whites to visualize the future. The greater number of Americans do not live near enough to the Negro to understand the limitations of the Negro and to realize that he has not had, and cannot have, a part in progressive civilization. The Negro himself does profit from his enforced dwelling with the Caucasian, but such profit is at the expense of the Caucasian. The future holds before us an America filled to overflowing with a population which is to be pressed for room and food. There will be a white man for every job in America. When that times comes, and it will not be far distant, the Negro millions will eliminate just so many white millions. But the depressing influence of the Negro upon future America will be dealt with in another chapter.

We have seen that the American, by reason of race ideal and law, has mixed but little with the alien race within his midst. This mixture almost in its entirety has been illegal. The mulatto element results from unlawful unions between whites and blacks. The mulatto, in turn, willingly submits to the sub-normal white, and the result is a quadroon. The quadroon seeks a white mate, and the result is an octoroon, one-eighth Negro. Here is the danger! The octoroons and the yet whiter Negroids are bucking the color line. They constitute the distinguished "Negroes" of America that fanatical and untruthful whites exhibit as specimens of Negro stock and culture. The law of heredity will constitute some of these mixbreeds, Caucasian-like in appearance and in race instinct. These will tower over the Negro and will approach the white in mentality and in culture. It is this mixbreed element in the United States, supplemented by Negroes form South Europe, Latin America, and the British West Indies, coming to our shores in ever-increasing numbers, who constitute the immediate peril to the white race and the institutions of civilization. The near-whites are bucking the color-line and making good in every state in the American Union. The North, the South, the East and the West are suffering these aggressive Negroids to enter white society and to inject the blood of Africa into Caucasian circles. The vaunted race pride of the Southerner has more than once succumbed to the mulattress, while beyond the South the mulatto's program is still more easily realized. The near-white is a cancer that will eat deeper and deeper into the heart of the white race. Following upon the triumph of the near-white, the near-Negro will enter, finding a people who having received the near-white in martial equality to be less severe in repulsing the near-Negro.

While the purity of the white race has been the national ideal throughout American history, it is not the nation as a whole, but that part of the nation in immediate contact with the Negro that has been submitted to a rigid test of this ideal. The South emerges from three hundred years of immediate contact with the Negro and is white. This is the greatest miracle in the record of the contact of races. Faithful to race and institutions, the South now presents twenty-five million Saxon sons and daughters for the nation's use in peace or war.

The abuse meted to the Southerners in the days of the great illusion of the equality of races by English writers, and by not a few of the North, leaves no rancor in Southern memory when the South calls attention to her white sons and daughters. The doctrine of equality of races angered and hurt the Southerners, as it did the British and Dutch colonials, but the consciousness that they were preserving race and culture steeled them during the period of acrimony and defeat.

Europeans, instead of finding a mulatto South, as they find a mixbreed Latin America, are struck with the contrast.

Henderson is never better satisfied than when praising the physical type of the Southerners and their Saxon ideals. He calls them "Anglo-Saxons of the purest strain." (See Lieut. Col. (British Army), C.F.R. Henderson's Life of Stonewall Jackson, v.1, p. 93.)

Keane, the ethnologist, speaks of their "magnificent physique." ( A. H. Keane, Ethnology, p. 373.)

Even Johnston, the negrophilist, does them the honor of saying there is in the Southerner "no evidence of race decay." (He refers to the Southern inhabitants of the Mississippi Valley. See Sir H.H. Johnston, The Negro in the New World, p.435.)

Von Bernhardi expresses high appreciation of the South and its heroic struggle in the Civil War. (See Germany and the Next War, by F. Von Bernhardi.)

Schultz (American writer) says the Civil War was not over in three months because "the Southerners were pure Saxons." (Race or Mongrel, by Alfred F. Schultz.)

James Bryce and other Englishmen write of the Saxon's sense of race superiority and of his maintenance of the color-line. In every instance of which the writer is aware, the English or American historians who seek to show the Saxon's sense of race superiority when dwelling with a colored race draw their illustrations from the history of the South.

The immensely rich East and West, with their highly developed industrial civilization, due in great extent to the use of European capital, receiving millions of immigrants, possessing the wealth of the nation and holding the reins of government, have been hardly conscious prior to the past decade of the latent possibilities of the Southern States. By reason of a sparse white population and an always high percentage of Negroes and by defeat in the Civil War, which defeat carried with it the Reconstruction, the Southern States, though immensely rich in natural resources and blessed by a splendid climate, have lagged behind the rest of the nation in wealth and many other expressions of civilization. In 1860, the Souhtern whites, by reason of their vast landed possessions, were worth more per capita than the whites of the North. The Civil War reduced them below the North in per capita wealth, the Reconstruction brought them to the border of bankruptcy. Staggering to their feet under these burdens, they had hardly reached solvency when the nation-wide panic of the early nineties swept away the material progress of a generation. Recovering gradually, the South by 1900 had entered its present era of prosperity.

When it was ascertained that the South had recovered from the Reconstruction and was a safe place for investments, the wealth of the North began to pour into its treasuries and, that which is far more important than wealth, Northerners themselves came to the South, and the land profited greatly by their superior knowledge in the industries and agriculture. No Northern man has endeared himself to the people of the South in such degree as the late Dr. Seaman A. Knapp. In the proceedings of the Fourth Annual Convention of the Southern Commercial Congress, Nashville, Tennessee, 1912, a session was arranged as a memorial to this distinguished benefactor of the South. As organizer and director of the farmer's co-operative demonstration work. Dr. Knapp contributed more tot he present prosperity of the South than has any other individual. How the Southerner will welcome the coming of the Northerner who demonstrates that he is interested in the Caucasian culture of the South was clearly set forth in the addresses of representative Southerners who were in agreement that Dr. Knapp was the most capable friend that the Southern farmer has ever had.

If we consider the extraordinary hatred shown by the Southerner to those form the North who came to the South some fifty years ago and taught the theory of equality of Negro and Caucasian, and compare that attitude with the praise given by representative Southerners to "The Schoolmaster of Agriculture," we cannot but draw the conclusion that the so-called sectionalism of the Southerner is circumscribed by the Caucasianism of the Southerner. The address of the Arkansas representative affirmed that the State of Arkansas owes a debt of $200,000,000 to Dr. Knapp, while an even more significant understanding of the character of this great man is found in the address of the Georgia delegate who said,

"Seaman A. Knapp came as a stranger into our Southland, but when his great soul passed over the river into the shadows beyond, he left behind him the loving memories and grateful hearts of the entire people of Dixie."

The South is credited with high ingenuity in war and in politics, but such ingenuity will not of itself entitle Southerners to rank with other Saxons. The thing that strikes the European and Northern visitor most when they journey through the ex-slave states is the comparative lack of industries. Matters have changed somewhat of late years, and the South is taking on new life, but it would be futile to prophesy that the Southern States will be able, under present circumstances, to overtake the North and West. This cannot be, for the millions of Africans in the Southern States will render it impossible.

The difficulty of the South is not that it is deficient in industrial capacity, but that Southern conditions make difficult an industrial display. Suppose that the Southern proportions of blacks and whites should exist in the North! Diminish the creative element there by more than thirty percent and substitute in its stead a people not only non-creative, but incapable of seconding the progress of the creative element. Is it conceivable that the intensity of Northern civilization could be maintained? The history of the contact of races shows that it could not.

If we keep in mind the relative sparsity of population, the chaos growing out of the Civil War and the Reconstruction, together with the world-wide experience that the intensity of civilization is in inverse ratio to the numerical proportion of Negroes in the population, we shall have a true explanation of the backwardness of the Southern States.

The South will never be able to cope with the white North. The South is doomed to material and spiritual inferiority. This is a depressing conclusion, but no other is possible. What has it availed the South to show industrial capacity? Creative ingenuity and initiative the Southerner has in common with other Teutonic peoples. The Southerner built the first railroad in America, the first street car line, the first and second steamboats, the first ironclad, the first submarine; invented The first reaper; was first to apply electricity to street car locomotion; was first to municipally build and operate a street car service; inaugurated municipal government by commission, an innovation that is spreading beyond the borders of America; gave to America and to the world the public free school which has become the glory of modern civilization; lastly, but, in the opinion of some, not the least, constructed the first golf links in the Western World. The South could create, but the South could not develop its own creations as the white North has done. Teutonic genius is in the race, but the race has been imperiled by the jungle.

It is necessary to remind the people of the great white North that the portion of their race, which is by virtue of circumstance custodian of civilization in the Southern States, has demonstrated that it possesses cultural capacities like unto themselves, but that "Experience in all parts of the world shows that the presence of an inferior race in large numbers tends constantly to lower the standards of the dominant race," and, "If he (the American Negro) could be eliminated form the Southern States, their future would be much brighter than it is now." (Address of Ellsworth Huntington, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Geography, Yale, given at Clark University, 1913. See Latin America, published by Clark University, p.368.)

The South has been submitted to the acid test of the white ideal. The South has preserved the color-line and the color-line has maintained a white South. The color-line has preserved the white race, but the color-line will not make the South a great industrial civilization. Civilization proceeds from and is dependent upon the white man, and the white American surely must have an intense interest in remedying matters in the South. The Negro is not, save in a restricted sense, the Southerner's problem. He is a national problem.

In a speech delivered in the Senate August 7, 1916, Senator James K. Vardaman of Mississippi, speaking of the Negro problem, said: "We realize that nothing definite looking to the solution of the race problem can be expected without National aid...It is a problem which the Nation made, and the Nation alone can solve it." This is true. It is the greatest problem of our civilization, and constitutes the "only problem beyond which we cannot see." (Grover Cleveland).

When tyranny, backed by immense power, attempted to intimidate the Northern colonies, the South, though not immediately concerned in the struggle, cried, "Our brethren are already in the field! Why stand we here idle?" (Patrick Henry) We know the result. The South made common cause with their endangered "brethren" and the American nation sprang into existence. Race and culture are imperiled in the South as they never were in the North. There are millions of Southerners who wait for the powerful white North to say, "Our brethren are in the field! Why stand we here idle?"

For more than two years the writer was employed as an underground workman in the diamond and gold mines in South Africa. His lengthy experience with the white workingmen of South Africa enabled him to enter into the spirit of their problems. The problems arising from the white man's contact with the Negro are similar throughout the world. The differences are those of degree, not kind. The white laboring class of South Africa is extremely hard pressed by reason of disastrous competition with the low standards of the colored, who outnumber the whites five to one. If the writer has been seemingly severe in criticism of the institutions of South Africa, it is because his living there identified him with the present status and the needs of the white laboring class upon which the civilization depends. The white workingmen will have to arouse themselves if civilization is to continue in South Africa. They need to realize that their present danger is a man-made danger and can be remedied by human agency.