Hiram Revels worked with the Freedmen's Bureau to create schools for African American children in Mississippi. He had also helped to establish a school in St. Louis for freedmen before moving to Mississippi.
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what was the purpose of the Freedman's bureau? provide work, education, and relief for former slaves.The main purpose of the Freedman's Bureau was to provide assistance to former slaves and whites after the Civil war. The Freedman's Bureau ended after Reconstruction.
That whites and blacks should live together.
White Southerners resented the work of the Freedmans's Bureau. Many white southerners resented the aid offered by the Freedmen's Bureau. Lincoln's plan of reconstruction, however, was not based on trying to lay blame on the Southern states for starting the war. Rather it was a conciliatory effort based on the belief that the Confederate states had never left the Union.
On March 3, 1865, Congress established the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, commonly known as the Freedmen's Bureau, which was intended to address all of the concerns of the refugees and freedmen who lived within the states during Reconstruction. It was to be in service for only one year but, on July 16, 1866, Congress extended the life of the bureau despite the veto by President Andrew Johnson. The bureau's main purposes were to establish schools, to help the freedmen to resettle, to provide food and medical care, to manage abandoned or confiscated property, to ensure justice for the freedmen, and to regulate labor. In many cases, it also provided aid for destitute whites. The bureau opened 4000 free schools, including several colleges, and educated 250,000 African Americans. By 1870, 21% of African-American population could read. Although the bureau was successful in its educational goals, it failed in its goal to help the freedmen to resettle. While the bureau gave 850,000 acres to the freedmen, President Andrew Johnson revoked the land and gave it to the Confederate landowners, instead. Consequently, the bureau focused upon employment and encouraged the freedmen to work on plantations. However, problems arose when the freedmen became sharecroppers and tenant farmers. Even though there were many problems, the Freedmen's Bureau did help the newly freed African-Americans to get the rights that they had been denied. These included the right to an education, the right to due process, the right to the practice of religion, and the right to contract.
He was a hard-working Quaker, so proabably on Sundays when there was no work after church, otherwise it was work work work with worship for Jesus in there as well.