Financial History 134 (Summer 2020) | Page 23

By Jill Watts During the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Black Americans were appointed to federal posts at historically large numbers. Together they eventually formed an advisory body known as the Black Cabinet, which was led by the crusading educator Mary McLeod Bethune and the brilliant economist Robert Weaver. But early on Black inclusion was met with stiff resistance, and appointees had to fight for both a voice in the administration as well as relief for the Black community. In August 1933, Robert Weaver returned to his academic post at Greensboro’s North Carolina Agriculture and Technical College. He dreaded going back. While he was a popular professor, he found teaching there a chore. He felt smothered by Greensboro’s omnipresent segregationist traditions and laws; he isolated himself, refusing to patronize segregated stores and entertainment venues. In Greensboro and its surroundings, Weaver became exposed to the rawest versions of white southern racism. As he traveled in and out of town, he passed sharecroppers’ shacks and the cotton and tobacco fields where Black farmers barely scratched out a living. The Depression had hit North Carolina hard. By fall 1933, 25% of all families there depended on some kind of public or private assistance; the NAACP estimated that the rate was far higher for the Black rural population. And poverty haunted not only rural areas but also the cities. The textile industry was one of North Carolina’s largest employers, and it had collapsed with the Depression’s onset. Large textile mills stood on the hills surrounding Greensboro—they had dominated the city’s economic life. As the economy deteriorated, Impoverished Black children in the Mississippi Delta, July 1936. Dorothea Lange, photographer. Black mill workers were laid off or cut back to starvation wages at a far greater rate than white workers. At night, Weaver meticulously pored over the numbers, mining them for irrefutable proof that Black communities were in a downward spiral. That summer he tracked the data of 12,000 Black cotton-mill workers nationwide who had managed to hang on to their jobs. He determined that 75% of them were grossly underpaid and overworked, despite the National Recovery Administration’s mandates regarding minimum wages and maximum hours. Times were hard and people took any job they could get—even if they earned almost nothing. This was, as Kansas City’s Plaindealer pointed out, a “new kind of slavery.” As Weaver walked Greensboro’s Black neighborhoods, he witnessed firsthand the impact of the Great Depression and the suffering it caused. Families were homeless; children went hungry. For Weaver, the experience marked the beginning of a transformation. His determination to resist American racism grew. “The lash of prejudice is not the overt lash; it’s the subtle lash of feeling yourself up against an iron block of prejudice that is the most cutting. Because I had been protected, I felt the cut more deeply,” he reflected. The Robert Weaver who came to Greensboro was a man of limited but rare privileges. In 1933, he was only 26, but he was impressive in nearly every way. Handsome, with a chiseled jaw and a sly smile, Weaver radiated confidence, pride and dignity. His grandfather, DC dentist Robert Tanner Freeman, remained a celebrated figure in Washington’s Black community. His grandmother, Rachel Turner, born out of wedlock to white parents, had been raised by an African American family and lived her life as a Black woman. Weaver’s mother, Florence was born shortly before her father’s early death. Rachel Turner remarried in 1890—and well at that. Her second husband, Albert J. Farley, was a clerk for the Supreme Court, and his salary enabled the family to move to the middle class, interracial Washington, DC suburb of Brookland. Weaver’s father, Mortimer Grover Weaver, came from far humbler origins. He was born on a farm in Fauquier County, VA. His mother was a domestic and his father was a former white slaveholder who had sided with the Confederacy. As a child, Mortimer worked in the fields. But when he reached his teens, he was sent off to attend high school in the District of Columbia. A few years after graduation, he secured a prized position in the city’s post office. A careful guardian of his earnings, Mortimer Weaver saved his money and, in 1901, married Florence Freeman. He purchased a home in Brookland and, eventually, a seaside cottage for weekend getaways. The Weavers quickly added two sons to their family, Mortimer Grover Jr. and Robert Clifton. The Weavers were intensely proud of their sons and were determined that they should have the finest that could be offered to African American children. The closest Black secondary school was the top in the country—Paul Laurence Dunbar High School. Dunbar was rigorous and challenging, requiring students to master all academic disciplines. In Weaver’s era, 80% of the school’s graduates attended northern colleges; many were admitted to the most prestigious in the nation. Robert Weaver graduated near the top of his class at Dunbar. In 1925, he enrolled at Harvard and declared an economics major. After finishing his bachelor’s degree with honors, he then attempted to do what no African American had ever done before—earn a PhD from Harvard’s extremely conservative economics department. It was not a welcoming environment. Weaver remembered that the department’s most influential scholar, Frank Taussig, “didn’t think that Black men had aptitude for economics.” Nonetheless, Weaver excelled. After passing his comprehensive examinations with high marks, he focused on crafting his thesis, entitled “The High Wage Theory of Prosperity.” In 1931, he headed to Greensboro to teach. On weekends, he often returned to Brookland to work with his long-time friend John P. Davis. They founded an www.MoAF.org | Summer 2020 | FINANCIAL HISTORY 21