.� I • I drove, an company � ith the Hon. L. B. D Voignes, the prob te jud e of the county, r, x nnett Thr her, a ne paper .riter, and r, Je e W. ladrey, the latter one of the mo pro perou colored f rmer in the county, from C polis in th direction of Calvin to n hip, e soon n goin throu h ell-cultivnt d f rm and p t comfortable-look in f rrn-houses, The farm , for the mo t p rt, in their en­ eral ppe ranee comp red favorably ith th av r e farm e av in Michig n. M ny of the hou ere 1 rge, attr ctive, nd well built. 'The yards -ere made beautiful ith ,hrubbery, and fto - er The b m , tock, poultry, and other farm attachments ere in keeping ith every thin el that ea. In our drive of nearly ten hour, in hich e covered thirty miles of territory, through Calvin to n hip nd part of Porter, the adjoining to n hip, e sa little to indi­ cate that e ere � a egro to n except the color of the face t the people. . They � ere up to the aver e of their white neighbor. There are perhap. fe township in the South among the agri­ cultural classes that would compare favor­ ably with thi one. In a few cases it was inter ting to standing on the me premises the mall cabin in hich the people began life years ago, and then to see near it a modem frame cottage. conta,ining six or seven rooms. To me it as interesting and encouraging to note to what an extent these people "lived at home," that is, produced what, ' �. Consumed. My visit took me throug he community during the harvesting season, and at that time most of the farmers 'ere engaged in threshing wheat and oats. On one (arm we saw a large, modern steam thre her at work. Around it ere employed some twenty men. This complicated piece of mac inery beinl operat d holl b , or Ui ere! n , ... 0 ned by a negro by the name of Henry L Archer.· Mr. Archer not only threshed grain for the negro farmers in his township, but for' the white farmers as well ' In speaking of the extent to which these people U keep themselves," I want to say that their home-raised and home-cured' pork I, Ithout any re ervation, the best I ever tasted. I as particularly struck with this when visiting the home of Mr. Allen, of Porter township, the negro stock-raiser and stock-trader. " Bill" Allen has as high standing for probity and shrewdness among the people in the Chicago stock­ yard as the average white man. His many well-filled barns and the large num­ ber of valuable horses, cows, pigs, and sheep he owns were among the most interesting sights that I saw. ' ; William Allen was born in Logan County, Ohio, but his parents were free colored people from North Carolina. To • speak in more detail about Mr. Allen, I found that he owns seven hundred acres of land, and that the taxes which he paid last year in the two townships of Calvin and Porter amounted to ,191. When I vi ited his farm, he had fifty head of catt e, ten horses, three hundred sheep, and twenty-five hogs. All of his property is paid for. Mr. Allen is one of the few men I have heard of as resigning a political office. He was a Justice of the Peace for eighteen years, and resigned because it took too much of his time away from his Iarm. lt wa rather remarkable to learn that Samuel Hawkes, a fine specimen of the race, pays the largest tax of anyone, white or black, in the township of Calvin. His tax this year was '154.36. In, addi­ tion to this, Mr. Hawkes paid over 'SO B A HI CTO '1 C. . C dler taxes on property which is in his charge as an drninistrator, He own about five hundred acres of land, free of encum­ brance. He is highly spoken of by every one hom I aw, of both race, including . the coulUy offtcials and the cashier of the bank at Cusopolis, who aid hi cr dit was good at that institution. I as told on good authority that Mr. Hawke is orth '50,000. He has perhaps learned the lesson that not a few hite people have learned-not to give in all of their property for the purpo e of taxation. Sam Hawk as born in Not _ly (Aunt,; I , I 1 . I 1837 moved to Jacklon County, Ohio, and r mained there until he. came to Calvin in 1853. He is entirely a elf-made man, beginning ork for himself at the age of sixteen, cutting cord ood. He had saved up enough money so that when he came to Calvin in 1853 he as able to buy the eighty acres of land on rhich he still live ,paying for it ,800 in, as he expresses it, "gold and silver." He then ent back to Ohio and orked there six year longer before he came to Calvin to live permanently on his farm. For the last quarter of a century. )ff. Hawkes has devoted him elf to the zeneral manage ment of his property, loaning money, and dealing in real estate. Cornelius Lawson, the Supervisor for Calvin; is a native of North Carolina, whose parents' moved to Cass County after an intermediate residence of some years in Indiana, He has lived in Cal­ vin since 1853. He was elected a Justice of the Peace in 1878, and retained the office until the present year. In 1899 he was elected Supervisor, and has been re­ elected every year since. Mr. Lawson is a farmer, and lives about a mile from lI'rhe Corner "-the official center of Calvin, He is the first colored man to be elected to the County Board of Supervisors. It would be difficult for me to give a better idea of the industry and prosperity of these! people than can be obtained from reading the following extract f.rom a letter which I received not long after my visit to Cas County!' The letter is from one of the most reliable colored men in the county, and, I ought to add. was written with no thought that it was to be published : .... nry L Archer WI. tM great grand uncle of Denn Archer, who I. now I olndldat. for Mayor Of Detroit and form.rIy .4H'Wd • I Michigan uprem. Court Juetlo •• HAU. IN CALVIN, WITH THI't �UP£"VISOR, TOW CLERK, AND TWO OTKa One que tion th t i often deb ted is to the ability of the n 0 for If· v­ ernm nt from a political point of vie , and I extremely anxiou to t infor­ marion on thi. In Calvin to n hip in 1900 th re . 'ere 759 negroes and 512 \ rhites, I m de dili nt inquiry to a er­ t in if ther a any friction between the h 0 rae , and could find no evidence th t there a. J ud e Des Voigne and other county officer informed me tb t there ere no reports of cheatin t the ballot-boxes, nd th t the aft ir of the town hip ere conducted as ell politic l1y a any in the county. For some years, the J u id, it had been the bo of the negro tax collector of Calvin that s one of· the first collector to secure nd p y into the county treasury all of the to nship taxes. On 'one recent occa ion it wa aid th t when another to n w. trying to beat Calvin in thi , and the Calvin tax-gatherer's report was delayed, largely through the tardiness of one negro taxpayer, hose tax � only three dollars, r ther than have Calvin 10 e it reputation for promptnes a number of the public­ spirited negroes" chipped in" and paid the tax of the delinquent. / CORNELIUS LAWSON Su� of the tOWl hip of Calvin. , Cassopolis. Mlchlpn, Nov mber 3,1902. JJfr. Boo/:lr T. IVask;IIlloN: Dear Friend=-I will impo e upon your pre­ cious time only long enough for you to read th is, as no an wer is nece sary. I wanted to tell you that I thrashed those stacks of grain that you saw when at our place. Mr. Archer did the thrashing in-one day-944 bushels of oats and 884 bushels of wheat. I paid him '41.«. On the 29th I hipped a car­ load of hop and sheep of my 0 n raising to­ Chicago. I received '707.30 for the same. I have 167 sheep �e!t and about 80 head of hOI i this includes all sIzes .... Your humble servant. . J. W. MAJ>KEY •• I found that there was another colored man in the township, Mr. C. W. Bunn, who owns two sawmills and much other real estate. He is said to be worth ,50,000. In several cases I noticed that the car­ pets on the Boors of the home of the 'people wer� of the home-made kind, but they were hand ome and substantial. A considerable numbet of the colored people - in Calvin township own their homes, and many of those who are renting are doing so from negro landowners. I n a few case. hite people in the county are rent­ ing property owned by negroe •• There are, I believe, eight schools in Calvin, four of them taught by colored teachers. ' Not only are the teachers col­ ored, but the schools are controlled by negro school, officials f�r the most part. As we drove through the to mship I found a copy of the following .not�ce posted: ANNUAL SCHOOL MEETING State of Michigan NOTICE is hereby given to the qualified Voter of School Di trict No.8 of the Town· ship of Calvin that the Annual Meeting of aid Di tric:t will be held at the Schoolhouse on Monday evenin�t the 1st oay of September, A. O. 1902, at 8 0 clock, for the :1ection of School Di trict Officer., and for the transac­ tion of such other buslne a shall lawfully come before it. Dated thi.15th day of Aug� t, 19�2. C. F. NOltTHROP, Director. Mr. C. F. Northrop is a neg-roo 'So far as I could judge by the appearance of the teachers and the chool building , they compared favorably with other in that part of the State. In addition to the negro teacher. and ministers, there are two negro phy iciana in the township. Each township in the county is entitled to one representative on the County Board of Commissioners which has the control of the affairs of the. entire county. The representative of Calvin is a black maa, and I was told by everal white people of the county that the negro Commissioner voted intelligently and conservatively. So far as I could find evidence, there had never been in the township any "scan­ dal " growing out of the misuse of money by public officials, notwithstanding, as I have said, that each township levies and collects its own taxes for schools and other public enterprises. TO BE CONTINUED "To me it was interesting and • encouraging to note to what an extent these. people "lived at home," that is, produced what they consumed. " - BOOKER T. WASHINGTON .peaklng In 1102 of tM rulel ... of Calvin Twp.