in agriculture1,566,627
in extraction of minerals72,892
in manufacturing and mechanical industries781,827
in transportation308,896
in trade129,309
in public service49,586
in professional service41,056
in domestic and personal service273,959
in clerical occupations28,710

The women were employed as follows:

in agriculture612,261
in manufacturing and mechanical industries104,983
in trade11,158
in professional service39,127
in domestic and personal service790,631
in clerical occupations8,301

A list of occupations in which at least 10,000 Negroes were engaged in 1920 is impressive:

Males
Farmers845,299
Farm laborers664,567
Garden laborers15,246
Lumber men25,400
Coal miners54,432
Masons10,606
Carpenters34,217
Firemen (not locomotive)23,152
Laborers127,860
Laborers in chemical industries17,201
Laborers in cigar and tobacco factories12,951
Laborers in clay, glass and stone industries18,130
Laborers in food industries24,638
Laborers in iron and steel industries104,518
Laborers in lumber and furniture industries103,154
Laborers in cotton mills10,182
Laborers in other industries80,583
Machinists10,286
Semi-skilled operatives in food industries11,160
Semi-skilled operatives in iron and steel industries22,916
Semi-skilled operatives in other industries14,745
Longshoremen27,206
Chauffeurs38,460
Draymen56,556
Street laborers35,673
Railway laborers99,967
Delivery men24,352
Laborers in coal yards, warehouses, etc.27,197
Laborers, etc., in stores39,446
Retail dealers20,390
Laborers in public service29,591
Soldiers, sailors12,511
Clergymen19,343
Barbers, etc.18,692
Janitors38,662
Porters not in stores59,197
Servants80,209
Waiters31,681
Clerks except in stores14,014
Messengers12,587
Females
Farmers79,893
Farm laborers527,937
Dressmakers and seamstresses26,961
Semi-skilled operatives in cigar and tobacco factories13,446
Teachers29,244
Hairdressers and manicurists12,660
Housekeepers and stewards13,250
Laundresses not in laundries283,557
Laundry operatives21,084
Midwives and nurses (not trained)13,888
Servants401,381
Waiters14,155

This has been the gift of labor, one of the greatest that the Negro has made to American nationality. It was in part involuntary, but whether given willingly or not, it was given and America profited by the gift. This labor was always of the highest economic and even spiritual importance. During the World War for instance, the most important single thing that America could do for the Allies was to furnish them with materials. The actual fighting of American troops, while important, was not nearly as important as American food and munitions; but this material must not only be supplied, it must be transported, handled and delivered in America and in France; and it was here that the Negro stevedore troops behind the battle line—men who received no medals and little mention and were in fact despised as all manual workers have always been despised,—it was these men that made the victory of the Allies certain by their desperately difficult but splendid work. The first colored stevedores went over in June, 1917, and were followed by about 50,000 volunteers. To these were added later nearly 200,000 drafted men.

To all this we must add the peculiar spiritual contribution which the Negro made to Labor. Always physical fact has its spiritual complement, but in this case the gift is apt to be forgotten or slurred over. This gift is the thing that is usually known as “laziness”. Again and again men speak of the laziness of Negro labor and some suppose that slavery of Negroes was necessary on that account; and that even in freedom Negroes must be “driven”. On the other hand and in contradiction to this is the fact that Negroes do work and work efficiently. In South Africa and in Nigeria, in the Sudan and in Brazil, in the West Indies and all over the United States Negro labor has accomplished tremendous tasks. One of its latest and greatest tasks has been the building of the Panama Canal. These two sets of facts, therefore, would seem to be mutually contradictory, and many a northern manager has seen the contradiction when, facing the apparent laziness of Negro hands, he has attempted to drive them and found out that he could not and at the same time has afterward seen someone used to Negro labor get a tremendous amount of work out of the same gangs. The explanation of all this is clear and simple: The Negro laborer has not been trained in modern organized industry but rather in quite a different school.

The European workman works long hours and every day in the week because it is only in this way that he can support himself and family. With the present organization of industry and methods of distributing the results of industry any failure of the European workingman to toil hard and steadily would mean either starvation or social disgrace through the lowering of his standard of living. The Negro workingman on the other hand came out of an organization of industry which was communistic and did not call for unlimited toil on the part of the workers. There was work and hard work to do, for even in the fertile tropical lands the task of fighting weeds, floods, animals, insects and germs was no easy thing. But on the other hand the distribution of products was much simpler and fairer and the wants of the people were less developed. The black tropical worker therefore looked upon work as a necessary evil and maintained his right to balance the relative allurements of leisure and satisfaction at any particular day, hour or season. Moreover in the simple work-organization of tropical or semi-tropical life individual desires of this sort did not usually disarrange the whole economic process or machine.[70]

The white laborer therefore brought to America the habit of regular, continuous toil which he regarded as a great moral duty. The black laborer brought the idea of toil as a necessary evil ministering to the pleasure of life. While the gift of the white laborer made America rich, or at least made many Americans rich, it will take the psychology of the black man to make it happy. New and better organization of industry and a clearer conception of the value of effort and a wider knowledge of the process of production must come in, so as to increase the wage of the worker and decrease rent, interest, and profit; and then the black laborer’s subconscious contribution to current economics will be recognized as of tremendous and increasing importance.