Forty acres and a mule



Forty acres and a mule

A a government handout; a broken promise. As Union general William T. Sherman marched through Georgia and other parts of the confederacy during the Civil War, he promised freed slaves the gift of forty acres of South Carolina and Georgia farmland and an army mule with which to work the soil. Following the war, however, President Johnson rescinded Sherman's order, and the appropriated land was restored to its owners. While most citizens adopted the phrase as a metaphor for either any form of government handout (or a trifling salary or bonus from their employer), African-Americans who remembered the expression's history used it as a rueful reminder of a offer that was reneged upon.
See also: acre, and, forty, mule

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
MaeMAYEnglish
RikRIKDutch
Kepa-Basque
PhilippaFIL-i-pə (English), fi-LIP-ə (English)English (British), German
Ryuunosukeṙyoo:-no-soo-ke, ṙyoo:-no-skeJapanese
Ozias-Biblical Latin, Biblical Greek