Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 356 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 356 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

Interviewer:  Miss Irene Robertson
Person Interviewed:  John Bowdry, Clarendon, Arkansas
Age:  75

“I was born at Baldwyn, Mississippi not for from Corinth.  When my mother was last seen she was going away with a bunch of Yankees.  I don’t know what it was.  She was a dark woman.  Pa was light.  I was born in 1865.  I was left when I was two or three months old.  I never seen no pa.  They left me with my uncle what raised me.  He was a slave but too young to go to war.  His master was named Porter.  Master Stevenson had sold him.  He liked Porter the best.  He took the name of Stanfield Porter at freedom.  Porters had a ordinary farm.  He wasn’t rich.  He had a few slaves.  Stevenson had a lot of slaves.  Grandfather was in Charleston, South Carolina.  Him and my uncle corresponded.  My uncle learnet to read and write but I guess somebody done his writing for him at the other end.

“My Uncle Stanfield seen a heap of the War.  He seen them fight, come by in droves a mile long.  They wasted their feed and living too.

“At freedom Master Porter told them about it and he lived on there a few years till I come into recollection.  I found out about my pa and mother.  They had three sets of children in the house.  They was better to them.  All of them got better treatment ’en I did.  One day I left.  I’d been making up my mind to leave.  I was thirteen years old.  Scared of everything.  I walked twenty miles to Middleton, Tennessee.  I slept at the state line at some stranger’s but at black folks’ house.  I walked all day two days.  I got a job at some white folks good as my parents.  His name wae J.D.  Palmer.  He was a big farmer.  I slept in a servant’s house and et in his own kitchen.  He sont me to school two two-month terms.  Four months all I got.  I got my board then four months.  I got my board and eight dollars a month the other months in the year.  He died.

“I come to Forrest City when I was twenty years old.

“I been married.  I got a girl lives wid me here.  My girl, she married.

“I ain’t got no complaint again’ the times.  My life has been fair.  I worked mighty hard.”

Name of Interviewer:  Irene Robertson Subject:  Ex-Slave—­History

This information given by:  Jack Boyd
Place of Residence:  Hazen, Arkansas
Occupation:  Light jobs now.  Age:  72
[TR:  Information moved from bottom of first page.]

[HW:  The Boyd Negroes]

Jack Boyd was born a slave.  Miss Ester’s mother was a Boyd and married a Donnahoo.  Miss Ester Donnahoo married Jim Shed.  The Boyd’s lived in Richmond, Virginia.  They sold Jack Boyd’s grandmother, grandfather, mother, and father a number of times.  One time they were down, in Georgia not far from Atalnta.  They were being ill treated.  The new master had promised to be good to them so he wasn’t and the news had gotten back to Virginia

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Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.