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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 148 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 148 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

“We lived off to the back of the masters house in a little log cabin, that had one winder in the side.  We lived tobly well and didn’t starve fer we had enough to eat but we didn’t have as good as the master and mistress had.  We would slip in the house after the master and mistress wuz sleeping and cook to suit ourselves and cook what we wanted.

“The Mistress had an old parrot and one day I wuz in the kitchen making cookies, and I decided I wanted some of them so I tooks me out some and put them on a chair and when I did this the mistress entered the door, I picks up a cushion and throws over the pile of cookies on the chair and mistress cane near the chair and the old parrot cries out, Mistress burn, Mistress burn, then the mistress looks under the cushion and she had me whupped but the next day I killed the parrot, and she often wondered who or what killed the bird.

“I’ve seen whole pigs roasted before open fire place and when it wuz done we would put a nice red apple in its mouth and the big white folks company that come would eat of this delicious dish.  Sometimes we had to bake pies for a week to supply the company that wuz invited to our masters and mistresses house.  They served elaborate dinners and hundreds of guest were invited.

“My master wuzn’t as mean as most masters.  Hugh White was so mean to his slaves that I know of two gals that killt themselfs.  One nigger gal sudie wuz found across the bed with a pen knife in her hand.  He whipped another nigger gal most to death fer fergiting to put onions in the stew.  The next day she went down to the river and fer nine days they searched fer her and her body finally washed upon the shore.  The master could never live in that house again as when he would go to sleep he would see the nigger standing over his bed.  Then he moved to Richmond and there he stayed until a little later when he hung himself.

“Our clothes wuz made from cotton and linsey.  Cotton wuz used in the summer and linsey fer the winter.  Sometimes our clothes wuz yeller checked and most time red.  Our stockings wuz made of coarse yarn fer winter to wear with coarse shoes.  We had high topped shoes fer Sunday.

“I’ve seed ten thousand of the Union Soldiers and a great many of the rebel soldiers.  The Rebel soldiers would take everything they could get their hands on but I never did know of the Union Soldier taking anything.  The rebels have stole my masters cows and horses and we would have to hide the meat in a box and bury it in the ground.”

BOYD CO.  (Carl F. Hall)

The Commonwealth of Kentucky, having for a northern boundary the Ohio River—­the dividing line between the northern free states and the southern slave states has always been regarded as a southern state.  As in the other states of the old south, slavery was an institution until the Thirteenth Ammendment to the Constitution of the United States gave the negro freedom in 1865.

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