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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 375 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 375 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

“I was born in north Georgia.  It was not fer from Rome.  We belong to Master Belton Moore and Miss Jane Moore.  They had a big family, some grandchildren old as their own.  That was my job playing wid the children.  My parents’ name Rob Moore and Pilfy Calley.  She lived five miles from Belton Moore’s house.  She was hired out over at Moore’s the way she and papa met up.  I know now I was hired out too.  I run after them children a long time it seemed like to me.  I loved them and they cried after me.  I get so tired I’d slip off and go up in the loft and soon be asleep.  I learned to climb a ladder that very way.  It was nailed up straight against the side of the wall.  They’d ask me where I been.  They never did whoop me fer that.  I tell ’em I been asleep.  I drapped off ’sleep.  I was so tired.  Papa helped with the young calves and the feeding and in the field too.  Mama was a fast hand in the field.  They called her a little guinea woman.  She could outdo me when I was grown and she was getting old.  She washed fer the Calley’s.  All I remember they was a old man and woman.  Mama lived in the office at their house.  He let her ride a horse to Moore’s to work.  I rode home wid her many a time.  She rode a side saddle.  I rode sideways too.  She used a battling stick long as she lived when she washed.

“Papa died two years after the surrender in Atlanta, Georgia.  The Moore’s moved there and he went along.  He left mama at Master Calley’s and I was still kept at the old home place.  Aunt Jilly kept me and my two oldest sisters.  Her name was Jilly Calley.  I seen mama right often.  They fetched papa back to see us a few times and then he died.  We all went to Atlanta where he was buried.  Mama lived to be purty nigh a hundred years old.  She had fourteen children.  I had two sisters and eight half-brothers and three half-sisters.  Some died so young they never was named.  My stepfather was mean to her and beat her, caused some of their deaths.  She was a midwife in her later years.  She made us a living till I married.  She was gone with Dr. Harrison a lot.  He’d come take her off and bring her home in the buggy.  I married and immigrated to Dell, Arkansas.  We lived there a year and went to Memphis.  Mama come there and died at my house.  She got blind.  Had to lead her about.  My steppapa went off and never come back.  He got drunk whenever he could get to it.  We hunted him and asked about him.  I think he went off with other women.  We heard he did.

“Freedom—­I heard Miss Jane say when she was packing up to go to Atlanta, ‘I will get a nurse there.  They will make her go to school.’  I thought she was talking about me.  I wanted to go.  I loved the children.  I got to go to school in the country a right smart.  I can read and write.  Me and my two sisters all was in the same class.  It seemed strange then.  We had a colored man teacher, Mr. Jacobin.  It was easier for me to learn than my sisters.  They are both dead now.

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