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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 143 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 143 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

Der wuz three of us chillun.  Charles, de oldest, den Anthony next and den me, de youngest.  I wuz workin’ for a white man and wuz old enough to drive cows and work in de ‘bacco fields, pickin’ worms off de leaves.  De other brudders worked wid my father on another plantation.  De house where I lived wid de white Massa Lewis Northsinge and his Missus, wuz a log house wid just two rooms.  I had just a little straw tick and a cot dat de massa made himself and I hed a common quilt dat de missus made to cover me.

I hear dat my grandmother died during slavery and dat my grandfather wuz killed by his massa during slavery.

On Sunday I would go home and stay wid my father and mother and two brothers.  We would play around wid ball and marbles.  We had no school or church.  We were too far away for church.

I earned no money.  All I got wus just my food and clothes.  I wuz leasted out to my massa and missus.  I ate corn bread, fat hog meat and drank butter milk.  Sometimes my father would catch possum and my mother would cook them, and bring me over a piece.  I used to eat rabbit and fish.  Dey used to go fishin’ in de creek.  I liked rabbit and groundhog.  De food wuz boiled and roasted in de oven.  De slaves have a little patch for a garden and day work it mostly at night when it wuz moonlight.

We wore geans and shirts of yellow cotton, we wore no shoes up til Christmas.  I wore just de same during de summer except a little coat.  We had no under shirt lik we have now.  We wore de same on Sunday.  Der wuz no Sunday suit.

De mass and missus hed one boy.  De boy wuz much older than I. Dey were all kind to me.  I remember plenty poor white chillun.  I remember Will and John Nathan.  Dey were poor white people.

My massa had three plantations.  He had five slaves on one and four on another.  I worked on one with four slaves.  My father worked on one wid my brother and mother.  We would wake up at 4 and 5 o’clock and do chores in de barn by lamp light.  De overseer would ring a bell in de yeard, if it wuz not too cold to go out.  If it wuz too cold he would cum and knock on de door.  It wuz 8 or 9 o’clock fore we cum in at night.  Den we have to milk de cows to fore we have supper.

De slaves were punished fore cumin’ in too soon and unhitching de horses.  Dey would bend dem accross a barrel and switch dem and den send dem back to de fields.

I head dem say dey switch de blood out of dem and salt de wound den dey could not work de next day.

I saw slaves sold.  Dey would stand on a block and men would bid for dem.  De highest bidder bought de slaves.  I saw dem travel in groups, not chained, one white man in front and one in back.  Dey looked like cattle.

De white folks never learned me to read or write.

Der were petrollers.  Dey were mean if dey catch you out late at night.  If a slave wus out late at night he had to have a notice from his massa.  Der wuz trouble if de slaves were out late at night or if dey run off to another man.

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