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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 373 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 373 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

“They took their slaves to close to Houston, Texas to save them.  Captain Jones said he didn’t want the Yankees to scatter them and make soldiers of them.  He brought them back on his place like he expected to do.  Mama said they was out there three years.  She had a baby three months old and the trip was hard on her and the baby but they stood it.  I was her next baby after that.  Freedom done been declared.  Mama said they went in wagons and camped along the roadside at night.

“Before they left, the Yankees come.  Old Master Jones treated them so nice, give them a big dinner, and opened up everything and offered some for them to take along that they didn’t bother his stock nor meat.  Then he had them (the slaves) set out with stock and supplies to Texas.

“Mama and papa said the Jones treated them pretty well.  They wouldn’t allow the overseers to beat up his slaves.

“The two Jones men put two barrels of money in a big iron chest.  They said it weighed two hundred pounds.  Four men took it out there in barrels and eight men lowered it.  They took it to the family graveyard down past the orchard.  They leveled it up like it was a grave.  Yankees didn’t get Jones money!  Then he sent the slaves to Texas.

“Captain Jones had a home in Tennessee and one in Arkansas.  Papa said he cleared out land along the river where there was panther, bears, and wild cats.  They worked in huddles and the overseers had guns to shoot varmints.  He said their breakfast and dinner was sent to the field, them that had wives had supper with their families once a day, on Sundays three times.  The women left the fields to go fix supper and see after their cabins and children.  They hauled their water in barrels and put it under the trees.  They cooked washpots full of chicken and give them a big picnic dinner after they lay by crops and at Christmas.  They had gourd banjos.  Mama said they had good times.

“They had preaching one Sunday for white folks and one Sunday for black folks.  They used the same preacher there but some colored preachers would come on the place at times and preach under the trees down at the quarters.  They said the white preacher would say, ’You may get to the kitchen of heaven if you obey your master, if you don’t steal, if you tell no stories, etc.’

“Captain Jones was a good doctor.  If a doctor was had you know somebody was right low.  They seldom had a doctor.  Mama said her coat tail froze and her working.  But they wore warm clothes next to their bodies.

“Captain Jones said, ’You all can go back on my place that want to go back and stay.  You will have to learn to look after your own selves now but I will advise you and help you best I can.  You will have to work hard as us have done b’fore.  But I will pay you.’  My folks was ready to ‘board the wagons back to Jones’ farm then.  That is the way mama tole me it was at freedom!  It was a long time I kept wondering what is freedom?  I took to noticing what they said it was in slavery times and I caught on.  I found out times had changed just b’fore I got into this world.

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