"Ex Slave Tales," DeKalb County.

Folder contains 27 pages of former slave narratives compiled for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the late 1930s.Y. Fowler, 0 Fort Payne, labama De Kalb Cour. ty CL~SSI rtn/'''; .<I II $'t." Mil Ex- lave Stories- " I e sure I lTust ha' been aro O~cial...

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collection WPA Alabama Writers' Project Collection
building Alabama Department of Archives and History
publisher Alabama Department of Archives and History
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"Ex Slave Tales," DeKalb County.
fulltopic WPA Alabama Writers' Project
African Americans--Alabama--Biography; Alabama Writers' Project; DeKalb County (Ala.); Slaves--Alabama--Biography; Slaves--Alabama--Social conditions; United States. Works Progress Administration
description Folder contains 27 pages of former slave narratives compiled for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the late 1930s.Y. Fowler, 0 Fort Payne, labama De Kalb Cour. ty CL~SSI rtn/'''; .<I II $'t." Mil Ex- lave Stories- " I e sure I lTust ha' been aro O~cial Project,265-6903_ -0: Project,No. ,30II(I) Type of tork Symbol, 1885( I) rJ then the 1ar sta.ted;as grown as I ever h s been. You say , s i x t een or seven t een,'_~Imust ha' been -but I can't rightly make that conjuration-but I could plow as well as any fiel'-han' 01' Messa had,en put the harness on,besides- " 01' ssa,an' my istis had twelve chillen-one bOY,en' leben girls-an' fi~ty of us cullid folks. fe all lived in Etowah county- "Ireckelect well when oung Yarster went off to the ar- 01' Mistis had been a laughin , kind of person,but it wes a long time before she lau hed anymore. Folks cried,E.nd hollered,an fell down like they 'vas dead,when their men-folks marched aw~y to War. e all plowed,an' hoed,an made tl.ings some-/ay, to eat .nd to wear,an' 'e /':0+ along very "ell- " But the best tire of my life,was before the 'Var Come on-Ol' lias treated us like "'e was all one big family;we had plenty to eat,en' all 'Ve needed to wear-Ol' istis done the, sewing for us all,white an cUllid_ But her an' assa believed in teaching folks to work,an' all the chillen had • to learn how +0 do everything-even to worK in the field- 01' Yassa knew what was comin',an' he'al eys say'You better learn to "/ork,for you gwine ha va it to do.' " " As I say, we li ved plen tiful-Every Saturday we killed a pig, or a calf-or some kind of fresh meat-an' it never spoiled-they was always plenty of folks to eat it up. But a white man who had nearly a hundred slaves,on a plantation not far from uS,wouldn't give his culled folks enough to eat-they even went hungry;an every once in n 'vhile,Ol' 'assa 'ud make us cook up a lot of Vittles-long tables pilin' fUll,an' ax them all over to e:: t. 2 Ex-sla ve Story_ !!. F. • • n.An' "!hen "ie at +'h"ou~h ",ith our ol'm work,'.e could hire out to other .hite families to hoe,or pick cotton-an' have some money for our _ selves;but l'e always saved that,for we had pl"nty of everything,an' that would be somethin' to have on hand. "Our nBig hO'lse" was up on a kind of a little hill;it ",as Just as !hi te-an' allan one flour-an' the kitchen , dinin'-room was off to their-selves,with a little walk-way,with a shelter,leadin' to the big house• .An out to one side,was a big room where the white folks entertain_ ed their friends-they c.lled it a 'v11iom~aB' such dances as they had there_ "The white fol s 'ud come for miles awaY,in their kerridges,an' surreys ,an , bug~ies- an' some come on horse-back. The women 'ud oome ridin' road in front. We didn't ha VB many flo···ers. bu t 10 ts of trees, up to the horse-blook in them fUll,long ridin'-habits they wore in them days,an' they would Slip they foot out of the stirrup,into the han' of the man 'vho was ridin' with them ,an ' step dotm onto the horse-blook,an' down to the groun'-an' sometimes th'y would hold their head so high, they would look like the groun' wasn't good enough to put they foot on-n. An' then a little blac. boy would take the horse an' hitoh him, an she would 0 to the guess-room,an put on her dress with all them rUf_ fles an' laoes,over her lide hoops,an' a little curl would be peepin' o­ver her s oUlder,' ith maybe a rose tucked in it,ad her little foot 'ud peep out fro~ under ~he . ide hoopS,with its strap slipper,an clock stooki '-an she would stand,an' look in the glass at herself,an' then she would go out to the 'Viliom,where the fiddles was makin' lonesome music,that Just took your heart out,an' they auld dance there till long after the roosters orowed for midni ht.n "fe had a big yard that stretohed out all around the house,an' down to the and 0001, reen grass; an' down across the road,was the houses for the oul­led fOlks_ 3 Ex-slave Stories-M.F. • • They had two big rooms, lith " c imtley at each end, an' a hall be t"'een, an' two f .i11es Ii ved in every house,one i" each room- "l.:y UIOt,my ma's sister,was the cook up at the bi house-an' my Wa was the overseer of the hands-Sometimes , they would ax Pa what to do next,an' he say, 'Ax the Boss-that her over yondah"- "01' essa never lived to see the S'render.He died e year before" the War w s over. 'Did 'e drape the mirrors,an' the pictures when he lay dead?'-Yessum,we alwFys do. Some folks say the breath of the dyin, ~ll make he ouicksilver all come off the back of the lookin'-~lass_but that aint the real reason- Sometimes 'hen the spirit's gain' out the body,it roams 'roun' in the house,an' if it sees itself in the glass-there will shore be another death in the house. " rite man come do rn from the Nawth to vi si t on a plan tation, that was a ~ood ways off from uS,an he shot himself,huntin' ,an' died-an' his mistis 'Iouldn't let 'em hang things over the glass in the house,said there wa'nt no sense in it,an' one mornin' right after he lay a corpse, she was found lyin' on her floor,dead. They said it was her heart,but we knowed Ihat it was. , o'm,1 don't believe in conjurin'_but same folks does_1 heard of a loman ·.ho always chewed the bark of a tree, when she 'ven t along a walk under the trees ,an' when she at si ck, she ,vas conjursd, an' the flyin'. an ts come out of the pores of her skin. They said that sure was 30. Why , when they conjure,they ~its to-gether all kinds of herbs and roots,and boils them to-gether with so e k~d o~ out-landish stuff,an' waves the hands ov­er them,an mumbles somethin'_but we doan have no truck with t .. in~s like that." - the Drug_ s to re, D1 dn 't do no thin' New Orleans_an' he cured he~ in three days. prescription,an' we bourht the medicine from "When ~y ma got sick,an fell off till she was like skin an' bone , my si s ter son t "or hsr to come to Bilmminham an h h d there fran. '-- , sea a fine doctor up but "i va a 4 Ex-sla ve Stories-M. F. • it was &11 just ~ o\vln l ho "- "I hear " song on th Rad.io that took me back to them d.ays- "In tho EV'J"in' nv tho oon11 ..ht"-an' I thouP'ht of them d."ys,before 01' Massa died.,an before the lar come on,ho"1 on moon-li ht ni1;hts,E.fter all the sup­! er things was done,Ne 'ould all it out in front of the ouse-Ol' assa, an' istis,an' Young rter,an' 11 +he little i"siles,-",ould sit on the rorch,an' on the 'ong, hite steps,an' young Lerster 'ould play he iddle­an' some o:! h o culled folks 'Iould pick the banjers-an' "e '1Ould all sing. The culled 'olks 'olld sin..S~1ng Lo ,Sweet Chariot,Comin' fo to C&rry me Home-" an' I:O'~ ~h t I ""'J1t remeC"ber now. "After th~ 1ar,Ol' llistis -as struck by lightenin' an' kilt.An' then my :Fa died,an' La r'nted a far!" f,.ryr: a -'f i te fan:ily on the shares. They urnished. the house,an' the land,e.r' the stock-an' "re dono the ork. Tha t vear "Ie made t",el VB b 1 s 0'" cotton ,ex' one hundred an~ fifty bushels of corn. No,the "rite f'olks didJ"'t have to stand for ou» livin' ,until 've ma de our crop; .~ h-d the n oney we had been savin '-Anough to li ve on unti til the C,.op we.s gatlered. • "Yes,Vle "'O"~' hard;rut "Ie had a ood time too.1!aybe on onday , we "ould get a card for a dance on ,Iednesday ni te- ra \"ould say, "If you get our work done,vou can '0-' No,,~ didnt take nothin'-They had long tables et the side,covered "'ith fried chicken,biscuits,pies an cakes,=' when 've danced o"'f a set,'/e'd have to "Salute' er pardner" to the table, an' he "ould ruy you eLy-thing yo saw that you wanted, to eat." "I have lived e. lor.g +ime,and have seen a 10t.But now I cant re­member ",uch,I hts "'ol""'"d so hvrd.I s w ;' ung • rster f.O off to the var, an , sa 1 t.iIT, Cor t ck,an I" 0 ' h,. has '0 a s+;ore 111 towah coun ty ,n ear Gadsden, An I s w my o III boy o off to this las' war,}1e was in the R inbo, di vision but I cen t ~ee n:uch more. I 9Jl' blind in one eye,and can't see much out of the other-Six years avo,I trou ht I lould street ri-ht out there ,on' a across the strset,th&t , - - , , • • • • • a , , • • • • a' , t '. • • • • • ,, • I , " •1 , • 1 ' , , 1. I , , • , • I • • • • • • Fowler, Fruit urst,Alabama- Ex Slave Stories­CF..,'"... /... 1/D w '""-lj assa lilliam Shepherd an' Miss Georgiana,his wife,coce fro IT. Virginia- ...' t /vJoa &1> I_ an' his plantation w' s in Lowndes oountY,between Mac's Switch ,an , },loll'gans ville. They had two little girls,Nellie an' Maggie-Kaggie was ths younges' an' her an I ~~s about ths same age.1 was the only light nigger in the fam ilY,en ' I was brou~ht up in the house with the chillen. I slep' with 'em, lived with 'em- iWice every week I went to my Kammy's cabin,Dn took a bath an' I had my own sof' shoes,an' my own night-gown an jackst,an' lived, an slep' an' played with my Yassa's chillun- Every mornin' before breakfas' it was my place to sweep the long back porch,~a+ reached clear across the back of the house,an' sweep roun' jn the yard,an then I cleaned up,an' put on a clean dress,an' played the res' of the day with the chillun-'ceptin ever' other day I churned. We pla yed hop-scotch,an' ring-a roun'-+'hs-posy,an' played house, an'lotsa things I can't remember now-1 must'a been about seven years old then- I j'u" can't tell au much about my brothers and sisters-In dem days "ve:r;'1 white family wha~ have servants, givs each chile that got mahried a pus­sonel servantTan' I never saw my oldss' sister- shs was give away befo' the family lef' Virginia.I remember sist' Celie,an' sist' Harriet,an' sist Li za - she help' un t Evelina in ths ki tchen- • One song we sung den,dat always made me cry; it was,' ammY,is OJ I Yassa gwine .sell us tomorrow?" "Yes,my chile". "Whah he gain sell us?" "Way down outh in Georgl.!1." l'Let me see if c remembsr how many ssrvants we had- Edie was the laun dress; rrie,she was the weaver;then there was Becky ,an' slia,en' Aunt a rY,an' Ed,an' John ,an , Uncle Pete,an' Uncle GeorgeThe was the house-man an' "as mahried to un t Evelina, the cook- An' Jake-he was the 0 ver-lookea.­( oversser)_he was a great,big,strong culled man- thsre was more,but I cant remember_1 was jus' a little birl thsn. Our bil" house 'vas whits,en' allan one floor-There was the big parlor, en , ths guess-room,where the vis'tors stayed_an the other sleepin'-rooms. • • • 2 Ex-sla ve Sto ry- The front porch was jus' a little porch,but it had columns in front-but the back porch was big an'w1de an'reach all across the back of the house­The kitchen an' dinin'-room was off from the house a little way,but was joined by a long covered entry-so they could go back an' forth in all kin' of weather. "Flowers? Dh,we had every kin' of flowers-Lotsa magnolia trees-I can Jus' an' the birds dartin' in an' out- Eee the big lhite blooms against the slick,shinin' leaves now~' we had cape Jassamines,ar' that purple flower with so s~eet a sce.t-oh,yes,the lila c-an' the crepe-myrtle,we had both pink an' white. 'roses _jus' rosew ever' where. 111e "~uarters" was about a hundred an' fifty or two hundred yards from the house-We went along a path behin' the house a­bout a hundred yards,an' the turned to the right an' went across to the qua rters-The servants houses an' gardens had plank fences-but the big house hed a picket fence. " The well at the house,what we used,had a pump;but down in the back,not fa far frOM the kitchen was a bie well we used for the deiry an' the laundry. There was a t~oueh from this well to the dairy,so we always had plenty of water,an' there was a stove there too,to heat plenty of water for the milk things-ve.sels an~ strainers an' oloths- Massa had a lot of cows,an' we c churned two big churns of milk every other dey. 111e dairy was big an' cool a n' we strained up the milk an' churned an' worked Up the butter here, bu t we jl:ep' it in the spring-house. There was a spring at the foot of a little hill,with a wide,spreadin'tree shad1n'it,ar' asss had a trench dug from the spring, an , walled with rock,a n' lined along the bottom with rock,an' pieces of plank was put a cross,a little ways apart,to hold the vessels steady,an' that was where we kep' the milk an' butter cool an' sweet,as with ice. Down close to the -ell,not far from the deirY,waw the laundry_It had t 10 rooms,an Arrie,lived in one of them- Arrie was the weaver,an' she could wea VB stripes,as ,ell as plein,an' they was as pretty as anything we could buy. , • :3 Ex- sla ve sto r, - Louisa cleaned the par1or, an kep ' Idissis'room nice ,an' then she didn't d do any thing else but sew-an' sistI Liza helped her lith it- After the wea'Yin \~S done,then come the se 'in-an' it took a lot of sewin' for the family- Everybody had two Sunday dresses,Clr suitsTSllmmer an' 'Vinter- an' then cloes for everyday- Fbr the men's suits the wool had to be took off an carded an rot ready to make- but we had plenty of wool from our own sheep,an had ducks an' geese-chickens,turkeys,guineaS, __no we didn't have pea -fowls. But they had 'em on a plantation not far from us- an' the .my they strut,an hold the heads so high,an their tails all spread out like a fan,my they was pretty-an' I can still hear 'em hollerin'- When they killed the hogs for the winter' mea t_ ,they took some of the han' out of the fiel' or what ever they was doin' an let them help_an' we had a smoke-house full of hams an' middlins, an , when a rainy spell 'ud come, us chillen 'ud rake up chips an' leaves,an' make a smudge of s~oke to keep the meat sweet- Eva lina done the cookin' ,with sistI Liza to help-but when we had comp'ny rrie'd help too-You say' rrie ~eem'd in demand?' Yessum,she las.Arrie was fine about everything-an she was so nice,an' helt herself so proud-lik she was almos' like the ,uality-" ~assa Shepherd an' kiss Geor iana was both i hty kin'-heartsd,and trea­ted their servants vood- I remember once when Idiss Georgina lay down to ta ke a nap , sr. , -ive me bresh to min the flies offen her,an I 'ot hot a:.. 3leepy 'lay doVID by her,ani,Rent to sleep too,an when she woke Up,an'I was a lyin' there by her,fas' asleep,she called Louisa an' laughed,an sa y, "Look ho she keeps the fliee o~f me"- An' once, when assa Shepard sent us chillen down to the Station with a note,an' he say,' ow ou go fas' ,an' get back'- But we played along the wa y,an' pick d flowers , s.n, h t IV en Ie ""me S eppin' baek,hs say,"I tol' yon to hurrv'-an I elt "+ the flowers,an sey'We ';"n .. brou h+ "oe Mme flol"e>-. an he lJ 't 1,le off a little keen switch f:.-om a bush,an' picked me "P,M' switched ne allover my hare feet an' legs-an' when he put me down,I say, , • 4 "I'm goin' tell my mammy on you. a n he throwed back his head,an' Ex-sla" Stories­She don't 'low nobody to whip me but her' j llS ' laughed, an' sai d to iss Geo rgiana, • "ilia t little devil don't l<:now I'm her aster' an' lol1ss Geor'iana,she say, 'No,l 'toni. I-"'ose she does"- There wasn't but two thjngs caus~d Massa Shepherd to whip any of his serVli very one of the married fFlmili"s he.d their own house an' garden an' chi ckens-an' every family had to ...ai se a pig, so the. t when Christmas come they could kill it,an' have a 'ig time. He always give them plenty of evero;thing,an' on Friday,after dit:ner,they had to etop 'Iork -.n' wash ,an , nn Sa t. they ironed and cle ned for Sunday. An' on Sunday momin', ssa had give 'em dishes,an knives an' forks ,an , even tablecloths,on Sunday he vlent Flr""11' ",,' pat s m~uthful' in every house I.n +hA ~"arteI'- That wa s to see that every thing vas done up,right-an if they wasn't,they ~ot a whippin' the nex' day. The other reason ,v~s,if ,~y-body start­ed ~o the fiel' on 1londav momin' vrlthout bein clean,an' ready to start out the veek right,whv they got whipped. No, a ssa didn'.t do the w>ippin'.He set on his horse :n' see it done-but Ja ke,the ever-looker ,he done the Ihippin'-but he wasn't allowed to gi ve more than a certain number of licks. "Yessum,there was places,we heard ofit,where they treated their servants b bad. The nex plantation to Us,.Govemor ,Iatts,he owned it- th-" -ay'd "e ha d his servants whipped till the bldod run-They had a white man for eve looker, 'How did we feel atout a white man that would hold a place like tha t?' 'Me called him 'po'white tre.sh'-He was so big an' strong,an he diJ. n't show no mercy to the black people,en' his master didn't care if he did n't- One of his servants stayed at the Station where they shipped off all the tlings for the soldiers-com,an' meat,an' sich like-that the white folks give out of their own cellars an' bams,an' srroke-houses,for the sol­diers- He stayed down at the Station,an' his master 'louldn't let him have a ny shoee,en' the hot cinders,sn' sll "U~t his feet-an' he boun' rags aroun' 'em, an' his master bumed the rags off his feAt-lany's the time, • • 5 ET~sla ve Stories- Bible to him-down 'h~"'e \/i th liss 'y God,kindness an I has -on~ an' she 'Iould read the ~istreated- He'd say,' Gear ~ i ana t an , the t ..,o li ttle Missi es, ~assa Sheperd hated to see servant poli teness don't co st a red cent.' f1 1ent to church-to Hopehull Baptist church Sheperd,an' iss Georgiana,an' us three chill~ of kerria~e,shaped mos' like a bowl­at the back,there was a broad Every meetin '-day, everybody about six miles eway- 'assa rode in the rock-a- ay. Thet a kin' The dri vers "eat Was high ,<n ""ront, then deep seat,an on at the back was a little seat,with its back to the c~r~~ kerriage,an' a stoop let ""own from it. That was where the l'ttle black boy set,who ot down an opened en shut the gates. Then he jumped back up, an set there,with his feet on the little stoop- The kerriage vms pulled by ~1~ bi" horses,one a baY,an' one a grey- The coach~an 'hat set up on that hiqh seAt,had on a long double-breasted bla ck coat,shiny hieh boots,an' a tall silk hat- a-sa had on a silk hat,too,but a tight waisted coat-But iSfl Georgiana,she looked like a __ ~ boka y. She didn't like to \ ea r hoops,because she had sprained her ankle ones_an' walked with a limp. But she liked to wear thin,cool,flowe~ dy dresses-dimity an' lawn-white with little flowers of blue an' pink ,an , yellow scattered over it-an' lotsa rUffles an' lace,an' a sccop_they call_ ed the onnets-made of soft, 1hite straw,comin' close over the ears,an' fla rin hi h an' spreadin' over the face,an' .filled in With flowers ,an , tied ifi th long streamers of ribbon. The little missies,with their white ruffled p~ntalets,comin do~m nearly to their shoe-tops,under the full skirted r"ssps 'i th the li ttle ti ht _ waists_an' the little snoop bonnets,an ~lat-heeled shoes__ an' back behin was the ga·e-b'y,an behin him,was the two vmgons filled ith the black servants_ We'll never see nothin like that again_ When tho ,lar was 0 v-er ,all the Shepard ser'~-ts co"'d could 'vri teo .~ ..... read,an' most of the • l' • €I Ex-slave Stories- • An' all o~ them had enouvh money to buy a little home for themselves. ;(hy loIassa Sheperd had made every family have their oWll, garden ,an ' pig, a n' erickens-an' whoever went to town,even asss,hiMself,would take the e eggs,an' c.ickens,or hatever thsy had to sell,an' they ~ot the money for the things they'd sell ,an , put it away,an'they had it when they needed it. When assa Sheperd died the second year of the War,it was whispered a­roun' that he had been slow-poisoned. By the people who t. ou~ht he was too good to hiS servants-They called us'them damn free niggers of Shepherds'- fter a .nile ,~ust before the War closed, iss Georgiana IDahried r. Sla ter,a Government man-who p;ot the supplies for the soldiers. Folks didn't think iss Geor'."iana oU<7ht to have mArried him, (assa had left her so .ell off-a n' I don't think she was very happy long,for he run through .11 th what she had-an' finally the m~ved al<SY to Texas- ~r Slater had a place here in ont~omery,they called the 'fruit-farm' , a n' they come here an canned fruit,an spent a little while every sum­mer, for a good while. We ha d al' ays been so well treated that when the servants was made free, even a fter the S'render,we jus' stayed on,an' took care of everything, jus' as 'Ie always had. But after awhile,they moved off to Texas, an' the black people settled do down "'or theilllselves, an I las took as cook by a rich South Carolina fam;l. ily,Yar ch1el,in 'ontuomery,an' they treated me like I was their own daU&h ter-I vms allowed to a out three nights in a wee' ,an' no more. No matter how much I cried,c:y tisses said, "I rouldn' t 1st mv own dau"hter 1"0 out,an' I lion t let vou- , • I had to el tays be at home by eleven o'clo~k-We had a long pla nk walk rom the front gate,up to the house,and around to the kitchen an' dinin'-room_ Sometimes in the momin',Ol' :assa say,' .did you come in las' night when I say come?'an I say, 'Yessir'-an' he saY,'I hea rd you goin'roun the house,your shoes tappin' en the walk-better not be late'- • ~. ewo plqe4 ~eoot.=. l'1a8-al'ODdo-\he-I'Og M4 lot.. or ot.heJ' ~ 1 ou·t. r..-bu.' ~ upla1ne4. 'I 1IIIl.\a be_ .~t. MY_ 7.... el4 .... __ A7. aha h S4 or 85e at. ~ look. ol4ezo .. reuaber. "'7 llt.t.le about. hOI' bro\hen u4 01....1"8 MIl ~ l'1Ioall 'lht.1 Cella. I1sf.· RaZ"rlet.t. aD4 11...• L1&a.' !be lat...... belpod Almt. E'rallDa 111 'he lt1 t.obeII • ... llrt.e4 bel' 870. t.olIIII'il \ho oe1l1Dct _deayor1A8 \0 1"8oall ~ _t. -.bel' ot .erY_t.. her _.t.ezo 0 e4. '1410 _. M laaD4I'.... ' abe 1"eoallu. '... Aft'1 aha ... 4e ...,...... 40ft ~•••u.. Amat. 1Ie1'7. U. .lola -.l ~o o-p, \he IIIIue wbo 11111'1'1e4 .Allat. SYallaa. .Jab .. 4e _ looker (01'U'"u.) &8 a sreat. big Gll1lud UII. IU' ........ at. 1 MIl't. ......bU. 1 J••t. a l1t.Ue ebanr 48.· .. .....a.r. ~t. 'he '1a1& hra.ee ... !Iap M4 whiM 1I1\h a beaut.U1ll pUleii' a4 p ••t. n.-. .hare \he 1'101.... were _t.ert.a1Ae4. GlpaUo 1Ib1... 001_. ro.. sa rr-t. of \ho lMlU... U4 ol1l.t.ezo. of 1IIIP011a. 8IU'1'OWl4e4 1t.. !he lila" lMlU........ looat.ocl about. 200 7~ baok or \he lMlU... ...... IIIepIIer4 M4 na\ll8 QoOlS1aM ... N\h po4 u l veat.ocl 4e M""t.. kSa4o. II1II& 8&14••1 • .-1la'. clat. 1 ulO4 t.o bop .. flU. orr .1.w. Qo~ w14 a b1& r-. .1 _ 1 _to too .leop... J..t. laasbe4 __ .. fOllllI .. eloopsal dar be.1U bor. ealle4. QM \IWIg ... u \IWIg• .-'t. 4aDe up Je.t. 1'1&bt. ., ... kUlla' u.. .' .. o\ber ... U • alg&l" __'t. o1.e. m- be 'p0rt.e4 rOl" 1IOI"k OIl _CID4q UJ'ILta' .. 01' ..... cUcIa" .... IIIa1ppSa'. la1aMl1'. Jue cU4 1~ _to 11& eat. c1lIr OIl hi. hone too ..e 4at. 0Bl,y • 0&I"t0a1a or 11-' si- .... cUd .. r.el. bOIlt. wb1te lIaP lIbo would be on~ lookel't We oalle4 b1a 'po' wb1te tl"aeI:&o' Be ne't. t.bou6Ilt. _all or _ ..,~•• ..... ea14 t.bato OY8Z7 CIllO _to t.o obu:roh OIl 1UDdq.. ... 'Ut. ebe l1ke4 t.o .1JIS \be oU ret1&10ll. b;J&le. r nedlllll _ all \he lbephel"lt .eJOrute had. been tausht t.o 1"8&4 and 111"1te, eM bad .Ud, MIl eaGh r~/era~ 1I0118J' t.o ~ a 11'\1e luae ot thell" OG. S1e ea14 ... 1I&I"et.ert' wou1d aalte uoh r_1l7 bop pig.. hen• .ul 8Il~ t.bato be ItOIlld lUl"ltet. the p1"Od1l0t.. _d p1_ \be aOl1ey aa1de tOl" ~. • lllephel"lt died two 7e&l". att&l" \be W1' et.arte4, AII4 JII"•• 8beph&I"4 -.rr1ed aga1D 8D4 r1nallT aoTed to 'fqq. tI1t'heIl .......... oT.r,· Faa. ea14, ·all uto. Jen .\e,T04 .... loag .. 1I1et.ll. Qeozog1aa -\qed, be_eo abe .. &004 t.o n..- 1.&10&1" 1a lUe ... • oook rOl" • 8llIlt.h 0aI"0l1na rea11T wbo ...04 too __~. II» aaI"I"1e4 • oaJ'POIltG' whlle wl'-ll \r­end ..t.tle4 40.. rOl" bel"eelt. .. 1. Upn ... ad uplala•• ·De I"U'" I baa .t.qe4 eo well 1. 4ato peop1e baa al..,. be••0 &004 \II _ •• H • Fowler, Fr~it ur t,Alab n- 1 Ex SlaTS Storieo- Kassa 1111 Shephe an' Kiss Georgiana,his fe,oo e fro ll.rgini an' his plQlltation e in 1.ll dee county,between Jlao's Switch,an' J(a1rgBJ1S ville. !bey had t '0 little ~ir~s,.ellie 'Jla&gie-Jlaggis was the younges' an' her I s acout the saae 86e.I wae the only light nigger in the l' ily,an' I s brou ht up in the house with the chillen. I slsp' with 'ea, li ftd wi th '8m- ios e ry wsell: I went to my 1I!1l1lIlY'8 oabin,en took a ba an' I d my 0 sof' shoes,an' lIy 0 night-go 8J1 Jaoket,an' liwd , en slep' an' played with my KaSBa'S ohillun- Every momin' before realtfas' it s my place to seep he long baok porch, +~ at reached olenr aoross the baolt of the house,M' sweep roun' in the yard, then I cle ed up,en' put on a cleM dress,an' pla1ed the res' of ths d y th the chillun-'oeptin ever' cther dey I churned. We pla yed hop-scotch,an' ring-a roun'. h~-»osy.an' played hcuse, an'letsa things I can't remember now-I must'a been about seYen years old th _ I J fI' can't tell 00. much about my brothers and sisters-In delll day8" r whi te 1'811111 wh haw ser ta, gift each ch11e that got mahried a pus-onel serwn1;yan' I ne r saw lIy oldee' 8i8ter- e was gi away befo' the family lef' ll.rginia. I r ber 8i8t' Celie,an' si8t' Harriet,an' sist Liza -she help' Aunt EliDa in the tchen- ODe eng e Bung den,d 10 al ys made e ory; it was, 1,18 01 Kassa gwine seU us to o,rrow'· "Yss,my chile". down South in eorn. " "Wbah he oin seU us," "Wa1 Let me Bee if I c reme ber how many BSrYUDts e h 4- ie was he laun dress ;J.rrie, she B the weaver;th n there as Becky, ')(elia,an' J.unt s more,but I )(a r1,an' Ed,an' lchn,an' Uncle Pete,an' Uncle Georseyhe an's mahr1ed to J.nn 10 E lina, the cook- J.n' lake-he waB the 0 wl'-look (0 rseerl-he was a gre t,big,strong c~led man- the cant rem ber-I was Jus' a little girl then. Our big house was hite,an' all on one flcor-~ere was the big parlor, ' the guess-room,~here the visItors stayed-an the other sleepin'_~nnM. 2 h-sla"" story- Th. ~ n~ porch was Jns' a li~~le poroh,bnt it had oolumna in ~ron~bnt the baok !,oroh was big an' d. an'reach all aoro.a the baolc o~ the house- Th. tchen 'dinin' -rooa waa o~~ ~roa the hons. a 11ttle wa;V,but waa Joined b;V a long 00'18 entry-ao the;v oould go baolc an' torth in all ldn' o~ "eather. o fio".rs? Oh,". had .""ry kin' o~ ~lo".rs-Lo~ aagnolia tre....I oan In.' , the Mrda dar~1n' in an' out-ae th bi, hite blooma againa~ the sliok,ah.1n1n' laa"". now '". had oape Jaassmines,M' at purple flower th so sweet a so at-oh,;vas,the lila 0- 'th orepe- ;vrtle,we d both pink 'white. All' ro ea -Jua' roaew e r' e • e • nart rs· s abont a handred an' t1~t;v or o hand yards tre h honss-We went along a path behin' the honse a-bout a hundr.d ;V rds,an' tha tnrned to the ri t an' went aoroas to tha ~na rters-!he aer nts honses 'gardens had plank ~enoee-bnt the big honse h d a picket tono.. • The well t the honsa,what e used,had a pump;bnt do in the baolc ,no t ~ ~ar ~ro the ki tohan waa a big well we nsed ~o r tha d.nir;v an' the lnundry. There s a tro h ~rom this well to the dairy,ao "a alws;va d plant;v ot wa tar,an' the a a ston there too, to haat pl t,y o~ water ~or the 1111 things-Vllllse1B an str inera an' oloths- Kassa d a lot o~ oowe,an' e ohnrned 0 big crums o~ milk e'l81'1' other dB;V. !he dair,y a b1g an' 0001 a n' we str ined np the milk 'chnrned an' :o:wrke i: e butter hers, but we .ep' it in the spring- onse. There was a spring at the ~oot ot a little hill,with a wide,apreadin'tree shadiD' 1t,M' Jlaa had a trenoh dug fro the spring,an' walled with rook,a n' lined along tha otto with rook,an' p1eoes ot pl waa pnt a oross,a little ,ys apart,to hold tha Yassels sta d.J,an' t t waa ha we kep' tha ailk 'bntter 0001 an' aweet,as th 10e. Down close to the "sll,not 1'ar ~ a the 1r,y,ws tha laundr;v-It had 0 rooaa,an .lrrie,l1Vlld in one o~ th 11- .ln1e waa tha wea'l8r,an' ahe oould wea Ya atripes,as well as plein,an' they a aa prett;v a8 an;vthing e oould bn,y. • • • - • 3 Loll1s" oleanod the par1or,an ke"~' .u1ss1s'room n10e ,an' then she didn't ~ do any th1lU' else bllt se -an' s1st' L1za helped her th 1t- .In&r the wea v1n B done,then oolle the se'nn-an' 1t took a lot o~ se n' ~or the ~am1ly- Everybody had two Sunday dresses,ew sll1ts"Snmmer 'Winte~ an' then oloes for 8'9llryday- For the 8n' s sll1 ts the 001 d to be took o~~ an oarded an ot read,y to make- but we h"d plenty o~ wool ~II 0111' 0 sheep,an had duoks an' geese-ch1ckens, turkels,gu1neas,--no we d1dn' t haft pea -~owls.But t ey had 'e t10n not far ~roll us- an' the way thel strut,an hold the heada 0 bigh,an their 1ls &11 spread out l1ke a ~ ,117 they s pretty-an' I oan sUll hear '811 holler1n'- When thel killed the hogs ~or th ....... ter' meatl, they took SOlie o~ the han' out o~ the ~1el' or wh"t e r thel was doin' an let them help-an' ws had , leaT8s,an' make a smudge o~ smoke to keep a smoke-house ~l of hams us oh11len 'ud r e up oh1ps the msat Bwset- , m1dd11ns, an , hen a 1nl spell 'ud come, Eva lina dons the cook1n',w1th s1st' L1za to holp-but hen we had comp'nl .lrrie'd help too-You sal'.lrr1e se8lll'd in demand?' YessUII,she ·'as.urie was ~ine about 0 ryth1ng-an she she was almos' 11ko tile ual1tl-" s so n10s,an' helt horsel~ so proUd-11 Kassa Shepherd an' ss Goor 1ana was both 1 tl ldn'-hsarhd,and tre ted their ser'lallts ood- I rem ber onoe when Kiss Goor ina lay do to tIL ke a nap ,an ' 1 T8 me a brash to min the ~l1es oUe her,an I got hot sleepy , 1 down b7. her, an ' ••111\ t to Bleep too,an when she woke up ,an' I was a llin' the by her,fas' asleep, she oalled Lou1sa an' la hed,an sa 1,"Look ho she keeps the ~1es o~~ me"- .In' ono.,when )lassa Shepard sent us OO1ll.n do to the Stat10n with a note,an' he Bal,'Iow you go fas',an' get baok'_ But we played along ths • wa l,an' p1ck ~lowers,an' when we no e ateppin' balk, e Ba7,"I tol' loa to hurrl'-an I helt out the ~lowers,an Bal'.e one brought ou o.e ~lo e an he pl1lled o~~ a 11 ttle keen sri too ~rom a bUllh,an' p10ked lie up ,11I1' sri tohed me 1111 0 '9llr ml bare feet 11I1' legs-an' en he put me down. I naT. • • Elr,oods'9Il Ito ri e8­She don't 'low nobo47 to whlp me bllt her' jaB ' la\16hed,an' lIald to Kl88 Geor&1ana, , Kill II Geo r.">' ....a, lIhe sa;" bleolo thll,on SlII14a;r 'nta t 11tUe devil n' t lInow I'm her Kaster' '.0,1 1o1l't 'spose llho doos"- ntllre wallD' t blIt 0 things oaus Kassa Shepherd to "hlp an;, 01' his sllr liln17 onll 01' the llarr1ed tutl11 II had th01r 0 house 'garden ' oh10kens-an' en17 taal1;, had to Sll a p1g,so th t wh8ft Christllall ooae tha, col11d kill It,an' ha a big timll. He alwa;,s g1'fll thea plent, 01' en~th1ng,an' on lPr14a;r,attllr flIler, tho, had to lltop ork SIl' wallh,an' on t. they 1ronlld d 1 nad tor SWl4a;r. An' on San ;, 110min' ,Kall. had gl'V11 ,_ d1shes,an lin1 'IllS he went Protm' PIl' e t II moathtlll' in e'fll17 house \n the wQuarWII- !!hat wa s to sell that S'fll17 thing wos done up,right-an 11' tho, wasn't,the;r got a whippin' the nex' da;r. ntll other reason ,wos,1t I\n;r-bod;r s rt-ed t.o the tlel' on Ko~day momin' thout bein ole ,an' read3' to II rt • Ollt the week r h why thllY got whippe Bo ,Ka saa d1dn' t do tho 1ppin '.He set on h1s horse 'seo 1t done-but ia ke,the O'fllr-looker ,he done the whlppin'-but he wasn't allowad to g1n more than a 0 rt in number at l10ks. ·YasllUll, there was plaoes,we ha 01'1 t.where thsy treated the1r Berwmts 11 bad,!hll nex plantation to usyGonmor atts,ho a ed 1t- the;r sa,'d he ha d his serwmts whlpped till thll bllod ~!hey had a whlte Ilsn tor O'fll looker, 'How d we telll about a lte Ilan that uld hold a plaoe l1~e tha U' Ife oalled h11l 'po 'wb1 til trallh'-He was so b1g 'strong.an he di n't lIhow no merc;r to the blaok people ,an , his lIaster didn't oare 11' he dj n't- One at hls lIer'tBJ1ts sta;red at the StatiOIl e the, IIhlpped ott s· the things tor ths soldiers-oom.an' llee.t,an' lI10h 1 e-that the wI11te talks g1'fll out at thelr own oellars an' bams,an' lIIIIok -hous.s,tor the "o~­diers- He s 1ed down at the St t10n,an' his II ster wol11dn ' t let hill T any lIhoell,an' the hot oind.ra,an' 1 umt hia teet-an' he boan' rags , hiD msoter bumed ths raCs ott his teet-Kan;" s the ,_.an tilDe , • 6 ~sla~ Stodeo- An' all ot th III had eno money to buy a 11 ttle hOllle tor th IIIsel ~s. Why ssa Shsperd had made o~ry tamily haw their 0 garde,an' plg, an' ohiokens-an' e~r went to town,e'Aln )las_,hil'lsslt,woud take the e eggs,an' ohiokens,or whate'9llr theY had to sell an' they cot the IIOney tor the things they'd sell,an' Pllt it away,an'thoy had it en they needed 1 t. 'II1en KaSll8. Sheperd died the seoond year ot the war,i t was whispered. a-ro un' that he had been slow-poisoned. lIy the people who tholl&h t he was too good to his aervants-!bey oallod lls'thelll hoee niggera ot Shepherds'- .1tter a whlle,lllSt betore the war olosed,lIiss Geor 1 a makr1ed )(r. Sla t r.a Oo'9tll'rllllent -who got tho sllppl.1es tor tho. soldiers. J'o1lts didn't th1nlt 1110.0. Geor iana ollght to have 1II1'rried him,Kassa had lett her 0 well ott_a 0.' In't th1nk she was very happy long, tor he run through with what she had..an' tinally the mOVlld away to teDo- IIr Slater had a plaoe h re in 1100. omery, they oalled the 'trll1 t-tIll'II' , a 0.' they oome here an oanned trllit,an spent 0. little while e~ry Slllll­mer. tor a good while. We ha d always been so well treated that when the servants was aade tree, e'Aln a tter the S'render,we JllS' stayed on,an' took oare ot e~rything, Jus' as e 0.1 yo. had. lIut after awhile,they mo~d ott to !'eDS. an' the blaok people settled do dOIm tor the8Bel~s, an I was took as cook by a doh Sollth il1,)larchiel,in 1100. "omery,an' they treated illS lilts I was their 0 tel'-I 0. lowod to go ,'ut three nights in a oek,an' no 1I0re. No matter how much I oded,my II1sses said."I "oudn't 1st lIy 0 daughter 60 out,an' I wont let you-' I had to ways bo at hOlle by e!e'Aln o'olook-We had a long pIa nlt wall trom the tront gate,llP to ths hOllss,and around to the ki tchoo. an' dinin '-room- Sollletimes in the momin' ,01' KaIlP 7, ' ••did you oOlle in las' night when I say cOlle"an I Ba7,'Yellllir'-an' he lIay,'I hea rd yOll g01n' roun the hOllSO,YOllr IIhoes tappin' on the walk.-better no t bo lo.te'-
title "Ex Slave Tales," DeKalb County.
titleStr "Ex Slave Tales," DeKalb County.
url http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/wpa/id/829
id ADAHwpa829
thumbnail http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/utils/getthumbnail/collection/wpa/id/829
_version_ 1743797182953160704
spelling GSU# SG022774_01072-01099SG022774_01072_01099"Ex Slave Tales," DeKalb County.Folder contains 27 pages of former slave narratives compiled for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the late 1930s.1937 circa1930-1939African Americans--Alabama--Biography; Alabama Writers' Project; DeKalb County (Ala.); Slaves--Alabama--Biography; Slaves--Alabama--Social conditions; United States. Works Progress AdministrationTextDocumentsAlabama. Dept. of Archives and HistoryWorks Progress Administration filesSG022774WPA Alabama Writers' Project, Ex Slave Tales, DeKalb County, #2Alabama Dept. of Archives and History, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130EnglishThis material may be protected under U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S. Code) which governs the making of photocopies or reproductions of copyrighted materials. You may use the digitized material for private study, scholarship, or research. Though ADAH has physical ownership of the material in its collections, in some cases we may not own the copyright to the material. It is the patron's obligation to determine and satisfy copyright restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in our collections.96 dpi tiffY. Fowler, 0 Fort Payne, labama De Kalb Cour. ty CL~SSI rtn/'''; .<I II $'t." Mil Ex- lave Stories- " I e sure I lTust ha' been aro O~cial Project,265-6903_ -0: Project,No. ,30II(I) Type of tork Symbol, 1885( I) rJ then the 1ar sta.ted;as grown as I ever h s been. You say , s i x t een or seven t een,'_~Imust ha' been -but I can't rightly make that conjuration-but I could plow as well as any fiel'-han' 01' Messa had,en put the harness on,besides- " 01' ssa,an' my istis had twelve chillen-one bOY,en' leben girls-an' fi~ty of us cullid folks. fe all lived in Etowah county- "Ireckelect well when oung Yarster went off to the ar- 01' Mistis had been a laughin , kind of person,but it wes a long time before she lau hed anymore. Folks cried,E.nd hollered,an fell down like they 'vas dead,when their men-folks marched aw~y to War. e all plowed,an' hoed,an made tl.ings some-/ay, to eat .nd to wear,an' 'e /':0+ along very "ell- " But the best tire of my life,was before the 'Var Come on-Ol' lias treated us like "'e was all one big family;we had plenty to eat,en' all 'Ve needed to wear-Ol' istis done the, sewing for us all,white an cUllid_ But her an' assa believed in teaching folks to work,an' all the chillen had • to learn how +0 do everything-even to worK in the field- 01' Yassa knew what was comin',an' he'al eys say'You better learn to "/ork,for you gwine ha va it to do.' " " As I say, we li ved plen tiful-Every Saturday we killed a pig, or a calf-or some kind of fresh meat-an' it never spoiled-they was always plenty of folks to eat it up. But a white man who had nearly a hundred slaves,on a plantation not far from uS,wouldn't give his culled folks enough to eat-they even went hungry;an every once in n 'vhile,Ol' 'assa 'ud make us cook up a lot of Vittles-long tables pilin' fUll,an' ax them all over to e:: t. 2 Ex-sla ve Story_ !!. F. • • n.An' "!hen "ie at +'h"ou~h ",ith our ol'm work,'.e could hire out to other .hite families to hoe,or pick cotton-an' have some money for our _ selves;but l'e always saved that,for we had pl"nty of everything,an' that would be somethin' to have on hand. "Our nBig hO'lse" was up on a kind of a little hill;it ",as Just as !hi te-an' allan one flour-an' the kitchen , dinin'-room was off to their-selves,with a little walk-way,with a shelter,leadin' to the big house• .An out to one side,was a big room where the white folks entertain_ ed their friends-they c.lled it a 'v11iom~aB' such dances as they had there_ "The white fol s 'ud come for miles awaY,in their kerridges,an' surreys ,an , bug~ies- an' some come on horse-back. The women 'ud oome ridin' road in front. We didn't ha VB many flo···ers. bu t 10 ts of trees, up to the horse-blook in them fUll,long ridin'-habits they wore in them days,an' they would Slip they foot out of the stirrup,into the han' of the man 'vho was ridin' with them ,an ' step dotm onto the horse-blook,an' down to the groun'-an' sometimes th'y would hold their head so high, they would look like the groun' wasn't good enough to put they foot on-n. An' then a little blac. boy would take the horse an' hitoh him, an she would 0 to the guess-room,an put on her dress with all them rUf_ fles an' laoes,over her lide hoops,an' a little curl would be peepin' o­ver her s oUlder,' ith maybe a rose tucked in it,ad her little foot 'ud peep out fro~ under ~he . ide hoopS,with its strap slipper,an clock stooki '-an she would stand,an' look in the glass at herself,an' then she would go out to the 'Viliom,where the fiddles was makin' lonesome music,that Just took your heart out,an' they auld dance there till long after the roosters orowed for midni ht.n "fe had a big yard that stretohed out all around the house,an' down to the and 0001, reen grass; an' down across the road,was the houses for the oul­led fOlks_ 3 Ex-slave Stories-M.F. • • They had two big rooms, lith " c imtley at each end, an' a hall be t"'een, an' two f .i11es Ii ved in every house,one i" each room- "l.:y UIOt,my ma's sister,was the cook up at the bi house-an' my Wa was the overseer of the hands-Sometimes , they would ax Pa what to do next,an' he say, 'Ax the Boss-that her over yondah"- "01' essa never lived to see the S'render.He died e year before" the War w s over. 'Did 'e drape the mirrors,an' the pictures when he lay dead?'-Yessum,we alwFys do. Some folks say the breath of the dyin, ~ll make he ouicksilver all come off the back of the lookin'-~lass_but that aint the real reason- Sometimes 'hen the spirit's gain' out the body,it roams 'roun' in the house,an' if it sees itself in the glass-there will shore be another death in the house. " rite man come do rn from the Nawth to vi si t on a plan tation, that was a ~ood ways off from uS,an he shot himself,huntin' ,an' died-an' his mistis 'Iouldn't let 'em hang things over the glass in the house,said there wa'nt no sense in it,an' one mornin' right after he lay a corpse, she was found lyin' on her floor,dead. They said it was her heart,but we knowed Ihat it was. , o'm,1 don't believe in conjurin'_but same folks does_1 heard of a loman ·.ho always chewed the bark of a tree, when she 'ven t along a walk under the trees ,an' when she at si ck, she ,vas conjursd, an' the flyin'. an ts come out of the pores of her skin. They said that sure was 30. Why , when they conjure,they ~its to-gether all kinds of herbs and roots,and boils them to-gether with so e k~d o~ out-landish stuff,an' waves the hands ov­er them,an mumbles somethin'_but we doan have no truck with t .. in~s like that." - the Drug_ s to re, D1 dn 't do no thin' New Orleans_an' he cured he~ in three days. prescription,an' we bourht the medicine from "When ~y ma got sick,an fell off till she was like skin an' bone , my si s ter son t "or hsr to come to Bilmminham an h h d there fran. '-- , sea a fine doctor up but "i va a 4 Ex-sla ve Stories-M. F. • it was &11 just ~ o\vln l ho "- "I hear " song on th Rad.io that took me back to them d.ays- "In tho EV'J"in' nv tho oon11 ..ht"-an' I thouP'ht of them d."ys,before 01' Massa died.,an before the lar come on,ho"1 on moon-li ht ni1;hts,E.fter all the sup­! er things was done,Ne 'ould all it out in front of the ouse-Ol' assa, an' istis,an' Young rter,an' 11 +he little i"siles,-",ould sit on the rorch,an' on the 'ong, hite steps,an' young Lerster 'ould play he iddle­an' some o:! h o culled folks 'Iould pick the banjers-an' "e '1Ould all sing. The culled 'olks 'olld sin..S~1ng Lo ,Sweet Chariot,Comin' fo to C&rry me Home-" an' I:O'~ ~h t I ""'J1t remeC"ber now. "After th~ 1ar,Ol' llistis -as struck by lightenin' an' kilt.An' then my :Fa died,an' La r'nted a far!" f,.ryr: a -'f i te fan:ily on the shares. They urnished. the house,an' the land,e.r' the stock-an' "re dono the ork. Tha t vear "Ie made t",el VB b 1 s 0'" cotton ,ex' one hundred an~ fifty bushels of corn. No,the "rite f'olks didJ"'t have to stand for ou» livin' ,until 've ma de our crop; .~ h-d the n oney we had been savin '-Anough to li ve on unti til the C,.op we.s gatlered. • "Yes,Vle "'O"~' hard;rut "Ie had a ood time too.1!aybe on onday , we "ould get a card for a dance on ,Iednesday ni te- ra \"ould say, "If you get our work done,vou can '0-' No,,~ didnt take nothin'-They had long tables et the side,covered "'ith fried chicken,biscuits,pies an cakes,=' when 've danced o"'f a set,'/e'd have to "Salute' er pardner" to the table, an' he "ould ruy you eLy-thing yo saw that you wanted, to eat." "I have lived e. lor.g +ime,and have seen a 10t.But now I cant re­member ",uch,I hts "'ol""'"d so hvrd.I s w ;' ung • rster f.O off to the var, an , sa 1 t.iIT, Cor t ck,an I" 0 ' h,. has '0 a s+;ore 111 towah coun ty ,n ear Gadsden, An I s w my o III boy o off to this las' war,}1e was in the R inbo, di vision but I cen t ~ee n:uch more. I 9Jl' blind in one eye,and can't see much out of the other-Six years avo,I trou ht I lould street ri-ht out there ,on' a across the strset,th&t , - - , , • • • • • a , , • • • • a' , t '. • • • • • ,, • I , " •1 , • 1 ' , , 1. I , , • , • I • • • • • • Fowler, Fruit urst,Alabama- Ex Slave Stories­CF..,'"... /... 1/D w '""-lj assa lilliam Shepherd an' Miss Georgiana,his wife,coce fro IT. Virginia- ...' t /vJoa &1> I_ an' his plantation w' s in Lowndes oountY,between Mac's Switch ,an , },loll'gans ville. They had two little girls,Nellie an' Maggie-Kaggie was ths younges' an' her an I ~~s about ths same age.1 was the only light nigger in the fam ilY,en ' I was brou~ht up in the house with the chillen. I slep' with 'em, lived with 'em- iWice every week I went to my Kammy's cabin,Dn took a bath an' I had my own sof' shoes,an' my own night-gown an jackst,an' lived, an slep' an' played with my Yassa's chillun- Every mornin' before breakfas' it was my place to sweep the long back porch,~a+ reached clear across the back of the house,an' sweep roun' jn the yard,an then I cleaned up,an' put on a clean dress,an' played the res' of the day with the chillun-'ceptin ever' other day I churned. We pla yed hop-scotch,an' ring-a roun'-+'hs-posy,an' played house, an'lotsa things I can't remember now-1 must'a been about seven years old then- I j'u" can't tell au much about my brothers and sisters-In dem days "ve:r;'1 white family wha~ have servants, givs each chile that got mahried a pus­sonel servantTan' I never saw my oldss' sister- shs was give away befo' the family lef' Virginia.I remember sist' Celie,an' sist' Harriet,an' sist Li za - she help' un t Evelina in ths ki tchen- • One song we sung den,dat always made me cry; it was,' ammY,is OJ I Yassa gwine .sell us tomorrow?" "Yes,my chile". "Whah he gain sell us?" "Way down outh in Georgl.!1." l'Let me see if c remembsr how many ssrvants we had- Edie was the laun dress; rrie,she was the weaver;then there was Becky ,an' slia,en' Aunt a rY,an' Ed,an' John ,an , Uncle Pete,an' Uncle GeorgeThe was the house-man an' "as mahried to un t Evelina, the cook- An' Jake-he was the 0 ver-lookea.­( oversser)_he was a great,big,strong culled man- thsre was more,but I cant remember_1 was jus' a little birl thsn. Our bil" house 'vas whits,en' allan one floor-There was the big parlor, en , ths guess-room,where the vis'tors stayed_an the other sleepin'-rooms. • • • 2 Ex-sla ve Sto ry- The front porch was jus' a little porch,but it had columns in front-but the back porch was big an'w1de an'reach all across the back of the house­The kitchen an' dinin'-room was off from the house a little way,but was joined by a long covered entry-so they could go back an' forth in all kin' of weather. "Flowers? Dh,we had every kin' of flowers-Lotsa magnolia trees-I can Jus' an' the birds dartin' in an' out- Eee the big lhite blooms against the slick,shinin' leaves now~' we had cape Jassamines,ar' that purple flower with so s~eet a sce.t-oh,yes,the lila c-an' the crepe-myrtle,we had both pink an' white. 'roses _jus' rosew ever' where. 111e "~uarters" was about a hundred an' fifty or two hundred yards from the house-We went along a path behin' the house a­bout a hundred yards,an' the turned to the right an' went across to the qua rters-The servants houses an' gardens had plank fences-but the big house hed a picket fence. " The well at the house,what we used,had a pump;but down in the back,not fa far frOM the kitchen was a bie well we used for the deiry an' the laundry. There was a t~oueh from this well to the dairy,so we always had plenty of water,an' there was a stove there too,to heat plenty of water for the milk things-ve.sels an~ strainers an' oloths- Massa had a lot of cows,an' we c churned two big churns of milk every other dey. 111e dairy was big an' cool a n' we strained up the milk an' churned an' worked Up the butter here, bu t we jl:ep' it in the spring-house. There was a spring at the foot of a little hill,with a wide,spreadin'tree shad1n'it,ar' asss had a trench dug from the spring, an , walled with rock,a n' lined along the bottom with rock,an' pieces of plank was put a cross,a little ways apart,to hold the vessels steady,an' that was where we kep' the milk an' butter cool an' sweet,as with ice. Down close to the -ell,not far from the deirY,waw the laundry_It had t 10 rooms,an Arrie,lived in one of them- Arrie was the weaver,an' she could wea VB stripes,as ,ell as plein,an' they was as pretty as anything we could buy. , • :3 Ex- sla ve sto r, - Louisa cleaned the par1or, an kep ' Idissis'room nice ,an' then she didn't d do any thing else but sew-an' sistI Liza helped her lith it- After the wea'Yin \~S done,then come the se 'in-an' it took a lot of sewin' for the family- Everybody had two Sunday dresses,Clr suitsTSllmmer an' 'Vinter- an' then cloes for everyday- Fbr the men's suits the wool had to be took off an carded an rot ready to make- but we had plenty of wool from our own sheep,an had ducks an' geese-chickens,turkeys,guineaS, __no we didn't have pea -fowls. But they had 'em on a plantation not far from us- an' the .my they strut,an hold the heads so high,an their tails all spread out like a fan,my they was pretty-an' I can still hear 'em hollerin'- When they killed the hogs for the winter' mea t_ ,they took some of the han' out of the fiel' or what ever they was doin' an let them help_an' we had a smoke-house full of hams an' middlins, an , when a rainy spell 'ud come, us chillen 'ud rake up chips an' leaves,an' make a smudge of s~oke to keep the meat sweet- Eva lina done the cookin' ,with sistI Liza to help-but when we had comp'ny rrie'd help too-You say' rrie ~eem'd in demand?' Yessum,she las.Arrie was fine about everything-an she was so nice,an' helt herself so proud-lik she was almos' like the ,uality-" ~assa Shepherd an' kiss Geor iana was both i hty kin'-heartsd,and trea­ted their servants vood- I remember once when Idiss Georgina lay down to ta ke a nap , sr. , -ive me bresh to min the flies offen her,an I 'ot hot a:.. 3leepy 'lay doVID by her,ani,Rent to sleep too,an when she woke Up,an'I was a lyin' there by her,fas' asleep,she called Louisa an' laughed,an sa y, "Look ho she keeps the fliee o~f me"- An' once, when assa Shepard sent us chillen down to the Station with a note,an' he say,' ow ou go fas' ,an' get back'- But we played along the wa y,an' pick d flowers , s.n, h t IV en Ie ""me S eppin' baek,hs say,"I tol' yon to hurrv'-an I elt "+ the flowers,an sey'We ';"n .. brou h+ "oe Mme flol"e>-. an he lJ 't 1,le off a little keen switch f:.-om a bush,an' picked me "P,M' switched ne allover my hare feet an' legs-an' when he put me down,I say, , • 4 "I'm goin' tell my mammy on you. a n he throwed back his head,an' Ex-sla" Stories­She don't 'low nobody to whip me but her' j llS ' laughed, an' sai d to iss Geo rgiana, • "ilia t little devil don't l<:now I'm her aster' an' lol1ss Geor'iana,she say, 'No,l 'toni. I-"'ose she does"- There wasn't but two thjngs caus~d Massa Shepherd to whip any of his serVli very one of the married fFlmili"s he.d their own house an' garden an' chi ckens-an' every family had to ...ai se a pig, so the. t when Christmas come they could kill it,an' have a 'ig time. He always give them plenty of evero;thing,an' on Friday,after dit:ner,they had to etop 'Iork -.n' wash ,an , nn Sa t. they ironed and cle ned for Sunday. An' on Sunday momin', ssa had give 'em dishes,an knives an' forks ,an , even tablecloths,on Sunday he vlent Flr""11' ",,' pat s m~uthful' in every house I.n +hA ~"arteI'- That wa s to see that every thing vas done up,right-an if they wasn't,they ~ot a whippin' the nex' day. The other reason ,v~s,if ,~y-body start­ed ~o the fiel' on 1londav momin' vrlthout bein clean,an' ready to start out the veek right,whv they got whipped. No, a ssa didn'.t do the w>ippin'.He set on his horse :n' see it done-but Ja ke,the ever-looker ,he done the Ihippin'-but he wasn't allowed to gi ve more than a certain number of licks. "Yessum,there was places,we heard ofit,where they treated their servants b bad. The nex plantation to Us,.Govemor ,Iatts,he owned it- th-" -ay'd "e ha d his servants whipped till the bldod run-They had a white man for eve looker, 'How did we feel atout a white man that would hold a place like tha t?' 'Me called him 'po'white tre.sh'-He was so big an' strong,an he diJ. n't show no mercy to the black people,en' his master didn't care if he did n't- One of his servants stayed at the Station where they shipped off all the tlings for the soldiers-com,an' meat,an' sich like-that the white folks give out of their own cellars an' bams,an' srroke-houses,for the sol­diers- He stayed down at the Station,an' his master 'louldn't let him have a ny shoee,en' the hot cinders,sn' sll "U~t his feet-an' he boun' rags aroun' 'em, an' his master bumed the rags off his feAt-lany's the time, • • 5 ET~sla ve Stories- Bible to him-down 'h~"'e \/i th liss 'y God,kindness an I has -on~ an' she 'Iould read the ~istreated- He'd say,' Gear ~ i ana t an , the t ..,o li ttle Missi es, ~assa Sheperd hated to see servant poli teness don't co st a red cent.' f1 1ent to church-to Hopehull Baptist church Sheperd,an' iss Georgiana,an' us three chill~ of kerria~e,shaped mos' like a bowl­at the back,there was a broad Every meetin '-day, everybody about six miles eway- 'assa rode in the rock-a- ay. Thet a kin' The dri vers "eat Was high ,<n ""ront, then deep seat,an on at the back was a little seat,with its back to the c~r~~ kerriage,an' a stoop let ""own from it. That was where the l'ttle black boy set,who ot down an opened en shut the gates. Then he jumped back up, an set there,with his feet on the little stoop- The kerriage vms pulled by ~1~ bi" horses,one a baY,an' one a grey- The coach~an 'hat set up on that hiqh seAt,had on a long double-breasted bla ck coat,shiny hieh boots,an' a tall silk hat- a-sa had on a silk hat,too,but a tight waisted coat-But iSfl Georgiana,she looked like a __ ~ boka y. She didn't like to \ ea r hoops,because she had sprained her ankle ones_an' walked with a limp. But she liked to wear thin,cool,flowe~ dy dresses-dimity an' lawn-white with little flowers of blue an' pink ,an , yellow scattered over it-an' lotsa rUffles an' lace,an' a sccop_they call_ ed the onnets-made of soft, 1hite straw,comin' close over the ears,an' fla rin hi h an' spreadin' over the face,an' .filled in With flowers ,an , tied ifi th long streamers of ribbon. The little missies,with their white ruffled p~ntalets,comin do~m nearly to their shoe-tops,under the full skirted r"ssps 'i th the li ttle ti ht _ waists_an' the little snoop bonnets,an ~lat-heeled shoes__ an' back behin was the ga·e-b'y,an behin him,was the two vmgons filled ith the black servants_ We'll never see nothin like that again_ When tho ,lar was 0 v-er ,all the Shepard ser'~-ts co"'d could 'vri teo .~ ..... read,an' most of the • l' • €I Ex-slave Stories- • An' all o~ them had enouvh money to buy a little home for themselves. ;(hy loIassa Sheperd had made every family have their oWll, garden ,an ' pig, a n' erickens-an' whoever went to town,even asss,hiMself,would take the e eggs,an' c.ickens,or hatever thsy had to sell,an' they ~ot the money for the things they'd sell ,an , put it away,an'they had it when they needed it. When assa Sheperd died the second year of the War,it was whispered a­roun' that he had been slow-poisoned. By the people who t. ou~ht he was too good to hiS servants-They called us'them damn free niggers of Shepherds'- fter a .nile ,~ust before the War closed, iss Georgiana IDahried r. Sla ter,a Government man-who p;ot the supplies for the soldiers. Folks didn't think iss Geor'."iana oU<7ht to have mArried him, (assa had left her so .ell off-a n' I don't think she was very happy long,for he run through .11 th what she had-an' finally the m~ved al<SY to Texas- ~r Slater had a place here in ont~omery,they called the 'fruit-farm' , a n' they come here an canned fruit,an spent a little while every sum­mer, for a good while. We ha d al' ays been so well treated that when the servants was made free, even a fter the S'render,we jus' stayed on,an' took care of everything, jus' as 'Ie always had. But after awhile,they moved off to Texas, an' the black people settled do down "'or theilllselves, an I las took as cook by a rich South Carolina fam;l. ily,Yar ch1el,in 'ontuomery,an' they treated me like I was their own daU&h ter-I vms allowed to a out three nights in a wee' ,an' no more. No matter how much I cried,c:y tisses said, "I rouldn' t 1st mv own dau"hter 1"0 out,an' I lion t let vou- , • I had to el tays be at home by eleven o'clo~k-We had a long pla nk walk rom the front gate,up to the house,and around to the kitchen an' dinin'-room_ Sometimes in the momin',Ol' :assa say,' .did you come in las' night when I say come?'an I say, 'Yessir'-an' he saY,'I hea rd you goin'roun the house,your shoes tappin' en the walk-better not be late'- • ~. ewo plqe4 ~eoot.=. l'1a8-al'ODdo-\he-I'Og M4 lot.. or ot.heJ' ~ 1 ou·t. r..-bu.' ~ upla1ne4. 'I 1IIIl.\a be_ .~t. MY_ 7.... el4 .... __ A7. aha h S4 or 85e at. ~ look. ol4ezo .. reuaber. "'7 llt.t.le about. hOI' bro\hen u4 01....1"8 MIl ~ l'1Ioall 'lht.1 Cella. I1sf.· RaZ"rlet.t. aD4 11...• L1&a.' !be lat...... belpod Almt. E'rallDa 111 'he lt1 t.obeII • ... llrt.e4 bel' 870. t.olIIII'il \ho oe1l1Dct _deayor1A8 \0 1"8oall ~ _t. -.bel' ot .erY_t.. her _.t.ezo 0 e4. '1410 _. M laaD4I'.... ' abe 1"eoallu. '... Aft'1 aha ... 4e ...,...... 40ft ~•••u.. Amat. 1Ie1'7. U. .lola -.l ~o o-p, \he IIIIue wbo 11111'1'1e4 .Allat. SYallaa. .Jab .. 4e _ looker (01'U'"u.) &8 a sreat. big Gll1lud UII. IU' ........ at. 1 MIl't. ......bU. 1 J••t. a l1t.Ue ebanr 48.· .. .....a.r. ~t. 'he '1a1& hra.ee ... !Iap M4 whiM 1I1\h a beaut.U1ll pUleii' a4 p ••t. n.-. .hare \he 1'101.... were _t.ert.a1Ae4. GlpaUo 1Ib1... 001_. ro.. sa rr-t. of \ho lMlU... U4 ol1l.t.ezo. of 1IIIP011a. 8IU'1'OWl4e4 1t.. !he lila" lMlU........ looat.ocl about. 200 7~ baok or \he lMlU... ...... IIIepIIer4 M4 na\ll8 QoOlS1aM ... N\h po4 u l veat.ocl 4e M""t.. kSa4o. II1II& 8&14••1 • .-1la'. clat. 1 ulO4 t.o bop .. flU. orr .1.w. Qo~ w14 a b1& r-. .1 _ 1 _to too .leop... J..t. laasbe4 __ .. fOllllI .. eloopsal dar be.1U bor. ealle4. QM \IWIg ... u \IWIg• .-'t. 4aDe up Je.t. 1'1&bt. ., ... kUlla' u.. .' .. o\ber ... U • alg&l" __'t. o1.e. m- be 'p0rt.e4 rOl" 1IOI"k OIl _CID4q UJ'ILta' .. 01' ..... cUcIa" .... IIIa1ppSa'. la1aMl1'. Jue cU4 1~ _to 11& eat. c1lIr OIl hi. hone too ..e 4at. 0Bl,y • 0&I"t0a1a or 11-' si- .... cUd .. r.el. bOIlt. wb1te lIaP lIbo would be on~ lookel't We oalle4 b1a 'po' wb1te tl"aeI:&o' Be ne't. t.bou6Ilt. _all or _ ..,~•• ..... ea14 t.bato OY8Z7 CIllO _to t.o obu:roh OIl 1UDdq.. ... 'Ut. ebe l1ke4 t.o .1JIS \be oU ret1&10ll. b;J&le. r nedlllll _ all \he lbephel"lt .eJOrute had. been tausht t.o 1"8&4 and 111"1te, eM bad .Ud, MIl eaGh r~/era~ 1I0118J' t.o ~ a 11'\1e luae ot thell" OG. S1e ea14 ... 1I&I"et.ert' wou1d aalte uoh r_1l7 bop pig.. hen• .ul 8Il~ t.bato be ItOIlld lUl"ltet. the p1"Od1l0t.. _d p1_ \be aOl1ey aa1de tOl" ~. • lllephel"lt died two 7e&l". att&l" \be W1' et.arte4, AII4 JII"•• 8beph&I"4 -.rr1ed aga1D 8D4 r1nallT aoTed to 'fqq. tI1t'heIl .......... oT.r,· Faa. ea14, ·all uto. Jen .\e,T04 .... loag .. 1I1et.ll. Qeozog1aa -\qed, be_eo abe .. &004 t.o n..- 1.&10&1" 1a lUe ... • oook rOl" • 8llIlt.h 0aI"0l1na rea11T wbo ...04 too __~. II» aaI"I"1e4 • oaJ'POIltG' whlle wl'-ll \r­end ..t.tle4 40.. rOl" bel"eelt. .. 1. Upn ... ad uplala•• ·De I"U'" I baa .t.qe4 eo well 1. 4ato peop1e baa al..,. be••0 &004 \II _ •• H • Fowler, Fr~it ur t,Alab n- 1 Ex SlaTS Storieo- Kassa 1111 Shephe an' Kiss Georgiana,his fe,oo e fro ll.rgini an' his plQlltation e in 1.ll dee county,between Jlao's Switch,an' J(a1rgBJ1S ville. !bey had t '0 little ~ir~s,.ellie 'Jla&gie-Jlaggis was the younges' an' her I s acout the saae 86e.I wae the only light nigger in the l' ily,an' I s brou ht up in the house with the chillen. I slsp' with 'ea, li ftd wi th '8m- ios e ry wsell: I went to my 1I!1l1lIlY'8 oabin,en took a ba an' I d my 0 sof' shoes,an' lIy 0 night-go 8J1 Jaoket,an' liwd , en slep' an' played with my KaSBa'S ohillun- Every momin' before realtfas' it s my place to seep he long baok porch, +~ at reached olenr aoross the baolt of the house,M' sweep roun' in the yard, then I cle ed up,en' put on a cleM dress,an' pla1ed the res' of ths d y th the chillun-'oeptin ever' cther dey I churned. We pla yed hop-scotch,an' ring-a roun'. h~-»osy.an' played hcuse, an'letsa things I can't remember now-I must'a been about seYen years old th _ I J fI' can't tell 00. much about my brothers and sisters-In delll day8" r whi te 1'811111 wh haw ser ta, gift each ch11e that got mahried a pus-onel serwn1;yan' I ne r saw lIy oldee' 8i8ter- e was gi away befo' the family lef' ll.rginia. I r ber 8i8t' Celie,an' si8t' Harriet,an' sist Liza -she help' Aunt EliDa in the tchen- ODe eng e Bung den,d 10 al ys made e ory; it was, 1,18 01 Kassa gwine seU us to o,rrow'· "Yss,my chile". down South in eorn. " "Wbah he oin seU us," "Wa1 Let me Bee if I c reme ber how many BSrYUDts e h 4- ie was he laun dress ;J.rrie, she B the weaver;th n there as Becky, ')(elia,an' J.unt s more,but I )(a r1,an' Ed,an' lchn,an' Uncle Pete,an' Uncle Georseyhe an's mahr1ed to J.nn 10 E lina, the cook- J.n' lake-he waB the 0 wl'-look (0 rseerl-he was a gre t,big,strong c~led man- the cant rem ber-I was Jus' a little girl then. Our big house was hite,an' all on one flcor-~ere was the big parlor, ' the guess-room,~here the visItors stayed-an the other sleepin'_~nnM. 2 h-sla"" story- Th. ~ n~ porch was Jns' a li~~le poroh,bnt it had oolumna in ~ron~bnt the baok !,oroh was big an' d. an'reach all aoro.a the baolc o~ the house- Th. tchen 'dinin' -rooa waa o~~ ~roa the hons. a 11ttle wa;V,but waa Joined b;V a long 00'18 entry-ao the;v oould go baolc an' torth in all ldn' o~ "eather. o fio".rs? Oh,". had .""ry kin' o~ ~lo".rs-Lo~ aagnolia tre....I oan In.' , the Mrda dar~1n' in an' out-ae th bi, hite blooma againa~ the sliok,ah.1n1n' laa"". now '". had oape Jaassmines,M' at purple flower th so sweet a so at-oh,;vas,the lila 0- 'th orepe- ;vrtle,we d both pink 'white. All' ro ea -Jua' roaew e r' e • e • nart rs· s abont a handred an' t1~t;v or o hand yards tre h honss-We went along a path behin' the honse a-bout a hundr.d ;V rds,an' tha tnrned to the ri t an' went aoroas to tha ~na rters-!he aer nts honses 'gardens had plank ~enoee-bnt the big honse h d a picket tono.. • The well t the honsa,what e used,had a pump;bnt do in the baolc ,no t ~ ~ar ~ro the ki tohan waa a big well we nsed ~o r tha d.nir;v an' the lnundry. There s a tro h ~rom this well to the dairy,ao "a alws;va d plant;v ot wa tar,an' the a a ston there too, to haat pl t,y o~ water ~or the 1111 things-Vllllse1B an str inera an' oloths- Kassa d a lot o~ oowe,an' e ohnrned 0 big crums o~ milk e'l81'1' other dB;V. !he dair,y a b1g an' 0001 a n' we str ined np the milk 'chnrned an' :o:wrke i: e butter hers, but we .ep' it in the spring- onse. There was a spring at the ~oot ot a little hill,with a wide,apreadin'tree shadiD' 1t,M' Jlaa had a trenoh dug fro the spring,an' walled with rook,a n' lined along tha otto with rook,an' p1eoes ot pl waa pnt a oross,a little ,ys apart,to hold tha Yassels sta d.J,an' t t waa ha we kep' tha ailk 'bntter 0001 an' aweet,as th 10e. Down close to the "sll,not 1'ar ~ a the 1r,y,ws tha laundr;v-It had 0 rooaa,an .lrrie,l1Vlld in one o~ th 11- .ln1e waa tha wea'l8r,an' ahe oould wea Ya atripes,as well as plein,an' they a aa prett;v a8 an;vthing e oould bn,y. • • • - • 3 Loll1s" oleanod the par1or,an ke"~' .u1ss1s'room n10e ,an' then she didn't ~ do any th1lU' else bllt se -an' s1st' L1za helped her th 1t- .In&r the wea v1n B done,then oolle the se'nn-an' 1t took a lot o~ se n' ~or the ~am1ly- Everybody had two Sunday dresses,ew sll1ts"Snmmer 'Winte~ an' then oloes for 8'9llryday- For the 8n' s sll1 ts the 001 d to be took o~~ an oarded an ot read,y to make- but we h"d plenty o~ wool ~II 0111' 0 sheep,an had duoks an' geese-ch1ckens, turkels,gu1neas,--no we d1dn' t haft pea -~owls.But t ey had 'e t10n not far ~roll us- an' the way thel strut,an hold the heada 0 bigh,an their 1ls &11 spread out l1ke a ~ ,117 they s pretty-an' I oan sUll hear '811 holler1n'- When thel killed the hogs ~or th ....... ter' meatl, they took SOlie o~ the han' out o~ the ~1el' or wh"t e r thel was doin' an let them help-an' ws had , leaT8s,an' make a smudge o~ smoke to keep a smoke-house ~l of hams us oh11len 'ud r e up oh1ps the msat Bwset- , m1dd11ns, an , hen a 1nl spell 'ud come, Eva lina dons the cook1n',w1th s1st' L1za to holp-but hen we had comp'nl .lrrie'd help too-You sal'.lrr1e se8lll'd in demand?' YessUII,she ·'as.urie was ~ine about 0 ryth1ng-an she she was almos' 11ko tile ual1tl-" s so n10s,an' helt horsel~ so proUd-11 Kassa Shepherd an' ss Goor 1ana was both 1 tl ldn'-hsarhd,and tre ted their ser'lallts ood- I rem ber onoe when Kiss Goor ina lay do to tIL ke a nap ,an ' 1 T8 me a brash to min the ~l1es oUe her,an I got hot sleepy , 1 down b7. her, an ' ••111\ t to Bleep too,an when she woke up ,an' I was a llin' the by her,fas' asleep, she oalled Lou1sa an' la hed,an sa 1,"Look ho she keeps the ~1es o~~ me"- .In' ono.,when )lassa Shepard sent us OO1ll.n do to the Stat10n with a note,an' he Bal,'Iow you go fas',an' get baok'_ But we played along ths • wa l,an' p1ck ~lowers,an' when we no e ateppin' balk, e Ba7,"I tol' loa to hurrl'-an I helt out the ~lowers,an Bal'.e one brought ou o.e ~lo e an he pl1lled o~~ a 11 ttle keen sri too ~rom a bUllh,an' p10ked lie up ,11I1' sri tohed me 1111 0 '9llr ml bare feet 11I1' legs-an' en he put me down. I naT. • • Elr,oods'9Il Ito ri e8­She don't 'low nobo47 to whlp me bllt her' jaB ' la\16hed,an' lIald to Kl88 Geor&1ana, , Kill II Geo r.">' ....a, lIhe sa;" bleolo thll,on SlII14a;r 'nta t 11tUe devil n' t lInow I'm her Kaster' '.0,1 1o1l't 'spose llho doos"- ntllre wallD' t blIt 0 things oaus Kassa Shepherd to "hlp an;, 01' his sllr liln17 onll 01' the llarr1ed tutl11 II had th01r 0 house 'garden ' oh10kens-an' en17 taal1;, had to Sll a p1g,so th t wh8ft Christllall ooae tha, col11d kill It,an' ha a big timll. He alwa;,s g1'fll thea plent, 01' en~th1ng,an' on lPr14a;r,attllr flIler, tho, had to lltop ork SIl' wallh,an' on t. they 1ronlld d 1 nad tor SWl4a;r. An' on San ;, 110min' ,Kall. had gl'V11 ,_ d1shes,an lin1 'IllS he went Protm' PIl' e t II moathtlll' in e'fll17 house \n the wQuarWII- !!hat wa s to sell that S'fll17 thing wos done up,right-an 11' tho, wasn't,the;r got a whippin' the nex' da;r. ntll other reason ,wos,1t I\n;r-bod;r s rt-ed t.o the tlel' on Ko~day momin' thout bein ole ,an' read3' to II rt • Ollt the week r h why thllY got whippe Bo ,Ka saa d1dn' t do tho 1ppin '.He set on h1s horse 'seo 1t done-but ia ke,the O'fllr-looker ,he done the whlppin'-but he wasn't allowad to g1n more than a 0 rt in number at l10ks. ·YasllUll, there was plaoes,we ha 01'1 t.where thsy treated the1r Berwmts 11 bad,!hll nex plantation to usyGonmor atts,ho a ed 1t- the;r sa,'d he ha d his serwmts whlpped till thll bllod ~!hey had a whlte Ilsn tor O'fll looker, 'How d we telll about a lte Ilan that uld hold a plaoe l1~e tha U' Ife oalled h11l 'po 'wb1 til trallh'-He was so b1g 'strong.an he di n't lIhow no merc;r to the blaok people ,an , his lIaster didn't oare 11' he dj n't- One at hls lIer'tBJ1ts sta;red at the StatiOIl e the, IIhlpped ott s· the things tor ths soldiers-oom.an' llee.t,an' lI10h 1 e-that the wI11te talks g1'fll out at thelr own oellars an' bams,an' lIIIIok -hous.s,tor the "o~­diers- He s 1ed down at the St t10n,an' his II ster wol11dn ' t let hill T any lIhoell,an' the hot oind.ra,an' 1 umt hia teet-an' he boan' rags , hiD msoter bumed ths raCs ott his teet-Kan;" s the ,_.an tilDe , • 6 ~sla~ Stodeo- An' all ot th III had eno money to buy a 11 ttle hOllle tor th IIIsel ~s. Why ssa Shsperd had made o~ry tamily haw their 0 garde,an' plg, an' ohiokens-an' e~r went to town,e'Aln )las_,hil'lsslt,woud take the e eggs,an' ohiokens,or whate'9llr theY had to sell an' they cot the IIOney tor the things they'd sell,an' Pllt it away,an'thoy had it en they needed 1 t. 'II1en KaSll8. Sheperd died the seoond year ot the war,i t was whispered. a-ro un' that he had been slow-poisoned. lIy the people who tholl&h t he was too good to his aervants-!bey oallod lls'thelll hoee niggera ot Shepherds'- .1tter a whlle,lllSt betore the war olosed,lIiss Geor 1 a makr1ed )(r. Sla t r.a Oo'9tll'rllllent -who got tho sllppl.1es tor tho. soldiers. J'o1lts didn't th1nlt 1110.0. Geor iana ollght to have 1II1'rried him,Kassa had lett her 0 well ott_a 0.' In't th1nk she was very happy long, tor he run through with what she had..an' tinally the mOVlld away to teDo- IIr Slater had a plaoe h re in 1100. omery, they oalled the 'trll1 t-tIll'II' , a 0.' they oome here an oanned trllit,an spent 0. little while e~ry Slllll­mer. tor a good while. We ha d always been so well treated that when the servants was aade tree, e'Aln a tter the S'render,we JllS' stayed on,an' took oare ot e~rything, Jus' as e 0.1 yo. had. lIut after awhile,they mo~d ott to !'eDS. an' the blaok people settled do dOIm tor the8Bel~s, an I was took as cook by a doh Sollth il1,)larchiel,in 1100. "omery,an' they treated illS lilts I was their 0 tel'-I 0. lowod to go ,'ut three nights in a oek,an' no 1I0re. No matter how much I oded,my II1sses said."I "oudn't 1st lIy 0 daughter 60 out,an' I wont let you-' I had to ways bo at hOlle by e!e'Aln o'olook-We had a long pIa nlt wall trom the tront gate,llP to ths hOllss,and around to the ki tchoo. an' dinin '-room- Sollletimes in the momin' ,01' KaIlP 7, ' ••did you oOlle in las' night when I say cOlle"an I Ba7,'Yellllir'-an' he lIay,'I hea rd yOll g01n' roun the hOllSO,YOllr IIhoes tappin' on the walk.-better no t bo lo.te'-http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/wpa/id/829