Folklore, Lee County.

Folder contains 21 pages of Alabama folklore compiled for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the late 1930s./ Preeton Klein---Leeco. o . Year. and yeare ago,ae the etory goes told by a white oitizen of ~ee , . • Co. ,Ala. ,lived a family of wealthy planters. At thie time the mother and son l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Electronic
Published: Alabama Department of Archives and History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/wpa/id/905
format Electronic
collection WPA Alabama Writers' Project Collection
building Alabama Department of Archives and History
publisher Alabama Department of Archives and History
topic WPA Alabama Writers' Project
spellingShingle WPA Alabama Writers' Project
Folklore, Lee County.
fulltopic WPA Alabama Writers' Project
African Americans--Alabama--Folklore; Creek Indians; Folklore--Alabama; Alabama Writers' Project; Lee County (Ala.); United States. Works Progress Administration
description Folder contains 21 pages of Alabama folklore compiled for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the late 1930s./ Preeton Klein---Leeco. o . Year. and yeare ago,ae the etory goes told by a white oitizen of ~ee , . • Co. ,Ala. ,lived a family of wealthy planters. At thie time the mother and son lived on this large plaatation; of oourse in those days there were no soreen doors and windows,then every family used the younger alaves,boye as water boys,the girls to shoo flies off of the table withs bruSh. A girl, named Naroissus,Who helped in the house and dining room,was a light mulatto girl and neat in appearanoe so this SOD fell in l've with this mulatto girl and things finally beo... so bad his poor old mother left home to live with one of the other children. Years later \hie white man beoame very ill and requested '0 be buried in bis front yard When he died,and was. Naroissus married in three months and made the remark, "lIut of sight, out of mind. It She moved to the Heard plantation and later eold to .W.Snipea and below is a oopy of the reo'ipt of one of her ohildren, being sold for. 1,4.00, she for 1000 and the baby for $400. POR VALUE RSCEIVBD I DELIVER AnD SELL unTO YR.W. lPES A NEGRO WOIlAN :BY THE NAUE OF PHOEBIA,ABOUT 20YEARS OF AGE AIID CHlLD (A BOY)IIOT nllED ABOUT TiO 1lOIIrHS ULD,lI'IIIT:! NEGROES. I T TO BE SOUND IN BODY AllD KIND AND SLAVES FOR LIYE?AGAINST THE CLAUIS OF ALL 0THEil PERSOUS VE.~,TliIS THE 17th.OF SEPT.1866. .UO.R.HEARD • !rh18 bab7 bo:? is an old man now,eighty-two years old,living in Upe l1lta, Ala.,Lee Co. He has his seoond wite,who was Vannie ~loyd,lived on same f~&, both are in bad health and barel,. enough to live on and aay give thea slavery t~, "Us ehow woe ted and had warm olothea,lIl8J' not been ae fine as dey weare nowdays, but us 'il'Usn't hangry nor oold,our folkB wos Show good tar UB. M us ohildren _t 0010 in de oold wid oot oor bonnets,ole mistaBII 'od osll UB right back and pinoh our earll. She never did 10lr our &ODlere tar whip us and maw l ~WOOld Bay, 'de helllp 18 jest ar growing fer hl8 • JIIIck tooimeaning I'd be GhDa' Stor1es • a P. C.X. --Lea Co. • • hun8 someday oause dey usad grass ropas you know." Ef us had measles ar eaoh us wus carr1ed ter the b18 housa and slept 1n 11ttla olosats.whut had badS 1n dem whut she made." 'Vann1s ••id, "1\y maw had su M ts er tw1ns. an she won I 10 lowed ieer turn her hands ter do noth1n'." Vannie sa1d. "One day I went to da f1a1d aarly and a caie wos cry1n8 and follo d me up and down de rows as I wOrked and or1ad all day long.us would rook IUt and rat baak h1t 'ud oome and Be boy 't'Ihuie wos work1ng wid us "1d, 'I am p1ne ieer :!t1ll dat damn ieh1ng.' 110 don't kJ.:j.l de 'oar thing but sOllllln sho 1s p1nt ar happen and r1ghie den and there daie oat jaeie opened up sum Uay w1ngs. jest 1ak er turkeY,and sUd, Whoof .and up 1t rose and fiew 1n oar oh1mney," "lIo~m us never seed h1t no more." "D1dn't h1t sn1pes?" "Show d1d." "And er nother ie1me Kisa, I all de t1f:le 11ked ter have flowers on de eaUn' table SO I woS out p1okJ.ng flowers en sumpen sa1d. 'Uh-huh.Uh-huh. and I jest kept on p1ok1n8 my flowera en ever t10:e I broke one off h1 t would Bay Uh-huh.uh-huh and I jeat got ao aoeered ••en hJ.t aa1d,' ell.a1r,' and man, I drapped dem flower a and flew tar the houae hard .. I ooold fly and ahet the door ... " I jeat tell you K18icaaa daie sa1pea plaoa woa iche hanieest place you arer sged. n , 'J.lr,sn1pea,You remember when austar woa .1ok?" "I show dO," "We woa .eU~'roUDd de fire qu1.t lak,she W08 birtiliD'er baby.and er lady woa aetten' there wid us whut woa g01n' br wa1t on her and I ieell ybQ dam doora woa ahut Ughie and fore God I BBW .r f1gure oom1ng 1n through that ahat door, I punoh­ad th1s other oMsn and aa1d,Look yonder you 8ee dat? She sa1d ah.t up you- '11 k111 your s1ater. ell,I tall you dat thJ.ng k.pt ooming and th1a womaD je.t .or••••d and tr1.d her be.t tar git up the ohAIm1ay and I wish 1'00 oould er Baed her wh1te dreas den,h1t mo won't wh1ica no more. Well that blaok th1ng d1Bsapeared and my s1ater's baby d1dn't 11ve but two .anths ne1ther." GHOST or < • • Sethn Up Party : le lngram (Col.) 1'.C.Klein---Lee Co. . all en nobody 'roon dare had no goats I rle how old are you? I'se s~y-five,miss. Is I ever seed er ghost? 11,mistess.I wus born wid er veil over ~ faoe and er eord too, and them kind er Dhillon wos born t.ar see things en talk wid de dead bU" I'se been seeard tar talk wid dem,oause dey moot t.e11 me BUmpeD whut I den' want ter bew, but I t.e11 :flU tho mistess, I wos at ar "Set.ten Up" party one night -.hen I wos 'bout fourteen years old, 'bout. er mile en er half frum home and when I wos going down er narrow path thrll dem woods,er set.ten hen wid er dozen er more chickens lit up in dat pat.h,a11 fuzzed up and jest flew all over me and hit. woe in the mido1e er the night. t.oo en ne:ver did see whur she eum frum ner whur she went.,yea'm she did,nom I didn' have noth­ing t.8r drink,hit wus jest real. And I mora dan did f1:f an the faster I runed t.he more th1nga I seed er cemin' behind me,and me er paesin' goat.s wid long beardS and I don't. know whut nei ther. en I got home my he said, ..L tells yer to cum in fore dark and • yer jest etays out till mid-night. en I don' keer ef thinge do take oat attar yoa.1't I kin a1waye eee folke aJ.k1ng 'roand ergin in 1ife,whut hae been dead er long Ume cause I woe Illest. born ter see t.hem kinder things but I ain't _ver talked to um,no'm,I ain't. naver desired t.ar talk to um. I kin be walk-ing 'roand moet eny time and ell fre h b100d,O,eo plain. One the I had er bad spell er eicknese and tr13 'thar oum back and stood by my bad, jeet ae plain e z I see s you now and ahe wue fanning me ,ao'm ehe didn' say nothin' t.er me but ehe hope git ma 11. GHOST TALES------ arle !ngram (Col. , . • • I : sette~ Up Party ~rle how old are YOU! I'oe sixty-fiTe,mies. Ia I eTer soed er ghoat'l ell,a1ateBs, I wus born wid er Teil OTer rq faoe and er oord too, and them kind er obillun Wl1S born ter 88e things en talk wid de dead bU' I'ae been soeerd ter talk wid dem,oause dey out tell me sumpen Whut I dan' want ter know. but I tell yer tho miatess,I WDB at er "Sotton Up" party one night 'Whon I B 'bout fourteen yeara old, 'bout er mile en er half frum home and whon I wos going down or narrow path thrll dem woods,or Botton hon wi4 or do~en er more iokeDB lit up in dat path,all fuszod up and je t ow all onr me and hit B in the middle er the night too en I never did seo whur she cum frwn ner whur she WIInt,yes'm she did,nom I diAn' haTo noth-ing ter dr1nJ::,hit wua jost real. ADd I Clore dan did fly en the faster I runed the more thingB I Boed er comin' bohind me,and me er pasBin' gcats wid long bearda and I don't know 1lhut all,en nobody 'rollIl dare had no goats nei thor. en I got licme my p a he said,"! tells yer to OUID in fore dark and • ye JOBt steT8 out till mid-night an I don' koar af thingo do taka out attar ;YOO." I kin wlJi1s 8ee folks walking 'round ergin in life, ut ha been dead er long till8 oauae I 8 ~ 8t born ter see thom kinder 1hing8 but I ain't never talked to UJlI,no'm,I ain't nOTer deoirad ter talk to IlID. I kin be walk­ing 'round m08t eny time and lIIIell freoh bloo ,O,so plain. One time I had er bad 8pell er sickness snd r:v 'other CUID bank and 8tood by my bed,je8t aD plain ez I soes yOIl now and &he WilD fanning me,ao'm hs didn' sa;y nothin' ter mo bllt she hope git me ....,11. • • Ala1'np 1lar1 W...0....4e4 111 u Ml441. .1' U !lou. 2 a. 1.1 b_41. at olotha. U.4 111 a .quare t olo'h• .u'.r \ha Journq .tar..4 \ha tarthar 'beT 4 tbe we.. .... .r.hllT. tar'h.r ...4 tar'bar b.hll14, '11 Mr. DowuU reaU.. \hq .lp, ha•• 10.' the .la•• wo..... Vanl tor so•• U .. wi'hout .r.11I11 oatohlllC UP. ha ...t Ullol• .r.tt back '0 look for her. Unol• .r.ft tOUl14 h.r ooapl.t.l1. ni an4 111ne 111 'ha 1'0&4. noi able to CO &J1T far\h.r. Abo wh.. Unol• .r.tt broucht Mr. Dow­ull•• ha uplain.4 ihai .h. vas co1Jlc to ha•• a babT••0 ihq 1 s4l.at.l1 aa4e her.o hoi ootf.....4 414 whai thaT coul4 tor her. In 4us U a UUle whn. I. a .1rl .... born to hal' 111 th. a1441. at ihlS ro&4. • Dowdell ..,4 Unol• .r.tt aotine .. D1IJ'•• aa1u th. 11iU. n... babT uP 111 a t ... oloth•• • ha ha4 be.n oarrTlne 111 that b1Z4l•• Mr. Dovull took 'hls babT bun41....4 bouno.4 ii up ...4 cI.ovn an4 .S"C. "Bl••• ~ l1'tl. fr•• ~t. n1 r. ~ llttl. fr•• whU. ~rl oo.t •• noth111C." ...4 aciuallT kliled ii, prauA. ha .&14. ihai ha!a4 14 not~ for tM. babT ...4 pull.4 0117 onr Mr. OUft. lis &&14. "tM. shall be &7 Uttle 4anchisr'. u,n. whit. an4 b. ra1l&4 111 ~ hous. to _n all &D4 ••m hal', in Tears woo ...4 io pl.., wiih her now. ".r.I1I11, I tMllIt oil. oil ul4 b. u ••4 1l0a47." ha .&14." as .h. va. bo.... in tha 1'0&4. but .r7l11lT b. 4.0 for h.r w b. n ...4 1Iar7, ,hat ha flasl17 0011••l1t.4 an4 called hal' 1larT· .... .r.11I11 va. 110t able io b. oarrlsl!. all, iheT fOUl14 a plan­\ aUon 010•• bT an4 wed iha vMh """sr it he ooull!. \aks oars at tM. wo..., babT ..4 two UU1. bOT. tor aboui two weeks, allI... • • " -" . 2 aD ...p....ed '" l' hb lllbl.. llefor. he .at 4""". la 100klDc rOOTer h. n tl0 4 th. or t- ~l. t 1n the botto • t th1JlldDg DCthll1C of it. he IIoIdII eelf 00 forialll."it hi. la hll d. and bl aD to b ]llble. In t nl M. vhen all v.. q111.t bd the .-plt-wit of the 10111. noUo.d a black cat or.. 1 the hole lD the &1001'. !h. r.acher AlAn't u.r a word but kept onl "'" on the cd end onl .J'" on hi. ]llb1l and hi. n hi. blade. fhe CIt dole ln a HUle 010..... lDtent17 ."HU1. "".....l' ~ t. the ....0 .Ull wit one..,. on hi. lIlb1l. bl ln hond 0 l' 1;11 on t eat but .Ull ...t DCt \0 b. noUo1nc. • cat !:&Y. a at °r...v.· aDd 'lIDO d n the • but th ....on a. q111 .. the oat. I a .1& and cut ott ono ot it'. tr nt .... fhe I'D t.ll at the nonI. t ••t b t lilian h. looked t r the eat 1t had All& \rh A tum1nc \0 klelt: the oatI. toot .wq. 10 b. old. hI w.. thwllIe...tl'1l • tor lD.teed of the cat'. toot. I. lor1nc t Id b.. ot • 0 t'. wlt. wao ... roU.d it 1D a pl. ot a..... and U U ... !Iuo nen 110 nt to the h • tor br t. t· landlor4 W&I I'lalal7 ....."rlled t II alhl, but Itea w t 4 t a D1 t he ..,."t." repl1e4 thet h. had ...4 a rtlot17 q111lt nlpt wlth the eze Uon ot I wlU 0 t to .oratch h1a but that h. had • blad. and .....t ott n. ot U. tront I''''''' °lltI dU.ol h••&14. and aMe4 0]17 t °lbe 't cot\a thi. b DCt weU.o • , ---1' :..._-_. '(jet' ~- Several years ago in La Fayette. a.,lived a ne.gro woman ~maJsr­Estelle Thomas. stelle is a great believer in conjUrin~Bhe ­, she lived in Chambers Co. ~ says she was conjured when Whll......... next door neighbor was a single girl Estelle harm,she said. 1 this thought)was trying to her husband wway from ~e~the left side ~ ",~~\,7~ :w..... gose just itched and itched and that is 'for a woman tha~wa.nts to do ~~ neighbor came over~ III •••&i..sat by the fire and talk-stelle was combing her own hair and would throw the combings in the fir • -some bumad and BOms fall on the hearth. - Several nights after that .and for several nights."hen she went. to the o. spell over I feels hit done hit unless she cast me. door or out of doors,great f1ashe. of ,;light.1ike 1ightening.wou1d dart across ,";;J-. her eyes and she would f_1 • just ~~to d ho 1e.r and would have mad fHs and then be b1ind~ Wb11~ "Yes 'm,l sho do know dat nigger ms~cause she wanted my husbant1~o·m.I don't know how ehs S("YrJ-' ~ got _ er my hair and made up oonjure and put on ~ " ~times nowJhit jest makes me have one er dem mad fit ?course I ain't seed her since us moved down here and dats ~ long tir_e -but she still have me in her power end oasts dem spells over 118 still." ~ '1 '"You reoon dat. WU~whut hit wus,oause IS.hs could er put poisoll in my food ~ -:;.- oause she we in and out er my kitchenJ10ts er times:but no'm she jest oonjure womsn en she sho got me in dat fix." "You know dem kind tin oast spe;lls over r ef you steps over ~ticks dey lays dOwn fer yo~ou never know when dey does it n&ither." ." ." -l'NDIAl'l FOLKLORE J Preeton Klein--Lee Co. This story s told by ~rs.G.O.~ulsby,of Opelika,Ala.,leatned as her hair wae being ourled when a little girl and told by her grand-mother, the parties concerned being her great-gra4d parente. In 1829,coming frcm Putman GO.,Ft.Y1tchell,Ga.four miles from Col­umbus, Ga.,crossing the lcwer Chattahoochee River,~.Willis Cox,wife Eli­sabeth Moore and three chUdren,acved to abams and booght land from the Indians and settled in south east.ern part of Lee Co. ,Alabama, between Dchee and Salem, Ala. , ow, in crossing this river, in the moving,e:tcltllaent and11i.a , • Cox thinking that his wife Elizabeth had all the children on the cther side of the river with her,didn't worry, but as daylight apP~Dach­ed and time to move on,an check op, the oldeet child, illiam,a boY of 4t yea%e of age was missing;t'was only a short time and little William walked up se;ying,1hat he had gotten lost from tUe crowd and le;y down under soma buahes and lll.ept for the night,not being afraid as he knew they woold hunt for him in the morning and woold not leave him. This land 1I8S bOUght from a friendly Indian called "Indian Ben," and at this t,ime,he lived in a doable log cabin and promisDd U TBoate at once, bot as tba 8tbry goas,he ~ivsd on in one of the cabin rooms and the Coxes camped Indian faehioa in the other, but all this tilll8 ~rs.aox lived in ortsl fear of SOIl8 of the feaily being killed or burned oot,eo soaroely sapt at all,for lIhe coold, DOt be perlll1aded that Indian Ben wee a friend­ly Indian, ahe thinking all Indiane w ebloody murder ra. Attar a week or ao Ben aoved out to himself and alwaya proved a frlllDd of the vary best kind to this f ..ilY,calling .Cox--ee for r.Cox. Latar on ,Cox moved down in the eouth-weat,arn part of Lee Co. ,on Sogahatchee Creek near If tsaulga Ala. ,at Rocq DDt Church. A 11ttle far-ther on wea an Indian reaerTBt1on. J.lr.Cox had a trading post for the Indiana in !:tallapoosa Co.at craeshoe Bend. Knowing the ndi..a weah1esses ,he woold never aell them firewater, • • • • • FOLKLORE MOLLY I mIAIl Preston Klein -- Lee Co . Durin~ slaver,y time, if a slgve married an Indian o~n. their chil­dren were Dot ~1de slaves, but free to roam 8S the Indians did, such WP.B the case with Molly Indian. As a child Molly Indian lived on the plantation of Mr. Willis Cox, who married Miss Elizabeth Moore and lived ~t Ft. Itchell, Ala., n~ar Bock Mount Church, in 1829. The Cox's used Ii tIe Molly in tho big house to keep flies off the table, with a fly brush. e of strips of c~lored oanere. or oeW80Ruers strlooed god ulued to stick, to wave ov~r the table. or a nice ~reen switch, cut from a preen bush. She ~18o remained in the house all ~ to help her Mistress, wait on her and kepp fresh vater at the water shelves and just any little jobs the Mistres. saw fit for her to do. Molly lived on with the Cox8e till she ~s grown, and married a youn~ Indian, to them were borne two Children, etrie. l:olly Indian afterwards married a slave-hand on the Cox farm and lived in a small log hut close by, &s the law was, she beinH an Indian, her Indian children were not con~iderpd slaves but she always liked for them to be kept busy and out of mischief so let them be used in the big house as she WAS, when she was YOUDoit. ~he Coxes had two Frown 80ns, who were very wild, bet on horse-races and gambled just any way they could ~8t the money and more bssidps, now, they were deRply in debt and knew not how to pet out. On one occa8~10n ~8 these little eirls ~ere h~re to keep flies from the table but ere out of the room at the time, overheard a conTerwation between the two brothers, planni~ to take these two 1i Ie colored pirls down the river into G~orgla ADd sell th~m to ~et 80me money for ~p.mblin~. The children flew home 88 fast pa they could run, to tell their mother what they had he.xd but the chlldr"n in the "Tcitement failed to hear when .. • UllUJ l!'OIKLORE I Preeton Kleln--LeeCo • Another Indian atory told by J.lra.GIlO.LIauelby.~ Opel1ka.Ala, ,of aOlle Indians liYing in the neiBftborhooil of her grand-father, One of the neighbors who moyed into thia oommunity too late to plant a garden s in'9'1ted to go to a neighbors for some vegetables,ao sent her two amall ohildSan to this other neighbors aoross a wide creek, with a foot­log orossing,to get the vegetables,and on returning the two children heard Indians oo.ing and hid under the end olf this log till they pasll8d onJ.,.eight or ten,and returned,and mile they were there,heard these Indians plsnnins to massacre the 1IIhole"COtton"f&.llily and did,all but this little boy and girl who ware hidden under the; bridge, too afraid to 1I0ye,and flnally ran home to tell what they had heard. This little "Cotton" girl that went back home and reported on mat she had heard the IndiBlls plaming was sent to Gold Rill ,Ala. ,later to lift and has • grand-son li.ing there- now, .' 11ll8ge Jackson. In this fight they killad Indian Ben's best friend,then this old Indian kaew that he ould be killed as the Indian A••• then ,was for the ned in torn try to kill th& kiner,ao one night about aidnigbt, s.cox was awak­ened by a Toioe aaying,"Cox--ee,I'. a dead man,I'1I a dead lIaD,cox--ee,so she was eo frightened thinklng he was saying "Cox--ee,w111 be a dead man," and planning to kill her husband and would not lat hill go out to see about him, but finally understanding that it was the friendly Indian and in trouble went to him. After disoussing the situation,he told the ndian he must not do that and he himeelf would go to Columbus QQ" the naarest plaoe to reaoh the law,to 8at a warrant to arreat this Indian killer,and they did and got their man,mo as hangad in Ga., with two other man. Re baing the first Indian In \hie oountry known to haTe been hanged by law instead of Indian faehion. • • I Several yearB ago in La l'!lYe~te,A1a.,lived a negro wo....n by the nalllll of EBtelle Thomae. • :ete110 1e Breot bolieVllr in oonjuring,ahe eaye sho wae oonjured when ho livod in Chambers Co. Whilo living there,hor next door neignbor woe a single girl and Estelle thought wae tryi g to got her hueband ww~ from her. thO left Blde of her Dono juet itohed and itohed and that is itohing for a woman that wante to do you harm. she said. After a whUe thia neighbor ° over as ullucl.eat by the fire llnd talk-e • stell0 wae combing hor own hair and WOllld throw tho combings in the fire, BOII8 burned and Bome fe11 on the haorth. several nights after that ,and for vera! nighte,when she wont to the door or out of doora,grollt flaBhell of light.11ke lightening,would dart acroee her oyos and she would falll ao funny, Just wanted to run and holler and ~ould havo suob mad fita and then be blind a while. "Yes'm,1 aho do know 4at nigger oast er apell over me,oauae e wanted my huaband,no' ,I don't know how She done hit un1eaa sho got s er my hair and made up eum o~nJure and put on me. I feels hit eUD times now,hit Jest makes me have one er dem mcd fite, oouree I ain't Goad her ainoe us moved doY!ll he e and datB er long t1...e er go, but she still have IIllI in her po r d ° Bte dem ap lls over IllII eti11. n "You reoon dat wos whut hi 10 WOS,88UBO Bhe oould er put poisoll in my food oauee ahe wae in and out er my k1tohenllotB er timea,but no'm ahe jest or in dnt fix." "You know dem kind kin oaBt BpellB over yer ef you stepB over ~ticka dey I oonJure womn en ebe ShO got l~e down fer you ,you never know when dey 40ee 110 ither ."
title Folklore, Lee County.
titleStr Folklore, Lee County.
url http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/wpa/id/905
id ADAHwpa905
thumbnail http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/utils/getthumbnail/collection/wpa/id/905
_version_ 1743797184847937536
spelling GSU# SG022775_00880-00901SG022775_00880_00901Folklore, Lee County.Folder contains 21 pages of Alabama folklore compiled for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the late 1930s.1938 circa1930-1939African Americans--Alabama--Folklore; Creek Indians; Folklore--Alabama; Alabama Writers' Project; Lee County (Ala.); United States. Works Progress AdministrationTextDocumentsAlabama. Dept. of Archives and HistoryWorks Progress Administration filesSG022775WPA Alabama Writers' Project, Folklore, Lee County, #3Alabama 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 tiff/ Preeton Klein---Leeco. o . Year. and yeare ago,ae the etory goes told by a white oitizen of ~ee , . • Co. ,Ala. ,lived a family of wealthy planters. At thie time the mother and son lived on this large plaatation; of oourse in those days there were no soreen doors and windows,then every family used the younger alaves,boye as water boys,the girls to shoo flies off of the table withs bruSh. A girl, named Naroissus,Who helped in the house and dining room,was a light mulatto girl and neat in appearanoe so this SOD fell in l've with this mulatto girl and things finally beo... so bad his poor old mother left home to live with one of the other children. Years later \hie white man beoame very ill and requested '0 be buried in bis front yard When he died,and was. Naroissus married in three months and made the remark, "lIut of sight, out of mind. It She moved to the Heard plantation and later eold to .W.Snipea and below is a oopy of the reo'ipt of one of her ohildren, being sold for. 1,4.00, she for 1000 and the baby for $400. POR VALUE RSCEIVBD I DELIVER AnD SELL unTO YR.W. lPES A NEGRO WOIlAN :BY THE NAUE OF PHOEBIA,ABOUT 20YEARS OF AGE AIID CHlLD (A BOY)IIOT nllED ABOUT TiO 1lOIIrHS ULD,lI'IIIT:! NEGROES. I T TO BE SOUND IN BODY AllD KIND AND SLAVES FOR LIYE?AGAINST THE CLAUIS OF ALL 0THEil PERSOUS VE.~,TliIS THE 17th.OF SEPT.1866. .UO.R.HEARD • !rh18 bab7 bo:? is an old man now,eighty-two years old,living in Upe l1lta, Ala.,Lee Co. He has his seoond wite,who was Vannie ~loyd,lived on same f~&, both are in bad health and barel,. enough to live on and aay give thea slavery t~, "Us ehow woe ted and had warm olothea,lIl8J' not been ae fine as dey weare nowdays, but us 'il'Usn't hangry nor oold,our folkB wos Show good tar UB. M us ohildren _t 0010 in de oold wid oot oor bonnets,ole mistaBII 'od osll UB right back and pinoh our earll. She never did 10lr our &ODlere tar whip us and maw l ~WOOld Bay, 'de helllp 18 jest ar growing fer hl8 • JIIIck tooimeaning I'd be GhDa' Stor1es • a P. C.X. --Lea Co. • • hun8 someday oause dey usad grass ropas you know." Ef us had measles ar eaoh us wus carr1ed ter the b18 housa and slept 1n 11ttla olosats.whut had badS 1n dem whut she made." 'Vann1s ••id, "1\y maw had su M ts er tw1ns. an she won I 10 lowed ieer turn her hands ter do noth1n'." Vannie sa1d. "One day I went to da f1a1d aarly and a caie wos cry1n8 and follo d me up and down de rows as I wOrked and or1ad all day long.us would rook IUt and rat baak h1t 'ud oome and Be boy 't'Ihuie wos work1ng wid us "1d, 'I am p1ne ieer :!t1ll dat damn ieh1ng.' 110 don't kJ.:j.l de 'oar thing but sOllllln sho 1s p1nt ar happen and r1ghie den and there daie oat jaeie opened up sum Uay w1ngs. jest 1ak er turkeY,and sUd, Whoof .and up 1t rose and fiew 1n oar oh1mney," "lIo~m us never seed h1t no more." "D1dn't h1t sn1pes?" "Show d1d." "And er nother ie1me Kisa, I all de t1f:le 11ked ter have flowers on de eaUn' table SO I woS out p1okJ.ng flowers en sumpen sa1d. 'Uh-huh.Uh-huh. and I jest kept on p1ok1n8 my flowera en ever t10:e I broke one off h1 t would Bay Uh-huh.uh-huh and I jeat got ao aoeered ••en hJ.t aa1d,' ell.a1r,' and man, I drapped dem flower a and flew tar the houae hard .. I ooold fly and ahet the door ... " I jeat tell you K18icaaa daie sa1pea plaoa woa iche hanieest place you arer sged. n , 'J.lr,sn1pea,You remember when austar woa .1ok?" "I show dO," "We woa .eU~'roUDd de fire qu1.t lak,she W08 birtiliD'er baby.and er lady woa aetten' there wid us whut woa g01n' br wa1t on her and I ieell ybQ dam doora woa ahut Ughie and fore God I BBW .r f1gure oom1ng 1n through that ahat door, I punoh­ad th1s other oMsn and aa1d,Look yonder you 8ee dat? She sa1d ah.t up you- '11 k111 your s1ater. ell,I tall you dat thJ.ng k.pt ooming and th1a womaD je.t .or••••d and tr1.d her be.t tar git up the ohAIm1ay and I wish 1'00 oould er Baed her wh1te dreas den,h1t mo won't wh1ica no more. Well that blaok th1ng d1Bsapeared and my s1ater's baby d1dn't 11ve but two .anths ne1ther." GHOST or < • • Sethn Up Party : le lngram (Col.) 1'.C.Klein---Lee Co. . all en nobody 'roon dare had no goats I rle how old are you? I'se s~y-five,miss. Is I ever seed er ghost? 11,mistess.I wus born wid er veil over ~ faoe and er eord too, and them kind er Dhillon wos born t.ar see things en talk wid de dead bU" I'se been seeard tar talk wid dem,oause dey moot t.e11 me BUmpeD whut I den' want ter bew, but I t.e11 :flU tho mistess, I wos at ar "Set.ten Up" party one night -.hen I wos 'bout fourteen years old, 'bout. er mile en er half frum home and when I wos going down er narrow path thrll dem woods,er set.ten hen wid er dozen er more chickens lit up in dat pat.h,a11 fuzzed up and jest flew all over me and hit. woe in the mido1e er the night. t.oo en ne:ver did see whur she eum frum ner whur she went.,yea'm she did,nom I didn' have noth­ing t.8r drink,hit wus jest real. And I mora dan did f1:f an the faster I runed t.he more th1nga I seed er cemin' behind me,and me er paesin' goat.s wid long beardS and I don't. know whut nei ther. en I got home my he said, ..L tells yer to cum in fore dark and • yer jest etays out till mid-night. en I don' keer ef thinge do take oat attar yoa.1't I kin a1waye eee folke aJ.k1ng 'roand ergin in 1ife,whut hae been dead er long Ume cause I woe Illest. born ter see t.hem kinder things but I ain't _ver talked to um,no'm,I ain't. naver desired t.ar talk to um. I kin be walk-ing 'roand moet eny time and ell fre h b100d,O,eo plain. One the I had er bad spell er eicknese and tr13 'thar oum back and stood by my bad, jeet ae plain e z I see s you now and ahe wue fanning me ,ao'm ehe didn' say nothin' t.er me but ehe hope git ma 11. GHOST TALES------ arle !ngram (Col. , . • • I : sette~ Up Party ~rle how old are YOU! I'oe sixty-fiTe,mies. Ia I eTer soed er ghoat'l ell,a1ateBs, I wus born wid er Teil OTer rq faoe and er oord too, and them kind er obillun Wl1S born ter 88e things en talk wid de dead bU' I'ae been soeerd ter talk wid dem,oause dey out tell me sumpen Whut I dan' want ter know. but I tell yer tho miatess,I WDB at er "Sotton Up" party one night 'Whon I B 'bout fourteen yeara old, 'bout er mile en er half frum home and whon I wos going down or narrow path thrll dem woods,or Botton hon wi4 or do~en er more iokeDB lit up in dat path,all fuszod up and je t ow all onr me and hit B in the middle er the night too en I never did seo whur she cum frwn ner whur she WIInt,yes'm she did,nom I diAn' haTo noth-ing ter dr1nJ::,hit wua jost real. ADd I Clore dan did fly en the faster I runed the more thingB I Boed er comin' bohind me,and me er pasBin' gcats wid long bearda and I don't know 1lhut all,en nobody 'rollIl dare had no goats nei thor. en I got licme my p a he said,"! tells yer to OUID in fore dark and • ye JOBt steT8 out till mid-night an I don' koar af thingo do taka out attar ;YOO." I kin wlJi1s 8ee folks walking 'round ergin in life, ut ha been dead er long till8 oauae I 8 ~ 8t born ter see thom kinder 1hing8 but I ain't never talked to UJlI,no'm,I ain't nOTer deoirad ter talk to IlID. I kin be walk­ing 'round m08t eny time and lIIIell freoh bloo ,O,so plain. One time I had er bad 8pell er sickness snd r:v 'other CUID bank and 8tood by my bed,je8t aD plain ez I soes yOIl now and &he WilD fanning me,ao'm hs didn' sa;y nothin' ter mo bllt she hope git me ....,11. • • Ala1'np 1lar1 W...0....4e4 111 u Ml441. .1' U !lou. 2 a. 1.1 b_41. at olotha. U.4 111 a .quare t olo'h• .u'.r \ha Journq .tar..4 \ha tarthar 'beT 4 tbe we.. .... .r.hllT. tar'h.r ...4 tar'bar b.hll14, '11 Mr. DowuU reaU.. \hq .lp, ha•• 10.' the .la•• wo..... Vanl tor so•• U .. wi'hout .r.11I11 oatohlllC UP. ha ...t Ullol• .r.tt back '0 look for her. Unol• .r.ft tOUl14 h.r ooapl.t.l1. ni an4 111ne 111 'ha 1'0&4. noi able to CO &J1T far\h.r. Abo wh.. Unol• .r.tt broucht Mr. Dow­ull•• ha uplain.4 ihai .h. vas co1Jlc to ha•• a babT••0 ihq 1 s4l.at.l1 aa4e her.o hoi ootf.....4 414 whai thaT coul4 tor her. In 4us U a UUle whn. I. a .1rl .... born to hal' 111 th. a1441. at ihlS ro&4. • Dowdell ..,4 Unol• .r.tt aotine .. D1IJ'•• aa1u th. 11iU. n... babT uP 111 a t ... oloth•• • ha ha4 be.n oarrTlne 111 that b1Z4l•• Mr. Dovull took 'hls babT bun41....4 bouno.4 ii up ...4 cI.ovn an4 .S"C. "Bl••• ~ l1'tl. fr•• ~t. n1 r. ~ llttl. fr•• whU. ~rl oo.t •• noth111C." ...4 aciuallT kliled ii, prauA. ha .&14. ihai ha!a4 14 not~ for tM. babT ...4 pull.4 0117 onr Mr. OUft. lis &&14. "tM. shall be &7 Uttle 4anchisr'. u,n. whit. an4 b. ra1l&4 111 ~ hous. to _n all &D4 ••m hal', in Tears woo ...4 io pl.., wiih her now. ".r.I1I11, I tMllIt oil. oil ul4 b. u ••4 1l0a47." ha .&14." as .h. va. bo.... in tha 1'0&4. but .r7l11lT b. 4.0 for h.r w b. n ...4 1Iar7, ,hat ha flasl17 0011••l1t.4 an4 called hal' 1larT· .... .r.11I11 va. 110t able io b. oarrlsl!. all, iheT fOUl14 a plan­\ aUon 010•• bT an4 wed iha vMh """sr it he ooull!. \aks oars at tM. wo..., babT ..4 two UU1. bOT. tor aboui two weeks, allI... • • " -" . 2 aD ...p....ed '" l' hb lllbl.. llefor. he .at 4""". la 100klDc rOOTer h. n tl0 4 th. or t- ~l. t 1n the botto • t th1JlldDg DCthll1C of it. he IIoIdII eelf 00 forialll."it hi. la hll d. and bl aD to b ]llble. In t nl M. vhen all v.. q111.t bd the .-plt-wit of the 10111. noUo.d a black cat or.. 1 the hole lD the &1001'. !h. r.acher AlAn't u.r a word but kept onl "'" on the cd end onl .J'" on hi. ]llb1l and hi. n hi. blade. fhe CIt dole ln a HUle 010..... lDtent17 ."HU1. "".....l' ~ t. the ....0 .Ull wit one..,. on hi. lIlb1l. bl ln hond 0 l' 1;11 on t eat but .Ull ...t DCt \0 b. noUo1nc. • cat !:&Y. a at °r...v.· aDd 'lIDO d n the • but th ....on a. q111 .. the oat. I a .1& and cut ott ono ot it'. tr nt .... fhe I'D t.ll at the nonI. t ••t b t lilian h. looked t r the eat 1t had All& \rh A tum1nc \0 klelt: the oatI. toot .wq. 10 b. old. hI w.. thwllIe...tl'1l • tor lD.teed of the cat'. toot. I. lor1nc t Id b.. ot • 0 t'. wlt. wao ... roU.d it 1D a pl. ot a..... and U U ... !Iuo nen 110 nt to the h • tor br t. t· landlor4 W&I I'lalal7 ....."rlled t II alhl, but Itea w t 4 t a D1 t he ..,."t." repl1e4 thet h. had ...4 a rtlot17 q111lt nlpt wlth the eze Uon ot I wlU 0 t to .oratch h1a but that h. had • blad. and .....t ott n. ot U. tront I''''''' °lltI dU.ol h••&14. and aMe4 0]17 t °lbe 't cot\a thi. b DCt weU.o • , ---1' :..._-_. '(jet' ~- Several years ago in La Fayette. a.,lived a ne.gro woman ~maJsr­Estelle Thomas. stelle is a great believer in conjUrin~Bhe ­, she lived in Chambers Co. ~ says she was conjured when Whll......... next door neighbor was a single girl Estelle harm,she said. 1 this thought)was trying to her husband wway from ~e~the left side ~ ",~~\,7~ :w..... gose just itched and itched and that is 'for a woman tha~wa.nts to do ~~ neighbor came over~ III •••&i..sat by the fire and talk-stelle was combing her own hair and would throw the combings in the fir • -some bumad and BOms fall on the hearth. - Several nights after that .and for several nights."hen she went. to the o. spell over I feels hit done hit unless she cast me. door or out of doors,great f1ashe. of ,;light.1ike 1ightening.wou1d dart across ,";;J-. her eyes and she would f_1 • just ~~to d ho 1e.r and would have mad fHs and then be b1ind~ Wb11~ "Yes 'm,l sho do know dat nigger ms~cause she wanted my husbant1~o·m.I don't know how ehs S("YrJ-' ~ got _ er my hair and made up oonjure and put on ~ " ~times nowJhit jest makes me have one er dem mad fit ?course I ain't seed her since us moved down here and dats ~ long tir_e -but she still have me in her power end oasts dem spells over 118 still." ~ '1 '"You reoon dat. WU~whut hit wus,oause IS.hs could er put poisoll in my food ~ -:;.- oause she we in and out er my kitchenJ10ts er times:but no'm she jest oonjure womsn en she sho got me in dat fix." "You know dem kind tin oast spe;lls over r ef you steps over ~ticks dey lays dOwn fer yo~ou never know when dey does it n&ither." ." ." -l'NDIAl'l FOLKLORE J Preeton Klein--Lee Co. This story s told by ~rs.G.O.~ulsby,of Opelika,Ala.,leatned as her hair wae being ourled when a little girl and told by her grand-mother, the parties concerned being her great-gra4d parente. In 1829,coming frcm Putman GO.,Ft.Y1tchell,Ga.four miles from Col­umbus, Ga.,crossing the lcwer Chattahoochee River,~.Willis Cox,wife Eli­sabeth Moore and three chUdren,acved to abams and booght land from the Indians and settled in south east.ern part of Lee Co. ,Alabama, between Dchee and Salem, Ala. , ow, in crossing this river, in the moving,e:tcltllaent and11i.a , • Cox thinking that his wife Elizabeth had all the children on the cther side of the river with her,didn't worry, but as daylight apP~Dach­ed and time to move on,an check op, the oldeet child, illiam,a boY of 4t yea%e of age was missing;t'was only a short time and little William walked up se;ying,1hat he had gotten lost from tUe crowd and le;y down under soma buahes and lll.ept for the night,not being afraid as he knew they woold hunt for him in the morning and woold not leave him. This land 1I8S bOUght from a friendly Indian called "Indian Ben," and at this t,ime,he lived in a doable log cabin and promisDd U TBoate at once, bot as tba 8tbry goas,he ~ivsd on in one of the cabin rooms and the Coxes camped Indian faehioa in the other, but all this tilll8 ~rs.aox lived in ortsl fear of SOIl8 of the feaily being killed or burned oot,eo soaroely sapt at all,for lIhe coold, DOt be perlll1aded that Indian Ben wee a friend­ly Indian, ahe thinking all Indiane w ebloody murder ra. Attar a week or ao Ben aoved out to himself and alwaya proved a frlllDd of the vary best kind to this f ..ilY,calling .Cox--ee for r.Cox. Latar on ,Cox moved down in the eouth-weat,arn part of Lee Co. ,on Sogahatchee Creek near If tsaulga Ala. ,at Rocq DDt Church. A 11ttle far-ther on wea an Indian reaerTBt1on. J.lr.Cox had a trading post for the Indiana in !:tallapoosa Co.at craeshoe Bend. Knowing the ndi..a weah1esses ,he woold never aell them firewater, • • • • • FOLKLORE MOLLY I mIAIl Preston Klein -- Lee Co . Durin~ slaver,y time, if a slgve married an Indian o~n. their chil­dren were Dot ~1de slaves, but free to roam 8S the Indians did, such WP.B the case with Molly Indian. As a child Molly Indian lived on the plantation of Mr. Willis Cox, who married Miss Elizabeth Moore and lived ~t Ft. Itchell, Ala., n~ar Bock Mount Church, in 1829. The Cox's used Ii tIe Molly in tho big house to keep flies off the table, with a fly brush. e of strips of c~lored oanere. or oeW80Ruers strlooed god ulued to stick, to wave ov~r the table. or a nice ~reen switch, cut from a preen bush. She ~18o remained in the house all ~ to help her Mistress, wait on her and kepp fresh vater at the water shelves and just any little jobs the Mistres. saw fit for her to do. Molly lived on with the Cox8e till she ~s grown, and married a youn~ Indian, to them were borne two Children, etrie. l:olly Indian afterwards married a slave-hand on the Cox farm and lived in a small log hut close by, &s the law was, she beinH an Indian, her Indian children were not con~iderpd slaves but she always liked for them to be kept busy and out of mischief so let them be used in the big house as she WAS, when she was YOUDoit. ~he Coxes had two Frown 80ns, who were very wild, bet on horse-races and gambled just any way they could ~8t the money and more bssidps, now, they were deRply in debt and knew not how to pet out. On one occa8~10n ~8 these little eirls ~ere h~re to keep flies from the table but ere out of the room at the time, overheard a conTerwation between the two brothers, planni~ to take these two 1i Ie colored pirls down the river into G~orgla ADd sell th~m to ~et 80me money for ~p.mblin~. The children flew home 88 fast pa they could run, to tell their mother what they had he.xd but the chlldr"n in the "Tcitement failed to hear when .. • UllUJ l!'OIKLORE I Preeton Kleln--LeeCo • Another Indian atory told by J.lra.GIlO.LIauelby.~ Opel1ka.Ala, ,of aOlle Indians liYing in the neiBftborhooil of her grand-father, One of the neighbors who moyed into thia oommunity too late to plant a garden s in'9'1ted to go to a neighbors for some vegetables,ao sent her two amall ohildSan to this other neighbors aoross a wide creek, with a foot­log orossing,to get the vegetables,and on returning the two children heard Indians oo.ing and hid under the end olf this log till they pasll8d onJ.,.eight or ten,and returned,and mile they were there,heard these Indians plsnnins to massacre the 1IIhole"COtton"f&.llily and did,all but this little boy and girl who ware hidden under the; bridge, too afraid to 1I0ye,and flnally ran home to tell what they had heard. This little "Cotton" girl that went back home and reported on mat she had heard the IndiBlls plaming was sent to Gold Rill ,Ala. ,later to lift and has • grand-son li.ing there- now, .' 11ll8ge Jackson. In this fight they killad Indian Ben's best friend,then this old Indian kaew that he ould be killed as the Indian A••• then ,was for the ned in torn try to kill th& kiner,ao one night about aidnigbt, s.cox was awak­ened by a Toioe aaying,"Cox--ee,I'. a dead man,I'1I a dead lIaD,cox--ee,so she was eo frightened thinklng he was saying "Cox--ee,w111 be a dead man," and planning to kill her husband and would not lat hill go out to see about him, but finally understanding that it was the friendly Indian and in trouble went to him. After disoussing the situation,he told the ndian he must not do that and he himeelf would go to Columbus QQ" the naarest plaoe to reaoh the law,to 8at a warrant to arreat this Indian killer,and they did and got their man,mo as hangad in Ga., with two other man. Re baing the first Indian In \hie oountry known to haTe been hanged by law instead of Indian faehion. • • I Several yearB ago in La l'!lYe~te,A1a.,lived a negro wo....n by the nalllll of EBtelle Thomae. • :ete110 1e Breot bolieVllr in oonjuring,ahe eaye sho wae oonjured when ho livod in Chambers Co. Whilo living there,hor next door neignbor woe a single girl and Estelle thought wae tryi g to got her hueband ww~ from her. thO left Blde of her Dono juet itohed and itohed and that is itohing for a woman that wante to do you harm. she said. After a whUe thia neighbor ° over as ullucl.eat by the fire llnd talk-e • stell0 wae combing hor own hair and WOllld throw tho combings in the fire, BOII8 burned and Bome fe11 on the haorth. several nights after that ,and for vera! nighte,when she wont to the door or out of doora,grollt flaBhell of light.11ke lightening,would dart acroee her oyos and she would falll ao funny, Just wanted to run and holler and ~ould havo suob mad fita and then be blind a while. "Yes'm,1 aho do know 4at nigger oast er apell over me,oauae e wanted my huaband,no' ,I don't know how She done hit un1eaa sho got s er my hair and made up eum o~nJure and put on me. I feels hit eUD times now,hit Jest makes me have one er dem mcd fite, oouree I ain't Goad her ainoe us moved doY!ll he e and datB er long t1...e er go, but she still have IIllI in her po r d ° Bte dem ap lls over IllII eti11. n "You reoon dat wos whut hi 10 WOS,88UBO Bhe oould er put poisoll in my food oauee ahe wae in and out er my k1tohenllotB er timea,but no'm ahe jest or in dnt fix." "You know dem kind kin oaBt BpellB over yer ef you stepB over ~ticka dey I oonJure womn en ebe ShO got l~e down fer you ,you never know when dey 40ee 110 ither ."http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/wpa/id/905