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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 258 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 258 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

Interviewer:  Mrs. Bernice Bowden
Person interviewed:  Ike Worthy
                    2413 W. 11th Avenue, Pine Bluff, Arkansas
Age 74

“I was born in Selma, Alabama on Christmas day and I’m goin’ on 75.

“I can ‘member old missis’ name Miss Liza Ann Bussey.  I never will forget her name.  Fed us in a trough—­eighteen of us.  Her husband was named Jim Bussey, but they all dead now.

“When I got large enough to remember we went to Louisiana.  I was sixteen when we left Alabama—­six hundred head of us.  Dr. Bonner emigrated us there for hisself and other white men.

“There was nine of us boys in my parents’ family.  We worked every day and cleared land till twelve o’clock at night.  On Saturday we played ball and on Sunday we went to Sunday school.

“We worked on the shares—­got half—­and in the fall we paid our debts.  Sometimes we had as much as $150 in the clear.

“Most money I ever had was farmin’.  I farmed 52 years and never did buy no feed.  Raised my own meat and lard and molasses.  Had four milk cows and fifteen to twenty hogs.  You see, I had eight children in the family.

“Never went to school but one day in my life, then my father put us to work.  Never learned to read.  You see everybody in the pen now’days got a education.  I don’t think too much education is good for ’em.

“I was 74 Christmas day.

“Garland, Brewster—­the sheriff and the judge—­I missed them boys when they was little.  Worked at the brickyard.

“I got shot accidental and lost my right leg 32 years ago when I was farmin’.  I’ve chopped cotton and picked cotton with this peg-leg.  Mr. Emory say he don’t see how I can do it but I goes right along.  I made $21 pickin’ and $18 choppin’ last year.  I picked up until Thanksgiving night.

“I worked at the Long-Bell Lumber Company since I had this peg-leg too.  I stayed in Little Rock 23 years.  Had a wood yard and hauled wood.

“Yes ma’am, I voted the ’Publican ticket.  No ma’am, I never did hold any office.

“I don’t know what goin’ come of the younger generation.  To my idea I don’t think there’s anything to ’em.  They is goin’ to suffer when all the old ones is dead.

“I goes to the Zion Methodist Church.  No ma’am, I’m not a preacher—­just a bench member.”

Interviewer:  Samuel S. Taylor
Person interviewed:  Alice Wright
                    2418 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas
Age:  About 74

“I was born way yonder in slavery time.  I don’t know what part of Alabama nor exactly when, but I was born in slavery time and it was in Alabama.  My oldest boy would be fifty-six years old if he were living.  My father said he was born in slavery time and that I was born in slavery time.  I was a baby, my papa said, when he ran off from his old master and went to Mississippi.  He lived in the thickets for a year to keep his old master from finding out where he was.

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