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.

My mother came from a fine family,—­the Beebe family.  Angeline Beebe was her name.  You’ve heard of the Beebe family, of course.  Roswell Beebe at one time owned all the land that Little Rock now sets on.  I was born in a log cabin where Fifth and Spring streets meet.  The Jewish Synagogue is on the exact spot.  Once we lived at Third and Cumberland, across from that old hundred-year-old-building where they say the legislature once met.  What you call it?  Yes, that’s it; the Hinterlider building.  It was there then, too.  My father and mother had the kind of wedding they had for slaves, I guess.  Yes, ma’am, they did call them “broom-stick weddings”.  I’ve heard tell of them.  Yes, ma’am, the master and mistress, when they find a couple of young slave folks want to get married, they call them before themselves and have them confess they want to marry.  Then they hold the broom, one at each end, and the young folks told to jump over.  Sometimes they have a new cabin fixed all for them to start in.  After Peace, a minister came and married my father and mother according to the law of the church and of the land.

The master’s family was thoughtful in keeping our records in their own big family Bible.  All the births and deaths of the children in my father’s family was in their Bible.  After Peace, father got a big Bible for our family, and—­wait, I’ll show you....  Here they are, all copied down just like out of old master’s Bible....  Here’s where my father and mother died, over on this page.  Right here’s my own children.  This space is for me and my husband.

No ma’am, it don’t make me tired to talk.  But I need a little time to recall all the things you want to know ’bout.  I was so little when freedom came I just can’t remember.  I’ll tell you, directly.

I remember that the first thing my father did was to go down to a plantation where the bigger children was working, and bring them all home, to live together as one family.  That was a plantation where my mother had been; a man name Moore—­James Moore—­owned it.  I don’t know whether he had bought my mother from Beebe or not.  I can remember two things plain what happened there.  I was little, but can still see them.  One of my mother’s babies died and Master went to Little Rock on a horse and carried back a little coffin under his arm.  The mistress had brought mother a big washing.  She was working under the cover of the wellhouse and tears was running down her face.  When master came back, he said:  “How come you are working today, Angeline, when your baby is dead?” She showed him the big pile of clothes she had to wash, as mistress said.  He said:  “There is plenty of help on this place what can wash.  You come on in and sit by your little baby, and don’t do no more work till after the funeral.”  He took up the little dead body and laid it in the coffin with his own hands.  I’m telling you this for what happened later on.

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