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

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 375 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 375 pages of information about Slave Narratives.

Interviewer:  Mrs. Bernice Bowden
Person interviewed:  Millie Taylor
                    1418 Texas Street, Pine Bluff, Arkansas
Age:  78

“Yes’m, I was born in slavery times in Calhoun County, Mississippi.

“Bill Armstrong was my owner.  He’s been dead a long time.

“My folks stayed on there a good while.

“Pa said they was good to him but they wasn’t good to my ma.  I heered pa say they beat her till she died.  I don’t remember a thing ’bout my ma.

“I heered ’em talk ‘bout the Ku Klux.  They kep’ that in my hearin’ so much that I kep’ that in my remembrance.

“I know when we stayed on the place pa said was old master’s.  Yes’m, I sure ’members dat.  I know we stayed there till pa married again.

“Bill Armstrong’s wife made our clothes.  I know we stayed right in the yard with some more colored folks.

“Pa worked on the shares and rented too.

“I was twenty-four when I come from Mississippi here.  I was married then and had three chillun.  But they all dead now.  I stays here with my grandson.  I don’t know what I’d do if it wasn’t for him.  I reckon I’d just be knockin’ around—­no tellin’.

“I got another grandson lives in Marvell.  I went there to visit and I got so I couldn’t walk, so my grandson carried me to the doctor.  And he just looked at me—­he had been knowin’ me so long.  I said, ’Don’t you know me?’ And he said, ’If you’d take off your hat I think I’d know you.’  And he said, ‘Well, for the Lawd, if it ain’t Millie Taylor!’

“I’ve always done farmin’.  That’s the way I was raised—­farmin’.  I just looks at these folks in town and it seems funny to me to buy ever’thing you need.  Looks to me like they would rather raise it.

“Oh, Lawd, don’t talk about this young race.  It looks to me like they is more heathe’nish.  The Bible say they would be weaker and wiser but they is just too wise for their own good.  I just looks at ’em and I don’t know what to think about this young race.  They is a few respects you and theirselves.

“I seen things here in town I didn’t think I’d ever see.  Seems like the people in the country act like they recognize you more.

“I has a good remembrance.  Seems like I gets to studyin’ ’bout it and it just comes to me like ABC.  I know pa used to talk and tell us things and if I didn’t believe it, I didn’t give him no cross talk.  But nowadays if chillun don’t believe what you say, they goin’ try to show you a point.

“Yes ma’am, folks is livin’ a fast life—­white and colored.

“Looks like the old folks has worked long enough for the white folks till they ought to have enough to live on.”

Interviewer:  Miss Irene Robertson
Person interviewed:  Sarah Taylor, R.F.D., Madison, Arkansas
Age:  70

“I was born in Releford County, Tennessee, ten miles from Murfreesboro.  My parents belonged to Dr. Jimmy Manson.  He was off and gone from home nearly all the time.  He didn’t have a Negro driver.  Because he didn’t they called us all Manson’s free niggers.  Folks didn’t like it because we had so much freedom.  One day a terrible thing happened broke up our happy way of living on Dr. Manson’s place.

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