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.

“We found us a cabin to live in here.  Didn’t have to pay rent then likes they do now.  We lived here but after a while my mother died.  They had two battles ’round here, the Battle of Prairie Grave and one was the Battle of Pea Ridge, after we comed back but no soldiers bothered us.  I remember that back from where the Christian church is now, down to the Town Branch, there was a whole lot of Federal soldiers staying, they called it then Cato Branch, cause a man by the name of Cato owned all that land.”

“Yes’m, I guess we had a purty good master and missus.  We never did get treated much rough.”

“After the War, Miss Evaline brought back all the colored people that she took with her, but my father.  He got married down there and didn’t come back for a long time.  Then he did and died here.  Two of Miss Eveline’s daughters married down there.  They didn’t have no boys ’tall, just four girls.”

“When Peace was made the slaves all scattered.  We none was givin’ nothin’ for as I know.  I worked on a farm for $13. a month and my board, for a man down at Oxford’s Bend, then I went down to Van Buren where I worked as a porter in a hotel then I went to Morrilton and I married.  We come back here and I worked all the time as a carpenter.  I worked for Mister A.M.  Byrnes.  I helped build a lot of fine houses round here and I helped put a roof on the Main Building at the University.”

“Yes’m, I own my home down by the school, I can’t make much money these days.  It kinda worries me.  My folks all dead but three of my brothers children.  One of these is blind.  He lives on the old home my mother had.  The county gives him a little food and a little money.”

“Yes’m, my white folks were all good to us.  Purty good to us.”

“After Peace was made though, we all jes’ scattered, somehow.”

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