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.

“I went to school some after the war, but I had to pay for it.

“I been disabled bout five or six years.  Got to have somethin’ to take us away, I guess.”

Interviewer:  Miss Irene Robertson
Person interviewed:  Diana Rankins, Brinkley, Arkansas
Age:  66

“I was born at Arlington, Tennessee but when I was a chile the depot was called With.  My parents’ name Sarah and Solomon Green.  There was seven girls and one boy of us.  My sister died last year had two children old as I was.  I was the youngest chile.  Folks mated younger than they do now and seem like they had better times when there was a big family.

“Adam Turnover in Charleston, South Carolina owned my papa.  When he died they sold him.  He was one year and six months old when he was sold.

“I think S.C.  Bachelor, around Brownsville, Tennessee, owned mama first.  She said they put her upon the block and sold her and her mother was crying.  The man after he sold her ask her if she didn’t want him to sell her.  She said she didn’t care but said she knowed she was afraid to say she cared cause she was crying.  She never seen her mama no more.  She was carried off on a horse.  She was a little girl then.  General Hayes bought her and he bought papa too.  They played together.  General Hayes made the little boys run races so he could see who could run the fastest.

“Papa said they picked him up and carried him off.  He said they pressed him into the breastworks of the war.  He didn’t want to go to war.  Mr. Hayes kept him hid out but they stole him and took him to fight.  He come home.  He belong to Jack Hayes, General Hayes’ son.  They called him Mr. Jack or Mr. Hayes when freedom come.  Mr. Jack sent him to Como, Mississippi to work and to Duncan, Arkansas to work his land.  I was fifteen years old when we come to Arkansas.  Mr. Walker Hayes that was president of the Commercial Appeal over at Memphis lost his land.  We been from place to place over Arkansas since then.  Mr. Walker was General Hayes’ grandson.  We worked field hands till then, we do anything since.  I nursed some for Mr. Charles Williams in Memphis.  I have done house work.  I got two children.  My son got one leg off.  I live with him.  This little gran’boy is the most pleasure to us all.

“The Ku Klux never did interfere with us.  They never come to our house.  I have seen them.

“When papa come from war it was all over.  We knowed it was freedom.  Everybody was in a stir and talking and going somewhere.  He had got his fill of freedom in the war.  He said turn us all out to freeze and starve.  He stayed with the Hayes till he died and mama died and all of us scattered out when Mr. Walker Hayes lost his land.

“Ladies used to be too fine to be voting.  I’m too old now.  My men-folks said they voted.  They come home and say how they voted all I know about voting.

“Walker Avenue in Memphis is named for Mr. Walker Hayes and Macremore was named for him or by him one.

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