“He kept emigrating folks over there till he like to got killed. The white people give him a stayaway and told him not to come back, but he sure did get some colored folks out of Georgia.
“I ’member they said the war was to free the niggers. They called it the Civil War. I never did know why they called it that. I can’t ’member things like I used to.
“My mother’s old master’s granddaughter, Miss Anne, had a baby that was six months old when I was born and mama said old master come in and tell Miss Ann, ‘I’ve got a new little nigger for Mary Lou.’ He said he was goin’ to give her ten and that I was her first little nigger. When we was both grown Mary Lou used to write to me once a year and say ’I claim you yet, Mary.’
“I ’member when Garfield was shot. That was the first time I ever heard of gangrene.
“Yes’m I have worked hard all my life. When I was in Mississippi I used to make as much as ten dollars a week washin’ and ironin’. But I’m not able to work now. The Welfare helps me some.”
[HW: (Copy)]
El Dorado Division
folklore subjects (Ex-Slave)
Mrs. Mildred Thompson
Federal Writers’ Project
Union County, Arkansas
[TR: hand dated Nov. 6, 1936]
[TR: Ellen Crowley]
Ellen Crowley an old Negress of Jefferson county, known as “old Aunt Ellen” to both white and colored people. She was quite a character; a slave during Civil War and lived in Mississippi. She later married and moved to Arkansas.
Aunt Ellen was much feared and also respected by the colored race owing to the fact that she could foretell the future and cast a spell on those she didn’t like. This unusual talent “come about” while on a white plantation as a nurse. She foretold of a great sorrow that would fall on her white folks and in the year two children passed away. One day soon after she was being teased by a small negro boy to whom she promptly put the ‘curse’ on and in later years he was subject to “fits.”
She said she was “purty nigh” 200 when asked her age, always slept in the nude, and on arising she would say: “I didn’t sleep well last night, the debil sit at my feet and worried my soul” or vice versa “I had a good rest the Lord sit at my head and brought me peace.”
She was immaculate about her person and clothes and always wore a red bandana around her head.
Her mania was to clean the yard. When asked about her marriage she would say: “I been married seven times” but Jones, Brown and Crowley were the only husbands she could remember by name. She said the other “four no count Negroes wasn’t worth remembering.”
She was ever faithful to those she worked for, and was known to walk ten and twelve miles to see her white folks with whom she had work. Would come in and say: “Howdy, I’se come to stay awhile. I’ll clean the yard for my victuals and I can sleep on the floor.” She would go on her way in a few days leaving behind a clean yard and pleasant memories of a faithful servant.