Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 69 pages of information about Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days.

Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 69 pages of information about Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days.
home for the three of us, and then see what I could do in this line of business.  After a long and hard search, I found a little house of two rooms where we could live, and the next day I found a place to start my restaurant.  For house furnishings, we used at first, to the best advantage we could, the things we had brought from Macon.  Caroline’s cookstove had been left with my foster-mother in Macon.  After hiring the room for the restaurant, I sent for this stove, and it arrived in a few days.  Then I went to a dealer in second-hand furniture and got such things as were actually needed for the house and the restaurant, on the condition that he would take them back at a discount when I got through with them.

Trade at the restaurant was very good, and we got along nicely.  My sister got a position as nurse for fifteen dollars a month.  One day the cook from a shipwrecked vessel came to my restaurant, and in return for his board and a bed in the place, agreed to do my cooking.  After trade became good, I changed my residence to a house of four rooms, and put three cheap cots in each of two of the rooms, and let the cots at a dollar a week apiece to colored men who worked nearby in hotels.  Lawrence and I did the chamber work at night, after the day’s work in the restaurant.

I introduced “Boston baked beans” into my restaurant, much to the amusement of the people at first; but after they had once eaten them it was hard to meet the demand for beans.

Lawrence, who was now about eleven years old, was a great help to me.  He took out dinners to the cigarmakers in a factory nearby.

At the end of the season, about four months, it had grown so hot that we could stay in Jacksonville no longer.  From my restaurant and my lodgers I cleared one hundred and seventy-five dollars, which I put into the Jacksonville bank.  Then I took the furniture back to the dealer, who fulfilled his agreement.

My sister decided to go back to Atlanta when she got through with her place as nurse, which would not be for some weeks.

I took seventy-five dollars out of my bank account, and with Lawrence went to Fernandina.  There we took train to Port Royal, S. C., then steamer to New York.  From New York we went to Brooklyn for a few days.  Then we went to Newport and stayed with a woman who kept a lodging-house.  I decided to see what I could do in Newport by keeping a boarding and lodging-house.  I hired a little house and agreed to pay nine dollars a month for it.  I left Lawrence with some neighbors while I came to Boston and took some things out of storage.  These things I moved into the little house.  But I found, after paying one month’s rent, that the house was not properly located for the business I wanted.  I left, and with Lawrence went to Narragansett Pier.  I got a place there as “runner” for a laundry; that is, I was to go to the hotels and leave cards and solicit trade.  Then Lawrence thought he would like to help by doing a little work. 

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Project Gutenberg
Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.