
Texas Slavery Narratives 19
Preely Coleman
PREELY COLEMAN was born in 1852 on the Souba farm, near New Berry, South Carolina, but he and his mother were
sold and brought to Texas when Preely was a month old. They settled near Alto, Texas. Preely now lives in Tyler.

Preely Coleman
"I'm Preely Coleman and I never gits tired of talking. Yes, ma'am, it am Juneteenth, but I'm home, 'cause
I'm too old now to go on them celerabrations. Where was I born? I knows that 'zactly, 'cause my mammy tells me
that a thousand times. I was born down on the old Souba place, in South Carolina, 'bout ten mile from New Berry.
My mammy belonged to the Souba family, but its a fact one of the Souba boys was my pappy and so the Soubas sells
my mammy to Bob and Dan Lewis and they brung us to Texas 'long with a big bunch of other slaves. Mammy tells me
it was a full month 'fore they gits to Alto, their new home.
"When I was a chile I has a purty good time, 'cause there was plenty chillen on the plantation. We had
the big races. Durin' the war the sojers stops by on the way to Mansfield, in Louisiana, to git somethin' to eat
and stay all night, and then's when we had the races. There was a mulberry tree we'd run to and we'd line up and
the sojers would say, 'Now the first one to slap that tree gits a quarter,' and I nearly allus gits there first.
I made plenty quarters slappin' that old mulberry tree!
"So the chillen gits into their heads to fix me, 'cause I wins all the quarters. They throws a rope over
my head and started draggin down the road, and down the hill, and I was nigh 'bout choked to death. My only friend
was Billy and he was a-fightin', tryin' to git me loose. They was goin' to throw me in the big spring at the foot
of that hill, but we meets Capt. Berryman, a white man, and he took his knife and cut the rope from my neck and
took me by the heels and soused me up and down in the spring till I come to. They never tries to kill me any more.
"My mammy done married John Selman on the way to Texas, no cere'mony, you knows, but with her massa's consent.
Now our masters, the Lewises, they loses their place and then the Selman's buy me and mammy. They pays $1,500 for
my mammy and I was throwed in.
"Massa Selman has five cabins in he backyard and they's built like half circle. I grows big 'nough to hoe
and den to plow. We has to be ready for the field by daylight and the conk was blowed, and massa call out, 'All
hands ready for the field.' At 11:30 he blows the conk, what am the mussel shell, you knows, 'gain and we eats
dinner, and at 12:30 we has to be back at work. But massa wouldn't 'low no kind of work on Sunday.
"Massa Tom made us wear the shoes, 'cause they's so many snags and stumps our feets gits sore, and they
was red russet shoes. I'll never forgit 'em, they was so stiff at first we could hardly stand 'em. But Massa Tom
was a good man, though he did love he dram. He kep' the bottle in the center of the dining table all the time and
every meal he'd have the toddy. Us slaves et out under the trees in summer and in the kitchen in winter and most
gen'rally we has bread in pot liquor or milk, but sometimes honey.
"I well 'members when freedom come. We was in the field and massa comes up and say, 'You all is free as
I is.' There was shoutin' and singin' and 'fore night us was all 'way to freedom.
Harriet Collins
HARRIET COLLINS was born in Houston, Texas, in 1870. Her family had been slaves of Richard Coke, and remained
with him many years after they were freed. Harriet recalls some incidents of Reconstruction days, and believes
in the superstitions handed down to her from slave days.
"My birthday done come in January, on de tenth. I's birthed in Houston, in 1870, and Gov. Richard Coke
allus had owned my daddy and mammy, and dey stayed with him after freedom. Mammy, what was Julia Collins, didn't
die till 1910, and she was most a hundred year old.
"She done told me many a time 'bout how folkses git all worked up over Marse Coke's 'lection. Mammy took
lunch to de Capitol House to Marse Richard, and dere he am on de top floor with all he congressmen and dat Davis
man and he men on de bottom floor, tryin' to say Marse Richard ain't got no right to be governor dis here State.
Old Miss and de folkses didn't sleep a wink dat night, 'cause dey thunk it sho' be a fight. Dat in 1873, Mammy
allus say.
"De old place at Houston was like most all old places. Dere was little, small dormer windows, dey call
'em, in upstairs, and big porches everywhere. Dere was 'hogany furniture and rosewood bedsteads, and big, black
walnut dressers with big mirrors and little ones down de side. Old Miss allus have us keep de drapes white as drifted
snow, and polish de furniture till it shine. Dere was sofies with dem claw foots, and lots of purty chiny and silver.
"On de farm out from town dere was de log house, with quarters and de smokehouse and washhouse and big
barns and carriage house. De quarters was little, whitewashed, log houses, one for de family, and a fence of de
split palin's round most of dem.
"De white and cullud chillen played together, all over de place. Dey went fishin' and rode de plough hosses
and run de calves and colts and sech devilment. De little white gals all had to wear sunbonnets, and Old Miss,
she sew dem bonnets on every day, so dey not git sunburnt. Us niggers weared de long, duckin' shirts till us git
'bout growed, and den us weared long, dark blue dresses. Dey had spinnin' and weavin' rooms, where de cullud women
makes de clothes.
"Old Miss, she sho' a powerful manager. She knowed jes' how much meal and meat and sorghum it gwine take
to run de plantation a year. She know jes' how much thread it take for spinnin', and she bossed de settin' hens
and turkeys and fixin' of 'serves and soap. She was sho' good to you iffen you work and do like she tell you. Many
a night she go round to see dat all was right. She a powerful good nuss, too, and so was mammy.
"De white folks had good times. Dey'd go hossback ridin' and on picnics, and fishin' and have big dinners
and balls. Come Christmas, dey have us slaves cut a big lot of wood and keep fires all night for a week or two.
De house be lit with candles from top to toe, and lots of company come. For dinner us have turkey and beef roast
and a big 'ginny ham and big bowls of eggnog and a pitcher of apple cider and apple toddy. All us git somethin'
on Christmas and plenty eggnog, but no gittin' drunk.
"I can jes' see Marse Dick, tall and kinder stooped like, with de big flop hat and longtail coat and allus
carryin' a big, old walkin' stick. He was sho' a brave man and de big men say dey likes dat flop hat, 'cause dey
done follow it on de battlefield. He had a big voice and dey do tell how, in de war, he'd holler, 'Come on, boys,'
and de bullets be like hail and men fallin' all round, but dat don't stop Marse Dick. He'd take off dat flop hat
and plunge right on and dey'd foller he bald head where de fight was hottes'. He was sho' a man!
"When I gits married it was eight folkses dere, I jus' walks off and goes to housekeepin'. I had a calico
dress and a Baptist preacher marries us.
"Dere been some queer things white folks can't understand. Dere am folkses can see de spirits, but I can't.
My mammy larned me a lots of doctorin', what she larnt from old folkses from Africy, and some de Indians larnt
her. If you has rheumatism, jes' take white sassafras root and bile it and drink de tea. You makes lin'ment by
bilin' mullein flowers and poke roots and alum and salt. Put red pepper in you shoes and keep de chills off, or
string briars round de neck. Make red or black snakeroot tea to cure fever and malaria, but git de roots in de
spring when de sap am high.
"When chillen teethin' put rattlesnake rattles round de neck, and alligator teeth am good, too. Show de
new moon money and you'll have money all month. Throw her five kisses and show her money and make five wishes and
you'll git dem. Eat black-eyed peas on New Year and have luck all dat year:
"'Dose black-eyed peas is lucky,
When et on New Year's Day;
You'll allus have sweet 'taters
And possum come you way.'
"When anybody git cut I allus burns woolen rags and smokes de wound or burns a piece fat pine and drops
tar from it on scorched wool and bind it on de wound. For headache put a horseradish poultice on de head, or wear
a nutmeg on a string round you neck.
If you kills de first snake you sees in spring, you enemies ain't gwine git de best of you dat year. For a sprain,
git a dirt dauber's nest and put de clay with vinegar and bind round de sprain. De dime on de string round my ankle
keeps cramps out my leg, and tea from red coon-root good, too. All dese doctorin' things come clear from Africy,
and dey allus worked for mammy and for me, too.
Andrew (Smoky) Columbus
ANDREW (Smoky) COLUMBUS was born in 1859 on the John J. Ellington plantation, one mile south of Linden, Texas.
He continued in the service of the Ellingtons until about 1878, when he moved to Jefferson, Texas. He carried meals
to Abe Rothchild, who was in jail, charged with the murder of Diamond Bessie Moore. Andrew was 37 years a servant
of Hon. Tom Armistead, and was a porter in the Capital at Austin when Armistead was a senator. Andrew now lives
in Marshall, Texas.
"I was bo'n a slave of Master John Ellington, who lived in Davis County (now Cass Co.), Texas. Master John
had a big house and close by was a long, double row of slave quarters. It looked like a town. There was four boys
and two girls in Master's fam'ly and one daughter, Miss Lula, married Lon Morris, that run the Lon Morris School.
"Master John was one white man that sho' took care of his niggers. He give us plenty warm clothes and good
shoes, and come see us and had Dr. Hume doctor us when we was sick. The niggers et ham and middlin' and good eats
as anybody. Master John's place joined the Haggard place, where they was lots of wild turkey and the slaves could
go huntin' and fishin' when they wanted.
"We had a church and a school for the slaves and the white folks helped us git book learnin'. Mos' of the
niggers allus went to preachin' on Sunday.
"The hands didn't work Saturday afternoons. That's when we'd wash our clothes and clean up for Sunday.
There was parties and dances on Saturday night for them as wanted them. But there wasn't no whiskey drinkin' and
fightin' at the parties. Mammy didn't go to them. She was religious and didn't believe in dancin' and sech like.
On Christmas Master John allus give the slaves a big dinner and it didn't seem like slavery time. The niggers had
a sight better time than they do now.
"Master John did all the bossin' hisself. None of his niggers ever run off 'cause he was too good for them
to do that. I only got one whippin' from him and it was for stealin' eggs from a hen's nest. My pappy was carriage
driver for Master. I didn't do much of the work when I was a boy, jes' stayed round the house.
"Master John raised lots of cotton and after it was baled he hauled it to Jefferson on ox wagons. I'd allus
go with him, ridin' on top of the bales. I'll never forgit how scared I was when we'd cross Black Cypress on Roger's
Ferryboat and it'd begin to rock.
"I don't remember much about the War. When it was over Master John calls all his slaves together and says,
'You'se free now and you can go or stay.' He told the men who wanted to leave they could have a wagon and team,
but most of them stayed. Pappy took a wagon and team and left but mammy and us children stayed and lived with Master
Ellington 'bout 15 years after the war was over.
"When I left Master John I moved to Jefferson and married Cora Benton and we had three boys and two girls.
While I was in Jefferson Sheriff Vine goes to Cincinnati after Abe Rothchild, for killin' 'Diamond Bessie.' Abe
shot hisself in the forehead when he heared Sheriff Vine was after him, but it didn't kill him. There was sho'
some stirrin' about when the sheriff fotch Abe back to Jefferson.
"Mr. Sam Brown was the jailer. Abe wouldn't eat the jail food and hired me to bring his meals to him from
the hotel. His cell was fixed up like a hotel room, with a fine brussels rug and nice tables and chairs. He kep'
plenty of whiskey and beer to drink. He'd allus give me a drink when I took his meals.
"I worked 37 years for Mr. Tom Armistead, who helped W.T. Crawford and his brother defend Rothchild. Mr.
Eppenstadt, he was mayor of Jefferson then and acted as a go-between man in the case.
"Master Tom Armistead never married and I kep' house and cooked for him. He give me lots of fine clothes.
I bet I owned more fine shirts than any nigger in Texas. He got me a job as porter in the Capitol at Austin while
he was senator. I was workin' there when they moved in the new Capitol in 1888. They was gonna put on a big party
and say all the porters had to wear cutaway suits. I didn't have one, so the day 'fore the party I goes over to
Mr. Tom's room at the Bristol Hotel and git one of his. I didn't know then it was a right new one he had made for
the party. When I goes back to the Capitol all dressed up in that cutaway suit, I meets Mr. Templeton Houston and
he recognises the suit and says. 'You sho' look fine in Mr. Tom's new suit,' 'bout that time Mr. Tom walks up and,
you know, he give me that suit and had him another one made for the party! I wouldn't live where there wasn't no
good white folks.
Steve Conally
STEVE CONNALLY, 90, was born a slave of Tom Connally, grandfather of United States Senator Tom Connally, from
Texas. The family then lived in Georgia, and Steve's master was a member of the Georgia Legislature.
Steve Conally
"I was born in Murray County, Georgia, and was a slave of Massa Tom Connally, but they called him Massa
"Cushi" Connally. He was a member of de Georgia Legislature. I stayed with Missy Mary Connally till I
was sixty-seven and Massa Cushi died when I was sixty-nine.
"My mother, Mandy, weighed two hundred pounds and she was de Connally cook. When I was born, she took de
fever and couldn't raise me, so Missy Mary took and kep' me in a li'l cot by her bed. After dat, I'm with her nearly
all de time and follows her. When she go to de garden I catches her dresstail and when she go to de doctor, 'bout
eighty miles away, I goes with her.
"I mus' tell you why everybody call Massa Connally Cushi. Dere am allus so many Tom Connallys in de fam'ly,
dey have to have de nickname to tell one from de other.
"Back dere in Georgia, us have lots and lots of fruit. Come time, de women folks preserves and cans till
it ain't no use. My mammy take de prize any day with her jelly and sech, and her cakes jes' nachelly walk off and
leave de whole county. Missy Mary sho' de master hand hersef at de fine bakin' and I'd slip round and be handy
to lick out de pans.
"Dey didn't have no 'frigerators den, but dey built log houses without a floor over de good, cold spring,
and put flat rocks dere to keep de milk and cream and butter cold. Or dey dig out de place so de crock be down
in de wet dirt. Dey sho' have to make de latch up high, so de bad chillen couldn't open dat door!
"De plantation in Georgia was de whopper. I don't know 'zactly how many acres, but it a big one. Us make
everything and tan hides and make shoes, jes' like all de big places did. De big house and de weavin' house and
de tannin' yard and de sugar mill and slave quarters made a li'l town. Dere used to be some mighty big doin's dere.
De Connally men and women am allus good lookers and mighty pop'lar, and folkses come from far and near to visit
dem. All de 'portant men come and all de sassiety belles jes' drift to our place. Dere sho' lots of big balls and
dinners and de house fix mighty fine dem times. De women wore de hoop skirts and de ribbons and laces. My missy
was de bes' lookin' from far and near, and all de gem'mans want to dance with her. She sho' look like de queen
you see in de picture books and she have mighty high ways with folks, but she's mighty good to dis here li'l black
boy.
"I goes in de buggy with Massa Cushi, up to Tennessee, to git his sons what been kilt or wounded. Massa
Ned, he dead, and Massa Charles, he shot in de hip, and die after he git brung home. Massa Dick hurt, too, but
he didn't die.
"Right after de Civil War, when I'm 'bout nineteen, I comes to Texas with de Connallys, all what didn't
git kilt in de war. I stays with Missy Mary till she die in Georgia. Her son, Jones Connally, come to Brazos County,
near Bryan, and after dat removes to Eddy. I works for him two years and has lived round Eddy ever since. De Connallys
give me a house and lot in Eddy. Some de fool niggers 'spected a lot, but I wasn't worryin' none. All I wanted
was to stay near de Connallys. Mos' gen'ly all de slaves what I knowed was found places for and holp git a start
at jobs and places to live. All de Connally slaves loved dem. Some de timber land give to Mrs. Rose Staten and
when she go up dere a old nigger woman name Lucy sees her. She so happy to see one dem Connally chillen she laugh
and cry.
"Massa Jones Connally have de twin gals, name Ola and Ella. Olla born with de lef' arm off at de elbow
and she allus follow me round. When I go to milk I puts her in de trough. I saved her life lots of times. One time
she's on de cone of de two-story house, when she's 'bout two years old. I eases up and
knocks de window out and coaxes her to come to me. 'Nother time, I's diggin' de well and some clods falls down
and I looks up and dere am dat Missy Ola leanin' over, mos' tumblin' in de well on her head. I gives de loud yell
and her brother-in-law come runnin' and grabs her legs.
"Senator Tom Connally, what am a son of Jones Connally, often says he'd like to visit his grandpa's old
home in Georgia. I'd like mighty well to go with him and take him all over de old home place and out to de old
cemetary."
Valmar Cormier
VALMAR CORMIER was born a slave to Duplissent Dugat, a small slave-holder of Lafayette, Louisiana. He tells
his story in a mixture of English and French. As far as he knows, he is nearly 90 years old. He now lives with
his sister, Mary Moses, in the Pear Orchard Settlement, in Beaumont, Texas.

Valmar Cormier
"I 'member de day my old marster go to de war. I kin 'member dat jes' like yesterday. He used to like to
play de fiddle and make me dance when I was li'l, but he went to de war and got kilt. He name Duplissent Dugat.
Mary, my sister, she don't 'member de old marster.
"De slaves did de work on dat farm. Dey was two growed-ups, my mama, Colaste, and my uncle, and dere was
us two chillen. My father was a white man, a white Creole man. I never carry he name till after freedom.
"Marster was jes' a poor man and he have jes' a ordinary house. De slave house was jes' a old plank house
'bout twelve feet by twenty feet and have dirt floor. Us cook in de big fireplace and take a log 'bout four foot
long and have a big iron pot with a iron lid. Dey put red hot coals under de pot and on top de lid and dey have
a big iron poker with a hook on it what dey took de lid off with.
"Befo' dey have coal oil lamp dey used to use homemake candles. Dey'd kill de brutes and keep and save
all de tallow and one day was set off to make de candles. All de neighbors come and dey have kind of party and
eat and things. Sometime dey make three, four hunnerd candles in one day and lay dem in a big box, so dey won't
git break.
"Us make soap on de plantation, too. Dey melt de tallow and cracklin's and git lye out de fireplace ash.
We have cotton and corn and potatoes growin', so we has plenty to eat. Us have coosh-coosh, dat cornbread and meat,
and some fish to eat. Snails us jes' go through de woods and pick dem up and eat dem jes' like dat. Us eat plenty
crawfish. De chillen git string and old piece fat meat and tie on de end, and us go to de bog and drap de string
down dat crawfish hole. When de old man grab de meat with he pincher, den us jerk us up a crawfish, and bile him
in hot water, or make de gumbo.
"Us drink French coffee befo' de war, but endurin' de war us couldn't git de good kind. Den us make coffee
out of coffee weed. Dey parch dat weed in de iron oven, grind it and put it in de iron pot.
"I seed de sojers and I run under de house, I was so scared. Mary, she hide under de bed in de house. De
Yankees come take de cattle and went 'way with dem. I kin sho' rec'lect when dose sojers come and de road was full
goin' day and night. De Yankees find a lot of Confed'rate sojers close to Duson, de other side of Rayne and dey
captures lots and brung dem back by dere.
"After while it all over and dey told us we free, but my mama kep' working for old missus after freedom,
'cause old marster, he kilt in dat war. Den old missus die and left three li'l chillen, but I don't know what happen
to them, 'cause us go to another place and I plow and Mary she he'p pick cotton.
"I git marry at 20 and my first wife de French gal. We marry by de priest in de church. Us have so many
chillen us have to keep a map to account for all dem, dere was 19 in all. We stays in Louisiana long time, den
come to Texas.
Laura Cornish
LAURA CORNISH was born on the plantation of Isaiah Day, near Dayton, Texas. She "reckons I's 'bout twelve
or maybe thirteen years old when all de cullud folks was made free." Laura's memory is poor, but she made
an effort to recall slave days. She lives at 2915 Nance St., Houston, Texas.
"Lawd have mercy 'pon me, when you calls me Aunt Laura it seems jes' like you must be some of my white
folks, 'cause dat what dey calls me. I mean Papa Day's chillen and dere younguns, when dey comes to see me. But
it been de long time since any of dem come to see old Aunt Laura, and I reckon dey most all gone now.
"You know where Dayton is at? Well, dat's where Papa Day's plantation was at and where I's borned. I don't
know when dat am, 'zactly, but when all de cullud folks was made free, I reckons I's 'bout twelve or thirteen years
old.
"Mama's name was Maria Dunlap and daddy's name was Saul. Mamma was de seamstress and don't do nothin' but
weave cloth on de spinnin' wheel and make clothes. Daddy from Lake Providence, I heared him say, but I don't know
where at dat is. He do all de carpenter work. I has five sisters and two brothers, but dey heaps older dan me and
I don't know much 'bout dem.
"We 'longs to Papa Day, his name Isaiah, but us all call him Papa Day, 'cause he won't 'low none he cullud
folks to call him master. He say us is born free as he is, only de other white folks won't tell us so, and our
souls is jes' as white, and de reason us am darker on de outside is 'cause us is sunburnt. I don't reckon dere
am anybody as good to dere cullud folks as he was.
"Miss Martha, he wife, was mighty good, too. Does any us chillen git hurt or scratched, she fix us up and
give us a hug. I knows dey has two boys and a gal, and dey comes to see me long time after I's free and brings
dere own chillen. But my mem'ry am sort of foggy-like and I can't 'member dere names now.
"De only work Papa Day 'lows us chillen do am pick de boles close to de ground, and dat mostly fun, and
us ride to de house on de wagon what takes de pickin' at night. Papa Day don't make he cullud folks work Saturdays
and Sundays and dey can visit round on other plantations, and he say nobody better bother us none, either.
"One time us chillen playin' out in de woods and seed two old men what look like wild men, sho' 'nough.
Dey has long hair all over de face and dere shirts all bloody. Us run and tell Papa Day and he makes us take him
dere and he goes in de briar patch where dem men hidin'. Dey takes him round de knees and begs him do he not tell
dere massa where dey at, 'cause dey maybe git kilt. Dey say dey am old Lodge and Baldo and dey run 'way 'cause
dere massa whips dem, 'cause dey so old dey can't work good no more. Papa Day has tears comin' in he eyes. Dey
can't hardly walk, so he sends dem to de house and has Aunt Mandy, de cook, fix up somethin' to eat quick. I never
seed sech eatin', dey so hongry. He puts dem in a house and tells us not to say nothin'. Den he rides off on he
hoss and goes to dere massa and tells him 'bout it, and jes' dares him to come git dem. He pays de man some money
and Lodge and Baldo stays with Papa Day and I guess day thunk dey in Heaven.
"One mornin' Papa Day calls all us to de house and reads de freedom papers and say, 'De gov'ment don't
need to tell you you is free, 'cause you been free all you days. If you wants to stay you can and if you wants
to go, you can. But if you go, lots of white folks ain't gwine treat you like I does.'
"For de longest time, maybe two years, dey wasn't none of Papa Day's cullud folks what left, but den first
one fam'ly den 'nother gits some land to make a crop on, and den daddy gits some land and us leaves, too. Maybe
he gits de land from Papa Day, 'cause it an't far from his plantation. Us sho' work hard on dat place, but I heared
mama say lots of times she wishes we stay on Papa Day's place.
"I 'member one year us don't make no crop hardly and daddy say he gwine git out 'fore us starves to death,
and he moves to Houston. He gits a job doin' carpenter work and hires me out for de housegirl. But mama dies and
daddy takes sick and dies, too. Lawd have mercy, dat sho' de hard time for me when I loses my mama and daddy, and
I has to go to Dayton and stay with my sister, Rachel. Both my husbands what I marries done been dead a long time
now, and de only child I ever had died when he jes' a baby. Now I's jes' alone, sittin' and waitin' for de Lawd
to call me."
John Crawford
JOHN CRAWFORD, 81, was born a slave on Judge Thompson Rector's plantation at Manor, Texas. After emancipation,
John was a share-cropper. He has always lived in Travis County and is now cared for by a daughter at Austin.

John Crawford
"John Crawford am me. It am eighty-one years since I's borned and dat's on de old Rector plantation where
Manor am now. It wasn't dere den. I knowed the man it was named after.
"Ma's name was Viney Rector and the old judge brung her from Alabama. She milked all the cows two times
a day and I had to turn out all de calves. Sometimes dey'd git purty rough and go right to dere mammies.
"Pap's name was Tom Townes, 'cause he 'longed on de Townes place. He was my step-pap and when I's growed
I tooken my own pap's name, what was Crawford. I never seed him, though, and didn't know nothin' much 'bout him.
He's sold away 'fore I's borned.
"Pap Townes could make most everythin'. He made turnin' plows and hossshoe nails and a good lot of furniture.
He was purty good to me, 'siderin' he wasn't my own pap. I didn't have no hard time, noway. I had plenty bacon
and side-meat and 'lasses. Every Sunday mornin' the jedge give us our rations for de week. He wasn't short with
dem, neither.
"Many was de time Injuns come to Jedge Rector's place. Dem Injuns beg for somethin' and the jedge allus
give dem somethin'. They wasn't mean Injuns, jes' allus beggin'.
"I can't read and write to this day. Nobody ever larnt me my A B C's and I didn't git no chance at school.
"On Christmas mornin' Massa Rector come out and give each man and woman a big, red pocket handkerchief
and a bottle of liquor. He buyed dat liquor by de barrel and liked it hisself. Dat why
he allus had it on de place.
"One mornin' the jedge done send word down by de cook for nobody to go to de fields dat day. We all want
up to de big house and de jedge git up to make de speech, but am too choke up to talk. He hated to lose he slaves,
I reckon. So his son-in-law has to say, 'You folks am now free and can go where you wants to go. You can stay here
and pick cotton and git fifty cents de hunerd.' But only two families stayed. De rest pulled out.
"After freedom we rented land on de halves. Some niggers soon got ahead and rented on de third or fourth.
When you rent that-a-way you git three bales and de boss git one. But you has to buy you own teams and seed and
all on dat plan.
"Its a fac' we was told we'd git forty acres and a mule. Dat de talk den, but we never did git it.
"De Ku Klux made a lot of devilment round-about dat county. Dey allus chasin' some nigger and beatin' him
up. But some dem niggers sho' 'serve it. When dey gits free, dey gits wild. Dey won't work or do nothin' and thinks
dey don't have to. We didn't have no trouble, 'cause we stays on de farm and works and don't have no truck with
dem wild niggers.
"In 1877 I marries Fannie Black at de town of Sprinkle. It wasn't sech a town, jes' a li'l place. Me and
her stayed married fifty-two years and four months. She died and left me eight year ago. We had seven chillen and
they is all livin'. Four is here in Austin and two in California and one in Ohio.
"I gits a li'l pension, $9.00 de month, and my gal, Susie, takes care of me. I ain't got long to go now
'fore de Lawd gwine call me.
Slavery 20
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