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Oklahoma Slave Narrative
Acemey Wofford
The folks say I'm about 100 years old but there's no way of me telling about
that. I remember the master told me I was born on June 13, but I don't know
what was the year. Maybe I know once, but not now, for the only things I
remember now is about the master. I mean my second master who brought me from
somewhere in Mississippi to Texas. He was Doctor
Hayes; the mistress was Malissa.
She was mean, not like the master himself. When the mistress got mad, and that
was likely to happen most any time, the slaves got pretty rough handling. She
would pick up anything close and let it fly. Buckets or stone jars, sticks or
boards, didn't make no difference just so's it was loose. I didn't get around
during the slave days. Just worked in the fields like a man and toted water to
the master's house. It was a big log house and it seemed like somebody was
always wanting water; I wear myself out keeping water in the house.
The night peace was told me I prayed to the Lord. I was thankful. And then
after the freed negroes got to leaving their old homes my husband left
Mississippi and come to Texas for me. We stayed in Texas on a farm about four
miles in the country from Midway. My first son died during the last year of the
war. About three years after the surrender my second son was born and I live
with him now. His name is Enlow, same as
his father who died December, 1925, in Muskogee. That's all I know about slave
times and when I tries to think more it brings a hurting in my head.
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