left. They got up the next morning and examined the road and the horse tracks and went on. They all thought something had been given to them, but I don’t guess there was. They caught my mother and brought her here and sold her. If they caught a nigger, they would carry him off and sell him. That’s how my mother came to Arkansas.
“I don’t know what year I was born in. I know the month and the day. It was February tenth. I have kinder kept up with my age. As near as I can figure, I am seventy-three years old. I was 18 in 1884 when I married. I must have been born about 1864, I was brought up under my step father; he was a very mean man. When he took a notion to he’d whip me and mother both.
“My mother was born somewheres in Missouri, but whereabouts I don’t know. One of her masters was John Goodet. His wife was named Eva Goodet. He was a very mean man and cruel, and his wife was too. My grandmother belonged to another slaveholder and they would allow her to go to see my mother. She was allowed to work and do things for which she was given old clothes and other little things. She would take em and bring em to my mother. As soon as she had gone, they would take them things away from my mother, and put em up in the attic and not allow her to wear them. They would let the clothes rot and mildew before they’d let my mother wear them. If my mother left a dish dirty–sometimes there would be butter or flour or something in the dish that would need to be soaked–they would wait till it was thoroughly soaked and then make her drink the old dirty dish water. They’d whip her if she didn’t drink it.
“Her other master was named Harrison. He was tolerable but nothing to bragg on.
“After she was Jayhawked and brought down South, they sold her to John Kelly, a man in Arkansas somewhere. She belonged to John Kelly and his wife when freedom came. John Kelly and his wife kept her working for them without pay for two years after she was free. They didn’t pay her anything at all. They hardly gave her anything to eat and wear. They didn’t tell her she was free. She saw colored people going and coming in a way they wasn’t used to, and then she heard her Mistress’ youngest daughter tell her mother, ‘You ought to pay Hannah something now because you know she is free as we are. And you ought to give her something to eat and wear.’ The mother said, ‘You know I can’t do that hard work; I’m not used to it.’ After hearing this my mother talked to the colored people that would pass by and she learned for _shor_ enough she was free.
“There was a colored man there that they were keeping too. One Sunday, they were taking him to church and leaving my mother behind. She said to them, ‘Well, I will be gone when you come back, so you better leave Bill here this morning.’ Her old mistress said to her, ‘Yes; and we’ll come after you and whip you every step of the way back.’ But she went while they were at church and they did not catch her either.
“The Saturday before that she made me a dress out of the tail of an old bonnet and a big red handkerchief. Made waist, sleeves and all out of that old bonnet and handkerchief. She left right after they left for church, and she dressed me up in my new dress. She put the dress on me and went down the road. She didn’t know which way to go. She didn’t know the way nor which direction to take. She walked and she walked and she walked. Then she would step aside and listen and ask the way.
“It was near night when she found a place to stay. The people out in the yard saw her pass and called to her. It was the youngest daughter of Mrs. Kelly, the one she had overheard telling her mother she ought to set her free and pay her. She stayed with John Kelly’s daughter two or three days. I don’t know what her name was, only she was a Kelly. Then she got out among the colored people and got to working and got some clothes for herself and me. From then on, she worked and taken care of me.
“From there she went to Pocahontas and worked and stayed there till I was about fifteen years old. Meanwhile, she married in Pocahontas. Then she moved to Newport. When I was fifteen, I married in Newport. My mother supported herself by cooking and washing. Then she got a chance to work on a small boat cooking and doing the boat washing, and there would be weeks that some of the deck hands would have to help her because they would have such a crowd of raftsmen. Sometimes there would be twenty or thirty of them raftsmen–men who would cut the logs and raft them to go and bring them down the river. Then the deck hands would have to help her. I too would have to wash the dishes and help out.
“I went to school in Pocahontas and met my future husband (Travis). I brought many a waiter to serve when they had a crowd. I took Travis to the boat and he was hired to wait on the men. When they had just the crew–Captain, Clerk, Pilot, Engineer, Mate, and it seems there was another one–I waited on the table myself. I help peel the potatoes and turn the meat. When we had that big run, then Mr. Travis and some of the others would come down and help me. The boat carried freight, cotton, and nearly anything might neer that was shipped down to town. Pocahontas was a big shipping place.
“My mother said they used to jump over the broom stick and count that married. The only amusement my mother had was work. I don’t know if she knowed there was such a thing as Christmas.
“Mother’s little house was a log cabin like all the other slaves had.
“They didn’t give her anything much to eat. They was farmers. They raised their own cattle and hogs. The niggers did the same–that is, the niggers raised everything and got a little to eat. They had one nigger man that was around the house and others for the field. They didn’t allow the slaves to raise anything for themselves and they didn’t give them much.
“The slaves made their own clothes and their own cloth. They would not let the slaves have anything much. To keep them from being stark naked, they’d give them a piece to wear.
“Mama got to see her mother in 1885. When I married she left and went to Missouri and found her sister and half-sister and her mother and brother or cousin. She found her sister’s oldest daughter. She was a baby laying in the cradle when mama ran through the field to get away from a young man that wanted to talk to her.
“My grandmother was a full-blooded Indian. Her husband was a French Negro. Nancy Cheatham was her name.
“The Ku Klux never bothered us. They bothered some people about a mile from us. They took out the old man and whipped him. They made his wife get up and dance and she was in a delicate state. They made her get out of bed and dance, and after that they took her and whipped her and beat her, and she was in a delicate state too.
“There was a man there in Black Rock though that stopped them from bothering anybody. He killed one of them. They went to the train. They was raging around there then. He got off the train and they tried to take him to jail. The jail was way out through the woods. He hadn’t done anything at all. They just took hold of him to take him to the jail because he had just come into the town. They had tugged him down the road and when they got to the woods, he took out his gun and killed one of them, and the rest left him alone. The man who was killed had a wife and four or five children. They sent the nigger to the penitentiary. He stayed there about a year and come out. That broke up the Ku Klux around Black Rock and Portia. They never seemed to get much enjoyment out of it after that.
“I heard from different ones’ talk that a big hogshead full of money was given to the Negroes by the Queen, but they never did get it. I think they said the queen sent that money. I reckon it was Queen Victoria, but I don’t know. But the white folks got it and kept it for themselves.
“Didn’t nobody have any rights then. They would just put em up on a block and auction them off. The one that give the most he would take em. Didn’t nobody have no schooling only white folks. The white children would go to school but they didn’t allow her to go.
“Once there was a slave woman. They worked her day and night. She had a little log cabin of her own. The spirit used to come to her at night and tell her if she would follow them she wouldn’t have to work all the rest of her life. At first she was scared. But finally, she got used to them and she listened to them. She got directions from them and followed them. She went up into the loft and found a whole lot of money hid there. She took it and built her a new house and used it. I heard my grandmother tell this. That was my step-grandmother named Dilsey.
“One of my bosses had a lot of money and he hid it in a cave. They tried to find it and to make my mother tell where it was hid, but she didn’t know and couldn’t tell. They came back several times and tried to find him at home but they couldn’t catch him. That was in Missouri before freedom came.
“I hate my father. He was white. I never did have no use for him. I never seen him because Mama was jayhawked from the place. I never heard my mother say much about him either, except that he was red-headed. He was my mother’s master. My mother was just forced. I hate him.”
Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson
Person interviewed: Mark C. Trotter, Edmondson, Arkansas Age: 71
“My owners was Miss Betty and Mr. Luke Trotter. I was born in Tunica County, Mississippi. I farmed all my whole life. I did like it. One thing they said about slavery, you couldn’t get away. They had dogs and you get away and have no place to go, nothing to eat. Travel was hard through the rough wilderness. One owner would notify another about a runaway. They would take him back or send him word to come get the runaway. Some of ’em tried to stay in the woods. They said they never tried to get away. I wasn’t born till after freedom. They said they felt sorry when somebody got beat but they couldn’t help it. They had feeling for their color.
“I come to Arkansas in 1925. I jus’ can make it. I’m sickly. I made my part, three bales cotton, last year and prices was so low and provisions so high it is all gone. I don’t get no help from the Welfare.
“I heard old folks set around the fire and spit and talk about them very things but I got here too late to know well enough to tell it.
“I recollect when seed was a scarce thing. We had to save all our seed. The women would swap around. Folks had to raise their own stock.
“The Ku Klux didn’t bother us.
“I voted here in town. I don’t bother the polls no more. I don’t own nothing.
“Times and folks both been changing all my life. Some things is better and some people as good as they always been.”
El Dorado District
FOLKLORE SUBJECTS
Name of Interviewer: Pernella Anderson (Colored) Subject: NEGRO FOLKLORE–Uncle James Tubbs Story:–Information
“Well ah wuz born second year after surrender. Some say dat makes me 72 years old. Mah maw only had two boys. Ah am de baby. My pa wuz name Manger Tubbs. I wuz a purty bad boy. When ah wuz one. Ah use ter hunt. Use ter catch six and eight possums in one night. Ah use ter love ter fish. Spunt er many a nite campin and fishin. An playin marbles wuz a wonderful game in mah days yo knows. Fokes wuzen so wile den.
“Ah recollect one night we went coon huntin and de boys wuz wanderin roun and got lost. Some of de boys wuz wanderin roun tryin to git out and couldn’ so ah said: “Dar de seben star yo all jes wait and let me fine de way out and dey say all right,” “We gwina trus yo to fine out a way out.” Went on bout 200 yards and struck our fiel’. We crawled under fence and went on, struck our coan (corn) fiel’. Den dey all reconcile wha dey is and ah had a big laff. When ah wuz a boy ah use to drink a little whiskey. Finally ah said that would be mah ruin. Aftah ah got oldah ah jess decided ah’d quit. Ah nevah did do no hahm tho. Parents didn’t raise me ter drink, ah jes taken up the habit mahself. Ah use ter steal Grandma’s aigs, He! He! She use ter go ter church and tell us not to bother anything and fore she got out er sight we’d done gone in de hen house. We boys git dem eggs and git on out in our play thicket and roast em and eat em and you know grandma found out where we roast dem aigs at, and whooe if she didn’ whup us. He! He! You know the wurst race ah evah had in mah life ah wuz comin on fum Spearsville and two coach whipper wuz layin side de road and you know dem things run me ooo-eee till ah got tuh a stream and you know ifn hit had not bee fer dat watah dem things woulder caught me.
“Coase mah grandma and me had had some putty good races. She tryin’ ter cotch me but ah loves her terday fer dose races we had. Mah ma died when ah wuz one munt ole. Mah pa married agin and mah step-ma wuz mean to me so mah grandma come an got me and raised me. Ah hant nevah been in jail. Haint nevah been rested er nothin. Ah wish the chilluns of terday wuz like dey wuz when ah wuz a boy. We lived in er two room log house. Our house had a double chimney and we cooked on dat. You know we’d put a big back stick uv wood on. Mah pa loved his big back sticks of wood to hold the fire. Wudden no stoves at that time. We cooked on chimney fires. We et ash cakes. Hit sho wuz good too. Granma say ash cake wuz healthy. Ah bleve fokes ought ter eat a few of dem now. We had a putty good school house made outn logs. Ah stop school when ah wuz in the third grade. Ah learnt purty fair. We uster have ter take rocks an beat corn ter make meal. We wud have ter go sometime fifty mile to git ter a griss mill. An when we couldn’t git coan mashed inter meal we wud make hominy and hit sho wuz good too.
“Ah use ter card fer granma while she wuz spinnin. We made our socks, gloves, and thread. We didn’ have dat ter buy. When ah wuz a boy everybody farmed and we had a plenty. Didn’ have drouth in does days.
“Any kine of lan’ would produce. Ah use ter get a many lashin bout pickin cotton. Ah couldn’ pick until ah got dem lashins. Some fokes say lashin don’ help but ah clare dey do.
“Ah use ter pick cotton and sing. Ah can recollect so well de song. Hit went lak dis:
Me an’ mah wife had a fallin out
She wanted me ter work on de railroad track Etc. (See enclosed song)
“Ah jes love ter talk bout when ah wuz a boy. We had a lop cabin fuh a church house. In dem days on meetin’ Sunday fokes would go ter church and carry de chillun but now not neither the chillun nor dey ma’s go either.
“Fokes would serve the Lord. Dey would git happy in de fiel’ and fall out choppin, choppin cotton. No sich times as hit wuz now. Aftah all er mah youth and hardship and goodship the Lord called me ter preach and when he called me ah answered. Ah wuz comin cross de fiel about 12 er’clock. Ah tole him ah couldn’ preach. Den ah heard a voice above mah haid. Ah stopped and wondahed and pondered wid mahself knowin’ de condition uv mahself. Ah said, “Lord yo knows ah caint preach.” Den ah made a vow and ah stuck to hit but ah heard nother voice say, “Go and preach” again. And ah heerd ah nother voice say “Yo go in de mawnin and pray befo sunrise.” Ah goes thar and gits on mah knees and tried ter pray an ah heard dogs a barkin and chains rattlin an cats mewin and everthing. Ah had heard ole fokes talk bout when yo go ter pray chains and things would track yer tenshun. The same happen ter me. Ah want on and ended mah prayer and yo know ah wuz a glad soul. Ah felt lak ah cud go an then an do whut the Lawd said. Ah gone on an stahted preachin. Hit seemed the church wuz so crowded wid so many local preachers ah couldn’ do whut de Lawd wanted me ter so ah ask the pastor ifn ah could run prayer meetin and he said, “Why chile yes,” and ah went on wid de prayer meetin till ever’body quit his church and come to mah prayer meetin so den he called mah han’, got jealous and made me move mah prayer meetin. So som good white fokes let me come ovah neah them and start a prayer meetin so de people followed me and we built a church and hit is yet dare terday.”
Interviewer: Mrs. Bernice Bowden
Person interviewed: Mandy Tucker
1021 E. 11th Street, Pine Bluff, Arkansas Age: 80?
“I was here in slavery times but I don’t know what year I was born. War? I was in it!
“I member old master and old mistis too. I member I didn’t know nothin’ bout my mother and father cause it was night when they went to work and night when they come in and we chilluns would be under the bed asleep.
“I know the white folks had a kitchen full of we chilluns. We went over to the kitchen to eat.
“My mother belonged to the Cockrills and my father belonged to the Armstrongs. They were cousins and their plantations joined.
“I was large enough to know when they took my parents to Texas, but I didn’t know how serious it was till they was gone. I member peepin’ through the crack of the fence but I didn’t know they was takin’ em off.
“They left me with the old doctor woman. She doctored both white and colored. I stayed there till I was fourteen years old.
“I know we had our meals off a big wooden tray but we had wooden spoons to eat with.
“I member when they was fightin’ here at Pine Bluff. I was standin’ at the overseer’s bell house waitin’ for a doll dress a girl had promised me and the guns was goin’ just like pop guns. We didn’t know what it was to take off our shoes and clothes for six months. We was ready to run if they broke in on us.
“The Yankees had their headquarters at the big house near the river. All this was in woods till I growed up. We used to have our picnic here.
“I was standin’ right at the post when they rung the bell in the bell house when peace declared. I heered the old folks sayin, ‘We is free, we is free!’
“I know before freedom they wouldn’t let us burn a speck of light at night. Had these little iron lamps. They’d twist wicks and put em in tallow. I don’t know whether it was beef or sheep tallow but they had plenty of sheeps on the place.
“Colonel Cockrill would have us come up to the big house every Sunday mornin’ and he’d give us a apple or a stick of candy. But them that was big enough to work wouldn’t get any. They worked on Sunday too–did the washin’ every Sunday evenin’.
“Oh lord, they had a big plantation.
“After the War I went to school some. We had white teachers from the North. I didn’t get to go much except on rainy days. Other times I had to work. I got so I could read print but I can’t read writin’. I used to could but since I been sick seems like my mind just hops off.
“After freedom my parents rented land and farmed. I stayed with the old doctor woman till I was fourteen then I went to my parents.
“I married when I was eighteen and had five chillun. When I worked for my father he’d let us quit when we got tired and sit under the shade bushes. But when I married I had to work harder than ever. My husband was just a run-around. He’d put in a crop and then go and leave it. Sometimes he was a constable. Finally he went off and took up with another woman.
“I been here in Arkansas all my life except eight months I lived in St. Louis, but I didn’t like it. When I was in St. Louis I know it started to snow. I thought it was somebody pickin’ geese. I said, ‘What is that?’ and my granddaughter said, ‘Gal, that’s snow.’
“I don’t know what to think of the younger generation. I think they is just goin’ out to nothin’. They say they are gettin’ weaker and wiser but I think they are weaker and foolish–they are not wise in the right way. Some are very good to their parents and some are not.
“Honey, I don’t know how things is goin’–all I know is they is mighty tight right now.”
Interviewer: Mrs. Bernice Bowden
Person interviewed: Emma Turner
330 W. Sixth Avenue, Pine Bluff, Arkansas Age: 83
“Yes ma’am, I was born in slavery days. They never did tell me when I was born but I was ten the seventh day of August the same year we was freed.
“No ma’am, I wasn’t born in Arkansas. I was born in Georgia. I sent there and got my license to show my age. I was twenty years old when I married.
“George Jones was my old master. But, Lawd, them folks is all dead now. Old master and old missis, yes ma’am, all of ’em dead.
“Fight ’round us? No, they didn’t fight there but they come through there. Yes ma’am, they come through there. Oh, chile, they got horses and mules.
“Used to give us the Confederate money. Wasn’t no good though. They got the silver and gold. Confederate money was white on one side and green on the other. Yes’m, they was Yankees.
“Oh, yes’am, old master was good to us. He didn’t never marry. My grandmother was the cook.
“My mother was born in Virginia. I heerd her talk of the Nat Turner Rebellion but I never did see him.
“Our folks stayed right on after freedom and hired by the month. And hired us children for our victuals and clothes.
“I stayed there till I was married. Then I come to Vicksburg, Mississippi. Had nine children and all dead but two.
“Me? Oh, I done washin’ and ironin’ mostly, cooked and most anything I could get to do. I’m all worked down now though.
“We emigrated from Georgia to Mississippi. All my children born there.
“I ‘member the soldiers had guns and we was scared of ’em. We looked for ’em to come up the road but they come out of the woods and was around us right now. They didn’t mind creeks or nothin’, ridin’ horseback or walkin’. I know they said, ‘We ain’t gwine hurt you.’
“Old master’s mother and father was named Sally and Billy. ‘Member ’em? ‘Co’se I do–many times as I waited on that table. But they all dead ‘fore I even thought about bein’ grown.
“Oh, yes ma’am, we had a plenty to eat. That’s the reason I misses it now.
“I went to school one year but I had to work so hard I done forgot nearly everything I learned. I can read a little but my eyes ain’t no good.
“Dem Ku Klux–you dassent be out after dark. You better not be out on the street after dark. But Sunday night they didn’t bother you when you went to church.
“I was raised up with two white girls and their mother didn’t ‘low us to get out of the yard.
“I used to pick peas and cotton. Yes ma’am, that was when we was with the same old man, George Jones. I used to huddle (herd) cows for miles and miles. My mother was the milk woman. I don’t know how many she milked but she milked a heap of ’em.
“Used to climb up in trees and tear our clothes. Then they’d whip us. Old master say, ‘Don’t you tell me no lie.’ Then old Miss Sally would get a stick and make out she gwine kill us, but she wouldn’t touch us a lick.
“Younger generation? Now you done asked me too soon. I set here and look at ’em. Sometimes I don’t know what gwine come of ’em. When we was young we didn’t do nothin’ like they doin’ now. Why we dassent raise our dresses. If we see a man comin’ we pull down our skirts. Yes, Lawd.”
FOLKLORE SUBJECTS
Name of interviewer: Watt McKinney
Subject: Ex-Slave and Confederate Soldiers Story:–Information
This information given by: “Uncle” Henry Turner (c) Place of residence: Turner, Phillips County, Arkansas Occupation: Plantation hand
Age: 93
[TR: Information moved from bottom of first page.]
I’m gettin’ old and feeble now and cannot walk no more And I’ve laid the rusty-bladed hoe to rest.
Ole marster and ole missus are sleeping side by side And their spirits are a-roamin’ with the blest.
The above lines, had they been composed today, might well have been written with reference to “Uncle” Henry Turner, ninety-three years of age, of Turner, Arkansas, in Phillips County, and among the very few remaining ex-slaves, especially of those who were old enough at the time of their emancipation to have now a clear recollection of conditions, customs, events, and life during those days long past immediately proceeding and following the Civil War. “Uncle” Henry’s eyes have now grown dim and he totters slightly as, supported by his cane, he slowly shuffles along the path over a short distance between the clean, white-washed cabin where he lives with a daughter and the small, combination store and post office, on the porch of which he is accustomed to sit in an old cane-bottomed chair for a few hours each day and the white folks in passing stop to speak a few words and to buy for him candy, cold drinks, and tobacco.
Though “Uncle” Henry is approaching the century mark in age, his mind is remarkably clear and his recollection is unusually keen. He was born a slave in northern Mississippi near the small towns of Red Banks and Byhalia, was the property of his owner. Edmond Turner, and was brought to Phillips County by “his white folks” some months before the war. Turner, who owned some fifty other slaves besides Henry, settled with his family on a large acreage of land that he had purchased about fifteen miles west of Helena near Trenton. Both Turner and his wife died soon after taking up residence in Arkansas leaving their estate to their two sons, Bart and Nat, who were by that time grown young men, and being very capable and industrious soon developed their property into one of the most valuable plantations in the County.
As “Uncle” Henry recalls, the Turner place was, it might be said, a world within itself, in the confines of which was produced practically everything essential in the life of its inhabitants and the proper and successful conduct of its operations. Large herds of cattle, hogs, sheep, and goats provided a bountiful supply of both fresh and salt meats and fats. Cotton and wool was carded, spun and woven into cloth for clothes, fast colored dyes were made by boiling different kinds of roots and barks, various colored berries were also used for this purpose. Medicine was prepared from roots, herbs, flowers, and leaves. Stake and rider fences enclosed the fields and pastures and while most of the houses, barns and cribs were constructed of logs, some lumber was manufactured in crude sawmills in which was used what was known as a “slash saw”. This was something like the crosscut saws of today and was operated by a crank that gave the saw an alternating up and down motion. Wheat was ground into flour and corn into meal in mills with stone burrs similar to those used in the rural districts today, and power for this operation was obtained through the use of a treadmill that was given its motion by horses or mules walking on an inclined, endless belt constructed of heavy wooden slats.
Candles for lighting purposes were made of animal fats combined with beeswax. Plows, harrows and cultivating implements were made on the plantation by those Negroes who had been trained in carpentry and blacksmithing. Plows for breaking the land were sometimes constructed with a metal point and a wooden moldboard and harrows made of heavy timbers with large, sharpened wooden pegs for teeth. Hats of straw and corn shucks were woven by hand.
Small, crude cotton gins were powered by horses or mules hitched to a beam fastened to an upright shaft around which they traveled in a circle and to which was attached large cogwheels that multiplied the animal’s power enormously and transmitted it by means of belt to the separating machinery where the lint was torn from the seed. No metal ties were available during this period and ropes of cotton were used to bind the bales of lint. About three bales was the daily capacity of a horse-powered plantation gin.
It was often difficult to obtain the services of a competent doctor and except in cases of serious illness home remedies were administered.
Churches were established in different communities throughout the County and the Negro slaves were allowed the privilege of attending the services, certain pews being set apart for them, and the same minister that attended the spiritual needs of the master and his family rendered like assistant to his slaves.
No undertaking establishments existed here at this time and on the death of a person burial was made in crude caskets built of rough cypress planks unless the deceased was a member of a family financially able to afford the expensive metal caskets that were available no nearer than Memphis. “Uncle” Henry Turner recalls the death of Dan Wilborn’s little six-year-old boy, Abby, who was accidentally killed when crushed by a heavy gate on which he was playing, and his burial in what “Uncle” Henry described as a casket made of the same material as an old-fashioned door knob; and while I have no other authority than this on the subject, it is possible that in that day caskets were made of some vitrified substance, perhaps clay, and resembling the present day tile.
The planters and slaveowners of this period obtained the greater share of their recreation in attendance at political rallies, horse races, and cock fights. Jobe Dean and Gus Abington who came to Trenton from their home near La Grange, Tennessee were responsible for the popularity of these sports in Phillips County and it was they who promoted the most spectacular of these sporting events and in which large sums of money were wagered on the horses and the game cocks. It is said that Marve Carruth once owned an Irish Grey Cock on which he bet and won more than five thousand dollars one afternoon at Trenton.
No Negro slave was allowed to go beyond the confines of his owner’s plantation without written permission. This was described by “Uncle” Henry Turner as a “pass”; and on this “pass” was written the name of the Negro, the place he was permitted to visit, and the time beyond which he must not fail to return. It seems that numbers of men were employed by the County or perhaps by the slaveowners themselves whose duty it was to patrol the community and be on constant watch for such Negroes who attempted to escape their bondage or overstayed the time limit noted on their “pass”. Such men were known then as “Paddy Rolls” by the Negroes and in the Southern states are still referred to by this name. Punishment was often administered by them, and the very mention of the name was sufficient to cause stark terror and fear in the hearts of fugitive slaves.
At some time during that period when slavery was a legal institution in this country, the following verse was composed by some unknown author and set to a tune that some of the older darkies can yet sing:
Run nigger run, the Paddy Roll will get you Run nigger run, it’s almost day.
That nigger run, that nigger flew
That nigger tore his shirt into.
Run nigger run, the Paddy Roll will get you Run nigger run, it’s almost day.
Both Bart Turner and his brother Nat enlisted in the services of the Confederacy. Nat Turner was a member of the First Arkansas Volunteers, a regiment organized at Helena and of which Patrick R. Cleburne was colonel. Dick Berry and Milt Wiseman, friends and neighbors of the Turners, also volunteered and enlisted in Cleburne’s command. These three stalwart young men from Phillips County followed Cleburne and fought under his battle flag on those bloody fields at Shiloh, Murfreesboro, Ringgold gap, and Atlanta; and they were with him that day in November in front of the old gin house at Franklin as the regiment formed for another and what was to be their last charge. The dead lay in heaps in front of them and almost filled the ditch around the breastworks, but the command though terribly cut to pieces was forming as cooly as if on dress parade. Above them floated a peculiar flag, a field of deep blue on which was a crescent moon and stars. It was Cleburne’s battle flag and well the enemy knew it; they had seen it so often before. “I tip my hat to that flag” said the Federal General Sherman years after the war. “Whenever my men saw it they knew it meant fight.” As the regiment rushed on the Federal breastworks a gray clad figure on a chestnut horse rode across the front of the moving column and toward the enemy’s guns. The horse went down within fifty yards of the breastworks. The rider arose, waved his sword, and led his men on foot to the very ramparts. Then he staggered and fell, pierced with a dozen balls. It was Cleburne, the peerless field-marshal of Confederate brigade commanders. The Southern cause suffered a crushing defeat at Franklin and the casualty list recorded the names of Nat Turner, Dick Berry, and Milt Wiseman, who like their beloved commander had given their life for their country. There is an inscription on the stone base of the magnificent bronze statue of General N. B. Forrest astride his war horse in Forrest Park in Memphis that could well be placed above the graves of Cleburne, Turner, Berry, and Wiseman, those brave, heroic soldiers from Phillips County. The inscription in verse is as follows:
Those hoof beats die not on fame’s crimson sod But will live on in song and in story.
He fought like a Trojan and struck like a god His dust is our ashes of glory.
Interviewer: Zillah Cross Peel
Information given by: Seabe Tuttle
Residence: Washington County, seven miles east of Fayetteville.
Seabe Tuttle who was born in slavery in 1859, belonged to James Middleton Tuttle of Richland, which was about seven miles east of Fayetteville.
“I was just a baby when the war was but I do recollect a lot of things that my ma told me about the War. Our folks all come from Tennessee. My mother was named Esther, she belonged to Ole Man Tom Smith who gived her to Miss Evaline, who was Mister Mid Tuttle’s wife. The Tuttles and Smiths lived joining farms.”
“You see, Mister Tuttle was a colonel in the Confederate army and when he went off with the army he left all his slaves and stock in care of Mr. Lafe Boone. Miss Mollie and Miss Nannie, and Miss Jim and another daughter I disrecolect her her name, all went in carriages and wagons down south following the Confederate army. They took my pa, Mark, and other servants, my mother’s sister, Americus and Barbary. They told them they would bring them back home after the War. Then my mother and me and the other darkies, men and women and children, followed them with the cattle and horses and food. But us didn’t get no further than Dardanelle when the Federals captured us and took us back to the Federal garrison at Ft. Smith, where they kept us six months. Yes’m they were good to us there. We would get our food at the com’sary. But one day my ma and my sister, Mandy, found a white man that said he would bring us back to Fayetteville. No’m, I disremember his name.”
“We found us a cabin to live in here. Didn’t have to pay rent then likes they do now. We lived here but after a while my mother died. They had two battles ’round here, the Battle of Prairie Grave and one was the Battle of Pea Ridge, after we comed back but no soldiers bothered us. I remember that back from where the Christian church is now, down to the Town Branch, there was a whole lot of Federal soldiers staying, they called it then Cato Branch, cause a man by the name of Cato owned all that land.”
“Yes’m, I guess we had a purty good master and missus. We never did get treated much rough.”
“After the War, Miss Evaline brought back all the colored people that she took with her, but my father. He got married down there and didn’t come back for a long time. Then he did and died here. Two of Miss Eveline’s daughters married down there. They didn’t have no boys ‘tall, just four girls.”
“When Peace was made the slaves all scattered. We none was givin’ nothin’ for as I know. I worked on a farm for $13. a month and my board, for a man down at Oxford’s Bend, then I went down to Van Buren where I worked as a porter in a hotel then I went to Morrilton and I married. We come back here and I worked all the time as a carpenter. I worked for Mister A.M. Byrnes. I helped build a lot of fine houses round here and I helped put a roof on the Main Building at the University.”
“Yes’m, I own my home down by the school, I can’t make much money these days. It kinda worries me. My folks all dead but three of my brothers children. One of these is blind. He lives on the old home my mother had. The county gives him a little food and a little money.”
“Yes’m, my white folks were all good to us. Purty good to us.”
“After Peace was made though, we all jes’ scattered, somehow.”