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VI The Slave
Blacksmith 1 I BEEN in
this
region all my life — eighty years. In my young days I belonged to Mr.
Lewis,
and I had a little blacksmith's shop right hyar at Groveton where I
live now at
the cross-roads. There was only two or three houses hyar then just as
there are
to-day. The
Confederates
had been kickin' up around hyar for some time befo' the battle. Oh
land, yes!
and they had fo'ts six miles from hyar at Manassa' and had held fo'th
there a
good while. We colored
people
knew that the war was on foot, and we thought slavery wouldn’t be
allowed any
mo' if the North won. Very few of us could read at all or even knew the
alphabet, and our masters would have kept us ignorant about the meaning
of the
war, but the news leaked out so we got hold of it slightly. As the war
went on
the North had enough well-wishers among the colored people for them to
be
twenty-five thousand strong in its armies on the field. I heard one
colored man
say that he'd rather lose his wife from his family than have the North
beaten. We wanted liberty — we wanted to be free men and women, and not like the Children of Israel in bondage in Egypt. We wanted to inherit the promised land. In the old slave times I've known men to freeze to death they were so thinly clad. They'd have ragged jackets and no undershirt, and old patched trousers with no drawers underneath. Exposure and poor living made the slaves get pleurisy — what we call pneumonia now — and they'd have rheumatic pains. Planters from farther South would come hyar to market and buy up laborers for their tobacco and cotton plantations, and I've seen those slaves goin' along handcuffed, and they'd be put in jail at night to keep 'em from tryin' to escape, We wasn’t allowed to go visitin' from house to house. They had paterollers who went about on horseback at night and patrolled all the roads. Those paterollers would come to your house to see who you'd got there, and who was out of place. If they found you on the highway without a pass from your boss, and you couldn’t give a satisfactory account of yourself, they'd lay on so many lashes. Well, as I
was
sayin', we had Confederate soldiers all around this north coast befo'
the
battle of Bull Run, and we were a-lookin' for a battle but didn’t know
which
way it would be comin' in. Things kept kind o' quiet till the middle of
July.
Then, on a Thursday, mind you, the Union troops come down through a
little
village called Centerville, six miles east of hyar, and a long-range
cannonade
was begun. There was no musketry. It was just a little artillery
skirmish with
guns stationed on both sides of the Run firing back and fo'th. Our
employers took
a big lot of us slaves down in the Bull Run bottom to blockade the road
by
chopping down trees. The trees were great big oaks, and four men would
chop at
a single one at the same time. After we'd cut a tree till it wouldn’t
take much
to throw it we'd let it stand, but of co'se some few trees fell without
our
intending to have 'em. When we'd got enough fixed we sat down right
there
waiting for orders. If the enemy got too strong we was expected to
bounce up, throw
the trees, and escape. We stayed on the field Thursday night just as
the
soldiers did. Friday the Union troops fell back to their camp, and we
slaves
went home. Sunday
morning come
around. Everything was calm, and the sun was shining bright and hot.
I'd had my
breakfast and was standing in the yard befo' my shop door lookin' to
see what I
could see when I heard the boom of a cannon. I looked down the Fairfax
Road and
seen a smoke raisin' above the trees. Then I heard the pop of a return
shot
from the Southern side. The cannon kept on firin', and the people
around hyar
were all lookin' on from their houses. This is high ground and we had a
beautiful view. About ten
o'clock
the Union infantry crossed Bull Run, and then I could see 'em goin'
helter-skelter crossways and every way hardly a mile distant. Yes, I
could see
both gangs and the whole maneuvering. My Lord! I was lookin' right at
the smoke
blazin' out of the guns. There was a constant flicker of firin', and
the noise
was mo' like a hailstorm on a roof than anything else I can compare it
to. I
didn’t go home to get any dinner that day. I had something else to
think about.
It was a very exciting time, I tell you. It was, indeed! The
fighting that I
could see was over in an hour or so, but the bombooing and bumming
continued
until about two. Then the whole Northern army retreated. We couldn’t
see the
men, but we could see a mountainous cloud of dust rising up through the
tops of
the trees from the roads they were on. The Southern troops followed 'em
across
the Run and kept up their cannonading until about four o'clock. When we
colored
people knew the Northern army had been beaten we felt just like we were
worse
off than we ever was, and we thought we'd be barbarously treated. The
South
knew in its soul that our sympathy was on the other side. I've heard
our
masters talkin' that way, and they used to tell us so. Whatever they
said we
had to keep silent and take the wink as good as a nod. We couldn’t
argue. We
just let a still tongue carry a wise head — that's all. On Monday
lots of
people come from all directions and went perusin' on the battlefield,
and I
went over that way myself, but I soon turned back after I began to come
across
dead men. I'd seen enough. I heard the Southern soldiers say that some
of their
men were killed with poisoned bullets. The poison was in a thin piece
of some
different metal at the big end. I reckon I've seen a thousand of those
bullets
that have been picked up around hyar. When the ball went into a plank
or a
sapling or a man's body that poisonous plate stayed there and let loose
the
poison, even if the lead part went on and out. But Northern soldiers
have told
me that such bullets were just an invention for cleaning out the gun
barrel as
they were fired. We saw a
good deal of
the soldiers all through the war — coming and going and camping and
fighting.
Once a Federal officer stopped at my shop, and his men stood lined up
out in
the road. While he was talking with me one of the men fell dead as a
beef, shot
by a bullet from the Confederates who were a full quarter of a mile
away. If the
soldiers
were camped anywhere near they'd be comin' to our houses to buy milk,
butter,
pies, or anything. I've had 'em in my house many a time, both Northern
and
Southern soldiers. Some were just as genteel as if they'd been born in
a
church. But you'd find scalawags, too —men who were filthy and with no
behavior
about 'em. They wasn’t accustomed to behaving, and no doubt they was
rough in
their own homes. Some of 'em was convicts cut loose from the Richmond
Penitentiary. They were sent out hyar with the stripes on 'em to throw
up
breastworks, and they were just as mean and dirty people as the sun
ever shone
on. We lost
considerable in the line of things to eat. The soldiers would milk our
cows out
in the field and take the milk away, and they'd steal our chickens,
geese, and
turkeys. The Northern and Southern men was alike about takin' those
things —
one side stole just as much as the other. But I don't blame 'em for
stealin'
chickens — why certainly not. I'd do the same thing myself in their
place. Yes,
if I'd been for weeks and months out on the field eating only beef and
hardtack, and I found a good fat hen I'd take that hen sure. But of
co'se we
didn’t like to have our things carried off, and if we could ketch a man
stealin', and could overpower him, we saved our property; and if we
were not
able to do that the things had to go 'long. There was no civil law
then, and
you couldn’t do anything more about it. When people refugeed and left
their
houses vacant the soldiers would go in and take the wearin' clothes and
whatever else they pleased. Often though it was the neighbors instead
of the
soldiers that did such pilfering. Clothing was very skurce among the
Rebels in
the last part of the war, and they wore anything they could get on
except
United States blue. That wasn’t allowed. They had on a general mixture
of
clothing of all sorts, and they were ragged and dirty. Sometimes
we'd go
to an officer at the army headquarters and say, "Sir, I wish to have a
guard on my place." The
officer would
say, "All right, but you'll have to be responsible for him and see that
he's not jerked up by the enemy." So a
soldier would
be detailed to go and protect your place, and he'd stay right there
till he was
ordered in, even if the balance of his troop went away. After the
Emancipation Proclamation I set up my own blacksmith shop and went to
work. I
felt like a man then, and as if I had something to work for. But some,
as soon
as they were free, quit work, and away they went, which was a great
mistake. I
have to acknowledge there's mo' loafing now than befo' the war. The
slave had a
man behind him with a bull whip, and was made to work whether he wanted
to or
not. But you go to the towns and villages now, and you'll find big,
able-bodied
men standing around doing nothing. A man I knew was offered a dollar
and a
quarter a day. He said he couldn’t board himself for that, and because
the
money wasn’t comin' fast enough he kep' on loafin'. But no man is wise
to walk
around a small job when he's out of work. Freedom ain't made us all
thrifty,
and though some colored men are worth thirty-five or forty thousand
dollars
others ain't worth a decent suit of clothes. Perhaps
you'd be
interested to know that I seen a ghost on the battlefield once. There
was a
woman in the neighborhood whose company I was very fond of, and I often
went to
call on her. It was a lonesome road to where she lived and it went
across the
battlefield. One night I was startin' out to call on her, and I picked
up my
doublebar'led gun to carry along. I thought some dog might bother me,
or I
might see a wild turkey up a tree. I'd been out in the evenin' a while
befo'
and seen a turkey, and I came cl'ar home, got my gun, and crep' back
and killed
him. Anyway,
the gun was
company, and I took it on my shoulder and started. The night was
pleasant and
the stars was shining, but the air was cool and the wind was blowin'
pretty
high. I walked along until I saw somethin' like a big black dog comin'
across
the battlefield. "If that dog attacks me I'll give him both bar'ls" I
thought. I felt
pretty safe
with that gun in my hands, for I'd never known it to miss fire. After
cocking
it ready for business I checked up to let the animal go by if it wanted
to; but
as soon as I stopped that stopped, too. Then, in a minute or so, it
started on
again. The country was all ripped up and the fences gone, and the dog
came
straight along from the field down in the hollow of the road. So I
walked out
on the edge of the road with my gun pointed right at where the animal
was. I'd
got within ten feet of it when, Blessed Lord! I saw it was nothing but
a cedar
bush. It was kind of a goose-egg shape and had been cut off, and the
breeze of
the air had made it roll. There's many a man would have run and always
thought
afterward he'd seen a mystery. When I
found out
what it was I let the hammers down, throwed my gun up on my shoulder,
and went
on. Anyhow I had a good story to tell when I made my call. ______________ 1 He was a courteous,
intelligent
man, white-haired and spectacled, I visited him at his house, which,
though
weather-worn, was clean and comfortable. |