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XLII A Rustic Slave
Woman 1 I BELONGED to ol' Doctor Tyler. He was President Tyler's brother. Early in the war he died, and then I belonged to his son, the young doctor. I was raised in the house and waited on the white folks thar. They always called my mother "Mammy." At the
time the war
began I was married and I had several children. We lived in a log house
the
same as the other slave families did. I reckon the Tylers had as many
as ten of
those log houses. They was built like a street. At one end of each
house was a
chimbley made of sticks and mud. The fireplace inside was so large we
could
burn logs in it and have great big fires to keep us warm. Clay mud was
thrown
between the logs to stop the cracks, and it hardened and stuck thar.
Oh! a log
house can be made mighty comfortable. Everybody
had to
work if they was slaves. The little children would pick cotton. I used
to weave
and spin and all like of that. The looms and spinning-wheels was in the
shop
and washroom. Each
family had a
garden, and we had pigs and chickens. Master used to allow us to raise
one hog.
He'd give us a little pig, and when it had grown to be a hog and the
time came
to fatten it, Master would have the hog put in his pen and we'd get it
when it
was butchered. He let us
have
'bout three or four hens and furnished the feed for 'em, and when we
killed a
couple of hens one would be for him, and he had half the chickens. The first
Yankee
raid down hyar was in the summer of 1862. It was then that the children
came
running one day to Doctor Tyler and said: "Master, thar are lots of men
on
horseback up the road, and they have blue clothes on. Come and look." The
children had never
seen nobody dressed that away. In fifteen minutes the yard was full of
Union
cavalry, but they soon went on, and they didn’t do no harm. We fared
very well
through this country till Sheridan's cavalry came in 1864. His men was
quite
troublesome and we saw hard times. They didn’t tarry long — only one
night, but
they swept the deck and burned the broom, If a cavalryman come across
one of
the hogs that ran in the woods he'd kill it and throw it up on his
horse and
carry it away. They got Mother's hog right out of the pen. I reckon it
weighed
over a hundred. They took every hen they could find. We thought they
had got
all of ours, but one ol' hen was settin' in a gully in the orchard. She
was
under a brush pile and nobody didn’t know she was thar till after the
battle.
Then she come to the house with fifteen chickens. The
raiders drawed
the clothes off my mother's line, and they took a new country-wove
counterpane
and a dress. The farmers had all their corn and fodder stolen or
destroyed, and
those men actually would go into your kitchen and take the bread out of
the
skillet. They come into our house and pointed to a featherbed, and one
of 'em
said to Mother, "Is that your bed?" "Yes,"
she told him. "I believe
it's a blamed ol' Reb's bed," he said, and he went off with it. We
found
it afterward up hyar at Cold Harbor all ripped open. Some told
us that
Uncle Sam would pay for everything that was taken or destroyed, but we
poor
slaves never got any pay for what we lost. Sheridan's
men went
into the white people's houses and took the silverware and carried it
off, and
they'd take the bolsters off the beds and empty out the feathers so
they'd have
bags to hold corn or wheat or anything they wanted to put into 'em. If
they saw
pretty and nice things that they couldn’t carry they just broke 'em up.
The
Widow Tyler owned some very costly silverware. It was gilted with gold.
But the
Yankees didn’t have a chance to steal that because she had taken it to
Jefferson Davis for safe keeping. I don't know whether she ever got it
again. The
raiders come to
the Tylers' house just as the family was settin' down to the dinner
table. Thar
hadn’t any one eaten a mouthful, and the soldiers walked in and took
hold of
the tablecloth and pulled it off so everything on it went right down,
and the
china and glassware broke up on the floor. Then they caught a lot of
hens, and
after cutting off the heads with their swords, put 'em in the
tablecloth. They
tied those hens up just like clothes that was goin' to be sent to wash,
and carried
'em off on one of their horses. The Tylers
had some
great big books with leather backs, and the soldiers carried off all of
those
that they could, and they mashed up two looms and all the
spinning-wheels. When
Grant's and
Lee's armies got hyar, we kept watchin' which way they was movin', and
the
officers promised to tell us if thar was any danger. On the morning of
the big
battle it looked as if they might fight right on our place and tear
things all
to pieces. So the Union officers told us to take the children and every
one and
go away back in the rear. We all went. Most of us traveled on foot, and
the
women toted the children that couldn’t walk. My mother was afflicted
with the
rheumatism, and we hitched a horse into a market cart and carried her.
Young
Doctor Tyler's wife had a baby only a few hours old, and we fixed a bed
in a
carriage and took her thataway. We went
'bout a
mile and a half to another house, and the battle was goin' on. Lord 'a'
mercy!
it seem like the guns shook the whole earth, and we could see the smoke
rise as
if thar was a big fire. Thousands and thousands was killed, and if the
Yankees
captured a Rebel who could do anything at all to assist they made him
come and
help the wounded. Doctor
Tyler's
house was used for a hospital, and guards were posted all around the
place.
Next day we colored people come back. When I got thar one of the
wounded men
was settin' on the steps of the big house beggin' for water. I went to
the
well, which was right in the yard, and got some. He was leaning back
too weak
to move, and I put my arm behind his head and gave him a drink. But the
water
and some blood come right out of a wound in his chest, and he fell over
dead. Well, I
helped what
I could. Some Sisters of Charity were thar, and they was nice ladies
and
certainly tended to the wounded good. I went around, too, and if I see
a man
suffering I would give him water, and I made coffee and cooked and
washed. They
brought the bundles of clothes to my house. Monday I
went on
the battlefield. Hundreds of people was lookin' around thar, and some
of 'em
was what we called "grave robbers" and was goin' along pullin' off
coats and boots. I took my oldest child with me. She was big enough to
comb her
own hair, and she could sweep up a floor very good, and tote chips, and
stay in
a room and keep the fire. We come to whar a lot of dead soldiers was
buried.
They was in great long trenches and not very well covered, and some
hogs was
down thar eating of the dead bodies. Pretty soon a dog that belonged on
our place
ran past us with a man's foot in his mouth. "Oh,
Mamma!" my girl said, "look what Tige has got." Then she
fainted
and fell. Thar was a branch near by, and some of us older people got
water and
threw on her. She come to, but we had to tote her all the way home.
Thar were
five or six of us, and we took turns. As soon as we got her in the
house I sent
for the doctor. He was thar in a very short time, and he said: "You
deserve to lose the child. You had no business to take her to the
battlefield."
Anyway, I never did go to it no more. They
buried the
dead soldiers as fast as they could, and they tore the fences to pieces
and
used 'em to burn up the dead horses and the ol' stinkin' beef and the
like of
that. The Tyler
barn was
filled with guns stacked up thar, and the wagons come and took 'em
away.
Besides, the wagons took away a whole parcel of things that the
children had
picked up. My little boy had an army blanket and overcoat he had
brought from
the battlefield. He wanted me to make him a suit of clothes out of 'em,
and
when he saw the wagons comin' he took the blanket and overcoat and ran
down the
hill to the swamp and hid 'em in the bushes. As soon as
the
Union army retreated back most of the colored people went away with it.
They
didn’t like bein' slaves. Often they had masters who drove 'em so they
fared
mighty bad — mighty bad! So off they went with the Northern army, and
some got
kilt and some didn’t. A good many come back when the war was over. Not long
after the
battle hyar the Widow Tyler moved to town, and she took the oldest
child from
each of the slave families. That was pretty hard on us, but we couldn’t
help
ourselves. The young doctor wanted to get out of the way of the army,
and he
went off with his family and left us with nothing. We just had to shift
for
ourselves. The Tyler
house was
a Union hospital for the rest of the war, and the people in charge paid
us for
everything we did. They paid us for work, and they bought peas, onions,
lettuce, and such things from us. I've gathered many a lot of
vegetables from
the garden for 'em. Every
Sunday the
soldiers had meetings on the lawn — preaching, you know, for the
hospital. A
little drummer boy beat his drum to call the soldiers to the meetings.
I
certainly did fall in love with that little feller. He said that when
the war
ended, he was comin' down South to see me, if he didn’t get killed. I
used to
cook for him. I've give him many a mouthful to eat. He was mighty fond
of
cornbread. So was all the soldiers. They'd give you hardtacks for it. I
had
good teeth and I could bite them hardtacks, but ol' people would soak
'em in
water. One while we couldn’t get anything else in the world to eat but
beef and
hardtacks. We used to
parch
rye and wheat and corn and sweet potatoes for coffee. Sometimes we'd
grind meal
and parch that and make meal coffee. Some liked it and some didn’t. It
went
very well with milk. Thar was a
number
of different kinds of leaves that did for tea, such as sassafras and
sage and
pine needles. Then thar was holly. That was healthy. We hardly
ever seen
sugar, but we could get molasses. If we had
plenty of
corn we'd take some of it and boil it in a weak lye, and then wash it
and rub
it between our hands to get the hulls off. It would wash out right
white. After
that we'd put it on the fire to cook and make hominy. Perhaps we'd boil
a piece
of pork in with it. Some people would eat butter with the hominy if
they could
get any. The hominy was good with molasses, and if you fried it and
fried some
meat, too, it was good that way. Sometimes we made bread out of it. Oh! but we
were
glad when the cruel war was over. The white people said it was a civil
war, but
we slaves called it cruel. ________________ 1 I did not find her at
the tiny
house on the borders of some thin pine woods where she lived, but by
dint of
searching discovered her at a white neighbor's. She was stalwart of
frame, but
slow of movement, very black, and with a countenance that beamed
amiably as she
told her story. She sat in the doorway of the outdoor kitchen, an ugly
new
structure of unplaned boards, and I sat close by under a tree in a
chair. |