A Little History

Oklahoma Slave Narrative

  Patsy Perryman

 
My mother didn't know how old any of her children was; she told me I was born about three year before the war that the same thing she told my sister Victoria about her age, so I claim the age of eighty and hope to live long like mother who died last year (1937), 115-years old.  The Taylor place, where I was born, was in the Caney Creek settlement, near Walkingstick Spring, in the old Flint District of the Cherokee Nation. The Taylor family was Cherokees and the mistress and master always treated us mighty good. We didn't know what whippings were, only what we heard about other slaves getting beaten for trying to runaway or too lazy to work. My mother had always been with Mistress Judy Taylor and she was the only mother my mama ever had, least the only she could remember for her own mother (my grandmother) died when she was three days old. She was raised by the Indians and could talk Cherokee. There was two boys and three girls; myself, Jude and Victoria, 'Boney' (Bonaparte) and Lewis. Father belonged to some other man for a long time; he would get a pass to visit with mother and us children, then go back the next day. The Taylors bought him so that we could all be together. My brother Lewis married a full-blood Indian woman and they got lots of Indian children on their farm in the old Cherokee country around Caney Creek. He's just like an Indian, been with them so much, talks the Cherokee language and don't notice us negroes any more. The last time I saw him was thirty year ago when he come to see mammy at the agency. We started out walking and pretty soon he dropped behind, leaving me to walk in front. I looked back and there he was standing in the middle of the road with his eyes shut. "What's the matter, brother Lewis?" I wanted to know. "Sister wants you to come on," I told him. "I darn tired looking at negroes!" he said, keeping his eyes shut tight, and I knew just how he felt. That's what I use to tell Mistress Taylor when I leave my own mammy and run to the mistress, crying to stay with her, even after the peace come that set us free. "Honey," Mistress Judy say kindly, "stay with your own mammy, she cries for you." And I would cry some more, keeping my eyes shut all the time, for like my brother said, "I tired looking at negroes." The Taylor house was a beautiful place to live; it was a long double log house, weatherboarded, with a yard of clover under the big oak trees that made plenty of shade. I use to pick up leaves to keep the yard clean and sweet smelling, and go to the big spring close to the house for water.  Besides helping that way I would feed the chickens, take care of the children and sometimes I would get money for it and buy candy; once I bought a doll. When I was little Victoria and me would go hunting for rabbits and quail birds in the snow. In the summer we catch terrapins, roast them over the fire for some good eating. Mostly we had bean bread and bean dumplings with corn bread. Making corn bread was a big job. First the corn had to be soaked, then put in a mortar and pounded to meal with a pessel - 'beating the meal' is what my mammy called it. Cotton clothes for summer, wool clothes for winter, with knitted stocking and gloves made by mammy and Mistress Taylor. For Sunday our dresses was calico and our bonnets was trimmed up with corn stalks. Our shoes were home made, with brass toes and bradded soles to keep the flint rocks from cutting through the leather. The main crops were corn and cotton and if they were big ones the master would hire negroes to come in and help with the work. There was nobody around the place but Indians and negroes; I was a full grown girl before I ever saw a white man. There was no way to learn reading and writing; I was a big girl when I learn the letters and how to write, and tried to teach mammy but she didn't learn, so all the writing about allotments had to be done by me. I have written many letters to Washington when they gave the Indian lands to the native Indians and their negroes.Mammy said the patrollers and 'Pin' Indians caused a lot of trouble after the war started. The master went to war and left my mistress to look after the place. The 'Pins' came to the farm one day and broke down the doors, cut feather beds open and sent the feathers flying in the wind, stole the horses, killed the sheep and done lots of mean things. Then mistress took her slaves and went somewhere in Texas until after the war. She started back to the old home place, but wasn't going to take us with her until mammy cried so hard she couldn't stand it and told us to get ready. We drove through in an ox wagon and sometimes had to wait along the way because the streams were flooded and we couldn't ford. We found the old house burned to the ground when we got back and the whole place was a ruin. There was no stock and no way for any of us to live. The mistress told us that we were free anyway and to go wherever we wanted to. We went to Fort Gibson and then to Tahlequah; mammy earning our way cooking at both them places. Victoria was hired out to Judge Wolfe and that's where she was when father had her stolen. We was all worried about her for a time, until we found out she was with him. My first husband was Charley Clark, a full-blood Creek Indian, living on the river near Yohola; the next man was a black African, but we couldn't get along so I let him go, and married Randolph Perryman, who, like Charley Clark, is dead now. I never had any children. I am glad slavery is over and I do not want to see any more wars. Lincoln freed us, but I never liked him because the way his soldiers done in the south.

 



BACK TO SLAVE NARRATIVE INDEX