Texas Slave Narratives

 

 

 

 

Texas Slave Narrative

  James D. Johnson

James D. Johnson , born Oct. 1st, 1860, at Lexington, Mississippi, was a slave of Judge Drennon . He now lives with his daughter at 4527 Baltimore St., Dallas, Texas. His memory is poor and his converaation is vague and wandering. His daughter says. "He ain't at himself these days." James attended Tuckaloo University, near Jackson, Mississippi, and use a very little dialect.

My first clear recollection is about a day when I was five years old. I was playing in the sand by the side of the house in Lexington with some other children and some Yankee soldiers came by. They came on horseback and they drew rein by the side of the house and I ran under the house and hid. My mother called to me to come out and told me they were Federal soldiers and I could tell it by their blue uniforms. One of the soldiers reached into his haversack and pulled out a uniform and gave it to me. 'Have your mammy make a suit out of it,' he said. Another soldier gave me a uniform and my mother was a seemstress in the home of the Drennons and she made me two suits out of those uniforms. Judge Drennon had married the daughter of Colonel Terry and he had given my parents to his daughter when she married the judge. My father and mother both came from Virginia. Colonel Terry had bought them at separate times from a slave trader who brought them from Virginia to Mississippi. They had a likeness for each other when they learned both came from Virginia. Both of them had white fathers, were light complected and had been brought up in the big house. When they told the Colonel they wished to marry he only said, 'Julia , do you take William ,' and 'William , do you take Julia !' Then they were man and wife. He gave them the name of Johnson , which was the family name of my father's mother and the name of his father.

When my parents lived with Judge Drennon they had a house in the yard quarters. The Drennon home was the most beautiful house I ever have seen. It was a big, brick mansion with tall, white pillare reaching up to the second story. The yards and grounds were so beautiful the white folks used to come from long ways off to see them. After the surrendering we lived with the Drennons four or five years. They paid my parents for their work and I had an easy time of it. I was youngest of eight children and there was ten years or more between me and the next older child. My mother wanted to make something special out of me. I went to three different schools down in the woods before I was nine. White people would come and put up schools for the colored children but the white people in Mississippi said they were not good people and would criticize them. Sometimes the schools would get busted up. We studied out of the Blue Back speller and an arithmetic and a dictionary. I could spell and give the meaning of most nigh every word in that dictionary. When I was thirteen they held an examination at Lexington for colored children to see who'd get a scholarship at Tuckaloo University, eight miles from Jackson. I was greatly surprised when I won from my county and I went but didn't finish there. Then I went a little while to a small university near Lexington. called Allcorn University. I loved to go to school and was considered bookish. But my people died and I had to earn a living for myself and I couldn't find any way to use so much what I learned out of books, as far as making money was concorned. So I came to Texas, doing any kind of labor work I could find. Finally I married and went to farming 35 or 40 years and raised five children. I'm the only one left now of my brothers and sisters and it won't be lon until I'm gone, too, but I don't mind that. We lived a long time. Some of it was hard and some of it was good. I tried all the time to live according to my lignts and that is as far as I know now to do. I don't feel resentful of anything, anymore. When there is sun, I just sit in the sun.


BACK TO TEXAS "J" SLAVE NARRATIVE INDEX