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Jerman, Dora

Forrest City, Arkansas

Age 60?

"I was born at Bow-and-arrow, Arkansas. Sid McDaniel owned my father. Mother was Mary Miller and she married

Pete Williams from Tennessee. Grandma lived with us till she died. She used to have us sit around handy to thread

her needles. She was a great hand to piece quilts. Her and Aunt Polly both. Aunt Polly was a friend that was sold

with her every time. They was like sisters and the most pleasure to each other in old age.

"My great-great-grandma said to grandma, 'Hurry back wid that pitcher of water, honey, so you will have time to

run by and see your mama and the children and tell them good-bye. Old master says you going to be sold early in

the morning.' The water was for supper. That was the last time she ever seen or heard of any of her own kin folks.

Grandma said a gang of them was sold next morning. Aunt Polly was no kin but they was sold together. Whitfield

bought one and Strum bought the other.

"They come on a boat from Virginia to Aberdeen, Mississippi. They wouldn't sell her mother because she brought

fine children. I think she said they had a regular stock man. She and Aunt Polly was sold several times and together

till freedom. When they got off the boat they had to walk a right smart ways and grandma's feet cracked open and

bled. 'Black Mammy' wrapped her feet up in rags and greased them with hot tallow or nutton suet and told her not to

cry no more, be a good girl and mind master and mistress.

"Grandma said she had a hard time all her life. She was my mother's mother and she lived to be way over a hundred

years old. Aunt Polly lived with her daughter when she got old. Grandma died first. Then Aunt Polly grieved so.

She was old, old when she died. They still lived close together, mostly together. Aunt Polly was real black; mama

was lighter. I called grandma 'mama' a right smart too. They called each other 'sis'. Grandma said, 'I love sis so

good.' Aunt Polly lessened her days grieving for sis. They was both field hands. They would tell us girls about how

they lived when they was girls. We'd cry.

"We lived in the country and we listened to what they said to us. If it had been times then like now I wouldn't know

to tell you. Folks is in such a hurry somehow. Gone or going somewhere all the time.

"All my folks is most all full-blood African. I don't believe in races mining up. It is a sin. Grandma was the brightest

one of any of us. She was ginger-cake color.

"No, I don't vote. I don't believe in that neither.

"Mimes is too fast. Fast folks makes fast times. They all fast. Coming to destruction."

Interviewer Miss Irene Robertson"

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