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Meland, Emaline

Marianna, Arkansas

Age Born 1859

"I was born two years before the War. I was born in Murray County. Tennessee. It was middle Tennessee. When I

come to remembrance I was in Grant County. Arkansas. When I remember they raised wheat and corn and tobacco.

Mother's master was Dr. Harrison. His son was married and me and my brother Anderson was give to him. He come

to Arkansas 'fore ever I could remember. He was a farmer but I never seen him hit a lick of work in my life. He was

good to me and my brother. She was good too. I was the nurse. They had two children. Brother was a house boy.

Me and her girl was about the same size but I was the oldest. Being with the other children I called her mother too. I

didn't know no other mother till freedom.

"Freedom! Well, here is the very way it all was: Old master told her (mother) she was free. He say, 'Go get your

children, you free as I is now.' Ain't I heard her say it many a time? Well, mother come in a ox wagom what belong

to him and got us. They run me down, caught me and got me in that wagon. They drove twenty-five miles. Old Dr.

Harrison had moved to Arkansas. Being with the other children I soon learnt to call her ma. She had in all ten or

eleven children. She was real dark.

"Pa was a slave too. He was a low man. He was a real bright man. He was brighter than I is. He belong to a widow

woman named Tedford. He renamed his self after freedom. He took the name Brown 'stead of Tedford. I never

heard him say why he wasn't satisfied with his own name. He was a soldier. He worked for the Yankees.

"After the War pa and ma got back together and lived together till she died. There was five days' difference is their

deaths. They died of pneumonia. He was 64 years old and she was 54 years old. I was at home than pa come from

the War. All my sisters was light, one sister had sandy hair like pa. She was real light. Ma was a good all 'round

woman. She cooked nore than anything alse. She nursed. Dr. Harrison told her to stay till her husband come back or

all the time if he didn't ever come back. Ma never worked in the field. When pa come he moved us on a place to

share crop. Ma never worked in the field. He was buying a home in Grant County. Es started to Mississippi and

stopped close to Helena and ten or twelve niles from marianna. He had a soldier friend wouldn't let him go. He told

him this was a better country. He decided to stay down in here.

"I heard a whole heap about the Kn Klux. One time when a crowd was going to church, we heard horse's feet

coming; sound like they would run ever us. We all got clear out of reach so they wouldn't run over us. They had on

funny caps was all I could see, they went so fast. We give them the clear road and they went on. That is all I ever

seen of the Kn Klux.

"I seen Dr. Harrison's wife. She was a little old lady but we left after I went there.

"I used to sew for the puhlic. Yes, white and colored folks. I learnt my own self to sew. I never had but one boy in

my life. He died at seven weeks old. I raised a stepson. I married twice. I married at home both times. Just a quiet

marriage and a colored preacher married ma both times.

"The present conditions is hard. I want things and can't get 'em. If I had the strength to hold out to work I could get

along.

"The present generation---young white and black---blinds me. They turns corners too fast. They going so fast they

don't have time to take advice. They promise to do better but they don't. They do like they want to do and don't tell

nobody till they done it. I say they just running way with their selves.

"I get $8 and a little help along. I'm thankful for it. It is a hlessing I tall you."

Interviewer Samuel S. Taylor"

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