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Smith, Emma Hulett

Hasen, Arkansas

Age 66

I was the first colored baby born here or very near here. There was only three houses in this town (Hazen). I think

they muster been log houses.

My folks belong to Dr. Hazen. He brought families from Tennessee. When the war broke out he took em to Texas.

Then he brought em back here. When they was freed I heard my mother say they worked on for him and his boys

(Alex and Jim Hazen) and they paid them. He was good to them. They had or plenty always. After the war they

lived in good log houses and he give em land and lumber for the church. Same church we got cept a storm tore it

down and this one built in place of it. He let em have a school. Same place it stands now. My mother (Mandy

Hulett) got a Union pension till she died. She cooked at the first hotel in Eazen for John Lane. She washed and

ironed till she died. We girls helped and we wash and iron all we can get now. None of us not on relief (Fannie nor

Emma). I can't wash no more. My hands and arms swell up with rheumatism. I still iron all I can get.

"The present conditions seems awful unsettled; wages low, prices high and work scarce at times. Men can get work

in the hay two months and bout two months work in the rice or pickin cotton, either one. Then the work has played

clean out till hay time next year.

"How do they live? Some of their wifes cooks for white people and they eat all they make up soon as they get paid.

Only way they live."

Interviewer Samuel S. Taylor"

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