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Wells, Sarah Williams

Biscoe, Arkansas

Age Born 1866

"I jess can't tell much; my memory fails me. My white folks was John and Mary Williams but I was born two years

after the surrender. Soon after the surrender they went to Labanon, Tennessee. My folks stayed on wha I was born

round in Murry County. My father was killed after the war but I was little. My mother died same year I married. I

heard em say there was John and Frank. They may be living over there now. I heard em talking bout war times.

They said my father was a blacksmith in the war. I come here wid four little children on a ticket to Crocketts Bluff.

We was sick all that year. Made a fine crop. The man let another man have us to work. He was a colored man. His

wife she was mean to us. She never come to see or do one thing when we all had fever. The babies nearly starved.

Took all for doctor bills and medicine. Had $12 when all bills settled out of the whole crop. In all I had fifteen

children. But two girls and one boy all that livin now. I farmed and washed and ironed all my life. My husband was

born a slave. (He recently died.)

"The present generation ain't got no religion. They dances and cuts up a heap. They don't care nothing bout settlin

down. When they marry now, that man say he got the law on her. She belongs to him. He thinks he can make her do

like he wants her all the time and they don't get along. Now that's what I hear round. I sho got married and we got

along good till he died. We treated one another best we knowed how. The times is what the folks making it. Time

ain't no different, is like the folks make. This depression is whut the folks is making. Some so scared they won't get

it all. They leave mighty little for the rest to get. They ain't nothin matter with nothin but the greedy people want it

all to split through wid. I don't know what going to come of it all. Nothin I tell you bout it ain't no good. Young

folks done smarter than I is. They don't listen to nobody Interviewer Miss Irene Robertson"

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