Slavery and the
war of the
rebellion.
Beginning of the war.
I remember well when Abraham Lincoln
was elected. Boss and the madam had been reading
the papers, when he broke out with the exclamation:
“The very idea of electing an old rail splitter
to the presidency of the United States! Well
he’ll never take his seat.” When Lincoln
was inaugurated, Boss, old Master Jack and a great
company of men met at our house to discuss the matter,
and they were wild with excitement. Was not this
excitement an admission that their confidence in their
ability to whip the Yankees, five or six to one, was
not so strong as they pretended?
The war had been talked of for some
time, but at last it came. When the rebels fired
upon Fort Sumter, then great excitement arose.
The next day when I drove Boss to town, he went into
the store of one Williams, a merchant, and when he
came out, he stepped to the carriage, and said:
“What do you think? Old Abraham Lincoln
has called for four hundred thousand men to come to
Washington immediately. Well, let them come; we
will make a breakfast of them. I can whip a half
dozen Yankees with my pocket knife.” This
was the chief topic everywhere. Soon after this
Boss bought himself a six shooter. I had to mould
the bullets for him, and every afternoon he would
go out to practice. By his direction, I fixed
a large piece of white paper on the back fence, and
in the center of it put a large black dot. At
this mark he would fire away, expecting to hit it;
but he did not succeed well. He would sometimes
miss the fence entirely, the ball going out into the
woods beyond. Each time he would shoot I would
have to run down to the fence to see how near he came
to the mark. When he came very near to it within
an inch or so, he would say laughingly: “Ah!
I would have got him that time.” (Meaning a Yankee
soldier.) There was something very ludicrous in this
pistol practice of a man who boasted that he could
whip half a dozen Yankees with a jackknife. Every
day for a month this business, so tiresome to me, went
on. Boss was very brave until it came time for
him to go to war, when his courage oozed out, and
he sent a substitute; he remaining at home as a “home
guard.” One day when I came back with the
papers from the city, the house was soon ringing with
cries of victory. Boss said: “Why,
that was a great battle at Bull Run. If our men
had only known, at first, what they afterwords found
out, they would have wiped all the Yankees out, and
succeeded in taking Washington.”
Petty disrespect to the Emblem
of the Union.
Right after the bombardment of Fort
Sumter, they brought to Memphis the Union flag that
floated over the fort. There was a great jubilee
in celebration of this. Portions of the flag,
no larger than a half dollar in paper money, were
given out to the wealthy-people, and these evidences
of their treason were long preserved as precious treasures.
Boss had one of these pieces which he kept a long time;
but, as the rebel cause waned these reminders of its
beginning were less and less seen, and if any of them
are now in existence, it is not likely that their
possessors will take any pride in exposing them to
view.
As the war continued we would, now
and then, hear of some slave of our neighborhood running
away to the Yankees. It was common when the message
of a Union victory came to see the slaves whispering
to each other: “We will be free.”
I tried to catch everything I could about the war,
I was so eager for the success of the Union cause.
These things went on until
The battle of Shiloh, April
9, 1862.
Boss came hurrying in one morning,
right after breakfast, calling to me: “Lou,
Lou, come; we have a great victory! I want to
go up and carry the boys something to eat. I
want you and Matilda to get something ready as quickly
as you can.” A barrel of flour was rolled
into the kitchen, and my wife and I “pitched
in” to work. Biscuit, bread, hoe-cake, ham,
tongue all kinds of meat and bread were
rapidly cooked; and, though the task was a heavy one
for my wife and me, we worked steadily; and, about
five o’clock in the afternoon the things were
ready. One of the large baskets used to hold
cotton was packed full of these provisions. Our
limbs ached from the strain of the work, for we had
little help. One reason for the anxiety of the
Boss for the preparation of this provision for the
soldiers was that he knew so many in one of the companies,
which was known as the “Como Avengers,”
and he had a son, a nephew and a brother of his wife
connected with it; the latter a major on Gen. Martin’s
staff. On the following morning I got up early,
and hurried with my work to get through, as I had
to go to the postoffice. Madam hurried me off,
as she expected a letter from her husband, who had
promised to write, at the earliest moment, of their
friends and relatives. I rushed into the city,
at full speed, got some letters and a morning paper,
and, returning as rapidly as possible, gave them to
her. She grasped them eagerly, and commenced
reading the paper. In a short time I heard her
calling me to come to her. I went in, and she
said, in great excitement: “Louis, we want
to have you drive us into town, to see the Yankee
prisoners, who are coming through, at noon, from Shiloh.”
I went and told Madison to hitch up, as soon as he
could. In the meantime I got myself ready, and
it was not long before we were off for the city.
The madam was accompanied by a friend of hers, a Mrs.
Oliver. We were at the station in plenty of time.
About twelve o’clock the train from Shiloh drew
into the station; but the prisoners that were reported
to be on board were missing it proved to
be a false report. While they were looking for
the prisoners, Mrs. Oliver saw Jack, a servant of Edward
McGee, brother of madam. “Oh! Look,”
said Mrs. Oliver, “there is Edward’s Jack.
Lou, run and call him.” In a minute I was
off the carriage, leaving the reins in madam’s
hands. Jack came up to the carriage, and the
women began to question him: “Where is your
Master, Ed,” asked both of them. “He
is in the car, Missis he is shot in the
ankle,” said Jack. In a minute the women
were crying. “I was going to get a hack,”
said Jack, “to ” “No,
No!” said both of them. “Go, Lou,
and help Jack to bring him to our carriage. You
can drive him more steadily than the hackman.”
Jack and I went to the car, and helped him out, and
after some effort, got him into our carriage.
Then I went and got a livery hack to take the women
and his baggage home. When we reached home, we
found there old Mrs. Jack McGee, mother of the madam,
Mrs. Charles Dandridge, Mrs. Farrington, sisters of
madam, and Fanny, a colored woman, Edward’s
housekeeper and mistress a wife in all but
name. All of these had come to hear the news of
the great battle, for all had near relatives in it.
Mrs. Jack McGee and Mrs. Dr. Charles Dandridge had
each a son in the terrible conflict.
Mourning in master’s family.
In the afternoon, when all were seated
in the library reading, and I was in the dining room,
finishing up my work, I happened to look out of the
window, and saw a messenger coming up the graveled
walk. I went out to meet him. “Telegram
for Mrs. McGee,” he said. I took it to her;
and, reading it without a word, she passed it to the
next member of the family, and so it was passed around
until all had read it except Mrs. Dandridge.
When it was handed to her, I saw, at a glance, that
it contained for her the most sorrowful tidings.
As she read she became livid, and when she had finished
she covered her face with her handkerchief, giving
a great, heavy sob. By this time the whole family
was crying and screaming: “Oh! our Mack
is killed.” “Mars, Mack is killed,”
was echoed by the servants, in tones of heart-felt
sorrow, for he was an exceptional young man.
Every one loved him both whites and blacks.
The affection of the slaves for him bordered on reverence,
and this was true not alone of his father’s
slaves, but of all those who knew him. This telegram
was from Boss, and announced that he would be home
the next day with the remains. Mrs. Farrington
at once wrote to old Master Jack and to Dr. Dandridge,
telling them of Mack’s death and to come at
once. After I mailed those letters nothing unusual
happened during the afternoon, and the house was wrapped
in silence and gloom. On the following morning
I went for the mail as usual, but there was nothing
new. At noon, the remains of the much loved young
man arrived at our station, accompanied by Boss and
Dr. Henry Dandridge, brother of the father of the
deceased, who was a surgeon in the rebel army.
I went to the station with another servant, to assist
in bringing the body to the house. We carried
it into the back parlor, and, after all had been made
ready, we proceeded to wash and dress it. He had
lain on the battlefield two days before he was found,
and his face was black as a piece of coal; but Dr.
Henry Dandridge, with his ready tact, suggested the
idea of painting it. I was there to assist in
whatever way they needed me. After the body was
all dressed, and the face painted, cheeks tinted with
a rosy hue, to appear as he always did in life, the
look was natural and handsome. We were all the
afternoon employed in this sad work, and it was not
until late in the evening that his father and mother
came down to view the body for the first time.
I remember, as they came down the broad stairs together,
the sorrow-stricken yet calm look of those two people.
Mrs. Dandridge was very calm her grief was
too great for her to scream as the others did when
they went in. She stood and looked at her Mack;
then turning to Boss, she said: “Cousin
Eddie, how brave he was! He died for his country.”
Poor, sorrowing, misguided woman! It was not
for his country he died, but for the perpetuation of
the cruel, the infamous system of human slavery.
All the servants were allowed to come in and view
the body. Many sad tears were shed by them.
Some of the older slaves clasped their hands, as if
in mute prayer, and exclaimed, as they passed by the
coffin: “He was a lovin boy.”
It seems that all his company but five or six were
killed. At an early hour next morning the funeral
party started for the home in Panola, where the body
of the lamented young man, sacrificed to an unholy
cause, was buried, at the close of the same day.
Edward stayed at our house some six
weeks, his ankle was so slow in getting well.
At the end of that time, he could walk with the aid
of crutches, and he took Fanny and went home.
Alarm of the Memphis rebels.
Not long after this the people were
very much worked up over the military situation.
The Yankees had taken Nashville, and had begun to
bombard Fort Pillow. The officials of the Memphis
and Ohio railroad company became alarmed at the condition
of things, fearing for the safety of their stock.
The officers, therefore, set about devising some plan
by which they might get the cars down on the Memphis
and Jackson road, where they imagined their property
would be safe from the now terrible Yankees.
The railroad officials at once set to work to buy the
right of way through Main street, to give them the
connection with the southern road named. At first
it was refused by the city authorities, but finally
the right of way was granted. When, however, the
railroad men began to lay the ties and rails, the
people grew furious. Some fled at once, for they
imagined that this act of the railroad officials indicated
that the Yankees must be coming pretty near. Boss
became so excited, at this time, that he almost felt
like going away too. The family grew more and
more uneasy; and it was the continual talk: “We
must get away from Memphis. The companies are
already moving their rolling stock, fearing the Yankees
may come at any time and destroy everything; we must
get away,” said Boss, speaking to the madam.
The family flee from Memphis.
Things continued in this way until
about June, 1862. The Union troops had taken
Fort Pillow. We had heard the firing of cannon,
and did not know what it meant. One morning I
was in the city after the mail, and I learned that
a transient boat had just come down the river, which
had lost a part of her wheelhouse. She was fired
on from Fort Pillow, sustaining this serious damage
from the shot. This increased the excitement
among the people; and our folks became alarmed right
away, and commenced talking of moving and running
the servants away from the Yankees, to a place of
safety. McGee was trying for some time to get
some one to take the house, that is, to live in and
care for it until after the war, while the family
were gone. They never thought that slavery would
be abolished, and so hoped to come back again.
After some search, they found a widow, a Mrs. Hancock.
She was to have full charge of the house and continue
keeping boarders, as she had been doing in Memphis.
The vaunted courage of this man seems to have early
disappeared, and his thought was chiefly devoted to
getting his family and his slaves into some obscure
place, as far away as possible from the Yankees, that
were to be so easily whipped. We were about two
weeks getting ready to leave, stowing away some of
the things they did not want to move. The Boss
and his family, my wife and I, and all the house servants
were to go to Panola, to his father’s. The
family went by rail, but I had to drive through in
a wagon.
I am taken to Bolivar farm.
Soon after the family all reached
Master Jack’s, Boss took me to his own farm
in Bolivar county. This separated me for a time
from my wife, for she remained with the family.
I had to look after the house, at the farm, attend
the dining room, and, between meals, sew every day,
making clothes for the hands. I could run on
the machine eighteen to twenty pairs of pants a day,
but two women made the button holes and did the basting
for me, getting the goods all ready for the machine.
Capture of A Union trading boat.
The Yankees had made a raid through
Bolivar, before I came, and the excitement had not
abated, as they were spreading themselves all through
the state. There was a Union trading boat, the
Lake City, that had been successful in exchanging
her goods for cotton that came from Memphis.
She usually stopped at Helena, Fryer’s Point
and other small towns; but on a trip at this time
she came about fifty miles farther down the river,
to Carson’s Landing, right at Boss’ farm.
She was loaded with all kinds of merchandise sugar,
tobacco, liquor, etc. She had a crew of
about forty men, but they were not well prepared for
a vigorous defense. The rebel soldiers stationed
in the vicinity saw her as she dropped her anchor
near the landing, and they determined to make an effort
for her capture. They put out pickets just above
our farm, and allowed no one to pass, or stop to communicate
with the boat. Every one that sought to pass
was held prisoner, and every precaution taken to prevent
those on the boat from learning of the purposes of
the rebels, knowing that the boat would land in the
morning, if not informed of the danger, and then it
was anticipated that they could easily make her a prize.
There was a small ferry boat behind the steamer, and
as the latter dropped down stream, and then steamed
up to the landing, the former stood off for a few
moments. As the steamer touched shore, the rebels
charged on her, and captured her without a struggle.
In the meantime the ferry boat, seeing what had happened,
sped away up stream, the soldiers firing at her, but
doing little damage, except the breaking of the glass
in the pilot house. The rebels, seeing that the
ferry boat had escaped them, turned their attention
to the unloading of the steamer. They sent out
for help in this work, and the summons was answered
by the neighbors far and near. Wagons were brought,
two of which were from our farm, and loaded with goods,
which were taken to Deer Creek, forty miles from Carson
Landing. What goods they found themselves unable
to carry away were packed in the warehouse. The
steamer was then burned. McGee was present, and
the rebel captain gave him a written statement of the
affair to the effect that the residents were not responsible
for it, and that this should be a protection for them
against the Union forces. The officers and crew
of the steamer to the number of forty were made prisoners,
and taken to Deer Creek, the rebel headquarters of
that region, and put in the jail there. The ferry
boat that escaped went to Helena, Arkansas, and carried
the news of the affair to the Union forces there.
Boss taken prisoner.
I was told by Boss to take my stand
on our veranda, and keep watch on the river, and if
I saw any boat coming down to let him know at once.
I kept a close watch the next morning until about
eight o’clock, when I saw a boat, but she had
almost gone past our house before I discovered her.
I ran into the house and told Boss. He ordered
me to get his horse at once, which I did; and he mounted
and went down to the landing as fast as he could.
Upon reaching there, he was taken prisoner by the
Union soldiers, who had just landed from the boat.
All who came near were captured. The Union soldiers
went to work and transferred all the goods which the
rebels had put into the warehouse from the boat which
they had captured, then setting fire to the warehouse
and the postoffice, they pushed off yelling and shouting
with glee. Among those captured by the Union
soldiers were three other rich planters besides Boss,
all of whom were taken to Helena. After they had
been there about a week, the planters offered to secure
the release of the Unionists captured on the boat
which the rebels had burned at Carson Landing, and
who had been sent to the rebel jail at Deer Creek,
if they were guaranteed their own release in exchange.
They offered to bear the expense of a messenger to
the rebel officer, at Deer Creek, with this proposition.
The Union officer at Helena accepted the proposition,
and the messenger was sent off. It was arranged
that he should stop over at our house, both on his
way down and back. Upon his return, he stopped
over night, and the next morning proceeded on his way.
When he had gone about five miles, he saw a flat-boat
at a landing, on which were people drinking and having
a merry time. He stopped, and went aboard; and,
in joining the carousal, he soon became so intoxicated
that he was unable to go on with his journey.
Among those present was one Gilcrease, a cousin of
the McGees, who recognized the man as the messenger
in this important business, went to him and asked
him for the letters he carried. The fellow refusing
to give them up, Gilcrease took them from him, and
at once sent to our overseer for a reliable man by
whom to forward them to the commandant at Helena.
The overseer called me up from the cabin to his room,
and told me that I was to go to Helena to carry some
important papers, and to come to him for them in the
morning, and make an early start. I left him
and went back to my cabin.
My third effort for freedom.
I made up my mind that this would
be a good chance for me to run away. I got my
clothes, and put them in an old pair of saddle bags two
bags made of leather, connected with a strip of leather,
and used when traveling horseback for the same purpose
as a satchel is used in traveling in the cars.
I took these bags, carried them about a half mile
up the road, and hid them in a fence corner, where
I could get them in the morning when I had started
on my trip. Fryer’s Point, the place to
which I was to go, was about fifty miles from the farm.
I started early in the morning, and, after I had gone
twenty-five miles, I came to the farm of William McGee,
a brother of the madam, and stopped to change horses.
I found that William McGee was going, in the morning,
down to old Master Jack’s; so I took one of
their horses, leaving mine to use in its place, went
right to Fryer’s Point, delivered the letters
to a man there to carry to Helena, and got back to
William McGee’s farm that night. I made
up my mind to go with William down to Panola, where
madam was, to tell her about Boss being captured.
The next morning, he started, and Gibson, his overseer
and myself accompanied him. He questioned me
about the capture of Boss, what the soldiers had done,
etc., and I told him all I knew of the matter.
“Well, Lou,” he said, “why did you
not bring us some whisky?” “I did bring
a little with me,” I said. He laughed,
saying: “Oh, well, when we come to some
clear water we will stop and have a drink.”
Then I said: “Mr. Smith will look for me
to-night, but he wont see me. I am going to tell
the madam that Boss is captured.” “Hey,
ho!” he said, “then you are running away.”
I replied: “Well I know Miss Sarah don’t
know Boss is in prison.” We traveled on,
all three of us, stopping at intervals to be refreshed.
After two days, we arrived at Panola. Our journey
was a tedious one. The streams were so swollen
in places that we could hardly pass. The Tallehatchie
we had to swim, and one of the men came near losing
his horse and his life. The horses became tangled
in a prep vine, as we were nearing the shore at which
we aimed, and, the current being very swift, we were
carried below the landing place; but, finally, we
got safely ashore, McGee landing, and we following.
Reaching Panola, wet and weary, I conveyed to madam
the story of her husband’s capture and imprisonment,
a rumor of which had already reached her.
The next morning was Christmas, and
a number of the family had come to spend it together.
They had heard that McGee was captured and in prison;
but, now, as I told them every feature of the affair
in detail, they grew excited and talked wildly about
it. Among those who came were Dr. Dandridge and
his wife, Blanton McGee and his wife, Tim Oliver and
his wife. All these women were daughters of old
Master Jack McGee, and sisters to the madam.
Mrs. Farrington and old lady McGee were already there.
These re-unions on Christmas were a long established
custom with them, but the pleasure of this one was
sadly marred by the vicissitudes and calamities of
the war. A shadow hung over all the family group.
They asked me many questions about Boss, and, of course,
I related all I knew.
After I had been there three days,
they started me back with letters for Boss. When
I left it was near night, and I was to stop over at
Master Jack’s farm fifteen miles away.
It was expected that I would reach Fryer’s Point
on the third morning, thus allowing me three days to
go sixty miles; but I could not make much headway,
as the roads were so heavy. The understanding
was that I was to deliver the letters to the same
gentleman, at Fryer’s, to whom I delivered the
others, for forwarding to Boss at Helena. I was
then to go straight to the farm at Boliver, and report
to Smith, the overseer. But after I had got about
four miles away, I concluded that I would not go back
to the farm, but try to get to the Yankees. I
knew I had disobeyed Smith by going down to the madam’s
to tell her about Boss, because he told me not to go
when I spoke to him about it. And now if I went
back I feared he would kill me; for I knew there would
be no escape for me from being run into the bull ring,
and that torture I could not think of enduring.
I, therefore, stopped, and, taking the bridle and
saddle from the horse, hid them in the corner of a
fence in a cornfield. Then I went into the woods.
The papers which I had were in the saddlebag safe.
The place where I stayed in the daytime was in a large
shuck-pen a pen built in the field to feed
stock from, in the winter time. This pen was on
Dr. Dandridge’s farm; and the second night I
worked my way up near the house. Knowing all
the servants, I was watching a chance to send word
to the coachman, Alfred Dandridge, that I wanted him
to tell my wife that I was not gone. I went down
to his cabin, in the quarters; and, after a short time
he came. I was badly scared, and my heart was
heavy and sore; but he spoke comfortingly to me, and
I was cheered, somewhat, especially when he promised
to see Matilda, and tell her of my whereabouts.
He gave me some food, and hid me away for the night
in his house. I kept close all the next day;
and, at night, when all was still, Alfred and I crept
out, and went to old Master Jack’s. The
distance was not great, and we soon covered it.
Alfred went in and told my wife that I was outside
and wanted to see her. She came out, and was
so frightened and nervous that she commenced sobbing
and crying, and almost fainted when I told her, in
low tones, that I was going to try to get to Memphis,
and that Alfred was helping to plan a way to this
end. The rebels occupied both roads leading to
Memphis, and I was puzzled to know how to reach the
city without coming in contact with them. Two
days after I had talked with my wife, the rebel troops
who were camped on the Holly Springs road left for
some other point. My friend Alfred found this
out, and came and told me the encouraging news.
The following night I went to old Master Jack’s
and told my wife that the way now seemed clear, and
that I was going at once. I was bent on freedom,
and would try for it again. I urged my wife not
to grieve, and endeavored to encourage her by saying
that I would return for her, as soon as possible,
should I succeed in getting to a land of freedom.
After many tears and blessings, we parted, and I left,
Uncle Alfred going with me some three miles, as I was
not acquainted with the road. When he left me
I went on alone with gloomy forebodings, but resolved
to do my best in this hazardous undertaking, whatever
might happen. The road passed over hills and
through swamps, and I found the traveling very wearisome.
I had traveled some hours, and thought I was doing
well; when, about one o’clock in the night, I
came up out of a long swamp, and, reaching the top
of a hill, I stopped for a moment’s rest, raising
myself to an erect position from that of walking, inclined
by reason of weariness and the weight of the saddle-bags
thrown across my shoulders. The weather was bad,
a heavy mist had come up, and was so dark that I could
hardly see my way. As I started on, a soldier
yelled at me from the mist: “Halt! advance
and give the countersign.” I stopped immediately,
almost scared out of my wits. “Come right
up here,” said the soldier, “or I’ll
blow you into eternity.” I saw at once he
was a rebel soldier. I knew not what to do.
This place where I was halted was Nelson’s farm,
and the house was held as headquarters for a company
of rebel soldiers, known as bushwhackers. While
they belonged to the rebel army, they were, in a measure,
independent of its regulations and discipline, kept
back in the woods, ready for any depredation upon the
property of unionists any outrage upon their
persons. The soldier who had halted me took me
up to the house, and all began to question me.
I told them that I had been sent on an errand, and
that I had lost my way. The next morning I was
taken about a mile away down in the swamp, over hills
and through winding paths, till at last we came to
the regular rebel camp. I was in great fear and
thought my end had come. Here they began to question
me again the captain taking the lead; but
I still stuck to my story that I had been sent on
an errand, and had lost my way. I knew that this
was my only chance. They tried to make me say
that I had come from the Yankees, as they were in
camp near Holly Springs. They thought the Yankees
had sent me out as a spy; but I said the same as at
first that I had lost my way. A soldier
standing by said: “Oh! we will make you
talk better than that;” and stepping back to
his horse, he took a sea-grass halter, and said:
“I’ll hang you.” There was a
law or regulation of the rebel government directing
or authorizing the hanging of any slave caught running
away; and this fellow was going to carry it out to
the letter. I talked and pleaded for my life.
My feelings were indescribable. God only knows
what they were. Dr. Carter, one of the soldiers,
who knew me and the entire McGee family, spoke up and
said: “You had better let me go and tell
Mr. Jack McGee about him.” The captain
agreed to this, and the doctor went. The following
day, Old Jack came, and steadily refused to consent
to my being hung. He said: “I know
Edmund would not have him hung-ung. He is too
valuable-aluable. No, no! we will put him in
jail and feed him on bread and water too
valuable a nigger to be hung-ung.”
They tried again to make me say that
I was with the Yankees. They whipped me a while,
then questioned me again. The dog-wood switches
that they used stung me terribly. They were commonly
used in Mississippi for flogging slaves one
of the refinements of the cruelty of the institution
of slavery. I refused to say anything different
from what I had said; but when they had finished whipping
me I was so sore I could hardly move. They made
up their minds to put me in jail at Panola, twenty-two
miles away, to be fed on bread and water. The
next day was Sunday, and all arrangements having been
made for taking me to the place appointed for those
whose crime was a too great love for personal freedom,
they started with me, passing on the way Old Master
Jack’s, where they halted to let him know that
his advice respecting me was to be carried out.
The old man called to my wife: “Come out
and see Louis.” Some one had told her that
they were going to hang me; and I shall never forget
her looks as she came out in the road to bid me good-by.
One of the soldiers was softened by her agony, and
whispered to her: “Don’t cry, aunty,
we are not going to hang him we will only
put him in jail.” I saw this changed my
wife’s looks in a minute. I said a few words
to her, and, with a prayer for God’s blessing
on us both, we parted, and they moved on. After
we had gone about seven miles, we met two soldiers,
who belonged to the regiment at Nelson. They said:
“Hello! where you going with that nigger?”
The two men in charge of me replied: “We
are going to take him to Panola jail.”
“Why,” said one of the soldiers, “there
is no jail there; the Yanks passed through and pulled
down the doors and windows of the jail, and let all
the prisoners out.” This caused a stop;
and a council of war was held in the fence corner,
the result of which was a decision to take me back
to old Jack McGee’s. After we had gotten
back there, they took me and gave me another flogging
to satisfy the madam. I was never so lacerated
before. I could hardly walk, so sore and weak
was I. The law was given me that if ever I was caught
out in the public road again, by any soldier, I was
to be shot. Monday morning I was sent to the
field to plow; and, though I was very stiff and my
flesh seemed sore to the bone, my skin drawn and shriveled
as if dead, I had, at least, to make the attempt to
work. To have said: “Master, I am
too sore to work,” would only have gotten me
another whipping. So I obeyed without a word.
Rebels Burn their cotton.
The capture of Memphis by the Union
troops closed the principal cotton market of the country,
and there was, as a consequence, an immense accumulation
of the product in the hands of the farmers of that
region. They were, therefore, compelled to resort
to temporary expedients for its protection from the
elements. Old Master Jack had his piled up in
a long rick, and shelters built over it. Other
farmers did the same. As cotton was almost the
only source of revenue for the farmers, and as there
was now no opportunity of getting it to market, there
was such a dearth of money as had seldom, if ever,
been known, and a corresponding dearth of those necessaries
of life which money was the only means of procuring.
The accumulations of our family in this product were
very great. While the rebel farmers were waiting
for a time when they could turn their stores of this
valuable article into money, a proclamation was issued
by the rebel government that all the owners of cotton
that had it stored on their farms must prepare to
have it burned. Hundreds of rebel soldiers marched
to every section of Mississippi that they could reach,
and applied the torch to these cotton ricks. The
destruction was enormous. This was to prevent
the cotton from falling into the hands of the Unionists.
Jeff Davis said to his deluded followers that it was
better for them to destroy this property than to risk
its coming into the possession of their enemies, since
that would equally impoverish themselves, while it
might result to the pecuniary advantage of those with
whom they were at war. I know that it was a terrible
sight when our cotton was burned. Hundreds of
bales were consumed, and it seemed like a wholly unnecessary
destruction of property, and, therefore, unwise as
a war measure. Many were sorry that they had
acquiesced in the policy, as it cost them thousands
of dollars, and made many poor. They thought that
possibly their farms might have escaped the visits
of the Union soldiers, and the property, so much needed,
been saved in whole or in part. They reasoned,
and reasoned correctly, that their condition would
in no sense have been worse if their cotton had not
been burned by their own soldiers, but might have
been much better in many cases, without any real detriment
to the rebel cause. The sacrifice of the property
of their own people, by the rebel authorities, was
evidence of the desperation of the condition of the
rebellion, and was so regarded by not a few at that
time. Those were terrible days. One could
see anxiety written on every face among the whites.
The slaves even looked worried at times, though the
war meant so much to them, as they were always looking
forward to freedom, at its close, if the Union troops
were successful.
My fourth runaway trip.
After I had been working on the farm
about two months, and had thoroughly talked the matter
over with Alfred Dandridge, we planned to make a careful
and persistent effort to escape from the land of bondage.
We thought that as others, here and there, all through
the neighborhood, were going, we would make trial
of it. My wife and I were at old Master Jacks;
and, after we had consulted with Alfred and Lydia,
his wife, we all concluded to go at once. Alfred
had been a teamster for Dandridge for many years,
and was familiar with the road, as he had hauled cotton
into Memphis for his master for so long a time he could
hardly tell when he began. Matt Dandridge was
a fellow servant, belonging to the same man, and both
had, as was not unusual, taken their master’s
name, or, rather, were known by it. Matt had
learned of our purpose to run away, and concluded
to join our party. So one night, when all was
still, we started. Uncle Alfred, as I always
called him, was to be our leader. He was older
than any of the rest of us, and had had a good deal
of experience; we, therefore, all looked to him in
fact, we relied entirely upon him. After we had
traveled about twelve miles, we came to a swamp, called
Hicke-Halley. Here we stopped, as day was dawning,
and settled down for the day, as we could travel only
in the night, lest we should be seen and caught.
We were wet our clothes soaked through from
the heavy dew. We had to travel through corn fields,
cotton patches, oat fields and underbrush, not daring
to take the main road. This is why we were so
wet. Uncle Alfred traveled wholly by the stars they
were his guide. He knew by looking at them the
four cardinal points of the compass. Many old
slaves were guided in this way when traveling in the
night, and some could tell the time of night by the
position of the stars. We stayed in Hicke-Halley
all day, and in the evening, when it was dark enough,
we started on again, Uncle Alfred offering up a prayer
to God to guide us safely through. Cold Water
was our next stopping place, and here a difficulty
rose before us that made us fearful. We had nothing
to wear but what we had on, and not much of that, so
had small space for carrying anything, and, therefore,
had brought with us only a little bite to eat.
As we had lived on this small provision for a day,
there was now but little left for our increasing wants;
and the difficulty of securing anything from the houses
without danger of detection was almost insurmountable.
But we felt encouraged as we thought of what we were
striving for, and sped on our way. But the way
was hard, for sometimes we got completely stuck in
brier patches, and had to turn and go back, in order
to find a way out. Old logs and driftwood, that
had been piled up year after year, were other obstacles
in our way; and one can imagine how hard it was to
make our way through such a mass of brush and forest
by the dim light of the stars as they struggled through
the dense branches of the trees. We stumbled on,
however, as best we could, each fearful, yet silently
praying for guidance and help. When within four
or five miles of Cold Water, Uncle Alfred stopped,
and cautioned us not to speak above a whisper, as the
rebel troops were camped on both sides of us.
We were in a swamp between the two roads, gradually
working our way through to the river, as we could
not go on either of the roads for fear of detection.
At the bridges, where these roads crossed the river,
there were rebel camps, and it was useless for us
to think of crossing either. We, therefore, worked
our way carefully through the thicket that we were
in until we came within sight of the river. Then
Uncle Alfred went ahead, creeping a few steps, then
stopping to see if the river was clear of soldiers.
From this point it was some two and a half miles to
the bridges, each way; and it was our idea that if
we could cross here without being seen by the soldiers,
we would be all right. Uncle Alfred came back
to us and told us that he thought the way was clear.
“I can not hear a sound,” said he, “so
let us go on.” We followed the river down
until we came to a place where we could cross.
Here we found some drift-wood an old tree
had been blown down, nearly across the river, leaving
a space of about twenty feet. Over this natural
bridge we crept to the open space which we waded,
the water being up to our knees; but we did not mind
this. There was no talking above a whisper, for
fear of being heard by the soldiers. Daylight
had begun to dawn, and we felt good that we had succeeded
thus far. We went on quietly until we got entirely
out of the swamp and reached some hills. The
woods were on each side of us and still thick; so
we stopped here, on the side of a hill, where the sun
shone brightly on us, expecting to rest for the day.
Our clothes had already become quite dry from the
sunshine; and, so far, we felt all right. Alfred
and I had made a turn around the place, listening to
see if we could hear any noise, or see any trace of
soldiers; but we discovered no trace of them, and
went back to our stopping place. I had been asleep
and some of the others were still asleep, when suddenly
I heard the yelp of blood hounds in the distance.
It seemed quite far away at first, but the sound came
nearer and nearer, and then we heard men yelling.
We knew now that they were on our trail, and became
so frightened that we all leaped to our feet, and
were about to run, when Uncle Alfred said: “Stop
children, let me oil you feet.” He had with
him a bottle of ointment made of turpentine and onions,
a preparation used to throw hounds off a trail.
All stopped; and the women, having their feet anointed
first, started off, Uncle Alfred telling them to run
in different directions. He and I were the last
to start. Alfred said: “Don’t
let the bushes touch you;” at the same time he
ran through the bushes with such a rattling noise
one could have heard him a great distance. He
wore one of those old fashioned oil cloth coats made
in Virginia; and, as he ran, the bushes, striking
against the coat, made a noise like the beating of
a tin board with sticks. The funny part of it
was that, having cautioned us to be careful about noise,
he made more than all of us. By this time the
woods were resounding with the yelping of the hounds
and the cries of their masters. The hounds numbered
some fourteen. The men howled and cheered in
concert with the brutes, for they knew that they were
on the right trail, and it would be but a short time
before they caught us all. I had gotten further
away than any of them. Having run about a mile,
I came to a farm, and started across an open field,
hoping to reach a wood beyond, where I might conceal
myself. Before I was half way across the field,
on looking back, I saw the dogs coming over the fence,
and knowing there was no chance of my getting to the
woods, I turned around, and ran back to a persimmon
tree, and just had time to run up one of the branches
when the dogs came upon the ground. I looked
and saw the men, Williams the nigger-catcher, and Dr.
Henry and Charles Dandridge. As soon as Williams
rode up, he told me to come down, but I was so frightened
I began to cry, yet came down trembling. The
dogs laid hold of me at once, tearing my clothes and
biting my flesh. Dr. Dandridge was just riding
up, and seeing what was happening, yelled out to Williams:
“I thought your dogs didn’t bite.”
“Oh! well,” said Williams, “he aint
hurt we’ve got to let ’em bite
a little.”
They took us all back to the fence
where I crossed over, all the others having been caught.
Our hearts were filled with dismay. All looked
as if they were condemned to be hung. We knew
not what was to be done with us. The women were
pitiful to see, crying and moaning all courage
utterly gone. They started back with us to Old
Master Jack’s, at Panola, and we stopped for
the night at a small farm house. The old woman
who kept it said, tauntingly: “You niggers
going to the Yankees? You all ought to be killed.”
We started on the following morning, and got back home
at one o’clock in the afternoon. All of
us were whipped. All the members of the family
were very angry. Old Lady Jack McGee was so enraged
that she said to my wife: “I thought you
were a Christian. You’ll never see your
God.” She seemed to think that because
Matilda had sought freedom she had committed a great
sin.
Incidents.
Ever since the beginning of the war,
and the slaves had heard that possibly they might
some time be free, they seemed unspeakably happy.
They were afraid to let the masters know that they
ever thought of such a thing, and they never dreamed
of speaking about it except among themselves.
They were a happy race, poor souls! notwithstanding
their down-trodden condition. They would laugh
and chat about freedom in their cabins; and many a
little rhyme about it originated among them, and was
softly sung over their work. I remember a song
that Aunt Kitty, the cook at Master Jack’s,
used to sing. It ran something like this:
There’ll be no
more talk about Monday, by and by,
But every day will be
Sunday, by and by.
The old woman was singing, or rather
humming, it one day, and old lady McGee heard her.
She was busy getting her dinner, and I suppose never
realized she was singing such an incendiary piece,
when old Mrs. McGee broke in upon her: “Don’t
think you are going to be free; you darkies were made
by God and ordained to wait upon us.” Those
passages of Scripture which refer to master and servants
were always cited to us when we heard the Word preached;
and they were interpreted as meaning that the relation
of master and slave was right and proper that
they were rightly the masters and we the slaves.
I remember, not long after Jeff Davis
had been elected president of the Confederacy, that
I happened to hear old Master Jack talking to some
of the members of the family about the war, etc.
All at once the old man broke out: “And
what do you think! that rascal, Abraham Lincoln, has
called for 300,000 more men. What is Jeff Davis
doin’-doin’?” He talked on, and
seemed so angry that he gave no one a chance to answer:
“Jeff Davis is a grand rascal-rascal,”
said he, “he ought to go into the field himself.”
At first all the Southerners were jubilant over Davis;
but as they were losing so, and the Unionists gaining,
they grew angry and denounced him oftentimes in unsparing
terms.
Union raid at master’s farm.
During the time the Union headquarters
were at Helena, a Union gun-boat came down the river
as far as Boliva, and stopped at Miles McGee’s.
The soldiers made a raid through the farm, taking
chickens, turkeys, meat and everything that they could
lay hands on. During this raid Miles McGee came
out of the house with a gun, and shot the commanding
officer of the party. He became alarmed over
what he had done, and hid in the cabin of one of the
servants. He never came near the house. The
Union soldiers came three different times to catch
him, but never succeeded. The last time they
came, he made for the canebrake, and hid himself there
until they were gone. But though he had escaped
their righteous vengeance, he became so nervous that
he left his hiding place in the canebraker, and went
to Atlanta, Ga., and staid there among friends until
things became more quiet. At last wearying of
this, he determined to return to old Master Jack’s,
but not to his own home. Word had been received
of his coming, and great preparations were made for
his reception. After he had started on his return,
he was taken ill on the train, and was left at a small
town called Jackson, where he soon died. I drove
the family to the depot upon the day of his expected
arrival, and as the train came in, the women waved
their handkerchiefs; and, when the conductor stepped
off, they asked him if Mr. McGee was aboard. He
said no “I have his remains.”
The scene that followed, I can not describe such
wailing and screaming! I could not but feel sad,
even though they had treated me so meanly, causing
the death of my children, and separating me from my
wife. Their grief was indeed great. The sad
news was conveyed to his mother, old Mrs. Jack McGee,
at the house by an advance messenger, and we soon
followed with the body. He was the favorite son
of his mother, and her grief was very great. But
for his wanton shooting of the Union officer, he would
probably not have met his death as he did.
Union soldiers pass the Panola
home.
One winter night, while I was at old
Master Jack’s, I was awakened by a rumbling
noise like that of heavy wagons, which continued steadily
and so long a time that I finally concluded it must
be an army passing, and such I found to be the case,
upon getting up and venturing out, the rumbling which
had awakened me being caused by the passing artillery.
I was afraid to go out straight to the soldiers, but
would take a few steps at a time, then stop and listen
behind a tree or the shrubbery. All seemed quiet there
was no talking. I had listened about twenty minutes
when there seemed to be a halt at the creek, some distance
from the house. Soon afterwords I heard the command
given: “Forward!” I at once made
up my mind that they were Yankee soldiers. I got
on my knees and crawled to the fence, not daring to
go openly, fearing that they might hear or see me
and shoot, supposing me to be a spy. I went back
into the house and told my wife that they were Yankees
who had just passed. “Uncle George,”
said I, “this would be a good time for us to
go.” “Oh, no,” said he, “we
are not quite ready.” Uncle George’s
cabin was where my wife and I stayed while at old
Master Jack’s. In the morning I was to
carry a parcel to Como, a place not far from home,
to Mr. James McGee, who was in the rebel army.
It was not quite daylight when I made ready to go
on my trip, for I was anxious to find out more about
the soldiers. Going to the stable and saddling
my horse, I mounted and rode out to the big gate leading
to the main road, just as day was dawning. As
I dismounted to open the gate, some soldiers were passing
and an officer sung out to me, “Hello! which
way are you going.” I said “to Como,
to carry this parcel of clothing to my young master
in the war.” “You have a fine horse,”
said the officer, “I guess I will exchange horses
with you.” He took my package of clothing
and some letters which I had to mail and my horse,
leaving me his, which was a very poor animal.
I was badly scared at this performance, fearing that
I would be severely whipped for the loss of the horse
and package. Yet how could I help it? We
knew nothing but to serve a white man, no matter what
he asked or commanded. As a matter of course,
I did not go to Como, as I had nothing to take the
officer had everything, but went back to the cabin.
I supposed that the soldiers had all passed; but in
about half an hour Aunt Kitty, on looking out of her
cabin window, exclaimed: “My God! just
look at the soldiers!” The yard was covered with
the blue coats. Another venerable slave said:
“My Lord! de year of jubilee am come.”
During the excitement I ran to the big house, and told
the madam that the Yankees were there, and had taken
my horse and every thing I had. Old Master Jack
had heard the news, but was not able to come out.
He had arisen, but, when he knew of the presence of
the Yankees, he went back to bed, calling for Kitty
to get him a mush poultice. “Tell Kitty-ity-ity
to get me a mush poultice-oltice.” It was
customary, after the beginning of the war, for him
to take sick, and call for a poultice to be put upon
his stomach whenever he heard of the Yankees being
near. He and many like him were especially valorous
only when the blue coats were far away. The soldiers
went into the dairy and drank all the milk, helped
themselves to butter, cheese, meat, bread and everything
in sight which they wanted. Nothing was said
to them by the white folks, but the slaves were glad,
and whispered to each other: “Ah! we’s
goin’ to be free.” Old Master Jack,
lying on his couch would ask every little while:
“Where are they? Are they gone?” After
they had all left the premises, he said; “My
God! I can’t stand it. Them devils-evils
are just goin’ through the country destroyin’
everything.” I was sent down to get Uncle
Peter for old master, and when Peter came up the old
man asked: “Well, did any of the servants
go away? And, sir, them devils took Louis’
horse and the clothes he had for his young master.”
Hiding valuables from the Yankees.
Right after this the McGees commenced
planning to put away their valuables, to keep them
from the Union soldiers. All the servants had
to fill up their bed-ticks with fine gin cotton the
lint part for safe keeping. Great
boxes and barrels were packed full of their best things,
and put into the cellar, under the house. It was
not exactly a cellar, but a large shallow excavation,
which held a great deal. We put all the solid
silver ware, such as cake baskets, trays, spoons, forks,
dishes, etc., in boxes, and buried them under
the hen house. Great packages of the finest clothing
I had to make up, and these were given in charge of
certain servants whose duty it was to run into the
big house and get them, whenever they heard that the
Yankees were coming, and take them to their cabins.
This was a shrewd arrangement, for the soldiers never
went into the cabins to get anything. When the
soldiers had passed, these packages were taken back
to the house. It speaks well for the honesty
and faithfulness of the slaves that such trusts could
be devolved upon them, notwithstanding all the cruelties
inflicted upon them by their masters.
Death to runaway slaves.
It was about this time, that the law
or regulation of the rebel government was promulgated,
authorizing or directing the shooting or hanging of
any slave caught trying to get away to the Union army.
This barbarous law was carried out in many cases,
for every little while we would hear of some slave
who was caught running away, and hung or shot.
A slave belonging to Boss, ran away, and got safely
within the Union lines; but he returned to get his
sister. They both got away from the house, but
had gone only a few miles, when William McGee overtook
them, and shot the man dead. William boasted
of this, but told Uncle Peter, the foreman, that he
never wanted it mentioned.
Slaves hung and left to rot
as A Warning.
Two slaves belonging to one Wallace,
one of our nearest neighbors, had tried to escape
to the Union soldiers, but were caught, brought back
and hung. All of our servants were called up,
told every detail of the runaway and capture of the
poor creatures and their shocking murder, and then
compelled to go and see them where they hung.
I never shall forget the horror of the scene it
was sickening. The bodies hung at the roadside,
where the execution took place, until the blue flies
literally swarmed around them, and the stench was
fearful. This barbarous spectacle was for the
purpose of showing the passing slaves what would be
the fate of those caught in the attempt to escape,
and to secure the circulation of the details of the
awful affair among them, throughout all the neighborhood.
It is difficult at this day for those not familiar
with the atrocities of the institution of slavery to
believe that such scenes could ever have been witnessed
in this or any other civilized land, as a result simply
of a human being’s effort to reach a portion
of the country, where the freedom of which it was
said to be the home, could be enjoyed without molestation.
Yet such was the horrible truth in not one case alone,
but in many, as I know only too well.
Runaway slave caught and whipped.
One day while I was waiting at dinner,
some of the children from the slave quarters came
running into the house, and said to old Master Jack:
“Uncle John is going away he is down
to the creek.” He had been put in the carpenter
shop, fastened in the stocks, but by some means he
had gotten the stocks off his feet, and got loose.
All in the house immediately got up and ran out.
Old master told me to run and catch the runaway.
I did not like to do it, but had to obey. Old
master and I ran in pursuit, and soon overtook him.
He could not run, as the stocks were still on his
arms and neck. We brought him back, and he was
“staked out” that is, four
stakes were driven into the ground, the arms tied to
two and the legs to the other two. He was then
paddled with the whipping paddle upon the bottom of
his feet, by old Master Jack, until blood blisters
arose, when he took his knife and opened them.
I was then sent for salt and water, and the bruises
of the suffering chattel were washed as usual in the
stinging brine.
A home guard accidentally shoots
himself.
After the capture of Memphis by the
Union forces, the soldiers were in the habit of making
raids into the surrounding country. These were
a source of alarm and anxiety among the people, and
they were constantly on the watch to defend their
property and themselves, as best they could.
One day Dr. Charles Dandridge went over to one of our
neighbors, Mr. Bobor’s, to practice shooting,
and to see if he had heard anything new about the
war. It was the custom of the home-guards to meet
weekly, and practice with their fire-arms, in order
to be the better prepared, as they pretended, for
any sudden incursion of the now dreaded Yankee.
Mr. Bobor had gotten a Yankee pistol from some friend,
who was in the army, and Dr. Charles wanted to see
and try it. It was shown him, and its workings
explained. He took it and began shooting, and
in showing the other men how quickly he could shoot
a Yankee, and mount his horse, he accidentally shot
himself under the short rib near his heart, and fell
to the ground. All the men came running to him,
picked him up and carried him into the house, immediately
sending word to Mrs. Dandridge and Master Jack McGee,
his father-in-law. The boys came hurrying in,
and told us what had happened. I hitched up and
drove Boss over to Mr. Bobor’s. We found
the wounded man rapidly sinking; and when, a little
later, his wife came, he could not speak only
clasped her hand. He died that night, and we
carried his body to the home, which so short a time
before, he had left in health and high spirits.
No casket was to be had everything of that
kind had been consumed or shut out by the war.
Accordingly two slaves were ordered to make a coffin,
which they did, using plain boards. It was then
covered with black alpaca from a dress of the madam,
and lined with the cloth from Mrs. Dandridge’s
opera cloak. The regular material used for these
purposes was not to be had. By the time the coffin
was ready, the body was so bloated, that it could
not be got into it. Resort was then had to a plain
box, and in this the body of another of the stricken
family group was laid away. At the suggestion
of old Master Jack, the coffin, was put up in the carriage
house, for safe keeping, he saying it would do for
him to be buried in. Sorrow had come to this
family with such crushing force, that their former
pride and boastful spirit had given place to utter
dejection.
Substitutes for coffee.
During the war everything was scarce
and dear, and substitutes were devised for many of
those things which had formerly been regarded as the
necessaries of life. Sweet potatoes were peeled,
then cut in small pieces and put out in the sun to
dry. They were then used as a substitute for
coffee, when that article became so scarce, toward
the close of the war. Great quantities of this
preparation were used. Okra was another substitute
for coffee. It was dried in the pod, then the
seeds shelled out, and these were dried again and prepared
something as the coffee is. This made a delicious
drink when served with cream, being very rich and
pleasant to the taste. Quinine was a medicine
that had been of almost universal use in the south;
yet it became so scarce that it was sold at seven
dollars a bottle, and could not often be had at that
price. Lemon leaves were used as a substitute
in cases of chills and fever. The leaves were
made into a tea, and given to the patient hot, to
produce perspiration. During an attack of chills,
I was treated in this manner to some advantage.
At any rate I got well, which can not always be said
of all methods of treatment.