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Washington County
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Former Slave - Sarah Woods Burke
"Yessir, I guess you all would call me an
ex-slave cause I was born in Grayson County, West Virginia and on a
plantation I lived for quite a spell, that is until when I was seven years
old when we all moved up here to Washington county." "My Pappy's old Mammy was supposed to have
been sold into slavery when my Pappy was one month old and some poor white
people took him ter raise. We worked for them until he was a growed up
man, also 'til they give him his free papers and 'lowed him to leave the
plantation and come up here to the North." "How did we live on the plantation? Well—you
see it was like this we lived in a log cabin with the ground for floors
and the beds were built against the walls jus' like bunks. I 'member that
the slaves had a hard time getting food, most times they got just what was
left over or whatever the slaveholder wanted to give them so at night they
would slip outa their cabins on to the plantation and kill a pig, a sheep
or some cattle which they would butcher in the woods and cut up. The
wimmin folks would carry the pieces back to the cabins in their aprons
while the men would stay behind and bury the head, skin and feet."
"Whenever they killed a pig they would have to
skin it, because they didn't dare to build a fire. The women folk after
getting home would put the meat in special dug trenches and the men would
come erlong and cover it up." "The slave holders in the port of the country
I came from was men and it was quite offen that slaves were tied to a
whipping stake and whipped with a blacksnake until the blood ran down
their bodies." "I remembers quite clearly one scene that
happened jus' afore I left that there part of the country. At the
slaveholders home on the plantation I was at it was customary for the
white folks to go to church on Sunday morning and to leave the cook in
charge. This cook had a habit of making cookies and handing them out to
the slaves before the folks returned. Now it happened that on one Sunday
for some reason or tother the white folks returned before the regular time
and the poor cook did not have time to get the cookies to the slaves so
she just hid then in a drawer that was in a sewing chair." "The white folks had a parrot that always sat
on top of a door in this room and when the mistress came in the room the
mean old bird hollered out at the top of his voice, 'Its in the rocker.
It's in the rocker'. Well the Missus found the cookies and told her
husband where upon the husband called his man that done the whipping and
they tied the poor cook to the stake and whipped her till she fainted.
Next morning the parrot was found dead and a slave was accused because he
liked the woman that had been whipped the day before. They whipped him
than until the blood ran down his legs." "Spirits? Yessir I believe in them, but we
warnt bothered so much by them in them days but we was by the wild
animals. Why after it got dark we children would have to stay indoors for
fear of them. The men folks would build a big fire and I can remember my
Pappy a settin on top of the house at night with a old flint lock across
his legs awaiting for one of them critters to come close enough so he
could shoot it. The reason for him being trusted with a gun was because he
had been raised by the poor white man who worked for the slaveholder. My
Pappy did not work in the fields but drove a team of horses." "I remembers that when we left the plantation
and come to Washington County, Ohio that we traveled in a covered wagon
that had big white horse hitched to it. The man that owned the horse was
Blake Randolls. He crossed the river 12 miles below Parkersberg. W. Va. on
a ferry and went to Stafford, Ohio, in Monroe County where we lived until
I was married at the age of 15 to Mr. Burke, by the Justice of the Peace,
Edward Oakley. A year later we moved to Curtis Ridge which is seven miles
from Stafford and we lived their for say 20 year or more. We moved to
Rainbow for a spell and then in 1918 my husband died. The old man hard
luck came around cause three years my home burned to the ground and then I
came here to live with my boy Joe and his family." "Mr. Burke and myself raised a family of 16
chilluns and at that time my husband worked at farming for other people at
$2.00 a month and a few things they would give him." "My Pappy got his education from the boy of
the white man he lived with because he wasn't allowed to go to school and
the white boy was very smart and taught him just as he learned. My Pappy,
fought in the Civil War too. On which side? Well, sho nuff on the site of
the North, boy." Submitted and Transcribed by Sandie
Cummins
James Immel,
Reporter
Folklore
Washington County, District Three
SARAH
WOODS BURKE
Aged 85