2. 14 aaid she Was ~o],d onc, away fr~ hex mother but they 1.t her have her four children. She grieved for her old ~ • fraid ahe would have a hard tij~. ~e aold tor one thousand dollars, She said that was half price btit freedoen was coming on. She never laid eyes on her mama ag‘in. “After freedom they had goné to another place and the man owned the place run the L~ flux oft. They c~ there and he told them to ~o on away, if he need them he would call them back out there. They never come back, she aaid. They was scared to death of the K~ Klux. At the place where they was treed all the farm bells rung slow for freedc~ That was for miles about. Th~ir master told. them up at his house. Ra said it was sad thing, no tima tor ‚ they badn ‚ t ‚ sperienced it. ~t for thsm to oc~ back he would divide long as ~iat he had lasted. They didn‘t go off right at first. . They was several years getting broke up. Soiae went, ec~ stayed, some actually moved back. Like bees trying to find a setting place • Seem like they couldu‘ t get to be satisfied avên being tree. eI had eleven children ~ own. seit. I let the plough tly back and hit me once and now I got a tumor there. I love to plough. I got two children living. She comes to see ma. She lives across over hers. I don‘t hear from my boy. I reckon he living. I gets help trcm the relief on account I can‘t work imich with this tumor.*