~I to se. dat big shop“. «I itayed on de plantatioEk awhile after d• war and heped de MiSBUS in de house. Den I went away“. “I.e had eight ohillun. Dey ai]. died and thirnin azil bis brothr (r.ferri4g to Lafayette). Den his brother died too. I said h. ou~it ter died inetid o hie brother.“ “Why?“ “Beoauee thisun got eo skeered when he was little bein carried on a hoe that he los hie .p.eoh and de wouldt let me •ee im for two 4ay.. It waa a long time bfor he I earned to talk again“. (To this day he has euoh an impediment of speech that it is painful to hear him nmke ~ the effort to talk). “What did you bave to eat domi on the plantation, Aunt Lucy?“ “I hab mostly olabber, fieI~- aM corn bread. We gets plenty of fish do~ on de bay“. “When ~ ot~n up here we worke in the oie Forest Glen hotel. Mistah Charley Keys owned the place th~. We stayed there after ir. Caseidy oc~e. (Mr. Caseidy was the founder of the National ~ark 8e~uinary, a school for girls ). My eon Lafayette worked that‘. för thirty five years • Then we awn to Carroll Spring. Inn“.