. 2. ~‚ 52 able to work any at all I wus put to milking cows. UI have seen the ~)atero11ers huntin~ men and have seen men they had whipped. The slave block stood in the center of the street, Fayetteville Street, where ~aznsey ~id ~i11espie Street c~ie in near Cool Spria~s Street. The silk ~i11 stood just öelow the slave market. I saw the silkworms that made the silk and saw them ~ather the cocoons and spin the silk. ~ “They hund‘ people in the middle of ~arnsey Street. They put up a ‚~ailows and hu~~ the men exactly at 12 o‘clock. “I r~än away from the plantation once to go with some white children to see a man hung. ~‘The only boats ï remember on the Cape Fear wus the iovernor ~iorth, The Hurt ‚ The iser anc~ The North Stat~( Oh! Lord yes, I remember the stase coach. As mar~ times as I run to carry the ‘nail to them when they come by L They blew a horn before they got there and you had to be on time ‘cause they could riot wait. There wus a stage each way each day, one up ano. one down. “Mr. George Lander had the first Torribstone ~iarb1e yard in Fayetteville on hay Street on the point of Flat Iron place. Lander wus from Scotland. They gave me a pot,