s 205 ~‚ : ~ ;~ ~ Intervie~r ~•. ~ Person interriewed £mia ~in~ - -~- ~Ö~4ut.~7ifth (rai]; Pine 7B~tÙ~r Aik.ùãB Mgs~_~82 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — ~ — — — œ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ — — ~ — — — — — — ~ — — — ‘I uasd to ‘member lots ~it you ~ow, my remembrance got short. ~I was bred end born in J~ohneton County, North Carolina. I was sold away frc~ sy mother but after frsdcs I got back. I had a brother was sold just ‘fore I sas, My mother bad two boys and three girls end ~y oldest sister was sold. “And then you know, in slavery ti~ss, when the white children got grown, their parsnts giv ‘em so aeny darkiss. My young misais drawd w tust master was such a drinkr. Ned lee. Lawd a mercy, I knoied his fast n~ but I can‘t think now. Young Lee, that was it. “Es sold ~‚ eM Leo Andrew Ihitley bought ~. Don‘t know how ~uch-s~‘ &U I know is I was sold, ‘Atter frsodc I screabled back to the old plantation and that‘s the way I founi ~ ~othsr. “My last aaster never aarri.d. He had what they caUd a northern trotter. ~Iish I was able to get back to the old country and find scm. of ~ kin f‘olks. It th•y ain‘t none of the old head livin‘ ‚ the young folks is. I got oceans of kin folks in Sampson County. “My husband was a preacher and he co~ to the old country frc~ this hers Arkansas. K. always said bi was going to bring out to this country. Es was always tllin‘ ‘bout Little Bock end Hot Springs.