| The
Reading Selection:
These interviews give an interesting look at the end of
slavery from the point of view of the freed slaves. The interviews
were actually made during the 1930s, as part of a government program during
the Great Depression. The people speaking were, of course, quite
elderly by then. But their memory of the great day of freedom is
sharp indeed, as their remarks prove.
The interviews were written down phonetically to record
speech patterns, which can be useful to linguists and historians alike.
It is worth reminding students that even today, many areas of the country
- North and South - have distinct variations of speech.
The
Picture:
The gateway at Fort Sumter, where the first shots of the Civil War were
fired. The war led to the emancipation of all slaves in the U.S. |
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Group
Discussion:
The first two interviews show very
different attitudes by plantation owners toward the end of slavery.
In the first interview, Mary Adams
shows that she is not accepting the change at all. She declares,
"Ten years from today, I'll have you all back 'gain."
The former slave holder in the second
interview accepts the end of slavery, and tells his former slaves "You
is now free and can go whar you pleases." Beyond that, he promises
to help the slaves if they have problems. It is not an empty promise,
and the speaker, Betty Bormer, recalls that the "freed slaves goes to him
lots of times, and he always helps." He also offered pay for those
who stayed on the plantation, and some did.
The third interview reveals an important
fact about life in the South just after the Civil War. Survival meant
adjustment for both whites and blacks. Crops had to be planted, or
starvation would be the result the next winter.
The speaker, Robert Falls, recalls
the day he made a deal with a white landowner to trade labor for food and
clothing. The impact of the free choice made a big impact on his
sense of himself. "I knowed then that I could make a living for my
own self, and I never had to be a slave no more."
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