Slave Narratives Vol. XIV. South 
Carolina,
by Various 
 
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Carolina, 
Part 1, by Various This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no 
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Title: Slave Narratives Vol. XIV. South Carolina, Part 1 A Folk History 
of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves. 
Author: Various 
Release Date: July 26, 2006 [EBook #18912] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SLAVE 
NARRATIVES VOL. XIV. *** 
 
Produced by Janet Blenkinship and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images 
generously made available by the Library of Congress, Manuscript 
Division)
SLAVE NARRATIVES 
A Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with 
Former Slaves 
TYPEWRITTEN RECORDS PREPARED BY THE FEDERAL 
WRITERS' PROJECT 1936-1938 ASSEMBLED BY THE LIBRARY 
OF CONGRESS PROJECT WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION 
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SPONSORED BY THE 
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 
WASHINGTON 1941 
VOLUME XIV 
SOUTH CAROLINA NARRATIVES 
PART 1 
Prepared by the Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress 
Administration for the State of South Carolina 
+-----------------------------------------------------+ | TRANSCRIBER 
NOTES: | |To reflect the individual character of this document,| 
|inconsistencies in formatting have been retained. | | | |[HW: ] denotes a 
handwritten note. | +-----------------------------------------------------+ 
 
INFORMANTS 
Abrams, M. E. 1 
Adams, Ezra 5 
Adams, Mary 9 
Adams, Victoria 10
Adamson, Frank 13 
Andrews, Frances 17, 18 
Arthur, Pete 19 
Bacchus, Josephine 20 
Ballard, William 26 
Barber, Charley 29 
Barber, Ed 34 
Barber, Millie 38 
Bates, Anderson 42 
Bates, Millie 46 
Bees, Welcome 48 
Bell, Anne 51 
Bevis, Caroline 55 
Black, Maggie 57 
Bluford, Fordon 62 
Boulware, Samuel 65 
Boyd, John 70 
Bradley, Jane 74 
Brice, Andy 75 
Briggs, George 80, 89, 93
Bristow, Josephine 98 
Broome, Anne 104 
Brown, Hagar 107, 112, 115 
Brown, Henry 118, 122 
Brown, John C. 127 
Brown, Mary Frances 131, 134 
Brown, Sara 137, 141 
Bryant, Margaret 143 
Burrell, Savilla 149 
Burton, C. B. 152 
Butler, George Ann 153 
Butler, Isaiah 155 
Butler, Solbert 161 
Cain, Granny 166, 168 
Caldwell, Laura 169 
Caldwell, Solomon 170 
Cameron, Nelson 172 
Campbell, Thomas 176 
Cannon, Sylvia 180, 187 
Caroline, Albert 197
Chisolm, Silvia 199 
Chisolm, Tom 201 
Cleland, Maria 204 
Clifton, Peter 205 
Coleman, Henry 210 
Coleman, Rev. Tuff 216 
Collier, Louisa 218 
Collins, John 224 
Corry, Bouregard 227 
Craig, Caleb 229 
Cunningham, Dinah 234 
Daniels, Lucy 238 
Davenport, John N. 240 
Davenport, Moses 244 
Davis, Charlie 245 
Davis, Charlie 250 
Davis, Heddie 254 
Davis, Henry 260 
Davis, Jesse 263 
Davis, Lizzie 267, 288, 293
Davis, Louisa 299 
Davis, Wallace 304, 306 
Davis, William Henry 308 
Dawkins, Elias 313 
Dill, Will 319 
Dixon, Thomas 324 
Dorroh, Isabella 326 
Downing, Laurence 329 
Dozier, Washington 330 
Duke, Alice 336 
Durant, Silva (Sylvia) 337, 342 
* * * * * 
 
Project 1885-1 From Field Notes. District No. 4. April 27, 1937 Edited 
by: Elmer Turnage 
FOLK LORE: FOLK TALES (Negro). 
"Marse Glenn had 64 slaves. On Sat'day night, de darkies would have a 
little fun on de side. A way off from de big house, down in de pastur' 
dar wuz about de bigges' gully what I is ebber seed. Dat wuz de place 
whar us collected mos' ev'ry Sa'day night fer our lil' mite o' fun frum de 
white folks hearin'. Sometime it wuz so dark dat you could not see de 
fingers on yo' han' when you would raise it fo' your face. Dem wuz sho' 
schreechy nights; de schreechiest what I is ever witnessed, in all o' my 
born natu'al days. Den of cose, dar wuz de moonlight nights when a 
darky could see; den he see too much. De pastur' wuz big and de trees
made dark spots in it on de brightest nights. All kind o' varmints tuck 
and hollered at ye as ye being gwine along to reach dat gully. Cose us 
would go in droves sometime, and den us would go alone to de gully 
sometime. When us started together, look like us would git parted 'fo 
we reach de gully all together. One of us see som'tin and take to runnin'. 
Maybe de other darkies in de drove, de wouldn't see nothin' jes den. 
Dats zactly how it is wid de spirits. De mout (might) sho de'self to you 
and not to me. De acts raal queer all de way round. Dey can take a 
notion to scare de daylights outtin you when you is wid a gang; or dey 
kin scare de whole gang; den, on de other hand, dey kin sho de'self off 
to jes two or three. It ain't never no    
    
		
	
	
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