<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</SPAN></span></p>
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<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="georgerogers">
<tr><td align='left'>N.C. District:</td><td align='left'>No. 2</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Worker:</td><td align='left'>T. Pat Matthews</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>No. Words:</td><td align='left'>1239</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Subject:</td><td align='left'>GEORGE ROGERS</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Person Interviewed:</td><td align='left'>George Rogers</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Editor:</td><td align='left'>Daisy Bailey Waitt</td></tr>
</table></div>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2> GEORGE ROGERS<br/> Ex-Slave Story<br/> </h2>
<p>"George Rogers is the name. I has carried fur 94 years
an' over. I will be 95 the first day o' this comin' August.
Louis Rogers wuz my father. My mother wuz Penny Rogers.
All my brothers an' sisters are dead except one sister.
She is livin' in Buffalo, New York. She is somewhere in
seventy years old. She wuz the baby in our home. My mother
an' father an' all o' us belonged to Felix Rogers. He lived
in the edge o' Wake County next to Greenville County. My
mother came from Canada. My master came here from Canada
an' married here. He married old man Billy Shipp's daughter.
Her name wuz Matilda Shipp.</p>
<p>"I cannot read an' write. Dey did not 'low no niggers
to handle no papers in dem days. Master had three plantations
an' about one hundred slaves. We had good houses
an' plenty to eat. My master wuz a good man. We had no
church on the plantation, but we had prayermeeting in our
houses. He 'lowed dat an' when dey had big meeting, he
made us all go. We had dances or anything else we wanted
to at night. We had corn shuckings, candy pullings, an'
all the whiskey an' brandy we wanted. My daddy didn't do
nuthin' but 'still for him. Whiskey wuz only ten cents a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</SPAN></span>
quart den.</p>
<p>"I have never seen him really whup a slave any more dan
he whupped his own chilluns. He whupped us all together
when we stole watermelons and apples. He made us chillun,
white and black, eat together at a big table to ourselves.
We had ordinary clothes, but we all went alike. In the
summer and winter we all went barefooted and in our shirt
tails mos' er de time. His chilluns wuz just as bad fer
goin' barefooted as we niggers wuz.</p>
<p>"We had our patches, and he allowed us to have the
money we made on 'em. Our houses were called slave quarters.
Our marster's house wuz a big fine two story-house. We slaves
called it 'de great house'. None er de slaves from Marster
Roger's plantation never run away.</p>
<p>"We chillun played de games uv marbles, cat ball, an'
we played base, prison base. At night we all played peep
squirrel in the house. We played blindfold and tag.</p>
<p>"We fished a lot in Briar Creek. We caught a lot o'
fish. Sometimes we used pin hooks we made ourselves. We
would trade our fish to missus for molasses to make candy
out uv.</p>
<p>"When we got sick we had a doctor. His name wuz Dr.
Hicks. I never wuz sick, but some uv de res' wuz. We had
an old colored man who doctored on all us chillun. He give
us roots an' herbs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes sir, I have seen slaves sold. My marster died
the year the war started; den dey had a big sale at our
house. Dey had a sale, an' old man Askew bought a
whole lot o' our niggers. I don't know his name only
dey called him 'old man Askew'. He lived on Salisbury
Street Raleigh, down near de Rex Hospital, Corner Salisbury
and Lenoir Streets. Old man Askew wuz a slave speculator.
He didn't do nothin' but buy up slaves and sell 'em. He
carried de ones he bought at our house to Texas. He bought
my half-sister and carried her to Texas. Atter de surrender
I saw her in Texas once, never no more.</p>
<p>"When de war begin dey carried young marster off. His
name wuz William Rogers, an' dey sent me to wait on 'im.
I wuz in camp wid 'im up here by de old Fair Grounds. Atter
we got there I seed old Colonel Farrabow, he wuz Colonel o'
dat regiment. We all lef' Raleigh on wagons, an' I don't know
whur we went atter we lef' Raleigh; I wuz las'. We got on
de train at Fayetteville, whur dey kept de rations. We went
to a place whur dere wuz a lot o' water. I don't know its
name. We were dere about three days when dey had a battle,
an' den Colonel Farrabow come round an' tole me marster wuz
gone. He told us to go to the breas'works and work. I
stayed dere three years and eight months. Den dey had
anudder battle dar just befo' I lef', and de Yankees tuc'
de place.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I went to de Yankees den. Dey give me clothes,
shoes, sumtin to eat, and some money too. I worked for 'em
while dey were camped in Raleigh. I come wid' em back to
Raleigh. Dey were camped on Newbern Avenue and Tarboro
Street and all out in Gatlin' Field in de place now called
Lincoln Park. De Yankees, when dey tuc' us, tole us ter come
on wid' em. Dey tole us to git all de folks's chickens and
hogs. We wuz behind 'em, an' we had plenty. Dey made us steal
an' take things fur 'em. Wheeler's Calvary went before us,
dat's why dey wuz so rich. Dey got all de silver, an' we
got de chickens and hogs.</p>
<p>"De Yankees skinned chickens and geese. Dey cut hogs
an' cows up an' den skinned 'em. Dey took jis' part of a
cow sometime, jis' de hind quarters an' lef' de res'. We
went to one place, an' de white 'oman only had one piece o'
meat an' a big gang o' little chillun. I begged de Yankees
to let dat piece of meat alone, she wuz so po', but de officer
tole 'em to take it, an' dey took her las' piece o' meat.</p>
<p>"I stayed wid de Yankees two years arter de surrender.
Dey carried me to Florida when I lef' Raleigh. When I lef'
'em in Florida I went ter Texas to min' cattle. I stayed in
Texas seven years. Den Mr. Hardie Pool from down here at Battle
Bridge, Wake County come out dere. When he started home I
couldn't stan' it no longer, an' I jis tole him I wuz goin'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</SPAN></span>
back home to North Carolina. No Sir, when I got home, I would
not go back. No mo mindin' cattle in Texas fur me. I married
arter I come back here. I married Polly Bancomb first, den
a 'oman named Betsy Maynard, and las', Emily Walton.</p>
<p>"When de surrender come marster wuz dead, but he lef' it
so dat all his slaves who had families got a piece o' lan'.
Dere were four of 'em who got lan'. He wuz dead do', but missus
done like he had it fixed.</p>
<p>"We had white overseers. Old man John Robinson stayed
there till de surrender; den he lef'. We used to kill
squirrels, turkeys, an' game wid guns. When marster went off
some o' us boys stole de guns, an' away we went to de woods
huntin'. Marster would come back drunk. He would not know,
an' he did not care nuther, about we huntin' game. We
caught possums an' coons at night wid dogs. Marsa an' missus
wuz good to us.</p>
<p>"I heerd a heap uv talk about Abraham Lincoln, but I
don't know nuthin' bout him. I like Mr. Roosevelt all right.
He is all right as fur as I know of 'im. I digs fish worms
fer a livin'; I can't work much. I jist works awhile in the
mornin'. I don't git anything from charity, de county, ner
de State. I don' have much. Dese are de bes' shoes I has.
Dey flinged dem away, an' I picked 'em up. Dey is jist rags
uv shoes. I shore need shoes."</p>
<p>L.E.</p>
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