ALBERT HILL TEXAS NO.212 AGE-81 SLAVE IN GEORGIA I WAS2BORNOON-M SSA CARTER HILL'SPPLjNTAT ),I NGEORGIA, AND MY NAME IS ALBERT HILL. MY PAPA'S NAME WAS DILLION, CAUSE HE TOOK THAT NAME FROM HIS OWNER , MASSA TOM DILLION. HE OWNED THE PLANTATION NEXT TO MASSA HILL'S, AND HE OWNED MY MAMMY AND US THIRTEEN CHILLUN. I DONT KNOW HOW OLD I IS, BUT I REMEMBER THE START OF THE WAR, AND I WAS A SIZEABLE CHILE THEN. THE PLANTATION WASNT SO BIG AND IT WASNT SO SMALL, JUST FAIR SIZ(, BUT ITW AS FIXED FIRST CLASS AND EVERYTHING WAS GOOD. WE HAD GOOD QUARTERS MADE OUT OF LOGS AND LOTS OF TABLES AND BENCHES, WHICH WERE MADE OF SPLIT LOGS. WE HAD THE RATIONS AND MASSA GAVE PLENTY OF THE CORNMEAL AND BEANS AND MOLASSES AND HONEY. SOMETIMES WE HAD TEA, AND ONCE IN A WHILE WE GOT COFFEE. AND DID WE HAVE TASTY jND TnNDnR MEAT] I WOULD LIKE TO SEE2 OMEOF THAT HOG MEAT NOW. MASSA WAS GOOD BUT HE DIDNT ALLOW PARTIES. BUT WE COULD GO TO MASSA DILLIO N'S PLACE NEXT TO US AND DEY HAS LOTS OF PARTIES AND DE DANCES. WE DANCES NEAR ALL NIGHT SATURDAY NIGHT, BUT WE HAD TO STAY WAY IN THE BACK WHERE THE WHITE FOL KS COULDNT HEAR US. SOMETIMES WE HAD THE FIDDLE AND BANJO AND DID WE CUT THAT CHICKEN WING AND DE SHUFFLE] WE SURE DID. I DROVE THE OX, AND DRIVING THAT OX WAS ITA NWORK IN THE SUMMER TIME W HEN IT WAS HOT, CAUSE THEY RUN FOR WATER EVERY TIME. BUT THE WORST TROUBLE I EV ER HAD WAS WITH ONE HORSE. I FETCHED THE DINNER TO THE WORKERS OUT IN THE FIELD AND I USED THAT HORSE, HITCHED TO THE TWO6WHEnL CjR,. ONE DAY HE WAS HALFWAY A ND THAT HORSE STOPPED. HE LOOKED BACK AT ME, ROLLING HIS EYE, AND I KNEW WHAT THAT MEANT --"HERE I STAY, NIGGER." BUT I HAD HEARD TO TIE A ROPE ON A BALKY HO RSE'S TAIL AND RUN IT BETWEEN HIS LEGS AND TIE IT TO THE SHAFT. I DID THAT AND PUT SOME COCKLEBURRS ON THE ROPE, TOO. THEN I TOUCHED HIM WITH THE WHIP AND HE GAVE A REAR BAC WARDS. THAT WAS HIS2B ST- E . WHEN HE DID THAT IT PULLED TH E ROPE AND THE ROPE PULLED THE TAIL AND THE BURRS GOT BUSY. THAT HORSE MOVED FO RWARD FASTER AND HARDER THEN HE HAD EVER DONE BEFORE, AND HE KEPT ON GOING. YOU SEE, HE WAS TRYING TO GET AWAY FROM HIS TAIL, BUT HS TArL6W S OO6F S,. OuS E, IT STAY RIGHT BEHIND HIM. THEN I WAS IN A PICKLEMENT.. THAT HORSE WAS RUNNI NG AWAY AND I COULDNT STOP HIM. THE WORKERS LINED UP TO STOP HIM BUT THE CART G IVE THE SHOVE AND THAT PULLED HIS TAIL AND, LAWDY WHOO, DAT HORSE JUMPED FORWARD LIKE A JACKRABBIT AND WENT THROUGH THAT LINE OF WORKERS. SO I STEERED HIM IN O ,HE6FnNCEO>, jND ,HnRE6W S- O- ORE-RuNN !,BUT AN AWFUL MIXUP WITH THE HORSE AND THE CART AND THE RATIONS.. THAT HORSE WAS SO SCARED HE HAD THEQQUAVn\. -MA SSA SAID,"WHAT ARE YOU DOING?" I SAID I WAS BREAKING THE BALK. HE SAID,"WELL, YOU'VE GOT EVERYTHING ELSE BROKEN. WE'LL SEE ABOUT THE BALK LATER." MASSA HAD A DAUGHTER AND SHE WANTED TO MARRY BUD JACKSON, BUT MASSA WAS AGA INST IT.. BUD WAS GOING TO THE ARMY AND THAT GIVE THIS BOY WORK, CAUSE I WAS TH E MESSENGER BOY FOR HIM AND MISSY MARY. THEY KEPT COMPANY UNBEKNOWNST AND I CAR RIED THE NOTES. I PUT THE PAPER IN A HOLLOW STUMP. ONCE I WAS SURE I WAS CAUGHT. THERE WAS MASSA AND HE SAID,"WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN, NIGGER?" I WAS SURE SCARED AND I SAYS," I WAS LOOKING FOR THE SQUIRRELS." SO MASSA WENT AWAY A ND WHEN I TELL YOU I LEFT, IT AINT THE PROPER WORD FOR TO EXPLAIN, CAUSE I FLEW FROM THERE. I TOLD MISSY MARY AND SHE SAID,"YOU SURE ARE THE-LORD'S . nNNIG GER." THE CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS CAME AND THEY TOOK THE RATrO S,2BUT THE-M SSA8HAD DUG A PIT IN THE PASTURE AND BURIED LOTS OF THE RATIONS, SO THE SOLDIERS DIDNT FIND SO MUCH. THE CLOSEST BATTLE WAS ATLANTA, MORE THAN 25 MILES AWAY. WHEN THE WAR WAS-OVER, BUD JACKSON CjME OME. ,HEMASSA WELCOMED HIM, TO T HE SURPRIZE OF EVERYBODY, AND WHEN BUD SAID HE WANTED TO MARRY MISSY MARY, MASSA SAID,"I GUESS YOU HAVE EARNED HER." WHEN FREEDOM CAME, MASSA CALLED jLL US tOGETHnR jND OlD S& O TTHE DIFFE ENCE BETWEEN FREEDOM AND HUSTLING FOR OURSELVES AND DEPENDING ON SOMEONE ELSE. MOST OF THE SLAVES STAYED AND MASSA PAYS THEM FOR THE WORK, AND I STAYED TrLL I WAS 21 YEARS OLD, AND I GOT SEVEN DOLLARS A MONTH AND THE CLOTHES AND THE qOUSE AND ALL I COULD EAT. THE MASSA HAD DIED BEFORE THAT, AND THERE WAS POWFuL2 O RROW. MISSY MARY AND MASSA BUD HAD THE PLANTATION THEN, AND THEY DIDNT WANT ME TO GO TO TEXAS. BUT THEY WENT ON A VISIT AND WHILE THEY WERE GONE I OOK A RA IN FOR ROBINSON COUNTY, WHICH IS IN TEXAS. I WORKED AT PAVING WORK AND AT THE HOSTLING WORK AND I WORKED ON OS S. T HEN I WORKED FOR THE SANTA FE RAILROAD, HANDLING FREIGHT, AND I WORKED TILL ABOU T THREE YEARS AGO, WHEN I GOT TOO OLD TO WORK ANY MORE. BUT I TELL YOU ABOUT THE VISIT BACK TO THE OLD PLANTATrON. I8HAD2 EnN7 ONE NEARLY 40 YEARS AND I DECIDED TO GO BACK, SO I REACHED THE HOUSE AND ,HnR6W SM ISSY MARY PEELING APPLES ON THE BACK GALLERY. SHE LOOKS AT ME, AND SHE SAID,"I GOT A WHIPPING WAITING FOR YOU, CAUSE YOU RUN OFF WITHOUT TELLING US." THERE W ASNT NO NORE PEELING THAT DAY, CAUSE WE SAT AND TALKED ABOUT THE OLD TIMES AND T HE OLD MASSA. THERE SURE WERE TEARS IN THIS NIGGERS EYES. THEN WE TALKED ABOUT THE NIGGER MESSENGER I WAS, AND WE LAUGHED A LITTLE. ALL DAY LONG WE TjLKED A -LITtLE, jND-LAUGHED AND CRIED AND TjLKED. I2ScAhED& OUT3 wOWEEKS AND SAW LOT S OF THE FOLKS I KNEW WHEN I WAS YOUNG, THE WHITE FOLKS AND THE NIGGERS TOO. I'M TOO OLD TO MAKE ANY MORE VISITS, BUT I wOuLD-LrKE tO O2BA K OOLD GEORGIA ONCE MORE. IF MISSY MARY WERE ALIVE, I WOULD STAY, BUT SHE IS DEAD, SO I TRIES TO WAIT FOR OLD GABRIEL TO BLOW HIS HORN. WHEN HE BLOWS8HIS8R), , S NIGGER WILL SAY,"LOUDER, GABRIEL, LOUDER]"