<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span></p>
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<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="isaacjohnson">
<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'>991</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Subject:</td><td align='left'>ISAAC JOHNSON</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Story teller:</td><td align='left'>Isaac Johnson</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_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>ISAAC JOHNSON</h2>
<h4>Lillington, North Carolina,
Route 1, Harnett County.<br/></h4>
<p>"I am feelin' very well this mornin', while I don't
feel like I used to. I done so much hard work, I'm 'bout
all in. Dey didn't have all dese new fangled things to do
work an' go 'bout on when I wus a boy. No, no, you jes'
had to git out an' do all de work, most all de work by hand.
I wus ten years old when de Yankees come through. I wus
born Feb. 12, 1855.</p>
<p>"I belonged to Jack Johnson. My missus' name wus
Nancy. My father wus Bunch Matthews; he belonged to old
man Drew Matthews, a slave owner. My mother wus named Tilla
Johnson. She belonged to Jack Johnson, my marster. De
plantation wus near Lillington, on the north side o' de
Cape Fear River and ran down to near de Lillington Cross
roads one mile from de river. I had one brother and six
sisters. My brother wus named Phil and my sisters name
Mary, Caroline, Francis and I don't remember de others
names right now. Been so long since I saw any of 'em.
Dey are all dead. Yes sir, dey are all dead. I do not
remember my grandpa and grandma. No sir, I don't.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I wus too small to work, dey had me to do little
things like feedin' de chickens, an' mindin' de table
sometimes; but I wus too small to work. Dey didn't let
children work much in dem days till dey were thirteen or
fourteen years old. I had plenty to eat, good clothes,
a nice place to sleep an' a good time. Marster loved his
slaves an' other white folks said he loved a nigger more
den he did white folks. Our food wus fixed up fine. It
wus fixed by a regular cook who didn't do anything but
cook. We had gardens, a plenty o' meat, a plenty, an' mo'
biscuit den a lot o' white folks had. I kin remember de
biscuit. I never hunted any, but I went bird blindin' an'
set bird traps. I caught lots o' birds.</p>
<p>"Jack Johnson, my marster never had no children of
his own. He had a boy with him by the name of Stephen, a
nephew of his, from one of his brothers. Marster Jack had
three brothers Willis, Billy, and Matthew. I don' remember
any of his sisters. There was 'bout four thousand acres
in de plantation an' 'bout 25 slaves. Marster would not
have an overseer.</p>
<p>"No sir, de slaves worked very much as they pleased.
He whupped a slave now an' then, but not much. I have
seen him whup 'em. He had some unruly niggers. Some of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>
'em were part Indian, an' mean. Dey all loved him doe.
I never saw a slave sold. He kept his slaves together.
He didn't want to git rid of any of 'em. We went to de
white folks church at Neill's Creek a missionary Baptis'
Church.</p>
<p>"We played during the Christmas holidays, an' we
got 'bout two weeks 4th of July, and lay by time, which
wus 'bout the fourth. We had great times at corn shuckin's,
log rollin's and cotton pickin's. We had dances. Marster
lowed his slaves lots o' freedom. My mother used to say
he wus better den other folks. Yes, she said her marster
wus better than other folks.</p>
<p>"The white folks didn't teach us to read an' write.
I cannot read an' write, but de white folks, only 'bout
half or less den half, could read an' write den. Dere
were very few pore white folks who could read an' write.
I remember de baptizin's at de Reuben Matthews Mill Pond.
Sometimes after a big meeting dey would baptize twenty four
at one time. No slaves run away from Marster. Dey didn't
have any scuse to do so, cause whites and colored fared
alike at Marster's. We played base, cat, rolly hole, and
a kind of base ball called 'round town.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Dr. John McNeill looked after us when we were sick.
We used a lot of herbs an' things. Drank sassafras tea an'
mullen tea. We also used sheep tea for measles, you knows
dat. You know how it wus made. Called sheep pill tea.
It shore would cuore de measles. 'Bout all dat would
cuore measles den. Dey were bad den. Wus den dey is now.</p>
<p>"I saw Wheeler's Cavalry. Dey come through ahead
of de Yankees. I saw colored people in de Yankee uniforms.
Dey wore blue and had brass buttons on 'em. De Yankees an'
Wheeler's Cavalry took everything dey wanted, meat, chickens,
an' stock. We stayed on wid Marster after de war. I've
never lived out of de state. We lived in de same place
ontill old Marster an' Missus died. Den we lived wid deir
relations right on an' here. I am now on a place deir
heirs own.</p>
<p>"Ole Marster loved his dram, an' he gave it to
all his slaves. It sold for ten cents a quart. He made
brandy by de barrels, an' at holidays all drank together
an' had a good time. I never saw any of 'em drunk. People
wan't mean when dey were drinking den. It wus so plentiful
nobody notices it much. Marster would tell de children
'bout Raw Head and Bloody Bones an' other things to skeer
us. He would call us to de barn to git apples an' run an'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
hide, an' we would have a time findin' him. He give de
one who found him a apple. Sometimes he didn't give de
others no apple.</p>
<p>"I married Ellen Johnson May 22, 1865 de year de
war went up, an' my wife is livin' as you see, an' able
to be about. I'm not able to work, not able to go out
anywhere by myself. I know I cain't las' much longer
but I'm thankful to de Lord for sparin' me dis long."</p>
<p>AC</p>
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