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. I was single for two years. After that I married Rev. Hays. I lived with Rev. Hays about twenty-one years in Brownsville, Tennessee. We bought a house and lot there. We were gettin' along fine when we decided to come here. He was a shoemaker then. He made shoes after he came here, too. I ran a restaurant in Brownsville. I guess we lived together more then fifty years in all. He died seven years ago. "I rent these two rooms in this little shack. They won't give me no help at the Welfare." --- 1- 1937 Interviewer: Mrs. Bernice Bowden Person interviewed: Tom Haynes 1110 W. Second Street, Pine Bluff, Arkansas Age: "I was six years old when the war ended--the day we was set free. My old mistress, Miss Becky Franks, come in and say to my mother 'Addie, you is free this morning' and commenced cryin'. She give my mother some jerked beef for us. "I know I run out in the yard where there was eighty Yankee soldiers and I pulled out my shirt tail and ran down the road kickin' up the dust and sayin', 'I'm free, I'm free!' My mother said, 'You'd better come back here!' "I never knew my mother to get but one whippin'. She put out her mouth against old mistress and she took her out and give her a breshin'. "I can remember away back. I can remember when I was three years old. One day I was out in the yard eatin' dirt and had dirt all over my face. Young master Henry come out and say 'Stick out your tongue, I'm goin' to cut it off.' I was scared to death. He said 'Now you think you can quit eatin' that dirt?' I said 'Yes' so he let me go. "One time the Yankee soldiers took young Master Henry and hung him up by the thumbs and tried to make him tell where the money was. Master Henry's little brother Jim and me run and hid. We thought they was goin' to hang us too. We crawled under the house just like two frogs lookin' out. "Old master had about thirty-five hands but some of em run away to war. My father run away too, but the war ended before he could get into it. "I went to school a little while, but my father died and my mother bound me out to a white man. "When we was first freed I know those eighty soldiers took us colored folks to the county band in Monticello. There was forty soldiers in the back and forty in front and we was in the swing. "I learned to read after I was grown. I worked for the railroad in the freight office fifteen years and learned to check baggage.
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