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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

Illustrated with Photographs
WASHINGTON 1941

VOLUME XIII
OKLAHOMA NARRATIVES

Prepared by the Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration
for the State of Oklahoma

169 pages, Softcover/Comb Bound, 8.5"x11"
4 photographs (including cover)

This is Volume 13 (Oklahoma) of the WPA Slave Narratives Project.  This booklet is 169 pages (85 sheets of 60# paper printed on two sides) with a comb-bound card stock cover. A portion of the sales of this booklet will be donated to the organization which provided the transcription.

B.A. Botkin, Chief Editor of the Writer's Unit, in his 1941 Introduction to the Slave Narratives collection, wrote:

"Set beside the work of formal historians, social scientists, and novelists, slave autobiographies, and contemporary records of abolitionists and planters, these life histories, taken down as far as possible in the narrators' words, constitute an invaluable body of unconscious evidence or indirect source material, which scholars and writers dealing with the South, especially social psychologists and cultural anthropologists, cannot afford to reckon without. For the first and the last time, a large number of surviving slaves (many of whom have since died) have been permitted to tell their own story, in their own way. In spite of obvious limitations—bias and fallibility of both informants and interviewers, the use of leading questions, unskilled techniques, and insufficient controls and checks—this saga must remain the most authentic and colorful source of our knowledge of the lives and thoughts of thousands of slaves, of their attitudes toward one another, toward their masters, mistresses, and overseers, toward poor whites, North and South, the Civil War, Emancipation, Reconstruction, religion, education, and virtually every phase of Negro life in the South.

"The narratives belong to folk history—history recovered from the memories and lips of participants or eye-witnesses, who mingle group with individual experience and both with observation, hearsay, and tradition. Whether the narrators relate what they actually saw and thought and felt, what they imagine, or what they have thought and felt about slavery since, now we know why they thought and felt as they did. To the white myth of slavery must be added the slaves' own folklore and folk-say of slavery. The patterns they reveal are folk and regional patterns—the patterns of field hand, house and body servant, and artisan; the patterns of kind and cruel master or mistress; the patterns of Southeast and Southwest, lowland and upland, tidewater and inland, smaller and larger plantations, and racial mixture (including Creole and Indian).

"The narratives belong also to folk literature. Rich not only in folk songs, folk tales, and folk speech but also in folk humor and poetry, crude or skilful in dialect, uneven in tone and treatment, they constantly reward one with earthy imagery, salty phrase, and sensitive detail. In their unconscious art, exhibited in many a fine and powerful short story, they are a contribution to the realistic writing of the Negro. Beneath all the surface contradictions and exaggerations, the fantasy and flattery, they possess an essential truth and humanity which surpasses as it supplements history and literature."

Those interviewed (and their city or county) were:
Isaac Adams (Tulsa), Alice Alexander (Oklahoma City), Phoebe Banks (Muskogee), Nancy Rogers Bean (Hulbert), Prince Bee (Red Bird), Lewis Bonner (Oklahoma City), Francis Bridges (Oklahoma City), John Brown (West Tulsa), Sallie Carder (Burwin), Betty Foreman Chessier (Oklahoma City), Polly Colbert (Colbert), George Conrad, Jr. (Oklahoma City), Martha Cunningham (Oklahoma City), William Curtis (McAlester), Lucinda Davis (Tulsa), Anthony Dawson (Tulsa), Alice Douglass (Oklahoma City), Doc Daniel Dowdy (Oklahoma City), Joanna Draper (Tulsa), Esther Easter (Tulsa), Eliza Evans (McAlester), Lizzie Farmer (McAlester), Della Fountain (McAlester), Nancy Gardner (Oklahoma City), Octavia George (Oklahoma City), Mary Grayson (Tulsa), Robert R. Grinstead (Oklahoma City), Mattie Hardman (Oklahoma City), Annie Hawkins (Colbert), Ida Henry Oklahoma City), Morris Hillyer (Alderson), Hal Hutson (Oklahoma City), William Hutson (Tulsa), Isabella Jackson (Tulsa), Nellie Johnson, Josie Jordan (Tulsa), George G. King (Tulsa), Martha King (McAlester), George Kye (Fort Gibson), Ben Lawson (Oklahoma City), Mary Lindsay (Tulsa), Mattie Logan (West Tulsa), Kiziah Love (Colbert), Daniel William Lucas (Red Bird), Bert Luster (Oklahoma City), Stephen McCray (Oklahoma City), Hannah McFarland (Oklahoma City), Marshall Mack (Oklahoma City), Allen B. Manning (Tulsa), Bob Maynard (Weleetka), Jane Montgomery (Oklahoma City), Amanda Oliver (Oklahoma City), Salomon Oliver (Tulsa), Phyllis Petite (Fort Gibson), Matilda Poe (McAlester), Henry F. Pyles (Tulsa), Chaney Richardson (Fort Gibson), Red Richardson (Oklahoma City), Betty Robertson (Fort Gibson), Harriett Robinson (Oklahoma City), Katie Rowe (Tulsa), Morris Sheppard (Fort Gibson), Andrew Simms (Sapulpa), Liza Smith (Muskogee), Lou Smith (Platter), James Southall (Oklahoma City), Beauregard Tenneyson (West Tulsa), William Walters (Tulsa), Mary Frances Webb (McAlester), Easter Wells (Colbert), John White (Sand Springs), Charley Williams (Tulsa), Sarah Wilson (Fort Gibson), Tom Woods (Alderson), Annie Young (Oklahoma City)

 


Other Slave Narrative Project Books
[Arkansas Parts 3 & 4] [Arkansas Parts 1 & 2] [Arkansas Part 5] [Arkansas Parts 6 & 7] [Florida] [Georgia Parts 1 & 2] [Georgia Parts 3 & 4] [Indiana] [Kansas and Kentucky] [Maryland and Mississippi] [Ohio] [Oklahoma] [South Carolina Parts 1 & 2] [Tennessee]


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