Joseph S. Badgett's Slave Narrative
Badgett, Joseph Samuel
1221 Wright Avenue, Little Rock, Arkansas
Age 72
Interviewer Samuel S. Taylor
"My mother had Indian in her. She would fight. She was
the pet of the people. When she was out, the pateroles would
whip her because she didn't have a pass. She has shored me
scars that were on her even till the day that she died. She
was whipped because she was out without a pass. She could have
had a pass any time for the asking, but she was too proud to
ask. She never wanted to do things by permission.
Birth
"I was born in 1864. I was born right here in Dallas
County. Some of the most prominent people in this state came
from there. I was born on Thursday, in the morning at three
o'clock, May the twelfth. My mother has told me that so often,
I have it memorized.
Persistence of Slave Customs
"While I was a slave and was born close to the end of
the Civil War, I remember seeing many of the soldiers down
here. I remember much of the treatment given to the slaves.
I used to say 'master' myself in my day. We had to do that
till after '69 or '70. I remember the time when I couldn't
go nowhere without asking the 'white folks.' I wasn't a slave
then but I couldn't go off without asking the white people.
I didn't know no better.
"I have known the time in the southern part of this state
when if you wanted to give an entertainment you would have
to ask the white folks. Didn't know no better. For years and
years, most of the niggers just stayed with the white folks.
Didn't want to leave them. Just took what they give 'em and
didn't ask for nothing different.
"If I had known forty years ago what I know now!
First Negro Doctor in Tulip, Arkansas
"The first Negro doctor we ever seen come from Little
Rock down to Tulip, Arkansas. We were all excited. There were
plenty of people who didn't have a doctor living with twenty
miles of them. When I was fourteen years old, I was secretary
of a conference.
Schooling
"What little I know, an old white woman taught me. I
started to school under this old woman because there weren't
any colored teachers. There wasn't any school at Tulip where
I lived. This old lady just wanted to help. I went to her about
seven years. She taught us a little every year---specially
in the summer time. She was high class---a high class Christian
woman---belonged to the Presbyterian church. Her name was Mrs.
Gentry Wiley.
"I went to school to Scipio Jones once. Then they opened
a public school at Tulip and J. C. Smith taught there two years
in the summer time. Then Lula Baily taught there one year.
She didn't know no more than I did. Then Scipio came. He was
there for a while. I don't remember just how long.
"After that I went to Pine Bluff. The County Judge at
that time had the right to name a student from each district.
I was appointed and went up there in '82 and '83 from my district.
It took about eight years to finish Branch Normal at that time.
I stayed there two years. I roomed with old men John Young.
"You couldn't go to school without paying unless you
were sent by the Board. We lived in the country and I would
go home in the winter and study in the sumer. Professor J.
C. Corbin was principal of the Pine Bluff Branch Normal at
that time. Dr. A. H. Hill, Professor Booker, and quite a number
of the people we consider distinguished were in school then.
They finished, but I didn't. I had to go to my mother because
she was ill. I don't claim to have no schooling at all.
"Forty Acres and a Mule"
"My mother received forty acres of land when freedom
came. Her master gave it to her. She was given forty acres
of land and a colt. There is no more to tell about that. It
was just that way---a gift of forty acres of land and a colt
from her former master.
"My mother died. There is a woman living now that lost
it (the home). Mother let Malinda live on it. Mother lived
with the white folks meanwhile. She didn't need the property
for herself. She kept it for us. She built a nice log house
on it. Fifteen acres of it was under cultivation when it was
given to her. My sister lived on it for a long time. She mortgaged
it in some way I don't know how. I remember when the white
people ran me down there some years back to get me to sign
a title to it. I didn't have to sign the paper because the
property had been deeded to Susan Badgett and HEIRS; lawyers
advised me not to sign it. But I signed it for the sake of
my sister.
Father and Master
"My mother's master was named Badgett---Captain John
Badgett. He was a Methodist preacher. Some of the Badgetts
still own property on Main Street. My mother's master's father
was my daddy.
Marriage
"I was married July 12, 1889. Next year I will have been
married fifty years. My wife's name was Elizabeth Owens. She
was born in Batesville, Mississippi. I met her at Brinkley
when she was visiting her aunt. We married in Brinkley. Very
few people in this city have lived together longer than we
have. July 12, 1938, will make forty-nine years. By July 1939,
we will have reached our fiftieth anniversary.
Patrollers, Jayhawkers, Ku Klux, and Ku Klux Klan
"Pateroles, jayhawkers, and the Ku Klux came before the
war. The Ku Klux in slavery times were men who would catch
Negroes out and keep them if they did not collect from their
masters. The pateroles would catch Negroes out and return them
if they did not have a pass. They whipped them sometimes if
they did not have a pass. The jayhawkers were highway men or
robbers who stole slaves among other things. At least, that
is the way the people regarded them. The jayhawkers stole and
pillaged, while the Ku Klux stole those Negroes they caught
out. The word 'Klan' was never included in their name.
"The Ku Klux Klan was an organization which arose after
the Civil War. It was composed of men who believed in white supremacy
and who regulated the morale of the neighborhood. They were not
only after Jews and Negroes, but they were sworn to protect the
better class of people. They took the law in their own hands.
Slave Work
"I'm not so certain about the amount of work required
of slaves. My mother says she picked four hundred pounds of
cotton many a day. The slaves were tasked and given certain
amounts to accomplish. I don't know the exact amount nor just
how it was determined.
Opinions
"It is too bad that the young Negroes don't know what
the old Negroes think and what they have done. The young folks
could be helped if they would take advice."
Interviewer's Comment
Badgett's distinctions between jayhawkers, Ku Klux, patrollers,
and Ku Klux Klan are most interesting.
I have been slow to catch it. All my life. I have heard persons
with ex-slave background refer to the activities of the Ku
Klux among slaves prior to 1865. I always thought that they
had the Klux Klan and the patrollers confused.
Badgett's definite and clear-cut memories, however, lead
me to believe that many of the Negroes who were slaves
used the word Ku Klux to denote a type of persons who stole
slaves. It was evidently in use before it was applied to
the Ku Klux Klan.
The words "Ku Klux" and "Ku Klux Klan" are
used indiscriminately in current conversation and literature.
It is also true that many persons in the present do, and in
the past did, refer to the Ku Klux Klan simply as "Ku
Klux."
It is a matter of record that the organization did not
at first bear the name "Ku Klux Klan" throughout the South.
The name "Ku Klux" seems to have grown in application
as the organization changed from a moral association of the
best citizens of the South and gradually came under the control
of lawless persons with lawless methods---whipping and murdering.
It is antecedently reasonable that the change in names accompanying
a change in policy would be due to a fitness in the prior use
of the name.
The recent use of the name seems mostly imitation and
propaganda.
Histories, encyclopedies, and dictionaries, in general,
do not record a meaning of the term Ku Klux as prior to
the Reconstruction period.
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