[The Sequel of Appomattox by Walter Lynwood Fleming]@TWC D-Link bookThe Sequel of Appomattox CHAPTER II 5/23
The Negroes were summoned to the "big house," told that they were free, and advised to stay on for a share of the crop.
The description by Mrs.Clayton, the wife of a Southern general, will serve for many: "My husband said, 'I think it best for me to inform our Negroes of their freedom.' So he ordered all the grown slaves to come to him, and told them they no longer belonged to him as property, but were all free.
'You are not bound to remain with me any longer, and I have a proposition to make to you.
If any of you desire to leave, I propose to furnish you with a conveyance to move you, and with provisions for the balance of the year.' The universal answer was, 'Master, we want to stay right here with you.' In many instances the slaves were so infatuated with the idea of being, as they said, 'free as birds' that they left their homes and consequently suffered; but our slaves were not so foolish."* * "Black and White under the Old Regime", p.
158, The Negroes, however, had learned of their freedom before their old masters returned from the war; they were aware that the issues of the war involved in some way the question of their freedom or servitude, and through the "grapevine telegraph," the news brought by the invading soldiers, and the talk among the whites, they had long been kept fairly well informed.
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