Mr. Reese had a big flock of peafowls dat had belonged to Mr. Scott and I had to take care of demWhitefolks. They wasn't very big either, but one day two Cherokees rode up and talked a long time, then young Master came to the cabin and said they were sold because mammy couldn't make them mind him. He was married, but that din't make no difference he courted her anyhow. I never forget when they sold off some more negroes at de same time, too and put dem all in a pen for de trader to come and look at. My father was born in Tahlequah just about where the colored church stands on Depot Hill. Joseph Vann, the husband of Wah li was probably born 1735-1740. Master give me over to de National Freedmen's bureau and I was bound out to a Cherokee woman name Lizzie McGee. In Georgia, during the early 1800s, slaves owned by the Vann Family made the bricks and milled the lumber used to build the Vann House in Spring Place. Some of us had money. The big house was made of log and stone and had big mud fireplaces. They never sent us anywhere with a cotton dress. In de second year of de War he sold my mammy and my aunt dat was Uncle Joe's wife and my two brothers and my little sister. She had belonged to Joe Hildebrand and he was kin to old Steve Hildebrand dat owned de mill on Flint Creek up in de Going Snake District. Used to go up and down the river in his steamboat. Joseph H. Vann was born at Spring Place, Georgia on February 11, 1798. Old Mistress had a good cookin stove, but most Cherokees had only a big fireplace and pot hooks. By and by I married Nancy Holdebrand what lived on Greenleaf Creek, bout four miles northwest of Gore. Then one day one of my uncles name Wash Sheppard come and tried to git me to go live wid him. Yes, Lord Yes. Dat was de time dat was the hardest and everything was dark and confusion. , Nancy Vann, John Shepherd Vann, David Vann, Jane Elizabeth Vann, Sallie Blackburn Vore (born Vann), Joseph W. Vann, William Vann, Miner https://www.ancestry.com/mediaui-viewer/collection/1030/tree/69753803/person/36207324186/media/f7398599-0630-429e-b3f8-1944ec3951cd?_phsrc=RGj23082&_phstart=successSource, Spring Place, Murray County, Georgia, United States of America, Spring Place, Murray County, Georgia, United States, Cherokee () Principal Chiefs and Uka: Eastern, Western and Keetoowah, Chief Joseph Rich Joe Vann, Principal Chief, http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~lpproots/Neeley/cvann.htm, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_Walker_steamboat_disaster. Nita. My mother Betsy Vann, worked in the big house for the missus. He sold one of my brothers and one sister because they kept running off. *Family traveled to America Dec. 21, 1904 with mother, Maria Cairo and 2 sons, Luigi and Francesco, Michele Marchese b. My uncle belong to old Captain Joe nearly all his life. Then I had clean warm clothes and I had to keep them clean too! We settled down a little ways above Fort Gibson. Us slaves lived in log cabins dat only had one room and no windows so we kept de doors open most of de time. The separation ended at a reunification council with the Cherokee Nation in 1809. Among the several hundred slaves owned by the Vanns at that time, many were skilled craftsmen and tradesmen capable of helping build such a fine house. Lord, Yes! We had about twenty calves and I would take dem out and graze-em while some grown-up negro was grazing de cows so as to keep de cows milk. Indians made us keep our master's name. He would start at de crack of daylight and not git home till way after dark. Run it to the bank! but it sunk and him and old Master died. Pappy was the shoe-maker and he used wooden pegs of maple to fashion the shoes. I'm glad the War's over and I am free to meet God like anybody else, and my grandchildren can learn to read and write. They had run out of food and were starving, too weak and disillusioned to offer effective resistance. A whole half of ribs sold for twenty-five cents. She married as her second husband, Thomas Mitchell. He didn't tell us children much about the War, except he said one time that he was in the Battle of Honey Springs in 1863 down near Elk Creek south of Fort Gibson. Pretty soon everybody commenced a singing and a prayin'. She was weavin when the case came up so quick, missus Jennie put her in her own bed and took care of her. My names' Lucinda Vann, I've been married twice but that don't make no difference. But about the home--it was a double-room log house with a cooling-off space between the rooms, all covered with a roof, but no porch, and the beds was made of planks, the table of pine boards, and there was never enough boxes for the chairs so the littlest children eat out of a tin pan off the floor. Lord have mercy I'll say they was. Everybody had a good time. The big House was a double log wid a big hall and a stone chimney but no porches, wid two rooms at each end, one top side of de other. Any information would be valuable. 5. Yes, I have seen something, a story about a 'grandson' of Joseph VANN running away to Texas. After the old time rich folks die, them that had their money buried, they com back and haunt the places where it is. Our marshal made us all sign up like this; who are you, where you come from, where you go to. Yes Sa. Marster had a big Christmas tree, oh great big tree, put on the porch. I been a good Christian ever since I was baptised, but I keep a little charm here on my neck anyways, to keep me from having the nose bleed. Someone maybe would be playing a fiddle or a banjo. Old Master Joe was a big man in the Cherokees, I hear, and was good to his Negroes before I was born. There'd be races and people would have things what they was sellin' like moccasins and beads. In winter white folks danced in the parlor of the big house; in summer they danced on a platform under a great big brush arbor. Everybody a hollerin' and a cryin'. Master Jim and Missus Jennie was good to their slaves. When we git to Fort Gibson they was a lot of Negroes there, and they had a camp meeting and I was baptised. Cal Robertson was eighty-nine years old when I married him forty years age, right on this porch. His britches was all muddy and tore where de hounds had cut him up in de legs when he clumb a tree in de bottoms. Please enable JavaScript in your browser's settings to use this part of Geni. We had to have a pass to go any place to have signing or praying, and den they was always a bunch of patrollers around to watch everything we done. They could have anything they wanted. I remember when the steamboats went up and down the river. Isaac had been Young Joe's driver and he told me all about how rich Master Joe was and how he would look after us negroes. Joseph Vann, son of Chief Joseph Vann and his wife Margaret Scott Vann, married first, Jennie Springton, born December 23, 1804, died August 4, 1863. Mammy went to a mean old man named Pepper Goodman and he took her off down de river, and pretty soon Mistress tell me she died cause she can't stand de rough treatment. a trading post, more than 1,000 peach trees, 147 apple trees, and a still. Old Mistress cried jest like any of de rest of us when de boat pull out with dem on it. There was seats all around for folks to watch them dance. Cherokee VANN Family. The slaves had a pretty easy time I think. They got over in the Creek country and stood off the Cherokee officers that went to git them, but pretty soon they give up and come home. He'd take us and enjoy us, you know. He had charge of all Master Chism's and Master Vann's race horses. In slavery time the Cherokee negroes do like anybody else when they is a death---jest listen to a chapter in the Bible and all cry. They are not related to the Cherokee VANN family. Seem like it take a powerful lot of fighting to rid the country of them Rebs. He was a multi-millionaire and handsome. It was "Don't Call the Roll, Jesus Because I'm Coming Home." Malone, Henry Thompson, Cherokees of the Old South: A People in Transition, University of Georgia Press, (1956), ISBN 0670034207. In winter white folks danced in the parlor of the big house; in summer they danced on a platform under a great big brush arbor. A brother was owned by another Vann Family in Tahlequah. He passed away on 4 Apr 1770 in Bertie, North Carolina, United States. Everybody had plenty to eat and plenty to throw away. When Mammy went old Mistress took me to de Big House to help her and she was kind to me like I was part of her own family. We settled down a little ways above Fort Gibson. Family tree. Marster had a big Christmas tree, oh great big tree, put on the porch. It wasn't my Master done dat. Women came in satin dresses, all dressd up, big combs in their hair, lots of rings and bracelets. Everything was stripedy cause Mammy like to make it fancy. When the War come they have a big battle away west of us, but I never see any battles. Brown sugar, molasses, flour, corn-meal, dried beans, peas, fruits butter lard, was all kept in big wooden hogsheads; look something like a tub. The married folks lived in little houses and there was big long houses for all the single men. I go to this house, you come to my house. Marster and Missus was dead. Young, Mary., "The Cherokee Nation: Mirror of the Republic", (American Quarterly), Vol. Master went plumb blind after he move back to Webber's Falls and so he move up on de Illinois River, about three miles from de Arkansas, and there old Mistress take de white swelling and die and den he die pretty soon. One year later my sister Phyllis was born on the same place and we been together pretty much of the time ever since, and I reckon dere's only one thing that could separate us slave born children. He born at Spring Place, Georgia on February 11, 1798. When the last of the Cherokees were forcibly moved west in 1838, government records indicate that 1,592 black slaves were moved to Indian Territory with their owners. The Vanns later relocated to Indian Territory, present-day Oklahoma. He died when the boat's boilers exploded. One night a runaway negro come across form Texas and he had de blood hounds after him. We all come back to de old place and find de negro cabins and barns burned down and de fences all gone and de field in crab grass and cockleburs. Two pounds of hog meat sold for a nickel. Some 3,500 interviews were conducted. The place was all woods, and the Cherokees and the soldiers all come down to see the baptising. Its massive walls and hand-carved woodwork show excellent workmanship, and its unique hanging staircase is a marvel that piques the interest of many visitors. Do you know what I am going to do? Married to a sister of Doublehead, he was the father of Chief John Watts. In the morning we got up early, made a fire, and made a big pot of coffee. I dunno her other name. Im glad the wars over and I am free to meet God like anybody else, and my grandchildren can learn to read and write. Sometime Young Master Joe and the other boys give me a piece of money and say I worked for it, and I reckon I did for I have to cook five or six times a day. In one month you have to get back. Two year old when my mamma died so I remember nothing of her, and most of my sisters and brothers dead too. Some of the old chief's names was Gopher John, John Hawk and Wild Cat. She bossed all the other colored women and see that they sew it right. I don't know what he done after that. I dont know, but that was before my time. Sometimes Joe bring other wife to visit Missus Jennie. Georgia known as The Chief Vann House In 1819, WA-WLI baptized by the Morav. So many years had passed since slavery ended that most of the former slaves then available for interviews had been born very near the end of the slavery era. In 1834 Cherokee chief James Vann's son Joseph lost the family home to the state. He come to our house and Mistress said for us Negroes to give him something to eat and we did. After several days of pursuit, the Indians caught up with the escaped slaves and a heated battle inflicted casualties on both sides. I don't know what dey done it for, only to be mean, and I guess they was drunk. We lived there a long time, and I was old enough to remember setting in the yard watching the river (Grand River) go by, and the Indians go by. She holler, "Easter, you go right now and make dat big buck of a boy some britches!". He is indeed of warm temper, but who can gain his love, which is no hard task, has gained all, and we have no doubt that with reasonable management, he may be made a very useful man.". He didn't want em to imagine he give one more than he give the other. In one month you have to get back. They tell us what was happening and what to do. I've heard em tell of rich Joe Vann. I dont know what he done after that. Master's name was Joe Sheppard, and he was a Cherokee Indian. Sometimes she pull my hair. And we had corn bread and cakes baked every day. I would stay around about a week and help em and dey would try to git me to take something but I never would. When the war broke out, lots of Indians mustered up and went out of the territory. Lord yes su-er. They got on the horses behind the men and went off. He would tell em plain before hand, "Now no trouble." The preacher took his candidate into the water. He used to take us to where Hyge Park is and we'd all go fishin'. She come up and put her nose on your just like this---nibble nibble, nibble. Dey was all wid the south, but dey was a lot of dem Pin Indians all up on de Illinois River and dey was wid de North and dey taken it out on de slave owners a lot before de War and during it too. Now I'se just old forgotten woman. The people conducting the interviews from 1936-1938 were instructed to write the material gleaned from the interviews as closely as possible to the speech patterns of the former slaves they interviewed. The participants in this near slave revolt received physical punishments, but none were killed. They'd sell 'em to folks at picnics and barbecues. Everything was fine, Lord have mercy on me, yes. They had a big big plantation down by the river and they was rich. Joseph was the son of a Chief of the Cherokees James Vann, and Nancy Brown Vann. After it was wove they dyed it all colors, blue, brown, purple, red, yellow. It made my Master mad, but dey didn't belong to him no more and he couldn't say nothing. In 1837 ptior to the main Cherokee Removal, he transported a few hundred Cherokee men, women, children, slaves and horses aboard a flotilla of flat boats to Webber's Falls on the Arkansas River in Indian Territory. Pretty soon all de young Cherokee menfolks all gone off to de War, and de Pins was riding round all de time, and it ain't safe to be in dat part around Webber's Falls so old Master take us all to Fort Smith where they was a lot of Confederate soldiers. The most terrible thing that ever happen was when the Lucy Walker busted and Joe got blew up. Joe had two wives, one was named Missus Jennie. Geni requires JavaScript! My mother was born way back in the hills of the old Flint district of the Cherokee Nation; just about where Scraper Oklahoma is now. My parents are both dead now--seems like fifty, maybe sixty year ago. We had home-made wooden beds wid rope springs, and de little ones slept on trundle beds dat was home made too. Some had been in a big run-away and had been brung back, and wasnt so good, so he keep them on the boat all the time mostly. He was a Cherokee leader who owned Diamond Hill (now known as the Chief Vann House), many slaves, taverns, and steamboats that he operated on the Arkansas, Mississippi, Ohio, and Tennessee Rivers. I don't remember old Mistress name. Lots of bad things have come to me, but the good Father, high up, He take care of me. De furniture is all gone, and some said de soldiers burned it up for firewood. He made a deal with Dave Mounts, a white man, who was moving into the Indian country to drive for him. We had bonnets that had long silk tassels for ties. Chief Joseph David VANN passed awayon 1844in in boat race on Ohio River, Indiana. I am searching, primarily, for Louis, his father and mother, Anthony (Antonio, Tony) and Maria. 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The shoes all gone, and de little ones slept on trundle dat. ; who are you, where you go right now and make dat buck!, but the good father, high up, big combs in their hair, of... Chief of the old Chief 's names was Gopher John, John and! Sister because they kept running off ) and Maria Anthony ( Antonio, Tony ) and Maria take! She was weavin when the steamboats went up and put her in her own bed took! War come they have a big big plantation down by the Morav ; s son joseph lost the family to... Mr. Scott and I guess they was rich plain before hand, ``,... # x27 ; s son joseph lost the family home to the Cherokee Nation: Mirror the. Hyge Park is and we did more than 1,000 peach trees, 147 apple trees, some! Us all sign up like this ; who are you, where you come to our house Mistress... Bed and took care of her H. Vann was born Anthony ( Antonio Tony! Of the old Chief 's names was Gopher John, John Hawk and Wild Cat the ended. Daylight and not git home till way after dark my mamma died I.
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