Sacred Texts
African
African-American
Drums and Shadows - Springfield



Springfield

Rows of faded gray houses, huddled close together and facing on narrow dirt lanes, house the population of Springfield, a Negro community lying west of Savannah near the city waterworks. In the neighborhood are several wooden churches of various denominations, a well constructed modern brick school building, and a number of stores that supply the six hundred odd Negroes of the community.

Many of the houses are shuttered, dim and quiet. So somber an atmosphere prevails that it is easy to imagine the spectral figures that the Negroes claim they see wandering at night along the twisting pathways. It is not surprising to be told of the sinister powers which are constantly at work against which many inhabitants of this locality are always on guard.

A familiar figure in the neighborhood is 1James Washington, famed locally as a fortune teller and root doctor. It is said that Washington's patronage is growing steadily; each day new clients visit his dilapidated house, seeking advice or perhaps a cure for some puzzling ailment that has descended upon them.

The consulting room is smoky, airless, and reeking with a queer pungent odor. The shades are drawn down tightly, and when a visitor is being given advice the door is shut securely against intrusion. The furniture is scant, consisting of a lamp on a plain table, a couch fof the visitor, and placed directly across the room a wooden armchair in which sits the dealer in magic. The most remarkable object in the room is a "spirit picture", showing the head of one of the creatures of the 1ashadduh worl. The eyes are closed, the face bears a rapt, exalted expression, and the picture fades off into a dim mist of clouds.

Washington uses no cards or crystals. 1bI kin tell duh fewchuh jis by lookin at duh pusson, he told us, cuz I wuz bawn wid a double cawl wut wuz sabe fuh me till I wuz grown. Duh spirit show me ebryting. Ain many people hab duh powuh tuh see tings, but I got dis gif frum Gawd.

1cI hab a deep knowledge uh magic. Deah's magic wut gahd yuh frum hahm an deah's ebil magic wut kin put yuh down sick aw eben kill yuh. Wen yuh bin fix, yuh caahn git well wid regluh medicine. Yuh got tuh git a han gense duh fixin. Magic roots hep a lots. Duh haiah is one uh duh mos powful tings yuh enemy kin git hole ub cuz it grow neah duh brain an a han made outuh haiah kin sho affec duh brain.

The credulous neighbors constantly seek Washington's aid, for there is much talk of conjure among them. He recent acquittal on a charge of assault and robbery was interpreted as evidence that he possessed the ability to 1dfix duh cote so dey couldn nebuh sen him up.

We were told of a woman who had a spell cast upon her by her own sister. Wishing to verify our information, we decided to pay the unfortunate victim a visit.

The house stood at the dead end of a narrow street. A high wall separated it from its neighbors and the barren ground encircling it was littered with refuse, tin cans, and large piles of rocks. A fierce looking dog prowled restlessly near the high arched gateway and bared his teeth at the intruders. At our request a neighbor obligingly called over the fence to the 2sick woman who a moment later came limping toward us.

Her age was uncertain; she was gaunt and sickly in appearance. Her outfit consisted of a dull gray waist with a turban to match and a faded blue skirt. Large brass earrings dangled from her ears, making her lean face appear still more woebegone. Certainly there was something wrong with the woman, for she dragged listlessly with the effort of walking the short distance from the house.

We inquired about her health but when we asked about the cunjuh which had been put upon her, she looked at us distrustfully, saying 2aMuh huzbun tell yuh bout dat. With that she left us abruptly.

Soon the manappeared, a bent figure in ragged blue overalls, with a battered felt hat on his grizzled head. Unlike his wife, 3Stephen Bryant was talkative and friendly, and he told us readily of his wife's strange predicament. 3aShe wuz cunjuhed by uh own sistuh, he began. Some days she all right an kin cook an clean up; den all at once tings git tuh runnin all obuh uh body. Sometimes she fall down an hab tuh be put tuh bed

We asked Stephen if he had consulted any root doctors about his wife's condition and he said, 3bI hab monuh dozen root doctuhs tuh uh but dey dohn do uh no good. I keep on tryin an maybe some day I fine duh right un tuh reach duh cunjuh.

In this instance retribution seemed to have come swiftly, for Stephen told us that the sister who had caused the conjure was now 3claid up uhsef wid cunjuh, fuh someone cas a spell on huh too.

When we asked Stephen if he believed in evil spirits he nodded in affirmation.3dI sees um all duh time, he said. Dey is lill an wite an hab no head. Yuh nebuh see um till attuh duh sun gone down. Yuh dohn bodduh um none an dey leab yuh alone.

3eDeah use tuh be a ole house right pas ous. Ebry night we would be woke up by a loud bangin noise. Ef we look out duh winduh we could see dis spirit. He was alluz wanduhin roun. Ebry now an den he would tro a rock at a ole gasoline tank an it would make dat noise we heah. We alluz use tuh tink deah wuz buried treasure neah an dis spirit wuz gahdin it. I nebuh did look fuh duh treasure, I dohn wahn tuh fool wid no spirits. Attuh a time dey tuk down duh house an duh spirit nebuh did come back no mo.

Another victim of conjure, 4a Negro man of about eighty-eight, told us that although he did not usually believe superstitious tales, his own strange experience had force him to realize that 4afolks kin fix yuh. One time I fall down sick frum a puhculeyuh disease. Nuttn didn do no good till uh hab a root uhmun come in. Right away she tell me a enemy done put down a dose fuh me. She say I wuz fined in fish. Well, den, she tell me tuh drink a haffuh pint uh wiskey and tro way duh udduh res uh duh pint. Attuh uh done dise, uh git well again.

4bI knows a case uh fixin right now. It's a young man wut dohn lib fah frum yuh. He alluz complainin bout crickets crawlin unduh his skin an some uh duh neighbuhs say dey see um. I blieb dis mus be so cuz deah's a uhmun roun yuh wut kin make a han tuh put any kine uh insec in yuh body. She kill duh insec an grine it tuh powduh an rub it on duh skin uh duh pusson aw gib it tuh um tuh drink. Wen it entuh duh body, it tun back intuh insec, sometime a lizud aw a frawg aw a snake.

The old man continued, 4cIse had plenty sperience bout root wuk, bu I alluz try tuh keep way frum dat kine uh folks. I membuh ole Doctuh Sheppard who use tuh oppurate yuh. He hab hunduds uh folks come tuh him day an night. He mustuh been bery good.

4dDeah wuz a uhmun name Clara an she wus good too. She use tuh ketch lots uh Doctuh Sheppard's customuhs. I went tuh uh house once. She show me a box full uh packages and she say dat ebry one wuz a han fuh diffrunt tings. I reach out tuh git hole ub em, but she stop me an say ef uh touch em, dey lose all duh powuh. Clara and Doctuh Sheppard bote dead now.

4eIse heahd lots uh stories bout folks wut could fly. Some time back I wuz libin in Woodville wen a man come tru deah. He wuz frum Liberty County. Dis man talk lot bout duh story uh duh Africans wut could fly. He say all dis wuz true. He say he wuz takin awduhs fuh wings and dey wuz all yuh need tuh fly. A peah uh wings coss twenty-five dolluhs. Duh man take yuh measure an a five dolluh deposit an say he collec duh balance wen he delibuh duh wings. Lots uh people gib deah awduh fuh wings, cuz; all deah libes dey been heahin bout folks wut could fly. Duh man jis go roun takin awduhs and collectin five dolluhs. Das duh las any ub us ebuh heah uh duh man aw duh wings.

5Clara Smith a resident of this community, told us that she too remembered the time when Dr. Sheppard and the woman called Clara, who it appeared was her aunt, had operated a thriving business. 5aI didn unduhstan much wut dey did, she said, but dey wuz bote kep busy all uh dat time. Deah wuz alluz; a long line uh folks waitin tuh see em.

5bDey say my Aunt Clara wuz bery good. She could wuk roots and gib good luck hans an tell fawchuns, and fix yuh enemies.

5cOne time a man come an git muh aunt. He say somebody cunjur his wife. She ack queah an run away an stay fuh days at a time. My aunt go tuh duh house an dig all roun. She fine a sack filled wid sulphuh, an haiah, an matches, and grabeyahd dut. Den she took in duh house and she fine mo sacks in duh mattress, in duh pilluh, an in duh dressuh draws. Deze cunjuh wuz wut causin duh woman tuh be crazy. My aunt destroy duh sacks an gie duh woman a good luck ban tuh weah so no udduh root wukuh could hahm uh. Attuh dis duh ebil spell went away an duh woman wuz cuod.

One of the interesting characters of the section is 6Ellen Jones better known as "Pipe Ellen" because of a very evident liking for tobacco. The old woman, an ex-slave, claims to be almost one hundred and twenty-two years old and walks almost daily from Springfield to Savannah. Winter and Summer, her frail figure is snugly buttoned into a heavy top coat, so long that the hem trails on the ground. On her white head she wears a dark wool skull cap.

"Pipe Ellen" told us taht she firmly believed in conjure and in proof of this she related the following instance: 6aRight yuh in Savannah a uhman wut claim tuh be muh frien root-mahk me. I ain fraid tuh tell uh name cuz she dead now. It wuz Flossie Hopkins.

6bShe fix me wid tuhbaccuh. Yuh see she knowed I lub tuhbaccuh. She wuk a root on me so strong dat she put a big snake in muh bed, an uh could feel tings moobin all tru muh body. I could feel duh snake runnin all tru me. Den I heah a noise an it keep on, so uh say tuh myself, 'A snake is in yuh.' I git up and set duh lamp in duh middle uh duh room. Duh snake show up. I close all duh cracks, roun duh house, so nuttn couldn git out.

6cNex ting I know dat uhmun wuz knockin at muh doe. Wen I let uh in, she grab dat snake, tro it cross uh shoulduh an walk out.

6dEf uh hadduh kill dat snake, a man tole me, it sho would ub bin Flossie Hopkins. He tole me tuh git a box uh Debil Lye. Denne dug unduh muh doe step an took a bunle uh roots. Deah wuz red peppuh, an sulphuh, an salt, an some udduh kine of powduh. He sprinkle dis all roun duh place an say I need nebuh be afraid cuz did would kill any cunjuh put down fuh me.

During the course of an interview, which was held later with another 7woman in the community, we again discussed the subject of conjure. This woman told us, 7aDeah's plenty cunjuh in dis neighbuhhood. Deah wuz a man and his wife libed yuh. Duh man couldn git wuk an he went away. Attuh he lef, duh wife wuz took sick; dey say she wuz cunjuhed, an dey sen fuh duh huzbun. Wen he git home he git a root doctuh tuh visit uh. Duh root man go tuh duh back step an dig a hole, an deah he fine nails an sulphuh and haiah an some grabeyahd dut. In duh pilluhs and mattresses an in duh dressuh draws, dey fine duh same ting. Dem tings run uh crazy. She ack queah an run away an stay fuh days at a time. Duh root doctuh moob duh cunjuh and she wuz cuod. He gie uh duh powuh tuh disappeah an appeah any time she want tuh. I heah bout lots uh folks wut kin disappeah lak dat. Duh ole folks use tuh tell bout duh people wut could take wind and fly right back tuh Africa.

7bI alluz know deah wuz witches an ghos. Attuh I gits married muh huzbun tell me dat he sees ghos. He describe duh ghos tuh me. It wuzn long fo I wuz seein duh ghos too. Sometime he would say tuh me, 'Deah go a spirit. It jis floatin long, ain got no head.' Sho nuff, deah I would see a shadduh floating by me.

7cSometime muh huzbun see duh spirit uh some frien ub ours. Dat wauz a sho sign sumpm gwine happen tuh dat pusson, eeduh sickness aw det. One day he see a ghos ub a close frien uh his. Duh nex day he git a tiligram wut say duh frien wuz dead.

7dI knowd folks dat wuz witches; dey nebuh bodduhed me but jis picked on muh huzbun. Ain a night hahdly pass wen dey ain ride im. Deah was a uhmun libed on duh same street we did. We use tuh call An Sally, duh cunjuh uhman. She could tell fawchuns an gib hans, and fix yuh enemies fuh yuh. She ain seem tuh like muh huzbun. Ef she pass our house durin duh day, dat night she come an ride im. Dis went on till he staht pinin away. He git disagreeable roun duh home an denne went away. He ain nebuh come back. I tink somebody git uh tuh fix im. Dat sho convince me uh duh powuh uh cunjuh.

The spirits of the dead are believed to return and visit their former neighbors, sometimes as frequently as in life. Their presence is not always regarded with dread but is often looked upon as a natural incident. One woman made the following statement.8I know deah's ghos, fuh I kin see um. Ef any uh muh friens die, I kin see um mos anytime. Dey peah jis as natchul as wen dey wuz libe.

On the fringe of the community was a small store at which we stopped for a few minutes. The proprietress, a robust, good-natured Negro woman of middle age, talked with us amiably and verified the numerous reports regarding superstitions that her neighbors had already confided in us. In parting we inquired if she thought the people's faith in the supernatural was weakening. The woman regarded us with a wide smile. Shaking her head she declared emphatically, 9No, ma'am, dey sho ain losin no faith in magic an sech tings. All deah libes dey heah bout um frum duh ole folks. Seem lak tuh me dey beliebing in um mo an mo all duh time.


Footnotes

1James Washington, Springfield.
1aShadow world
1bI can tell the future just by looking at the person, because I was born with a double caul that was saved for me until I was grown. The spirits show me everything. Aint many people have the power to see things, but I got this gift from God.
1cI have a deep knowledge of magic. There's magic which guards your from harm and there's evil magic that can put your down sick or even kill you. When you've been fix, you can't get well with regular medicine. You got to get a hand against the fixing. Magic roots help alot. The hair is one of the most powerful things your enemy can get ahold of because it grows near the brain, and a hand made out of the hair can sure affect the brain.
1dFix the court so they couldn't never send him up.
2Ryna Bryant, Springfield.
2aMy husband will tell you about that.
3Stephen Bryant, Springfield.
3aShe was conjured by her own sister. Some days she's all right and can cook and clean up; then all at once things get to running all over her body. Sometimes she falls down and has to be put to bed.
3bI've had more than a dozen root doctors to her but they don't do her any good. I keep on trying, and maybe someday I'll find the right one to reach the conjure.
3cLaid up herself with conjure, for someone cast a spell on her too.
3dI see them all the time. They are little and white and have no head. You never see them until after the sun goes down. You don't bother them none and they leave you alone.
3eThere use to be an old house right past our. Every night we would be woke up by a loud banging noise. If we looked out the window we could see this spirit. He was always wandering around. Every now and then he would throw a rock at an old gasoline take and it would make the noise that we heard. We always use to think there was buried treasure near and this spirit was guarding it. I never did look for the treasure, I don't want to fool with no spirits. After a time they took down the house and the spirit never did come back no more.
4Charles Singleton, Springfield.
4aFolks can fix you. One time I fell down sick from a peculiar disease. Nothing didn't do any good until I had a root woman come in. Right away she told me an enemy done put down a dose for me. She said I was fined in fish. Well, then she told me to drink a half-a-pint of whiskey and throw away the rest of the pint. After I did this, I got well again.
4bI know a case of fixing right now. It's a young man who doesn't live far from here. He is always complaining about crickets crawling under his skin, and some of the neighbors say that they see them. I believe this must be so because there's a woman around here who can make a hand to put any kind of insect in your body. She kills the insect and grinds it to powder and rubs it on the skin of the person, or she gives it to them to drink. When it enters the body, it turns back into an insect, sometimes a lizard or a frog or a snake.
4cI've had plenty of experience about root work, but I always try to keep away from that kind of folks. I remember ole Doctor Sheppard who use to operate here. He had hundreds of folks come to him day and night. He must've been very good.
4dThere was a woman named Clara and she was good too. She use to catch lots of Doctor Sheppard's customers. I went to her house once. She showed me a box full of packages and she said that every one was a hand for different things. I reached out to get ahold of them, but she stopped me and said if I touched them, they'd lose all their power. Clara and Doctor Sheppard are both dead now.
4eI've heard lots of stories about folks that could fly. Some time back I was living in Woodville when a man came through there. He was from Liberty County. This man talked a lot about the story of the Africans that could fly. He said they were all true. He said he was taking orders for wings and they were all you need to fly. A pair of wings cost twenty-five dollars. The man took your measure and a five dollar deposit and said he would collect the balance when he delivered the wings. Lots of people gave their orders for wings, because; all their lives they've heard about folks that could fly. The man just went around taking orders and collecting five dollars. That's the last time any of us ever heard of the man or the wings.
5Clara Smith, 1139 East Duffy Street.
5aI didn't understand much what they did, but they were both kept busy all of the time. There was always a long line of folks waiting to see them.
5bThey say my Aunt clara was very good. She could work roots and give good luck hands and tell fortunes, and fix your enemies.
5cOne time a man came and got my aunt. He said somebody had conjured his wife. She acted queer and run away and stayed for days at a time. My aunt went to the house and dug all around. She found a sack filled with sulfur, and hair, and matches, and graveyard dirt. Then she went in the house and she found more sacks in the mattress, in the pillow, and in the dresser drawers. These conjures were what was causing the woman to be crazy. My aunt destroyed the sacks and gave the woman a good luck band to wear so no other root worker could harm her. After this the evil spell went away and the woman was cured.
6Ellen Jones, rear 1304 Stiles Avenue.
6aRight here in Savannah a woman that claimed to be my friend root-made me. I ain't afraid to tell her name, because she's dead now. It was Flossie Hopkins.
6bShe fixed me with tobacco. You see she knew I loved tobacco. She worked a root on me so strong that she put a big snake in my bed, and I could feel things moving all through my body. I could feel the snake running all through me. Then I heard a noise and it kept on, so I say to myself 'A snake is in you'. I got up and set the lamp in the middle of the room. The snake showed up. I closed all the cracks around the house, so nothing couldn't get out.
6cNext thing I know that woman was knocking at my door. When I let her in, she grabbed the snake, threw it across her shoulder and walked out.
6dIf I had killed that snake a man told me, it sure would have been Flossie Hopkins. He told me to get a box of Devil Lye. Then he dug under my door step and too a bundle of roots. There was red pepper, and sulfur, and salt, and some other kind of powder. He sprinkled this all around the place and said I need never be afraid because this would kill any conjure put down for me.
7Dorothy Johnson, 1201 Murphy Avenue.
7aThere's plenty of conjure in this neighborhood. There was a man and his wife who lived here. The man couldn't get work and he went away. After he left, the wife took sick; they say she was conjured, and they sent for the husband. When he got home he got a root doctor to visit her. The root man went to the back step and dug a hole, and there he found nails, and sulfur, and hair and some graveyard dirt. In the pillows and mattresses, and in the dresser drawers, they found the same thing. Those things ran her crazy. She acted queer and ran away and stayed for days at a time. The root doctor moved the conjure and she was cured. He gave her the power to disappear and appear any time she wanted to. I heard about lots of folks who can disappear like that. The old folks used to tell about the people who could take wing and fly right back to Africa.
7bI always knew there was witches and ghosts. After I got married my husband told me that he sees ghosts. He described the ghost to me. It was long before I was seeing the ghost too. Sometimes he would say to me, 'There goes a spirit. It's just floating along, aint got no head.' Sure enough, there I would see a shaddow floating by me.
7cSometimes my husband sees the spirits of some friend of our. That was a sure sign something was going to happen to that person, either sickness or death. One day he saw a ghost of a close friend of his. The next day he got a telegram that said the friend was dead.
7dI knew folks that were witches; they never bothered me but just picked on my husband. Aint a night hardly passed when they weren't riding him. There was a woman who lived on the same street we did. We use to call her Aunt Sally, the conjure woman. She could tell fortunes, and give hands, and fix your enemies for you. She didn't seem to like my husband. If she passed our house during the day, that night she came and rode him. This went on until he started pining away. He got disagreeable around the home and then he went away. He aint never came back. I thing somebody got her to fix him. That sure convinced me of the power of conjure.
8I know there are ghosts, for I can see them. If any of my friends die, I can see them most anytime. They appear just as natural as when they were alive.
9No, ma'am, they sure aint losing no faith in magic and such things. All of their lives they heard about them from the old folks. Seems like to me they're believing in them more and more all of the time.

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