Sacred Texts
African
African-American
Drums and Shadows - Yamacraw



Yamacraw

Yamacraw takes its name from the little Indian town that Tomochichi, chief and friend of General Oglethorpe, established on the Savannah River bluff west of the township of Savannah over two hundred years ago. Today waterfront industries have pushed the Negro district southward from the bluff, but it is still so close to the river that some of the small shanties rattle when winds roar across the water.

In this community the residents are drawn largely from coastal counties of Georgia and South Carolina. At one time an unruly element gained Yamacraw the reputation of being the toughest section of Savannah, but the presence of an unusual number of churches of various denominations seems to have improved law and order in recent years. Intense religious interest is aided by pride felt in the fact that the first Negro Baptist church in America was established here and also that Methodism gained an earlier start among Yamacraw Negroes than in any other part of the county.

In spite of the difference in religious doctrines there seem to be certain common beliefs handed down in families. We found an implicit and readily asserted faith in the power tuh do unnatchul ting.1 Ghosts are everyday experiences. Root doctors are in constant demand.

Eighty-year old Martha Page2, a small and frail woman, remembers her African grandfather and the strange talk he use tuh make wid two udduh slabes on duh plantation.2a.

Wen dey git tuh gabbin, yuh couldn unnuhstan a wud dey say, Martha informed us. Muh gran sho hab funny name fuh call ting, too. He lub tuh hunt an fish an he use tuh hab a lill piece uh wood wid a string on each en tuh kill squhrel an hawk wid. He call it he 'wah-hoo bahk'. Sometime he use tuh sing a song das staht off like dis, 'Dody boda do dandy.' He say it mean, 'We come tuh make waw tuhday.'2b

Did your gran tell you about magic and conjure?, we asked.

Dat he did. I sho wuz sked ub im wen he use tuh talk bout dem ting he people in Africa could do. Some ub em could make yuh dissapeah, he say, an some could fly all roun duh elements and make yuh do anyting dey wants yuh tuh do. Wen I growd up, I discobuh dat plenty uh duh tings gran tell me is sho nuff true.2c

"You've had personal experiences?" we queried hopefully.

Me an muh sistuh bote. Witches use tuh ride uh regluh till it seem she gwine swivel away an die. One day a man tell uh tuh tro salt on duh bed and no witch would bodduh uh. So dat ebenin muh sistuh sprinkle a heap uh salt on uh cubbuh. Soon attuh we dit tuh bed, I seen a cat come right in duh doe and look me in duh eye. I try tuh holluh but uh couldn make a soun. Nex ting I know sistuh was poin watuh in muh face.2d

I dohn take tuh witches, said Martha Page. I dohn mine ghos, cuz I caahn see em as I wuzn bawn wid a caul. But I dohn want no mo sperience wid witches. Das wy uh sprinkle salt down ebry night uh muh life.2e.

The broom precaution against witches is also believed among Yamacraw residents. Martha Major3, aged sixty;, related to us the time a witch had "worried" her. She was alone in a basement in an empty house, as the landlady was out of the city. No sooner had she gone to bed than she heard supm comin down duh steps3a

It jump on me, she declared, an it choke me deah tuh det. But I knowd who it wuz. She come tuh see me duh bery nex day but she ain nebuh been back sence, cuz I put a bruhm, by duh bed.3b

We noticed that as Martha Major had risen from her chair in excitement over her story, she had exhibited a slight limp.

"Have you hurt your foot?" we asked.

Oh, it mos well. Mos all duh wuhrums done crawl out now.3c

"Worms?"

At our astonishment she was instantly on guard.

Muh foot all right, she said crossly, but her brown face was a mask of brooding. Finally she volunteered the information that she had been conjured the previous October, almost six months past.3d

I dohn know who done it, but all ub a sudden muh leg begin tuh swell an swell. I call a regluh doctuh, but he didn seem tuh do no good; so tree weeks ago I went tuh a root man. He gimme sumpm tuh put in muh bed. In a few days knots come out all obuh muh leg an wuhrums staht tuh crawl out. Only one knot lef. I guess I soon be well3e

Out beyond Yamacraw, where the old brick and dirt streets of the community give way to the broad, paved Augusta road, an old Negro named James Copper4 has for years conducted a miscellaneous business in a ramshackle push cart. James sells lunches to the workers at the Savannah Sugar Refinery; he also cobbles shoes and repairs anything from broken pots to roller skates. Because of his skill as a wood carver, particularly of walking sticks, he has become known in the vicinity as "Stick Daddy". A decidedly original technique is evident in his carving, but he smiled when this was mentioned.

I nevuh been taught, he said. I took up cahvin as paht time jis fuh the fun of it. Muh granfathuh, Pharo Cooper, he used tuh make things from wood an straw, sech as baskets an cheahs an tables an othuh things fuh the home. I guess I sawt of inherited it frum, him4a

One of "Stick Daddy's" canes is a slender, snake-encircled rod with a handle made from a large black and white die. Another, slightly thicker, is carved with a single crocodile. The third, a heavy stick topped with a flashlight handle in which the snapshot of a young Negro girl has been inserted, is artfully decorated with a turtle, a large crocodile, and a small, sinous snake. The chief characteristic of "Stick Daddy's" work is the boldness with which the carved figures, dark-stained and highly polished, stand out afainst their unfinished natural wood background. Very differed is another stick that was found abandoned in an office building in the city. This has a man's head for a handle but the stick proper is so covered with minute, unpatterned crisscrosses that the little figure of a man upside down, and an undetermined object which may be either man or animal, are noticed only when the cane is carefully studied.

"Stick Daddy", besides being a general repair man and carver, knows a few sho cuos4b for illness.

I kin make a sho cuo fuh chills an fevuh. Yuh take some cawn fodduh an boil it an make a tea. Yuh drink some an bathe in some an yuh'll git well soon. Fuh a cold yuh git some life-evuh-lastin and make a tea tuh drink, aw git some Jack-O.4c

We asked about roots.

I dohn believe in them things, asserted "Stick Daddy". I dohn beleive in nuthin like that, it's too dangerous. But I do believe in some signs. Yuh watch em and yuh'll see that they dohn nevuh fail. If somebody borruh salt frum yuh, 'tis not wise tuh accept it back'; 'twill cause trouble. If yuh throw out stove an chimney cleanin aftuh sundown, 'tis sho death.4d

Fred Jones5, a tall Negro of nearly eighty, with brown complexion and piercing eyes, sternly forbade us to discuss conjure.

Dohn yuh know,fearfully, dat yuh might bring trouble on yuhsef? Das ting ain nobody ought tuh mess wid.5a

How do you know that?

Ain no mattuh how come I knows. I seen it. I seen pusson wid duh powuh tuh tun hesef intuh any shape he got a mine tuh. Dey kin cause yuh plenty trouble an duh only ting kin sabe yuh is tuh git tuh a root man on time.5b

Our surprise and interest drew him in spite of his fears to speak in a low voice of several instances where he had seen conjure working.

Deah wuz a man wid duh powuh. He draw a ring roun anudduh man an dat man couldn git out dat ring till duh root man come and wave tuh um. Den deah wuz a uhmun done up so bad by somebody dat ants wuz crawli out tru uh skin. Wenebuh a pusson go crazy, wut is dat but conjuh?5c

I dohn lak tuh talk bout muhsef, but I caahn nebuh fuhgit duh time I hab a dose put on me by a uhmun uh didn lak. I wuz a good frien ub uh huzbun an she didn lak fuh us to go out tuhgedduh; so she tole me not tuh come tuh uh house no mo. I ain pay no tention. Well, suh, duh nex night soon as uh laid down, uh feel muhsef swoon. Ebry night it happen. Dis ting keep up till uh git sick. I couldn eat an jis git tuh pinin way. Duh doctuh he caahn hep me none. Finally I went tuh a root man. He say right off somebody done gib me a dose. He say 'I'll be roun tuhnight. Git some money tuhgedduh cuz I caahn do yuh no good less yuh staht off wid some silbuh.'5d

Wen he come dat night an git duh silbuh, he look all roun duh house an den dig a hole unduh duh doe step. Deah he fine a bottle. He tro it in duh fyuh and holluh, 'Git gone, yuh debil'. Attuh dat I git bettuh, but I ain nebuh bin tuh dat uhmun's house since. An I dohn lak tuh talk about it.5e

Another octogenarian, Thomas Smith6, told us that the same magic power that Moses had used when he turned his rod into a snake before Pharoah still exists today among Negros.

Dat happen in Africa duh Bible say. Ain dat show dat Africa wuz a lan uh magic powuh since duh beginnin uh histry? Well den, duh descendants ub Africans hab duh same gif tuh do unnatchul thing. Ise heahd duh story uh duh flying Africans an I sho belieb it happen. I know doze wut could make a pot bile widout fyuh. Jis sit it anyweah on duh flo aw in duh yahd an bile deah meals. Dey could make a buzzud row a boat an hab a crow fuh pilot.6a

Long yeahs ago deah wuz; a cunjuh man wut could git uh out uh jail by magic. A frien uh mine at Hilton Head git rested fuh stealin. He sen fuh duh cunjuh man an duh man say,'Dohn worry. Duh jedge gwine tun yuh loose.' Wen duh hour uh duh trial come, duh cunjuh man tell me, 'See dat bud on duh cote house? I sen im up deah. Deah wohn be no trial'. Sho nuff, wen duh case wuz call fuh, duh jedge git tuh suchin roun tuhnin up ebryting tuh fine duh chahge gense muh frien. Attuh wile he git disgusted an tell duh cote, 'Case Dismissed. I caahn fine duh papuhs.' Wen we git outside duh bud done fly away.6b

Thomas Smith's reference to flying Africans caused us to mention this story to Carrie Hamilton7, whom we next visited.

7aI hab heah uh dem people, said this seventy year old woman, who has the tall, heavy frame of a plantation hoe hand. Muh mudduh use tuh tell me bout em wen we set in duh city mahket sellin vegetubbles an fruit. Sh say dat deah wuz a man an he wife an dey git fooled abode a slabe ship. Fus ting dey know dey wuz sole tuh a plantuh on St. Helena. So one day wen all duh slabes wuz tuhgedduh, dis man an he wife say, "We gwine back home, goodie bye, goodie bye," an jis like a bud they flew out uh sight.

7bMuh mudduh use tuh tell me all kine uh ting cuz I wuz bawn wid a caul an wuz; diffrunt frum duh res. Ebry now an den I see ghos. Dey hab all kine uh shape, sometime no head, sometime no feet, jis floatin by. Dey is duh spirits uh duh dead, but ef yuh dohn meddle in deah business, dey ain gwine meddle in yoze.

Not only among these older Yamacraw Negroes but among younger residents we found a solid background of ancestral beliefs and practices, for here little of modern progress has touched the dirt streets, pebbly walks, and tumble down houses of another day.

8Ellen Dorsey, a forty year old, born in Savannah, gave us a detailed description of the conjure her husband put on her.

8aMe an him couldn git long so I lef him. He went tuh a root doctuh fuh him tuh make me come back home. Den duh root doctuh put me down sick so duh wite people I wuz wukin guh would dischahge me. I had pains runnin up an down muh whole body, an I knowed I wuz cunjuhed but uh wouldn gib in. I call me in a man who use tuh try tuh sell me a han tuh wawd off cunjuh. He rub muh legs down twice a day, an one mawnin a big black snake run outuh muh big toe. Deah goes duh devil, say duh root man, an frum den on I git bettuh. A cousin uh mine git a dose once an wen duh root doctuh rub uh all ovuh wid a clean liquid, bugs begin crawlin out of us skin. Duh doctuh say if she had wait one mo day it would uh bin too late.

"Did your husband ever try any more conjure on you?"

She laughed with great amusement. 8bHe sho did. He went tuh duh same man dat cuo me an give him thutty dolluhs tuh make me go back tuh him. One Sunday attuh chuch wen I ain had thought of evuh livin wid muh huzbun agen, I walked out duh chuch straight tuh muh huzbun's house. An dis happen, concluded Ellen, widout duh root man evuh seein me. I didn know nuthin bout it till long attuh we wuz reconcile.

9Evans Brown is only fifty years old. To see him going daily about his duties as a janitor of the West Broad Street Negro School, no one would suspect unusual powers at work beneath his good-natured exterior. Yet he not only said that he believed absolutely in the supernatural but proudly asserted that he could work magic himself.

9aIt come natchul tuh me, duh powuh tuh do suttn ting. Since I wuz lill I could see ghos, sometime two feet off duh groun, sometime walkin. Wen muh haiah rise on en an hot eah pass muh face, I tun roun an deah's alluz a ghos. Lots uh time it's duh spirit ub a frien. Many wintuh mawnins wen I go tuh school early tuh make fyuhs, uh heah doze open an shut an den uh see duh ghos dat do it.

9bI didn know I hab powuh tuh do tings till muh mudduh wuz fixed. Yuh know, a man kin fix a dose fuh a suttn pusson an only dat pusson will git caught. Fo women wuz in duh house wid muh mudduh, but duh doe knob wuz dressed fuh huh. All dem women pass out befo she did, all tuhnin duh knob. But wen she come out, a pain strik uh in duh side. We hab doctuhs but nuttn done no good. Uh whole side tun black an she die.

9cDat cause me tuh make a special study. Evans Brown quietly added, an soon uh realize uh was bawn wid duh powuh. I ain nebuh use it much, cuz I dohn lak tuh bodduh wid dem ting. But I knowd a man name Doctuh Buzzud wut git yah out ub any trouble yuh wuz in. He would chahge yuh so much an tell yuh to hide duh money in a suttn place. Duh money would disappeah an yuh trouble wid it.

9dDuh poeleece rested a man right yuh in Yamacraw. Dey hab him by duh pants' wais takin him tuh duh box tuh ring up fuh duh wagon. Wen duh poeleece git tru ringin an tun roun tuh look, dey holdin a ole gray mule an duh man done disappeah.


Footnotes


1To do unnatural things.
2Martha Page, 606 Zubly Street.
2atalk he use to make with two other slaves on the plantation.
2bWhen they got to talking, you couldn't understand a word they said. My grandpa sure had a funny way of naming things. He loved to hunt and fish and he used to have a little piece of wood with a string on each end to kill squirrels and hawks with. He called it "Wah-hoo bahk". Sometimes he use to sing a song that started off like this. "Dody boda do dandy". He said it means, 'We come to make war today.'
2cThat he sure did. I sure was scared of him when he used to talk about them things his people in Africa could do. Some of them could make you disappear, he said, and some could fly all around the elements and make you do anything they wanted you to do. When I grew up, I discovered that plenty of the things grandpa told me are sure enough true.
2dMe and my sister both. Witches used to ride her regularly until is seemed she was going to shrivel away and die. One day a man told her to throw salt on the bed and no witch would bother her. So that evening my sister sprinkled a heap of salt on the covers. Soon after we got to bed, I saw a cat come right in the door and look me in the eye. I tried to holler but I couldn't make a sound. Next thing I know sister was pouring water in my face.
2eI don't take to witches. I don't mind ghost, because I can see them as I was born with a caul. But I don't want no more experience with witches. That's why I sprinkle salt down every night of my life.
3Martha Major, 542 West York Street.
3aSomething coming down the steps.
3bIt jumped on me and it choked me near to death. But I knew who it was. She came to see me the very next day but she ain't ever been back since, because I put a broom, by the bed.
3cOh, it's almost well. Most of the worms have crawled out now.
3dMy foot's alright.
3eI don't know who did it, but all of the sudden my leg began to swell and swell. I called a regular doctor, but he didn't seem to do no good; so three weeks ago I went to a root man. He gave me something to put in my bed. In a few days knots came out all about my leg and worms started to crawl out. Only one knot left. I guess I'll soon be well.
4James Cooper, Port Wentworth.
4aI was never taught. I took up carving part time just for the fun of it. My grandfather, Pharo Cooper, he used to make things from wood and straw, such as baskets, and chairs, and tables and other things for the home. I guess I sort of inherited it from him.
4bSure cures.
4cI can make a sure cure for chills and fever. You take some corn fodder and boil it and make a tea. You drink some and bathe in some and you'll get well soon. For a cold you get some life-everlasting and make a tea to drink, or get some Jack-In-the-Pulpit.
4dI don't believe in them things, I don't believe in nothing like that, it's too dangerous. But I do believe in some signs. You watch them and you'll see they dont ever fail. If someone borrows salt from you, it's not wise to accept it back, it will cause trouble. If you throw out the stove and chimney cleaning after sundown, it's sure death.
5Fred Jones, 607 West Congress Street.
5aDon't you know that you might bring trouble upon yourself? That's something ain't nobody ought to mess with.
5bAin't no matter how I come to know. I've seen it. I've seen a person with the power to turn himself into any shape he's got a mind to. They can cause you plenty of trouble and the only thing that can save you is to get to the root man on time.
5cThere was a man with the power. He drew a ring around another man and that man couldn't get out of that ring until the root man came and waved to him. Then there was someone done up so bad by somebody that ants were crawling out through his skin. Whenever a person goes crazy, what is that but conjure?
5dI don't like to talk about myself, but I can't ever forget the time that I has a dose put on me by someone I didn't like. I was good friends with her husband and she didn't like for us to go out together; so she told me not to come to the house anymore. I didn't pay any attention. Well, Sir, the next night as soon as I laid down, I felt myself swoon. Every night this thing happened until I got sick. I couldn't eat and just started pining away. The doctor, he couldn't help me. Finally I went to the root man. He said right off that somebody had given me a dose. He said 'I'll be around tonight. Get some money together because I cant do you any good unless you start off with some silver.
5eWhen he came that night and got the silver, he looked all around the house and then dug a hole under the door step. There he found a bottle. He threw it in the fire and hollered, "Get gone, you devil." After that I got better, but I've never been back to that woman's house since. And I don't like to talk about it.
6Thomas Smith, 37 Ann-Street.
6aThat happened in Africa the Bible said. Doesn't that show that Africa was a land of power since the beginning of history? Well then, the descendants of Africans have the same gifts to do unnatural things. I heard the story about the flying Africans, and I sure beleive it happened. I know those who could make a pot boil without fire. Just sit in anywhere on the floor or in the yard and boil their meals. They could make a buzzard row a boat and a crow for the pilot.
6bMany years ago there was a conjure man who could get you out of the jail by magic. A friend of mine at Hilton Head got arrested for stealing. He sent for the conjure man and the man said, "Don't worry. The judge is going to turn you loose." When the hour of the trial came, the conjure man told me, "See that bird on the court house? I sent him up there. There won't be any trial." Sure enough, when the case was called for, the judge got to searching around, turning up everthing to find the charge against my friend. After awhile he got disgusted and told the court. "Case dismissed. I can't find the papers." When we got outside the bird had flown away.
7Carrie Hamilton, 530 West President Street.
7aI have heard of those people. My mother use to tell me about them when we sat in the city market selling vegetables and fruit. She said that there was a man and his wife and they got tricked aboard a slave ship. The first thing they knew they was sold to a planter on St. Helena. So one day when all the slaves were together, this man and his wife said, We're going back home, goodbye, goodbye, and just like a bird they flew out of sight.
7bMy mother used to tell me all kinds of things because I was born with a caul and was different from the rest. Every now and then I see ghosts. They have all kinds of shapes, sometimes no head, sometimes no feet, just floating by. They are the spirits of the dead, but if you don't meddle in their business, they aren't going to meddle in yours.
8Ellen Dorsey, 515 West Congress Street.
8aMe and him couldn't get along so I left him. He went to a root doctor for him to make me come back home. Then the root doctor put me down sic so the white people I was working for would discharge me. I had pains running up and down my whole body, and I knew I was cursed but I wouldn't give in. I called me in a man who use to try to sell me a hand to ward off curses. He rubbed my legs down twice a day, and one morning a big black snake ran out of my big toe. There goes the Devil, said the root man, and from then on I got better. A cousin of mine got a dose once and when the root doctor rubbed her all over with a clear liquid, bud began crawling out of her skin. The doctor said if she had waited one more day it would have been too late.
8bHe sure did. He went to the same man that cured me and gave him thirty dollars to make me go back to him. One Sunday after church when, I hadn't thought of ever living with my husband again, I walked out of the church and straight to my husband's house. And this happened without the root man ever seeing me. I didn't know anything about it until long after we were reconciled.
9Evans Brown, West Broad Street School.
9aIt comes natural to me, the power to do certain things. Since I was little I could see ghosts, sometimes two feet off the ground, sometimes walking. When my hair rise on end, and hot air passes my face, I turn around and there's always a ghost. Lots of the time it's the spirit of a friend. Many winter mornings when I went to the school early to make the fires, I heard doors open and shut and then I see the ghosts that do it.
9bI didn't know I had power to do thing until my mother was fixed. You know, a man can fix a dose for a certain person and only that person will get caught. Four women were in the house with my mother, but the door knob was dressed for her. All of those women passed out before she did, all turning the knob. But when she came ou, a pain struck her in the side. We had doctors but nothing did any good. Her whole side turned black and she died.
9cThat caused me to make a special study, and soon I realized I was born with the power. I aint never used it much, because I don't like to bother with them things. But I know a man name Doctor Buzzard who'd get you out of any trouble you were in. He would charge you so much and tell you to hide the money in a certain place. The money would disappear and your trouble with it.
9dThe police arrested a man right here in Yamacraw. They had him by the pants' waist taking him to the box to ring up for the wagon. When the police got through ringing and turned aroud to look, they were holding an old gray mule and the man done dissapeared.

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