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Transcript
*My name
is Lucreaty J. Clark."
(1)* Lucreaty
Clark was born in 1904, in Jefferson County, Florida. She still lives
in that county, where she learned to make white-oak baskets from her parents,
who had learned from their parents.* Originally, these sturdy baskets
were used to hold cotton and carry vegetables from the plantation fields
in north Florida. The plantations are gone now,* but Lucreaty Clark continues
to fashion her baskets as they have been fashioned for generations in
her family. She shares with us the unique folklore and heritage of her
life as she demonstrates the complete process of her basket-making.
(2)*"I'll
take my ax and me and ya'll will go down the road here and I'll show you
the white oak. Best oak grows in the swamps. You know, in the woods, the
low-lying woods. *Yeah, you sure have to watch out for snakes. Yeah, I
always tells them, 'When you go in the woods, son, always look down 'fore
you look up for oak, look down.' * Them other boys, they just kept me
laughing yesterday evening. One of 'em say 'I believe I know what kinda
oak to get you Miss Creaty'." * They saying there's another tree that'll
make good baskets I believe. I say, 'What kinda tree is that?' He say,
'Dogwood', I say, 'No gracious, don't bring no dogwood towards me!!!'
I say, 'You couldn't even split a dogwood.' Nothing else but white oak."*
HAMMER SOUNDS
"In the river
swamp woods, 'cause the hogs rides them down and gets them acorns. I see
them be full of acorns sometimes. The hog just walks, straddling them
and rides them down and he takes them all off. I says 'Well, the Lord
sures fixes things for hogs." * Well, I've seen lots of changes, you know,
from like it was when I was growing up. 'Cause I reckon I sees too many
changes, but I sees so many changes from like it was when I was growing
up, till it has me just on a wonder sometimes.
(3) (Hammer
Sounds) * "The Bible says that the world will grow weaker and wiser. I
says, so the people is wiser now. And I says, so you can't look for no
more than that, I say, when we was coming 'long, we, I reckon was dumb.
We didn't know nothing much! Didn't!"
"This is
my axe and my maul. But I need this here when I get to busing 'um. This
is what I use to bust'um with. I got a little old John Henry, but it ain't
heavy enough, so I use that." *
(4) (Hammer
Sounds) "Now, I get that, see how easy it is to split? It done cracked
already. * Just split it up like this and scrap it off and lay it down,
it'll be seasoned. Just like you split it up today and lay it down there
while you're splitting up, it's drying out. That little water goes out
of it right now. *
"Way I dos'um,
I get out splits all day and then I throws'um on the grass in the night,
let'um stay out there. Then in the morning early I get up and I lay two
or three and run'um around and turn'um up, turn'um bottom up, lay'um aside,
go home and rest and get out me some more splits.
(5) * "Along
this time of year is a pretty good time, 'cause the oak don't dry as fast
as it do in the real hot summertime. When it's real hot, when the sun
rises and the wind blows it gets dry in a little while, * I love to work
when it's kinda raining and do do it. That's when I love to work at'um.
When I am doing a heap of work. Nice weather to work on a basket.
Now you takes
the bark off of this piece here and split it down so far, then you peel
the bark off it. And when it's dry it's kinda hard to peel off, but when
it's green it'll peel right off. I just take my knife and start it, and
then all you got to do is to bend it. If you were strong enough to bend
your oak like that, it'll pop off.
"My father
and mother was raised up mostly on the same plantation. But they was all
raised on the Randall Plantation. They growed corn, cotton, sweet potatoes,
peanuts, and peas, and different things like that. Now loan me my knock-hammer.
That's what I calls it, just a little short name."
(6) (Knocking
Sounds) I sometimes now wonders, * how did the people survive? But they
did survive, 'cause now all the people got all kinda different jobs, and
in them days it wasn't nothing you could do, the farmers. * But now 'long
in this time of year all the hoeing was over. And cotton 'long now is
cotton picking time, the fields would be full of white cotton 'long now
and everybody'd be picking cotton. * Be plenty of white cotton, yes sir.
And after picking cotton, then the mens would go to breaking corn. And
they would break corn with their hands, they didn't have no corn-breakers
or nothing like that. They went through all them rattlesnakes and I don't
know where them rattlesnakes was! (Laugh) * I don't know why, but ever
since the war, the last war up to this last one, the second war, but cotton,
you know, they went to misplacing good, nice cotton goods. They said they
weren't making cotton, you couldn't find it and you just couldn't find
stuff like that and you used to could go to the stores in back days and
you'd see bolts of homespun, * to make homespun dresses out of. All kinds
of different checks, it was so pretty. But you don't see nothing like
that now.
Yes, sir
it was sixteen head of us, sure was. I was one of the youngest ones. Well,
when I was small I was kinda lazy, I didn't like to pick cotton (Laugh)
* and when my other sisters would be picking cotton, I'd go out there
sometimes, you know, I liked the pretty white cotton patch. * And I'd
go out there and they'd go to wanting me to work, you know, they'd go
to wanting me to get a sack. So, I'd pick a little while and then it'd
get hot. So, I tell'um I want some water. * So, they say, 'Well, go home
and get your water now and come back, here.' I say all right. I'd go home,
I wouldn't come back no more. (Laugh)
(7) * * "But
we had happy times. We'd play 'Palm-a-needle.' It'd be a big ring of us,
we'd get a ring, a whole ring, and then we'd get a stick and give it to
one. And you hold it down in your hand, down behind your back. * And then
when this ring get all settled up good like that, one would get in there
and he'd get to hunting the 'Palm-a-needle.' And you'd hear him holler,
'Palm-a-needle' …the others would say, 'Palm-a-needle is running, Palm-a-needle,
that needle is running, catch the Palm-a-needle, Palm-a-needle is running,
Palm-a-needle is running' and, and then that be going round doing that
just this-a-way to everyone. * Mama used to, you know, teach us little
plays, She'd play, get out and play with us till she learnt it to us.
And there we'd be.
· "Now it
takes me all day long to get that oak out, like this, to split the oak,
then I set down maybe get out some of that oak today, then I finish it
tomorrow. Then I take them splits and carry'um in the house and lay my
basket. * That's the first one laying on the floor, the first split you
lay down. It's a split-split. You split the first one you lay down, you
split it straight up the middle, halfway. * And then you lay eight more,
eight with the split-split down there. * So they must be the ribs that's
like round in here they call them the ribs. So that's the ribs. Have a
good bottom and a good strong rib.
(8) * I'm
running the bottom of the basket round. * I used to cook pepper grass.
It's grass growing in the field in the spring. I don't see it now, but
when my children were little and growing up* and I wanted some greens
long in the spring and weren't no greens plentiful, I'd just get me a
pan and go down in a bottom. * They growed in a bottom, and they grow
about that high. And they was, had a fine-looking kinda leaves and they'd
be so tender. And you'd break'um, umm, smell like a mustard, * that's
what they'd call'um, wild mustards. I'd pick'um and pick me a pan full
and go home and put on me a * shoulder bone or a ham bone and put it in
that pot and then I'd get me some meal and dip me some of that liquor
out that pot and pour in that meal, help mix it up, * make me some dumplings.
And wouldn't we eat then!
(9) And now,
you know, but the Lord is good. * The Lord knows 'long in then , times
was hard. That was 'long in Hoover days and that grass was in the fields,
plenty of it. And now you can't find a sprig no time of year. * I looks
for it, in walking you know, I just, slightly, I say, 'Well sir, you don't
see that pepper grass that you used to see!"
But things
was so cheap 'long in then. You could go the store with twenty-five dollars
and get much groceries you wanted. * Go to the store, take a quarter and
get a paper bag of flour 'bout that high. * And look like things eat better
long in then, than they do now. * We used to smoke chittlins, in long
back days, we'd when we'd kill hogs we'd wash the chittlings, you know,
and let'um sit a little salt brine water kinda. * And then take'um out
and hang'um all on sticks and then put'um hang'um in the smokehouse and
build a little smoke down there and smoke'um till * they turn nice and
yellow and they dry up so pretty. Get hungry for one, you could run in
there, pull you down one and throw it on them good coals and cook it and
eat it.
(10) * I
used to love hopping' john. Man, I love it. "How do you make that?" *
You put on your peas and cook your peas first and then you get some rice
and wash it good * and you have right smart a little water in your peas,
so it won't stick right down. And put your rice in there, don't put in
too much rice in your pot, * and put your rice in there and then it'll
cook. That'll be hoppin' john.
(11)* Mama
said Papa named me. I used to be grumbling about my name. I'd say 'Mama,
why did ya'll name me Lucreaty?' Said, 'That's the ugliest name to be
sure!! Mama said, 'Papa named you,' I say, 'Well I don't know where he
found that for me, nobody else name it.' That's what Mama told me, it
was from the Bible, * I been trying to look and find it in there. That's
like when you're worried or something-or-other and * you's wanting to
read a true verse and you just open the Bible but won't look for what
chapter or nothing, you just open…hold that Bible a while and open it,
* and then open and there's a chapter to read and it'll suit your…what
you was wanting to read.
(12) * Thompson
Valley, that was our church. It was a Methodist Church, that's right.
Sure was, * we got three members we baptized the first Sunday, in Aucilla
River. We have'um every year if we can get some members. That's right,
if any get religion, we'll baptize'um. * I guess it's like in the time
when Peter was baptized. * You know it's very sad. Y'know a baptism is
a sad kind of thing and, you know if you're feeling very spiritual and
happy you feels like you could go in the water again. * It used to be
in times, they would have to keep a lot of 'um out of that water! (Laugh)
* It is a happy time and it looks sad because the way they be dressed
you know, it looks sad. * They're all dressed in white, the mothers in
white and they got on the white caps and they going down to the water
singing.
(13)We mostly,
when we're going down to baptize * we mostly sing that song about 'I Love
Jesus.' *'I love Jesus, I love Jesus, * I love Jesus, Yes, I do,' * I
got a little grandson. I told him, he ought to try to learn this. * Ain't
found nobody that does these baskets, but me. * I've tried to get some
children to learn, but it don't seem like, you know, they got their mind
on it enough. I think their time is too far spent and they ain't got time
to learn it. * I said, well, it'll be gone when I'm gone. I said, but
the people ought to have enough of my baskets around to last'um. SINGING
* * * *
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