First-person America 在线电子书 图书标签: society
发表于2024-11-08
First-person America 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024
Mrs. M.F. Cannon grew up on an Eastland County, Texas,
stock /arm. She was seventy-three years old when Federal
Writer Woody Phipps interviewed her at the Masonic Home
/or the Aged near Fort Worth.
I was raised in West Texas when it was considered the sure enough
wild and woolly West. If I could remember all the things that hap-
pened to me, you'd be able to write a big book on it all. As it is though,
my memory sort of fails me right when I want it to work, but I'll tell you
all I can recall.
I was born on July 3o, 1864, in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. Just as soon's
I was able to be carried good and my ma was able to take a long trip, my
dad set out for Texas on September 15, 1864. Dad's name was Eldridge
Nix and he settled on what was known as the Nix Place. It was just out-
side Jewell, Texas, in Eastland County, and had about x6o acres in it.
I suppose you'd call the place a stock farm because he farmed on a small
scale, but he really worked cattle.
Now, the reason I didn't pay attention to anything in the way of
business was because I was pretty spoilt when I was a kid. My mother
died right after we got to Jewell, and my two sisters had the raising of
me and all the household work too. They'd let me run loose after I got
big enough to get away from the leash. You see, while I was too small to
be depended on not to run off, they'd make a sort of harness that went
around my shoulders and kept me tied to a wooden stake while they were
in the dugout working. When we first came to that country, there were
no houses and everybody lived in dugouts that were made by digging a
square hole about ten feet by ten feet, then about seven feet deep, and
running a long pole across the middle, about two feet higher than the
ground level, then slanting the tarpaulin down so to let the water run off
when it rained.
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First-person America 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024