67. Joseph Leggett
Transcript
Jim Colley: Good morning. This is Jim Colley. And we're visiting this morning in the home of Mr. Joseph Leggett. Mr. Leggett, we're glad to be here. And we'll be talking with you in just a few moments, after this word from Peoples Bank & Trust, our sponsors. This is The Memories Show. My name is Jim Colley. Mr. Leggett, we're glad to be with you.
Joseph Leggett: I'm glad to have you.
Jim Colley: Thank you. When were you born, sir?
Joseph Leggett: I was born October the 8th, 1899.
Jim Colley: Before the turn of the century.
Joseph Leggett: That's right.
Jim Colley: Where were you born?
Joseph Leggett: At Georgetown, Louisiana in Grant Parish.
Jim Colley: Do you remember much about growing up in Grant Parish?
Joseph Leggett: I remember more than, the real sentimental things to me happened mostly in Caldwell Parish. My father moved up there when I was about three years old, and I lived there till I was almost 10. And then he moved back to Grant when his health began to fail him.
Jim Colley: What do you remember about growing up in Caldwell Parish? What was life like?
Joseph Leggett: Well, I remember the first year it started me to school. I remember that. And we had to walk three miles. And there's a hornet's nest on the side of the road. And the big boys would stir them up there and let them get us little fellas. That first year, I just went what I wanted to. I'd go with the older kids to school, and when I got tired of it, I'd just go home. I wasn't but six years old, but I'd go make that three miles by myself. I didn't go back until the next day.
Jim Colley: What did you think of school?
Joseph Leggett: I just thought it looked more like a playground than anything else to me then, when I was that little, because there wasn't much to the studies, you know. And we always, you seemed to live so far from the school [inaudible 00:02:14]. I didn't ever get to go to school very much up there, because I was closer to the school after I come back to Grant Parish. And I done most of my school days after coming back to Grant.
Jim Colley: Was school just a one-room schoolhouse with one teacher taking care of everybody?
Joseph Leggett: Yes, that's the way it was. I remember now, Miss Boatner, she'd give me the only lick in school that I ever got.
Jim Colley: Is it fair to ask you what you did to get that licking?
Joseph Leggett: Yes, it's plenty fair. I thumped a paper ball at a girl.
Jim Colley: Oh, I bet you gave girls a lot of trouble then, huh?
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, I was pretty bad after the girls.
Jim Colley: But the teacher just didn't catch you very often?
Joseph Leggett: That's the only time. That girl, she picked up that paper ball and carried it up there and showed it to her.
Jim Colley: And pointed you out?
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, and pointed me out.
Jim Colley: You didn't think-
Joseph Leggett: She just come back there with that big long switch and give me a rap over the back.
Jim Colley: Not much said about it after that though?
Joseph Leggett: No. That's the only trouble I ever had, serious trouble.
Jim Colley: Well, that's not bad at all.
Joseph Leggett: I thought that I had done pretty good. When I was in Caldwell Parish, when I wasn't but six, seven years old, I had me a girlfriend.
Jim Colley: Ah.
Joseph Leggett: And her mama would make her come see me every day.
Jim Colley: Her mother would make her come see you?
Joseph Leggett: No, she'd make her mother bring her to see me every day.
Jim Colley: That's not bad. What did your father do?
Joseph Leggett: He was a farmer.
Jim Colley: Do you remember much about farming?
Joseph Leggett: Well, I remember pretty much about them farming. I didn't do none of it because I was too young. He died when I was 10 years old, and that ended the farming.
Jim Colley: So did you ever spend any time out in the field with him?
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, everywhere he went, I was with him. He didn't go nowhere without me.
Jim Colley: What'd you grow, cotton?
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, he'd grow cotton and then feed stuff, corn, potatoes, everything like that.
Jim Colley: Did you remember your grandparents? We were talking before the show about your grandparents in the Civil War?
Joseph Leggett: No. It's too bad, I don't remember my grandparents on either side, because I wasn't but 10 years old, as I said. And they was all dead before I remember. But I used to love to set up at night and listen to the tales that my mother told about what went on back there. Now them, they had some days back there. Is it all right to tell what happened back then?
Jim Colley: Yeah, let's hear some of those stories.
Joseph Leggett: Well, sir, my grandfather, he dodged the war, that war. He didn't believe in slavery. He had already freed his slaves, and he wouldn't go to war. And he lived four years in a hollow tree.
Jim Colley: Oh really?
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, he did. He lived four years in that hollow tree right across the river from where he lived. And every Saturday evening, he'd come across the river, and he'd shave and clean up. So first one another would come and stay with him, you know. And in that country there was five John Nugent's.
And his nickname was Stickum John. And there was John Buckskin, and John Whistle Britches, and different Johns. I remember Buckskin John, he lived with him a while. And so, one time there was a man living over in that tree with him by the name of Carney. And he had him and his wife, and they were both a young couple. And they come across the river like they always do. And Carney, he shaved, cleaned up first. And after he got through, my grandfather started.
And while he was shaving, they looked and seen the cavalry coming down the road. And he made out like. He did run outside. And my grandmother said, "Oh, don't run, John." Says, "They'll kill you. They're too close." He says, "Well, I can give my partner a change." And he run outside and they hollered, "Halt, halt," and all that kind of stuff.
So Carney, him and his wife had went down on the river bank, right close to the boat. And his wife, she went way around, come down the road. And they was questioning her, said, "You got a husband?" She said, "No," says, "I'm just an orphan girl lives here with these people." But she told my grandmother after they left, said when he heard them hollering, said he just didn't wait for the boat. Said he just rolled over in that river and swum across to their island. That island, I'll tell you, they named it Stickum's Island. And that's what the name of it is today.
Jim Colley: Did the cavalry catch your grandfather at the house?
Joseph Leggett: Yes, they caught him at the house. And he had this horse belonged to his partner. He was a race horse. And he was a trick horse too, and he'd do all kinds of tricks. So he had planned a place in mind up the road to make his getaway. So up about close to Rochelle, he come to this place in the road where it was just a zigzagging. And he had that horse, his head right towards home, and he stuck spurs to him. And he went around the bend so fast, they began to holler up ahead, "Shoot him, shoot him." And his lieutenants, they had a man with every one. His lieutenants said, "Shoot, hell, in damnation. How can I shoot him when I can't get sight of him?"
And they never even went back after him, at all. They just let him go. He went on back, got back home, and my grandmother said that when she seen him coming down the road, said, "That horse didn't look like his four feet ever went to the ground." Said, "It looked like they just stayed up there under his chin." He just come run up to the gate, throwed the reins over the pickets, and going in says, "You got that coffee hot?" She said, "No, I ain't thought about no coffee." He said, "Well, heat it. I ain't going nowhere until I get some coffee."
Jim Colley: He had had enough of an escape right there. Mr. Leggett, we're going to pause just a moment and take a break for Peoples Bank & Trust. But we'll be back with you after this word from our sponsors. This is Jim Colley and we're visiting with Mr. Leggett on The Memories Program. We're looking now at a grocery list that your father used?
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, my father made that-
Speaker 3: That's [inaudible 00:10:39]-
Joseph Leggett: ... grocery bill.
Jim Colley: This was dated, gosh, in 1906. And it's on a piece of old ledger sheet. And we're looking at some grocery prices from back then. Those are really memories now, aren't they?
Joseph Leggett: Yes, they are.
Jim Colley: What's the one you find most interesting on there?
Joseph Leggett: I don't know. I couldn't read it without my glasses. I read with glasses and I can't see it.
Jim Colley: It says here that 27 pounds of bacon sold for $2.10 cents. I can hardly believe that. Here's 19 pounds of bacon for $2.40 cents. Now here are 10 yards of cloth, a dollar. Those are old prices, aren't they?
Joseph Leggett: Yes, that.
Jim Colley: It's hard to remember when they were that. I guess you spent most of your life in Grant Parish?
Joseph Leggett: Most of my life, yes.
Jim Colley: What did you do there?
Joseph Leggett: Well, after I got big enough to work, I worked on the railroad. I went to work on the railroad when I was 14 years old.
Jim Colley: How long did you work for?
Joseph Leggett: I worked about 18 years.
Jim Colley: That's quite a while.
Joseph Leggett: Yeah, up until the war, the second war, when they got to where they didn't use no men much in the second war. They just cut the force down to where we just make about a dollar and a half, a day and a half a week. And I quit the railroad then. And I moved over to Natchitoches Parish, over there in Provençal. That's where my wife's people lived. And from then on, over there I just used my daddy-in-law's team and cut wood and stuff like that for the people.
Jim Colley: We've got time for one last memory, Mr. Leggett. Do you remember anything special about growing up that you want to share with us?
Joseph Leggett: Yes. I'd like to say that my father was a cotton farmer, and I call myself, helping him do everything he done, I went with him. He'd go pick cotton. I'd go down there with him and pick three or four handfuls and put them in his sack. And then I'd get a straddle of that sack and ride it the rest of that half a day.
Jim Colley: That was some help, wasn't it? Riding on that sack.
Joseph Leggett: That's right.
Jim Colley: Mr. Leggett, we've enjoyed visiting with you in your home. We appreciate being here and we thank you for sharing your memories with us. And we hope that some of those folks who are listening to this show will call in and tell us they have some memories to share with us too.
Joseph Leggett: They surely ought to have as good of ones that I have.
Jim Colley: Thank you very much and Peoples Bank & Trust and I thank you for calling in and wanting to share your memories with us. We hope you have a good day.
Jim Colley interviews Joseph Legget about growing up in Caldwell Parish, walking three miles to school, listening to his mother tell stories about his grandfather during the Civil War, his father’s grocery bill, working on the railroad, and helping his father pick cotton.