Excerpt:
...'We always called freedom 'possum'
so as to keep the white people from knowing what we
were talking about.'
Ambrose Headen, 1878
Nellie Mae Rowe's father, Sam Williams,
was a true patriarch. Born a slave, whose own father
could well have been from Africa, Williams worked as
a farmer, blacksmith, and basket-maker. Resourceful
and respected in both the black and white communities
of Fayetteville, Georgia, he was known as 'Uncle Sam.'Joe
Brown, Rowe's nephew, remembers his grandfather as a
small, strong man whose advice was often sought and
who had a reputation as an extraordinary communicator.
Williams and his
wife, Luella Swanson Williams, had one son, who died
very young, and nine daughters, of whom Nellie Mae was
the youngest. She was born on Independence Day in 1900
-- a fitting birthday, as she was the living embodiment
of a firecracker, with a strong independent spirit.
She would hide to avoid working in the fields, preferring
to spend her time drawing and making rag dolls out of
dirty laundry. She also enjoyed music, playing the drum
in the band that she and her sisters formed.