Authors: Alex Haley
blue. Up again into the hills, through woods that slowly gave way to
fanns, and they saw fields of cotton and wondered at it, and played with
some bolls of it, although they got prickles in their fingers. The
weather was hot but it suited the land, and they saw slave gangs out
picking the cotton, chanting work songs as they picked, and they thought
it idyllic. Even the overseer flicking his whip occasionally, lazily, at
the blacks, appeared to them to be a necessary functionary. They came to
a river running through a deep gorge and were told it was called the Cum-
berland, and that they were close to their journey's end.
After thirty-five days of traveling, they arrived in the thriving
settlement of Nashville. Dirty, disheveled, and unshaven, skins browned
and necks reddened by the sun, they beamed in delight for they had
arrived almost at the edge of the world, and were happier than they could
possibly have imagined.
9
As far as James was concerned, Nashville was America, and
the rest of the country could go hang. From the moment they
rode into the town, he was so captivated by its simple vigor
and pleasant aspect, its sense of isolation and independence,
BLOODLINES 73
that he could not imagine he would ever want to live anywhere else. It was
Tennessee's oldest town, but established almost within the span of his own
lifetime, so that he could feel part of its growth, and would be able to
tell his children that he had been there from the beginning. It was a
thriving community, with half a dozen brick houses already replacing the log
cabins, and another hundred dwellings of clapboard. There were a dozen small
shops and stores, which drew their supplies, as James and Washington would
do, from Philadelphia and Baltimore to the east, and New Orleans to the
south. The local cotton farmers sent their crop to those same cities, for
export to Europe.
The land around Nashville had been settled by an early pioneer, John
Donelson, who had made a treaty with the Indian tribes, Cherokee, Creek,
Choctaw, and Chickasaw. To the south and southeast were immense tracts of
Indian land, mostly Cherokee in Tennessee and Creek in Alabama, which were
sacred to their traditional owners, and exempt from white settlement.
Constant encroachments were made onto this land in violation of the
treaties, and then the Indians retaliated. The Tennessee Militia, now under
the command of Andrew Jackson, would trounce the raiding parties, and the
usual result was that more Indian land would be ceded to whites. For the
most part, the Indians near Nashville who lived on white man's land dwelt
in uneasy alliance with their conquerors, but resentment simmered among the
younger men, the braves.
In the early days, the main route south from Nashville had been the river,
which connected briefly with the Ohio and then flowed into the mighty
Mississippi, and down into Louisiana. There was still considerable river
traffic, but a new road, the Natchez Trace, a mere remnant of an old Indian
path, led from Nashville, twisting and turning through the forests and
beside the gorges, skimpy wooden bridges fording the streams, to Natchez.
With the influx of settlers and merchants and speculators, the path became
broader and well traveled, linking Philadelphia to New Orleans, a distance
of two thousand miles.
There was a plentiful water supply from the Cumberland River, good rain,
sharp, snowy winters, and high, hot summers. A printing office published a
weekly newspaper. There
74 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
was no hotel or inn as yet, no industry of any kind, and the ambience of the
town was pastoral, uncluttered by machinery or factory.
Of the many settlers who had come to the district, to stay and farm, or
move on in search of that elusive, ultimate, perfect pasture, many had
prospered mightily. Land was abundant and cheap, and fortunes had been
quickly made by some. Not all had been so lucky. The adventurers and
speculators, the entrepreneurs and the farseeing, had taken the best of the
land, and those less fortunate immigrants who had stayed had found what few
acres they could on less productive soil. Dour, hardy, weatherbeaten folk,
worn out by wandering, had pitched tents on rocky plots which could be had
for a cent an acre, or squatted on Indian borders. They scratched out an
existence raising tobacco or corn, and, the women more fertile than the
land, swarms of children. Many of these children did not live beyond their
first few months or years, and those who did were condemned to a life at
least as harsh as their parents', unless they got lucky, or moved on.
West, always west. It was the anthem of the frontier. Somewhere out west
was the elusive crock of gold at the end of the rainbow, and few looked
back to the East, or to Europe, for what they had now, no matter how
little, or how much, was almost always more than what they had left behind.
These white poor gave spice to James's appreciation of his new environment,
for without the less lucky, how could the fortunate appreciate what they
had achieved? While he believed that all men were created equal, and
believed in equal opportunity, he did not believe in a leveled society,
with no rich and no poor. It was the duty of the strong to protect the
weak, but not to become weak themselves.
The population of the town was cosmopolitan, reflecting America. English
and Scottish and Irish and Welsh, German, Huguenot, and Scandinavian, and
a few from the Caribbean Islands. There were blacks-a few free tradesmen,
and enslaved laborers. Some Indians, like the Cherokee chief Doublehead,
had adapted to the white man's ways, and had successful farms. Others lived
in the forest, tribally, in small communities, some in log cabins, some in
wigwams or tepees.
BLOODLINES 75
Already there were settlers in the neighboring, less peaceful, territory
of Missouri, and some had gone farther west, and crossed the Sabine
River, into the Mexican province of Texas.
Nashville was the crossroads, and James was wise enough to understand
that fortunes can be made more easily at crossroads than at destinations.
James and Washington found a boardinghouse and settled in. Their letters
of introduction served them well, and they were welcomed to the community.
Being Irish was no disadvantage here; it was sufficient, they quickly
discovered, that they were white gentlemen. The manners and modes of the
town were no different from any other they had known, if more open and
informal, though both James and Washington were amused that almost all
white men, rich or poor, had constant dribbles on their chins, from
chewing tobacco. James never took to the practice. The few free blacks
were regarded dubiously by the majority of whites, if not with open
hostility, and the slaves were a simple fact of life, harshly treated or
otherwise, depending on the whim of their Massas. The Indians, of whatever
tribe, were mostly shunned and avoided, and half-breeds despised, even by
other Indians.
Within two weeks, James and Washington had found, and arranged to buy,
a spacious wooden store in the main street. Washington had his portion
from his father and was ready to pay cash. James had wrestled with his
conscience. Ultimately, not wanting to be indebted to a bank or his
younger brother, he used his own portion that he had vowed he would never
touch. He justified the breaking of this oath by his need for a start in
life.
Their supplies began arriving by flat-bottomed barge from Philadelphia
and Baltimore, and soon their shelves were stacked with clothing and
cloth-calico, linen, wool, and woven cotton-hats and boots, cases of
candles, tins of tobacco, bags of loose coffee and tea, flour and
oatmeal, dry beans and maize, crockery and cutlery, pots and pans, and
racks and spades and hoes. Even before the shop opened, they had begun
business, making contact with the farmers who dealt with their brothers
in the East, offering their services in any and every capacity, as
mailmen and post office, as agents and suppliers,
76 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
and as accountants and bookkeepers. They preferred cash money, specie, as
their payment, but were prepared to take signed notes or paper; they offered
credit, provided there was collateral, they would even barter, and they
accepted deeds to land, the common currency of the frontier.
They hung up their shingle, JACKSON BROTHERS, DRY GOODS, and on the day the
store was ready, they looked at each other, both in serviceable trousers,
with blousy shirts and clean linen aprons, shook hands, wished each other
good luck, and opened their door.
They did better than they had hoped and were busier than they could have
imagined. At the end of the first day, they knew they needed some help, if
only an errand boy, to run messages, clean the store, and load wagons. They
put a sign in the window, confidently expecting a number of applications
from the poor white boys in the district, keen to earn pocket money, but to
their surprise, no one came for the job. Had they been more attuned to the
town and the times, they might have noticed that some of their customers
looked at the sign suspiciously, but they were new to the district, and
naive.
James ran the store on his own, for Washington was always out making
deliveries in the wagon. He was toying with putting an advertisement for the
job in the local newspaper, when the door burst open, and an angry white man
came in. He snatched the job advertisement from the door and marched to the
counter, interrupting two women who were debating the merits of different
brands of linseed oil with James.
"What is the meaning of this?" he demanded.
James was irritated, and glared at the intruder. A tall, lanky man, with a
shock of unruly red hair and startling, sapphire eyes that were dancing
with anger. A slender, well-dressed black man had followed him into the
store, and stood behind him, Ue a shadow.
The ferocity of the man's approach unnerved James. The two women drifted
away to inspect bags of white beans.
"I need a boy for the store," James said. "To run errands, and keep the
place clean-"
"Nigger work," the man shouted, interrupting James. He
BLOODLINES 77
turned to his shadow. "Nigger work, eh, Alfred?"
The shadow nodded, and his Massa turned back to James.
"No decent white boy would do this."
James's temper was rising.
"But I need help, and I'd pay well," he said, with an edge in his voice.
The man laughed, and James wondered what was so funny.
"Then get a nigger," he said.
"I don't know how," James countered. "None have applied."
The man laughed again, and the shadow chuckled. "Nigger boys don't apply
for jobs; they don't have a choice in the matter. You buy 'em."
James felt foolish now. The concept of owning slaves was no longer
shocking or exotic to him, but he had never imagined he would have the
need to purchase one. He was not sure he wanted to own a slave.
An image popped into his mind of a well-dressed woman in Liverpool
leading a beautifully attired Nubian boy, on a silver chain. The boy had
not seemed unhappy.
"How?" was the best he could manage.
The man's anger had dissipated, and he looked at James almost pityingly,
and shook his head.
"I thought your brothers would have equipped you better for the
frontier."
It dawned on James who he was. Some cadence in his speech matched the
phrases he had read in irate letters.
"Mr. Jackson?" he wondered, and Andrew laughed, and shook his hand.
"Andrew will do," he said. "And you're the greenhorn. James or
Washington?"
"James," James murmured, feeling very like an errant boy before his
father.
"Well, James," Andrew said. "You've already set a few tongues wagging in
Nashville with this advertisement, Everyone took pity on you because you
are new, but no one had the guts to tell you. Except me."
He tapped the advertisement on the counter.
"We'll find you a boy."
78 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
He turned to his shadow. "See to it, Alfred. Get him a good un, but not
too pricey. We may have one at the farm.
"Yes, suh, Massa," the shadow, Alfred, murmured.
Andrew turned back to James.
"Irish," he barked. "Horses?"
James didn't understand the question.
"Horseracing!" Andrew snapped impatiently. "Are you a gambling man?"