OLD ALECK, HORSE LOVER AND EX-SLAVE, HAS
RICH MEMORY:
Take His Word For It – "You Can't Beat the Ponies"
Submitted by
Lorna
Marks

Ironton Tribune, 6 March 1938
Perhaps it was
on the court house wall, last time you saw Aleck TOLLIVER. It may
have seemed the aging, bent colored man was just "sittin" but
through old Aleck's mind usually runs a panoramic review of events
that historically portray the birth and growth of a nation.
A film of those memories that pass through old Aleck's mind these
days would be worth something. For he thinks about those times
when he spent his early boyhood in slavery with the PAUL family
near Russell – the underground slave tunnel into Ohio –
sanctuaries for escaped slaves, in and near Ironton – hectic days
following the war and the newly found freedom of colored men –
slaughter of Union troops near Guyandotte – groomer of proud
horses for F. C. FISHER and Nannie Kelly WRIGHT – realization that
the "horses" can't be "beat".
Many
residents will remember the Aleck of other years: those years when
Sixth street was unpaved and Mrs. Nannie Wright owned the best
pair of horses in the city. Aleck was proud coachman of the Wright
stables and day after day he drove the horses up and down Sixth
street training their every step, marveling in their beauty and
proudly disdainful of the envious glances of those who watched the
parade go by.
Always Horseman: From the first Aleck was a horseman. He
was born to it, for even in slavery his father dealt in horse
trading and was so adept at it that he made enough extra money to
buy his freedom for $500 and that of his wife and daughter. After
gaining freedom the father remained in Kentucky and was road boss
at old Amanda Furnace. Aleck crossed the Ohio river into Ironton
and started work at the age of eleven years, first with the late
F.C. Fisher of Yellow Poplar Lumber Company, then with Hiram
CAMPBELL and finally with Mrs. Wright. He served the latter for
twenty years and the era upon which he looks back with most
satisfaction are those spent in her service. He purchased the
horses in Maysville, brought them here and daily gave them ___ation
and exercise.
Aleck was born to horses , in addition to working with them he
"played the ponies" and at the time was regarded as the best race
"picker" in the valley. In those days he always carried his own
"library", a collection of racing forms and sheets, to which he
was ever referring. But even in this great passion came
disillusionment and Aleck approaches the declining years of life
after having learned the great lesson "you can't beast the
horses". His experience should be a valuable lesson to those
residents who today are still unconvinced that it is so.
"I quit
betting and quit the ponies" said Aleck yesterday "because people
are too crooked. The only straight races anymore are the stake
races. The best horse usually wind there barring accident."
Aleck was born in what is now Russell on September 3, 1857. It was
eleven years later that his father purchased freedom of his family
and then Aleck moved to Ironton. He had never married but he had
three full brothers and two sisters. He and Fanny Tolliver are the
only ones left. Neither is married.
Aleck remembers establishment of a colony at Macedonia by a
Paducah slave owner who brought his thirty seven former slaves to
Ohio and set them up in their own homes; he remembers the escape
of slaves from Kentucky into the northland via the "slave tunnel";
he remembers that John CAMPBELL, city founder, assisted in the
work and at times concealed some of the escaping humans in the
attic of his home.
"Why I remember" said Aleck, "how old man RANKIN, a relative of
Colonel GRAY and Mr. Campbell, helped some slaves escape to
freedom. After his death they always found a bouquet of roses on
his grave every anniversary date. It was always delivered at night
by an unknown man; but everybody knew it was from a former slave
he had helped."
Aleck's memory of slavery isn't so unpleasant but he says days of
the war and immediately after the war were terrible. He remembers
how Union soldiers were invited to church at Guyandotte, checked
their rifles and were in___ when rebel forces barricaded the
bridge, attacked and massacred the "northerners." That affair was
avenged by General Ziegler in a march on the community.
"Rebel" is Chased: When President Abe Lincoln was killed,
bells were tolled, whistles were blown and everybody quit work.
One ______ sympathizer was located in the cooper shop here and to
information that Lincoln was dead he replied "what's the matter,
did he swallow a nigger's boot." The man was badly beaten, finally
escaped, and frantically made his way across the river into
Kentucky.
Aleck remembers that his old "master" is now buried on Amanda Hill
and he also remembered brutal treatment of Negroes and whites at
old Clinton Furnace where wages were fifty or sixty cents a day
and a beating was the reward for grumbling. But Aleck missed most
of that due to his early escape from slavery.
Today Aleck
is rich only in the vivid pictures that flash through his mind;
pictures of the complacency of a happy home, flashes of rebellion;
war-torn refugees, galloping horses; prancing horses and horses on
paper. There's history and wisdom packed away inside those
memories.
We first remember Aleck as the driver of those high-stepping,
prancing horses of Mrs. Wright. Next our memory finds him sprawled
under the shade of a tree, diligently fingering through racing
records. And now he shuffles here and there…with his memories.
Aleck should know, so take his word for it…you can't beat the
ponies.