(Ebook) Speaking History: Oral Histories of The American Past, 1865-Present by Sue Armitage, Laurie Mercier (Auth.) ISBN 9780230104914, 9781403977830, 0230104916, 1403977836 No Waiting Time
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PALGRAVE
List of Illustrations ix
Series Editors’ Foreword xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
ONE
1865–1900 7
Race Relations 8
The End of Slavery: Boston Blackwell 9
Sharecropping and Violence: Hughsey Childes and
Minnie Whitney 13
A California Remembers the War: Doña
Angustias de la Guerra 14
A Wounded Knee Survivor Remembers: Dewey Beard 18
Work on the Western Agricultural Frontier 20
A Homesteader’s Account: Will H. Berger 21
A Cowboy’s Story: Richard Phillips 23
Immigration 25
A Greek Peddler: Anonymous 27
A Chinese Businessman: Woo Gen 29
Industrial War 32
The Homestead Strike: John Holway 34
TWO
1900–1920 39
Reform Movements 40
Women’s Reform: Sylvie Thygeson and Rebecca Reyher 40
Race and Work in the South 46
Child Labor: Naomi Trammel 46
Growing Up with Segregation: Avery Downing 50
vi / Contents
Migrations 52
From Russia to Chicago and Montana: Dora Rosenzweig 53
Beginning the Great Migration: M. Kelly Fritz 57
World War I 59
At the Front: Homer Nikirk 60
On the Homefront: Lola Clyde and Adin McKeown 65
The Influenza Epidemic: Lela Oman 69
THREE
1920–1945 71
Migrations 72
North to the United States for “a Steady Job”: Epigmenio
“Manuel” Rosales 72
From Oklahoma Dust Bowl to California: Mildred Lenora
Morris Ward 76
Involuntary Migration to Mexico: Emilia Castañeda
de Valenciana 79
Leisure and Culture in the 1920s and 1930s 82
Drinking and Leisure during Prohibition: Helen Raymond 82
American Renaissance: Marvel Cooke 84
Turn Your Radio On: John Koch 88
Work and Labor during the Great Depression 90
The New CIO and the 1937 Steel Strike: Thomas White 92
Working for the Civilian Conservation Corps: Marvin Whaley 95
Discrimination and the Depression: Rev Walter M. Cavers 98
World War II: Opportunities and Tragedies 101
Women at Work: LueRayne Culbertson 101
Women at War: Violet Hill Gordon 105
Negotiating Internment: Amy Uno Ishii 109
FOUR
1945–1965 115
The Cold War at Home 116
The Left during the Cold War: Rose Leopold 117
The Cold War and Labor: Frank Fiorello 120
Migrations 123
Opportunities in the Industrial North: Joe Farmer 125
Urban Indians: Gertrude Chapoose Willie 128
Race and Civil Rights 131
Desegregating the Nation’s Capital: Christine
Stewart McCreary 132
Black Freedom Struggle in Mississippi: Unita Blackwell 136
Contents / vii
The history of the United States during the past 150 years is marked by enormous
change, but also by more than a modicum of continuity. The tension between the
two helps make the history of the period a fascinating chronicle of economic and
political transformation, war and peace, racial and ethnic division as well as unity,
and cultural cohesion and cleavage. Historians often slice and dice the period cov-
ered in this volume with labels such as Reconstruction, the Gilded Age, Populism,
Progressivism, the Twenties, the Great Depression and the New Deal, the Cold War,
the Age of Reagan, and so on. In Speaking History, Sue Armitage and Laurie Mercier
divide their work into five chronological periods and bring together some of the best
examples of how oral history helps to illuminate the nation’s past.
Their emphasis on the role of ordinary people reveals one of the several ways that
oral history can be useful. It also can be employed to capture the stories of the movers
and shakers, such as the decision-makers who govern or who oversee large corpora-
tions. Those people often leave written records and have their activities chronicled
in newspapers or other media. In their case, the oral history normally attempts to
get beyond what already is known, to ask questions not answered by other available
information, to fill in the gaps. The people of interest to Armitage and Mercier, the
“unfamous,” usually don’t leave written records, and when they do appear in the
public record, it is often as the object of state intervention, not on their own terms.
An oral history interview provides the sole opportunity to obtain their version of life
stories or accounts of a specific event or activity. Since the middle of the 20th century
such accounts have been planned tape recorded, or more recently, digitally recorded
interviews. However, because the chronology of this volume extends back to the
period of Reconstruction, the editors creatively have included material not captured
with the help of audio technology. As this book’s early selections reveal, interviews
were conducted and recorded in writing long before these devices existed. The result-
ing transcripts reflected as much the person who wrote down the interview as the
individual interviewed. For example, see the first excerpt in this volume with Boston
Blackwell, a former slave.
Whatever the means used to obtain them, capturing spoken words brings his-
tory alive. Quotes by ordinary people humanize the historical narrative. Among
the selected oral histories herein, readers of this volume will find many instances
that prove the point. An African American who came to Detroit during the Great
xii / Series Editors’ Foreword
Migration explained how insignificant he felt when he walked through the crowded
Detroit Athletic Club: “I thought everybody in the world was looking at me. There
wasn’t a soul seeing me. Who the hell is going to see a busboy?” The implications for
issues of race and class at the time are palpable. An Oklahoman, or “Okie,” who
migrated to California aptly describes the Dust Bowl and remarks, “You couldn’t
even tell where the sun was.” A Japanese American recounts her feelings at the time
of internment during World War II: “I felt like an ant. I wanted to shrivel up into
nothing.” Less dramatically, a resident of Fairfax, Virginia incisively portrays every-
day, mundane life in an American suburb during the 1950s and 1960s. Those who
speak history have much to say even when discussing the ordinary.
Beyond giving us new knowledge of those otherwise absent from history and
humanizing them, oral history can complicate the generalities with which surveys
of United States history necessarily proceed. That is, oral history shows us in a more
fine-grained way the continuities and changes of a given period, the fits and starts
by which the trajectory of “history” moves, and also the human consequences of the
“big events” of the past.
This volume adds a new dimension to the Palgrave Studies in Oral History series,
which already includes sixteen books. These ordinarily cover a single topic such as
those most recently published about African Americans and Hurricane Katrina or
about reactions to the war in Iraq; others concentrate on the experience of a sin-
gle individual such as Sue Kunitomi Embrey, who led the movement for redress of
Japanese Americans interned during World War II. Usually, the interviews on which
the books are based primarily come from one oral history collection. Speaking History,
on the other hand, covers the entire panorama of U. S. history since Reconstruction
and mines the collections of a variety of the nation’s archives, large and small. It also
includes a guide on how to conduct an oral history for those interested in doing so. It
will assist those who seek to understand change and continuity in American society
over the past century and a half.
Bruce M. Stave
University of Connecticut
Linda Shopes
Carlisle, Pennsylvania
Acknowledgments
Our first thanks go to the people who asked us to undertake this project in the first
place, Linda Shopes and Bruce Stave, longtime members and officers of the national
Oral History Association and editors of the Palgrave Oral History series. Special
thanks are also owed to Chris Chappell at Palgrave for his support, patience, and
keeping this book on track; to Tess Rond of Washington State University (WSU) for
her computer skills and intelligent questions; and to the WSU History Department
for its assistance.
This project would have been impossible without the help of oral historians and
archivists all over the country. The long list that follows is one way to say thanks.
Oral histories came to us from many individuals and institutions. Listed alphabeti-
cally, they are:
This volume of oral histories features the voices of Americans who lived through
some of the most critical events shaping the nation’s history since the Civil War.
Their memories bring history alive, lending an unequalled immediacy to the past.
In the process, they give us a glimpse of a new kind of history. Conventionally,
we tend to think of History with a capital H: a narrative of great events—wars,
elections, and enterprise—decided by the prominent people in charge—generals,
presidents, and CEOs. And in most history textbooks, generalizations drown out
the particular, the voices of ordinary individuals are lost, and what we remember
are the words and actions of the famous (and infamous). This volume seeks to
illuminate the particular experiences of ordinary Americans and how they par-
ticipated in and observed history in the making. Here, they speak to us about
themes familiar and unfamiliar: about migration, family life, discrimination,
labor, leisure, social movements, depression, and wars. In so doing, they reveal
the many ways in which individual experience and historical events intersect.
On the one hand, they show us how individuals live through, and affect, great
historical events. And at the same time, they aid our historical understanding by
providing texture and depth to historians’ generalizations.
For thousands of years peoples of the world have relied on the spoken word
to understand history. In the late nineteenth century, however, as history became
an organized academic discipline, scholars became suspicious of oral sources
and considered only written records as reliable. The inevitable result was “top
down” history, because records were created only by those who were able to
write or who were so notable that others wanted to write about them. Only in
the mid-twentieth century did historians begin to rediscover the value of oral
reminiscences. In the depth of the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Federal
Writers Project employed writers to document American lifeways and culture by
2 / SPEAKING HISTORY
recollections lack. Interviewers also have an important part to play in the ques-
tions they ask, and in how they encourage full recollection. Narrators often react
differently to different interviewers, depending on race, age, gender, and familiar-
ity. You will see many varieties of interviewer-narrator interaction in the follow-
ing pages, but even in the selections where the questions have been removed, it is
important to remember that oral history is a collaboration between two people,
not a monologue, and created at a particular point in time.
What makes oral history such a valuable source for our understanding of history?
And what did we mean when we say that these interviews are the building blocks
of a new kind of history?
We look to oral histories to answer a number of questions. The first that we
all feel is the urge to recapture significant events: what was it like to be there?
What did you see when the World Trade Towers collapsed on 9/11? What did
you do on 9/11? What was it like to serve as a soldier in World War II or to
migrate from China to the United States at the end of the nineteenth century?
But we also seek to find out how people lived their lives from day to day. How
did you survive on your wages as a domestic worker? What was a typical work day
like in the steel mill? What can you recall of the games you played in childhood,
or the foods prepared by your parents or grandparents? As narrators remember
what happened and what they did, they can make past events come alive again
for all of us. Through their eyes we can see the past—or a little slice of it. The
memories of individuals contain a wealth of information, information that is
usually not available in any other form. By giving voice to people heretofore
excluded or ignored in the usual historical sources, oral history can provide a
fuller, more honest picture of the past.
But are these memories reliable? Memory is a tricky thing. As we age, some
memories become sharper while others dim. Often the popular or collective
memory of events such as a natural catastrophe or a labor strike drowns out or
alters our own individual recollections. And we know that one single memory
can’t tell it all. The problem with “eyewitness” oral history, for example, is that
no single reminiscence can contain the whole truth. Famously, when Cornelius
Ryan decided to write the “truth” of the D Day invasion of Normandy by inter-
viewing survivors, he found so many conflicting stories that he abandoned his
goal of writing the absolutely final, definitive “history.” In a larger sense, it seems
fair to say that oral histories are a way for people to make sense of their pasts, even
if all the details are not precisely accurate.
The full possibilities of oral history begin to become clear when we think
of all the people who will never write their memoirs, never save their letters
4 / SPEAKING HISTORY
or emails and donate them to an archive, never keep a diary or share it with
anyone. We have never known how most people lived their daily lives, or what
they thought. Today, however, we have the tools to interview almost anyone. We
have the means to document a genuine peoples’ history. Of course we cannot in
fact interview everyone, but we can now realistically aim to write a popular his-
tory, based on the idea: we all make history. Each one of us, in our life choices,
makes our own history, even if under circumstances inherited from the past. All
of us, with our combined choices and reactions, make our national history. Those
actions, of course, are shaped by structures often beyond our control, for example
the decisions made by officials to go to war, or by corporations to lay off workers
and move operations to another country. At any given moment, all that may be
obvious is a huge jumble of conflicting actions and opinions, but out of that very
diversity emerges a direction that in hindsight we call “history.”
Oral history has been a key tool in this exciting process of discovery. All
the new voices have vastly complicated any simple version of American history.
These reminiscences enrich, illuminate, and often contradict older versions of
the meaning of events, and they lead us to ask new questions. Each oral history
is individual, and it tells an individual story. As our experiences have differed,
so have our beliefs, values, and perceptions. Some people find this diversity of
viewpoints upsetting, fearing that we are losing the unity and shared beliefs that
hold us together as a nation. But for many others, the diversity is the story. New
viewpoints challenge us to think of the past in wider and more comprehensive
ways, and in their complexity, make history more compelling. In that spirit, we
offer a variety of perspectives in the following pages. We invite you to hear the
past speak in many voices.
In the following pages we present excerpts from fifty oral history interviews that
exemplify major themes in American history since 1865. We chose them from
among the thousands of interviews in oral history archives all over the country.
Recognizing the fallibility of memory, we make no claim that the oral histories we
have chosen “tell the whole truth.” We chose interviews that, in our view, seemed
accurate to the facts of history as we know them, but our primary purpose was to
select interviews that provided more than usual depth of insight into the life of
an individual and his or her times. There are many other interview examples that
could not be included because of space limitations. We urge you to explore the
rich variety of the country’s oral history archives, many of which have excellent
indexes and substantial collections available through the Internet.
The five sections that follow are divided chronologically: 1865–1900;
1900–1920; 1920–1945; 1945–1965; 1965–2000. Beginning with a very brief
INTRODUCTION / 5
introduction to the major events of the period, each section offers about ten oral
histories, drawn from archives all over the country, to illuminate major themes.
Five of the constant themes across all sections are war, migration, race, culture,
and work, while within each section other themes will be prominent as well.
To a large extent, we let each oral history “speak for itself,” while also pointing
out specific characteristics of each interview. Each example comes from a longer
interview; many of the transcribed interviews are available in their entirety in
electronic form on the Internet or from the institution noted. We have lightly
edited most interviews by removing repeated phrases, eliminating some ques-
tions, and indicating by ellipses where we made cuts. Brackets indicate editorial
clarifications, either by the interviewer, transcriber, or by us.
In each thematic section, we ask questions to guide you in thinking about
how these oral histories expand, modify or challenge our current historical under-
standing. In this way, we encourage you to join us in thinking about history as
the ongoing story of people shaping their own lives. As they speak history, they
point the way to a new sense of the past.
Finally, the Appendix gives you the tools to undertake an oral history your-
self. There you will find a brief “how to” guide for conducting and preserving an
interview, as well as a bibliography and list of websites with further helpful infor-
mation. The opportunity to interview a person about historical events through
which they lived is a way in which you personally can bring history alive. You will
probably hear things you did not expect to hear—the surprise value of oral his-
tory is one of its greatest pleasures! Many people have a lot to tell us about their
pasts. By helping them speak their histories they enrich our own.
O N E
1865–1900
The consequences of the Civil War shaped every aspect of American life in
the second half of the nineteenth century. The South had to be rebuilt and the
fate of four million African-American former slaves decided. Race relations were
the paramount, and the most controversial, southern concern. Race was also an
issue in the vast new western territories that the United States had taken in 1848
at the end of the Mexican-American War. Many Americans believed that west-
ward expansion required control over the American Indian and Mexican inhabit-
ants of the region and its resources.
Another consequence of the Civil War was a fundamental change in size and
organization of society. Large industries originally created by wartime needs now
contributed to a vastly accelerated rate of industrialization that attracted massive
immigration from Europe and Asia. The growth of industrial capitalism provoked
unprecedented conflict about wages, working conditions, and power in American
society. At the very moment when individual homesteaders were establishing farms
and ranches in the West, a new, larger scale of organization—what one historian
has called “the incorporation of America”—was transforming the society of small
towns and small businesses that had been the norm before the Civil War.
The nine interviews in this section introduce you to the voices of nineteenth
century Americans as they coped with these major adjustments in their lives.
The first five interviews concern different aspects of race relations in the period
1865–1900, in the South and in the West, followed by two interviews about
work on the western agricultural frontier, by a farmer and a cowboy. Two immigra-
tion accounts, one from the East Coast, one from the West, follow. Finally, this
section concludes with an account of a battle that epitomized the bitter nature
of the industrial war of the period. Each thematic section provides questions that
focus on what these oral histories add to our sense of history.
8 / SPEAKING HISTORY
None of the interviews in this section were preserved with mechanical record-
ing devices. Unlike later sound recordings, in the nineteenth century the accu-
racy of an interview depended on the interviewer and how well he or she listened
and transcribed. Accuracy also depended on the interviewer’s intent: sometimes
it seemed important to reproduce exact words and speech patterns; in other cases
interviewers paraphrased the spoken narrative. When reading the interviews in
this section, the reader should always keep in mind that the very words the nar-
rator “speaks” come to us literally through the interviewer as that person decides
how to write down the narrator’s words. The selections that follow introduce
the reader to various choices made by interviewers about how they present the
reminiscence.
Race Relations
escape to Union lines, being welcomed as a “contraband” and put to work, and that
he had pension and voting rights. The interviewer chose to convey the voice and style
of this narrator by the use of dialect in her transcript of the interview, a choice that
was common in the 1930s but can seem demeaning today.
Make yourself comfoble, miss. I can’t see you much ‘cause my eyes, they
is dim. My voice, it kinder dim too. I knows my age, good. Old Miss, she
told me when I got sold “Boss, you is 13—borned Christmas. Be sure to
tell your new misses and she put you down in her book.” My borned name
was Pruitt ‘cause I got borned on Robert Pruitt’s plantation in Georgia,—
Franklin County, Georgia. But Blackwell, it my freed name. You see, miss,
after my mammy got sold down to Augusta—I wisht I could tell you the man
what bought her, I ain’t never seed him since—I was sold to go to Arkansas;
Jefferson county, Arkansas. Then was when old Miss telled me I am 13. It was
before the Civil War I come here. The onliest auction of slaves I ever seed as
in Memphis, coming on to Arkansas. I heerd a girl bid off for $800. She was
about fifteen, I reckon. I heard a woman—a breeding woman, bid off for
$1500. They always brought good money. I’m telling you, it was when we was
coming from Atlanta.
Do you want to hear how I runned away and jined the Yankees? You know
Abraham Lincoln ‘claired freedom in ‘63, first day of January [the Emancipation
Proclamation]. In October ‘63, I runned away and went to Pine Bluff to get to
the Yankees. I was on the Blackwell plantation south of Pine Bluff in ‘63. They
was building a new house; I wanted to feel some putty in my hand. One early
morning I clim a ladder to get a little chunk and the overseer man, he seed me.
Here he come, yelling me to get down; he g’wine whip me ‘cause I’se a thief, he
say. He call a slave boy and tell him cut ten willer whips; he gwine wear every
one out on me. When he ‘a gone to eat breakfas’, I runs to my cabin and tells my
sister, ‘‘I’se leaving this here place for good.” She cry and say, “Overseer man, he
kill you.” I says, “He kill me anyhow.” The young boy what cut the whips—he
named Jerry—he come along wif me, and we wade the stream for long piece.
Heard the hounds a-howling, getting ready for to chase after us. Then we hide
in dark woods. It was cold, frosty weather. Two days and two nights we traveled.
That boy, he so cold and hongry, he want to fall out by the way, but I drug him
on. When we gets to the Yankee camp all our troubles was over. We gets all the
contraband we could eat. Was they more runaways there? Oh, Lordy, yessum.
Hundreds, I reckon. Yessum, the Yankees feeds all them refugees on contraband.
They made me a driver of a team in the quartermasters department. I was always
keerful to do everything they telled me. They telled me I was free when I gets to
the Yankee camp, but I couldn’t go outside much. Yessum, iffen you could get to
the Yankee’s camp you was free right now.
That old story ‘bout 40 acres and a mule, it make me laugh. Yessum, they
sure did tell us that, but I never knowed any pusson which got it. The officers
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