Saturday, December 22, 2012
Telegraph Company
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Threshing
Threshing
My mother and father were both raised in a farming community about five miles outside of Cleveland, Ohio. Most of the farmers in that area were descendants from immigrants from Germany. The farms were small. Where my father was raised the farm was about 40 acres, which was about the same size as most farms in the area. In order to feed the family and get a little money coming in they had to use up the entire 40 acres. A lot of it in vegetable gardens. But, because they had the horses to feed and grain to be taken to market for extra income a lot of it was planted in hay, oats, and wheat. The farm my mother was raised on about a mile away from my Dad's farm.
Before the harvest there was a lot of planting and the grain had to be cut in the field and bundled and by hand it had to be stacked in shocks. In the shocks it would not rot on the ground and it would dry properly. In the autumn the shocks in the field would be dried and cured enough to be collected and put in the threshing machine. Everybody, including the boys that were old enough, worked in the field to stack the shocks on the trucks and bring them to the threshing machine.
One person in the neighborhood of all these small farms owned the equipment to thresh the grain. It consisted of a steam engine and threshing machine. To move from farm to farm the man with the equipment would drive the steam engine with metal wheels down the roads between farms at about five miles an hour. Behind the steam engine he would tow the threshing machine. When he got on the site he would line up the threshing machine and the steam engine and he had a big belt that was about a foot wide and maybe 15 – 20 feet long. He would attach the belt to the pulleys on both pieces of equipment. In the meantime his schedule was laid out. All the farmers in the neighborhood would gather on the farm that was going to be harvested and do all the work necessary to bring the grain in. They would start early in the morning to take advantage of as much daylight as there was. Hopefully in the one day that farm’s harvesting would be complete.
The women’s job was to prepare the meal and feed the men lunch and supper. The girls either helped with the meals or watched the younger kids. The evening meal included beer and hard cider. After the evening meal was done everyone would sit around and talk and joke and tell about old times. They would catch up on the neighborhood gossip as well. The kids were going to school in the one room schoolhouse. My father went to that school through sixth grade. That was the end of his schooling. What he learned afterwards was out of books from the library and by experience.
After the sun went down the fun would start on the farm at harvest time. There was card playing and singing and lots of drinking. After enough hard cider and beer and passing around the whiskey bottle most of the grown men were feeling pretty good and happy. There were always lots of kids and we would have our own games and fun. When it got dark enough we would play hide and seek. Once it got dark the kids were not allowed in the barn because fire was a danger.
I had so many cousins it was pretty hard to count. In my father’s family there were seven girls and four boys. At that time most of them had children. And farmers believed in lots of children because they needed help in the fields. The family was so large they had an outhouse that was a three-holer. In later years they did put a bathroom in the house. Even after the bathroom was put in we would still use the outhouse when we had company on Sundays.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
My Street
Saturday, August 4, 2012
My First Love
My family belonged to a Catholic Church and we lived in the diocese of St. Ignatius about a mile from the school and church. My schooling from the 1st through the 8th grade was at the Catholic school. We had nuns for teachers. Every morning we were marched from the school to the church for services. We marched from the tune of a piano. In the sixth or seventh grade the piano player was a student about my age. She was a girl with curly blond hair. As she played the piano her head would bob back and forth and her curls would bounce up and down. I was fascinated with her looks.
One day I got up the nerve to talk to her (I was about fifteen) and ask her if I could walk her home from school. She said yes and I took her books and we started to walk. I was in seventh heaven. We talked about this and that. Finally we go to her house. She lived about a mile from the school but in the opposite direction from where we lived. As we walked she asked me, “I’m not taking you out of your way, am I?” I said, “Oh, no. You aren’t taking me out of my way.” When we got to her house I handed her back her books and said goodbye.
As I started to walk home I realized I had to go quite a long way home. It was a mile back to school and another mile back to my house. When I got back to my house, my sister, who was the cook was VERY upset. “Where WERE you?” I have to have potatoes for the meal. It was my job to peel potatoes for our large family – so a LOT of potatoes. I had to hurry up so I took my potato peeler and went as fast as I could. The peeler had an end to dig out the eyes, but this night a lot of the eyes were left.
The next day when school was out the girl with the blonde hair was waiting for me to walk her home. I told her I couldn’t because I have to go home to peel potatoes. It just wasn’t working out and that was the last and only time I walked her home. It turned out that was the end of our relationship – all because of potatoes.
In later years I told my kids that if it wasn’t for those potatoes they might all have blonde curly hair.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Hobo Final Chapter
After 3 years away I had been wondering how things were going at home. I was a little homesick. I gradually drifted back towards Cleveland. I didn’t go directly. First I went to Wakeman, Ohio. They had a river there and the farmer let us use the low lands next to the river to camp. There was one guy named Hank that we know. After I visited with him I went down by the campers and I went back to Cleveland with them.
Since I had been working with a sign painter Mmy Dad put me to work painting the house. I learned how to use linseed oil to treat the windows. I had a few ladders there and they were hard to handle but I did manage to get the house painted including up in the peaks. After the house was done, my Dad got me a job. One of the first jobs I had was doing finish work in a new house. My job was to put down the baseboard in all the rooms. I had to be careful when I used a hammer not to make hammer marks. Every time I would make a hammer mark my Dad would spot it.
When it came time for payday the contractor gave my
Dad the money that I had earned. Instead of turning over the money to me my Dad was going to give me an allowance and keep my money. At an earlier time when there were 9 kids to raise there was some reason for the older kids to kick in their money to help keep the household going. But by that time there weren’t nearly as many kids living at home. The necessity of this kind of arrangement no longer existed.
I was willing to pay room and board. Since I had been living on my own for around three years, I was used to making my own way. We locked horns and I packed my bags and left again.
For the next few years I drifted east and south. In order to support myself I was doing odd jobs. Some yard work, washing dishes, and doing a little carpenter work even though I didn’t have my own tools to do that. I went to New York City and then through some of the southern states. Usually I traveled on the trains and sometimes hitchhiking.
The War Years
When I finally came back home we were on the verge of going to war with Japan. My brothers were going into the service. My oldest brother, Ralph, was exempt because he had a family. Howard went into the Army. His job after he was in there a while was as a bartender in the officers club. Some of the officers told him he ought to apply for a commission, which he did. He went through some type of course and he became a commissioned officer. Al went into the Marine Corps. He took his course of training and became a full-fledged Marine.
Elmer was in the Air Force and one of his jobs was working on the new American bomb site in England. At the bomb site they calculated how far the bombs were from the targets. So he spent a lot of time in England. While he was there, he met this woman and he wanted to make it a permanent attachment when the war was finally over but the woman elected to go back to her husband. In the meantime, after he returned to the United States she was pregnant with Elmer’s child.
Bob joined the Navy and spent just about all of his time aboard a destroyer. Most of that time was spent in the Pacific.
Norbert joined the Army or was drafted. I am not sure.
With all of my brothers already in the service I didn’t want to miss out. I didn’t think of it as getting killed, I thought of it was the great adventure of the day. So, I joined the Navy.
There was many people joining at the same time and the biggest part of them joined the Navy because they didn’t want to go into the Army. When it came time to leave there were almost 100 from the Cleveland area that were packed aboard trains and sent to Chicago where the Great Lakes Training Center boot camp was. We were put up in barracks there. We did some marching and they gave us a duffle bag and all of our clothing that we were to wear including dress whites and in the barracks we had to learn to keep our bedding made and to clean the barracks. We were taken out and marched around. We learned how to handle a rifle. They took us to the firing range where we practiced shooting. All the time they were giving us tests. After about three months of basic training we were sent out on our next assignments. I was sent to machinist mate school which was set up in Lawrence, Kansas on the University of Kansas property. There was an obstacle course, rooms with all types of machinery (lathes, drill presses, etc.). At the end of about three months they gave us tests and I graduated 4th in the class. This entitled me to more schooling. During this time when we were at training was where I met Ken Kalbfliesh. We became friends and we went on liberty together. We were a little like Mutt and Jeff because Ken was tall and I wasn’t. We made a great team and we had a lot of fun together.
My next assignment was to refrigeration school. This was at the Carrier Corporation in Syracuse, New York. There were about 15 in the total class that went there. We found housing at different peoples homes. In the daytime everyday we went to the Carrier Corporation buildings where our class was set up. They taught us the basics of refrigeration and then the refrigeration machinery that was being used in the destroyer escorts.
After that course, I went to Massachusetts around Boston at the Hingham Shipyards where our ship was under construction. There was a whole line of DE’s under construction. The purpose of these ships was to do convoy duty. It was all types of commercial ships going back and forth across the Atlantic, mostly to England. The reason for us escorting the convoys was because the U-Boats were very active at that time in blowing up the cargo ships. We had aboard the sonar and we carried depth charges and we carried torpedoes.
When I first came aboard my ship, the U.S. Blessman, DE 69 it was still under construction. So I showed up every day and had to be aboard for so many hours. We did fire watch – we kept an eye when welding was going on. I was there at my station very often and I watched how they constructed the coolers. There were two coolers. One was at colder temperature than the others. This was mostly for meats. The other room was at a lesser temperature for all of the other food provisions. The walls were very well insulated and there was a metal skin over the insulation and all of the joints were soldered. They had very experienced people doing that.
At the time I was sleeping in a barracks and often on my time off I would go to the Boston Commons where all the Revolutionary War buildings and lots of other things to see in Boston. Finally the work on the ship was done and we were christened and slid out from the dry docks into the water and we went on our shake down cruise.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Hobo Continued
I became acquainted with the owner of a sign shop. He put me up for the night. I started doing little jobs for him. In addition to signs he would pick up little painting jobs and I would do that. He had a pretty large building. It was set up with the boards where he could put his signs on it was convenient to letter the signs. As time went on I watched him letter and I thought I could do that. When no one was around I would open up the little paint cans and practice my letters. When he finally saw what I was doing he was allowing me to letter some of the rough type of lettering that the grocery stores used to put the prices on. I still couldn’t do the fancier work. I spent a few months with him. I was living in the shop and he was giving me enough spending money so I was able to buy my meals. For recreation I went to a place where they did roller skating. I bought myself a pair of skates and I even met a girl there. I was really starting to settle in. Then my boss decided to partner with another painter and my job was gone. I went back on the road again.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Hobo
I remember when I was about 12 years old my Mom was out in the yard stretching the curtains. In those days when you washed the curtains you stretched them while they dried. A kid that was "on the road" showed up and my Mom gave him something to eat. Her advice to him was to go home to your Mom.
When I was going into the 10th grade I was about 15 years old. I had a little problem with my father. I knew I was probably going to get beat on. I don't remember what I did. So I decided rather than go home and face him that this was the time I would go and ride a freight train. I talked it over with my friend that was the same age. He was actually a relative that lived a dozen blocks from us. We used to go camping and lots of places together. I told him I was leaving but I didn't tell anybody else. So I headed for the freight yards. I didn't know anything about catching trains or riding the rails. I had to find out in a hurry, which I did. I got into a box car and pretty soon we were off. I was off into a world that I hadn't experienced before and into the unknown. I don't remember now the early part, where we went.
I had to learn how to catch a car. At that time there were a lot of hobo's on the road because it was the tail end of the depression and a lot of people were using the rails as a way to get from one place to the other. At that time there were single men, a few single women, and families riding the rails. i was not alone. There was always somebody that could tell you what to do next. I learned how to get on a box car. You had to get on the train after they were moving because there were railroad detectives trying to keep the people off the trains. You had to get on while the train was going slow enough. There were different ways to climb on. There were ladders on the side. You had to run along and grab one of the rungs of the ladder and pull yourself up. Riding the rails can be quite dangerous. When you swing up on the ladder you could swing between the two cars and fall back on the track and under the wheels. The old hands knew how to do it. I didn't realize that and I didn't find out until some time later when I was travling that the railroad companies put out a schedule. There was a train schedule with the times and directions and tracks.
I traveled around fro a while. There were times when I hitchhiked as well. That could very interesting. That is how I started driving. I was riding with one fellow and he said, "here, take the wheel." You meet all different kinds of people.
Then there was a problem of your meals. All I had was a pocket full of change. The thing I found the most satisfying was a bowl of chili. I could go in a restaraunt and have a bowl of chili for a dime or 15 cents. I had to stretch out what money I had. Then I would have to try to find some kind of work. The work that was most available and obvious was in the restaraunts washing dishes. I did a lot of that. I had to learn how to use a dishwasher. It takes a certain amount of caution because the water was so hot you could burn yourself. There was one restaraunt that I went in and I worked but didn't have a place to sleep. The owner let me sleep in the basement. That is what I did. I tried to find cardboard and I had aquired one blanket and I slept on the floor laying on top of cardboard and newspaper. It was the cold time of the year so this was better than being outside.
There were times that I slept in the boxcar. If you took your shoes off and laid them next to you somebody might take your shoes. So I would put my shoes together and tie the laces around them and use them as a pillow. There was more than one night where I would go to the police station and ask if I could spend the night there. These were small stations in small towns, ususally. They would let me come in and sleep in the cell and in the morning they would let me leave. There were also flop houses where they had beds. It cost 50 cents for the night. This one place the room was separated with wood petitions and wire mesh. After I was laying there for a little while something was biting me. There was one light hanging on a wire from the ceiling so I turned it on and picked up the pillow and the bed bugs were crawling all over the pillow. So I got up, put my clothes back on and I went out to the office where they had rented me the bed and I told them they had bed bugs, give me my 50 cents back. No argument. He gave me my 50 cents.