From “American Life Histories,” stories of everyday Americans collected
during the Great Depression. These stories are now online. The following is from an interview conducted
January 31, 1939, by Anne Winn Stevens of the Federal Writers’ Project. Mr.
Garrett in the story, a WPA worker, is actually Carl T. Garrison (white). Mr.
Henson is actually H. R. Hensley (white), identified himself as a farmer. They lived at 72 Burton
Street, West Asheville, N. C.
Four Garrett children, the oldest a girl of 15, huddled at the door of the
principal's office in the public school. When asked why they had been absent
from school for five weeks, the children could give no intelligible answer. The
idea uppermost in their minds was that their mother had told them to ask for
free lunches. They were scantily clad for a November day. Their clothes were
clean, but they seemed to have on little underclothing and to possess neither
coats nor sweaters. Their shoes were full of holes. The group was obviously
under-nourished, thin, pasty of complexion, anemic. One of the teachers
describing them said, "They look just like poor little rats."
The principal reached for the telephone. He called the State Aid worker
assigned to the school. "Mrs. Holt, look up the Garrett children; you know
the address," he said. "Find out why they have been absent from
school for five weeks, and why they wish to be put on the free lunch list. They
are always asking for something."
A few minutes later the worker parked her car near a large, yellow house on
a sparsely settled street inhabited mostly by negroes.
After a few minutes, Mrs. Garrett came out and stood with her visitor on the
windy porch. She was a thin woman, about 33 years old, with a pasty complexion,
and projecting teeth. Her hair was much too yellow -- drug store gold. Although
the morning was raw and cold she wore a thin, sleeveless summer dress and no
wrap.
"Yes, I live here," she said, hugging herself to keep warm;
"me and my husband and our six children live in three rooms,
upstairs."
The Hensons, who are her parents, and their youngest daughter and orphaned
grandchildren occupy the lower floor.
She explained the children's absences. No, they had had measles long ago; it
was the children under school age who had it now. "My husband had been out
of work for nine weeks," she declared. "When we was asked to leave
the cabin whar we wuz livin;" pointing to a tiny, log house in a hollow
across the street, "we tuk the children and went to my brother's at Emma
looking for work." That was five weeks ago.
"No'm, we didn't find no work. But my husband and me tuk in washin'.
He'd go out and get the clothes, and help me do them. Then he got back on WPA
and we come back to Asheville." She explained that her husband had been on
the WPA for some time. The project on which he was working "run out,"
as she put it. So he had been suspended until work could be found for him elsewhere.
"He has always been a hard worker," she maintained. He had worked
in the mills. He had been a clerk in a grocery store at $12 a week. He had been
a truck driver for the city, and for various transfer companies. Before the
depression, he had made $20 a week.
"We lived real well then," she said. "But there wasn't as
many of us."
But for the past few years he had worked mainly as an unskilled laborer on
the WPA.
"He goes back to work tomorrow," she said. "After he gets his
first pay cheek, we can get along. But we haven't had anything in the house to
eat for a week now but two messes of flour and a peck of meal. The children has
nothin' for breakfast but a biscuit or a slice of corn bread. They come home
after school begging for food. But I can't give them but two meals a day.
That's why I want to get free lunches."
So the family was given commodities by the welfare department; beans, flour,
and dried milk. The school agreed to give them lunches, and a member of the
parent-teacher association offered to find clothes and shoes for them.
Several weeks later, Mrs. Garrett, head tied up in a white cloth, was found
trying to divert a fretful two-year-old. The room was clean, but rather bare,
with shabby linoleum on the floor. The bed was without sheets or pillow cases.
But the mattress was covered by an unbleached cover-slip. The blankets were
clean, but mostly cotton.
"That's my baby," she said, indicating the two-year-old. "He
shore has had a hard time." She enumerated the illnesses of his two short
years: diptheria, pneumonia, measles, and now an abscess in his ear. He had a
bad cold also, and a sore on his upper lip, which his mother wiped every now
and then with a not-too-clean cotton cloth. Like the other children, he had too
waxen a look.
"The doctor says as how he should have orange juice every day, and
tomatoes and onions mashed with potatoes, but I don't have no money to buy them
things for him. I ain't nothing to give him but cereal."
However, she
admitted someone was sending him milk every day. But she didn't know who.
She was still feeding the older children on biscuits, corn bread, and now
"white beans," but not bread and beans at the same meal. Christmas
had been a great help to the family. "Nine dollars a week for eight
people," she maintained nevertheless, "doesn't go far, after rent and
coal has been paid for."
But they had "gotten" a bag of coal from a dealer, whose trucks
her husband loaded on his way from work. Still, "It was mostly dust,"
she complained. "When it was poured into the stove it flew all over the
room, until we was all sneezing."
The Christmas basket from a civic organization had helped. But again she
said, "How long could five dollars worth of groceries last for eight
people?"
However, she had profited by various Christmas charities.
"I stood in line before Pender's [shoe?] store two or three hours
Christmas morning. You know he allus gives away shoes on Christmas. I got three
good pair for the children. And I got two of the boys into the dinner given by
the Y.M.C.A. While I was waiting for then I went by the doctor's office and
asked the nurse for a sample bottle of cod-liver oil for the baby. She give me
three bottles of it," she narrated.
It is easy to see where the Garrett children get their habit of always
asking for something. As far as charitable organizations are concerned, their
mother knows all the answers.
She enumerated her further needs. "You know," she said
plaintively, "I ain't got but one sheet, no pillow cases, and only one
towel, and I asked the Red Cross, and the welfare department both, for some. It
looks like someone might give me a few towels; they are so cheap!"
Finally she admitted that she was seven months advanced in pregnancy, and as
yet had no layette. "The Red Cross," she declared, "used to give
lovely ones, all put up in a nice basket. But," in an aggrieved tone,
"they told me as how they didn't have any more."
But Mrs. Garrett, who says she completed only the third grade in school, and
never learned "to figger," has found a neighbor who is quite
sympathetic. "Mrs. Garrett, my husband has a good steady job," said
the neighbor, "I guess I'm just plumb lucky; so I'll find you some of my
baby's things that he don't need, or has outgrowed."
However, there is a shoemaker in the neighborhood who is wondering:
"Where do you suppose Garrett got those six new shirts he sold me last
week?" Can it be that the Garretts are making money off charitable
organizations, or off sympathetic individuals?
When Mr. Garrett came in, he was asked about his WPA job, his wages, and his
situation in general.
"I used to be a foreman, but now I'm just doing common labor, getting a
little over $18 every pay period; whenever the weather is good enough to put in
full time. Weather like this - we'll lose some time this month. That ain't much
for eight people to live on, is it? A little over $9 a week. They used to give
us Government food, but they won't give us anything now. One fellow down there
is the cause of it all. When they get it in for you, there ain't nothing you
can do. Who'd you say you was with?"
"The Federal Writers' Project."
"Well, the WPA and the welfare department ought to be cleaned up. You
can't get a thing now. My wife is going to have another baby soon, and I can't
get any clothes for it, or anything. They won't do a thing. They've just got it
in for me, that's all. Why right over on the next street is a WPA foreman who
gets Government food every week - and clothes - and he only has four children.
They won't give me a thing. That boy there, now, has got a sore throat, and I
can't get a thing for him."
"Don't the children get medical attention from the city authorities, or
the county?"
"No, They won't do nothing for anybody that ain't on relief. I have to
just get whatever doctor I can."
"How is the house rented?"
"I rent the house for $15 a month, and the people down stairs pay $7.50
for their half."
"Do they pay regularly?"
"Yes; but they are going to move out next week, and I reckon we'll have
to move, too - then. The Wood Reality Company has got this house, and they're
awful strict."
"Couldn't you rent the downstairs part to someone else?"
"Naw."
But Mrs. Garrett, in the kitchen, at the same moment said, "Sure;
there's somebody by here almost every day wants to rent a place." Mr.
Garrett ignored this.
"They's only one bathroom in this house, and it's up here. I don't want
strangers running in and out of my bathroom. They ain't no locks on none of the
doors, either."
Indeed, there are neither locks nor knobs, but each door has a string by
which it is pulled open, or shut. However, the radio, which was turned off to
facilitate the conversation is the very latest in design, and quite new. It
came from one of the large mail-order houses that now maintain retail stores in
principal cities, and it has the automatic features characteristic of the modern
sets. The furniture, too, is of recent design, and not very old, but there is
not much of it. Chairs are scarce, and there is no rug on the floor.
"Is your furniture paid for?"
"No, it ain't. They'll be taking that back, next."
"What will you do then?"
"Well, I don't know. Maybe I can get some more, somewhere."
"On credit?"
"Sure. I can't pay for no furniture."
"Do you buy other things on credit, too - that radio, for
example?"
"Of course, I had to make a down payment on that, same as furniture,
but you can't hardly get no credit anywhere else."
It was apparent from further conversation that he must have sought credit
everywhere, practically, and, failing to obtain credit, asked for gifts,
although he would not acknowledge this. All efforts to draw him out further
were in vain. He would not admit receiving gifts, money, or help from private
individuals or organizations. He always returned to the complaint that the
public agencies seemed to have it in for him, would not give him anything,
would not help him; while others, already more fortunate, were getting free
food, clothes, medicine, etc. He said it was not easy, on his wages, to keep
the electric power turned on, but they had oil lamps to use whenever the power
was off. However, he missed the radio during those times.
On the first floor of the same house live the Hensons, Mrs. Garrett's
parents. Mr. Henson, who has lived in town for the last ten years, was formerly
a farmer. He used to own his own farm. He is now 66 years old, and is unable to
work because of a very serious heart trouble. He maintains that any man can
make a living on a farm and work only one-eighth of his time. His own
experience of farming was to him altogether satisfactory. He planted a
diversified crop. Kept cows, chickens, hogs. He had plenty to eat for his
family, and the surplus clothed them. Besides, when work on the farm was slack
he did carpentering. It was illness he declares that had put him in need. His
wife has been an invalid for fifteen years, and has had numerous operations.
The Henson apartment is neatly kept. The living room has a bright, red and
tan linoleum on the floor. The white and red flowered curtains are crisp and
clean. The walls are filled with pictures of the family, hung just under the
ceiling, which perhaps is just as well, where they form a sort of frieze. The
bedroom is cheerful, if rather bare. The two faded-green iron beds are covered
with red and white counterpanes. There are no rugs. The room is heated with a
small stove. Mrs. Henson, the invalid, is a pleasant looking brown-eyed,
brown-haired woman of 56. Her expression is patient, and resigned. Her voice is
soft. Dressed in a red and white wrapper, she was seated on the side of the
bed.
"I was married at 16," she said. "It was too young. I've been
married to Henson 40 years. He was the first and only boy I ever went
with." Mrs. Henson attributed her invalidism to much child bearing. She
has had nine children. Besides successive operations, she has developed sinus
trouble, colitis, and gall stones.
"If I was just well enough, I could make a good living sewing,"
she says.
"All I ever had," said Henson, "has gone to support doctors,
hospitals, and druggists."
On first coming to town, Mr. Henson supported his family by carpenter work
and brick laying, until his heart trouble became so serious he had to stop
working. He has had, also, a sinus operation. However, he still does a little
farming. A friend down the river lends him a few acres of land, where he raises
some corn, potatoes, and vegetables.
The Henson's 18-year-old daughter, Grace, keeps house for them. They have
with them two orphan grandchildren. The county allows then $20 a month for
these children's support. Out of that, they pay $7.50 a month for rent, and $12
a month for coal.
"I guess," says Mr. Henson, "We'll just have to get along
without eating.”
Mr. Henson has his own ideas of how the Government should be run.
"If the Government would only put a lot of these people on relief back
on the land," he says, "and have them raise food for themselves and
for others not able to work, they might get somewhere. Of course, the
Government would have to carry them at first. But once they got a start, they
could support themselves."
"We are just paupers, I guess," summed up Mr. Henson; "just
poor, white trash."
"Poor," said his wife, "but not trash!"
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