Tennessee Mountain Stories

Wintertime Inconveniences

One of our readers commented last week that she agreed with me that she wouldn’t trade modern medical care for the good ‘ole days, and she really liked indoor plumbing too.  Diana, I completely agree, and your thought along with this week’s weather got me to thinking…

Photo courtesy of GHGraham.com

Photo courtesy of GHGraham.com

We got a little snow and ice this week and as the beautiful winter-scape developed, I kept one eye out the window and the other on a light bulb.  Tree limbs weighted by ice, slick roads and unskilled drivers all spell power outages for us.  We think we are prepared with bottled water, a stack of wood and extra food in the house.  Still, when things actually go dark, I can’t help but feel a little lost; it seems like everything that I need or want to do requires electricity. 

So at a time when we might be temporarily without some of our modern conveniences, let’s ask ourselves which one do you value most?  If you could only have one modern convenience, which one would it be?

There are a bunch of teenagers as well as several simply-agers that are running around these days with a cell phone permanently attached to their palm. Those folks might say they simply couldn’t live without that connection to the digital world.  Now, those of us who never heard of a cell phone for a good portion of our lives probably wouldn’t choose that first.  However, I must confess, I do feel a little safer on the road knowing I can call for help, I enjoy being able to reach out to friends and family whenever I think of something rather than waiting till I’m near a landline, and I won’t even tell you all the junk I have stored digitally that I truly enjoy carrying with me from to-do lists to photos.

Most of my generation would probably say they really need their television.  To those, I’d like to gently remind you of the day not too long ago when you only got three channels and maybe one of those was pretty fuzzy.  Pretty soon you’d seen all the shows so only the news was really new and most of that was bad.  Given those factors, do you really think the TV would be the one thing you would choose?  Not me.

I’m really spoiled by my car and frankly it would be hard to give up that level of freedom.  We are used to running out for a gallon of milk or to pop in on a friend; we can be at church or any appointment in just a few minutes and can make a trip to town and back and have plenty of day left to do something else.  But do you know that there are lots of places, even in the US, that don’t have two cars per household and they manage just fine?  Of course, it’s harder in the country because we can’t catch a bus to go to the mall or walk to the corner for a few groceries.  Back in the day, no one ever expected to go to town every week and buy their groceries.  However, everyone had a cow so there was always fresh milk and they prepared all summer to have food through the cold winter months.

And then there is electricity.  Okay, lights are good.  I like my computer – after all, that’s where I write my little stories and I guess I can’t really imagine doing it all on paper.  Heat is fine and it’s nice not to have to mind the fire sometimes.  The fridge is the kicker for me with electricity, think about summertime and frozen meat.  Do any of you remember salt-cured pork?  I know some folks consider it a delicacy but I never did acquire a taste for that stuff.

When I turned on my faucet this morning to prepare my morning coffee, I found it dry and right then and there I realized indoor plumbing would be the single modern convenience that I would choose if I could have only one.  Now, I’ve visited an outdoor privy just a few times in my life and that would have convinced me in one degree temps this morning even before the dry faucet.  I would love indoor plumbing in the summertime when the creek would be surrounded by flying bugs hounding efforts to do laundry.  From bathing to canning, opening that faucet with a plentiful, ready supply of fresh clean water is a blessing I can hardly even count.  Thankfully, the hiccup in my plumbing this morning was a simply mechanical issue at the pump and lasted only till my husband could drag himself down to the well house and then I was once again praising The Lord for running water.

It may be hard to think objectively about these conveniences, especially if you are without any one of them right now.  But I would love to hear from ya’ll which one convenience you would choose if you could only have one.

photo courtesy of ghgraham.com

photo courtesy of ghgraham.com

A Toothache - Today and Yesterday

I had a toothache a couple of weeks ago - it was my first one ever and I dearly hope it will be the last.  I was miserable.  Yes, I am a total baby and I do not believe in pain.  But the whole experience got me to thinking...

 

I write historical fiction and I'm always researching and listening to stories about yesteryear and it's really easy to think those were the "good 'ole days".  In lots of ways they were, but probably not when you had a toothache.


It took me a few days to realize that it was a tooth ache - I first went to my doctor and said, "I think I have an ear infection".  So she pulled the little otoscope off the wall and peered into my ears and declared them clear.  Now, that’s probably a step even a doctor one hundred years ago would have taken since that instrument is very old indeed (about six hundred fifty years old). 


The doctor found no ear infection but she prescribed an antibiotic thinking perhaps it was a sinus issue.  This is probably the first benefit of our modern medicine I enjoyed in this bout – antibiotics.  While scientists were aware of infections and the effects of antibiotics on them by the early 1800’s, the drugs were not commercially available until the late 1930’s.  Remember that during the Civil War, more men died from disease and infections than from actual war injuries; one article I read estimated eighty-three percent of the deaths were from disease and infection.  Even wounds that soldiers survived sometimes plagued them for years after the war because of deep infections left behind by unwitting doctors performing emergency surgery in field hospitals. 


Eventually, when I could no longer bear to bite down, I began to wonder, "Should I go to the dentist?"  My husband was convinced he would pull the tooth while I was sure that modern dentistry extracts a tooth only as a last resort.  However, that was not always the case.  Barbers originally served a dual role and historically, that would have been my destination with my aching tooth and he would almost certainly have pulled the tooth.  Of course, while the local barber (or blacksmith in some instances) was the accepted expert of teeth, he probably had no formal training.  The first school of dentistry opened in 1828 and great leaps were made in dental science in the last half of the nineteenth century and early twentieth century.  Still I wonder how much of that applied to rural communities. 


Even as late as the 1930’s and 1940’s, folks on the mountain lacked both dental care and education.  Look around and ask yourself how many people you know from the World War II generation who died with their own teeth – not many!  Not only were children never reminded to brush their teeth, many of them didn’t even own a toothbrush.  Dental checkups were unheard of and even when water began to be fluoridated in the late 1940’s, rural farms with well water would never benefit from the movement.  Living miles from town and walking wherever they went, it would be hard enough to see a dentist.   But even if you made the trip, money was so scarce that food was often limited to what could be produced on your own farm – that leaves little for a luxury like dental care.  These facts make me feel pretty bad about complaining over my one toothache!  I’ve had a lifetime of routine dental care – I can’t imagine the toothaches many of those families endured. 


You all know that I long for the day when family was the center of everything, when a slower pace of life allowed us to know and enjoy each other.  I relish the memories retold through local legends of neighbors and friends.  But one thing I would not want to trade with the past is modern medical care, a well-trained dentist and pain management!  What do you think?


Facts about Hobos

Isn’t it always amazing how once a term or subject is on your mind, how many times you hear or see it referenced?  Well, that’s what happened to me over the last week in regards to Hobos.  After writing last week’s short story, it seemed as though I couldn’t get away from hobo, therefore, we’ll talk about them again today.

Did it ever occur to you that hobos are unique to the railroads?  After all, there were no hobos on stagecoaches and we don’t see them on airplanes, buses or long-haul trucks.  Therefore, this character of American History could not exist until maybe the late nineteenth century.  In fact, Wikipedia cites the etymology of the very word as originating around 1890 in California.

I suppose if someone introduced himself today me as a hobo, with Roger Miller’s “King of the Road” echoing in the back of my mind, I might take a step back and tuck my purse a little tighter under my arm.  After all, that ballad of the hobo identified him as knowing “every lock that ain’t locked when no one’s around” and the four-bit room he bought himself doesn’t mention a bath, does it?  But the popular image of a vagabond or tramp is distinctly different that the real meaning of a hobo for hobos are traveling to find work.  And that is one of the things that came to my attention after writing last week’s short story.   The Hobo Minstrel, writing on Hobo.com, explains:

                              A Hobo is a person that travels to work. 
                              A Tramp is a person that travels and won’t work.
                              A Bum is a person that will neither travel [n]or work.

While it was unknown during most of his life, in his last days one of my great-uncles told of hoboing in his youth for the sole purpose of finding work. Growing up on the mountain, when he came of age there was simply no work to be found and coming from a family with very little means he struck out in search of gainful employment.  Born in 1911, Uncle T (as we always knew him) would have been looking for work in the very early days of The Depression. Unfortunately, there seems to be no record of where he traveled or how long he spent on the rails.  But he came home to the mountain and there married and started his family so apparently he found nothing to keep him elsewhere.

The lack of stories passed on seems to be a common thread.  Ruby Casteel, whose hobo days inspired last week’s story, never talked about his past and what little history they know was passed to his children from their mother.  However, the values he sought to instill in them were surely formed in those early years of neglect and I can’t help but wonder if he found a sense of brotherhood among men he met in his travels.  Uncle T said there were lots of men hopping trains to get to whatever town was rumored to have work available.  Another great uncle, Coy Key, told of trying to head out on the train.  However, he and the cousin he traveled with (he had scads of cousins and I’m afraid I’ve forgotten which one tagged along on this adventure) were quickly put off the train in Harriman by the bull.

Migrant workers still don’t get a good reputation among the rooted members of society – that prejudice no doubt has little more merit than any other prejudice.  I knew a lady who was raised in Wilder in the 1920’s and never knew her father; she lived with the rumors that he was a hobo, even one of a minority race.  Unfortunately that rather sounds like the kind of taunting that unkind school children come up with without a shred of evidence.  Yet the story survived and with no father to put up against such rumors, they seemed to take root in her heart, after all I heard about them fifty or sixty years later.  I guess we could have a huge discussion or even debate on the political ramifications of migrants and it’s always hard to look through antique lenses when we study history.  But I think it’s important to remember the situation that many honest and hard-working men faced in the 1930’s.  Remember that cities had men lined up for soup, American people were actually starving – that’s very different than not being able to afford dinner out on the town which is the extent of poverty many of us have faced.  Moreover, Americans in general were much, much less mobile than we are today.  There is a story of an entire family that passed through the area after walking all the way from Ohio.  They were headed to Florida where they had family and their situation was so dire up north that they were headed south by the only means available to them.  I don’t suppose a whole family can very successfully hobo from Ohio to Florida.

handwritten note on this photo dates it 1933

handwritten note on this photo dates it 1933

It is both sad and a little fascinating to think of these men resorting to this lonesome and dangerous mode of transport and I guess I am impressed by those who opt to be hobos rather than tramps or bums, as The Hobo Minstrel defines them.

A Hobo's Life

The story a couple of weeks ago about Giveaway Babies got a few very interesting comments.  One of them inspired me to write the following short story.

 

Rube could both hear and feel the rattle of the freight car as the train gained speed with each turn of the wheel.  He panted a little with the exertion of reaching the car and swinging himself onboard.  It hadn’t taken many rides to learn to quickly scoot into a corner that was protected from the cold wind.

The hum of steel wheels against the hardened rails sang a lullaby and his chin soon slumped onto his chest.  The sleep was light and images of home danced before him.  He dreamed of the first train he caught; he dreamed of the first train he heard.

“Rube, you’re gonna have to git them cows milked if we hope to git the corn chopped out today.” 

Rube acknowledged the kind farmer with only a grunt as he rhythmically pulled milk from the old cow’s udder, his head resting on her warm side.  The sun would quickly heat the corn field to misery but in the chill of the morning the boy appreciated his cozy resting spot. 

The farm was quiet in the mornings and that’s when Rube most enjoyed it.  He went to the barn before good daylight and even the cows seemed reluctant to disturb the peace.  In the silence, broken only by the metallic ring of milk against buckets, erupted a distant horn.  Rube froze.  It took only a moment to understand the sound and to remember that the tracks were just over the big hill; still he had somehow never noticed the sound, never realized the mournful, seductive nature of it.   In that moment, he could think of nothing but the train – the big locomotive and the steam he knew would be bellowing from the smoke stack, the innumerable cars following behind carrying people far away from Athens even out of Tennessee.

Rube shook his head, trying to regain control of his thoughts.  You’ll never see the inside of a train car and you know you’re lucky to have this place.

He was lucky, he would never argue that point.  A child without a father was nothing; he could hardly expect decent folk to speak to him and yet this man had taken him in and treated him nearly as well as his own sons.  He even bought him books and sent him to school in the winter months.  Much as he disliked sitting in still in the schoolroom, Rube realized it was a gift he that would serve him his whole life.  Yes, it was a lucky day for Rube when the farmer took notice of him as he stripped bark at the sawmill.

And yet the whistle lingered in his memory.  As he slowly made his way to the corn field with hoe in hand, he began to imagine where the train was going.  Was that coal smoke he smelled?  Was the train somehow reaching out to him?

He thought of Grandma.  He still imagined she would come for him one day, even though she left for the Cherokee reservation almost three years ago.  She’d always talked about her people and he wanted to believe they would love him for the blood he shared with them, no matter who his father was or even if he didn’t really know who his father was.  But somehow he’d never been able to fully believe it since both Mother and now Grandma had not wanted him, not really.  Maybe Grandpa had wanted him but the logging accident took him and now there was no one that wanted him, no one left to love him.

What did I do?  He asked himself that question every day.  How, he wondered, could Mr. Cox – despite his mother’s marriage to the man he’d never been allowed to call him anything but Mister – how could he have thought Rube was going to burn down the house when he was only stomping out an ember that popped from the fireplace?  It happened all the time; there were lots of little black spots around the stone that attested the fact.  What was different that time?  As Mother dragged him by the arm to her parent’s little house she’d promised that Mr. Cox would feel better soon and surely he would ask Rube to return.  But he didn’t feel better.  Now he and Mother had five children of their own and Rube supposed none of them ever let embers pop from the fire.

He woke with a jerk, the ligaments in his neck screaming – or was that the whistle again?  It took a minute to realize where he was, to realize he was no longer on the farm and the ache in his back was from the hard floor of the freight car and not hours bent over a hoe.  The dreams haunted him, as the unanswered questions always did.

Rube, I reckon you’re grown now so thar’s not a reason in the world to be worryin’ ‘bout all that stuff. 

He shifted the small pack, felt a bit of straw in the corner and tried to burrow as deeply into it as possible.  Even though his eyes were heavy, he tried not to sleep; sleep just brought more questions and he could never find the answers.

He passed this night like so many others – how many nights had he slept on the rails?  He shook his head, trying to focus on this new quandary. 

Must be two years now, he reasoned.  He slid the door open a crack and positioned himself to watch the rising sun even as the train seemed to run from it on the westbound track.  He’d ridden this line all the way to California, but then he found himself back in Tennessee.  In fact, every train seemed to eventually bring him back to Tennessee.  Now the Eastern horizon seemed to call him in a new way – it was reminiscent of that first sound of the train’s whistle he’d dreamed of again last night.

Suddenly Rube felt tired.  He realized it wasn’t just the restless nights, never sleeping soundly for fear the railroad bull would find him and use his ever-present club and toss him from the car at some remote whistle-stop.  No, this fatigue was deeper, much deeper.

Maybe it’s time to go home.  It occurred to Rube what a strange thought that was for there was no home to return to, no loved ones waiting with open arms, no one missing him and watching for his return.  Still, there was a distinct call from the mountains, an unmistakable need to be on solid ground and to begin to build something permanent, something better than what he had before.



Give Away Babies

Tales of a baby left on the doorstep in a basket have tormented more than one younger brother or sister and, unfortunately, we still occasionally hear the heartbreaking news-story of a baby being left in some unlikely and unprotected places.  Just last week I read a story about a tiny baby found in a dumpster somewhere in Tennessee.  In today’s world, there seems to be no reason whatsoever to abandon a child – maybe there never has been a good reason to do it.  But it has always happened.

Life has been tough everywhere at one time or another.  Today, when prices soar and jobs are hard to find, we have a plethora of social relief programs and I would certainly hope we have churches with hearts and coffers sufficient to help anyone in need.  However, in the not too distant past, food was short and jobs nonexistent on the mountain; healthcare was scarce and too many youngsters were orphaned.  Even those with two living parents sometimes found their family unable to sustain them.  In those cases, children were often simply given away.

I have a huge respect for any woman who is able to hand over a baby that she would be unable to properly care for and put him in the hands of a family that will love, protect and nurture him.  While we know that lots of details are lost as the years roll by, it seems that not every situation included those careful and tear-filled decisions for the welfare of the baby. 

There are lots of these stories that vary from grandparents raising entire families to de facto indenturing agreements where children were given to work for their room and board.  Today I want to share one of these stories.

This story is about a young child, we’ll call her Doris, who was given to her maternal grandparents when she was just six months old.  She would spend her whole life wondering why.

There seem to be a number of logical reasons for giving away one or more of your children.  Single parenthood is hard enough in the twenty-first century but at the beginning of the twentieth century it was nearly impossible.  Therefore, illegitimate children were very often given away.   However, Doris’ parents were married.

Many times a family simply had too many children to care for.  A small hillside farm, tilled with mules, could only sustain so many people.  As a family grew, a father was hard pressed to bring home food sufficient to feed them all.  This seems to be the reason for a lot of the give-away babies especially when older children were turned out of the home in their early teen years.  They were old enough to lend a hand on a larger farm or maybe for a doctor or storekeeper who had an extra income besides the subsistence farming.  So the children were given into another’s care to not only feed that child but to allow extra for those still at home.  However, Doris was the oldest child in her family, and she was given away when she was just six months old.

Parents who were in poor health could not provide for children, and in the absence of social programs to help them, they often had to give up their children.  However, Doris’ parents went on to raise six children and the second child was born just eleven months after Doris. 

That really exhausts my imagination for why you would give up your child.  One fact of Doris’ little life that doesn’t seem to fall into any of those categories was her tiny size.  Doris was so small when she was born that we’re told her mother would carry her in an apron pocket and she used a turkey quill to feed her.  Since the next baby came just five months after Doris’ mother gave her away, I suppose it’s possible that her mother feared she could not care for such this special-needs baby when she had another newborn to care for as well. 

Doris grew and thrived with her grandparents.  When she was sixteen years old, another of Grandma Black’s children passed away just one year after his wife died, leaving eight orphaned children; Grandma Black raised seven of them with Doris’ help.  Doris and her grandparents took on this large family in order to keep the siblings together, otherwise they would have been sent to seven different homes.  There were also three more grandchildren left with the Blacks.  That household, which should have been an empty nest enjoying the golden years, raised eleven children and you can just imagine how poor they were.  As adults, the children would remember their grandparents knitting throughout the winter in hopes that each child would have just two pair of socks.

Doris’ birth parents lived just about five miles away so Doris knew her siblings.  When she once saw one of her sisters wearing a cheap necklace at church she was very hurt for she had no such luxuries; the orphaned or given-away child had only the necessities of life.  Many years later that sister taunted Doris, stating that she’d had a better upbringing than Doris – Doris responded by expelling her from her home and never really talking to her again.

Doris spent her whole life wondering why she was given away.  She asked grandparents, aunts and uncles and was always told, “Don’t worry about that”.  I can certainly imagine not wanting to trouble a child with the kind of adult problems that might lead to that kind of difficult decision, but surely there was a point at which the grown-up Doris could have understood the explanation.  Doris was born in 1892 so the answers to all of our questions are surely long since dead; yet the mystery remains. 

Doris married and raised five daughters of her own but her whole life would be characterized by distrust, even of her closest loved ones.  She unconsciously always wanted proof that they loved her and would try to pit them against each other in hopes they would offer her that proof.  As I said in the beginning, there are many stories of give-away children but Doris’ seems the saddest because she could never understand the ‘why’ of the whole thing despite growing up in close proximity to her parents and siblings.

Do you have family members who were given away?  I’d love to hear their story – just click on “comments” below.