Primary tabs

B., Maria, June 1, 1976, tape 1, side 2

WEBVTT

00:00:02.000 --> 00:00:07.000
Peter Gottlieb:  Did-- Did you, did you know her very well? Or did she also
die when you were--

00:00:07.000 --> 00:00:13.000
Maria B.:  Oh yeah, my grandma. She lived with us after grand--,
Grandfath-- my grandfather died. She broke her heart [??], too, so she came
to live with us.

00:00:13.000 --> 00:00:15.000
Gottlieb:  Was this your mother's parents or your father's?

00:00:15.000 --> 00:00:17.000
Maria B.:  My mother's parents.

00:00:17.000 --> 00:00:23.000
Gottlieb:  Did she ever talk to you at all about her life or say anything
about slavery to you? Tell the children.

00:00:23.000 --> 00:01:08.000
Maria B.:  Yes, see she, um, I know she was kind of forcing [??] her and
her with her master. He was good and so was the mistress. And so she she
grew up and he, uh, he freed them all. He-- I don't think he gave anything,
but he freed them. But she would say she, she said a lot of her aunts had a
tough time, but she didn't. So she said a lot of time. She, she-- they
raised her from a little girl up. Now real small about five years old
because she was raised with their children. And they would read the
stories. And she said sometimes she would cry, or be lonesome for her
mother and she would cry and the master wanted to whip her and the mistress
said no don't whip her, maybe she's sick. But she's say, she wasn't sick.
She just be lonesome and just cry for [??]. And she never had anything bad
to say about her.

00:01:08.000 --> 00:01:12.000
Gottlieb:  Uh, was it after she was freed that she walked over the
mountains?

00:01:12.000 --> 00:01:38.000
Maria B.:  That's right. When she was free, she wanted to go. I don't know
what she went over there for, but she said her feet cracked. It was in
November. It started getting cold and she had on shoes when she left. But
they wore out, you know, walking across the mountain. I don't know if you
know anything about Virginia mountains, but that was the Blue Ridge
mountainsshe walked across. Gottlieb: I-- Go ahead I'm sorry. Maria B.: And
she got over there and somebody gave her a job and she worked. So she
that's why she lived there so long

00:01:38.000 --> 00:01:42.000
Gottlieb:  Um, what was her name?

00:01:42.000 --> 00:01:46.000
Maria B.:  Johnson. Anne Johnson.

00:01:46.000 --> 00:01:50.000
Gottlieb:  And then so that would have been your mother's maiden name?

00:01:50.000 --> 00:01:54.000
Maria B.:  Uh, yeah. My mother's maiden name was Johnson, too. That's
right.

00:01:54.000 --> 00:02:01.000
Gottlieb:  And, and your father's name was Maria B.: Mickey. Gottlieb: What
kind of work did your father do?

00:02:01.000 --> 00:03:21.000
Maria B.:  He worked for a stove foundry down there. It was a low stove
foundry. They mostly took most all of them down now, and he worked for
that-- their father. And the father gave him a lifetime home because this
house was supposed to have been haunted. Nobody could stay there. And he
said he could stay there. He's staying in the county. He'd been working--
you know, back in those days, people say they saw ghosts and he said
everybody was moving in the house, was mostly White, was before him, was
White. They grow the-- these standards for the hall, the stoves. And after
he worked out something, after they found out that he, he stayed there all
night because man gave him a lifetime home and he drove the truck for
years. And then when the old man died, the young man carried his vision.
And of course, when the people died and the cousins nieces come in it was a
little different. But he-- but my mother had to pay rent after that. But so
I guess for about 20 years he lived there rent free and we we be in the
house but my grandmother said she would see things but we had never-- we
had steps cracked but that's all. So the house was tore down there.
Gottlieb: Uh huh. Maria B.: I didn't even have a picture of it. [audio
cuts] It was an all White neighborhood. Laced up.

00:03:21.000 --> 00:03:25.000
Gottlieb:  Was this in a town or out in the country? Maria B.: It was a
town.

00:03:25.000 --> 00:03:36.000
Maria B.:  And we lived back-- the Whites that was down on our Street. Next
street was the main street where the rich people lived and we lived in a
house back by itself.

00:03:36.000 --> 00:03:45.000
Gottlieb:  And you said you saw your father work for a stove foundry. Maria
B.: That's right. Gottlieb: Do you, do you know exactly what type of work
he did there or was he driving?

00:03:45.000 --> 00:04:02.000
Maria B.:  He was night watch and then he would drive the horse. That's all
he would do. Sometimes he'd be night watch, watching the boys and things.
They'd go around through the fan and punch the keys to see if anybody would
be in there or anything.

00:04:02.000 --> 00:04:05.000
Gottlieb:  Did your mother have a job?

00:04:05.000 --> 00:04:15.000
Maria B.:  Well, when she-- before she got married, she worked at it. But
after she got married, she just, you know, would bake cakes for people and
wash and iron that's all she did.

00:04:15.000 --> 00:04:16.000
Gottlieb:  She would take it into the home.

00:04:16.000 --> 00:04:20.000
Maria B.:  That's right.

00:04:20.000 --> 00:04:21.000
Gottlieb:  What was the name of the town?

00:04:21.000 --> 00:04:42.000
Maria B.:  Waynesboro, Virginia. About 12 miles on this side of Stanton.
And I think it was like-- the next big place with Charlottesville. I think
it was 29 miles, Charlottesville and in Richmond. That big place.

00:04:42.000 --> 00:04:44.000
Gottlieb:  Uh, can you tell me when you were born?

00:04:44.000 --> 00:04:48.000
Maria B.:  On February 11th, 1908.

00:04:48.000 --> 00:04:53.000
Gottlieb:  Uh, how many brothers and sisters did you have?

00:04:53.000 --> 00:05:10.000
Maria B.:  Uh, in all there was 13 of us. There were nine girls. And. And,
uh. Five boys, I think. Yeah, five boys. I think that's the way it'd go. I
don't know I'd forgotten. There was fifteen of us.

00:05:10.000 --> 00:05:11.000
Gottlieb:  Were you the oldest or the second oldest.

00:05:11.000 --> 00:05:14.000
Maria B.:  The second oldest.

00:05:14.000 --> 00:05:19.000
Gottlieb:  Did anybody else live with you and your parents when you were
growing up? Any relatives?

00:05:19.000 --> 00:05:24.000
Maria B.:  Not until my grandmother was coming and I was pretty big then.

00:05:24.000 --> 00:05:30.000
Gottlieb:  Did any of your brothers or sisters or your parents ever move
north?

00:05:30.000 --> 00:05:51.000
Maria B.:  Oh, all of them's away. Now some is in New York. One brother is
up here with me. I mean, not with me. But he lives over in Wilkinsburg. One
lives in Philadelphia. I have two sisters-- three sisters and one brother
in New Rochelle. [??] and two of em. Two sisters there.

00:05:51.000 --> 00:05:55.000
Gottlieb:  Were you the first one to move or did you follow anybody else
up?

00:05:55.000 --> 00:06:02.000
Maria B.:  No, I was the first one to move. I moved on account of me
getting mad. I got mad.

00:06:02.000 --> 00:06:15.000
Gottlieb:  Um, I'd like to come back and ask you a little bit later some of
the circumstances about why you left Virginia, but could you tell me how
much schooling you were able to get in Virginia?

00:06:15.000 --> 00:06:47.000
Maria B.:  Well, I could have gone-- I could have finished high school but
I didn't. My mother had locked jaw and I would stay home with her a lot,
but I kept my grades up. But I only went to the ninth grade and the reason
I didn't go to Standard [??]. There was a hole that bad and they could
never fill it up. And what in heck, I think, a geologist, whatever you call
it, come all over the world to find out why that hole was, we couldn't find
out. Well, they couldn't see that hole and put the the Colored-- the Black
high school. And I was always scared to go. So I didn't go.

00:06:47.000 --> 00:06:48.000
Gottlieb:  There was a hole in the ground.

00:06:48.000 --> 00:07:18.000
Maria B.:  That's right. A hole in the ground. And that school-- I left
there in 1930 and that school was built about 4 or 5 years before I left
there. And maybe now, maybe more than that, because I was I would have went
to high school. That's why I didn't go. And that that school is still
staying there. But I thought maybe the dirt might cave in, you know, that
school might go and that's why I didn't go. But I did take a sewing course.
There were some kind of clerical course at home.

00:07:18.000 --> 00:07:21.000
Gottlieb:  So you went through nine grades at a different school.

00:07:21.000 --> 00:07:32.000
Maria B.:  No, same school, then in my home. But I didn't I didn't go to
high school because I was scared.  I couldn't stay. I'd be nervous thinking
that, you know, school was going to cave in.

00:07:32.000 --> 00:07:39.000
Gottlieb:  So when you were if you had gone on, you would have had to go to
this other school. Maria B.: That's right. Gottlieb: But it wasn't the same
one you had been going to.

00:07:39.000 --> 00:07:56.000
Maria B.:  No, because they didn't have a-- they got a high school there in
that, but they didn't have one when I was growing up. They just had the
grade school. Not for Colored people. They had one for the White people.
You know, they was different. They went to different segregated schools,
you know? Gottlieb: Yeah.

00:07:56.000 --> 00:08:04.000
Gottlieb:  Would-- did you use to go to school for the, for just as long
and at the same period of time of the year that children go to school now.

00:08:04.000 --> 00:08:13.000
Maria B.:  No we had six months for a while when I was gone and I think we
still had six months when I quit. But after-- later on, my sister and
brother went to a nine month school.

00:08:13.000 --> 00:08:16.000
Gottlieb:  Do you remember what months of the year those six were.

00:08:16.000 --> 00:08:26.000
Maria B.:  Started and set in October and I imagine ended up in must have
been March or April, something like. Mm.

00:08:26.000 --> 00:08:32.000
Gottlieb:  Did your, uh. Did any of your brothers or sisters, were they
able to finish high school?

00:08:32.000 --> 00:08:44.000
Maria B.:  One sister finished, and she lives in New York. She passed it.
The rest of them could have they just didn't want to. There wasn't no
reason they just didn't stay in school.

00:08:44.000 --> 00:08:55.000
Gottlieb:  Can you tell me what kind of, uh, work you did as a child,
either helping your parents or, uh, with jobs that you had to earn money?

00:08:55.000 --> 00:09:38.000
Maria B.:  Well, I used to wash-- wash cars by hand. There wasn't no-- it
wasn't-- now what do you call those things. No car washes then. I did
washing and I guess I didn't do it too good. But 8 or 9 years old, I used
to wash cars with people that worked in the office. The office was right--
was close to my house is, just in our back yard, the office where the
people work. And they would get me to wash the cars and I would wash them
for a quarter. That's the first work I ever did was to help my parents. In
the garden and different things. I'd be doing something all the time, some
kind of a hang work or something. I sewed my own things. TI could be still
happy doing some old thing. I used to go and pick berries and can them.

00:09:38.000 --> 00:09:42.000
Gottlieb:  What was the first job that you had once you were finished with
school?

00:09:42.000 --> 00:09:48.000
Maria B.:  I went to work for a lady I stayed with for six years, and I
left there and came up here and got married.

00:09:48.000 --> 00:09:52.000
Gottlieb:  So that was the, being a domestic.

00:09:52.000 --> 00:09:54.000
Maria B.:  That's right. She had two children.

00:09:54.000 --> 00:09:56.000
Gottlieb:  She lived in the. Did she live in Waynesboro?

00:09:56.000 --> 00:10:30.000
Maria B.:  That's right. And they've been busy with her daughters. Married
somebody work here at the glass factory. And I was supposed to get in
contact with her, and I lost the address, and I never did. I don't know
where she is now. But I stayed with her. I stayed with the-- I was there
before their daughter was born. She's six years older now. I didn't have no
where I go to work. I was only-- we were the only kind of Colored families
that was in there. In that vicinity. And I was raised-- we was raised up,
you know, with White people. We all play together, but we just didn't go to
school together.

00:10:30.000 --> 00:10:41.000
Gottlieb:  Mhm. What what would you do with the money that, that you would
earn when you were-- during the time you were still living at home?

00:10:41.000 --> 00:10:53.000
Maria B.:  Well, I always brought some. My mother wouldn't let me give her
my-- I bought some for the house to spend you know, I never did throw away
money.

00:10:53.000 --> 00:10:55.000
Gottlieb:  Your parents wouldn't ask you to turn it over to them?

00:10:55.000 --> 00:10:59.000
Maria B.:  No, they never, they never did. They said use it for yourself.
But I'd always buy something.

00:10:59.000 --> 00:11:05.000
Gottlieb:  Did any of your brothers ever, uh, help support your parents
with their jobs?

00:11:05.000 --> 00:11:14.000
Maria B.:  Well, they weren't too hot, but they did something now and then
cause they was-- doing something.

00:11:14.000 --> 00:11:21.000
Gottlieb:  What can you tell me a little bit about how you came up to
Pennsylvania? You said it was connected with your marriage.

00:11:21.000 --> 00:11:53.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, well, I came up to visit. I had a nervous breakdown. I
just work, work, work all the time. And he laid out work for me and he
would tell me not to be working so much. She had took in boarders to help
her husband work in the bank, to help her out and things. And so I was just
keep cleaning and carrying on and taking care of children. And she would
tell me about-- I got, I got real nervous and Doc said I had to go away. So
I came up here with my cousin and that's how I got married. Then I really
got nervous after that. I really. But I got over it.

00:11:53.000 --> 00:11:57.000
Gottlieb:  Uh huh. Uh, did your cousin know somebody up here?

00:11:57.000 --> 00:12:13.000
Maria B.:  She came up here, I think, on account of her husband. He was a
railroad man. I think he was up here more than he was anywhere else. And
after she moved, he was still on the road. But I think this was the closest
place to where he would travel at or somewhere I know.

00:12:13.000 --> 00:12:15.000
Gottlieb:  And so she was coming up to see him?

00:12:15.000 --> 00:12:31.000
Maria B.:  Well, she come up there and, and she lived right down here past
the house. She did. Her house tore down. She came up. She was living up
here now. I thought I'd come up here and visit her. Gottlieb: Oh, I see.
Maria B.: Cause I knew her very well. I knew, you know, [unintelligible]
That's on my father's side.

00:12:31.000 --> 00:12:32.000
Gottlieb:  So it was like a vacation for you?

00:12:32.000 --> 00:12:33.000
Maria B.:  That's right.

00:12:33.000 --> 00:12:57.000
Maria B.:  Both of them had come up here and got married. And what made it
so bad, the man I married had six children. Gottlieb: Already? Maria B.:
Already. That's what made the worst thing. Then I got the Warren family.
Gottlieb: Yeah. Maria B.: And I got nervous again. I mean, I got more
nervous on top of the head. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Maria B.: I was. Well, I got
cured a little bit. I met with some of them up here, and Maggie helped me a
little bit because I didn't have no work to do.

00:12:57.000 --> 00:13:01.000
Gottlieb:  And what year was that when you first came up?

00:13:01.000 --> 00:13:03.000
Maria B.:  Where I stayed?

00:13:03.000 --> 00:13:06.000
Gottlieb:  When you got married. When you came up to see your cousin?

00:13:06.000 --> 00:13:12.000
Maria B.:  Oh, I was coming this time-- oh, I stayed down Townsend Hall,
right down the street. Wilkins Avenue eastbound. That's where I lived every
day. Gottlieb: Uh huh.

00:13:12.000 --> 00:13:14.000
Gottlieb:  And what year was it?

00:13:14.000 --> 00:13:56.000
Maria B.:  19. The first part of 1930. Because I got married in October. I
got married quick. I wasn't-- you know, I wouldn't go and I didn't-- I
didn't-- I got married quick, I mean. You know, I didn't-- we didn't go
together too long on the town so-- and I went to work while I was here. So
I would just stay-- I would stay a little longer. They was too stingy by
giving some days. So I said, I'm going on back home. So some woman had a
baby-- friend to the lady I used to work for. He asked me to come back and
watch her. Bake while she was [??] and all. So I went back there and I was
already supposed to be married then. I went back there and we're currently
bickering because she could get able to get up and I'd come up here.

00:13:56.000 --> 00:13:58.000
Gottlieb:  And then you came back and got married.

00:13:58.000 --> 00:14:06.000
Maria B.:  I got married down there. He came down and we got married.
Gottlieb: Oh, I see. Maria B.: And I came back.

00:14:06.000 --> 00:14:09.000
Gottlieb:  Did you work when you came back and settle down with your--
Maria B.: No.

00:14:09.000 --> 00:14:19.000
Maria B.:  I had all the children and the house was messy the wife had been
sick for a long time. And I-- much as I could do is take care of them and
clean and try to get things straight.

00:14:19.000 --> 00:14:21.000
Gottlieb:  What kind of work did your husband do?

00:14:21.000 --> 00:14:25.000
Maria B.:  He worked at the Weston and he was [??]

00:14:25.000 --> 00:14:27.000
Gottlieb:  Had he been born and come up from the South?

00:14:27.000 --> 00:14:29.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, he born in Georgia.

00:14:29.000 --> 00:14:31.000
Gottlieb:  Do you know how long he had been up here?

00:14:31.000 --> 00:15:00.000
Maria B.:  He came up here when he was about-- I think he said, 14. Stayed
with his brother for a while because he got a job and he went to the army.
Went to the army, came back. He got married eight-- let me see, was he.
Yeah, I think he got. Anyway, he got married 18. I think he must have went
to the army after he got married. I don't remember that part, but I know he
come out from his--  and he said he wasn't of age when he got married. And
that part I can't tell you.

00:15:00.000 --> 00:15:04.000
Gottlieb:  Did he work at the Weston House all the time you were married to
him?

00:15:04.000 --> 00:15:16.000
Maria B.:  All the time I was married to him. He was pinching off from
that. Yeah, he worked there 45 years.

00:15:16.000 --> 00:15:18.000
Gottlieb:  And you can-- go ahead.

00:15:18.000 --> 00:15:29.000
Maria B.:  Of course. Sometimes he was laid off, you know, youu know how
times was in the Depression days.

00:15:29.000 --> 00:15:31.000
Gottlieb:  Did you come up on the train from Virginia?

00:15:31.000 --> 00:15:33.000
Maria B.:  That's where I came from. On the train.

00:15:33.000 --> 00:15:37.000
Gottlieb:  Can you tell me what route the train would have taken from, from
Waynesburg to--

00:15:37.000 --> 00:16:00.000
Maria B.:  Well, I got on at a place you called Basic, Virginia. It's all
Waynesboro now. Got on there and I rode and I got-- I got to Hagerstown
Junction, and then I changed. Sometimes I wait there six hours. Then I
got-- didn't go through Washington, and I came right up to Shenandoah
Valley. And then I came on Pittsburgh and Braddock. Braddock.

00:16:00.000 --> 00:16:07.000
Maria B.:  And I had to find a way to come back here.

00:16:07.000 --> 00:16:10.000
Gottlieb:  Did you bring much with you when you came back to settle down?

00:16:10.000 --> 00:16:19.000
Maria B.:  No, just a trunk. My mother's [??] and different stuff. Just a
trundle of suitcases, that's all.

00:16:19.000 --> 00:16:24.000
Gottlieb:  Um, did you used to go back to Virginia once you would settle
down?

00:16:24.000 --> 00:16:38.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, I've come back every year for a while, while my mother's
living, and I even went back when my two sisters was living. But they died
and now I just go every now and see my brother.

00:16:38.000 --> 00:16:43.000
Gottlieb:  Did. You used to go back every year at a certain time of the
year or just whenever you got a chance?

00:16:43.000 --> 00:16:48.000
Maria B.:  Whenever I got a chance I got, I got the money.

00:16:48.000 --> 00:16:53.000
Gottlieb:  Did you ever used to send money back to your.

00:16:53.000 --> 00:17:09.000
Maria B.:  Well, I didn't send my mother. I used to make clothes and send
to-- my mother had a son that his wife died. And I used to send things to
my mother, my mother's children was younger and I was sending the
children-- make things like that and send that to them.

00:17:09.000 --> 00:17:13.000
Gottlieb:  What did you think of Braddock, northern Pittsburgh area when
you moved in?

00:17:13.000 --> 00:17:31.000
Maria B.:  It was so smoky I could hardly stand it. It was clean where I
come from. And the dirt and me cleaning all the time. It was awful. But I
kind of got used to it. You couldn't hardly see. When I first came up here,
you-- all the days would be like this. And it was a luxury when you saw
sunshine.

00:17:31.000 --> 00:17:33.000
Gottlieb:  It's really changed a lot then. I guess.

00:17:33.000 --> 00:17:35.000
Maria B.:  You're right.

00:17:35.000 --> 00:17:39.000
Gottlieb:  Were there any things about it that you liked?

00:17:39.000 --> 00:17:55.000
Maria B.:  I didn't like too much of it. It was all right. I always did
like the country life, that kind of life, you know, when men has a
different life, a good man. I, like-- grew up picking berries and things
like that. But when the time was too, it was pretty dirty.

00:17:55.000 --> 00:18:01.000
Gottlieb:  Well, this I noticed when I was driving in here, there was lots
of woods around these roads here. Was it like that when you were first up
here?

00:18:01.000 --> 00:18:20.000
Maria B.:  Well, when I came up, up there and called [??] Hill was all
woods. And we used to go up there and make garden and and you could--
people hunt for rabbits and, and, you know, get apples and everything up
there but they, they built the houses different. You can't hardly get
nothing now.

00:18:20.000 --> 00:18:26.000
Gottlieb:  So it wasn't really like living in a, in a real built up city.

00:18:26.000 --> 00:19:05.000
Maria B.:  No. When I came here they had-- some people had coal mines in
their backyard and you would go there and get you a little coal, but the
coal, it was funny. It wasn't like it was rusty looking on one side and it
burnt real quickly just burning your stove out. But we used it. It wasn't
like the coal you'd buy at the coal yard. I think the car run a mile. But
even living was easier when I first came up here, you know? Not like now.
You get more things without going to the store. People raised chickens. I
raised chickens. That's what helped me raise these children in the
backyard. I can't do that now.

00:19:05.000 --> 00:19:10.000
Gottlieb:  Would it be hard for you to to go back to Virginia when you used
to go back?

00:19:10.000 --> 00:20:07.000
Maria B.:  No, I like-- Virginia's built up too. It's different than it was
when I was there. It's easier. It's, it's-- where I came from just north of
the city. Theres markets and you gotta DuPont plant down there. Got a
Crompton plant over there. It just don't look the same. And what got me so
bad-- I tell my grandchildren, I said, I want to take you down and show you
the man [??]. I'll show you the horseshoe curve. The hairpin curve. Nobody
told me nothing. They don't write me too much. I went down there and here,
bless me. They cut their whole mouth down. Gottlieb: Wow. Maria B.: Well, I
was. I think that was the worst thing I ever heard of cutting that man
down. Well, it looks. It's different now. One part of mine is all cut down
and leveled off and got hotels and things like that. I didn't like that,
cause that hairpin curve-- I always liked that because when you go down
there the grab through would stop your car and you could, you could-- you
slow up. Then after you pass that, grab the car, just shoot that. And I
wanted to show them all that and I didn't have nothing to show.

00:20:07.000 --> 00:20:15.000
Gottlieb:  Um, was it hard to go back to the south in terms of the the way
black people were treated down there as compared to up here?

00:20:15.000 --> 00:21:51.000
Maria B.:  Not at the beginning. We didn't have too-- the only thing we had
in Virginia that bothered us, but we lived down among the White people. And
my brother would always do something. I mean, it's like the poor people,
you know, like they would pick on my brother. The rich people would take up
on him because they liked him and the poor people didn't like that. So one
day some girl got raped down there, White girl, and she said she knew who
it was. So they put her on one of my brothers, and the man said, it ain't
him because he was working for me and I know it wasn't him. Our other
brother was a younger brother, but he couldn't get out of it because he was
at-- he had cried. He was four, and my mother had nearly died when he was
born. And she [??]. And so he, um, he was at the shelter and my sister, she
jumps up and, and they said, give me some clothes. That he had, he had been
fishing a couple of days before that. But that night he was at the shelter,
but Mama couldn't prove it because she didn't know exactly where I was, she
didn't give him the money for the shelter. Found her later. So they trapped
him up and put him in prison. So he stayed in there from 15 years until he
was 23 years old, I think. But he-- they treated him kind of nice. He
learned different trades that-- but he could never prove it. And so after
his-- after my mother died, I got him just a quick-- my mother was worried
and crying. I told her, I said, just wait he'll get out. So that's the only
trouble we had with them then. They, you know, they did that because they
was mad at him anyway, because a police come out one my brother,and he
knocked him down and they didn't put him in jail. They had that against us,
you know. So that's the only trouble that-- we got along with everything.
Of course that was bad.

00:21:51.000 --> 00:21:52.000
Gottlieb:  Yeah, right.

00:21:52.000 --> 00:22:00.000
Gottlieb:  Uh, when you-- the neighborhoods that you've lived in up here,
have they been mostly Black or have they been mixed too.

00:22:00.000 --> 00:22:17.000
Maria B.:  That crowd there used to be White. They used to be white. This
neighbors always been White. And, uh, what Colored people they were right
after from me, cause the next door was White. All White neighbors just
about.

00:22:17.000 --> 00:22:24.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, it didn't used to be White. Not this house with the dark
side, the next house used too be White.

00:22:24.000 --> 00:22:29.000
Gottlieb:  Have you lived here in this-- right in this area of Braddock
Hills all the time you've been here?

00:22:29.000 --> 00:22:30.000
Maria B.:  Ever since 1930.

00:22:30.000 --> 00:22:38.000
Maria B.:  October 1930. Yeah, October. I got married in September. I
didn't come up til October.

00:22:38.000 --> 00:22:42.000
Gottlieb:  You found the white people up here pretty much the same as they
were in Virginia.

00:22:42.000 --> 00:22:43.000
Maria B.:  Yes, I did. But it wasn't the same.

00:22:43.000 --> 00:23:24.000
Maria B.:  Because most of them was farmers but they were the same. Got
along with the children. I used to feed the children and how to grow up. We
cooked the rolls and everything, they'd come in and beg. A little boy, [??]
his mom and ran around all night and he called me mom. He come across to
give me some bread. I said no, go home. He said, if I go home my mom will
beat me and I said, you don't go your mom will beat you too. If you stay
here-- I had to feed him every morning. So his grandmother went down to
Florida to visit him and say, Well, guess what? I said, What? When I saw
Bernie, Bernie didn't say hi, Grandma. He said hi Mrs. B. and she was so
mad because she'd be in bed too the poor little boy. You know, I had to
give him his breakfast every morning.

00:23:24.000 --> 00:23:30.000
Gottlieb:  Did you ever work outside your home for, for wages when you've
been living up here?

00:23:30.000 --> 00:23:31.000
Maria B.:  No, I never worked.

00:23:31.000 --> 00:24:16.000
Maria B.:  One time I went out in the morning and worked three hours a day.
That didn't last too month. No longer than a month. I think, I think it's
better staying at home. And if I try to tell my daughter, stay at home, you
save more by staying at home than you do run out and and like you buy food,
you got to buy something quick. And children have fed. And because I'm
right here now, I feed them a lot and clothes that they could sew they
buying and pay 2 or 3 prices. I-- I've done better by staying at home
because I raise chickens too. I think that helped pay a lot and they can
raise a God but they can't raise chickens. But they can't go to the store
and get the meat wholesale you know, and put them in the freezer they have
to go to.

00:24:16.000 --> 00:24:18.000
Gottlieb:  Yeah.

00:24:18.000 --> 00:24:21.000
Gottlieb:  Did you and your first husband part after.

00:24:21.000 --> 00:24:37.000
Maria B.:  I never had. My husband went ahead. He was married twice. He had
the six when we got married. And I had and I had twins. I had eight boys.

00:24:37.000 --> 00:24:39.000
Gottlieb:  Is he still living?

00:24:39.000 --> 00:24:54.000
Maria B.:  The husband? Yeah, he's living. He's 77 now, but he gets around
good.

00:24:54.000 --> 00:25:16.000
Gottlieb:  When you were first living up here in the, in the 1930s, did you
notice any difference between those Black people who had been born in the
South and come up like you had and those who had been born in
Pennsylvania?

00:25:16.000 --> 00:25:32.000
Maria B.:  There was a lot of difference between the Black people in
Virginia and the Black people in Georgia. This is much different. It's a
whole lot different. But I don't know why. But they-- I don't know. They
they different altogether than people in Virginia.

00:25:32.000 --> 00:25:33.000
Gottlieb:  In what ways?

00:25:33.000 --> 00:26:12.000
Maria B.:  Well, I don't know. They don't seem to understand why people
like Virginia doing things because I think they all raised up together, you
know, they didn't have no contact with them. And me, I was raised up with
them. I understand, but they was like anybody up there. The thing was we
used to fight. The next day we'd make up and they fight and they fuss a
lot. And it was-- they was trying to get along like Virginia people getting
together and I feel different. Virginia is halfway between them. Virginia
is more like I think more like the North and, you know, than down beat down
south. A lot of difference. All right.

00:26:12.000 --> 00:26:20.000
Gottlieb:  Um, what other what other differences are there between the
Black people from Virginia and those from Georgia?

00:26:20.000 --> 00:26:27.000
Maria B.:  Well. Let's see.

00:26:27.000 --> 00:26:45.000
Maria B.:  I don't know but I think there are still dividing cells, but
I've been so used to living mixed that that's what-- that's what I've been
used to doing. I don't think I would want to live with all Black people
because I never was used to. Gottlieb: Yeah.

00:26:45.000 --> 00:26:50.000
Gottlieb:  Did you know a lot of Black people who had come up here from
Georgia?

00:26:50.000 --> 00:27:19.000
Maria B.:  Just these around here. My husband, he came from Georgia. I told
him if I'd known he's from Georgia, we never would have gotten married
because-- a [??] used to come down from Georgia. He'd come down to my house
about in Waynesboro and next, next summer there'd be more babies, you know,
born from me. And I just didn't like him for nothing. And he didn't tell me
he was from Georgia until after we got married. He would say he's from
Missouri. He never talked about Georgia. So after we got married, I found
and I told him, I wish I had known that. That'd be the one thing that kept
us separate. Gottlieb: Yeah. Maria B.: I never knew that.

00:27:19.000 --> 00:27:23.000
Gottlieb:  Um, are there quite a few people from Georgia living right
around here? Maria B.: That's right.

00:27:23.000 --> 00:27:45.000
Maria B.:  Just about all of them. But only was-- a few people here now
moved from Virginia. But at first I was about the only one. Because some of
them don't care too much for West Virginia. But I get along with the people
here. I don't know. So far I mean. If they didn't think-- if they don't
like it, they don't say nothing.

00:27:45.000 --> 00:27:46.000
Gottlieb:  Yeah.

00:27:46.000 --> 00:27:53.000
Gottlieb:  Did you ever have any trouble with Black people who had been
born and raised up here in Pennsylvania?

00:27:53.000 --> 00:28:10.000
Maria B.:  I don't know. I don't know. I never had no trouble. I've never
been, you know, go to church with them and everything like that. Most of
the young people around here was born. I don't have no trouble with them

00:28:10.000 --> 00:28:14.000
Gottlieb:  Um. Uh, did your husband grow up in a, in a countryside down
there?

00:28:14.000 --> 00:28:21.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, he's way back in the country.

00:28:21.000 --> 00:28:28.000
Gottlieb:  Did any of your brothers or sisters or any other relatives ever
come up here to live after you did?

00:28:28.000 --> 00:28:44.000
Maria B.:  One brother came up, stayed here with me. The one's in
Philadelphia now. And another one came up here and stayed and he went to
New Rochelle. I guess I wanted to stay, like two years, and the other
stayed about the same time, I think.

00:28:44.000 --> 00:28:47.000
Gottlieb:  Did they live with you when they were here?

00:28:47.000 --> 00:28:51.000
Maria B.:  That's right. They lived with me-- well they all lived me til
they could find a room somewhere.

00:28:51.000 --> 00:28:55.000
Gottlieb:  What, what kind of jobs were they able to get when they were
here?

00:28:55.000 --> 00:29:22.000
Maria B.:  One of them was a mechanic. He, uh. Excuse me. He, uh, you know,
worked on automobiles and worked in filling stations in place and fixed
cars and washed cars. Anything he could do he would take it. But he really
he could fix cars pretty good. And that's what my husband said he was doing
in Philadelphia till he got a pension law. He's three years older than I
am. And the other brother. He's a cook. When he went to New Rochelle to
cook, he worked for some bakery downtown while we were here.

00:29:22.000 --> 00:29:25.000
Gottlieb:  Did you or your husband ever help them get these jobs?

00:29:25.000 --> 00:29:33.000
Maria B.:  My husband would go out and help them. He we go out and find
jobs. We found jobs for them real quick.

00:29:33.000 --> 00:29:44.000
Gottlieb:  When they left-- after they, you know, left your your place to
go to board. Do you know where they-- you know where they did go to live?
Did they stay in this area?

00:29:44.000 --> 00:30:21.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, One of them stayed. One of them stayed on, oh, I forgot
the name of that street in Shadyside. Anyhow, stayed on Shadyside. He, um,
the man that he worked for-- he worked for come by. He lived on Tannehill.
That's why he moved there. And this rich man saw how nice he kept the place
and he said, Well, I want you to keep my apartment for me. So he kept that
apartment for him for a long time. Mhm. You know, you know how you, how you
stay there. He worked too. How you stay there and wash the things, you
know. I forget what you call it now.

00:30:21.000 --> 00:30:25.000
Maria B.:  And then he left.

00:30:25.000 --> 00:30:27.000
Gottlieb:  Did you join a church? When you came--

00:30:27.000 --> 00:30:31.000
Maria B.:  I belong to The First Baptist Church. Right down there.

00:30:31.000 --> 00:30:36.000
Maria B.:  I belonged-- at first I belonged to Shiloh in Virginia. And I
moved up here and I joined right away.

00:30:36.000 --> 00:30:38.000
Gottlieb:  Were you raise as a Baptist?

00:30:38.000 --> 00:30:39.000
Maria B.:  That's right.

00:30:39.000 --> 00:30:43.000
Gottlieb:  Did you, did you join First Baptist right away when you moved up
or was it.

00:30:43.000 --> 00:30:51.000
Maria B.:  That's right. About the same week I moved. Well, not before.
Before I moved up, I [??]. But the second Sunday, I went to church.

00:30:51.000 --> 00:30:52.000
Gottlieb:  Uh huh.

00:30:52.000 --> 00:31:02.000
Maria B.:  Because I like-- even down home, I used to go to the White
Presbyterian churches a lot. And up here I go to [??] church and I like it
when I can get out there. All of them the same to me, just the name, I
mean.

00:31:02.000 --> 00:31:11.000
Gottlieb:  Uh. There wasn't any particular reason why you joined First
Baptist then, as opposed to some other church.

00:31:11.000 --> 00:31:14.000
Maria B.:  Oh, no. That was the closest church around here. That was all.

00:31:14.000 --> 00:31:22.000
Gottlieb:  Was it very different from the, uh, from the churches that you
had been going to in Waynesboro?

00:31:22.000 --> 00:31:43.000
Maria B.:  It was about the same. Like Virginia people a little bit
different from, you know, from, from the people that was up here. But it
was why-- I don't know, some of them didn't-- couldn't read and write and
nothing like that. You know, some of them didn't go to school. I didn't
have that much but some of them didn't have as much as I had.

00:31:43.000 --> 00:31:50.000
Gottlieb:  Yeah.

00:31:50.000 --> 00:31:56.000
Gottlieb:  But in terms of the way the services would be conducted and that
kind of thing, it wasn't.

00:31:56.000 --> 00:32:06.000
Maria B.:  That's Right. They do a lot of arguing, you know, and they know
really what they was arguing about.

00:32:06.000 --> 00:32:09.000
Gottlieb:  Were a lot of the members of that First Baptist Church from
Georgia.

00:32:09.000 --> 00:32:10.000
Maria B.:  That's right.

00:32:10.000 --> 00:32:17.000
Maria B.:  All of them from Georgia, not even from Mississippi or nothing.
Just about everyone around here's from Georgia even including my husband.

00:32:17.000 --> 00:32:19.000
Gottlieb:  Mhm.

00:32:19.000 --> 00:32:24.000
Gottlieb:  Were you ever active in any church groups, clubs?

00:32:24.000 --> 00:32:56.000
Maria B.:  Well, I belong to the missionary, but since I had to babysit, so
I don't do too much. But I do teach Sunday school every-- some of-- I teach
the babies of all things. You think I have the older one, but the babies
are so, you know, the little children around up to six years old. They're
so, so active and so bad that my daughter-- I had her teaching and my
husband, Sidney told me, but she wouldn't do it. So I have to teach them
because don't nobody want to teach them. They they just too bad. They just
don't want to be bothered with.

00:32:56.000 --> 00:33:03.000
Gottlieb:  Did you ever belong to any other kind of clubs like social clubs
or women's groups?

00:33:03.000 --> 00:33:13.000
Maria B.:  I used to belong to some kind of a hobby club. I was the only--
they said they had another Black woman but I never seen her. I belong to
that for a while and it kind of broke up.

00:33:13.000 --> 00:33:17.000
Gottlieb:  What was the, what was the name of the club?

00:33:17.000 --> 00:33:22.000
Maria B.:  I forgot now. I got, I got pictures of me and the woman but I
can't remember how it was called now.

00:33:22.000 --> 00:33:41.000
Maria B.:  I forget a lot of things. But the woman lived in Pittsburgh. So
the women come from all around to the club. We'd exchange things, you know,
making everything.

00:33:41.000 --> 00:33:52.000
Gottlieb:  Tell me of what you remember from the 1930s, the Depression and
how, how your family was able to to get through that period of time.

00:33:52.000 --> 00:35:16.000
Maria B.:  Well, when I and I had all them children-- people wasn't having
too many children in them days, you know. And the welfare didn't want to
give us money because they-- we had a rotten old worker, too. I remember
his name was Rock. He, he fooled around with some woman, some White woman
got hit, knocked in the head and he quit or they put him out one so he
wouldn't let you get out. He had some kind of excuse. I don't know what was
his reason. So we couldn't get on the welfare and so my husband would go
get coal. We had a coal furnace in from the state. And this-- I'm just
hoping to get around because I'm working, because I just was raising
chickens and, and so on and different things like that. And sometimes we
sell some candy or something like that and, you know, make it. And flowers.
I sold paper flowers and artificial flowers and five and ten months I sold
a whole lot of artificial flowers and then I sold candy every Saturday and
had enough to buy meat for Sunday dinner. And we made it. But my husband,
he grown and put in coal. You see a coal power street. He had asked me to
put it in like made it like that. But we made it all right because some of
the people that you think would be doing good, their children to come in,
I'd feed them with my children and I made a lot of cakes and things. They
like that too. But after eating beans and greens, we weren't craving
something sweet. And I always had dessert just about every day. A lot of
Kool-Aid and stuff like that. We got along.

00:35:16.000 --> 00:35:19.000
Gottlieb:  Where would you go to sell the candy and the artificial
flowers?

00:35:19.000 --> 00:35:44.000
Maria B.:  They would go in the forrest where all the rich people was,
hoping. They didn't even have money. I remember one girl, her husband
didn't have nothing. He didn't give no money for her. He was a drunkard.
And she bought 6 or 7 candy from me, that was a penny a piece, and she
never was able to pay. So we didn't fool around with the poor people too
much because they were in worser shape than I was in. And we learned that
the rich people they bought it.

00:35:44.000 --> 00:35:47.000
Gottlieb:  Was your husband out of work for a very long period of time?

00:35:47.000 --> 00:35:58.000
Maria B.:  Yeah, he was out pretty long. Well, he wasn't exactly out. He
would work 1 or 2 days a week, but that wasn't enough to hardly make it.

00:35:58.000 --> 00:36:15.000
Gottlieb:  Well, these are all the questions that I, that I had to ask you.
If you think that I've skipped over something, that's-- that would be
important for me to understand I'd appreciate it if you tell me. But
otherwise, I don't. I don't have anything else to ask.

00:36:15.000 --> 00:37:04.000
Maria B.:  Yeah that's so far. I can't think of nothing except even this
place had changed when I came cause that's out in Tarnage [??]. And, um, I
just would get out because I had so many children, so they said, we'll get
the septic tanks. We'll get the city, you know, soon. So finally they got
it to me but my children are all grown up. And I had that old toilet cost
something, cause we had to keep on moving it. And then they got the roads
paved. Old dirt, you see they're not paved too good. And that-- dust would
come in the house. It was awful. Sometimes the children. I'd let them have
a dance or something after I take care of the house so I'd be sick a lot.
The dust would be so thick on the floor. The mud outside. It was a lot
different then. I had to work so hard. And then we had coal so that'd smoke
the walls all up. It was hard work

00:37:04.000 --> 00:37:07.000
Gottlieb:  Yeah. It still is hard work to keep a place clean.

00:37:07.000 --> 00:37:10.000
Maria B.:  It is. With all the automatic things you got it's still hard
work.

00:37:10.000 --> 00:37:22.000
Gottlieb:  When you used to go back home to Virginia once you were living
up here. Well you told me you were the first member of your family to come
up here. Maria B.: That's Right. Gottlieb: Did they look on you as a person
who was doing much better than they were?

00:37:22.000 --> 00:37:49.000
Maria B.:  They was telling me, say you come down here and you-- If I lived
like that, I would come down. I would put on airs. I tell them I never was.
They say I come down. They didn't like the way I would do, you know, they
want me to come down like a big shot, like I lived in Pittsburgh. But I
didn't do that. I come down, I was like, I always was but they-- my sisters
didn't think I would do that. And I go back to visit the people I used to
work for.T here's a girl that I used to go to school with, so.

00:37:49.000 --> 00:37:54.000
Maria B.:  This is the same person all the time. I didn't have nothing
anyway, but when I used to make them like I had something when I didn't.

00:37:54.000 --> 00:38:00.000
Gottlieb:  Yeah. So they-- did they, did they treat you differently as far
as you could tell?

00:38:00.000 --> 00:38:20.000
Maria B.:  No, they act all right. Because, you know, just the same person.
I was when I left. For some people, they go away to the city. I don't know
if you and your people or not, but they come back. They go away they think
they, you know, more than what they are and come back.

00:38:20.000 --> 00:38:22.000
Gottlieb:  Well, thank you very much Mrs. Maria B..

00:38:22.000 --> 00:39:22.000
Maria B.:  You're welcome. I hope you're happy, son.