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M., Joseph, November 16, 1973, tape 1, side 2

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Joseph M.:  The morning I went and I quit work. I went over to the office.
I gave it to the superintendent. Finest man that ever lived. I just loved
him. He looked at it with this joke [??]. He says, Is your mother? Said,
there's no use for me to ask you are you going? He said, No, you're going.
He said, How you fix the money? I said, Well, I have some. I said, but I
have to wait until the bank open. I said to get some more. He says, Hey, he
says, Anybody here got any money? And one fella said, I got $20. Another
one says, I have a ten. I was in the office. Another fellow named Henry
something he said, Fish got bones [??]. He said, I got all the money you
want. He got me $150 right there. Then my superintendent and he gave it to
me. Well, I had-- less than $100. So he gave it to me. So I came out. I
didn't have to wait till the bank opened. I put my clothes on and went
home, got my suitcase. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: Uh, I got down there.
And I told her about that. My mother, she was sitting in a chair.

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Joseph M.:  And she was old.

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Joseph M.:  And I got in. She said to me, she says. I'm glad you got here,
she says. You know, she said, I'm going to die. She made the statement, she
said, but asked God not to take me until I seen you and your wife. I took
my wife with me. She said now-- I'm going to die, she said. But you got a
big family, she said, Now Imma die. She said, Don't you come back. She
said, Because nothing you can do. She said, You got a big family and you
need the money. She said, My funeral is paid for. She said it's already
paid for. She said it won't be anything you can do, so don't come back. I
said, Well, when I was born, it was money here. I didn't have any of it and
didn't get any of it money when I got here. I said, I'm not making any
promise. So I came back and after that she passed. So I went back down
there.

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Peter Gottlieb:  Then-- about what time was that? What-- What year was that
about? Do you remember?

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Joseph M.:  [simultaneous talking] 1942. 1942. And I took my wife with me.
But when I went back to bury her, I didn't take my wife, my wife couldn't
go because, you see, my wife had kids so fast. My goodness. Gottlieb: Yeah.
Huh.

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Gottlieb:  What kind of work did your mother do when you were growing up as
a boy in Richmond? Joseph M.: Huh? Gottlieb: What kind of work did your
mother do? Joseph M.: Well, she used to

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Joseph M.:  cook and do that kind of work, you know, in the daytime. And
then at night, she'd take in washing and she'd wash and iron all night.
Mhm. So it's pretty rough. Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: But, uh.

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Gottlieb:  Did-- Did you used to go home often after you moved up to
Pittsburgh?

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Joseph M.:  No, no, no. I didn't go too often. No, I kept in contact with
them. I would write them, you know, I went back-- I went back, let's see,
in 1918. I went back in 1920. I went back in 1923. 26. I don't think I went
back anymore then until 40, 42.

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Gottlieb:  Didn't you miss Richmond? Didn't you-- Weren't you a little bit
homesick for the place you had grown up?

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Joseph M.:  No. No, not. Not necessarily. Tell you, you see, I wanted the
money. The big money. Other words, it was the big money. Gottlieb: Uh huh.
Joseph M.: And it wasn't a question that I was a miser. I don't know what
you would call it. It wasn't that. It was the pressure on me as a boy or as
a man in the condition of my mother. So, you see, maybe I put it this way.
If I pull a pistol on you and rob you. Excuse me, sir. Give me your money.
You give it to me. You see what I mean. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: You
didn't give me the money. You give the pistol the money. You see what I
mean? Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: It was the pressure. Gottlieb: Yeah.
Joseph M.: Well, that is it. And so it was the pressure on me, that forced
me to-- to seek-- to get all the money I could. But one thing I can frankly
say. I never would steal. I never stole. I won't steal. No, I won't either.
No, I won't steal. I've had number of chance to steal. I won't steal. You
don't have to steal. People just steal to better their condition. They
don't steal because they have to. So I remember one time I found a fella's
pay in the mill, 100 and some dollars, and I had gone into the restroom.
And when I got in, he had just came out and I went in to an April and
envelope was on it, I seen it laying on the floor and I picked it up. I
said to myself, Somebody done took the money out. This-- knowing this is
April Fool. So I just picked it up and I looked. He had never opened it up
and so I took it and stuck it in my pocket. And so. After I finish I went
back down the mill. I went back down the mill. No, before I left

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Joseph M.:  fella came and opened the door. It was a white fella. He peeped
in. He seen me. He didn't say anything. I didn't say nothing. So I got up
and I went on back down the mill on my job. So after a while, fella come
running down. And. Foreman come down to the end where I was working. I said
to him, Hey, what's the matter? He said, I lost something. I said, What did
you lose? I didn't say nothing. And so he looked, look, look. And all--
this is work in the day. And so I went back to the toilet and when I got
back. I didn't see him. I went in the office and I said to the clerk and I
thought, Man, Jimmy, for him [??] said, Jimmy. Said, here's a fella's pay I
found in the toilet. I said, He's been around me. I said, 3 or 4 times. I
said, And he didn't say anything to me about it. I said it looked like he
was trying to keep it a secret. I said, I didn't tell him I had it. I said
to him, I give it to Jimmy. And so coming out, the roller man there, fellow
named Jack Abbott, Abbott said to me, Hey, Joseph M.. I said, Yeah. He
said, A fella said that he thought you had his pay. Said, and I told him he
was a damn liar. I said, Because you give him before you take from him. I
said, I did have it. I said in the office now. I said, But I found it. I
said he didn't ask for it. I said I didn't give it to him. And so, you
know, he got it. I've done that 3 or 4 times in the mill.

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Gottlieb:  When you first got to Pittsburgh, you told me that you didn't
know anybody here. Joseph M.: I didn't. Gottlieb: How did you find a place
to live? How did--

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Joseph M.:  That's that. That's it right there. I had to inquire. I had to
make an inquire. But what I'd done, I went up the street and I seen a sign
on the door, a room for rent. And it was a fella by name of Snow. And so I
went into-- that's where I got the room that was up on Bedford.

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Gottlieb:  Okay. So you just walked up from the train station? Joseph M.:
Yeah. Gottlieb: Who did-- Who did you ask? Did you remember? Do you
remember where you made your, uh-- Where-- where you asked for a room?

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Joseph M.:  Yeah, just up there on-- on-- on the Webster Avenue in
Pittsburgh. I went to. I was looking for a place, and I seen the sign up,
room for rent. And I went in and asked them. And so that's why I got it. I
was. I think that was 12, 12 something. 12 something. Webster Avenue, 1200
block. Gottlieb: Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  How long was it between the time you got here and and the time
you started working in the Carnegie building? Do you know? Did it take you
very long?

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Joseph M.:  No. I was here about possibly, I say maybe 2 or 3 weeks, maybe
a month, as I got familiar enough then to find a pool room to be shooting
pool because I had to do that to live, you know, and had to pay my rent.
But at that time, you see, the rent wasn't very much. You see, you could,
you could get a room then, private rooms for $3 a week. Gottlieb: Uh huh.
Joseph M.: Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  And you were making money playing pool? You were making enough
money to pay for the room? Joseph M.: Sometimes.

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Joseph M.:  Well, yeah, I always have money, see, but I would. I had to. I
had to economize. Otherwise, if you and I would be sitting down playing
cards, and if I would win, you couldn't get all of it back. I had to keep
some of it because I had to live. If it looked like my luck would change
then I couldn't. Other words, I was going to be the loser. I'd had to quit
before I lost it all. And so-- got to live. Gottlieb: Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Were there-- was there, uh, certain pool rooms that were more
popular than others where a lot of Black men would gather together?

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Joseph M.:  Well, the two most popular pool rooms in Pittsburgh at the time
was E.K. Thumbs and Frank Sutton. Now, Frank Sutton was a Jack Johnson
dietitian [??], you know, and so I think it was through Jack Johnson that
Frank got to build that hotel there on Sixth Street. Gottlieb: On Sixth
Street? Joseph M.: You might not know where it is yet, but it was between
Fifth and Sixth on the left hand side if you're going out toward the
station. To the Greyhound bus, was on the left hand side and between Fifth
and Sixth and then over on, of course, near the corner with the Gasco
building and there were two, the most popular was in downtown. You had some
here in East Liberty too. Gottlieb: Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  Would there be, would there be, uh, crowds around those pool
rooms and places and-- were they places that lots of people would-- would
gather? Joseph M.: At certain times.

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Joseph M.:  Yes. You take a lot of the people that work, they like to play
pool. After they finished work, they would gather in, see, but they didn't
frequent that all the time. Other words, that wasn't their occupation.
Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: But now you take some of the fellas like me. I
was a floater. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: And that was my home. Oh, other
words, it had to be my home. Or I had to sit up in my room and just look at
four walls and the ceiling. Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: You see? And so.
Gottlieb: Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  Uh, do you remember where there are a lot of people in
Pittsburgh hanging, hanging out at these places that were-- That had just
come in like-- Like-- Like yourself. Kind of newcomers. People who had just
come in or-- Or were most of the people who-- who-- who-- who came in to
the places were they, were they old timers? Were they people who had been
around for a long time?

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Joseph M.:  I don't know. I would presume that the one that lived there
mostly was people that was familiar, you know, people that lived there.
Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: Uh, I would think that because unless you'se a
pool shark, you know, you wouldn't walk in a pool room and say, who want to
play a game of pool? And usually if you walk in a pool room and say, who
want to play a game of pool, whoever was in charge of this place, the house
man, we call him, would put the best he have on you to play you. Gottlieb:
Uh huh. Joseph M.: That's what they done for me. Gottlieb: Okay. Joseph M.:
And if I would go in and say, Well, who want to play a game of pool? I
challenge anybody that want to play. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: And maybe
the house man would put the best he'd have on me. And whenever we would
start, we would take the money. Sometime we'd stick it up here under the
railings and then come and tell him. He said, well, and say, you know, the
house rules is so and so and so and so. House rules is so-and-so and
so-and-so at least, and get my money. Say now wait a minute. The house
don't have no rules on the table. The book-- the book had the rules here on
the table. Now the house rule is no minors allowed, no-- no profanity and
this and that.

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Joseph M.:  You know what-- pay after each game and so forth and so on, the
house rules. But when you come for the game of pool, there's not a game of
pool you can play that rule is not in the book. You see what I mean?
Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: Now if you're playing continued pool, if you
miss your shot, you used to step back at least three feet from the table
and stand in one position until the other fella finished shooting. You see
what I mean? Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: And if you don't do that, he can
get the book and prove that you fouled the game and you can forfeit your
money. That I knew about. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: And so I told him, I
said, Now wait a minute. The house don't have no rules on the table. The
house have rules. And I told him. And so what they do, you know, they take
advantage of you if you don't know these things. Uh huh. They said, Well,
the house rules is so and so and so and so. But they always going to give
the man they put on you the benefit of the house rules. Gottlieb: Uh huh.
Joseph M.: And so you don't go for that. Not when your money's out.

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Gottlieb:  Did they-- did they usually have just one man who was-- who
was-- who was the person that they would put on you?

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Joseph M.:  Well, they would always put the best they had with you.
Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: And if, uh, you would beat them 2 or 3 games.
You know, the house would call them off, see, because the house would be
responsible for it and they'd put the money up for whatever you want to
play for. And if you beat them 2 or 3 games, call it off till you put your
stick in the rack.

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Gottlieb:  How did you-- how, how-- how would a person get to be the, uh,
get to be the man who woul-- who would be put up against challengers by the
house? Joseph M.: How was what? Gottlieb: How-- how-- how-- would you get
that position of being the person the house would put up against other
players?

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Joseph M.:  Well, if you was a good pool player and frequent the place and
they knew you was a good pool player, they would pick you if you were the
best. You see what I mean? Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: That's the way they
got them. Gottlieb: I see. Joseph M.: Mhm.

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Gottlieb:  When did you start living in Homestead?

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Joseph M.:  I started living in Homestead in 19-- must have been 1914, 15.

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Joseph M.:  Somewhere along in there, see, because I came over-- I was
rooming right here on 12th Avenue. 'Course, he had was, I know, I roomed
there for years and then I came over here and I came over here to go in the
mill as far as my job was concerned. I was already living in Homestead, but
I was working in town. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: You see. I could go
backwards and forward over there for a nickel. And I lived out here for oh,
fact, I lived down there for about 11 years then till I got married in
1923. And so I was at home and I came over here and wouldn't have to go as
far and I could work. Gottlieb: Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. Uh, how did you hear about the rooming house on 12th
Avenue?

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Joseph M.:  On 12th?

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. How-- How did you-- How did you know that you could get a
place to live down here when you were-- When you were living up in
Pittsburgh?

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Joseph M.:  Uh, one of the fellows that I came with, he got a job over here
and a fellow named Alfred Geary, that's what Alfred was telling me, and I
got a job over here because I didn't. I didn't. I didn't like the
environment where I was living. See, up there on Webster, I didn't like it.
In fact, it was filthy and it wasn't too conducive, see. And so I wanted to
get away from that. So when the boy told me about over here, I came over
here and I got a private room too, kept nice. And I stayed there then until
they started bringing in the transportation. And when they bring in
transportation, they had them down there, had them here, had 'em here,
biggest places. They had them crowded, filled up. And so when that
happened, the people down there, I guess, got so busy they didn't have time
to see me. And so what I'd done, I'd give them all of their bed clothing
and I bought my own. And so I kept my bed clean, you know, and I put my bed
clothes in the laundry, you know, and I kept my room clean where I could
live in it and be. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: But I had a private room.
Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph M.: And so the fella, he's an undertaker now. And
Bill Frederick, you might read of him in the paper. Gottlieb: No, I
haven't. Joseph M.: Got a place in Homestead, one in Braddock and got one
on Brushton, there in Homewood. His father came here from the South, but he
didn't come on transportation. He just came here now. Yeah, he came on
transportation. And so they sent him up to this place where I stayed. And
she said, the lady said to me, she says, the gentleman here, she says, and
I don't have room for him. And I just figured if you could take him, say,
you could collect his rent. And I said, I'll look him over. I looked him
over and I took him. The first night he spent in Homestead he slept in my
bed. And he was as nice as man as I ever met in my whole life. Of course,
Father [??]. Gottlieb: Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Do you remember the names of the people who owned the boarding
house you were staying at when you first was here? Joseph M.: [simultaneous
talking] Yeah. Yeah.

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Joseph M.:  Raymond Barber [??]. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: Uh huh. His
wife was named Rose. Gottlieb: I see-- Was he--

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Gottlieb:  Did he work down at the mill?

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Joseph M.:  No, no, no. Raymond-- Raymond a lazy kind of fella, he had the
job one time out in the library. And he had a good job out there, paid
good. But the. He had a good job out there. And the manager there was a
fella by the name of Hughie McCluskey, and he was one of the best men you
ever seen. He never used profanity. I never heard that man speak as many
words in my life. I wouldn't keep that job. Raymond had a sense, he start
the building onto it, you know, to make room. And he wanted to live on the
boarders. That's what he done. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Joseph M.: And so I lived
there for 11 years and we were very good friends. And he died. She died.
Before she died, she got sick and said she sent for me to come and pray for
her. Yes, she did. And so she died.

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Gottlieb:  But you lived at that at that one place on 12th Avenue for--
from the time that you first came to Homestead until you got married in
1923?

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Joseph M.:  Practically, yeah.

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Gottlieb:  You lived at the same place all the time?

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Joseph M.:  Practically, yeah. Yeah. During that time. And I went from here
to yonder. Went to Cleveland so much folks there thought I lived there.
Same thing in Columbus. Various places. Baltimore. Yeah. I made one trip
from there to California. Cost me $835 [??].

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Gottlieb:  Where did you meet your wife?

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Joseph M.:  I met her here. The-- This must have been in 1917, 18, 17. Her
people came here and they didn't have but the one girl. One kid. And they
brought her. So her father got to working down there. Not the machine. Her
mother, she was working on the Artsman King [??] until she got to work with
the doctor Furman [??]. And I seen his picture in the paper yesterday, so
her mother. But the way I got to meet them, she finally got to working at
the boarding house. You know, she was a cook or waited table. She just
another girl, as far as I was concerned. So after that, this woman got
sick. Her mother, she lived next door and she didn't know where her husband
was. Her husband-- I don't know what kind of man he was. He never gave her
anything. He never gave her any money. So she got sick and he was away. And
he stayed away for about 2 or 3 weeks. And at that time, the flu was
raging. So much so that they were digging the graves out there in the
cemetery with a steam shovel. They wasn't diggin' graves, just diggin' a
trench and just putting them down in there. And whole family died with the
flu. That was in 17. And she got sick. And so she said to me one day, she
said, Mr. M., she said, give me $50.

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Joseph M.:  Well, a lot of time when women borrow money off of you know,
they open the door. I said, Well, you mean it? She said, Yeah, sure. Gimme
$50. She said to me, she said, Now if I die. Said, you tell Walter to pay
you. And if I live, she said, I'll pay you. Okay, that's good. She got
well, she paid me, but the girl was all ______[??], so I didn't pay much
attention to her. So when they got ready to go back home, she said to me,
she said, Mr. M., she said, I've been up in New Jersey. She said, I been to
Michigan. She said, I've been places in the South. She said, You're the
best man, she said, I ever met in my life. She said, Now we're going back
to North Carolina, she says, But we want to keep in touch with you. So you
write us and we're going to be writing. I said, Okay. So she did. So I got
to writin, writin, writin. And I began to write. And this girl began to
answer my letters. I begin to write to her. I had already met the girl and
through that, the girl and I got married. So after I proposed her, she
accepted. And I got the wedding ring and the engagement ring, I got it
done

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Joseph M.:  at the Rhodes [??]. And I paid a hundred and some dollar. I'm
gonna pay for it now. And I paid for the wedding ring. But anyhow, I got
the engagement rings, send it down and then I had to have the invitation
printed. And so that was in 17 and I kept in touch with them from 1917 to
1923. So in 23 I had to get the engagement ring and the wedding ring. Had
to have the invitations printed and sent down. And so I went down and I had
never seen any cotton in the ground to know what I was looking at. And so I
told him and it was a pity to me, but of course, I said, I've never seen
any cotton. He said, If you ever come down to our place, you see a lot of
cotton. So when I got down there somewhere around, Nor' Lina, I was on the
seaboard. I seen a lot of something, but I took it to be string beans,
white potatoes, you know, because down-- doesn't bloom. I got there, got
off. I told him I thought I was going to see some cotton, he said, there's
cotton. I said, Oh my Lord, I've been seeing that. I didn't know what was
wrong. Well, I got married then the fifth day of July in 1923.

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Gottlieb:  Mhm.

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Joseph M.:  And then left. I got married and I got that, where I got
married. Town in North Carolina. All seaboard train stopped there and they
have a roundhouse there and they have a ice cream factory and population I
think something like. Small population, probably like

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Joseph M.:  5 or 6000 people and had a mayor. Well, the mayor took me to
the church in his car. That's a Cadillac. His wife took my wife to the
church in Essex and they shut that place down that day. That's the truth, I
said here. They shut it down. And so he was at the wedding and his wife.
And they had one kid, but, uh. And so all-- all of the people down there,
the church, my goodness, all the seats were taken up. And they pressed
around the side saying, sardines in a can into the hottest place I'd ever
been in my life. But you see people down there, they'd be walking around in
that barefooted. Never owned any shoes. And you could just see those little
molecules that eat, you know, and they'd be walking around barefoot and
bareheaded. And I was dying. So we got married and we left. And after that,
we went back down there. I went back down there. I drove down there in
1926. So we got there, my wife had an aunt live right near the border of
North and South Carolina, and she was sick. So we went down to see her and
we got there, the doctor had just left and he left a prescription and we
had to have it filled. And so I took the people on my car and took them
down to a place known as Bennettsville, South Carolina. That's over the
line in South Carolina. So they went down and got the prescription filled.
But I sit out in the car until they got it. And I come on back home. I left
there and started back to the family [??]. I had to get some gas and I
pulled up some gas and some white feller came out and asked me and I told
him, puttin' gas. He looked, he seen my wife. He opened the door and
grabbed her and come and start hugging and kissing her. Put kind of a bad
taste in my mouth. I didn't know what to think. Good thing you got a bad
smile. So then she told him who I was and he shook my hand, you know.