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G., Joseph, November 26, 1973, tape 1, side 2

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Peter Gottlieb:  Did you get back to Charleston much during the years--
Joseph Joseph G.: No. No, I, uh.

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Joseph G.:  I joined the mill here in '24. I guess I must have worked. I
knew where he lived. Gottlieb: Yeah. Gottlieb: So here I didn't-- early in
the morning, I didn't go there. I stopped at the rooming house.
________[??] He all, went into work, go in the hen house. Used to have,
that was there-- I went to the house. He came home in the evening and he
said, now I pass this morning. And all pass was you. Then-- that's long,
'fore. So in that time I went back there several times. I went back a half
dozen times after that time. [unintelligible]

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Gottlieb:  What-- What I meant to ask. I didn't make myself clear. When you
were workin' on the carnival before you settled down here in Homestead, did
your travel-- travel on the carnival bring you back to Charleston very
much? Joseph G.: No. Gottlieb: Never. Joseph G.: No, I left there.
Gottlieb: When you left in 1919, you didn't see Charleston. Joseph G.: No,
no, no. My narration of the carnival was about, oh, hundred or so miles. We
played Chesterfield, South Carolina. We left there, went down ______[??]
nine hundred miles. They don't-- that far, but at one time they did. We
left there, went to Savannah, [unintelligible], South Carolina. They didn't
have their own train. The reason for the car, you'd be in the yard for
several hours, [unintelligible]. But they didn't go overnight. No we never
went back, yeah. Of course, that train now, like most places where they had
carnivals around, didn't anymore. Build up, [unintelligible]. Same thing in
Pittsburgh. We had spaces here but we'd be up around hills where fields had
fields. _____[??] to go around. Walk back, deliver it, finally walk back.
Like any other place, there was nothing.  [unintelligible] Gottlieb: Did
you enjoy that? Traveling around? Joseph G.: Oh, yeah, very, very much.
Gottlieb: _________[??] have a place to come back every night
[unintelligible]. Joseph G.: No, that didn't-- But as I mentioned, the main
attraction is the travel because-- _____[??] about five dollars a week. And
that'd be justified. I'd be a farmer for that. I make enough for foreman,
well that job only pays $25. You didn't get that. What? I mean, you get
some of that and some later and whatnot. [unintelligible] Ohio. And I moved
up as a foreman.

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Joseph G.:  So I went to the bar to get nine dollars for room. The bar
didn't have any. [unintelligible]borrowed five dollars from somebody. Get a
room. Before that time, room, what are you talking about? You got to be out
of your mind. Gottlieb: You just slept on the ground. Joseph G.: We were
playing room in Pennsylvania for [unintelligible]. I get up the next
morning where I was lying was wrong. But all over the. You see, I did have
arthritis. Gottlieb: Yeah. Joseph G.: Another time. We were playing a
little county down in South Carolina. And then I went in the tent. Stood in
there. Why don't you lie down and sleep?

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Joseph G.:  I can't sleep on that-- bed. So I get up on my bunk. Fell
asleep. Woke up next morning. Peek out of the tent. There's a fire over
there. I couldn't get up. It's the bed. Took an effort to get myself.
[unintelligible] Usually when the show closes might be. But if you won,
you's the next day. But not too long. Usually, until they open up at night.
Gottlieb: Do you remember any other things you liked to do particularly
with your spare time? Working on the carnival? [unintelligible] Joseph G.:
Mostly what I said. Examples on there. We got the biggest. But other than
that. Because during the day. Well, we really have nothing to do. So the
main job of setting up begin with wasn't til the end. And. The tent, of
course. It didn't matter what happened in the rain. We roll them up, put
them in the car, and don't let the sun shine on them rolled up. Gottlieb:
Why? Joseph G.: For as long as it's raining. When the sunshine, we got to
roll it out. Gottlieb: Did you make a lot of new friends? Joseph G.: Well,
I didn't meet too many. It was the same guys. Well, that's about.

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Gottlieb:  Well can you tell me about how you finally came to settle here
in Homestead? What made you decide?

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Joseph G.:  Well, I said. I really don't know. _______[??] the tour. The
owner lived in the North Side. Of Pittsburgh. We stop here. I went back
another year. I had the foreman job. They don't know why we settled here. I
didn't want to stay here after I went out the mill. I wanted to go to
Detroit. ________[??] plant. 'Course, I put one loner, in the winter you
ain't _____[??]. You know, this one winter we were forced to hire. So here
I went to work in the landlord's shop. [unintelligible] Didn't have any
brains. I was packing boxes, 'course the whole thing started,

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Joseph G.:  Last thing started because I work in labor gang.
[unintelligible]

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Joseph G.:  So here this evening, I'm reading. Reading up this stuff. I
want to go home. Seven o'clock this morning. I said, why don't you go? He
said, my money didn't come.

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Joseph G.:  I said, Oh, he said, you were over there in that section, or
did you have anybody-- that guy quit. Don't have nobody. I said, why don't
you give me the job? He said, you can have it. [unintelligible] Go ahead
and pack the boxes. So there, I didn't have that thing but five minutes.
Guy comes to me, Are you the box? I said, yeah. Well. See this one. So here
I go over to all this stuff here we God blessing and the he says, Give me
that kid.

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Joseph G.:  I want to practice my ___[??]. [unintelligible] I been here all
night. I made it back to _____[??] I finally quit.

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Joseph G.:  The guy said, I'm sorry you're leaving, he come back and I'm
here, [unintelligible]. Well now I'm ___[??] to quitting. The reason I
quit, a buddy of mine, he would fill out that diesel engine. He didn't get
in there [??] So then we apply for a pass, get ready for hire. We just left
the job.

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Joseph G.:  Couldn't find a job. Of course the job paid $3.76 a day, you
get time and a half for, over eight. Get time and a half for all the
Sundays. That time, I couldn't go on less than $50. That'd be twice a
month. Six months. [unintelligible] Today now I'd be retired railroader.
I'd be lyin' if I ____[??] a train. But what do you anything.
[unintelligible] Anytime I see ____[??] less than, we're not putting in
forty years of railroad. Gottlieb: Did you always have to get a job during
the winter layover? For the carnival? Joseph G.: [unintelligible] Gottlieb:
Oh I see. Joseph G.: Well, we made it. We were. We went to court somewhere
in Virginia one year. So they, I was a, I published a newspaper.
[unintelligible] I was in news reporter and editor and printer. And I did
all the work myself.

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Joseph G.:  But somehow we managed to live doing that. The boss's wife and,
um. [unintelligible]

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Joseph G.:  Look, she said all winter. [unintelligible]

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Joseph G.:  There were three brothers. And each one's wife. So then that
the, uh. The, uh. Man I work for. They call his wife Bessie, just to break
the monotony. They all in the day [??]. [unintelligible] I was often a
member take the stuff off. That's the oly way to _____[??].
[unintelligible] You know, I was the everything. Editor. News reporter.
Printer. Gottlieb: So men would have to just find whatever job they could
find? Joseph G.: In winter.

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Joseph G.:  Because money. Some of them left all of their home and then
come back when it was over. But some of the fellas would save, want to save
the money for that. Cause they were-- they were paying for ________[??] but
there weren't too many doing that.

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Joseph G.:  I wasn't on that. No, I was on my own. News reporter. No, some
would go home and come back.

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Gottlieb:  How many months was the-- would you be laying over for the
winter?

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Joseph G.:  Oh, about. Five months. Gottlieb: Five. Joseph G.: Yeah just
about five months. I told you earlier about [unintelligible] They come from
the North. So many times they put in a few weeks there [unintelligible]
'Course that winter, [unintelligible]. Oh, they owed everybody.
[unintelligible] So once after. They owed so much money.

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Joseph G.:  That the association there sent a man along with a bill to
collect for them. They pay something about 20s or 10. Filled with. They
would pay. So that's [unintelligible] They have a bad week [unintelligible]
Revenue to pick up. Quite a few.

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Gottlieb:  Can you tell me how you heard about a job in the mills here and
how you came to be working here?

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Joseph G.:  Well, see, at that time there was a shortage of men. The steel
work lost in there to different places. They call that transportation. They
would go, like, say to Richmond. Yeah. Yeah, of course they got. They were
mostly from the South. They brought in transportation. In fact, most of the
fellas in the plant came here on transportation. Gottlieb: Oh yeah? Joseph
G.: Oh yeah. Most of the fellas. Gottlieb: You talking about Black men now?
Joseph G.: Yeah. Yeah. 'Course, they brought in anyone and all that want to
come. They were mostly fellas from the South. Anybody that want to come.
They would go to Richmond and they would bring in a whole coachload of men.
You know, you were one of the ones they were hire down there, bring you up.
And then you got here and they took care of your food and lodging until you
had earned enough to pay for it. Of course even after you earned a pay or
two, they would deduct from your pay enough to pay the boardinghouses.
[unintelligible] So they brought in enough to pay [unintelligible] Well,
we're up in the 30s. Gottlieb: Really? Joseph G.: 'Course now, well
actually, the most were Mexicans and so forth. See they went as far as
Mexico to bring up the Mexicans. [unintelligible] Gottlieb: But that's not
how you got here. Joseph G.: Oh, no, no, no. I came by just quitting on the
carnival here.

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Gottlieb:  Had somebody told you or your buddies that there was work in
Homestead as opposed to Braddock or Duquesne or one of those places, why
was it this particular town?

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Joseph G.:  The reputation. Gottlieb: Oh, really? Joseph G.: The coal, if
there's no work in Homestead, Detroit. The women. Gottlieb: Really. Joseph
G.: Yeah. Homestead. Detroit. They was the steel mills here. The automotive
in Detroit. Those two places. You may find a job anywhere, but if there's
no job in those two places, well then forget it, there's ain't anything.
There's always a great need for men here and Detroit back then.
[unintelligible] When I want to work in the mill, the certain job there,
they had 12 men on this particular job. So then finally, 1930. I worked as
a foreman there. On that team. [unintelligible] They cut twelve to six. So
finally. When I came out the mill eight years ago, it had three men on that
same job. Gottlieb: They cut-- Joseph G.: But, well, this wasn't actually
cut. It was machinery that made that second cut. But now when they had the
12 men.

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Joseph G.:  They just wanted, they didn't need that many there. Gottlieb:
They just make the six work harder. Joseph G.: Yeah. Yeah. But when they
had the twelve men, they didn't-- But now the six. They needed more than
six. I would say eight men would have been working together.
[unintelligible]

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Gottlieb:  Did you just walk into the mill's office down there when you
were-- Joseph G.: Oh yeah. You saw they had the sign. Anyone. They hire
every day at that time.

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Joseph G.:  And now, it's periodic. Gottlieb: Did they ask you if you had
any experience when you walked in? Joseph G.: No. Unless you applied for
certain job. And then the big manager line up with. Gottlieb: You had never
been in a big mill before. Joseph G.: No.

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Gottlieb:  What did it look like to you? Do you remember what, you know,
what, all that stuff, how you reacted?

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Joseph G.:  Well, I was really I was a little frightened, you know, to see
all that stuff. I only got. With my first job there, I worked in general
labor. I stayed there, I think. Gottlieb: Was that in open hearth? Joseph
G.: No. I was outside. Gottlieb: Out, out, out in the yard. Joseph G.: Out
in the yard. Fact I have a big truck here. I was in the Labour gang when
they were building that, and I worked 17 days there and it became so rough
I decided to quit. And this buddy of mine, he was already on the inside of
the plant. And he got me into shipping. That's why I continued. So after
they _____[??]

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Joseph G.:  I want to go over there. But the reason I didn't go, feeling in
my head about. Did I want about. Gottlieb: What truck was that? Joseph G.:
Truck drill.

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Joseph G.:  Yeah, cause I got that, the time I got that job.
[unintelligible] When I went there, there were no safety points. They have
now. But you didn't need to wear gloves if you didn't want.
[unintelligible] Uh, safety shoes came in year after I, one year after I
______[??]. Wear anything you wanted. [unintelligible] But then after that
you have to wear your goggles. [unintelligible] Gottlieb: You know some
companies _____[??] The accidents or job accidents, or the factory people
working there-- Joseph G.: They did that. But now they don't because they
tell you what to wear and you must wear it. So there's no there's no slip
up there. Gottlieb: You think the fact that they were bringing

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Gottlieb:  Up a lot of Black men from the South who didn't have a lot of
experience created a situation where that was more likely to happen? Joseph
G.: No.

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Joseph G.:  I blame that on the mill. Gottlieb: Well, how would you most
react to the ______[??] I mean, what would cause, how did the men-- Joseph
G.: Well in reference to the structure of the mill. They have those big
huge piles of beams piled up. Men would die [unintelligible]. Do you have
an overhead crane in the meantime that the crane would hit one beam and.
But of course, nowadays they're not piled up high and then they're more
careful. So, uh, so one to be killed down there now is news. It really
makes news. Because it happens so ___[??]. You don't get hurt down there
nowadays, til you out. Gottlieb: Human life was cheaper back in those days.
Joseph G.: Well they just didn't have experience. Not that the government
[unintelligible]. Back there was a reward for ____[??]. [unintelligible] It
didn't matter if you will, you'll have to work. You must, the gloves are
worn, you get new gloves or you don't work. [unintelligible] They put in
the hard hat and the goggles. Gottliebb: With the fire? Joseph G.:
Everything else. Now in the open hall. They're using, they give you
clothes. Protective clothes. The hard hats and the goggles ________[??] You
wear glasses. You can get prescription goggles made. [unintelligible] You
don't dare walk from one area to another without your hard hat.
[unintelligible] And it must be worn unless you're under a helmet. Anytime
you're away from the _____[??] hat must be on. [unintelligible] Gottlieb:
What job did you get after you were on the labor gang? ____[??] Joseph G.:
Shipping, yeah. So that's why I put off a year. Gottlieb: Oh you did?
Joseph G.: Oh yeah. Gottlieb: That was just like, you had two different
jobs in the mill the entire time. Joseph G.: Because as a foreman I worked
the picketing line. Two jobs. From general labor to the shipping job.
Gottlieb: What kind of work is involved in the shipping department? Joseph
G.: Sorting. Working out-- ____[??] plates. _____[??] plates. They all come
together. 'Course we separate the plates. Any of it. See some plates had to
be inspected. Foreman, have a huge pile of a thousand different customers.
That's way they did in shipment. Gottlieb: There's a different job that
I've heard about. On the pile gang. In the plate mill. And they have to

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Gottlieb:  The boss of the pile gang

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Gottlieb:  Will have to separate the plates according to the order. Joseph
G.: That was my job. Gottlieb: It was. Joseph G.: As foreman, yeah.
Gottlieb: Oh, I see. You were in the _____[??] but not in the plate mill.
Joseph G.: Now, the-- the, in the piling we was separated by order. What
they have on some of the plates. Well, he just needed to get in the pile.
Then they go in the yard and out in the yard. We do axe vill [??].
Definitely. Gottlieb: Oh I see. Joseph G.: He, he, he handled the hot stuff
that was going on. Got to go out in the yard. And that's where most of the
work was done out there. Gottlieb: Oh I see. Joseph G.: [unintelligible]
Gottlieb: Uh huh. Was the old man named Silas Bart? Joseph G.: Silas-- is
the relief man. Gottlieb: Oh, you were. Joseph G.: Yeah. Anytime he wasn't
there, I was there. He was a foreman. I was a relief man. Gottlieb: I see,
you worked up to be foreman after a while. Joseph G.: No. Here's what
happened. I worked as the relief and the job became vacant. And here I
didn't get the job. [unintelligible] I worked as a relief man. What
happened-- what are you talking-- Said, what are you talking about? Said, I
just had that job. Well, he said, not necessarily. So I want the first man
coming in for the job. I say, well, look.

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Joseph G.:  You don't find another spare tire, gotta use what you have.

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Joseph G.:  So they got him a hat. So I would talk the union man, well now,
what happened today, he said you folks should have gone there. I spoke with
the boss chipper and he said you could have went _______[??] continue. He
said, ___[??] when you ask for job, you don't get it, but then they offset
you. But I had some questions. I thought, forget it. The reason I did, I
said, well, now, if I get the union there, and they recommended it there, I
would have to get the job. But can I keep the job? Well, I had this in mind
that they'd find something wrong that wasn't wrong. So that's why I didn't.
That's why I didn't fight for the job. But they still want me to do the
relief foreman. And guy said to me, man, you're a fool. Because at that
time the job paid $10. Gottlieb: [unintelligible] Joseph G.: Yeah. Today,
about $50. He said, Now you're making $6.36 over here and over there you're
making ten. I said I must be a fool, why would he ______[??] But you know
the job thing. Here now I came off when Sunday morning and here the foreman
didn't come back. They said, that you, you a foreman today or something.
Why not? They had to almost shut the plant down trying to find someone to.
Put me as a foreman. Gottlieb: But if you were talkin' to a union man, that
would have been, the union came in 1937. So you worked in chipping
department for a long time before you were able to move up to a foreman.
Joseph G.: I could have gotten a job, I would have. Well now I just feared
what would be said that actually wasn't true. You know, so I just was down
there. Gottlieb: Til you got the job _____[??] anyway. Joseph G.: No, no,
no. I just. I refuse to be the release man. So I just went back in
chipping. I just-- what I was. Because actually my job was easier. Look at
the supervisor. You don't use your muscles. Very well. Maybe down to one
day. Look, I was foreman today. Look, you a foreman again today, I said,
said well now, another day's rest won't hurt me. My job is when I rest.
[unintelligible] Doing no muscle work. [unintelligible] It's like on a
Sunday line. Everything stop for just two minutes. They come looking for
me. Gottlieb: Oh yeah? Well, __________[??]. Joseph G.: Well, as you know,
any supervisor, well he's in trouble. As long as you're going good, fine.
Because I have those pictures, I had those trainmen to do the work. But
they didn't find any guys _____[??]. They come-- walk up-- but that's the
thing with any job. The manager, you's the prime target.