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B., Caleb, April 9, 1976, tape 1, side 1

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Peter Gottlieb:  The following interview is with Mr. Caleb B., of 114 West
12th Avenue, Homestead, Pennsylvania. Recorded on the 9th of April 1976.
[audio cuts]

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Gottlieb:  Maybe you can just tell me in your own words about your life.
Where you come from and how you came up to Pittsburgh. Caleb B.: Yeah, I
can't remember [unintelligible] from Marion. Gottlieb: From Marion? Caleb
B.: Yeah. Marion, South Carolina.

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Caleb B.:  I came up here wondering for myself and came up by myself. And I
got the boys in Richmond, Virginia,  they came up here. And I've been up
here ever since. Gottlieb: Um, let me ask you a little bit about South
Carolina. Um, were your parents born right around the area you grew up?

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Caleb B.:  They were born down in South Carolina. All of them were born
down in South Carolina. 16 of them were born down in South Carolina.
Gottlieb: Are those your brothers and sisters? Caleb B.: All were born in
South Carolina. Gottlieb: Uh huh. What about your grandparents? Did they
also come from-- Caleb B.: Down in South Carolina. Gottlieb: Did you, uh,
did you know your grandparents when you were growing up? Did they live
around the area? Caleb B.: Yeah, I was a small boy, but I knew them. Yeah.
Gottlieb: Do you remember anything about them? Caleb B.: No, sir, I don't
remember nothing about them. My dad had me out there cuting-- he had two
plantations. He had me out there cutting up, cutting-- weaving up stuff and
cutting down trees and making farm. Yeah. Gottlieb: So your, your, uh, did
your father own these places, or was he? Caleb B.: That's right. He owned
them. Gottlieb: He owned them. Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb: Well, he
must have been a fairly wealthy man for that period of time then. I don't
think many Black people in South Carolina owned farms back then. Caleb B.:
That's right. My dad owned two farms back then. You move from one farm to
the other, and we cleaned that last farm up. Yeah. Gottlieb: Do you know
how he got ahold of this land?

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Caleb B.:  No. I don't know how he got ahold of it. I don't know that. He
had me out there plowing. I was so small, I had to plow. I had to ride that
so low, I couldn't put my hand on it. I had to plow about right there,
plowing. Gottlieb: Uh huh. What kind of things did your father raise on the
farm?

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Caleb B.:  Corn and cotton and nothing, nothing, nothing--

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Gottlieb:  Did he raise any animals? Any livestock?

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Caleb B.:  Yeah. He had cows and hogs.

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Gottlieb:  Did you raise any vegetables there? I mean-- Caleb B.: Yes.
Greens and black eyed peas and white potatoes, all that kind of stuff.
Caleb B.: Um, you said there-- you had, did you have 15 brothers and
sisters? Caleb B.: I got 16 all of them. Gottlieb: So there were 17 in all?
17 children? Caleb B.: Yes. That's right. Gottlieb: Were you the oldest boy
or-- Caleb B.: No, sir, I'm the youngest boy. Gottlieb: Are you the
youngest one? Caleb B.: Yes, sir. Gottlieb: What place are you in the 17?
Caleb B.: I was down in Marion, South Carolina. Gottlieb: Yeah. no, what I
meant to ask was, were you the eighth child? Ninth? Caleb B.: No, I've
been. I've been the 10th shot, I think. Yeah. Gottlieb: When you were
growing up there, did did you have any other relatives living with you
besides, you know, your parents and your brothers and sisters?

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Caleb B.:  No it was only with my brothers and sisters.

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Gottlieb:  Did any of your, uh, relatives from South Carolina move north,
or were you the only one?  Caleb B.: No. A gang of them up here. Gottlieb:
Uh huh. Caleb B.: Yeah, they just follow me. Gottlieb: But you were the
first one to leave. Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb: Of all, of all your
family, your mother's side. Your father's side. Caleb B.: That's right. I
was forced to leave, so My daddy died in 66, and all my brothers died down
there in Marion, South Carolina. But I got six. I got four sisters living
down there now. Yeah. Gottlieb: Which of your relatives have moved up here
since you came? Caleb B.: My older brother's daughter and-- it's my oldest
brother's daughter, came up here following me. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.:
Yeah. And that's the only relative from down there who's come up here.
Caleb B.: Yeah, that's right. Gottlieb: Is she in Homestead? Caleb B.: Yeah
she lived over here on the north side somewhere. Gottlieb: And every-- and
all the other people stayed down there. Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb:
What kind of work did your father have you doing on the farm besides
plowing? Caleb B.: That's all. Plowing. Digging up ground for a farm. Yeah.
Gottlieb: He and he-- you said he started you out pretty young. Caleb B.:
Yeah, that's right. Gottlieb: Were you able to go to school Very much?
Caleb B.: One week in my life. Gottlieb: Is that right? Caleb B.: One week
in my life. When I leave South Carolina and came up here, I made a cross
mark. Had to get hired. Well, I learned how to write songs since I came
here to South Carolina. I mean to Pittsburgh.

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Gottlieb:  Who, who, who taught you how to write once you were here? Caleb
B.: I dreamed it. Gottlieb: You dreamed it? Caleb B.: God called me to
preach the gospel and told me-- I told God that I didn't want to preach
because I don't have no education. He said, if you go preach, I will send
you a man. He said, send me a man if I go preach. But I start out talking
with God and he brought me a black fountain pen and said write in that same
dream. I told him I can't write. He said, write. He took the pen out of my
hand and he told me to write my name. And I never wrote my name in my life.
Gottlieb: Huh. Caleb B.: Yeah. That's when I started out. Gottlieb: Did,
uh-- did God ever send you a man to help you? He meant to send the Holy
Spirit. Gottlieb: Uh huh. I see. Caleb B.: Did you ever go to any classes
up here or any any kind of school? Caleb B.: No. No, sir. There was no kind
of school up here? All I had a dream up here. Gottlieb: Did the other
children in your family? Were they able to go to school? Caleb B.: Yes,
they went to school. Gottlieb: Why weren't you able to? Caleb B.: I don't
know. My dad had kept me plowing and doing something on the farm.

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Caleb B.:  I was so small, but he kept me there. He moved from one farm to
the other one. And this farm he moved and all my trees and bushes and stuff
and we cleaned that up. Yeah. Gottlieb: So there was too much work for you
to do to to go to school? Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb: Did you ever
have any jobs off your father's farm when you were living in South
Carolina? Caleb B.: No, I went to the sawmill down there and had been a
fireman. Out in the woods, and then came up here. Gottlieb: I see. Um, how
old were you when you got the sawmill job in South Carolina? Caleb B.: I've
been. I've been 16. 16. Gottlieb: And you had never. You had never worked
at that sawmill before. This was the first time you were--? Caleb B.: First
time. Gottlieb: Do you remember what time of year it was that? Caleb B.:
No. I don't know what time of year it was. I didn't really think of that
part. Gottlieb: Why did you-- why did you go to work at this sawmill at
that time? Caleb B.: I wanted an automobile. I went to the sawmill to start
working to work for my car. Yeah. Gottlieb: How long did you work at the
sawmill? Caleb B.: Oh, about 2-- about 3 years. Gottlieb: About three
years. Caleb B.: Yeah, I bought me a car. Gottlieb: Were you still living
at home? Caleb B.: Yes, I was still living at home. Gottlieb: Were you,
were you able to help out your father on the farm while you were working at
the sawmill? Caleb B.: Helping my dad out on the farm.

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Gottlieb:  So you were working at two places. Really? Caleb B.: That's
right. Gottlieb: Let me ask you, when, when you were-- during this period
of time, the three years that you worked at the sawmill, did you spend some
time at the sawmill and some time at your father's place, or did you work
all year-- Caleb B.: yeah. Sometime at the sawmill Sometime my father's
place. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Were there certain times
of year that you would work at the sawmill and other times at your
father's? Caleb B.: When the farm was done. Then I worked at the sawmill.
Yeah, almost finished there. Gottlieb: I see that means when you were, when
you had brought in the crop. Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb: You-- Caleb
B.: That's right. You would go back to the sawmill? That's right. Gottlieb:
Would that mean that you would be working at the sawmill pretty much during
the winter months? Caleb B.: That's right. The winter months. Gottlieb:
Well, what made you decide to move up here? Caleb B.: I heard talk of
Homestead and I just said I was going to that I heard of the offer making
good money. And I, I got the train and come to Richmond, Virginia, and got
a ttransfer from Richmond, Virginia, here to Homestead. Gottlieb: Mm hmm.
Who who did you hear talking about this? Caleb B.: Some. Some old man was
talking about it.

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Caleb B.:  And I don't know the man's name now, but I said and I come up
here to see this place. Gottlieb: Did. Did you say your father had died?
Caleb B.: Yeah, He died at the age of 66. Gottlieb: Uh huh. And you said
that in 1923. Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb: Did your did your family
want you to carry on with the farm? To continue? Caleb B.: Well, my mother
told me to come up here and be careful. She told me come up and be careful.
Then I went back down there after my mother died and, and buried her. Then
I turn around and come right back to Homestead. Yeah. Gottlieb: Did your--
were your brothers and sisters able to continue with the farm? Caleb B.:
Yes, sir. That's Right.

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Gottlieb:  Did you stop anyplace between South Carolina and Richmond? No, I
stopped in Richmond. That's all. Gottlieb: That was the first place.

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Gottlieb:  Had your parents, uh, raised any. Did your, did your parents not
want you to work at the sawmill? Did they raise any objections to you
doing-- Caleb B.: No, they didn't say anything about me working at the
sawmill because I took my little bit of money. I get a dollar and a half a
day, and I took my little money back to my mother. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb
B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Did-- and then she allowed you to have some of it or?
Caleb B.: Yeah, she gives me some of that. Gottlieb: Yeah. Let me see you
are 81 now.

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Gottlieb:  you came up here in 23. You must have been about 28 years old
when you came. Caleb B.: Something like that. Yeah. Gottlieb: So you must
have started working at the sawmill when you were about 25. Caleb B.:
Something like that. Yeah. Yeah. Gottlieb: When you had heard this man
talking about Homestead, did he also talk about the transportation from
Richmond? Caleb B.: Well, not very much, because I went to Richmond to come
up here. It was no transportation to come. I stayed in Richmond three
weeks. Then I got a transportation here to Homestead. Yeah. Gottlieb: Did
you work in Richmond during those three weeks? Caleb B.: No. I didn't work
in Richmond. Gottlieb: You were just waiting for the-- Caleb B.: Just
waiting for the transportation to come here. Did, did somebody tell you
about the transportation? Caleb B.: Some old man from up here was down
there and he told me about it. Gottlieb: So you knew where to go when you
got to Richmond? No, I didn't know where to go because a man from this
place meet me at the train station down at Richmond and brought us back
here to Homestead. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  Why did you have to wait for those three weeks before you came
up here? Caleb B.: I'm waiting on the transporter to come to come to
Pittsburgh. Gottlieb: Yeah, yeah, so, hey, was this man Reverend Nelson?
The man who-- from up here who was bringing people up from, From Richmond?
Caleb B.: What'd you say about him? Gottlieb: Was his name Reverend Nelson?
Caleb B.: Nelson? Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb B.: Yes, that's him. Gottlieb:
Had you seen him in Richmond as soon as you got to Richmond and he told you
you'd have to wait for three weeks? Caleb B.: That's right. Gottlieb: Yeah.
Do you remember where you were living down there at that time while you
waited for transportation? Caleb B.: I. I know I was living in the house
down with somebody.

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Caleb B.:  I don't know who they were. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Were they friends
of yours? Caleb B.: No. I've never seen them before. You were just staying
in a room there or something. Caleb B.: That's right.

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Gottlieb:  Once you got up here, did you go back to South Carolina very
often? Caleb B.: No, sir. Gottlieb: You just stayed up here. Caleb B.: I
just stayed up here And see my sister, maybe stay a week or something like
that. Come right back here. Gottlieb: Uh huh. How often did you do that?
How often did you go back to visit? Caleb B.: No, just once a year.
Gottlieb: Just once a year? Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Every year? Caleb B.:
Yeah, every year until about 15 years when I quit going down. Gottlieb:
Would you go back at the same time of year? Like, take a vacation? Caleb
B.: No, no, not the same time. I was down one time, I buried my-- buried my
mother. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: And I went down two times to bury my,
bury my brother. And I buried my sister. Gottlieb: Mm hm. Would you be
going back down there whenever you got a chance, or? Caleb B.: Yes, yes,
that right. I ain't been down or nothing in about five years since I've
been down there.  Gottlieb: But you're relatives are still there farming
that same land? Caleb B.: That's right. My sisters. Not my brother, my
brother's dead. It's my sisters down there. Gottlieb: Were you able to keep
in touch with your people down there? Caleb B.: Oh, yes. We would write
another. Gottlieb: Yeah. Well, you told me that you didn't know how to
write when you came up here. Caleb B.: No, I didn't know how to write. I
got people to write for me. Gottlieb: Oh, you got to write for you. Were
the people who would write these letters for you just friends, or were
they-- Caleb B.: Friends, yes. Yes, just friends. Gottlieb: Can you tell me
how transportation used to work? What they would do with the men once they
got them here? Caleb B.: Oh, in the middle there's a wait.

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Caleb B.:  That's all I know. Got off in traffic in the mill. Gottlieb: Did
they give you a physical examination? Caleb B.: Yes. Yes. Gottlieb: Uh, and
then they, did they take you to someplace where you could stay? Caleb B.:
Well, yes. I stayed right here on Glen Street, housed in a rooming house on
there. Gottlieb: Was that down in Lower Homestead at that time? Caleb B.:
No that was right here on the second, second street from here. Gottlieb: Do
you remember the family that you were staying with? Caleb B.: Old man
Johnson was all I know. That his son was the cook. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  What kind of a, what kind of a job did they give you down in the
mill when you first started? Caleb B.: Carrying scrap. Gottlieb: Oh, yeah.
Caleb B.: Yeah. Hardest job the company had. Gottlieb: Can you tell me
about what you'd have to do there? Caleb B.: Yes. I took up the scrap and
carry it to the chute. Then it's coming down, you couldn't go, throw it in
the box and use the [unintelligible]. I kept the scrap like the rule.
Gottlieb: So there would be a place where the scrap would have fallen
[Caleb B.: Yes that's right] and you had to pick it up. Caleb B.: Put the
scarp in the scrap box. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: And the man's bac there
cutting it off on the side. Gottlieb: How long did you have that job? Caleb
B.: I had it until 1962. Gottlieb: You worked at that same position all the
time? Caleb B.: On scrap. Yeah. Hardest job the company had. Gottlieb: Did
you ever leave the mill and go look for a different job? Caleb B.: No, I
stayed in the mills. I went in the mills for 36 years. Gottlieb: And you
never had any other job? Caleb B.: No I had no other job. And I didn't lose
a day in 36 years. Down to the mill in that years. It was a hard job.

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Gottlieb:  What, what department of the mill were you in? Caleb B.: I was
in the whole, the whole up and down the river. 100 and a quarter. 118. 120.
All those. All those [??]. I just moved, moved from one mill to the other.
Gottlieb: Wherever they needed you to work. Caleb B.: That's right.
Gottlieb: But no matter what department you were in, you were always doing
that same job. Caleb B.: Same job, yeah. Same job up until 1962, they moved
me to the slab yard, and I got on pension, my pension from the slab yard.
Gottlieb: What kind of work were you doing there? Caleb B.: Chaining up.
Gottlieb: Can you tell me how that, how that goes? Caleb B.: Put the lift
down, I threw the chain up inside the crane who took it down in the yard.
Gottlieb: So you're just kind of connecting up loads of things to the
crane. Caleb B.: Yes, yes that's right. Gottlieb: How did that kind of work
compare to working on the farm? Caleb B.: Crane up lift,picking up lift,
taking it down there and the down there doing it. And I'm up here to the
mill, chaning up, sending it down in the yard. Yeah. Gottlieb: Did you, did
you like the-- did you like working in a steel mill better than you did
working on a farm? Caleb B.: Yeah, I like it better. Gottlieb: Why? Caleb
B.: Because I got money for it. Well, on the farm, you just plowing and
pulling grass or something like that. I got money for the steel mill a
dollar and a half a da when I first came here. Gottlieb: A dollar and a
half a day. Caleb B.: Yeah. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Um. Do you think you could have had a better life if you had
stayed down there? Caleb B.: No, sir. No, sir. I've had a better life by
coming up here. If I had been down there, I wouldn't have the pension
coming that I got now. Yeah. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Well, some people talk about, you know, living out in the
country and having fresher air and better--

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Caleb B.:  We had fresher air all right but fresher air don't mean
everything. Yeah, but I'm got my pension now and put in the mailbox every
month. I don't have to worry about nothing no more. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb
B.: And my sisters and the thing down there are not doing as good as I'm
doing because they got to work for it. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: I don't
have to work for it. Gottlieb: What about when, back when you were young?
Do you think there was an advantage of being up here when you were a young
man?

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Caleb B.:  No, I'd probably stay down there,  I'd have gone down like the
rest of them. Old and no, no, no getting around. Just moving. Just moving.
Just moving. Gottlieb: Were you a single man when you came up here? Were
you single? Caleb B.: My wife just died. Gottlieb: Oh, I meant when you
first came up here in 1924. Caleb B.: Yeah, I was single when I first came
up here. Gottlieb: What were you using the money you were earning for when
you worked here? Caleb B.: For a farm. Yeah for a farm. Caleb B.: You were,
you had planned to, to go back to the South? Caleb B.:  Yeah, I had a mind
to go back. But then my mind would change. I'd stay up here, I got the
money to go back and my mind would change and I stayed. That's why I'm here
today. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb B.: Backwards and forewards. Backwards and
forewards. Gottlieb: When did you finally decide to stay here? Caleb B.:
After. after-- I got married. And I come up here to another woman from down
South. And I said, I'll stay on up here. Yeah. Gottlieb: Cool. Do you
remember about what time that was?

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Caleb B.:  No. I don't remember. I don't remember what time of year that
was. It was the man I roomed with had a sister and she came up here to see
him and I married her.

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Gottlieb:  But you never had wanted to go back to your parent's farm. You
would want to get a farm of your own. Caleb B.: Yes. See, I had my dad farm
down there. See? Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: My dad's farm. Gottlieb: Well,
what did you need the money for from up here, then if you had your dad's
farm already? Caleb B.: Buy different things. I was buying different
things. Gottlieb:  Did you ever start to do that? Do you ever go back down
south and buy things for a farm? Caleb B.: No I was buying clothes and
grocery, that's all. Just living is all. Gottlieb: Do you know what did you
do with the car you had? Caleb B.: I give it to my brother and I came up
here. Yeah. Gottlieb: Did you buy one up here? Caleb B.: No. Didn't have
one up here.

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Gottlieb:  Did you know anybody from down in your home when you were living
in Homestead? Was there anybody who had come up from there? Caleb B.: No.
Nobody, Nobody but myself. They were all back down there. After I came here
at that time, they started following me up here. After I was telling them
how I was getting along up here and they're coming one by one. One by one.
Yeah. Caleb B.: Were these friends of yours from down there? Caleb B.: Yes.
Yes. Gottlieb: Would they be staying with you when they came up? Caleb B.:
No. We all-- we had the rooming houses. There were sometimes 15, 20 people
in that same rooming house. Gottlieb: Yeah. Would they get in touch with
you when they got here? Caleb B.: Yeah, they got in touch with me.
Gottlieb: Would you try and help them out? Caleb B.: I did all I could to
help them out. Gottlieb: What, what kind of things would you do to help
them?

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Caleb B.:  Give them my money until they get some. Possibly create a room
with-- all of that?

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. Did you ever help them to get a job? Caleb B.: Well, no.
They come up and the mill will give them a job. Gottlieb: Did you ever take
them to a foreman or, foreman or something like that? Caleb B.: Yes I took
them to my foreman. Mr. Nelson. Gottlieb: You would take them to Mr.
Nelson? Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Was he your foreman? Caleb B.: Yeah, he's
my foreman. Gottlieb: The same Reverend Nelson? Caleb B.: Yeah, that's
right. Gottlieb: I didn't know that he worked in the mill. I thought he was
in the personnel office. Caleb B.: Yeah, the personnel office. That's a
connection to the mill, too. Gottlieb: Right. Caleb B.: He'd bring the boys
down there. He took him down there in the morning, put them on the job.
Then he wouldn't go back no more. Gottlieb: Yeah, right. Caleb B.: Bring on
another crew, and he'd take them to the mill. Gottlieb: Right. So. So when
your friends wanted a job, it was Nelson that you went to give him a job.
Caleb B.: That's right. I went to Nelson. Very nice man. Gottlieb: What
would-- would Nelson be trying to help the Black people from the South who
were coming up here in some other way? Caleb B.: Well, he would meet them
down in Richmond, Virginia, and bring them on up here [doorbell rings] on
the train. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Wait a second.
[audio cuts]

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Gottlieb:  Can you tell me the different places that you've lived in
Homestead? Different addresses where you stayed? Caleb B.: Um, I stayed in
a place called Glen Hazel. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: Then I'd come back to
Homestead.

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Caleb B.:  Then when my wife died, I moved in with my daughter. Gottlieb:
Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  You first lived on Glen Street. Yeah: I'd first lived on Glen
street. Caleb B.: How long did you stay there? Well, I stayed there, I
guess, around two years. Rooming with them. Then I moved out on Sixth
Avenue. Gottlieb: Mhm.

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Caleb B.:  I married this man's daughter. This wife died when I was living
here, and then I moved with my daughter here.

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Gottlieb:  So from, so from sixth Avenue, you moved to Glen Hazel? Caleb
B.: I moved from on this street here, to Sixth Avenue. Gottlieb: Oh, yeah,
right. Caleb B.: Then I went to Glen Hazel. Gottlieb: Okay. And then back--
Caleb B.: Back. Back at Homestead. Yeah. Gottlieb: Was the wo-- I'm, I'm
not sure I remember whether you told me this, but was the woman you married
from South Carolina? Caleb B.: Yes, sir. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb B.: South
Carolina. Gottlieb: Had you known her before you moved up here? Caleb B.:
No I was rooming with her brother. Her brother had a room in a house on
Sixth Avenue. Where I could simply, I could cook for myself. And I leave
this place here. Leave that on Sixth. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: He sent for
his daughter, his sister, to come up here. And I caught it in the mail.
Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  The other people that knew you from your home in South Carolina,
would they be coming up and staying at the same boarding house you were
staying at? Caleb B.: [??] at the same boarding house, yeah. All they had
then, a big boarding house, six and seven and 10, maybe 13 people, living
in one house.

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Gottlieb:  Why did you move from the place at Glen Street down to Sixth
Avenue? Caleb B.: The man down here would let me cook. Gottlieb: Oh, I see.
Uh huh. And then this other place you had to eat your meals out. Caleb B.:
No, eating in some houses the man cook for us. Gottlieb: Oh, I see. Caleb
B.: The man cook for us on Glen Street. Gottlieb: didn't you like the food
he made for you?

00:27:40.000 --> 00:27:48.000
Caleb B.:  No, I really cook for myself.

00:27:48.000 --> 00:28:10.000
Gottlieb:  Was the place up here in, in Glen Street was this area then
Black neighborhood when you lived up here on on Glen Street? Caleb B.: Yes.
Gottlieb: it was? Caleb B.:  Yes.

00:28:10.000 --> 00:29:44.000
Gottlieb:  When you came up here, did you notice any difference between the
Black people who were coming up from the South and the Black people who had
been born in the north who were living up here. Caleb B.:  Yes, I-- was
different. Gottlieb: Can you tell me about them? Caleb B.: Up here the
Black people had a better home than we did down south. The White man
treated you right here. Better than he did down south. Gottlieb: Uh huh.
Did a, did the Black people who had been born up in the North treat you,
uh, any differently than the folks down home had treated you? Caleb B.:
Well, uh, no. About the same cause I ain't been down home very much. I've
had all the good treatment, I got it up here. Gottlieb: Is that right?
Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Did they ever look down on you and make fun of
you in any way? Caleb B.: No. No. One. One man-- you mean White or Black?
Gottlieb: Oh, Black. I mean, the Black people who had been born up here at
this point. Caleb B.: Oh, no, no. They just treat me right, as you said.
I've known myself. Because if you treat me right enough down south, you can
see all these kind of things to me. I tried to live a Christian life.

00:29:44.000 --> 00:30:26.000
Gottlieb:  Um, what did you think of Homestead when you first saw it? Caleb
B.: Oh, I knew I was in Homestead. Yeah. Gottlieb: Did it impress you as a
a good place to live, or did you not like it? Caleb B.: Yeah it's a good
place to live. A good place to live. Gottlieb: Were there any things about
it that you didn't like? Caleb B.: No. Everything was all right.

00:30:26.000 --> 00:31:39.000
Gottlieb:  Um, when did you join the Second Baptist Church? Caleb B.: Down
here on Sixth Avenue. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Do you
remember what year it was? Caleb B.: 1923. Gottlieb: When you first came
up? Caleb B.: Yeah, I joined my church then. Gottlieb: Did, uh. Why-- there
were two Baptist, Black Baptist churches in Homestead at that time. Why did
you choose, uh, Second Baptist? Caleb B.: I lived right next door to the
Clark Memorial. He had the foundation built, and I went down there to Sixth
Avenue to Reverend Morton. And I joined that church because I liked it.
Reverend Horton. Gottlieb: You liked-- it was because of Reverend Morton?
Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Was, was it Reverend Jones who was up at Clark
Memorial at that time when you were here? Caleb B.: No, I can't remember
this was way back. I can't remember that man's name because he had a
church, an old, old piece of house. We had no churches, we had nothing.
They built that church. There's a sense of fondness of that church. Now
living next to Eatonville. Gottlieb: Yeah. What did what did you like about
Reverend Morton?

00:31:39.000 --> 00:31:43.000
Caleb B.:  He just a down home preacher. That's all I liked about him.

00:31:43.000 --> 00:32:18.000
Caleb B.:  Down home preacher. Gottlieb: Had you been brought up in the
church in the South? Caleb B.: Yes, sir. Baptist Church down there.
Gottlieb: Did you find that, uh, Second Baptist Church was pretty much like
the church you'd been brought up in? Caleb B.: Yes. Gottlieb: It was? Caleb
B.: Yes. Gottlieb: Did you notice any differences about Second Baptist
Church in the church who had been brought up in. Caleb B.: Well, no. All
religious churches. All I knew. Good religious church.

00:32:18.000 --> 00:33:02.000
Gottlieb:  Were there a lot of people from South Carolina who belonged to
Second Baptist? Caleb B.: Yes there are. About 450 receiving on Sunday
morning. Gottlieb: Oh yeah. We're down on Sixth Avenue. Caleb B.: No,
that's since they moved up there. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb:
Did it seem to you that there were more people from South Carolina who
belonged to Second Baptist than from any other state in the South? Caleb
B.: Yes. And there had been more people who moved from down the South, to
me.

00:33:02.000 --> 00:34:17.000
Gottlieb:  Had somebody told you about Reverend Morton or about Second
Baptist Church or-- Caleb B.: When I first came here, I was grabbed by
Reverand Morton's church working in the Mill. That's how I got in touch
with it. Gottlieb: Oh, I see. Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: Do you ever talk to
him before you started going to his church or. Caleb B.: Oh, yeah. I met
him on the street another time And talked to him. Gottlieb: Uh huh. Caleb
B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: What kind of man was he? Caleb B.: Really nice.
Religious man. He talked nice to you. Preached good and everything.
Gottlieb: Were you ever-- were you ever active in any other kind of church
groups like the Choir or Missionary Society or anything? Caleb B.: No. I
was put in the-- made president of the usher board. Gottlieb: Oh, is that
right? Caleb B.: Yeah. Gottlieb: What kind of work did you have to do as
president of the usher board. Caleb B.: Take care of the church inside.
Seat the people and all like stuff like that. Gottlieb: Was that when you
first joined or after you had been a member? Caleb B.: After I had been a
member.

00:34:17.000 --> 00:35:11.000
Gottlieb:  Did you ever belong to any other kind of organizations in
Homestead? Like fraternal societies? Anything? Caleb B.: No, sir. Gottlieb:
You never-- Caleb B.: Nothing else. Gottlieb: Just the church. Caleb B.:
Just the church. Gottlieb: How many children did you and your wife have?
Caleb B.: Five. Gottlieb: Five. Are they still all living around here?
Caleb B.: No. Four of them here. And the rest of them died down south?
Gottlieb: Is that right? So some of them had. Some of them moved back
south? Caleb B.: No, they moved down south. Just come up here and visit me,
that's all. Gottlieb: Well, I believe that that's all the questions I had
that I wanted to ask you. If you think that I've left out any question that
would be important for me to understand what, you know, this period of
history--

00:35:11.000 --> 00:36:11.000
Gottlieb:  I'd appreciate it if you'd tell me, but otherwise, I don't have
any. I don't have any other questions. Caleb B.: Well, I was worried about
that because I said you have to ask me what you want me to say because I
didn't know so much. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: Yeah. You know about your
own life, though. That's what I was interested in. Caleb B.: So my life, a
little church, man. Ever since I was big enough to go to church, in my
life. I don't know. I don't remember about the world, but drinking and
smoking and stuff like that. I don't know nothing about it. Never played a
card in my life and do nothing. Yeah. Gottlieb: Were you ever able to do
any preaching? Caleb B.: Preach to myself. Layes at night and preached.
Gottlieb: Never preached to other folks, though? Caleb B.: Never. Never.
Gottlieb: Did you want to? Caleb B.: Yeah, I wanted to, but it was a hard
thing to do. Gottlieb: Yeah. Caleb B.: I wanted to preach, but I didn't go
out and stand for the congregation after God sent me, he said he'd send me
a man if I go. But I ain't going. Gottlieb: Did you ever have an
opportunity to preach before a congregation? Caleb B.: Yes, sir. Amen.
Somebody tell me to go ahead and preach. And after about a month he asked
you ready to go preach, I said no. Gottlieb: Why did you say that? Caleb
B.: Because I ain't ready to do it. Do you know that you don't have days
vacation. That's a different. If I go, you send me a man. But he meant to
send the Holy Spirit to tell me what I'm-- you asking me questions?
Gottlieb: Yeah. Yeah. Well, I don't have any other questions, so thank you
very much for helping me out. Caleb B.: Thank you very much. God bless.