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C., Harvey, December 2, 1973, tape 1, side 1

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Peter Gottlieb:  The following is an interview with Mr. Harvey ___ of 1504
McClure Street in Homestead, Pennsylvania, recorded on December 2nd, 1973.
Mr. ___ home. Okay. Try it again.

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Harvey C.:  Now, I was born in Union Springs, Alabama. 18 and 93, October
the 27th. Genuine Springs. Ellen Now, now, the one that brought me into the
wall was a midwife. Her name was Betsy Hubbard. That was her name. Betsy
Hubbard. And I lived there. I was born there, as I said. 1893 October 27th.
I lived there until 1912.

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Gottlieb:  Do you about 20 years old?

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Harvey C.:  No, I don't think it.

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Gottlieb:  Would be.

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Harvey C.:  1919 to say around. I stayed there until. 1913, as I said. Huh?
Yeah. Okay. Now, we. I was a member at the year of eight years old,
baptized at Sardis Baptist Church. Union Springs, Alabama. I cannot. School
and catechism on the highway was the first man that taught me from him to
Francis. Ivy from Francis to Bethesda Smith and from Union Springs, Festus
Smith from there to Tuskegee, Alabama, under the guidance of Booker T
Washington. And I only went one year in college. I left there and came to
Chicago. So I worked in the inland steel plant for about eight months. I
was called from there to the army. I was up in the Army in 1918 and got my
honorable discharge in 1919. Then I came here and I started in the
Homestead plant, which wasn't called the US Steel at that time. When I
started, uh, 19, 19, the 11th of the month, the 11th day and the 11th month
I started in the plant. Uh huh. Later on they changed it to the United
States Steel, which, uh, I was called at that time. A Thai foreman, then
turned informant in Alberta, was called to turn Foreman. Yeah. After being
turned informer. Then I become a supervisor at the plant. The eighth month.
The 28th day. 48. And I remained as supervisor from that time. That's not
working right now.

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Speaker3:  Give you what I want from 48.

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Harvey C.:  I've become to be supervisor and the management from 1948 until
1958. I c November the 1st. That's when I retired from from the plant. She
had nearly.

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Gottlieb:  40 years down there.

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Harvey C.:  39 years. 39 years. And yeah, 39 years. I was there 39 years.
So they now I served in the First World War during the time of I told you I
was in the Army, 1917 to 1918. And I joined Clark Memorial Baptist Church
and arriving here and July of 1918 under the Reverend Aurora Jones. Later.
The church was he was he was sick when I came in and had pastors coming in
to preach for them. Then Dr. Emma Talley came in 1922 and he passed on to
Dr. Tony's passed on, and his son, Dr. Donald. Tony is passing now. And
I've been with that church from the time that I joined up until I left out
this afternoon. Also, now I've served as a capacity the commander of the
White Post, the American Legion Post, 160. Also served in post 704 for the
last 25 years. His service officer through the post 704. And also I said in
the lower among the Haley Valleys ushers union as finance officer, vice
president and the president up to the present time, I'm still the president
of the Lower Gila Valley Union. I served this 36 years in our ownership
board and our church vice President, the President, the Treasurer and so
forth. And I serve as the president of the layman's vice President,
president and was off for two years and is called back to serve 1974 of the
layman's of Clark Memorial Baptist Church. And my parents, we was on the
farm. We did good. We as farmers could do. My father passed on, my mother's
passed on. So up until now, I had no regrets.

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Gottlieb:  Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?

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Harvey C.:  No. No.

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Gottlieb:  Okay. Could you tell me what kind of farm you had in Alabama?
What kind of things you grow and what what you can remember about the kind
of work you had to do in there?

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Harvey C.:  Well, that's easy now. A regular farm, what you call farming.
It's a regular farm. Same as someone would have a flower garden. It's got
to be cultivated the same as any grow. But you have acres and acres,
probably 25, 30 acres to what they call one farm. And then you grows,
whatever In Alabama was mostly a corn belt. A cotton belt? Yeah. We grew
corn. We grew cotton peas, peanuts, watermelons and so forth. Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  Was did your parents were they sharecroppers or did they rent?

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Harvey C.:  No, they they owned their own land. How many acres did 197
acres. My goodness.

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Gottlieb:  That was pretty large.

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Harvey C.:  Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. They had sharecroppers.

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Gottlieb:  Working.
Harvey C.:  For them. Yeah. Oh I see. Yeah. They had sharecroppers. And man
by the name of Luke Howard and a man by the name of Bill Ball. And Frank
Townsend was sharecroppers on that farm, you know, How.

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Gottlieb:  Were your parents able to get all that land?

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Harvey C.:  Well, uh, as far as I knew of that, my grandfather and heard
and heard the first of the small amount, maybe 30 or 40 acres through his
master. See, that was in slavery. Yeah. He was enslaved. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  But he was given the land.

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Harvey C.:  He was given the land. See, because at that time, throughout of
all walks of life, someone was very well liked. Say now they never called
him Austin C.. They called him Uncle Austin, See. But he was enslaved then.
Just about. He lived till after the emancipation. After the war. After the
slavery. Yeah. So then Judge Hubbard, as far as I know of that, was the
probate judge. He had thousands and thousands of acres. So he gave him this
home, this house and this land. Then he added to it. He bought it out,
right? That day began and he inherited it through his master. Say, Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  So you were able to. Oh, I wanted to ask you this. How many
other children were there in your family?

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Harvey C.:  Seven.

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Gottlieb:  So were there seven in all or seven plus you?

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Harvey C.:  No, Seven in all.

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Gottlieb:  Were you the oldest or. No.

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Harvey C.:  Oldest. My brother. My brother was oldest. Uh huh. Then we had
two that passed. Paul and Benny. Then my sister Austin. Uh huh. That made
the. The four. Right. And my sister Dolcetti made the five. My sister
Charlie Lou made the six. And Harvard, which is. I am made the seventh.

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Gottlieb:  So you were the youngest?

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Harvey C.:  Yeah. Yeah, my youngest one. The family. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  And you were able to go all the way through school, right up to
college? That's right. That's right. That's right. Uh, what were the
circumstances that made you decide to go to Chicago?

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Harvey C.:  Well, the conditions of the people, because segregation, of
course, was all over the country. But the segregation was bad. Uh huh. And
we wanted to go out where they used. Now was true or not? Free speech.
Yeah. You didn't wasn't afraid to hold a meeting or have. I will talk
things over. But way back then, in the early days of my father, them, they
couldn't have a meeting unless they had a closed door meeting. They went,
If you went out, if you was De-wei or you was. They must, as a black man is
at that time they call them Negroes. Then you was kind of protected say,
but it grew inch by inch a little bit better say until. But the people
started when they of course a lot of them couldn't leave the South. A lot
of them died in the south. But we provided and we left on our own terms and
so forth. And I go down there and my boy, he goes down there to the old
home farm. We go down there practically every year. Oh, you're.

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Gottlieb:  Still going back.

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Harvey C.:  There. Still going back there.

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Gottlieb:  And the farm is going to family.

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Harvey C.:  Oh yes, yes.

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Gottlieb:  Oh yes. Yeah. Did you did you know about a job when you went to
Chicago or did you just go up looking for work without knowing whether or
not you had a had a place there?

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Harvey C.:  Well, uh, not having a place there, but we decided we would go
north, left Union Springs and went to Birmingham, Alabama.

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Gottlieb:  We just. The whole family.

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Harvey C.:  No, no, no, no. Just myself at that time. So when I got to
Birmingham, it was a colored family, thereby robbing, uh. Uh, John Coleman.
Coleman. He had a son. Some of them was up in Chicago in the inland steel
plant. So he said to me, I can get in touch with John and you can get up
there and he can get you in the mill. But saying, I won't guarantee you
only you'll go up there expecting labor, but you can get. So that's where I
went. Uh huh, uh huh. So then after starting in the mill, you had to sign
up for so much if you didn't have no dependents. So I just taken went off
to the army. Uh huh. So when, uh, talking to my dad and him while I was in
the army, they came here to Homestead the homestead, and they stayed here
from around 1914 or 15 until 1927. They went to Detroit, Michigan. My
oldest brother still living. He spent the week here at ten days with us
this August. I see. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Let me go back for a minute to the time you spent in Birmingham.
Did you did you do. Did you get some work there? Yes, you did. Can you tell
me about what kind of jobs you were doing and.

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Harvey C.:  I was working out at the Rockwell out at Tan City just for
about six weeks. And I left there. I was employed about six weeks and what
they call a rock call. That thing is a coal mine. But they digs rocks and
this red clay, what they call they. That's what they used to grade the road
with down through the south side. So probably, maybe I might have been
there now. Perhaps. But by getting to this boarding house.

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Gottlieb:  There were the Reverend Coleman. Yeah.

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Harvey C.:  He said, me and another boy said, Now, uh, if you'd like to go
up to my son, this was young. John Fagan was with me. If you'd like to go
up there, he can get you a job up there and inland steel plant. But it'll
be labor. And I'm not. Promise you. But he can get you on. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  And so that's when you went up.

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Harvey C.:  That's when I went up.

00:20:03.000 --> 00:20:06.000
Gottlieb:  And was that in 1912?

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Harvey C.:  No, no, no, no, no. That was in 1912. When I left in 1913, I
believe. I said, wasn't it? Yeah. All right. Now, when we went when when we
went to Birmingham, we went to ten City and out at ten City we worked, uh,
uh, different jobs on the streets. And this, we wasn't just the employed,
uh, study, but we at this office, they would call you out. Uh huh. They
said they needed you. Oh, I see. I see. So the only two places that I was
employed that was out at Town City at Rockwell for about six weeks. And
then I went to Chicago and stayed there about 14 months. Then I was
inducted in the Army. Then after the Army, I met a friend, a white fellow
by the name of Weghorst. He got to know me well and he said, So. Harvey
said, If you ever come to Homestead, I can get you a job because my dad is
a superintendent would carry a funny. He said, Look me up. So when I got
out the Army, I came here and I found him and I got a job. I wasn't here
over two days before I got a job.

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Gottlieb:  What kind of. What kind of, uh, position did you have in at
Inland Steel in Chicago when you. When you went up to Chicago?

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Harvey C.:  Uh, missionary work. Brick department. Brick department.
Missionary.

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Gottlieb:  Um. Uh, where where did you find a place to live? Up there. Did
you have any relatives or no friends?

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Harvey C.:  No, but this reverend was looking out for people, was running
boarding houses, see, But they had imagined that the white went. But it was
a colored boarding house. Uh huh. Uh huh. See? That's where I stayed. He
sent us there and that's where we stayed. I stayed there until I was
inducted in the Army. Say.

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Gottlieb:  Was that the first time you had ever been in the North? That's
right. Do you remember what what Chicago looked like to you then, or what
impressions you had of the other city?

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Harvey C.:  Well, the impression of those high winds, it could be done or
what? And all over blue skies, it's just like a cloud busting the wind.
Then you'd go to the lake and they were attracted my attention. It seemed
like muddy water, just as muddy as could be. On this side was clear.
Nothing clean, but it just worked together. And it never makes you would
think that the muddy water, what we would call it at that time, would run
clear. But one on one side stayed across the lake. Uh huh. One side was
muddy, what they call red, and the other was just as clear as a Christian.

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Gottlieb:  And that's what you remember about Chicago? That's right. That's
right. That's right.

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Speaker3:  That's right.

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Gottlieb:  Uh, and so when you got out of the Army, then you came to
Homestead.

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Harvey C.:  I came to.
Gottlieb:  Homestead. Now, did you say that your parents were living here
at that time? Family? That's right. And also, you had met somebody else who
was a Cooper tenant at Carrie Furnace.

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Harvey C.:  I mean. His father was a superintendent and, of course, was a
white fella, too. He wasn't colored. Yeah, he was a white fella. And he got
to like me, know him. And he said, You ever get out of the Army and come to
Homestead and said, Look me up so I can get you a job? Because my dad is a
superintendent over at California. Uh huh. So when Rankin we called it
Homestead cause they wheel and axle is down on North Side and the Homestead
plant and the Rankin plant, which they called Chalfonte, is the Homestead
United States district mills all saying combined. But the part. Yeah,
right.

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Speaker3:  Um.

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Gottlieb:  What? Did your father have a job in the mill at that time?

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Speaker3:  Yeah.
Gottlieb:  What part of the mill was he working?

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Harvey C.:  He's working in the sanitation department at the employment
office. Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  And had he come and he brought your whole family here?

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Harvey C.:  Yeah. Yeah, he got the family here.

00:24:57.000 --> 00:24:59.000
Gottlieb:  So did you put your brothers working there, too?

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Speaker3:  Yeah.

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Harvey C.:  Yeah. They got a job in the mill. Yes, he got a job in the
mill. Now, see, it was very easy because they had a few cattle and so
forth. Well, they was about one of the average black livers in the south at
that time. Yeah. Yeah. See, So then in turns, uh, they left one of my
sisters there. She didn't know she died in the South. She passed 3 or 4
years ago. Her husband was put a nice man and the remaining he left them to
look. To look it over. They take charge, you see?

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Gottlieb:  So why did they decide to come to Homestead instead of some
other city?

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Harvey C.:  Well, I'd imagine I wasn't here, but I'd imagine people was
traveling was getting more that you could get about. And I'm sure that he
was recommended to come to Homestead.

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Gottlieb:  So when you when you came here after getting out of the Army,
did your parents have a have a house? They rented a place.

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Harvey C.:  Yeah, they rented the place.

00:26:12.000 --> 00:26:13.000
Gottlieb:  Do you remember where that was?

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Speaker3:  Yeah.

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Harvey C.:  517. Hazel Street.

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Speaker3:  Oh, Hazel.

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Harvey C.:  Hazel.

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Gottlieb:  I don't know if I. I don't think I know where that is.

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Harvey C.:  It's next to Sam's Drugstore there on eighth. And that street
run. It used to run down to the river. Yeah, but after the war, the Second
World War, they bought up all those tenant houses and come up to the
tracks. Yeah, but they lived 517. Hazel. Hazel.

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Speaker3:  Huh?

00:26:46.000 --> 00:26:57.000
Gottlieb:  Uh, didn't know. Did you tell me that you came here on November
11th, 1919? That's right. Uh huh, that's right. And you got a job right
away in the mills? That's right. Wasn't there a strike on at that time?

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Harvey C.:  Yes. Strike. Yes, I got in there. That's how my dad got me in
there. Wait a minute. You.

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Speaker3:  What? Something missing?

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Harvey C.:  I'm too far over.

00:27:19.000 --> 00:27:21.000
Speaker3:  Yeah. Here it is. Right here.

00:27:21.000 --> 00:27:24.000
Gottlieb:  November 11th, 1919.

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Harvey C.:  That's just history, Mom.

00:27:26.000 --> 00:27:30.000
Gottlieb:  And did you say you were able to get a job in the mill at that
time because there was a strike on.

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Harvey C.:  Well, in particular. But I got home to Whitehorse because his
daddy was at that time, he was the Burgess. It was no mayors. He was the
Burgess in West Homestead and also superintendent at Chalfonte. I see. So
it was no that whenever I got in the mail, when I got in, I found him and
he happened to be home and he told him who I was. So he said, You go down
to the employment office whenever you want to. And my dad will have it
fixed. Oh, I see.

00:28:09.000 --> 00:28:18.000
Gottlieb:  Did you get in any trouble with any of the people who were
striking at that time? No, You didn't. No. They didn't try and stop you
from going in the plant.

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Harvey C.:  It was 90. She wasn't. I mean, the way they wasn't employing at
that time, but they had a unique way that you could get in the mill. But
now all we were doing is like clean up, like, you know, the supervisor and
I worked in 2 or 3 strikes that they locked the gate on for his. I'd have
to stay there 24 hours around the clock, see. But they got so many people
in there. And I guess because you was from the south, we didn't know no
better than what they call scab so far as that concern. You know what I
mean? Oh, we knew we was getting a job, right?

00:29:03.000 --> 00:29:06.000
Gottlieb:  So it didn't matter to you that there was a strike?

00:29:06.000 --> 00:29:08.000
Harvey C.:  That's right. That's right.

00:29:08.000 --> 00:29:10.000
Gottlieb:  Where did they put you to work?

00:29:10.000 --> 00:29:12.000
Harvey C.:  Well, on inside the mill.

00:29:12.000 --> 00:29:15.000
Gottlieb:  Well, what kind of in which department and what.

00:29:15.000 --> 00:29:27.000
Harvey C.:  Kind of work? Well, department. I was working in the industrial
engineer's office. The industrial engine. They had the big office, and
that's where we stayed. Oh, I see. See?

00:29:27.000 --> 00:29:31.000
Gottlieb:  And you had to stay there night and day. Oh, yeah. They didn't
let you come out?

00:29:31.000 --> 00:29:39.000
Harvey C.:  Oh, no, they didn't let me come out because they said it's too
dangerous. But yet I went to work. I don't know what's all about. About the
strike at that time.

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Speaker3:  Right.

00:29:40.000 --> 00:29:44.000
Gottlieb:  And how long did that last? How long did the strike continue?
Oh.

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Speaker3:  Methylation?

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Harvey C.:  Well, it started in, I think, around July. August. It lasted
about four months.

00:29:53.000 --> 00:29:59.000
Gottlieb:  And so finally, you were able to, uh, just, uh, come out of the
mill? Oh, yes.

00:29:59.000 --> 00:30:02.000
Harvey C.:  Whenever was over. Yeah.

00:30:02.000 --> 00:30:04.000
Gottlieb:  But until it was, you had to.

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Harvey C.:  Stay in the.
Speaker3:  Mill and.

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Gottlieb:  You weren't able to come home to your family. Oh, no.

00:30:07.000 --> 00:30:08.000
Speaker3:  No, no.

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Harvey C.:  Because it was too dangerous. Because they still. They had at
that time the state road troopers. They had horses at every gate. Oh, I
see. At that time. Uh huh. So then that was to keep anybody from going
through the gate, and then they patrolled it, running and riding up and
down. At that time.

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Gottlieb:  Were the mills going?

00:30:32.000 --> 00:30:33.000
Speaker3:  Oh, no, they weren't.

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Harvey C.:  No, the mills wasn't going. Oh, you have to keep it takes
thousands and thousands of dollars to close down an open hearth and open it
up. But all they did is.