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

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Harvey C.:  So then that makes them look back at that too. He looked at
that slip and say, Here, now, when you have a trial, the trial board, now
they go so forth to the union office. Then they go downtown to the trial
boat. They have you down there. Well, now you must reduce these slips. And
with the former's name on it, it issued it. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. Do you remember if there was this one specific problem
that the people who would come up from the south would wouldn't stay here
very long. They'd just go in the mill, work a few days or a week maybe, and
then they'd be gone again.

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Harvey C.:  Well, I don't agree with you too. Hardly. I'd say they would
come and go, but 60% of the people came. They stuck with the jobs.

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Gottlieb:  Uh huh. There wasn't that much turnover.

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Harvey C.:  That's right. Was that much turnover? Because the floaters,
they wouldn't. Maybe the transportation wouldn't bring them in. But his
idea whenever you regardless to the transportation taking you in you was
under a 90 days civil. If you didn't come up then they could tell you what
you want to go back where we come from or if you have any other place and
they had it fixed, you couldn't come back. They sent them home.

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Gottlieb:  And that was within a period of 90 days. That's right.

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Harvey C.:  If you kept them over 90 days, he was a certified employee. And
of course, something could turn up. But you don't you didn't know where you
was employed after the 90 days up until the 90 days was over. So, as I say,
uh, 60% of the people that came from the South, they stayed. I can tell you
that they are dead and gone. They came from Virginia, different parts of
the state. It's a good family. He died here. He retired from the mill. Uh
huh. Uh, they are, uh uh, uh. Savages. They paid. They are basics. They
Alexander's. They are, uh, uh, doses. I can name them, uh, by the hundreds
that came here by their self and sent back and got the family, and they
died in the mill. At least the retired. And then they passed on after that.
But what I mean to say, I'll say that 60% of the people came here during
the transportation. They stayed. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  And I met some of them. I talked to them.

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Harvey C.:  Yeah, they stayed. The floaters come in. Maybe someone figured
they paid their way back and they would get a few dollars maybe to eat or
they'd give them a little something. And other than the transportation
back. But I'll say at all of the ones that come from different parts of the
world, the United States, 60% of them stayed.

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Gottlieb:  What is your impression on where most of the people came from in
the South? Did they come from Alabama during those years around the first
year that you were here? They come from Alabama or most of them from
Georgia or most of them from Virginia.

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Harvey C.:  Well, I'll tell you it not making a survey, but I think that
most black people, the majority of the black people from the South come
from the state of Virginia.

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Gottlieb:  Because I've read in one study that was done back in those years
that most of the people that this person surveyed was from were from
Alabama and Georgia. Now, most of the people that I've met have been from
Virginia. Um, Mr. Blake and Joe Gaiters are from South Carolina. That's
right. And you're from Alabama? That's right. But all the rest of the
people just about have been from Virginia.

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Harvey C.:  That's right. That's what they say. That what I mean, the one
that really stopped, I'll say Virginia State. The state of Virginia had
more people because now here was the idea. Maybe further down, like
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, uh, was kind. You couldn't get away when you
wanted to, you know?

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Gottlieb:  How come?

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Harvey C.:  Well, they. It was just like someplace I read about here. Some
parts even yet in California to take those farmers, take them out there,
and they couldn't get away. Now, that's reading to say, I think that
Virginia was always free now. All right. If you couldn't get back home and
didn't have. Well, what I mean, you didn't have transportation getting back
home, you'd have to depend on someone else. But if you had your
transportation, then you would be all right. So what I'm trying to say,
they most of the people came from Georgia and Alabama and Mississippi. They
had some way of meaning, of paying, of getting the way out. Because if it
got out and says a bill going north, they going to come in that evening,
say, lock up your barn and take up this or the other. When it was coming
down to the fact it was a little harder to get out. But if you didn't have
to tell someone, then you. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  So you think that the white people, in other words, and the Deep
South tried to keep black people down there? No, they didn't try.

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Harvey C.:  They kept them down. They did keep them say.

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Gottlieb:  So it was harder for them to get away. That's right. That's
right.

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Harvey C.:  That's right. I know one case. I was down south and I had a
cousin. He wanted to come here. He lived about 20 miles from our home. And.
He would tell you if you take me. He says, I'll get up like I'm going to
feel and I'll meet you in Montgomery. Uh huh. He says, I won't leave Troy.
He says, I can't leave there because you don't know where you're going.
Yeah. So I take him here. But he met me in Montgomery. See.

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Gottlieb:  Because he had to run away.

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Harvey C.:  In a way. Yeah, because the first place. Now, maybe it'd have
been here if he'd had the means. But after making his attempt to run away,
he didn't have anything to bear the expenses. See, that's what was tied up.
Yeah. Yeah, that's where the trouble. So it. I said, Now I'm sure again you
always was more free than any other place. So, as I say, the most of the
people came up. I know they Fullers up there, all of them up there. They
even have a little piece of land somewhere down there in, uh, uh, Augusta,
Georgia. We was talking about three weeks ago about it. What I'm saying, I
still say 60% of the people from the south, Alabama, Georgia and
Mississippi, uh, they had some means of getting here. So then that's that's
the story about.

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Gottlieb:  Now when you were when you first came to Homestead and began
working in the mill and was living with your family down here, what kind of
things did you like to do for spare time, amusement or recreation or
something like that?

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Harvey C.:  Well, uh, I was, uh, working with Nelson. I was in charge, uh,
with Betts and my brother, what they called their homestead softball team.
We had something going on. Football or something? Yeah, down there. And the
gym down there, they were training to box, so I was always busy.

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Gottlieb:  Oh, I see. So. So you were working with Nelson Recreation?
That's right. Did you say that was softball?

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Harvey C.:  That's right. Yeah. See, we had softball team and they they
jackets and whatever they wore it said the homestead steelworks softball.

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Gottlieb:  So you would organize this just for black men? That's right. You
would organize men who were working in the mill.

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Harvey C.:  That's right. That's right.

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Harvey C.:  That's right. Gottlieb: What fields did you use to play there?
Were there.

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Harvey C.:  Places? Well, we was very well. Uh, now we went all around the
areas. We went down through Lawrenceville, the North Side, Bethel Park,
Uniontown, Braddock, McKeesport, different places and played games with
them.

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Gottlieb:  I see you remember a man from Braddock named Earl Johnson?

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Harvey C.:  Yeah, he was the man. Same as Nelson, you know. I know what I'm
talking about. Sure, I know. I know. I know. You know now, huh? Well.

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Gottlieb:  Mr. Moorfield first mentioned to me Earl Johnson and a man named
back at Duquesne.

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Harvey C.:  That's right.
Gottlieb:  And you knew all these guys? Yes. And at each place, these men
would be doing things like setting up recreation center. That's right. The
softball team.

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Harvey C.:  That's right.
Gottlieb:  Why did they want to do that kind of thing specifically?

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Harvey C.:  Well, it was kind of like the steelworks was probated so much
money to try to get the black people recreation something to do instead of
saying in the street in the evening. So you didn't have to be a steel
worker, naturally. Maybe your father was or something like that, but you
could be just a young boy. Teenagers coming up, going to school or
something like that. They take them all in there. They was on good
behavior.

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Gottlieb:  And and the was there a problem with with black people standing
around on corners or, you know, doing something that the company didn't
want to see them do? Is that why they started this?

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Harvey C.:  Well, they company was trying to protect. They had some good
men, black men working in the mill. But what they was trying to do to show
that there was in spirit with the color and also they keep the young youths
off of the streets.

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Gottlieb:  So that's the that's how you spend a lot of your time.

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Harvey C.:  Now, you joined the center and they give you a card. See what I
mean? Now, you couldn't walk in there and take over. You had some means of
the boys wanted to take a part in whatever it was. We had drummers, we had
music and so forth. We only didn't have the softball team. We had boxing.
We had every thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, Johnson, we always met together
and went out for dinner. Oh, I see. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. Where did you meet?

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Harvey C.:  Well, say for Nelson, I would go over and he's going to quit
work. Yeah. Then I would meet him. We'd go out for dinner and maybe we
would have a beer or something and sit down and talk. Also, after Nelson
got to be minister, we didn't bother too much with him, but Earl Johnson
was a big man there in 18. Oh, yeah. Oh.

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Gottlieb:  Did you did you tell me that you joined the church clock
memorial? Just about the same time that you came to Homestead. You joined
right away. That's right. Do you remember if the if either Clark Memorial
or Second Baptist asked would come and ask black people from the South to
join them? Did they make any efforts to get black people to come to church?
No.

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Harvey C.:  All right. Here, here, here, here, here would happen. Now, of
course, my dad and brother had you, Johnny. That's funny. With Second
Baptist comes to Kokomo, but whenever you come in, it was somebody like
Nelson or somebody just like Johnson would tell you. If you don't have no
church home, there's new hope, brother, or his rankings and so forth.
That's the way they would tell you to start with so you wouldn't be around.
Well, I never heard of no church. Right.

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Gottlieb:  Was did most of the people who were new to Homestead, who had
just recently come up from the south, did most of them join Second Baptist,
in fact, or.

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Harvey C.:  Well, it was I'll tell you it was. I'll tell you what they
liked.

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Say at that time.

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Harvey C.:  Second Baptist was underdog to Kokomo. Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  In what sense?

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Harvey C.:  Well, Kokomo was always had some bodies of leaders in that
church with bachelor's degrees. Second Baptist didn't have it. A lot of the
people come in, not like the guys like Mel Goodes. You read of it? Yeah,
I've.

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Gottlieb:  Heard of him.

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Harvey C.:  You've heard of it?

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Gottlieb:  People told me.
Harvey C.:  Yeah. All right. His daddy was a deacon in my church, Kokomo.
Oh, man. Good. Yeah, they have a farm. Drove there. He was downtown. They
sold that out. And he's over on Frankstown there somewhere. Didn't have a
real estate brother that lives out there in Homewood. And they have one
brother's automobile salesman. I see. I see. So, as I said now, that's like
him. That's like Adkins. That's like Joe Mayfield. Yeah. When they came
here, they went to Clark and more. I can tell you, two out of every three,
it's dead and come from the south. They united with Clark and more.

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Gottlieb:  They came here and Clark Memorial was considered a better a
church with a better off congregation. That's right. I see. And Second
Baptist was considered a poorer congregation. That's right. Did did the
people who belong to Clark Memorial look down on the people who were coming
up from the south in any way?

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Harvey C.:  Well, no, they would make you work. And I was organized. I
don't know why I can get into so many things. I was organized in 1920, the
earliest part, to sponsor the strangers. They come in in the morning. Yeah.
I would talk to them, make them welcome, and tell them they were free to
see. Now, if you are a member church, you don't have no trouble of getting
in the church. What you call you join on watchcare. See? Yeah. See now,
just like I did from my church. But you join independent a letter. They
don't say, Well, you got to get your letter. You can join watchcare your
opinion, your letter. So that's why a lot of them if they was okay. And
they didn't have no trouble getting in there because all I had to do to get
in touch with my sister and my brother in law and he was the deacon of that
church. So they fixed send it right in. See.

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Gottlieb:  Did were some of the migrants from the south also joining
storefront churches?

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Harvey C.:  Yeah. Oh yeah. But now we will figure this. Now we only got one
church out of the storefront, that Second Baptist that started on Sixth
Avenue in Storefront. Oh, Reverend Mobley. Oh, I see. See, now, that's why
I said a lot of people looked at them back. We. You may run into them, but
they are sanctified people, Your Holiness. They are not classed with the
Baptists, people like elders, even. They don't. But I mean, they in turn
you have to catch them going to the worship because they got a little small
place, but they are welcome at our door. Oh, see what I mean? So to show
you, that's why the only church that I know survived, they went ahead, they
come up and named them and. All right. But Second Baptist started out on
Sixth Avenue. And then when they bought a church, they bought a church that
been served by the white people on the corner of Fourth and Amateur Street.
See, I know I was around here.

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Gottlieb:  Do you remember when Second Baptist got started? Actually.
That's right. You were here when it actually got. That's right.

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Harvey C.:  He was working in me or Reverend Morton was. J.d. Morton was
working in the mill, and he started this store front.

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Gottlieb:  I see. Did you say his name was Em? Modern.

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Harvey C.:  J.d. Morton. Modern? Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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Gottlieb:  I hadn't heard how it actually came about that it began, so I
wanted to get that. That's right. Yeah, He was he ordained or anything, or
did he just start it on his own?

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Harvey C.:  Well, I'd imagine now, I couldn't tell you what he was
ordained. He have to be. Now, the Baptist people, whenever you get a
church. Uh huh. And the Baptist ministers agreed to it. They ordained you
right away. So he got ordained before he. He might have started that church
for a week or two or maybe 3 or 4 months. But he had to be ordained.

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Gottlieb:  Was the were there. Well, why didn't why didn't he just join
Clark Memorial? And did he have some reason for going off on his own? Well,
there are too many black people here.

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Harvey C.:  But no, I do think that, uh, he had the idea that he could. It
was enough space, probably where he figured. But in the way of it, a lot of
times those people come up. I don't know. It was money proposition that you
figured you could make a few dimes on the side or whatever, but that's a
lot of time with these little churches comes in and they start. But as I
say, Second Baptist, uh, made good. Yeah, they're second to none. Uh huh.

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Gottlieb:  Was Modin was Modan had Modin come up from the South recently
himself? Yeah. Do you know where he was from?

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Harvey C.:  Well, I guess Reverend Modin had to come from Virginia. He did?
Yeah.

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Gottlieb:  Okay. And do you remember the year that Second Baptist began?

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Harvey C.:  No, no, no, I don't.

00:21:48.000 --> 00:21:54.000
Gottlieb:  I could find that out, I think, easily enough of I just went
over. I know they probably. They have their records.

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Harvey C.:  Oh, yeah, they have the records. Oh, they have the records.
See, our church started out in 1904. Right. And it had.

00:22:03.000 --> 00:22:06.000
Gottlieb:  Been around quite a while. Oh yeah.

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Harvey C.:  Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. See, when they started, I don't know
if my recollection back I wasn't here but they didn't start no store front.
They started in a church. Right, Right. Okay. So, uh, but Reverend Morton
Baszler that church until he died, he passed Second Baptist, Eddie Morgan.

00:22:32.000 --> 00:22:33.000
Gottlieb:  And now they're over here on East 12th.

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Harvey C.:  That's right. That's right. Uh, they had a couple of preachers,
and one was Perkins. He was just about dead when he come in. But they have
a young kid now. There is educated and he's real religious. Uh, Donald
Turner. That's right. That's his name. Yeah. Oh, I can tell you, as I said
before, maybe I might not explain it, just that it should be. But I can
give you a good idea of what it was and where they been.

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Gottlieb:  Yeah, that's exactly what I want. That's right. Yeah. Uh, you
said that your family left Homestead in 1927. That's right. Why did they
leave?

00:23:17.000 --> 00:23:21.000
Harvey C.:  Well, uh, a better job. Oh.

00:23:21.000 --> 00:23:28.000
Gottlieb:  When did they go to Detroit, did you say? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Your
father and mother and everybody.

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Harvey C.:  And my brother and his wife. They all went to Detroit.

00:23:31.000 --> 00:23:35.000
Gottlieb:  And were they. Did they then work in US steel there?

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Harvey C.:  No, no, no. Uh, my brother got into the Secret Service. Oh,
wait, My father got a job with the contractor was here. And now, if I might
say it, my dad was educated. He was about a handful of the Negro. The black
people came from the Deep South, that he had an education, and he, uh. This
man came here, and they built one part of the mill. And they got him. The
secretary. That's the way he started when they went to Detroit. They made a
place and he went and got him a home up there. And that's where he passed.
That's why he went.

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Gottlieb:  So they never went back to Alabama?

00:24:32.000 --> 00:24:33.000
Harvey C.:  No. No.

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Gottlieb:  But what was happening with the farm? Did you go down to visit
your old place in Alabama regularly once you were living in Homestead?

00:24:44.000 --> 00:24:54.000
Harvey C.:  Oh, yes. I've been been going there practically. Well, it might
have been some sickness or something, but practically every year, every
year you go down.

00:24:54.000 --> 00:24:57.000
Gottlieb:  Oh, yeah. Was there a certain time of year that you would go
down?

00:24:57.000 --> 00:25:28.000
Harvey C.:  Well, usually we'd go down when the lay by the crops. Oh, I
see. The last. The last of July and into the middle of August. See, that's
when the harvest. And then they have the big church meetings and they have
the homecoming with the different people from the South. That's usually the
time that you'd like to go down.

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Gottlieb:  Were you always able to? Did the company give you time to go
down?

00:25:31.000 --> 00:25:47.000
Harvey C.:  Oh, yes, they did. Oh, yes. See, now what I hear was the catch.
Now. I was fortunate to have good health.

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Gottlieb:  Now you can just go on from what you were saying. Right? Yeah.

00:25:50.000 --> 00:26:58.000
Harvey C.:  All right. Now, uh, I didn't take no days off during saying,
You see, when you come to be a supervisor in the United States Steel, you
didn't lose any time. If you was off six months, you got paid for that six
months. Then if you taken the six months, you, the company would let you
come back and work one day in the second half and you could take the other
six months off if it was up with the company. See what I mean? Now what I
would do, I would save my, uh, uh, vacation. See, your supervisors always
had 4 to 5 weeks. Right. And of course, she was contracted by the year. If
you perform the duty, you was good for the year it was no say why you come
in late this morning or where you was all that was in the management of the
supervisor.

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Gottlieb:  That's it. So in other words, you got just about a paid
vacation.

00:27:01.000 --> 00:27:06.000
Harvey C.:  That's right. Or got a paid vacation. Okay. Yeah, I got a paid
vacation.

00:27:06.000 --> 00:27:13.000
Gottlieb:  And you used to take it just about that same time every year so
you could go back. Did you did you like to go back and help them do the
work?

00:27:13.000 --> 00:27:22.000
Harvey C.:  No, You didn't. Didn't have to do anyway. See, that's why I
went at the at the lay by time. Did all the farms. That's right.

00:27:22.000 --> 00:27:28.000
Gottlieb:  That's right. I forgot you had told me so that the crops were
growing and there wasn't that much you had to do. That's right.

00:27:28.000 --> 00:27:52.000
Harvey C.:  They everybody would take off the last two weeks in July and
the first two weeks in August. That's why they could all visit one another
and go see, that's the time that I'd like to take. Because if you went down
there during or through March to the 1st of July, they was all down at the
harvest farming. Right.

00:27:52.000 --> 00:27:55.000
Gottlieb:  And did your entire family go back? No.

00:27:55.000 --> 00:29:17.000
Harvey C.:  No, not the whole entire family. That's at the time we would go
now. I might. You seen my wife? Young wife. That's the baby there Now. He
started going and he was now I always went down. Then me and the boy that's
in Akron, Ohio. Yeah. 354 Turner Street. Akron, Ohio. Yeah. We always went
down because he's in conjunction. That's my brother in law's brother. Son.
My brother in law. Son. And the boys in charge is the youngest boy down
there now. His name is Shepherd Bank. So it was always keep it safe. So,
uh, but every year, more or less, I've been going down. Have somebody
passed? I'll go down whenever it happened. Yeah, but that's just there and
back. Yeah, but I usually when I go down, take the last of July and the 1st
of August, make it to around two weeks or two and a half weeks, something
like that.

00:29:17.000 --> 00:29:25.000
Gottlieb:  Did you uh, so you, you still know quite a few people down
there. Oh, yeah. And you kept up your time. Oh, yeah.

00:29:25.000 --> 00:29:26.000
Harvey C.:  Oh, yeah.

00:29:26.000 --> 00:29:39.000
Gottlieb:  Uh huh. Do you when you first left home and went to Birmingham
and then to Chicago and then came here, did you were you ever homesick for
for a Union Springs? Did you miss it?

00:29:39.000 --> 00:30:39.000
Harvey C.:  No, I didn't. I didn't make it because the trouble seemed that
I was always could meet somebody that talked to somebody would like to
talk. I was never lonely. Yeah, right. I've been in places and somebody
walked up and grabbed my hand and said, Look, like I know you, boy, oh,
man, Look like I know you. Oh, I said, perhaps so Get to talking. Well, if
I didn't know you, I know you now, and so forth. So I was pretty well, the
only thing that that I was worried about when I was in the army, that's
when I wanted to go home. Come home.