WORKADAY WORLD
Dear Family,
Couple of weeks back a comment wafted up from down Texas way to the
effect
that "Sounds like all those folks did in those
days was work." Well, no, we didn't, not quite, but the Puritan ethic was pretty
strong. Basic was the tenet, If you don't work, you don't
eat. Consider for a minute: there was no
social
security, no health insurance, no Medicare, no workman's
compensation or unemployment compensation, no retirement or pension plans, no welfare or
workfare, no government support or aid programs of any kind. Oh, there was a county poor
farm, but that was the absolutely last resort. Unless you were rich or owned profitable
investments (and there weren't too many of
them
after the stock market crash in 1929), work provided for food and shelter and clothes and
everything else, and if you were at all prudent you put some part of your earnings away
for the time when you couldn't work (and if
you
stashed it away in a bank you may well have lost that when the banks failed). Beyond your
own resources there was only the charity of family and friends. You might say that folks
worked scared, only it didn't seem that
way.
Working was not onerous, just a natural thing to do. Parents worked, as
did siblings, and all your peers, and you wanted to be like them. For kids, one measure of
growing up was the kind of jobs you did and the amount of responsibility you were given.
Getting your first steady, wage-paying job was a major milestone, like getting your first
pair of long pants.
I mentioned before that I was given household chores to do as far back as
I can remember - laying fires in the cookstove, helping with the cleaning and the garden,
running errands, and later, mowing the lawn, washing the car, shoveling snow - for which I
received an allowance of five cents a week to begin with more or less regular raises. But
I also did similar jobs for some of the neighbors. By chance, we were surrounded by
single-women households. Our next-door neighbor on the west was Mrs. Lucy Button, a widow,
who provided board and room for single ladies, mainly school teachers. In the summer, she
would visit her brother and rent her house to some of the race track people who came for
the summer racing season at our four nearby thoroughbred tracks. Usually it was a family
surnamed Nugent whose home was in New Orleans. They were very nice people and we learned
that racing folk were not the touts and sharpies of legend, but common ordinary people who
chose racing as their livelihood. They always had passes to the tracks, and we were
welcome to go with them to watch the early morning workouts, provided we got up at 4:00
AM. Our next-door neighbor on the east was Mrs. Emma Button (not related to Mrs. Lucy
Button), also a widow, who provided room and board for single men. One of her long-time
boarders was Mr. McKee, a barber who had a glass eye, but who also like to fish and
sometimes took me fishing with him. Directly behind Mrs. Emma Button's house, and facing on May Court was the
residence of
Miss Carie Cole, a spinster lady who was "getting
along in years." She was a hair dresser (we
had
no salons or beauty parlors, then) and plied her trade in what would normally have been
her dining room. She also possessed a patented electrical contrivance about the size of a
portable sewing machine that was guaranteed to cure baldness, so she had a steady trade of
bald-headed men. Directly across May Court was Mrs. May Van Valkenberg, another widow,
whose husband had been killed when a farm tractor tipped over on him. Next to her on the
west, and thus across from our garden, lived Mrs. Emma Niece. Didn't know too much about her. She regarded everyone
with
suspicion and boys with complete distrust. She was not my favorite customer. She watched
every move with an eagle eye and critically inspected the results. As I grew older, I
mowed lawns and weeded and such for people in other parts of town, but there was always
plenty of time for swimming and fishing and baseball and just "fooling around"
with the other kids. The nickels and dimes and sometimes quarters I earned went into the
chrome-plated coin bank purchased for the Chagrin Falls Bank, and to which they held the
only key. When it was full, we took it to the bank and watched closely as the teller
unlocked it, counted out the coins, posted the total in my pass book, and returned it,
locked, to be filled again. When the Chagrin Falls Bank failed to reopen after President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's Bank Holiday
in 1933, my savings, and everyone else's were
gone. There was no FCDIC or FSLIC back then. Later the bank's assets were bought by one of the Cleveland banks
that survived, and eventually I received five or ten cents on the dollar.

When I was, I think, fifteen, I got my first full-time wage-paying job
working for the summer at Lowe's
Greenhouse
& Nursery in a crew with my brother and several friends. Mr. Lowe raised flowers,
outdoors in the summer and in the greenhouses in the winter. Once a week he would get up
extra early, load his panel truck with pails of cut flowers, and drive into Cleveland to
sell them at the wholesale market. Our work consisted of removing the depleted soil from
the greenhouse beds and replacing it with well-rotted manure and fresh dirt, one basketful
at a time, and weeding and cultivating the outdoor fields. Mr. Lowe introduced tuberous
begonias into the U.S. He discovered them while in Belgium with the army in World War I,
and after the war arranged for the importation of some tubers and for a visit by one of
the Belgian growers and even lectured at Ohio State University. But tuberous begonias were
pretty delicate and boys weren't allowed near
them. We worked six days a week, ten hours a day from 7:00 AM to 5:30 PM with half an hour
for lunch. The pay was twenty cents an hour and every Saturday evening I went home with
twelve dollars cash in my pocket, no deductions for social security or taxes or any of
that nonsense (and no concern for minimum wages or child labor laws, either). I kept a
dollar for spending money and gave the rest to my mother. I worked there for one or two
years, then got a job as a clerk in Fisher Brothers grocery store on Main Street next to
Brewster & Church Co. where Dad worked.
Chagrin Falls was the shopping center for the whole area, and Saturday was
the big shopping day. The stores were open from about 7:30 AM until 6:00 PM, except on
Wednesday when they closed at noon and Saturday when they stayed open until 10::00 PM or
later if customers were still coming in. Dad worked those hours and more. Since he was
pretty much in charge of the whole store, he spent a lot of evenings, and sometimes Sunday
afternoon, working on accounts or inventory or orders or even tending the furnaces when
they were between custodians. Saturday was when the farm folk came to shop, and the town
folk turned out to look at them. It was about the only interesting event in the whole
week, short of a fire or a runaway truck on one of the hills. Most of the townspeople
shopped a little bit very day, partly because they walked to the stores and carried their
purchases home, and partly because they didn't
have much storage, and partly because it was something to do. They had no problem
extrapolating that to Saturday when there were a lot of different faces to look at.
Trouble was, they ran out of shopping long before they ran out of looking and just walking
around was tiring. So, they brought their cars downtown early in the day when choice
parking places were available, parked them and locked them, and walked home; to return in
evening, unlock their cars and sit in them to watch the passing parade. This brought
confrontation with the merchants who wanted those parking places available for their farm
customers who drove in on Saturday to do a whole week's
worth of shopping. The problem never was resolved.
Fisher Brothers grocery, Krogers, and A & P all moved in about the
same time to replace the owner-operated groceries, and all three were very much alike. Our
Fisher Brother store was maybe thirty feet wide by one hundred feet deep. Flanking the
front door were display windows to showcase our wares. Entering the front door, on the
right was a wooden counter extending the whole length of the public area with shelves
behind stacked with dry and canned goods. Entering, on the left, was first the fresh
produce section manned by a produce clerk and extending about half way to the back, and
beyond that was the meat counter with two butchers in attendance. Across the far end was
the dairy counter, and behind that the cold storage, the manager's office, and the storeroom. Back of the grocery
counter four or five of us clerks eagerly awaited your custom. When you, the customer,
came in, you might glance at the produce but you presented yourself to one of the clerks
at the counter, me, who was poised with order book in one hand and pencil in the other (we
had to furnish our own pencils). You read your grocery list, I copied it in my order book,
then tore around the store gathering the ordered items and stacking them on the counter
for your inspection. When your order was assembled, I entered the cost of each item,
totaled the prices, took your money, rang up the transaction, and gave you your change.
Now if you were a townsperson who walked to the store, you put your purchases in your
shopping bag and walked home. If, however, you drove to the store from outside the
village, you probably purchased supplies for a week, and then I packed them and carried
them to your car (no tips, please). We had paper grocery bags and the manager schooled us
in packing them right to the top with no wasted space, but he discouraged their use ("bags cost money")
in favor of using empty cardboard cartons that originally contained corn flakes or soup
and would be discarded anyway. I remember one hot summer morning when a customer came in
and ordered two hundred pounds of sugar, and nothing more. I completed the transaction,
drafted another clerk to help, we each shouldered a hundred pound sack and followed the
man to his car, except he couldn't remember
where he left it. We paraded south along Main Street, then paraded back north, then we
crossed and tried the other side, and with every step the sun got hotter and that sugar
got heavier. Of course we found it eventually, but Smitty and I didn't think the whole episode was half as funny as that
customer did. We decided he was one of the local bootleggers who had been sampling his own
product. On Saturday, as I said, we worked from 7:00 AM to nominally 10:00 PM with two
half-hour breaks for meals ("and get back
sooner
if you can"). Then we had about an hour's cleanup. We stored the fresh produce in the cold
locker and scrubbed the shelves, pulled the window display and scrubbed the shelves,
dusted and swept the whole store, put new display in the front windows, restocked dry
goods, and covered as much as we could with dust cloths. After fifteen hours on the job,
we were free to trudge our weary way home, but we didn't.
Heck no, we went up to the paper mill pond and went swimming, skinny-dipping at midnight,
and playing hide-and-seek under the tree roots along the shore. I worked at Fisher
Brothers for a summer or two plus Saturdays during the school year, and then went to work
in a Standard Oil service station on the corner of Main and Washington Streets just below
our house.
Then sometimes on Wednesday afternoons or Sundays I did a spot of
chauffeuring, after I got my driver's license of
course. Our dentist, Dr. Donald Stem, who owned his own airplane frequently found that
that airplane was somewhere other than where he wanted it, so we would drive there and I
would return his car while he flew back. Despite my many hints, he never did give me a
ride in that aircraft. Dr. Stem's mother-in-law,
old Mrs. Austin Church, widow of one of the founders of the Brewster & Church Co.,
liked to go for rides about the countryside. She had a big Buick sedan but she didn't drive it herself, so I often drove for her. She was
a very pleasant person, and it was she who gave me, upon my high school graduation, a
ceramic elephant, which I recently passed on to certain Republican Party luminaries in the
Dallas area. I also drove for a Mr. Norris, an architect, who liked to visit the older
towns in northeast Ohio to study their early architecture.
Our Standard Oil service station was just a small station in a small town,
but it was in an excellent location and did, as they said, "a land office business," due to the manner in which it was run. We had
just
two sets of gasoline pumps and two service bays, both with lifts, but six of us worked
there and we all kept busy all day long. The manager, Mr. Nelson Hills, known as "Tuckeye"
had firm rules and was a strict disciplinarian, but he was probably the best boss I ever
had. Why? His rules were objective and sensible. He worked us hard but he worked just as
hard and right alongside us doing the same things we did. And he was fair. That station
made a lot of money. The first thing Mr. Hills insisted on was neatness and cleanliness.
We wore uniforms, clean uniforms: gray shirt with a leather black bow tie, black pants and
shoes, billed cap, and a black jacket for inclement weather - all of which we purchased
from the company, and washed at home. The restrooms were the cleanest in town; inspected
and tidied after every use, and mopped at least six times a day, oftener in wet weather.
The service bays were cleaned after every use; tools and equipment properly stowed, spills
wiped up, lifts and floors swept and mopped. Sometimes on a busy Saturday we would use a
service bay twice before stopping to clean it, even with customers lined up and waiting.
Outdoors, the curbs were freshly painted, the grass freshly clipped, the windows freshly
washed, and at least once a summer we washed the exterior of the whole building. No one
ever stepped on a spot of oil or a gob of grease on our pavement. Mr. Hills wanted two of
us to attend each customer, as far as possible; one at the driver's window to greet and take his/her order, check
under
the hood, and clean the windshield, and one to pump in gasoline and visually inspect the
tires. Our customers were predominantly local people, although we also had a surprising
number of out-of-owners who regularly drove past on U.S. Route 422. We courted repeat
business from all of them, learned their names and their preferences. Some of the older
people wanted no one but Mr. Hills himself to service their cars, and he was happy to drop
whatever he was doing and accommodate them with a smile and a cheerful word. We kept them
coming back.
The second summer I worked there, the manager asked if I was willing to
take over the late shift, so that the other attendants, all of whom were married, could go
home to their families. From about 8:30 PM on I worked all alone with instructions to keep
the station open as long as I was selling enough to cover the overhead. Usually I closed
around 11:00 PM, except on Saturdays and nights when the Cleveland Indians played a night
ball game at home. On the nights there was a ball game, I could count on a flurry of
business as the fans from Warren and other points east made their way home. And on those
nights, Mr. Hills would drive by slowly, and, if I had customers backed up and waiting, he
would park his car and jump right in and help. Most nights, though, it was quiet, and
about the only other person stirring was our police officer. At that time, the night
officer was Frank Simmons a good friend about my brother's
age, and a gregarious sort. He and I shared a common trait, neither of us could float.
When the WPA built our municipal swimming pool, lots of us wanted to be lifeguards, but
first we had to pass the Red Cross Life saving course which required that we be able to
float. Try as we could, neither Frank nor I could float - we would follow the instructions
meticulously and slowly sink to the bottom. As night officer, Frank didn't have much to do and frequently stopped in the
station to chat, or parked the police car across the street by the park an sat on one of
the benches. After I closed up, I would join him on the park bench and usually be invited
to ride along as he drove his rounds, just for company.
My brother stayed on at Lowe's
Greenhouse & Nursery for several years, and when he wasn't needed there "helped
out" at the Buick garage. Then he worked at
the
Brewster & Stroud Co., a furniture store, as warehouseman, truck driver, and salesman,
until he was drafted into the army in 1941. Mother and Grandma took care of the house;
cooked and baked, washed and ironed, cleaned, "put
up" fruits and vegetables in season, and in the
afternoons went visiting or shopping or entertained the aunts and cousins who dropped in .
And so we filled our days, but what about the evenings?
Dad, in addition to tending the store, was an active and loyal member of
the local Masonic lodge and the local Kiwanis club, and faithfully attended their
meetings. He was a trustee for our cemetery and, later for our Chagrin Falls Savings &
Loan and both involved more evening meetings, so he wasn't
home too much after supper. When he was, he might read the newspapers (we received two
Cleveland papers and the local weekly) or a hunting and fishing magazine, or occasionally
go down in the cellar and build a birdhouse or a feeder.
Mother and Grandma were never idle. You remember those nuts we
gathered in
the fall and put to dry in the upper attic? We brought them down, finished shucking them,
and then they had to be cracked and the nutmeats extracted for baking and cooking and
sometimes eating as is. Hickory nuts were cracked with a hinged nut cracker, but
butternuts and walnuts were too large. Of these, we brought in old cast iron flatiron from
the woodshed, placed them upside down on our laps, laid a nut on top and rapped it smartly
with a small hammer. Mostly, though, they sewed. Mother mended and darned, and sometimes
did needlework of one kind or another. Grandma worked on rag rugs and quilts. Which she
made depended somewhat on the raw matrial at hand, the quantity and kind of discarded
clothes and other fabric goods that had accumulated in the rag bags (actually recycled
paper flour sacks). If the decision was to make a rug, pieces were cut into strips, the
strips sewed together end-to-end, and the sewn strips rolled into balls, then the selected
number of strips braided tightly and the braids arranged in a flat coil and sewed
together. Voila! A rag rug.
A quilt was a major project but they usually made one each winter. First,
came selection of a pattern, dictated somewhat by color, type, and quality of goods at
hand, and this often involved trading with relatives and friends and trips to the Brewster
& Church Co. to check out the remnants of yard goods available there. These were
patchwork quilts and many evenings were devoted to cutting the intricate pieces, sewing
them into blocks, and ultimately sewing the blocks into a panel. The quilting frame was
brought down from the attic, adjusted tosize, and laid across the backs of four straight
chairs in the front room. The quilting frame resembled the curtain stretcher but without
those finger-pricking pins. A white sheet for backing was stretched tight and firmly
basted to the frame. Then a layer of cotton batting was spread evenly for filler, and the
top panel stretched and basted to the frame. The quilting pattern was marked with a taut
string soaked in a mixture of flour and water. Now the aunts and cousins came with purpose
and all sat and quilted as they visited, and each took pride in the neatness and evenness
of her stitching. My brother and I liked to play under the frame, pretending it was a
cave. Sometimes, though, our presence apparently inhibited the gossip, at least we would
hear the admonition "Little pitchers have big
ears." The finished quilt would be proudly
displayed and much admired before finally being lovingly folded and stored, usually to
serve as a future wedding gift. Those quilts also served as scrapbooks of momentoes. From
time to time they would be taken out and the provenance of each piece fondly recalled: "That blue there, that's from that skirt of Gertrude's, and this yellow here, that's from my old summer shirtwaist." When Mother sold our old home and its
furnishings,
she kept, and always kept with her, a large wooden chest packed with the homemade quilts.
But when she died, the chest and quilts were nowhere to be found. According to my brother,
they disappeared very suddenly and search as we might we never found a clue to their fate.
I told earlier how we burned coal in our furnace in the winter, and we
also burned cordwood harvested on the Little Farm. Some Sunday afternoons in January and
February when the ground was frozen, Dad and my brother and I would load our car with
crosscut saws (we had both one-man and two-man saws), axes (both cutting and splitting
axes), and maybe a splitting maul, drive up to Lowe's
Greenhouse & Nursery where we would leave the car, shoulder our tools and head into
the woods. Dad would select a tree to cut, usually a pig nut or pig hickory as we called
them. He would carefully calculate where it would fall, and then drive a stake in the
ground and assure us that the tree would fall exactly on top of that stake, and quite
often it did or near enough anyway. We would hang our outer jackets on branches or sticks
to make a windbreak, build a little fire in front, and Dad and my brother would fell the
tree. Then, with the two-man saw, they would begin cutting the trunk to lengths for
burning. I had a small axe and with it would lop off limbs. Some of the smaller branches
fed our fire but most were piled up to hopefully provide winter shelter for the wild
things. Before dusk, we would have the tree cut, split, and stacked, and the brush cleaned
up. The next summer when the ground was firm, cousin Dick Burnett would load it onto his
wagon or later his truck and bring it into town. We would stack it in the coal bin,
another chore for the by, me, and burn it along with the coal. Dad was expert with axes
and saws, as he was in many thing, and he pounded into us the correct and safe ways to use
them. Any carelessness, no matter how slight, earned a solid clop alongside my head.
Back at the beginning, I said that there were no welfare or workfare
programs and this was true until the federal government instituted the WPA (Works Progress
Administration), CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps), and PWA (Public Works Administration)
in the 1930s. These programs were a boon to many unemployed people, and they did
accomplish a lot of good things. A lot of the folks who signed on were a bit uncomforable
at taking the government' money, sort of as
if
it was an admission that they were not able to provide for themselves. Then, too, there
was concern that the federal government was going into debt to finance these programs. I
chanced to be in the Buick garage one day when our Congressman George Bender happened by
(he lived just outside the village) and several men voiced their concern to him. I still
recall his answer; "Yes, but who do we owe it
to? We owe it to ourselves, so don't
worry." Mr. Bender was an able politician and was
reelected
regularly for years. He was of course a Republican.
So, yes, people spent a good bit of time working, but it was not only from
necessity, they also took pride in their work and the optional tasks served tofill in some
of the hours before bedtime. We had no television, of course, and no one jumped into their
car to go shopping or to a movie. School activities and social events were few and far
between. I don't remember ever seeing Dad or
Mother or Grandma read a book. But we never felt that we were disadvantaged, and there
were plenty of good times but I can see that that will take a bit of explaining, in
another letter.
Love,
Dad
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