My dad was born in rural Northwest Louisiana in 1924, growing up during the bleakest of The Great Depression. Fourth of seven children born to a sharecropper who was barely scratching a living out of the red dirt, life got even harder for the family when his father died, leaving a destitute widow and six children under sixteen with only a mule, a cow, a wagon, a few farming implements, and the clothes on their backs. The boys took whatever work they could get at neighboring farms, working for their keep, and hopefully bringing a little something home to share, sometimes gone for weeks at a time. A widow with children in tow finds little welcome among struggling in-laws. Mettie was an orphan with no one to depend on except her brother, who provided them a place to stay and a garden patch. She struggled to feed her three girls left at home aged three through ten, doing whatever she could to put something on the table. They always managed to have a cow, pigs, and chickens. This and their garden staved off starvation. In the picture at the center top my dad is the little guy in the bottom center with wet overalls, so he must have been less than three years old. On the picture left lower, my dad is the youngest with two older brothers and two uncles. On the lower right, he is pictured with his two brothers and two black children who lived nearby. He said they played with these kids all the time, and ate many meals at their home. In the racist culture of the time, it is highly unlikely the favor would have been returned. If black children had come to a white home for a meal, they’d have eaten on the porch. I am so glad times have changed.
I see those faces and peek into their lives and feel such hope for the human race.
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I am so glad you said that. My Grandmother had more than forty grandchildren. Her grandchildren include doctors, lawyers, nurses, military officers, college professors, children of other races and ethnicities. It’s wonderful how the world has changed.
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Thank you for reminding me that we’ve come a long way. Sometimes it’s easier for me to focus on how things haven’t changed enough instead of the improvements. My mother grew up in the segregated South, so my early life was much more diverse than hers, which I’m not sure she was ever truly comfortable with. For my kids, it’s a completely different world; they’ve grown up immersed in diversity and continue to appreciate it.
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Those of us who are a little older are definitely more aware. Not only did I not go to school with black children, I didn’t even know any by name. My area was at least 50/50 ratio. We did no mix nor have opportunity to even meet. When we saw each other in stores or on the street, we just stared and wondered about each other. We would never have run up and joined each other at play. Our parents had taught us not to mix.
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If 1950 is your birth year, then you are of my mother’s generation, so yes, I imagine it was much the same.
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Yes from the Deep South.
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Maybe he had to stand there so long he wet his pants.
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Maybe. Also likely only ones available at time. Poverty, houseful of kids, did wash on rub board. Look ho they are dressed.
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Beautiful story and love these old pictures! Whoever took them did not mind your dad’s pants were wet! 😉 ~Elle
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I’m so glad!
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I rem standing with my Mother as a 5 year old in the potato fields of Idaho watching mounds of potatoes burning because if given to someone who need the food the farmers would lose their support money.
http://idahobluebird50.wordpress.com
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That must have been awful, knowing there were people who needed those potatoes.
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Yes it was. The farmers were protesting that they couldn’t gave the potatoes awy. It wouldn’t surprise that some were given any way. The food brought were store in warehouses until Lydon Johnston released to low income population. That was the start of our food banks.
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I remember hearing some people talking about the pain of having their cattle shot.
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It reminds me of when I was attending college and asked my “black friend” to go to the movies…she looked at me and quietly said, “We can’t go to the movies together. You’ll be sitting downstairs and I’ll be in the balconey.” I couldn’t believe she said that….but she was from “The South” and I was from “The North”….I couldn’t believe that that sort of thing was still going on. Makes me sad (and angry) to this very day…….
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Made no sense, did it?
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I really enjoyed this. My mom was a Depression baby too, born in 1929. Love the old photographs.
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Thanks.
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Love the old pictures, and the story is all too familiar. Dad born in 1924, his mother raised we first 3 siblings. She was so marred by the Depression, she told us stories and showed us by example how to survive hard times; lessons we never forgot. I have very few photos of the 1920’s, they didn’t want to capture those moments, I guess.
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May not have been an option. I have no idea who took this picture. I’m sure my dad’s family wouldn’t have owned a luxury like a camera.
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True enough…never thought of that.
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Someone probably gave her a negative or a copy.
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Such a beautiful & honest portrayal of the times. Abraham said “teach the children so it will not be necessary to teach the adults”.
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Unfortunately, Daddy grew up racist. Fortunately, all his kids learned better. Things have changed for the better.
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We can only start with ourselves! great post.
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Thanks.
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isn’t it funny how kids do not seem to care about the color of their friends’ skin, it is the adults that do
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Too bad when they “learn” something else.
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Wonderful photos and memories. Those were some rough times but they seem to have produced some pretty awesome people.
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They had to be tough.
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Yes, they did
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What fantastic pictures!
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I am fortunate to have these. I am sure his family didn’t have a camera.
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That’s why I treasure the pictures I have of my grandparents and parents…. The ones from their childhoods… Irreplaceable 😊
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They are precious.
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