Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Caroline Pierce Burke. March 25, Box 1 Folder 18. Oral Interview conducted by Robert Read

Similar documents
Lowell Luke - The Depression. Box 2 Folder 13

Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion. Box 2 Folder 31

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Freda Ann Clark. March 21, Box 1 Folder 13. Oral Interview conducted by Paul Bodily

Voices from the Past. Johnson s Settlement. By James Albert Johnson And Ethel Sarah Porter Johnson. June 9, Tape #10

Hazel Pearson- Life during the Depression. Box 2 Folder 21

Mary Hansen Gardner - Life Experiences of the Depression. Box 1 Folder 41

Utah Valley Orchards

A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Elizabeth Spori Stowell. December 11, Box 2 Folder 41. Oral Interview conducted by Sharee Smith

Dr. David L. Crowder Oral History Project. By Luseba Widdison Petersen. March 24, Box 2 Folder 23. Oral Interview conducted by Rick Smith

JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Grant Andrus. February 13, Box 1 Folder 3. Oral Interview conducted by Mike Andrus

Lester Belnap-Experiences of WWI. Box 1 Folder 11

U.19 Long Civil Rights Movement: Breaking New Ground. Interview U-0649 Bishop Henry Epps 2 August Abstract p. 2 Field Notes p. 3 Transcript p.

HOWARD ELMER GIBSON

Alvin Sharp Growing Up in Rigby Idaho. Box 8 Folder 26

422 HENRY E. JENKINS OXEN TO AIRPLANE 423

Howard Smith: So, how long did your brother stay there? He was only sixteen.

Plough Service Communion

Life History of Ivy Price: Experiences in North Salem. Tape #90

Anna Evert Terry - The Life Story. Box 2 Folder 45

Rose Koops - Beaver Dick s Daughter. Tape #12

Development of Agriculture on the Rexburg Bench. Tape #97

TETON ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM. Ricks College Idaho State Historical Society History Department, Utah State University TETON DAM DISASTER

Included Names: Andrew and Lucy Lucetta Brown McCombs, Ellen (Nellie) Gray

HUTSLER, J. S. INTERVIEW ^8781

BEET SUGAR FACTORY SUGAR CITY

Gale Reed Life During WWII. Box 6 Folder 22

Restoring baaa-d relationships In the pasture at Nazareth Village roam a flock of sheep.

Utah Power and Light Company. Tape #82

JOHN SCHWENDIMAN SWITZERLAND TO UPPER SNAKE RIVER VALLEY. Tape #174

You live in a very beautiful home, first of all. We ll talk about that in a minute. But can I have

How did the Transcontinental Railroad Change Utah s Economy?

TEST NAME:Reading Lit TEST ID: GRADE:04 - Fourth Grade SUBJECT:English Language and Literature TEST CATEGORY: School Assessment

Anna Eliza Lemmon Knapp

See The Good Challenge

PACKET 3: WHO MOVED WEST? Was westward expansion more positive or negative?

Leviticus 25:1-12 New International Version May 20, 2018

Ellis Island Park Service Oral History Excerpt Ida P. 13 August 1996 edited by Fern Greenberg Blood

The Americans (Survey)

Economic hard times Overproduction of goods, bank failures, and a stock market crash caused the Great Depression People were optimistic in

Chapter 8: Living in Territorial Utah. (Culture, Business, Transportation, and Mining)

KIRK, ALBERT B. INTERVIEW. #44B0. ii C^RDS: Opening-Oherokee otrip Government Springs Living Conditions Singing Schools

THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL. Utah History

The Archibald Family History and Pioneer Stories. Tape #56

The First Pioneer Company Crosses the Plains.

Flora Adams Wall Life During WWII. Box 6 Folder 28

Joseph Smith Hendricks

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Artell Chapman. Spring Box 1 Folder 23. Oral Interview conducted by Larry Ostler

Interview with Pastor Carl Garrett, Rutlader Outpost Cowboy Church

Arthur Claudius Hancey

The Spanish Speaking People Among Us. Tape #4

Iam grateful, brothers and sisters, to

Madison County Idaho Assessor. Tape #3

Carol E. Hines Interviewed by: Rusty Salmon January at Moab, Utah

Life History of the Wilding Family. Tape #127

HENRY S LAKE AREA

Memories of Farming By Bill Sievers

Utah Valley Orchards

OBXfPIN, ANNA. Ida B. Lankf ord

Reminiscence of Mrs. O.C. Bell From 1938 Interview

Poverty-Scoring Role-Play Script

IDAHO'S UPPER SNAKE RIVER BASIN

UTAH...THIS IS THE PLACE

Contact for further information about this collection

Dana: 63 years. Wow. So what made you decide to become a member of Vineville?

Mesopotamian Civilization For use with pages 16 23

THE FIRST WHITE MEN IN UTAH

U.19 Long Civil Rights Movement: Breaking New Ground. Interview U-0656 James Anderson 27 June Abstract p. 2 Field Notes p. 3 Transcript p.

Garth Victor Hall Life During the Teton Flood. Box 6 Folder 29

Utah Deaf Women s Camp. Written & Compiled by Jodi B. Kinner

Joseph Helps Pharaoh

How the Romans lived in Britain By Michael Coleman

MSS 179 Robert H. Richards, Jr., Delaware oral history collection, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware

Utah Settlement and Mining

Homer Bunker Zion National Park Oral History Project CCC Reunion September 28, 1989

Transcontinental Railroad

Transportation of Goods from Market Lake to Rexburg from 1883 to Tape #69

This information is taken from the records of Weber Co. and much is learned from personal testimony of grand daughter Sarah Slater & Nellie Clark.

Wife of Anson Call

Early School Teaching. Tape #23

THE FAMILIES OF MORONI CHUGG. IDA TAYLOR AND LOUISA LIGHTFOOT. Karl Leila. Moroni and Ida Chugg. Zola John. Melburne Duard.

Early Rexburg, Idaho. Tape #109

THE LAST SLAVE HAL AMES

Tree Art. Creations Craft Class. What s in your packet? 3 HRS.

TETON ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM. Ricks College Idaho State Historical Society History Department, Utah State University TETON DAM DISASTER.

Uncorrected Transcript of. Interviews. with. LOME ALLEN and SADIE LYON Undated. and. (W#*ed. by James Eddie McCoy, Jr. Transcribed by Wesley S.

Western Trails & Settlers

You could cut up and place the cards in a basket. Then choose a different scripture card to use each time in your collective worship.

Issaquah History Museums Oral History Interview with John Pinky Hailstone June 13, 1975

Preschool. June 7, :15am

Sermon for 12 th Sunday after Pentecost. How Time Flies

Joseph Hyrum Smith Life in Clark. Tape # 50

A18-C700U10-1. MONDAY, 5 NOVEMBER 2018 MORNING 1 hour 45 minutes

Lorenzo Snow Receives a Revelation on Tithing

194 Elizabeth R. H oltgreive

Impact of the Great Depression on Sugar City, Idaho. Tape #30

What Thanksgiving Is About Ephesians 5:19-20; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 I

Hibbard, Idaho Community. Tape #54

May 30, Mayer Dragon - Interviewed on January 17, 1989 (two tapes)

Transcription:

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Caroline Pierce Burke - The Great Depression Years in Southeastern Idaho By Caroline Pierce Burke March 25, 1976 Box 1 Folder 18 Oral Interview conducted by Robert Read Transcribed by Victor Ukorebi April 2005 Brigham Young University- Idaho

This is oral history. I am Robert Read. Today is March 25, 1976. I am going to interview Caroline Pierce Burke, B-U-R-K-E. The general topic will be the Depression Years in the Snake River Valley. Robert Read (RR): Mrs. Burke, where were you born? Caroline Pierce Burke (CPB): In Annis, Idaho, on a farm, pioneer farm. RR: How long have you lived in Iona? CPB: I ve lived here since 1916 RR: Where were your parents born? CPB: My father was born in Liberty, Pennsylvania. He and his mother and little brother died on the plains coming to Utah. His little brother died on the plains, and his mother and his father separated and left my father with just his mother. His father got married and he went to live with him and his wife, whose name was Mary. Father, being the oldest of his mother s family, cared a lot about his mother and he tried to help all he could. He told me that he dug his mother her first well. He would live with his stepfather for a while and then he d get kind of ornery and mean with him so then he would go back to his father. The first thing you know they d come and get him and he d go back to live them. So he didn t know where he belonged. I imagine he was a sort of a mixed up boy. But he went out and provided for himself in working in the timbers and things like this. RR: What was your occupation? CPB: Mine? RR: Uh-huh! CPB: My occupation? RR: Ya! CPB: My occupation was being in a good mother, a good Latter-Day Saints, and helping my husband in all that he stranded in need of and helping to provide for the children. RR: What were the first years of the Depression like? CPB: As I remember the first years of Depression, 1930, we didn t have much grain to harvest but we did have a little. Probably about two loads of wheat. Being the kind of people that we both were, we didn t suffer too much because we could always make do with what we had in raising a good garden and chickens and have our cow, and working as my husband could by helping others on P.T.A., P.W.A., or taking the men to and from work, making the roads and help laying the railroad here into Iona.

RR: Your husband was quite an industrious man! CPB: Yes, he was, Bob. RR: You were telling me about how he was always ready to work. CPB: My husband was never without work very long. One time he went up to a farmer and he said, Well I ve just got to have work, it was wintertime and we had two children at this time. He said, Will you give me a job? Then the man said, Well, I don t need you, and Elm says, How much do you want? and he said sixty dollars a month for four horses. He said, That s too much, I just can t hire you. So my husband said OK that s alright, I ll get along. So he started down the road and he hollered at him and told him to come back. He said, You ve got a job. So he help haul the beet pulp from the factory to feed his sheep, feed this man s sheep. RR: How was the farming during the Depression years? CPB: We was new at dry farming and didn t know or understand that we should plow our land in the spring, and cultivate it during the summer, and then plant our wheat in the fall. After we did that, we were able to raise better crops. But we was handicapped because we only had horses to do the work, for we used to have later on, a tractor and cultivators. RR: You raised quite a family! CPB: We raised six lovely daughters and they ve all married well and doing well in the church. We re really proud of our family. I have twenty-six grandchildren, about fifteen great grandchildren. RR: how was it raising these, your daughters, during the depression years? CPB: Raising my daughters during the depression years? It wasn t a hard task because we had always been used to getting along on what we had. I had to do a lot of extra making cover clothes and things like this. We carried our water from the ditch. We had to go about a block and a half to carry our water in a bucket and all our water in the house at that time. We didn t have electric washers; we have to scrub our clothes on the stove. We had to gather our own wood and our coal as well. We could afford to do our baking and heating our house and washing our clothes and cooking. RR: You re going to tell me about this experience that happened back during those years with your husband and your daughter? He was buying coal? CPB: My husband was a great man to work, he was industrious. If he had a job to do, he done it. At this time he figured that he had to work on a Sunday to make ends meet. So he would go up Sunday morning and get a load of coal from the Grind, Line Bull Coal Mine in Wyoming. He had to go up the Grays Canyon Dug way and it was awfully slick at this time. So as he came home this one Sunday evening, he was pretty discouraged because he wasn t getting ahead. Our

little daughters had been to sacrament meetings that night and as they came home they saw their father in this frame of mind and one little girl, ten, she decided that she would do something about it. So she, unbeknownst to us, she got an envelop and wrote on it and gave her father the advice of keeping the Word of Wisdom and the Sabbath Day holy. It was through this little girl doing this that he changed his life completely. He stopped working on Sunday. She promised him that if he would do this, that he would get out of debt and he would pay his bills and everything would work alright if he d just do the Lord s will. She put this letter in his shoe and he got up at two o clock. He got home at nine o clock and was going back to the mine at two in the morning. As he got dressed, I had the fire going and his breakfast ready. He picked up his shoe and he saw that letter in his shoe and he threw it across the house. I said, Isn t that something you want to take with you to the mine? and he said nope. He was in a very cross mood. He was just in a very foul mood this time. So we read the letter, he said, Oh that s what Sam done, or some other man that he knew in the ward, That s who wrote that letter. We didn t know who wrote the letter for twenty-six years. One day when I was down to California, I was telling the Ward teachers about this strange letter. She (the daughter) said, Mom, come in the kitchen, I ve got something to tell you. She says You know I wrote that letter. We didn t know where this came from, but it did have its bearings. He stopped working on Sunday and he was able to provide for our needs and get ahead and we ve never been in need since. That s just through a little child guiding us. RR: What about the times, I know, that money was scarce? What were the living standards like? CPB: There were time when our living standards, money was hard to get. We had been used to getting along, and it didn t affect us very much because we could always make a way that we could provide got our needs if it was melting snow or going to the ditch or hauling our water from the canal. We didn t have any electricity. We had to do our own, gathering our wood and chopping it and bringing it into the house to keep our house warm. It was rough sometimes or sometimes their shoes got kind of thin but we always managed. We never suffered very much. RR: You were probably pretty dependent on yourselves then during this time? CPB: Yes, I think that with, through this rearing up in our early years, my husband knowing that a struggle it was to get food on the table and things, he grew up and me being, I myself having that same standard in my home coming into this valley in the 1800 s we had to break the land of sagebrush. So we broke before we could put our crops in. Lots of times our crop would freeze and we had no other means but to eat the frozen bread, the wheat, we had the frozen bread from this dozen wheat. It wasn t very good bread. But we managed and we ve always been grateful that we never suffered much from this because we could always mange by making over clothes and working hard in our gardens, saving what we could. I think that s all. RR: OK. What about, with the church, how was the church in the years? CPB: The church, in my day when I was growing up as a child, sometimes we had primary and sometimes we didn t. We didn t have M.I.A. all the time. Living on the farm, it was kind of hard to get out and get down to these meetings. We didn t have the close contacts that we have today. So, I think that I did suffer from that because I would like to have been more active in the

church. You could learn this from your childhood on up. I think anyone should be given the chance t participate in the programs that s in the church. Sometimes the quiet ones always get the chance to set back while the others go ahead. I think that we should beware that we should help these quiet people in their lives so their lives will be better. RR: How did you manage taxes and like doctor bills and things? CPB: Doctor Bills? We didn t have very many doctors. Our parents being the pioneers, we relied on the Lord and on our knowledge of doctoring. In the valley, if one person was in need, we could always get help from our neighbors. When we had our children, we didn t go up to the doctors or the hospital. The ladies in our community would come in and help that patient. My mother was alone when I came into the world and my sister said she was ten at that time. She said all she could hear was a bawling baby. RR: How was it with land? CPB: The what? RR: Land. I mean how much land did you have? CPB: We had about six hundred and forty acres of states land and then we had a farm of a hundred and sixty. My husband and his father always worked on this land. He lived with us after his wife died. Uncle Burke was always a favorite in our household. He was so good to the children and he helped me many, many ways. RR: I know that a lot of people lost their land during this time. Did you have any problems like that? CPB: Our hundred and sixty acres was quite a distance from other farm. I don t know what happened to that land, whether we sold it. I believe it was taken on a mortgage that my father-inlaw put on it, for he lost it. So that left us with just the state land. So we lived off that for a long time and then during the period of the World War, Second World War, my husband was trucking at this time and he was able to manage his farm and truck wheat for different people and haul coal for them. He was never out of a job. Thank you very much. This tape will be placed in the library at Ricks College for use by future researchers.