Saturday, February 14, 2015

Ina Mae Green's Childhood Memories

Among the papers at Jean’s that I photographed in 2014 were 3 pages of Ina Green’s handwritten childhood memories ending after Sandy’s birth.  Following is their transcription:
“When I was born in Sacramento California on April 27, 1923 I already had two brothers.  They were Philip and Claude Jr. three years later another brother arrived; John Hewitt who was nicknamed Hughie.  My father Claude was a plumber and we lived very comfortable first in Sacramento and then in Oakland (so I was told).  In 1930 the Wall Street crash (1) caused what was called the Years of Depression.  My father lost his job and his home.  We had Dad’s mother and grandfather living in New York State who said they would provide our family with a home if we would move out to New York.  Dad loaded up a small Chevy truck (something like a van) with canvas sides and top with all the possessions they could take on the truck and headed out on the Lincoln Highway to N.Y.  It took five weeks of hard slow travel before we got the grandpas house in Dry Brook, New York.  The next few years we moved to Margaretville and also Cross Mountain where Great Grandpa George H. Hewitt died in 1993.  We moved back to Dry Brook.   We attended a one room school when all grades were taught by one teacher.  When I was twelve years old I was the only girl with nineteen boys attending this school (this school still stands in Dry Brook.  Someone has made it into their home).  When I was twelve years old Dad got a bonus (2) from the government for being in World War I.  He spent part of this by taking his family including my grandmother to New York City for three days.  It was the most wonderful thing that ever happened to us.  Maybe I should mention that up until this time we were very poor.  We were a very close knit family with lots of love.  My two older brothers were very musical and we did a lot of singing and playing games together.  We went to church every Sunday together.  So I have very pleasant memories of the years we lived in Dry Brook.  When I was fourteen I went to the 1937 World’s Fair in New York City with a girlfriend.  We moved to Margaretville when I was fifteen, Dad was back in the plumbing business and we were much better off money wise.  In 1939 Claude Jr married my best friend, lila Prime and moved to Fonda N.Y. In 1940 Phil married Katie Toth.  In 1941 I married Glen Scudder.  The Second World War had started.  Dad went to work for the government and Mom went with him.  I lived in Bragg Hollow with Glen and we had Sandy.”

(1)    The Wall Street Crash occurred 29 Oct 1929 triggered the Great Depression which lasted 10 years. I had never heard it called “The Years of Depression”
(2)    The World War 1 veterans’’ bonus was apx. $1,000 per veteran in 1936. This amount was more that 25% of the cost of a new home and more than half of a year’s average wages.

(3)    Hughie has told us his grandmother Ella and her father George Hewitt were living in CA when Claude came home from WW1 in Jan of 1919.  This is what prompted him to go to CA.  Ella and her father returned to upstate NY before 1930.





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