The Water Tower and Other Memories
The Water Tower is a curiosity on East Houston Avenue in Crockett,
Texas. It was built back in the year 1909--or much earlier--and
altho the original owners--the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jones (H. J.)
Arledge-- have gone, the Water Tower, built of hand-cut cedar
shingles, STILL stands staunchly as a sort of monument to a mode of
life back in the very early days of the 20th century. The Old House
facing East Houston Avenue (which in earlier days was called El
Camino Real--The King’s Highway) goes down in the History of
Crockett as one of the First Twenty-five houses built on the main
thoroughfare leading into the City of Crockett and the Old (and
first) courthouse. So deserves a Texas Medallion (Historical) as
such. The Old House has several ‘Firsts’ to its credit:
a) It was one of the first houses in Crockett to be piped with
plumbing. BUT for many, many years thereafter . . . in the
Wintertime . . . the pipes froze and would burst; and the old
galvanized washing tub would have to be drug out for a warm and
steaming Bath before a roaring fire in the open fireplace (and, the
back of you would freeze stiff, while the front of you practically
burned-up!) . . . and then & only then you would have to gingerly
pull yourself up, being very careful not to step upon a cake of
Fairy Soap, then turn around and lower yourself into the tub again.
It was No Fun taking a bath on a wintry cold night--or, any night
that was cold, and the wind outside 'whistling' to let you know it
was COLD outside, too.
b) The little white house on the East side of the lawn first housed
No. 20, the first large car in Crockett. It was a great 'big car'
(to us), a comfortable riding grey car . . . an OAKLAND . . . and
the boys of the family soon added a whistle that sounded like a real
live wild-cat. It is needless to say that that 'wild-cat' whistle
could be heard for miles, and quite often DID scare the inhabitants
quite often into thinking there was a real-live wildcat roaming this
area . . . for in those areas wildcats often came into town, to prey
on the chickens and such.
c) We had one of the first telephones. Dad was one of the first
subscribers for a telephone that you cranked to get 'Central'. Our
number was No. 58, and we kept that number for many, many years.
Yes, our Central was one of the Best. If you phoned and couldn't get
your party, you could phone back to her and she could tell you where
you could likely locate them.
d) With the buying of a car. (Dad, on one of his trips to Fort Worth
to sell his carload of cattle at a good price . . . brought the Big
Car...The Oakland... back with him, and he didn’t know HOW to
drive!!) So for about a year . . . Dad hired an excellent chauffeur
who was not only strictly hired as such, but got good lodging and
board. The chauffeur drove him to town and on my Dad's trip down to
the Trinity River Farm and Plantation . . . or to Dallas over
terrible roads, hub-deep in black sticky gumbo roads, or over clay
hills that you would slide back an inch or two (or three) before you
could go forward again, and TRUST that you would go forward again,
or hit deep sand that would cause the car wheels to spin. Sometimes
the Oakland would 'get stuck' by sliding too far on a clay hill, or
'get stuck' in pulling up the embankments at the Trinity River
ferry, and sometimes the car had to be pulled out of mud . . . or
deep, deep ruts by a team of mules or horses by good neighbors (who
were glad to lend a helping hand in those days). It is needless to
say right here and now--if Dad owned a car, he needed a chauffeur to
go with it! But . . . in time, his boys--Edgar, Roy (nicknamed the
Judge) and Henry (nicknamed Cat)--learned to drive (that is around
Grace Street, and around the Court House Square, up-town . . . and
THAT is as far as there were ever allowed to drive around the city .
. . in an era where we didn't have good roads.
The three-storied Water Tower (with a great big galvanized 200
gallon tank atop the Tower), as to the real usefulness, would not be
complete without the tall windmill nearby, for together they served
the purposes for which they were built . . . to have good well water
for drinking purposes; for the plumbing system in the house, and, to
fill the trough (to overflowing) in the barnlot, so that the horses,
mules, cows, and such would not got thirsty. Along about four
o'clock, the long chain that locked the huge blades (to keep them
from turning) was unfastened . . . and then the Wind would catch the
huge blades and make them spin 'round 'n 'round! Sometimes fast . .
. then faster, and then again rather slowly, all according to the
caprice and whim of the wind!! This type of 'power-plant' was just
great for pumping the water in the deep earth, up to the tank . . .
the huge 200 gallon galvanized tank, taking care of the surplus
water so that we could have running water in the house! Later, Dad
bought a gasoline pump, to aid the wind in its efforts to force the
water up into the tank atop the tower. This needed to be done of
course, when the air was very still . . . not all the time! But oh,
that cool & refreshing water for drinking water. It was pure, and
delicious to drink, and enjoy on a hot summer's day.
And too . . . as a child, I remember so well that the boys of the
family then of high school age, used to take over the top floor of
the Tower as their very own territory. (NO Girls Allowed!!) This law
laid down by the boys used to exasperate the girls of the
neighborhood (who wore their hair plaited, in pigtail fashion) who
thought they were left out! Talk about Women's Lib!!! There wasn't
any such thing in existence back in those days. And to see that KEEP
OUT sign hoisted above a ladder leading to the The Office on the top
floor served as a heated challenge as to whether the boys had a
rightful right to say it was 'theirs' and to keep the girls out! The
girls, then, in turn, developed their own ideas and rights. They
blocked their entrance to the third floor and top of the tower
(which you had to climb up to by a ladder, flat against the wall) by
saying that the second floor area was theirs!! The called it The
Princesses' Tower, and they charged the boys that they couldn't
enter it to get to their top tower and office!! Mother, on many a
morning's occasion, had to come to the rescue, and settle the
dispute.
An Era for Tennis
This old home--on El Camino Real in the Crockett, Texas area can go
down as a real old-fashioned American home--with parents who made a
home in Crockett, Texas, took part in the religious, social and
civic life of the community, and, who loved their children and,
oftentimes 'joined in' in the activities that all members
participated in. My parents believed in providing activities 'at
home' for the children and, having six children, the homeplace often
became a mecca for the young people of the neighborhood. There was a
Tennis Court on the east side of the lawn, where every afternoon, at
four o'clock, in the good-ole-summertime, the young people of the
neighborhood would gather for tennis matches. A few who gathered
here to play tennis were: Arch Baker, Dan Craddock, Harvey Bayne,
Frank Chamberlain, LeRoy Moore, Hunter Warfield, Robert Reid Nunn,
Grace and Sue Denney, Edgar, Roy and Henry Arledge, Genevieve
Eichaelburger, Jack Beasley, Judith Arledge, and Bitsy Arledge,
Hilllie Hart Johnson of Marlin, Texas, Seawillow Johnson of Marlin,
Texas, Virginia Chamberlain, Ruth Warfield, Hallie Aldrich, Milton
and Arthur Thomas, and a host of others.
There was a car, a Victrola with all the latest records from operas,
or Bands: dance music, ballads, popular music, folk songs, heart
songs and patriotic songs to enjoy anytime of the day and especially
at night. There was a piano in the parlor where young folks gathered
in the evening to sing those wonderful and beloved heart-songs of
long ago. And on occasion, the boys brought along a box of
candy--Norris Chocolates or Jacobs Chocolates that made the evening
perfect. And on June 19th, we celebrated Emancipation Day along with
the 'hired hands' as they celebrated Juneteenth down on the Trinity
River Farm or Plantation. And what food!! There were huge platters
of barbecued goat, huge platters of fried chicken, fried fish, fried
to a golden brown, fried squirrel, great slices of watermelon that
had been iced down before cutting, corn bread, hot biscuits the size
of a teacup, home-made pies, jellies, cakes in a choice that was
hard to make, strawberry soda-pop, orange soda-pop, cream sodas
a-plenty, and barrels of ice cold lemonade, all you could drink.
Besides home made cakes filled with blackberry jam, or loaf cake
filled with a soft lemon filling, and just everything good that one
can possibly imagine. There were other wonderful picnics down at the
Trinity River Farm, or at Blue Lake, or at Mill Lake---these picnics
planned for the family and a few friends, would sometimes expand
into the family and some fifty to one hundred friends. There were
truly wonderful occasions, indeed.
*** Informational notes from Claire Craddock Younkin: Of the youths
who gathered to play tennis, Dan Craddock and Judith Arledge married
in 1914; Ruth Warfield married Roy Arledge ; Frank Chamberlain's
sister, Katie, married Henry Arledge; Hillie Hart Johnson and
Seawillow Johnson, I think, were nieces of Florence Johnson, who
married Samuel C. Arledge.
Memories of Father
I remember my father as he hovered over the open fireplace to place
a large backlog, that would burn slowly throughout the night. I
remember the black iron shovel that so oftentimes was also used to
cover up the fiery-red embers with ashes, to tide the embers over
until morning light! Dad was a fellow that “went to bed with the
chickens, and got up with the chirping of the sparrows.” Dad would
get up early and poke and punch the backlog into a bright flame and
stir the ashes until the embers
burned brightly; then, he would reach into the firewood box for bits
of rich pine kindling and place them over the embers. The kindling
would soon burst into a flame. Then, he would carefully place the
little logs of oak on the brass andirons and soon the fire-making
process would be completed. Then he would go outside to fetch his
morning newspaper [the Houston Post and the Houston Chronicle--he
took both newspapers!] and settle down to read it. By this time, the
fire would be burning brightly, with warmth enough for the little
folks of the family to come in and stand by the fireside to dress.
I remember nights in front of the fire when we popped corn with a
long-handled corn popper, so long that it reached well inside and
over the open fire. And how we ALL enjoyed feasting on the hot
buttered popcorn on a long winter's night, and as we sat around
listening to the folklore our parents talked about. I remember my
dad getting down on the floor to wrestle with ‘his boys’ in fun. I
remember the times he took them hunting--for deer, squirrels, dove,
ducks or quail--all in plentiful supply in the days of the past. I
remember how he loved to take members of his family down to the
River plantation--to go fishing--and I remember the magnificent
strings of fish he caught. Dad, along with other good citizens
became a champion for getting good roads, for ever afterwards.
My father was considered a very wealthy citizen in Houston County.
To this kind of public relations talk, he would laugh in a
good-natured way, and exclaim: “Rich?!!, Well, I'm not so sure about
THAT!” He owned many acres of land, that's for sure, some in timber,
some in cotton, some land that was poor, and some fertile. As he
used to say, It is good to own land, but it can be a game of
chance!! The fluctuation of land prices, the prices to be gotten for
timber, the prices (and the rise and fall of them) of cotton
markets, World War I, taxes, the levee on the Trinity River to
protect from flooding, all took its toll in many anxieties, one
after another. With a great deal of longing in my heart for my Dad,
all I can say is . . . Hearts give way under such a strain, and one
wintry rainy day in February, 1923, my Dad had a sudden heart attack
and was gone before anyone could get a doctor. Oh, but what
memories!!
The Goat Ranch
“The Goat Ranch” out East of Town, on Kennard Highway, used to be
the scene of some wonderful picnics, too. This ranch was about 7
miles from Crockett, and was, in fact, easier to get to than the
Trinity River farm. [My parents--for love and
affection--gave me some 1,200 acres of land known as The Goat Ranch.
When they gave me this land, they also gave each of the other (five)
children tracts of land of equal value down on the river. The river
farms had the fertile, rich black land (River bottom land), along
with timber. The East Pastures land had an excellent growth of pine
trees and other valued timber, and was known, also, as good grazing
land.]
A. There was a Sugar Cane Syrup Mill out at the Goat Ranch. The
syrup mill was in operation for several years, in the Fall seasons;
and, the procedure the operators used in making syrup (so thick you
could cut it with a knife!) was really something very special to
witness by children and grown folks, alike.
B. There was a wonderful garden planted in the Spring and Fall
seasons of the year. And there were all types of fresh vegetables to
gather in bountiful basketsfull. There were golden ears of corn: the
stalks looking as if they'd reach the sky! And squash, pole beans,
bush beans, bell peppers, hot peppers, sweet onions, tomatoes,
cucumbers, and gourds on the fence that were always a curiosity to
see, and to marvel over as to size and shape.
C. There were horses to saddle and ride. The children, of course,
would get a gentle horse that you practically didn't have to more
the reins to guide. But, there were spirited horses to ride, too,
and for those who could ‘stay on’ and not fall off! After a ride
around an enclosed pasture, some gentle person was there to reach up
and lift you off the horse if you were a little tot.
There was so much to see and so much to do out at the Goat Ranch. It
was always a joy to go out there with Dad and Mother. And there were
goats (thousands of them) and their kids to watch. The goats were
bought out in West Texas, around San Angelo, and brought to Crockett
to the Goat Ranch, where their usefulness was in eating and clearing
out a lot of the green undergrowth that was not needed. It was
really a sight to see, (and one never to be forgotten)--to watch
them come up( in a mass of white wooled formation) and in slow
motion, to the barn to be fed. This was a wonderful experience for
me, as a child.
In the Fall of the year, it was fun to hunt a sweet gum tree for the
hardened sap. And it had better be HARD--or else when you picked the
gum from a slashed cut on the side of the tree, it got all over your
teeth--and there was nothing stickier!! But when you chewed fast,
and faster, the gum mellowed into a real nice chewing gum with an
unusual flavor. Hunting sweet gum, and even in picking and chewing
some was a very special treat for a little girl who lived in town,
visiting in the country.
There is so many wonderful things that nature shows us. The fall
leaves, which turned crimson, russet, and gold were always
beautiful, and I know one little girl that always brought an armful
of golden leaves back to town each time she came home following a
trip to the Ranch! Hunting wild violets and Johnny-Jump-Ups in the
spring was another delight. The main ranch house was atop a high
hill, and from a vantage point on the front porch -- in the fall of
the year, one could look out over across the land and feel a
peacefulness with all the world. In the fast on-coming dusk and
through the low-hanging clouds of grey smoke, one also became aware
of the rapidly approach of day's end. Sometimes there was still
light in the Western sky, as an orange red ball of sun seemingly
lingered and lulled in its time before sinking behind the horizon to
end a perfect day. The Perfect Day, the Perfect Afternoon at the
Goat Ranch ended that way many times . . . . It was always with
reluctance that I listened to my parents call “Come, Hattie Bell,
it's time to go home!” I remember these things so well! I can
remember many yesterdays at the Goat Ranch, and at the Trinity River
Farm place, just as wonderful, and just as beautiful as those I have
already described.
The Kitchen Back at Home
I remember a huge kitchen graced by a giant, old-fashioned,
wood-burning range with wide and deep ovens with space large enough
to bake a turkey, ham or roast. Mother has lifted many a golden
brown loaf of bread from that stove. She baked a marvelous peach
cobbler, or date loaf, or fruit cake . . . with loving care, and
anticipation of her family's delight. Mother had a cook at all
times, but mother was not satisfied to leave all the cooking to
them. She was there to supervise! I well-remember the cooks that we
had--some staying with the family “for years”, others would “come
and go.” But those that stayed on and on were a joy to have around.
They felt a responsibility in their duties as a cook. The hot
biscuits, waffles, baked breads, sausage, bacon, fried chicken and
steaks were always turned out in a very special way--SO temptingly
good! And in the Winter months, the oysters shipped in, usually from
the port of Galveston, were crisply fried and placed into huge
platters of them. During the oyster seasons, we often were served
oyster stew, or oyster pie, oyster cocktails, or just plain raw
oysters. [But, UGH, no eating raw ones for me!!!] In the season for
deer and squirrels, or dove, or quail--well, these things today are
very rare treats, but in my days, there were plentiful and a very
special treat.
I remember in this home, [when my parents lived here], that they
joined in the gatherings with the young people to supervise a “Candy
Pull” in the spacious kitchen and in pulling taffy candy. Sometimes
the young folks made peanut brittle/or/pecan brittle. I remember the
mugs of hot chocolate topped with thick whipped cream and served
before a crackling open-fire in the fireplace and, around which we
all gathered & hovered over for a night after night enjoyment of a
‘family togetherness’ on cold winter nights. I remember the huge
back log, and the firewood box, and the poker & tongs & shovel; and
how, when the embers died down, my Dad would take the poker or the
tongs to re-arrange the wood into burning better. I remember the
rich kindling and the firewood that was brought in by the houseboy
every afternoon, and placed in the firewood box, in order that we
have plenty of wood through the night, should we need it. I remember
my father as he hovered over the open fireplace to place a large
backlog that would burn slowly through the night. I remember that
just before everyone settled down for a wintry night's “nap,” Dad
would place the fire screen in a just-right position to keep, or
help ward off hot sparks that might pop out and burn the rug, or
perhaps start a fire!! Dad believed in caution! And he practiced
what he preached! I even remember the black iron shovel that so
often was used to cover up the fiery red embers to tide the embers
over until morning light. Dad was a fellow that “went to bed when
the chickens did and got up with the chirping of the sparrows.” Dad
would get up early, and poke & punch the backlog into a bright
flame, and stir the ashes until the embers burned again brightly;
then, he would reach into the firewood box for bits of rich pine
kindling and place over the embers. The kindling would soon burst
into flame. Then, he would carefully place the little logs of oak on
the brass andirons and soon the fire-making process would be
completed. By this time the fire would be burning brightly with
warmth enough for the little folks of the family to scramble out of
bed, and come in and stand by the fireside to dress.
He would then go outside to “fetch” his morning newspapers [both the
Houston Post and the Houston Chronicle]. ‘Spot’ or ‘Scuddar’ was a
bird dog . . . a real bird dog-of-talent to hunt birds, and to keep
his point on them . . . a hunter's delight! He was a black ‘n’ white
spotted dog, and he earned his place in the lives of family members,
as a favorite pet. Spot adored Dad. Spot was trained to be an
excellent bird dog, but when it wasn't the season for hunting dove
or quail, Old Spot made an excellent dog to fetch the morning paper.
One morning during World War I, and things were so dismal about our
Boys” at the front, Dad missed his newspaper. It was an upsetting
morning because the only news in those days was through the
newspaper--not radio or TV--Dad roamed the front yard several times
thinking he might have missed the paper somehow . . . and Ole Spot
followed along with an inquiring expression. Perhaps it was more
like a baffled look, for that dog knew that something was wrong!
Well, the whole day was spoiled. Newspaper subscribers in the
neighborhood in those days were not
plentiful, nor were extra copies of the paper available. He gave up
the thought of reading the paper that morning. He never did locate a
paper, altho he often wondered where on earth that paper could have
gone to. The carrier (who drove a horse and buggy to deliver his
papers) ‘vowed’ that he had thrown that newspaper that morning.
Three months later, it was discovered beneath an old blanket that
Spot used for a bed in the dog house. When it was found, Old Spot
wiggled and wagged, as if he knew that had been the paper that had
caused such a ruckus a few weeks before.
I remember nights in front of the fire when we popped popcorn with a
long-handled corn popper, so long that it reached well inside and
over the open fire. And how we ALL enjoyed feasting on the
hot-buttered popcorn. Later we sat around the room, enjoying the
cozy warmth of it, and listening to the folklore our parents told us
of former days, interspersed with stories their parents and
grandparents had told them. You see, in those days there wasn't a
radio or TV, or Juke Box, or Dairy Queen . . . to spend a great deal
of time at. There was a movie, but folks didn't go---especially on
school nights. Our parents just didn't allow us to go to a movie.
That was a time for studying, and most of us did just that! so most
homes, as well as at our home, was where young people stay, or
gathered after dark on weekends, but not on a school night! I
remember my dad getting down on the floor to wrestle with “his boys”
in fun. I remember the times he took them hunting---for deer,
squirrels, dove, ducks or quail--- all plentiful in those days. I
remember being awakened early in the morning, and tripping down the
stairway in my
long white flannel gown with long sleeves, and watching in
wonderment as Mom hurriedly fixed a good hot breakfast “for her men”
before they started out for a day's hunt. The boiling hot coffee
smelled wonderful. Breakfast was cooked by the light of a kerosene
lamp. There was just something very special about the whole thing.
Double-barrelled shot-guns needed to be readied, and a lunch
hurriedly packed. All the time, Mom would be cautioning over and
over to her boys and Dad, to “Do be careful.” The dogs would be
chained and put into the back of a hack (drawn by one horse.) And
blankets tucked into the back in case a blue norther suddenly blew
in. And then the house grew quiet once again, and Mother and I went
back to bed to catch a few more winks of sleep before getting up
again to great the sunrise of another day!
I remember how he loved to take members of his family down on the
River Plantation--to go fishing--and I remember the magnificent
strings of fish we caught! Sun perch, bream, fresh water trout,
catfish a-plenty. I remember the insurance or real estate men from
Dallas and Fort Worth, and other friends of my Dad's who he wanted
to entertain by taking them hunting on
the River Farm. Great preparations were made for these people. That
was just Dad's way. Sometimes “Camp” was set up for the hunters . .
. and as for deer . . . they had plenty of good luck and were happy,
contented hunters to show off their luck after bringing back their
game to camp. Then, there was a feast of everything good to eat that
anyone finds in country life, and at this time there wasn't any such
thing as “frozen foods.”
The Cotton Gin
Dad had a cotton gin for many years down on Blue Lake Farm. For a
long time, it was about the only cotton gin in that Trinity River
area, and people brought their cotton to be baled from that
gin--bringing the wagons full of cotton from miles around. I
remember Dad taking the family on a tour of the Gin to watch the
procedures used in making a wagonful of cotton into a bale of
cotton. It was amazing to watch a great tin pipe blower suck up so
quickly the cotton used in bailing the cotton. It's hard to forget!
Hog-Killing Time
I have memories of Hog Killing Time at home, in Crockett. I remember
sitting on the top of a boarded fence to watch helpers sort out and
spot a great big 200 pound hog, cornering him in a corner of the
lot, and slaughter him; then drag him out of the pen, wash the hog
off, by putting him in a wooden barrel of scalding hot water. Then
hang him up, scrape him, then throw bucket after bucket of clear,
clean water to cleanse him, and do all the things necessary to
actively get down to the final stages of cutting the hog up to make
sausage meat, or stuffed sausage, or preparing the huge hams to cure
and smoke. The final procedure was to hang the large hams up on the
rungs of the Water Tower, and let them slowly cure under the pungent
smoke from hickory wood. Home-baked ham with a real
honest-to-goodness hickory flavor is a delight that is hard to find!
The weather in January had to be watched very carefully. No warm
days for killing a hog! Meat spoils easily, and sometimes just that
kind of bad luck took place, but not too often. But when there was a
blue norther, accompanied by a dismal snow white frost of an early
morning and ice in the trough (that had to be broken before the
stock could get water), with predictions that the day would get
still colder and end in a Freeze . . . THAT was a good sign to “kill
a hog.” The Negro [hired hands] working for Dad would busy
themselves in making further preparations that were deemed necessary
in killing a hog.
Out in the back lot near the huge barn they would hurriedly build a
makeshift scaffold. This was to hang the hog on after he was first
thoroughly scalded in a huge wooden barrel. The water was heated to
scalding in a great big black iron washing pot; the fire under the
pot was kept burning furiously by the sticks of hickory wood that
the [hired hands] would chunk under the pot to keep the fire going
and the water rolling at its boiling point . Those [hired hands]
worked so fast and often grew so cold themselves that they would
back up to the fire in an attempt to warm themselves at intervals
when there was a slight break in preparing the hog to be cut up.
Finally, the hog was hung up and cleaned and scraped enough to
satisfy the boss--then he was stuck with a knife and slit from is
throat to his tail . . . . A gruesome sight for a novice! When this
was done, the innards were taken out and placed on a wooden table
and the edible pieces placed in a separate pile by themselves . . .
souce (a German delicacy), to pickle pigs’ feet, to stuff sausage
with, etc. Who, me? Well, I would leave the procedure of looking on
along about that time, and didn't usually come back!! But the meat
had to be cut into hams, and there was a certain selection delegated
to be the meat for the sausage to be ground and stuffed. I remember
the big black sausage stuffer, and the big black iron wash pot
filled with fat rinds, that soon dissolved into bubbling hot
shortening and cracklin’s that were lifted from the hot shortening
and placed on a long wooden table to dry. I would be right there
when it came to eating the cracklin’s!!! And first at the table when
there’d be Cracklin’ Bread!! Oh , soooo good.....an extra special
treat!
Domestic Help
“Sudie” was our wash-woman for many, many years. She had a million
dollar smile--and a disposition to match. Sudie came to our house,
from ‘way across town, every Monday morning, rain or shine, sleet or
snow, for the clothes to be washed. And what a heap of clothes she
had to tote on top of her head back to her home to be washed and
dried (by the sun) and later to be carefully ironed, each piece
‘just so.’ “Be careful of your ironing, Sudie, and please don't
scorch anything,” Mother would often caution. And sometimes, Sudie
would say, “Miss Jennie, I'm going to ‘haf to have’ a box of starch
this week, and some Ivory Soap" (Dad bought that by the carton!).
Or, maybe sometimes, it was “Little Fairy Soap” or “Fel’s Naphtha”
that Sudie needed. When Sudie would come for the clothes, she had a
certain routine of gathering them. First, she would spread out a big
sheet, then count all the clothes and sheets, and towels, and ‘Union
Suits” (in the wintertime) and drawers, petticoats (that needed to
be starched just so) and so on down the line. All these articles
would be accounted for on a piece of paper---and accounted for at
the end of the week when she returned them in a great big wicker
basket, all starched and ironed to perfection! Just one time in all
the years that I knew Sudie as a wash-woman, do I ever remember
things being “LOST”: only just one “temporary occasion when a
“dress-up cotton dress” failed to be returned on time. Mother had to
remind Sudie that the dress had not come back in the clothes that
were washed and returned. Even with this reminder--the dress still
was not returned. Eventually, I was sent (in the buggy) to go see
Sudie, and wait till she ironed . . . or ‘found’ the dress. I've
always believed that Sudie, who had a little girl and same age and
size that I was, had let her little girl wear my dress for some
special occasion before it was returned. But we will never know for
sure!
Zaybird Fain was the hired hand on the place for twenty-five years
or more! He also pinched-hit for the gardener, the milkman, the
house boy, the driver of the Phaeton or Surrey when Mother decided
to go to town (we lived one block from the square) and the Cook. He
was a general handyman: a handy man Supreme in quality of his work!
He'd even donned a white coat, in proper manner, to assist in
serving in the dining room when company was coming. Once, one of the
little girls got some flypaper
stuck in their hair! NOTHING would loosen the fly paper from her
hair. Mom had to take the scissors and cut her hair to get rid of
the flypaper. After that, Zaybird would tease, and call out to the
children “Flypaper!! Nothing! No time! Nuthin’” And the little girls
would go running to Mom's skirts! But he was a wonderful worker to
pot mother's flowers each spring and put them on the front porch to
bloom all summer long. He mowed the lawn, fed the chickens, milked
the cows, cooked, groomed the horses. He was truly an all round
hired man. Zaybird, late in life, decided to move to Houston . . .
and eventually, we heard that he had landed a job as gardener for
Miss Ima Hogg, prominent in the religious, social and cultural life
of Houston.
Annie Washington was the cook for many years. She lived out in the
country, and to arrive in Crockett in time to cook breakfast for
“Miss Jennie” and her family, she must have had to get up by five
o'clock and ‘catch-a-ride’ to town to be able to have breakfast
ready by seven! Annie was a wonderful cook, and she knew the art of
seasoning things in a perfect manner. He fluffy buttermilk biscuits
were something out of this world. They took lots of home-made butter
and thick syrup or honey or home-made preserves just to make the
eating better! A funny thing--nobody worried about getting fat--and
actually, nobody in the family really ever did back in those days!
There many chores to be done around the kitchen. Bread had to be
made and set behind the big black iron kitchen stove to rise
gradually and uniformly, pies and cakes had to be made, the turnip
greens from the garden had to be washed and re-washed through
several waters before they were felt clean enough to put into a
large black iron kettle to boil and boil with a ham hock, and the
cornbread had to be made and a roast had to be baked, and the
breakfast dishes had to be hand-washed (no dishwashers, back then!).
And, pretty soon it was dinner time, and the table had to be laid,
with immaculate white linen cloth and linen napkins, and the family
silver, just so, and set (for twelve, usually) each meal. Mother sat
at her usual place, presiding in gracious manner at the foot of the
table, and Dad sat at the head of the table where, if there was some
kind of meat, he would carve it. Once, when my older sister had
company, and in little girl fashion, they (3 little girls) began to
giggle at the table, when Dad was in the process of saying the
blessing. Dad felt with his heart and soul . . . that this moment
was reverent, and simply NO TIME for giggling! I caught the
reprimand! Quietly, but firmly, I was excused from the table. It was
a lesson that I never, ever forgot. Dad could be quite stern and to
the point in his discipline! Annie Washington I'll never forget. She
stayed with us for many years, and later went to Tyler, Texas to
live and go to college for an education.
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