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Helen Granger Boss - Special Collections - University of Baltimore

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Cf IL JJ<br />

/J f J" 04<br />

BOSS; 056 1:2:17<br />

I was a mean kid, an ornery kid, a scrappy k.id. I admit it. I've got a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> penance before I ever leave this world. I hope the Lord will let<br />

me stay to do them. I really was somebody like that••• and rough as could<br />

be••• always down around the river and half the time my mother didn't know<br />

I was there. I take the children now> when I see them running sort <strong>of</strong> wild•••<br />

One <strong>of</strong> them went up to the swimming pool a couple <strong>of</strong> summers ago and the<br />

screen around it was raised up from the bottom. He went up there with two<br />

brothers and crawled under that screen and was drowned. They say the mother<br />

was home in bed. Well, my mother wasn't home in bed. And my mother didn't<br />

drink, for that matter. I'm not bragging about it, I'm just saying she<br />

didn't know half the time when I was down the river.<br />

Kupchyk: What did you do down at the river?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Walk around down there••• One morning, I remember to this day, it<br />

was on a Monday. MY mother was washing. She washed in the back yard with<br />

a tub and a board. This fellow that I knew that tended to the boatyard<br />

he was my older brother's age and my brother was five or six years<br />

older than me. So I went down. The tide had come in and my brother's<br />

boat had been washed up. The bow was up on the wharf or on another boat<br />

or something. I called to him and said, "Charlie, look, that will dry<br />

out in the sun today." He said, "You stand on that back end and I'll<br />

hit this and we'll get it <strong>of</strong>f there." He did -- me and that boat!<br />

Well, I wrung my clothes out. We only had to come up past those<br />

two big lots. I guess I didn't meet nobody until I might have got to<br />

that 2100 block that did have houses on it. We had a side gate, naturally,<br />

so I come up and gathered this dress up and wrung it out down there by<br />

the river. That's the kind <strong>of</strong> little girl I was.


BOSS; 056 1:2:18<br />

I walked up the street and I said to Charlie, "Don't you tell<br />

Frank that I fell overboard because I don't want him to tell my mother."<br />

So I got up there, it was real early I guess it was about 10 o'clock on<br />

a Monday. So I went in the front door and my mother was in the yard.<br />

We had a side gate, but I wasn't going in the side gate. I went up­<br />

stairs and wrung the dress again as much as I could, and spread it out<br />

under my bed (we all had wooden floors then) and put on another dress.<br />

MY mother didn't know that I ever fell overboard.<br />

Kupchyk: Whew, close call!<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Close call, it was! Boy, I'd have got it. Then one time later<br />

when we were young girls, teenagers, we worked over at this cotton mill.<br />

And there were two belles that used to work there with us and they always<br />

dressed nice. When we'd go over across that river from down at the big<br />

hill there at the foot <strong>of</strong> Charles Street. We'd go over there in my<br />

brother's boat. MY older sister would take us. You could pull up on<br />

the shore like that and sit there. Back there they had a stage and tables<br />

all out there. You could sit there with your boat pulled up on the sand<br />

and they wouldn't say anything to you and you could watch the show.<br />

Which we did.<br />

So we used to tell them about how the show was and how the girls<br />

danced and sing. It wasn't nothing, everything was tame to what you see<br />

now days, but they were real people. So they wanted to go. We said,<br />

"We'll take you." I got Charlie, this fellow, to lend me the boat.<br />

could get the boat, but I had to get a pair <strong>of</strong> oars so he loaned me the<br />

oars. Irene and I, we took them over. When it was time to come home, we<br />

got in our boat, my brother's boat, and we come on across the river and<br />

I


BOSS; 056: 1:2:21<br />

Street. When the car come down it went through here and the beer garden<br />

was over here. But if you wanted to go to Ferry Bar, that fifteen minute<br />

walk would took you right down to the bar.<br />

Kupchyk: Where would you sit and watch the baptisms?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Well, see down here these two hills were like this -- one on each<br />

side. This was where the car would come through. Down on this side <strong>of</strong><br />

this hill, not in the gulch, but over on the other side•••<br />

Kupchyk: The other side where the streetcar wasn't running.<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Yes and more to the water. It was more flat land. The colored<br />

people that came with them would drive their wagons on the flatter piece<br />

<strong>of</strong> stuff and that's where we would sit. Up on that flat ground with the<br />

hills behind us. That's where we would watch them. They'd pull their<br />

wagons up there. They could come through the gulch and when they got to<br />

this lower part, they must have got <strong>of</strong>f someplace to where they got to<br />

flatter ground, they would park their wagons here. They'd have (in them<br />

days, everybody mostly made homemade ice cream) and they would have home­<br />

made ice cream and cakes and sandwiches and meat and all. They'd have a<br />

regular party. I don't know where the men would dress when they'd come<br />

there. But they would come with a minister with this white robe on. He<br />

would get in the shallow water when they first went in and he'd wet their<br />

hands. Two men (I don't know if they were both ministers or if one<br />

just helped him) they would take this person. They were mostly men in<br />

their (well, you never could tell how old the colored are, I can't) so<br />

they would lead him out into the deeper water and the minister would pray<br />

for him.<br />

Finally he would go on with the baptismal ceremony and then push him<br />

down in the water and bring him up again. And then bring him up the


BOSS; 056 1:2:23<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Today. But you never heard them call these children down or<br />

nothing and there never was anything like that. Nobody bothered you at<br />

all. Only thing, the time they had the baptism, the sun was going<br />

down. We were sitting on the hill like this and the river down here and,<br />

<strong>of</strong> course, that's the west and the sun would be shinning. There would<br />

be a lot <strong>of</strong> sun in the evening, if it was sunny at all. Sometimes they<br />

didn't stop at all unless it was a downpour, I guess. And then they'd<br />

have their feast.<br />

That was a nice thing. I don't know that they ever had it anywhere<br />

else, but I know that they had it there, because we went there.<br />

Kupchyk: What do you remember <strong>of</strong> Frog Island?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: «chuckle» Oh, that was •••• I remember plenty because that's just<br />

where I lived. This girl's father, Irene's father, kept a concession<br />

across the river and his place would be just about where the new hospital<br />

is -- the South <strong>Baltimore</strong> Hospital. He had a concession over that and<br />

this was where he would be. This, say, would be Ferry Bar. Up this way<br />

on the other side <strong>of</strong> the hill now I'm talking, up on this side was<br />

another•••park. This was Johnny Klien's Park.<br />

He's the one that I said that my sister used to take us and bring<br />

the boat up on shore. They always let us sit there and watch the show and<br />

all. Then you walked up through the grounds and you come to Kirby's<br />

II Park. Mr. Slagle, Irene's father, had this concession up there where he sold<br />

clam chowder, crab soup, and steamed crabs and live clams and things like<br />

that. No shrimp. We never heard much about shrimp in them days. But<br />

he was up here. Over here across the water above the Bar••• Say this is<br />

Ferry Bar sticking out on the west side <strong>of</strong> the old wooden bridge. When<br />

the tide was low, you could see all the sand on the bar. It was just


BOSS; 056 1:2:24<br />

like a point sit out on the bar. Then the bridge started right here, the<br />

old wooden bridge. On this side was another pavilion, on the east side<br />

<strong>of</strong> the old bridge, and that was Carl's Pavilion. A man was telling me<br />

the other day, he said, "That was an expensive place." It was open<br />

Saturday and Sunday, but the beer that you bought was like fifteen cents<br />

a bottle. The men mostly went to the cheaper places. Anyhow, the bar<br />

sit almost this close to•••in fact, a lot <strong>of</strong> the sand was <strong>of</strong> that right<br />

under that old bridge, the old wooden bridge.<br />

The wooden bridge didn't open like a drawbridge does now up in<br />

the air. It spun around on a plot <strong>of</strong> ground and sat over top <strong>of</strong> that<br />

plot <strong>of</strong> ground that had flowers growing on it and a man living there••••<br />

Kupchyk: So it swung sideways?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: It swung around. Say this was the piece <strong>of</strong> ground and this was<br />

this man's home here, Mr. Marshall. (I worked with his daughters and<br />

knew him well. He had three daughters.) He lived there, this Mr. Marshall,<br />

and he had like a turn thing. He had to turn it when the bridge••••He'd<br />

bring it around and it would sit••• It wouldn't sit down on his ground, it<br />

would just sit over top <strong>of</strong> it. His place was left all right until that<br />

boat went through and then he'd wind it back so it would be across the<br />

water.<br />

Kupchyk: So it did kind <strong>of</strong> go sideways?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: It went sideways instead <strong>of</strong> up. You can use your imagination, but<br />

that's how it was anyhow••••and that went over to Brooklyn.<br />

Kupchyk: What else do you remember about Frog Island?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: I don't know whether I told you or not, I walked on frogs.<br />

Kupchyk: Tell me again.<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Irene used to take her father's dilLner over there on a Sunday.


!Or I<br />

BOSS; 056 1:2:25<br />

Her mother would fix his dinner and we would walk down there. This Mr.<br />

Drum over here that Mr. Slagle worked for -- this Mr. Durm had his boat­<br />

yard here and that's where you could get the launches to go over to this<br />

Kirby's Park. Up here was Charlie Durm's. He had boats where he would<br />

hire them out. He would hire a launch out or you could get a launch up<br />

there.<br />

Then up there when I said that you went through the Dead Man's Gulch<br />

and got out here••• and this beer garden was over here -- Tod's Beer<br />

Garden. There was a lady named Miss Lizzie Flood. She lived a couple<br />

doors from me down there in the big house. She had a man working for<br />

her and they used to hire out boats to get across there. Still you could<br />

go up in town and come around in the stretcar to get over there, too.<br />

There was three ways <strong>of</strong> getting there••• about four ways to get there.<br />

So this day•.• every Sunday she took her father's dinner. We'd go<br />

down here to Mr. Durm's, down here to this lower part because her father<br />

had his concession down here at Kirby's. We'd go across there. We'd<br />

wai t and the man would take us in the launch. We'd go over there and<br />

walk around through them there places down here to where they'd have this<br />

show. Then sometimes we'd be in here like, go right over here. And<br />

we'd walk around and this place here didn't have any show. He had a dance<br />

pavilion.<br />

Kupchyk: What place was this?<br />

rooD <strong>Boss</strong>: Mr. Kirby's. This was where Mr. Slagle worked -- where he had<br />

his concession. People from down near Klien's would walk up there and buy<br />

crab soup and clams and steamed crabs and things like that. It set a<br />

little out over the beach -- not the water, over the beach like. This<br />

evening it had been an awful storm. It thundered, it lightened while we


tJ<br />

(\ D<br />

BOSS; 056 1:2:26<br />

were over there. Her father said, "Don't go home yet, wait until it<br />

stops." So we did. Then we walked down here to Mr. DurIn's place•••<br />

We walked down here where the boat comes in, like a stage and like that.<br />

We walked down there and stood on there and waited and the launch would<br />

come and pick us up and take us back across the water. This storm had<br />

been in progress before that, but it was clear then. The sun was coming<br />

out, like about now.<br />

We walked through these fields which we always did. But, ye gods,<br />

did I tread on frogs! I said to her, "Let's get out on Light Street<br />

where then! s a little bit <strong>of</strong> pavement." I think these frogs have mostly<br />

fell where the sun had draw them up. They say the sun draws them out<br />

<strong>of</strong> the pond and then they hatch in the clouds. Then they fell down and<br />

we were treading allover them in this grass. And you felt terrible.<br />

I wasn't that big-hearted or sympathic that I wasn't afraid to kill a<br />

frog. I never killed a frog, but I mean I wasn't happy about walking on<br />

them. At the same time, oh, it's a nasty feeling. So we got out where<br />

we would get on a little bit <strong>of</strong> a pavement. We figured that there<br />

wouldn't be as many out there because there hadn't been no ponds there<br />

that they dragged them up out <strong>of</strong>.<br />

Kupchyk: What did you think <strong>of</strong> the noise all the frogs made?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Oh, did I love it. I remember. I said I'd love to live there now<br />

and let the frogs sing me to sleep at night. I would. In that old back<br />

bedroom where we lived in the corner house and all them lots was in the<br />

back <strong>of</strong> us and all. You'd hear them frogs making that noise. Finally<br />

you'd wake up and there in the middle <strong>of</strong> the••• say about eight o'clock<br />

in the morning or so in the summer when the frogs were out, you would


BOSS; 056 1:2:28<br />

They had a sort <strong>of</strong> a building there, I don't know what they used it<br />

for. But I know when I was a girl, about eight or nine years old, I<br />

saw Houdini get out <strong>of</strong> his workings down there. They threw him overboard•••<br />

wasn't many peo:yle there at all. Even then (I was little then) I thought,<br />

gee, any other time there'd be a big crowd here, but it wasn't. They<br />

put him over in this trunk. Us kids, we had no other••• outside the movies<br />

when they came along and they were a nickel •••but outside that•••we<br />

didn't always have a nickel to go to the movies. But I say, I <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

wondered why there wasn't more people that day and he was going to perform<br />

like that. But I was real•••I knew he wasn't coming up. «chuckle» But<br />

he did.<br />

That was our Sunday walk, you know, over the Light Street Bridge.<br />

They started building the new bridge -- the new Brooklyn bridge now, or<br />

the Hanover Street bridge in 1917. That was started because it was<br />

right before my father died. Now see, that was all boundary down there<br />

where you could look across to these summer resorts where they had the<br />

show and they had the dance pavilion and all and Mr. Kirby had the stage.<br />

Naturally, he had an orchestra there, people would dance to it. That<br />

was his amusement, more or less, because you could go to Mr. Slagle's<br />

for beer and other refreshments. But then when you came down he only had<br />

the stage and he sold fish sandwiches and things like that. Now on<br />

this side <strong>of</strong> the bridge•••<br />

Kupchyk: Which side was that?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: On this side <strong>of</strong> the new bridge, Hanover Street bridge, this is<br />

Cromwell Street, the lock insulator's way here almost at Light Street•••<br />

Kupchyk: At the north end <strong>of</strong> Cromwell?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: No, at the east end <strong>of</strong> Cromwell where the jerkwater came through


BOSS; 056 1:2:29<br />

and where right middle way you come to the GuJ.ch. This was the Gulch<br />

right here where you come into it. And on the other side <strong>of</strong> it was<br />

Jake Snyder's. That's a big important thing because Jake Snyder was<br />

there for years. He sold fish sandwiches and he had a bar. He was on the<br />

west <strong>of</strong> Cromwell Street alongside <strong>of</strong> the new bridge.<br />

Kupchyk: The new Light Street bridge?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: No, the new Hanover Street bridge. The Light Street bridge was<br />

the old bridge. And Jake had that place there. You say -- what bounded<br />

it? There were these shore homes where people went in the summertime.<br />

Down here further was another place called -- the fellows called this<br />

woman "Mom McMaho:n;' her name, I say Mrs. McMahon-had another place<br />

like that. But I don't think she cooked. She just sold beer and other<br />

things like that.<br />

((end»


Kupchyk: Why did they call Bill Bailey "Peg Leg Bill"?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: 056 1:1:14<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: He had a wooden leg. This thing fit up around his thigh, or it might have been<br />

around his knee, I don't know. When it got down toward his foot it had a point on it like<br />

part <strong>of</strong> a broomstick. -- about that big around -- that was put on right under the knee and<br />

that was what he walked with. He didn't have a cane or anything. That was as good.<br />

I know that artificial limbs must be a whole lot better in this day and age, but that's why<br />

they called him "Peg Leg Bill". But they mostly called him Bill Bailey, but he was "Peg<br />

Leg".<br />

Kupchyk: Did he play the piano?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: No, but we had a man there that did play the piano. That was a crippled man. He<br />

used to play the piano at the saloon down here. I showed you where. We turned the<br />

comer and I said my son owned the house. Well that place down there was called<br />

Pierson's, Charlie Pierson's (yes, write that down). He was a big fixture in this vicinity.<br />

Kupchyk: Why so?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Well, he had the largest glass <strong>of</strong> beer in the city for a nickel, that's true, and he<br />

had a crippled man there named ...Gil Turner. This Gil Turner used to play the piano,<br />

and he used to play this song, because he came to our house one time with my uncle, my<br />

mother's step-brother.<br />

Kupchyk: Let me stop and turn the tape around.<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: OK<br />

((END TAPE I SIDE 1; BEGIN TAPE I SIDE 2))<br />

Kupchyk: Yes, I noticed you recorder when I came in.<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Anyhow, this Gil Turner. . .I don't know whether Gil was crippled or just had an<br />

artificial leg or anything, but he played the piano. I think he had something wrong -­<br />

whether he could walk with a crutch or what, I don't know.


BOSS; 056 1:2:15<br />

He came here with my mother's step-brother, Edward, the one time. He brought him<br />

there to play the piano and he used to sing. He sang this one song called "I Can't Change<br />

It". I don't remember all <strong>of</strong> the verses but "I Can't Change It", "I can't change it" was at<br />

the end. This fellow had gotten married and at the end it said,<br />

"It was a great surprise to me.<br />

I had half a woman and half a tree,<br />

but I can't change it, I can't change it.<br />

"But maybe someday I'll try.<br />

I'll chop her up for firewood<br />

in the sweet by-and-by."<br />

And he used to sing that song, and for me it was real funny, <strong>of</strong> course I was only a little<br />

bit <strong>of</strong> a kid then.<br />

Kupchyk: Was this inside <strong>of</strong> the bar that he would play this?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: He would go in there, but this night he came to our house. I guess my uncle said<br />

to him, "sing 'I Can't Change It' " and, no doubt, that's how I got it, because I could<br />

hear it and then know it. As a child it just run right through my mind like water.<br />

Kupchyk: And you still remember it.<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Lord, yes. In kindergarten where I used to go over across that big lot from 2048<br />

South Charles Street -- this was the end <strong>of</strong>2048 South Charles Street and this as all that<br />

big lot in front <strong>of</strong> me -- I'd go over there and cross Light Street and this little Mission sat<br />

right over there. I didn't go into the Mission because I was Catholic. I did go to the<br />

Mission but I used to go to the 9 o'clock Mass at St. Mary's <strong>of</strong>course, I had to; if you<br />

stayed home you got your head cut <strong>of</strong>f. Anyhow, in the afternoon they had 2 o'clock<br />

service in this little wooden church, this is on Sunday. I used to go there because kids<br />

in the neighborhood would say, "Miss Haddie says to bring you too because you sing ­<br />

you come over to the Sunday School", and I did. I went there on


Chi LffiE)J<br />

tv '/ ( \!JOL!­<br />

I i'. ,.,/, I<br />

BOSS; 056 I:2:l7<br />

I was a mean kid, an omery kid, a scrappy kid. I admit it. I've got a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> penance before I ever leave this world. I hope the Lord will let<br />

me stay to do them. I really was somebody like that•••and rough as could<br />

be•••always down ar01,md the river and half the time my mother didn't know<br />

I was there. I take the children now" when I see them rnnnjng sort <strong>of</strong> wild•••<br />

One <strong>of</strong> them went up to the swimming pool a couple <strong>of</strong> summers ago and the<br />

screen around it was raised up from the bottom. He went up there with two<br />

brothers and crawled under that screen and was drowned. They say the mother<br />

was home in bed. Well, my mother wasn't home in bed. And my mother didn't<br />

drink, for that matter. I'm not bragging about it, I'm just saying she<br />

didn't know half the time when I was down the river.<br />

KupChyk: What did you do down at the river?<br />

<strong>Boss</strong>: Walk: around down there•••One moming, I remember to this day, it<br />

was on a Monday. MY mother was washing. She washed in the back yard with<br />

a tub and a board. This fellow that I knew that tended to the boatyard -­<br />

he was my older brother's age and my brother was five or six years<br />

older than me. So I went down. The tide had come in and my brother's<br />

boat had been washed up. The bow was up on the wharf or on another boat<br />

or something. I called to him and said, "Charlie, look, that will dry<br />

out in the sun today." He said, "You stand on that back end and I'll<br />

hit this and we'll get it <strong>of</strong>f there." He did - me and that boat!<br />

Well, I wrung my clothes out. We only had to come up past those<br />

two big lots. I guess I didn't meet nobody until I might have got to<br />

that 2100 block that did have houses on it. We had a side gate, naturally,<br />

so I come up and gathered this dress up and wrung it out down there by<br />

the river. That's the kind <strong>of</strong> little girl I was.


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