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Charles LeRoy Lewis - Special Collections - University of Baltimore

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1420 Maryland Avenue<br />

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BALTIMORE NEIGHBORHOOD HERITAGE PROJECT<br />

847 North Howard Street<br />

<strong>Baltimore</strong>, Maryland 2 120 1<br />

The undersigned Informant Donor does hereby give and grant to the<br />

<strong>Baltimore</strong> Neighborhood Heritage Project, as a donation to its archival<br />

collection, the material listed below. I also authorize the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Baltimore</strong> to use said material for the purpose <strong>of</strong> research, according to the<br />

educational and historical objectives <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Baltimore</strong> Neighborhood<br />

Heritage Project. In the event the university decides to discard the materials<br />

~<br />

donated, the donor (or hislher family) must be notified and the material<br />

returned.<br />

099<br />

INTERVIEW #<br />

7-31-79<br />

DATE OF RECEIPT<br />

/J> /777<br />

te f Agreement<br />

-<br />

Signaiure <strong>of</strong> Intervie<br />

da AL,$$w<br />

Address a€ InterviewerlCallectar<br />

1 Description <strong>of</strong> Materials: 2 % hours <strong>of</strong> taped interview, dated 6/19/79 and 7/15/79 1


INFORMATION SHEET<br />

INTERVIEWER: Bill Harvey (with Susan Hawes)<br />

PROJECT: <strong>Baltimore</strong> Neighborhood Heritage<br />

DATE@) OF 1979. 6.19<br />

INTERVIEW: 1979. 7.15<br />

NUMBER OF 3<br />

TAPE@):<br />

GENERAL TOPIC(S) OF INTERVIEW:<br />

PLACE@) OF Community Center<br />

INTERVIEW:<br />

LENGTH OF 2:30<br />

INTERVIEW:<br />

Education, Work (in mills), Local Associations, Social Life, Business, Citizenship,<br />

Politics<br />

CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE INTERVIEW [PLACES, OmRS PmSENT AND m I R =LATIONSHIP TO TEE INFO=, ETC.]<br />

At Mr. <strong>Lewis</strong>' request, we did the interview in the Hampden-Woodbury-Remington<br />

Community Center. Audio quality on tape I is lousy, especially side 1. On tapes 2<br />

and 3, audio quality is fair.<br />

PARTS OF PARTICULAR VALUE [TOPICS DSISCUSSD W GFSATES DETAIL, AFS.4 OFPARnCULAR EXPERTISE, ETC.]<br />

Mill life and importance <strong>of</strong> mills in neighborhood.<br />

Politics, lodges and other groups.<br />

GENERAL EVALUATION [=LIABILITY OFINFORlvMNT, INFOFNATION CONTAIPJD ONTAPE, ETC.]<br />

Mr. <strong>Lewis</strong> is a very good narrator with an eye for detail and sense <strong>of</strong> humor.<br />

His memory seems very acute.<br />

POSSIBLE TOPICS FORFURTHERINVES~TGATION<br />

Churches, especially Grace Methodist.<br />

This was a very difficult tape; unintelligible at times, hammering in the background,<br />

lots <strong>of</strong> mumbling, record player in background rambling on and on.


~ LIST<br />

INFORMANT'S BIOIGRAPHICAL DATA<br />

NAME: <strong>Charles</strong> <strong>LeRoy</strong> <strong>Lewis</strong> 1 YEARS AT ADDRESS: BOARD:~<br />

ADDRESS: 1232 W. 37th St.<br />

TODAY'S DATE: 1979. 7.15 PHONENUMBER:<br />

I I<br />

DATE OF BIRTH: 1903. 2.16 PLACE OF BIRTH: Company House on David Ave.,<br />

RELIGION: Methodist<br />

HOUSE OF WORSHIP: Grace UMC<br />

Masonic Order 1928 -<br />

Mechanics<br />

Golden Rule branches<br />

Optimist Club 1950's<br />

PREVIOUS RESIDENCES:<br />

LIST YEARS:<br />

3510 Ash St. 1908<br />

210 Roland Ave. 1909 - 1915<br />

3648 Beech Ave. (with parents) 1915 - 1924<br />

30th St. (with in-laws)<br />

.37th St.<br />

1924 - 1928<br />

SCHOOLING AND/OR OTHER<br />

Boarding School<br />

F Prep. School<br />

-<br />

TRAINING:<br />

8th grade<br />

Spinning Room, Meadow Mills 6 months<br />

Notions Dept., Hutzler's 5 months<br />

Mount Vernon Mill 2 days (fired)<br />

Weighing, Hooper Mill 1917 - 1919<br />

Steamfitter, Wm. E. Woods Co.<br />

Transit Conductor, no. 10 line<br />

Salesman (after 1932), S&N Katz Jewelers<br />

Salesman, Heiss Jewelers<br />

1919. 2 - 1920


PARENTS~<br />

MOTHER'S<br />

NAME: (maiden) Shipley<br />

DATE OF BIRTH: 1884. 6.17 1 RACE OF BIRTH: Hampden<br />

1 RELIGION: Methodist 1 HER OCCUPATION: Clipper Mill, then housewife 1<br />

1 HERMOTHER: 1 RACE OF BIRTH: 1<br />

1 HERFATHER: 1 RACE OF BIRTH: I<br />

NAME: FATHER's <strong>Charles</strong> L. <strong>Lewis</strong><br />

RELIGION: Methodist<br />

1 RACE OF BIRTH: Ash St.<br />

1 HIS OCCUPATION: Pennsylvania RR<br />

1 HIS MOTHER: 1 RACE OF BIRTH: I<br />

1 HIS FATHER: 1 RACE OF BIRTH: 1<br />

LIST DATES OF BIRTH:<br />

SPOUSE'S<br />

NAME: (maiden) Keith<br />

DATE OF BIRTH:<br />

DATE OF MARFZAGE: 1924<br />

SPOUSE'S RELIGION:<br />

Evelyn 1907. 5.18<br />

Catherine 1911.12.15<br />

Gordon 1919.10.25<br />

RACE OF BIRTH:<br />

RACE OF MARRIAGE: Annapolis (church)<br />

SPOUSE'S OCCUPATION: Telephone Operator<br />

CHILDREN: none<br />

LIST DATES OF BIRTH:


INTERVIEWEE: ROY LEWIS #99<br />

SITE: HAMPDEN #2<br />

INTERVIEWER: BILL HARVEY<br />

DATES OF INTERVIEW: JUNE 19, 1979<br />

JULY 15, 1979<br />

PUCE OF INTERVIEW: HWR comwmrn CENTER<br />

3700 FALLS ROAD<br />

TRANSCRIBER: PAT SMITH<br />

AUDIT/EDTT C0MPLETED:MhY 2gr 1980 by CHRISTINE GREEN<br />

[BEGIN TAPE I SIDE I]<br />

LEWIS ;099 1:l:l<br />

Haxvey: Ok, this interview with M r. Ray <strong>Lewis</strong> <strong>of</strong> Barnpden<br />

was conducted by Bill Harvey on June 19, 1979 at the Hmpden<br />

Woodberry Rernington Comnity Center for the <strong>Baltimore</strong><br />

Neighbashood Heritage Project.<br />

Ok, Mr. <strong>Lewis</strong>, you've told me that you started into<br />

school at *he boarding house school down there down in the<br />

Hollow. Can you tell me a little bit what it was like there?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, it was only four grades at that time, and I


LEWIS :099 1:1:2<br />

<strong>of</strong> course went into the first grade; I was just a little<br />

under six years old, but I went. And then in February my<br />

people moved in Roland Avenue in what was then the 200<br />

block, which is now the 3500 block. Then I transferred to<br />

55 school; I went to #55 school up to the fifth grade and<br />

when I passed into sixth grade was when they started the<br />

<strong>Baltimore</strong> advanced schooling. When you went out <strong>of</strong> that,<br />

you went into the second year <strong>of</strong> high school. That was<br />

located at Oak Street and 24th Street, which is now H6Ward<br />

and 24th. And I went there up to 1917 when I quit school when<br />

World W ar I1 was on. And then after that I went to work.<br />

But the schools those days were a lot different than<br />

they are now; at the old boarding house we had a nice play-<br />

ground located between the millrace and the falls. And we<br />

had nice teachers and close to home. when we came over to<br />

55 school the lot there was full <strong>of</strong> gravel stone lot to play<br />

on, and where Paiine Street is now, formerly was Connecticut<br />

Avenue - that was a little swamp in there and marshy. And at<br />

that time - just about that t ime Mr. built the<br />

stucco houses on 36th Street running from just east <strong>of</strong> Elm<br />

Avenue over to what is now Paine Street. He buflt them, and<br />

<strong>of</strong> course when I left 55, why the old lot was still rough<br />

like it is now.<br />

Of course, when we went down to 52 school on 24th<br />

Street we didn't have no playground, but Oak Street them days<br />

was paved in cobblestone; wasn't much traffic. Across the<br />

street between the Chesapeake Baking Company and the


LEWIS; 099 1 :1:3<br />

construction company where they stored the terra cotta pipe:<br />

was where we played at. And in those days 24th Street<br />

didn't go through to Sissan Street . . . There was a big<br />

hole there big stream went down through there and the only<br />

way you could get across was go dawn to 23rd Street they had<br />

a bridge across, over where the American Ice Company is now.<br />

And I was going to night schoal, but like all the rest <strong>of</strong> the<br />

boys, war was on, money was good and I never went back to<br />

night school.<br />

Harvey: OK, was that boarding school far children <strong>of</strong> people<br />

who worked in the m ill only?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, that was a public school: that was run by the city.<br />

Woodberry School was crowded, and <strong>of</strong> course they put<br />

these grades down there because they couldn't enlarge over<br />

there.<br />

Now across from Waodberry School west where the church<br />

is there was in the building there that they called the un-<br />

graded school. And boys and girls were bad that's where<br />

they sent them to; from 56 or white school, or . . . 55, not<br />

56 was the old White School, they sent over there. Any <strong>of</strong> the<br />

unruly children, that's where they sent them to the ungraded<br />

classes they called it over at Woodberry,<br />

And when we took up manual training at 55 we all had to.<br />

go over to the Woadberry to get our instruction; that's<br />

where the manual training teacher was to learn you carpentry,<br />

building and different things the average boy was needing<br />

when you got older and had to do around his home. Of


LEWIS : 099 1:1:4<br />

course, when I went to 52 school that was all done away<br />

with; we didn't have no more manual training - it was more<br />

or less preparing for high school. And 1 m et a few <strong>of</strong> my<br />

old school mates in Late years; they've all went ahead and<br />

had a good life in <strong>Baltimore</strong>.<br />

Harvey: Ok, was there any special qualification to get<br />

into the Prep School down there on 24th Street?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : Well, I guess . People that<br />

was exceptionally fast in picking up stuff and knowing stuff;<br />

in other words, going down there - when we came out <strong>of</strong><br />

there we went right into the second year <strong>of</strong> high school.<br />

We took up language; German and Latin and makhematics, and<br />

down there you changed classes every half hour; you had a<br />

home room, but you didn't have a home teacher. And after<br />

that school progressed so far then they finally moved it -<br />

that was after my time - to Cathedral Street right there<br />

between Preston and Biddle Street. That was the first<br />

school that they picked you out <strong>of</strong> according to your marks<br />

and quick learners, or whatever you want to say, I call it a<br />

high I.Q. called it: we didn't get the Q or I [laughs].<br />

Hasvey: Were most <strong>of</strong> the kids in that school f rom Hampden,<br />

or did they come from all over the city?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, they were from all over the city. At 52 school<br />

that was from all the schools in the city sent them there.<br />

I'd say from our section out here we had maybe 25, may 30;<br />

not over that. Because it was not a big school; might have<br />

net been that many-1 never counted, because every six months


LEWIS; 099 1:1:5<br />

they would send another group then. As a group went out,<br />

why a group would come then. We had men principals, which<br />

was unusual, although Woodberry had a man principal - but<br />

most <strong>of</strong> the public schools had women teachers, principals at<br />

that time. And I don't remember the principal down at the<br />

boarding house, but 55 principal was a woman name <strong>of</strong> HoPmes.<br />

h d then there was a local teacher from out here; a woman<br />

by the name <strong>of</strong> Dewalt, She lived down there around 33rd<br />

Street.<br />

And in later years after my t ime Miss Bsoaks on Roland<br />

Avenue was a teacher down there, but that was after my time,<br />

Harvey: Did you say a minute aga that 56 school had been<br />

white school?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Yes.<br />

Harvey: What, did they move it down there to Robert Poole?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well . . . white school was up there where Green-<br />

spring Dairy is, that was old white school - it was there<br />

for years. Now, I don't know + . . my wife went there, I<br />

think they only went so far there and had to go to 55, but<br />

1 wouldn't swear to that. But I think they only went so<br />

far and then come down to 55.<br />

Harvey: Did you like going to school?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, it wasn't a case <strong>of</strong> liking it; you knew you<br />

had to go. 15 you had schoolitis you couldn't go out, so<br />

consequences we went to school. . . and it had its good<br />

points and its bad points. We used to have to use Sisson<br />

Street going down to 52 or Remington Road. R Tot <strong>of</strong> boys


LEWIS;099 1:1:6<br />

walked across the <strong>of</strong> the old streetcar bridge.<br />

That was a shortcut. Of course in them days when you went<br />

down Remington Road had to come back to Huntington<br />

Avenue because Remington Road only went to 29th Street; that<br />

was a big marsh in between there and 26th Street, American<br />

Can Company.<br />

Harvey: Well, why did you stop going to school when you<br />

did?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well . . . I didn't like the teacher I had, and I<br />

was ready to graduate then go to the other school, public school<br />

and go over to Poly - that's where I was going - but the war<br />

was on and I figured ~ ' go d to work in which I did.<br />

Harvey: Didn't you tell me the story once about your last<br />

day in school? How did that work now . . , your parents<br />

went down to see the teacher?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Oh teacher used to ask me questions<br />

about people doing stuff and I wouldn't tell her and she<br />

would always set me in a part <strong>of</strong> the room where I could see<br />

what went on if I wasn't busy with my lessons, and she sent<br />

me home - my mother had to come down and she had a party<br />

fox us at her house on <strong>Charles</strong> Street. She lived over there<br />

by the name <strong>of</strong> Rogers. Lived in the 2300 block <strong>of</strong> North<br />

<strong>Charles</strong> Street, which was all residents in those days.<br />

And she gave us a party and she introduced me to all <strong>of</strong><br />

her guests and she had there, grown guests, as one <strong>of</strong> her<br />

best pupils.<br />

The next morning the first thing, somebody done some-<br />

thing, she asked me who it was and I wouldn't tell her, and


LEWIS;099 1:1:7<br />

she sent me home. So that was just the thing in those days<br />

you didn't tell anything you seen like that because if you<br />

did you'd have to lick the one that done it, and I wasnvt<br />

a good fighter.<br />

Harvey: Was that the end <strong>of</strong> your t ime in school?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That was near the end <strong>of</strong> it; right before I stopped.<br />

That wasn't the cause I did stop; actually I had finished<br />

there and I decided things were moving, they were paying<br />

pretty good money in those days. Hadn't got to the big<br />

money yet, but they were paying good money for young people,<br />

and I went to work over in Meadow Mill, in the spinning room<br />

under Isaac McDonald. I worked over there about six months,<br />

then I left,went down Hutzler Brothers; worked there a little<br />

while and then came back over and went to work for a man<br />

named Arminger.. . . twisting room down in upper Mt. Vernon.<br />

And I got my work done and second boss told me to go on<br />

home. So I used to go home; had all my work done. The<br />

next morning when I come in Mr. Arminger asked me if I<br />

left early and I told him yes, Mr. t o l d<br />

me to go home<br />

and he told me not to leave early any more. That day when<br />

I got done my work - had it all done - second boss told<br />

me again to go home, I forget his name. I told h im what<br />

Mr. Arminger said; he said that's alright - you got all<br />

your work done you can ga ahead.<br />

The next morning when I come in Mr. Aminger<br />

told me I was fired. So I went over to W illiam E.<br />

nooper's Mill see my uncle was boss in rope room, Lampwick


LEWIS 099 I :I : 8<br />

Department and he sent me up ts llr. Tipton who had charge<br />

<strong>of</strong> the twisting roam. Mr. Tipton put me to work and I was<br />

weighing all the yarn that come through William E. Hooper's<br />

1 And <strong>of</strong> course that give me a lot <strong>of</strong> time to<br />

myself because you only had to work <strong>of</strong>f the machines that's<br />

taking the full spools <strong>of</strong>f, and I was able to get around all<br />

through the mill and see a lot <strong>of</strong> the activities, A man by<br />

the name <strong>of</strong> Wilson was the superintendent at that time.<br />

And over in the old mailbag department they were exper-<br />

imenting with duck an the side <strong>of</strong> the building. Of course<br />

then they kind along Druid Park Drive and they<br />

put this stuff together figured they make it covered the<br />

whole side because the ships carried torpedoes used<br />

to roll them over the side to plug up the holes. Now<br />

whether it ever worked or not, I don't know: I know they<br />

didn't make many <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

And 1 worked over Hooper's then until 1919. And I went<br />

to work down William E. Woods and worked there awhile and<br />

then 1 worked for the Transit Company on the 10 line about<br />

eighteen months.<br />

Harvey: Going back to the school thing - would you say that<br />

you quit school to go to work in the mills?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: I quit school - well, I'd say I was disgusted with<br />

school. I didn't like school any better than any boys at<br />

that age. And then I went to work over at the mill; back<br />

when I quit school I didn"t have a job. Prabably get the<br />

jab the war was on at that time - no problem getting a job.


Anywhere you went they hired you,<br />

LEWIS #099 1:1:9<br />

Harvey: Did you want to continue your education?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: f figured on continuing my education; then after I<br />

started to work I worked through the spring and summer; then<br />

I finished school in February and in the fall I went down<br />

and enrolled, but I never went. I decided against it.<br />

Harvey: OK, eo then the first job you had was in Meadow<br />

Mill in the spinning room.<br />

~ewis: That" sight.<br />

Harvey: Can you describe the whole process <strong>of</strong> the mill from<br />

the the the cotton comes in until the time it goes out?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, in those days it came in and they put it<br />

through blowers and blow it up through pip@<br />

about 12 inches in diameter and went into the card-<br />

ing room and it went in there in long sheets . . .<br />

Harvey: Excuse me, Mr. <strong>Lewis</strong> . . . [loud record player<br />

interrupts]<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: When it went through the carding they took all the<br />

foreign particles out <strong>of</strong> the cotton and when they came out the<br />

other end it was about an inch in diameter and it was twirled<br />

around in a fiber holder about three foot tall, a foot across<br />

and when that would get full theyJd put it in another one.<br />

Then after they'd take those up to another machine, run it<br />

through another machine, which they called a spinning machine,<br />

that was ithe first process. And that reduced it down to a thread<br />

about the size <strong>of</strong> ordinary thin cord. Then when it was re-<br />

duced down to that it was taken down to the spinning mach-<br />

ines it run faster, and they would take maybe four <strong>of</strong> those


LEWIS #099 1:1:10<br />

bobbins and run down to the spinning machines; <strong>of</strong> course,<br />

that would make it thicker.<br />

Then it was taken out <strong>of</strong> the spinning machine which<br />

was on small bobbins - it was taken d m to the spinning<br />

. . . where the women spun it on the bigger spools. They<br />

had a thing fit on their hand that tied knots for them<br />

automatic because this stuff was very delicate and hard to<br />

tie by hand. men they put it on the spool - and maybe it'd<br />

be fifteen to twenty <strong>of</strong> the small bobbins would go on each<br />

spool. And after that was on that spml they was taken down<br />

to what was called the twisting room. And the twisters<br />

down there made a warp, which was a real tight twist. And<br />

they made a filler, which was a coarser twist - wasn't near<br />

as tight.<br />

And if they wanted ply they would put maybe five<br />

spools up there; that would make it five-ply.. . six spools<br />

would make it six ply or four ply. You notice if you get a<br />

string now and twist it backwards you can see how many<br />

threads was put together and that was called ply.<br />

Then when they left those there at William E. Houper@s<br />

mill, that's when I weighed the yam. The spo<strong>of</strong>s weighed<br />

so much* the wagon weighed so much, but the twisters all<br />

got paid by weight.<br />

And <strong>of</strong> course then it was sent down either to the lamp-<br />

wick department where the coarser stuff was sent and the<br />

warp ar tighter twist was sent to the weaving mom where it<br />

was weaved into duck. And then <strong>of</strong> course, after it was weaved


LEWIS #099 1;1:11<br />

into duck then it waB shipped out and then lampwiek depart-<br />

ment went down.<br />

Now, William E. Hooper also made mailbags for the govern-<br />

ment - c mas mailbags for years they made canvas bags and<br />

that was made over in their concrete buildings. I never<br />

worked over in that part, but I been through there because<br />

my job weighing up I would lot <strong>of</strong> times have an hour, an<br />

hour and a half with no work to do. And I would go around<br />

the mi31 as long as I kept my work up and the boss didn't<br />

bother me, And I worked there then and in 1919 the war<br />

was over and that's when I left the mills.<br />

But when I was a boy, speaking <strong>of</strong> the mills, on account<br />

<strong>of</strong> the transportation, the mills had large tube - four,<br />

five, six <strong>of</strong> them running from all the mills - Meadow Mill,<br />

Clipper Mill, even down to Mt. Vernon; although Mt. Vernon<br />

did have a railroad siding for the bales to come in at that<br />

time. And there was a bridge there right below where Falls<br />

Road and coming down from Hampden and Falls Road the mills<br />

come together. That's where they brought the<br />

Clipper Mill and Meadow Mill and Drufd Mill and Park M i l l<br />

and Woodberry Mill all had these blowers; where they could<br />

blow it instead <strong>of</strong> having to haul the bales with the wagon;<br />

saved them time. They were up for many years.<br />

Of course then as modern transportation trucks and<br />

stuff come in, why - and the mills started to close - why<br />

they tore them all down and hand them the other way. And<br />

in Mt. Vernon mill they got permission to cross Jones Falls


LEWIS #099 1: 1: 12<br />

right back the mill and were able to put a siding back<br />

there, take another load <strong>of</strong> cotton there and bring it right<br />

across the mill and then they could ship their duck and<br />

stuff out. W i l l i a m E. Hooper was all electric, while the<br />

othex mills they run by steam and had belts. Meadow s ill -<br />

the oldtimers w ill remember it - on the Union Avenue aide<br />

had a belt run from the top to the mill clean down to the<br />

bottom where there boilers was and powerhouse was. And<br />

that belt xun all the machinery in the mill. Belt was about<br />

an inch thick and I guess was about two foot wide, It was<br />

a leather belt and that was the drive shaft and power for<br />

all the machinery in Meadow Mill,<br />

And the other mills worked on the same principle, but<br />

<strong>of</strong> course you didn't see it like you did Meadow Mill because<br />

it was there an Union Avenue side where people could see it.<br />

And <strong>of</strong> course Meadow M i l l was a showplace - all with<br />

beautiful lawn there, flower center place there - they always<br />

had tulips and all these flowers that bloomed all summer<br />

there by Woodberry Station because that was a train stop<br />

there. People still came out <strong>of</strong> town to Woodberry Station;<br />

they also got on at Woodberry Station and went away.<br />

But that was my experiences with the m ills . . .<br />

Harvey: Excuse me . . . well, how were they powered at that<br />

time? I think Mr, Ray told me that they switched over to<br />

electricity right around . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: William E. Booper, when he built the m ill it was<br />

electricity - all electric, Mr. Hooperas mill was all electric


LEWIS #099 1:1:13<br />

over on Parkdale Avenue. That was . The<br />

one thing I didn* miss there; a lot <strong>of</strong> times cord and duck<br />

.would be spoiled - things would happen to it and they had<br />

a machine that we would throw that into and it would turn<br />

it back to cotton. And then it was called because<br />

it was brown and it was used for bedding and stuff <strong>of</strong> that<br />

sort. In fact, today if you notice any <strong>of</strong> the bedding<br />

mattresses and all come apart it sort <strong>of</strong> has a brownish tint<br />

and it's sough-looking; and that's cotton and it was made<br />

into lampwick, and duck, and curd and where the bobbins would<br />

break - instead <strong>of</strong> wasting that, that was all throwed back<br />

in that machine and made back into cotton. Very fascinating<br />

to watch it work.<br />

Harvey: Well, you first job d m<br />

did you get that jab?<br />

there at Meadow Mill - how<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, 1 walked over into the <strong>of</strong>fice and I asked the<br />

man if he was hiring anybody: I don't recall who was in the<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice, but I did know some <strong>of</strong> the men these and he sent me<br />

up to E3r.Isaac McDonald who was the boss <strong>of</strong> the spinning room.<br />

And =.Isaac McDonald would give me a job . . . my job was to<br />

take bobbins when the girls d<strong>of</strong>fed them I was supposed to take<br />

them down to the spoolers and dump them in the bins for the<br />

spoolers and keep the d<strong>of</strong>fers in empty wagons so they could<br />

keep them all d<strong>of</strong>fing. And that was my job.<br />

And in them days the girls initiated you, and <strong>of</strong><br />

course I was initiated [laughs].<br />

Harvey: Well, what happened . . . hm'd they initiate you?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well - I think that would be better left unsaid.llaughs]


LEFIS;Q99 1:1:14<br />

Harvey: You don't want to talk about it . . .? [laughs]<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: [laughs1 . . . No, that would be better left unsaid;<br />

the girls initiated you in those days; we used to talk about<br />

boys doing things - but the young girls had just as bad a<br />

habit as the young boys. Can say it that way . . .<br />

Harvey: We already got you then - you must have forgotten<br />

yaurself because when we had the nostalgia hour down here<br />

you told that . . . [laughs]. . .<br />

~ewis: Well, that's alright . . . . long as it's permiss-<br />

ible - but they were all nice people and everybody was<br />

friendly; everybody lived close by.<br />

Over Hoaper's Miss Bosley on Druid Park Drive used to<br />

sell c<strong>of</strong>fee; <strong>of</strong> course I had plenty <strong>of</strong> time was my job about<br />

1L:30 I'd go up there. The people working they'd tell me<br />

they wanted c<strong>of</strong>fee, other things you wanted from the store<br />

and I 'd go up there. And those days c<strong>of</strong>fee come in a can<br />

about 8 inches high, about 4 inches across. And Miss Bosley<br />

used to give them ha15 full or better sf milk and sugar in<br />

it for a nickel, And you a11 - 1 took it up there and,<br />

<strong>of</strong> course, Miss Bosley would give me my c<strong>of</strong>fee for nothing.<br />

And a lot <strong>of</strong> othere little things; very nice lady and all<br />

the people worked in the twisting room that I would carry<br />

down these for - they always gave me something every week.<br />

There was no charge for it; X was being paid Zor the company.<br />

I remember one time Helen worked there in the<br />

twisting room and so did Sarah Daley; and they had a big<br />

affair at the Fifth Regiment Armory showing how the trenches


LEWrS;O99 1:1:15<br />

was built over in France and all that sort <strong>of</strong> stuff and<br />

showing people haw the boys had to fight over there. And<br />

Miss Daley and Miss took me down thexe - that was a<br />

big deal! Even bought me something before they took me<br />

home [1 aughs J .<br />

Harvey: Friends from work .. .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: They was very nice people; Miss died here<br />

a few years ago and I lost track <strong>of</strong> Miss Daley many years<br />

ago. Helen lived in the neighborhood; in fact, she<br />

lived on 37th Street just <strong>of</strong>f Hickory Avenue for years and<br />

then she married Ms. Langenfelter lived on Hampden Avenue,<br />

600 block. That's where she lived when she died.<br />

Harvey: Do you remember what hours you worked at Meadow<br />

Mill? Your first job - were you called a bobbin boy . . .<br />

is that what they call it, a bobbin boy?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Yes . . . bobbin boy.<br />

Harvey: Do you remember the hours you worked?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, I worked at Meadow Mill was ten hours, six<br />

days a week. My first pay was four dollars and change,<br />

because Mr. MacDonald asked me how much I had and I told him<br />

it was the most I ever had at one time, and he said if it<br />

was a million dollars it still wouldn't be enaugh.<br />

Harvey: Who was that . . . Mr. MacDonaId?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Mr. MacDonald, the boss . . .he knew me and he told<br />

me that and I found out through life, no matter haw much you<br />

made you could always use a little bit more. And thatms<br />

the way life i$. That's what it's all about. If it was up<br />

to you, you'd still be wanting more.


LEF7TS; 099 I :I : 16<br />

Harvey: What did you do with your money when you were paid?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well in those days it was customary for a11 <strong>of</strong> them<br />

you took it home and gave it to your parents, and they<br />

clothed you. In fact I was working for the <strong>Baltimore</strong> Transit<br />

and still giving my money to my mother and she made me go<br />

on account <strong>of</strong> my hours; didn't get home as <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

and had to eat out a lot. But up to when I was working for<br />

the <strong>Baltimore</strong> Transit Company you gave your money up and<br />

your parents took care <strong>of</strong> it. Of course you got spending<br />

money and you had money to go wherever you wanted to go,<br />

but that was the way it was handled in those days.<br />

Harvey: Did it seem like women worked certain jobs and men<br />

worked athers?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: In the mill most <strong>of</strong> the women - very few women worked<br />

in the weaving roam - mast <strong>of</strong> the women worked in the room<br />

around - and the work I could say would have been a little<br />

hard far men to do because it was finer work. For instance,<br />

when you would take in the twisting room pulling spools down<br />

and twisters into the empty bobbin. Men did run<br />

them - a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> run them and a<br />

fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Ambrose, both local men - they run<br />

pushers over there and there was maybe one or two others at<br />

a time came in ... but m ost <strong>of</strong> the women in the spinning<br />

room and the twisting room were women. Now in the carding<br />

room they had more men than they did women, and it was right<br />

dirty up these, dust flying; it wasn't modern like it is<br />

today. Those aays most men chewed tobacco and it's an<br />

unpleasant thing to say sometime, but most <strong>of</strong> the ladies used


LEWIS ;099 1:1:17<br />

snuff, and it was on account <strong>of</strong> the air being full <strong>of</strong> cotton<br />

and so on. Today people still use it, snuff, but for some<br />

reason or another, it seems to be an article that most <strong>of</strong><br />

them dongt want to admit using it.<br />

Harvey: Well, what did that do; the tobacco and snuff -<br />

how did that cut down on the dust?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, by breathing you had that moisture in your<br />

mouth all the time and that moisture in your mouth caught<br />

the cotton instead <strong>of</strong> going down in your lungs and choking<br />

you up. And they a11 had their awn little private spittoons;<br />

someplace ta spit, you know.<br />

Harvey: I see . . . was that a hard job, the first one?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, none <strong>of</strong> the jobs was what I'd call really hard.<br />

There was none <strong>of</strong> the jobs that was too heavy to do,there was<br />

no heavy lifting or anything like that; the wagons all had<br />

wheels on - they were kept in shape, all equipment was kept<br />

good. At; times when we were short <strong>of</strong> help, I would help the<br />

creel; that would be putting the cotton up on the twisting<br />

frames and that was about as hard a job that 1 had, hut the<br />

bobbins only weighed . . . oh, a couple pounds, not aver five<br />

pounds at most. You had to have awfully big bobbins to weigh<br />

that much. It wasn't a hard job. Of course, I: got paid<br />

extra for that; that's one thing - I'd get two paychecks;<br />

get paid far weighing up and I'd also get paid for creeling.<br />

Harvey: That was weighing up over at Hoaper's now . . .<br />

~e1qj.s: ~ooper's . . . yes. I worked ovex there longer than<br />

I did any <strong>of</strong> the other. As I say, Mt. Vernon mill - I


LEWIS 7099 1:1:18<br />

wasn't even working there; just two days and over Meadow<br />

Mill was about six months.<br />

And them days we used to come home and go out and play<br />

in the afternoon before it get dark in summertime. And the<br />

only thing you used Union Avenue Jerkwater<br />

was if you walked all the way over to get to the Jerkwater<br />

up Union Avenue you might as well walk the rest <strong>of</strong> the way<br />

home. While you was waiting for it, i-t: would be loaded and<br />

half the time you had to make some <strong>of</strong> it get <strong>of</strong>f because<br />

the car couldn't get up the hill with them on. But today<br />

people don't want to walk a block,they park and don't want<br />

to walk a block.<br />

Harvey: Do you remember your bosses in Meadow Mill?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Meadow Mill - the only boss I had was Mr. Isaac<br />

MacDsnald - he was my boss, he was the only boss I had up<br />

there. There was a couple men worked there, but at that<br />

time they didn't seem to have much to say to any <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

I don't remember too many people in the twisting room; a<br />

woman by the name <strong>of</strong> Parks, a girl by the name <strong>of</strong> I<br />

I remember them two, and they were about my age.<br />

Over in Hooper's I knew quite a few <strong>of</strong> them; Mr. -<br />

cause I run around.<br />

Harvey: Was there a union when you worked in Meadow Pill?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, there was no unions in either one <strong>of</strong> the m ills<br />

when I worked there - na unions at all. Well, in fact,the<br />

war was an you didn't need them; they paid you good money.<br />

Come around selling us Liberty Bonds; every time 1 bought<br />

a Liberty Bond, take out a dollar a week I got a dollar or


Harvey: Ok, go ahead . . .<br />

~ewis: Your bosses were more friendly to you and they tried<br />

to look out for you and if people had trouble at home they<br />

sort <strong>of</strong> . . , everybody sort <strong>of</strong> looked out for each other,<br />

The unions in the mills didn't come along until after that.<br />

Before I'd went to work over the mill they tried to start<br />

something over there, but that never materialized.<br />

Harvey: That's before you got there?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well. . .<br />

Harvey: Now, you worked in Hooper from maybe 1916 to 19 . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: NO, '17 . , . 1 went in there Hooper's . . about<br />

latter part <strong>of</strong> 1917. Worked there until 1919.<br />

Harvey: Ok . . . well, in that time they had a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

strikes in the M t. Vernon mills.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, to my knowledge I don't remember having any<br />

strikes right at that time around before the war was on and<br />

the war . . . the strikes and trouble came after - more or<br />

less organized after that, tried ta organize. They had their<br />

trouble. There had been trouble earlier and they had brought<br />

people in the Meadow M i l l and all, and they had to put<br />

police down there to protect them. Had a little shanty there<br />

at Buena Vista - where Buena Vista and Union Avenue is now;<br />

and they had them two houses . . . they were duplexes on


LE!rlI5;099 f :2<br />

Union Avenue west <strong>of</strong> Buena Vista where these people lived.<br />

That lasted for about a year, a year and a half: they had<br />

to have police protection for them all the time. But<br />

there was no organization for them, to my knowledge, in<br />

mills after that . . . the organization come after that.<br />

And then those days even during the war there - after the<br />

war started, if you wanted to learn a trade<br />

you had to put up a hundred dollar bond if you stay there<br />

four years and earn your trade.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> the labor unions came after that, as far as<br />

the cotton industry is concerned - same way with Poolers.<br />

That more or less came after the war was over, and <strong>of</strong> course<br />

we were so proud because everyone was working<br />

and so on: even the gun shop you built for Paole back <strong>of</strong><br />

Meadow mill - that was still busy fox a couple years after<br />

the war was over. They made them long guns that they used<br />

on railways . . . they were railway guns; took two flat cars<br />

to put them on just to haul them around to shoot thm.<br />

Harvey: Well, when they brought those strike breakers fn,<br />

where did they bring them from?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: I really couldn't tell you . . . I don't know; they<br />

were foreigners - they were people that weren't from<br />

come in from the south, they were foreigners. Later on, we<br />

had people come in from around Culpepper and all around down<br />

there, later on in years. I knew that from the neighborhood.<br />

But, in World War I most all the people that lived in<br />

Clipper and , Woodberry, Stone Hill, Brookhill,


they were pretty much all native people from around here.<br />

But they only brought these few in, but they kept them . . .<br />

I don't know what kind <strong>of</strong> work they done, but I know they<br />

couldn't go anywhere without - they had police stationed<br />

there all the time in that little cubicle.<br />

Harvey: Do you remember any fires in the m ills?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : No fires <strong>of</strong> any consequences when I was in the m ills<br />

as a boy; even when I carried lunch to my grandfather down<br />

around Mt, Vernon - well, he run carding machines in Mt.<br />

Vernon m ill for years, lower Mt. Verncln for years - and I<br />

used to carry his lunch. When he was up there I used to<br />

carry his lunch in summertime it was on my vacation; got<br />

a quarter a week for six days' work . . . and they were<br />

all nice, dirty, dusty roads - you needed a bath every<br />

evening before you even think about going to bed.<br />

And the boys up an Mt. Vernon throw stones<br />

sa all you had to do was push them, they was down in the<br />

road there on Falls Road and had us dancing trying to duck<br />

stones and not upset the lunches. In those days the wives<br />

all sent hot lunches to the men working in the m ills when<br />

you worked Mt. Vernon to Clipper.<br />

And <strong>of</strong> course somebody has to work in the mill to live<br />

in the company houses; and regardless <strong>of</strong> a lot <strong>of</strong> things that's<br />

said about companies - when there was no work in the mills<br />

and they were closed, the people didn't have to pay rent,<br />

You didn't have to worry about getting shipped out, and the<br />

company would haul wood and stuff through there for them.


LEWIS;099 I:2:22<br />

And, <strong>of</strong> course you know as the world progressed, things<br />

have got so that people haB to have somebody to represent<br />

them. In those days we all knew each other and represented<br />

each other. Unions are a good thing if people attend, but<br />

unions are nothing because half the member don't turn and<br />

just a few people attend, and a union's only as strong as<br />

its attending members. If it has a thousand members and<br />

twenty people attend, they don't have a union; they have<br />

something that's just working to suit the few that is.<br />

Where if they all attend, they know what's going on.<br />

Harvey: Was that good times during World War I? As far<br />

as the mills were concerned?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, people - it was good t imes because we made<br />

good money . . . I mean, when the war started people were<br />

working, making - the best mechanics wasn't making over<br />

ten a week and they were up, way up above that. 1 went to<br />

work first week, as I said, for four dollars and change<br />

and then when I left, you know, I was making around nine-<br />

teen dollars, and hardly had reason to strike. But, <strong>of</strong><br />

course it was like in all wars the company's working on a<br />

percentage the government guarantees them so much pr<strong>of</strong>it on<br />

their investment . . . we're still paying tax some <strong>of</strong> that<br />

money [laughs] .<br />

Harvey: Now, the Koapers lived right in Hampden, didn't<br />

they?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, in my time he didn't live right here in Hamp-<br />

den, but they Lived up in Mt. Washington not too fax, but


LEFqIS;099 I:2:23<br />

they had lived in Harnpden and their bosses - the boss <strong>of</strong><br />

Meadow m ill, the big boss over there was the Bowersox. He<br />

lived at the big house at the corner <strong>of</strong> Buena Vista and<br />

Union; the boss down at Mt. Vernon lived in what is now the<br />

Crittendon home, and the boss at Clipper lived there in the<br />

3500 block <strong>of</strong> Poole Street in that big stone house on the<br />

east side <strong>of</strong> the street.<br />

And af course some <strong>of</strong> the other bosses had better<br />

houses than others.<br />

Harvey: How about the owners <strong>of</strong> Mt. Vernon; where did they<br />

live?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, Mt. Vernon at that time when 1 was a boy -<br />

Mt. Vernon, Clipper, Meadow, Druid Mill Park and Woodberry<br />

M i l l all belonged to one company. They all belonged to one<br />

company. They separated as years went on, sold them all.<br />

Wasn't too long . . . in the twenties, they sold<br />

mill; in fact the first voting machines <strong>Baltimore</strong> had were<br />

made in Druid M ill. They also made washing machines down<br />

there,<br />

Harvey: Did you eves know those owners <strong>of</strong> the Ht. Vernon<br />

mf L ls?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, I never knew them at all . . . you never seen<br />

the <strong>of</strong>ficials - the big <strong>of</strong>fices were downtown. William E.<br />

Hooper - you seen Mr. Hooper and his family because they're<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice was right there at the mill, you did see them. They<br />

didn't come through the mill <strong>of</strong>ten; but I'd say Mr. Billy ~ilson,<br />

elderly man, he was superintendent <strong>of</strong> everything at ~ooper's.


LEWIS;~~~ I:2:24<br />

But Booper's came there to work and were active over there.<br />

Harvey: You know the organizations, like you were in the<br />

Mechanics . . .<br />

Lewi s : r Yes.<br />

Harvey: . . .And then the other organizations were . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, in those days there wasn't no television and<br />

radio; we had a lot <strong>of</strong> organizations - had patriotic organi-<br />

zations , and the Red men, Women <strong>of</strong> the World,<br />

Patriotic Sons <strong>of</strong> America, Junior Order <strong>of</strong> United American<br />

Mechanics. The Odd Fellows met cut here, but they didn't<br />

have their building here; you notice the building was built<br />

until '22. Golden Rule Council Junior Order <strong>of</strong> Mechanics<br />

known as the pool room now where that little restaurant is<br />

now between and we rented one side upstairs<br />

was rented out to Murphy Brothers, downstairs was folks who<br />

had a pool room and then there was a drug store next to the<br />

pool reon and the Purity Company had a branch<br />

there in that little store that's now a restaurant, And<br />

then there was two councils <strong>of</strong> the United American Mechanics<br />

out here because one was too big to handle it; one was the<br />

Golden Rule Council, the other one was Monumental. A lot <strong>of</strong><br />

the men, some <strong>of</strong> the older men still living were active in<br />

them. I was Past Councilor in Golden Rule, past Councilor,<br />

I think was still living, he was past Councilor. George<br />

Garrett was very active: he worked in the mill as a section<br />

hand - he was very active in the Golden Rule Council.


LEWIS; 099 I : 2 : 25<br />

Harvey: That's what I wanted to ask you about: Did the<br />

Junior Order <strong>of</strong> Mechanics or the or the Red<br />

men's or any other ones have anything directly ta do with<br />

the mills?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, all the men worked in the mills and one thing<br />

and the other it didn't hurt to belong to these organizations<br />

if it would give you a little headway to talk to some <strong>of</strong><br />

them - the different bosses belonged to them all, And even<br />

in those days, although they didn't mention it, the Ku Klux<br />

Klan was out here; they was organized - they met out here.<br />

Which it wasn't a bunch <strong>of</strong> radicals; they were average people.<br />

Harvey: Did they have anything directly to do w ith the<br />

mills?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, just working men; most <strong>of</strong> them were men that<br />

worked there - different kind and in different rooms and<br />

in different way. Most <strong>of</strong> the mills had their own blacksmith<br />

shops and a11 that stuff; they made a lot. <strong>of</strong> their own mach-<br />

inery and helped repair it.. They had a lot <strong>of</strong> activities,<br />

like outings. The junior orders they sponsored a young<br />

men's organization - they called them Junior Rifles. They<br />

used to go to ~olchestex two weeks on an outing. They go<br />

with rifles and all.. For many years; in fact until the<br />

Grand Axmy got disbanded in World War I1 came, they<br />

used to go up in St. Mary's Cemetery and decorate the graves<br />

<strong>of</strong> the C ivil Wax veterans and the Spanish American veterans.<br />

There were a few Spanish American vetexans buried at St.<br />

~ary's. That was a big thing: everybody out here on Decor-<br />

ation Day - you had good baskets <strong>of</strong> flowers do them up and


LEWISi099 I:2:26<br />

paid respect to them and all the Grand Army and even<br />

the Spanish Wax - they always had a L ittle American flag on<br />

every one <strong>of</strong> the graves and you be surprised just how many<br />

veterans are buried up there.<br />

Harvey: Bow about those outings that the m ills had?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they used to have an outing; m ost <strong>of</strong> them used<br />

to go to Tolchester, and sometimes they went to Dreamland,<br />

went to Chesapeake Beach, which is now known as South Beach.<br />

And Dreamland we used to leave a-t the foot <strong>of</strong> Broadway.<br />

But that was mostly a boat ride; you only had a couple hours<br />

there and to get into the beach down there you had about a<br />

mile to walk on the pier. The water was that shallow there,<br />

the boat couldn't get any closer. And time you got in and<br />

looked around a little, it was time to get on the boat and<br />

come back up. Where at Tolchester you go down and you had<br />

five or six hours at Tolchester and then you also would run<br />

moonlights down there. Sometimes they would run moonlights<br />

and the churches did that, too, and also the churches out<br />

here used to take picnics to Gwynn Oak.<br />

Very few picnics went to Riverview because they sold<br />

beer down there and at Gwynn Oak they didn't sell beer<br />

[laughs]. Before prohibition, <strong>of</strong> course, and <strong>of</strong> course<br />

Riverview was nice because they had the old German band, "oom<br />

pah" band played down there every Saturday and Sunday after-<br />

noon and all holidays. Had plenty seats down there could<br />

listen to the band. In late years a couple <strong>of</strong> them had their<br />

picnics at . . . down below Sparrows Point, Bayshore. They


LEIQIS; 099 I :2: 27<br />

had them down there. And right below Bayshore was another<br />

little park and during World War I the government built con-<br />

crete ships; they were built <strong>of</strong> concrete, and they were used<br />

to ship grain and stuff in towed to different places. The<br />

last time I was down at that little place park down there,<br />

the ferry used to come over from the Eastern Shore and pick<br />

you up there coming into <strong>Baltimore</strong>, and<br />

they had sunk them concrete ships down there for bulkheads.<br />

And we had a lot <strong>of</strong> fun an those picnics; as I say, it<br />

was something to look forward to. In those days when you<br />

got in the horse and buggy and rode up as far as Greenspring<br />

Avenue and Old Court Road, you had ta stop and have your<br />

picnic and it was time to turn around and come back. So it<br />

meant a big thing in those days - that was what our picnics<br />

were all about and places we went. And old Light Street was<br />

cobblestone. Everybody had their baskets with picnic food<br />

in them. Everybody ready to go to bed when you got home<br />

around nine or ten o'clock; when they get home - they didn't<br />

have to be rocked to sleep, they were tired.<br />

And people were very congenial; never had no trouble,<br />

don't remember ever having any trouble, even though in those<br />

days I wasn't old enough to buy but You could buy beer on the<br />

boat . . .s<strong>of</strong>t drinks wasn't such big sellers in them days,<br />

it wasn't as many <strong>of</strong> them around as there are today; same as<br />

ice cream.<br />

Of course, some people want to go back to the good old<br />

days; I think these good days we got right now - they can


LEW3S;099 1:2:28<br />

have all them good old days. We have electric lights now<br />

and the old coal oil lamps and the outhouses; now you got<br />

everything. Used to live in the kitchen - ninety percent<br />

<strong>of</strong> people lived in Hampden, Woodberry and Mt. Vernon lived<br />

in the kitchen in the wintertime. The only time the par-<br />

lor was used was Christmas and somebody died. Furniture<br />

last forever because it was never used. Today you live<br />

in all your home; you have heat, you have electric, you<br />

got nice paved streets, you got transportation. And people<br />

talk about the good old days, they forgot about the good<br />

old miseries we used to have.<br />

Harvey: On those mill outings - did the mills ever have<br />

carnivals down in the hollow ?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: As fax as I know none <strong>of</strong> the mills did - different<br />

organizations had carnivals and the churches used to have<br />

affairs. They used to have strawberry festivals and<br />

things like that, but the only . . . I remember Grace<br />

Church back on 37th Street between what is now Chestnut<br />

and Elm Avenue there was a field there, Thorpems<br />

field. They had a carnival there one time. Most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

carnivals that came to the neighborhood were sponsored by<br />

different organizations and out <strong>of</strong> town. But most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

things we had would be strawberry festivals, crab cake<br />

dinners and oyster suppers to raise money for the<br />

church and the people got together. Today, most af that<br />

stuff now - I guess you call them something similar to<br />

flea markets. Because food has got so high now it<br />

doesn't pay the churches, they don't have enough help to


LEKfSi099 I:2:29<br />

have those kind affairs. In those days people attended<br />

their churches; boys and girls in those days had no choice.<br />

You know they either went to Sunday School and church or<br />

you didn't go out and play on Sunday. Today you don't have<br />

that and, <strong>of</strong> course, church attendance is falling <strong>of</strong>f and<br />

people don't go The churches here, all the<br />

churches in the neighborhood now - probably get, one church<br />

could accomodate, two at the most, all that goes. In those<br />

days we needed a13 the churches because people went to<br />

church.<br />

Harvey: You mentioned earlier that there was no beer in<br />

Hampden .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No beer in Hampden until after prohibition.<br />

Harvey: They called that local option.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Local option, and the company houses;.beer companies<br />

had wagons delivered beer in this neighborhood, but they<br />

couldn't deliver any on the company property. The closest<br />

place you could get beer to Hampden was Huntington Avenue<br />

below 23rd Street. It was a saloon about halfway dawn the<br />

block. You go across through the park to Fultdn Avenue, or<br />

you could go up Falls Road the othes side <strong>of</strong> the railroad<br />

tracks at Bear Bill, Or you go out on Greenspring Avenue<br />

north <strong>of</strong> Avenue was called ~oach's Park. Or you<br />

could go out Park Heights Avenue, which was quite a ways to<br />

go a Of course after you got below 23rd Street there was<br />

saloons on North Avenue, Howard Street, There was also a<br />

saloon at and Falls Road; a man by the name <strong>of</strong><br />

Stocksdale run it. And halfway down the block was another


ZEWIS;099 1:2:30<br />

one that was - the people down in that block on Falls Road<br />

north <strong>of</strong> Maryland Avenue, where Falls Road comes there was<br />

houses there from Maryland Avenue down to Lafayette and then<br />

from Lafayette down to Mom and Poppa's Station, and there<br />

was another saloon down there; there were all Italian people<br />

lived down there.<br />

Of course those days saloons had to all close at twelve<br />

o'clock and closed Sundays. Nobody could sell any booze an<br />

Sundays; package stores - there was no such thing as package<br />

stores. And the county when they had oyster roasts and crab<br />

feasts at these different parks - Herring Park and those<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> places, they could serve beer and stuff to drink.<br />

Butthat was out in the county at those special affairs.<br />

Different people sponsored those affairs, especially German<br />

a£ fairs,<br />

It was like Gwynn Oak when the Germans had their big day<br />

out there; there was plenty <strong>of</strong> beer brought in out there -<br />

none sold - but they was allowed to bring it in and, <strong>of</strong><br />

course as most people know, most German people who drink<br />

beer know how to handle it. And there was always a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

singing and one thing and another - Gwynn Oak and Germans<br />

they was out there.<br />

Harvey: Well, how did that local option work here? Why<br />

was it that beer ar any kind <strong>of</strong> liquor couldn't be sold<br />

in Hampden?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Because the mills . . . when they bought the property<br />

out here to build the mills, had that incorporated in it<br />

because they knowed drinking only bred trouble. Of course,


~EW1s;Q99 I: 2 :31<br />

I've heard people say - and naturally I was too young to<br />

even think about buying it - they" be kicking me in the<br />

backside if I'd even thought about it - but I understand<br />

there were places if you was known that you could buy a<br />

drink on the side, In other words, bootleggers,or whatever<br />

you might want to call it.<br />

Harvey: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> those places?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, no, they were very careful in those days; I<br />

know I heard them laugh about one place - in fact, it was<br />

under where 1 formerly lived later on. But it wasn't<br />

there when I lived there; they used to sell whiskey and the<br />

man run the place used to sell it a nickel a shot. And on<br />

pay day when we got paid once a month, he had good whiskey,<br />

cost ten cents a shot. The difference was it was poured out<br />

<strong>of</strong> the old jug into a fancy jug . . . and a nickel. more.<br />

Of course them days was all before my time and I'd<br />

heard names mentioned, but I don't repeat hearsay; I didn't<br />

know, and I don't think it's right to use hearsay to say.<br />

But the story about the ten-cent whiskey was evidently true,<br />

because a lot <strong>of</strong> them laughed about it; and they only had the<br />

ten-cent whiskey on payday. But it was the same whiskey they<br />

drank all month for a nickel.<br />

Harvey: Well, why do you think the mill owners wanted to<br />

exclude liquor from being sold?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Because liquor breeds trouble; you get people losing<br />

time from work. You have it today; you have men that are<br />

good mechanics. Call them alcoholics or whatever you want;


LEWXS;099 I:2:32<br />

they'll get drunk on Saturday and Sunday and they ain't able<br />

to go to work en Monday. And the mill depended on the<br />

people - they wanted you to work; they didn't want you work<br />

if you was sick, they were human . . . but they didn't have<br />

a lot <strong>of</strong> dxinking and carrying on. You had any trouble in<br />

the company house f rom drinking or anything, you had to move.<br />

They didn't want them kind <strong>of</strong> people; they wanted people<br />

that helped them - the kind <strong>of</strong> people that made this country<br />

what it is today and built it up.<br />

In late years you've seen what liquor's done; it" same<br />

back, our countryvs losing its standing in the world. We<br />

have more dissention in this country than we've ever had -<br />

nobody knows believes the other guy is any good. Everybodyts<br />

trying to take somebody, and it's time people start to real-<br />

ize they're only going to yet three things out <strong>of</strong> life: that's<br />

enough to eat, a place to sleep and clothes to clothe their<br />

nakedness. You pay a hundred dollars to five hundred dollars<br />

for a suit - only clothing. If they pay a dollar for a<br />

meal or ten dollars for a meal, only fills their stomach.<br />

And if they got a house with fifteen rooms in, they can only<br />

sleep in one bed.<br />

And it" time people started to realize it ain't how<br />

much you make; it's what you do with what you do make. I<br />

found that's been a very good principle in all my life; I<br />

had nobody to back me and I had to look out prepare for my-<br />

self and the Lord's been very kind to me. Hard work didn't<br />

kill me; I worked long hours and still live as foolish, but


I don't think it was foolish. I've had a niee life and met<br />

wonderful people. It's one <strong>of</strong> the greatest privilege people<br />

have in meeting nice people. You all remember the people<br />

that ain't nice, but if you look around you know a thousand<br />

niee people to every bad one you know. So look at the nice<br />

ones and just forget about the bad ones.<br />

Harvey: O.K. . . . let me try a long shot on you: do you<br />

remember a co-op down on 28th street - Heath, Robey & Martin<br />

co-op. , .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Yes, Frank Robey and Heath and Martin; they worked<br />

in the mill together: and they opened that store as a co-op<br />

dawn there.<br />

Harvey: About when was that, do you know?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: I would say that was about 1920; in the era from 1919<br />

to '22, something like that* They run it: Will Martin,<br />

Frank Robey, and the other fellow I didn't know too well.<br />

I didn't know Heath very well,<br />

Harvey: Is this the same Robey that . . ,<br />

~ewis: Frank Robey that was your Clerk <strong>of</strong> the Common Court<br />

Pleas, Court <strong>of</strong> Common Pleas, was the man that was in on it,<br />

yes, same man. When they closed up down there, Frank opened<br />

the store there at 40th Street and Falls Road. Right now its<br />

a barber shop in there. And then Frank ran it and he had<br />

a fellow came out there worked for him. 1'11 tell you his<br />

name in a minute . . .from Eastern Shore. He worked there<br />

as a butcher, and when Frank opened a laundry on Hickory<br />

avenue and had got into politics, this boy took it over.


LEWIS; 099 I:2:34<br />

Very nice boy; Mrs. Robey deserves a lot <strong>of</strong> credit. Frank<br />

wasn't a college man - he was a self educated man and he done<br />

a lot for our neighborhood . . . a lot for it. ~ u t he was<br />

one <strong>of</strong> them that run it, but it was an attempt just one <strong>of</strong><br />

those things didnt t work at that time.<br />

Harvey: What was it, food?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Food, yes . . .all food, strictly food - no furniture<br />

nothing like that. And it was strictly food, and they were<br />

these - they might have been there longer, but I would say<br />

three or four years at the most,that they were down there<br />

and they were very nice. Will Martin, he married Daisy-<br />

- my grandmother she was an orphan my grandmother raised her,<br />

Daisy . That's why I know them so w ell, and I knew<br />

Will so well. Daisy died a good while ago - Will ain't been<br />

dead too many years.<br />

Harvey: Will Martin - he's dead.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Yes, he's dead; so's Frank Robey. I didn't know<br />

Heath.<br />

Harvey: O.X. . . . one last question. Maybe we can wrap it<br />

up with this one. Why do you think the m ill owners had these<br />

places out here?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Had what places?<br />

Harvey: The m ills.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: The mills . . . well, in them days the mills had to<br />

depend on the water. Don't forget, those mills operated on<br />

water as well as they did on steam when they first started out<br />

- it was practically all water power. And naturally they


LEWIS ;099 I:2:35<br />

needed water for steam and race. One race they had the dam:<br />

I' don't know if it's still standing back <strong>of</strong> Park Mill up<br />

there - that's where the water was diverted and come around<br />

into Meadow Mill. And they had one up above there where it<br />

came down into that m ill . . . Park M ill, came into that<br />

and that was diverted up near the trestle, where the Penn-<br />

sylvania Railroad trestle, Then the one that back<br />

<strong>of</strong> Milford Mill there come down to Meadow M ill. There was a<br />

pool over there that water coming in they could run it back<br />

over the falls. But that run on down to Clipper Mill, supp-<br />

lied water for Clipper Mill - for their toilets and their<br />

machinery. Then down at Mt. Vernon that dam is<br />

practically washed out in there that's where their water was<br />

diverted and went in.<br />

And the power was all made down in the lower Mt. Vernon<br />

Mill and the belt that formed the power up upper Mt. Vernon<br />

Mill crossed Falls Road. You know that mill where we was in?<br />

That's upper; the lower was down below and they had a big belt<br />

that went across the road up there. A11 the way up at that<br />

mill and turned the wheels up there and run the machinery up<br />

there.<br />

Harvey: Well, when I asked why you think they had the mill<br />

out here, do you think they'd have had them if they hadn't<br />

been making money <strong>of</strong>f people working for them7<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, the mills . . . w ell, any company goes in<br />

business is going to make money. The difference in our<br />

country and Russia is that you've got the ability to do


LEWIS ;099 I:2:36<br />

something but don't have the money, so I put the money up so<br />

you can do it, and we split the pr<strong>of</strong>it. In Russia the govern-<br />

ment does it and they give you what they want back. The man<br />

who produces don't get any more than the man that don't<br />

produce during the whole business. In other words, a man<br />

can have all the abilf ty in the world, but if he can' t<br />

borrow moneyF he can't do the job. It's just like the men<br />

you take today; you have men today small contractors that<br />

built hames; you have to give them so much down so they can<br />

get the foundations in. Then aftex they get the foundation<br />

in, you give them so much money to build the floor, you<br />

give them so much money as you progress with the building.<br />

And if you didn't do that, they couldn't build; they don't<br />

have the money.<br />

It's the same way; it" one <strong>of</strong> the biggest conceptions<br />

with the American public: they read the headlines <strong>of</strong> our<br />

newspapers, which is very misleading; they'l tell you how<br />

many million dollars . . . they'll say General Motors made,<br />

but they forget to tell you how many million stockholders.<br />

And it's news to a lot <strong>of</strong> people; they don" want to believe<br />

you when you tell them that none <strong>of</strong> our big companies, such<br />

as Chrysler, General Motors, IBM, Exxon - any <strong>of</strong> those big<br />

companies - nobody owns as much, no individual owns as much<br />

as one-half <strong>of</strong> one percent <strong>of</strong> their stock.<br />

Our biggest company in the United States is International<br />

Telephone and Telegraph; the biggest corporation in the world.<br />

md nobody owns as mueh as 25/100 percent <strong>of</strong> thefr stock.


LEWIS ; 099 I:2:37<br />

But when you take, and when they say how many millions they<br />

made you forget how much divided up. And one <strong>of</strong> the nice<br />

things about America is . . . everybody can buy stock.<br />

There is no law against St, and a lot <strong>of</strong> the stock, most <strong>of</strong><br />

the stocks sells for under fifty dollars a shaxe. Same <strong>of</strong><br />

it sells as cheap as - good stack sells as low as ten dollars<br />

a share.<br />

And, <strong>of</strong> course you have gambling stock. But these big<br />

companies make it possible for you. You take employees<br />

working for a company can pay for it out <strong>of</strong> their payroll<br />

with no broker's fees, You take just recently the gas and<br />

electric company; if you buy some <strong>of</strong> their stock through a<br />

broker, from then on you can send so much a month and they'll<br />

buy it for you with no broker's fees. And today, I didn't<br />

look just last night, but this plan's bearing nine percent;<br />

that's more than the banks give you on your money that you<br />

don't need. Nobody should close out their bank account to<br />

buy stock.


[BEGIN TAPE I1 SIDE 11<br />

Harvey: This interview for the <strong>Baltimore</strong> Neighborhood Her-<br />

itage Project with Mr. Roy <strong>Lewis</strong> <strong>of</strong> Hampden was conducted<br />

on July 25, 1979 at the Nampden Woodberry Remington Community<br />

Center by Bill Harvey, with an assist from Susie nawes,<br />

We'll talk about a lot af the things we just been talk-<br />

ing about so we can get it on tape.<br />

Mr. <strong>Lewis</strong>, you told me that you've been a Republican all<br />

your life - that's a little unusual for somebody around<br />

Hampden - how did that happcn?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Our whole family are Republican and during the Civil<br />

War, why . . . Northern people were all Republicans and this<br />

neighborhood here has always been Republican. There were a<br />

few Democrats here; up until after 1920 this was strictly a<br />

Republican stronghold. Until like the City Council or any-<br />

thing you had your Republicans in this area - and later<br />

years come along, Mr. Burke and M r. John ~unnigan, they were<br />

Democrat precinct workers. Mr. Sharkey Vates I he worked in<br />

the precincts and as these people came up from the south<br />

other people were moving away and it turned into a Democrat<br />

neighborhood, just the same as it is today.<br />

These are two precincts over here; the 23rd and 24th<br />

are in the 4th Ward; they're the only two precincts in it -<br />

we're all two white precincts in a all colored Ward . . .<br />

13th Ward, 4th District. And that's the way its been . . .<br />

it's just like years ago the neighborhood was definitely


LEWIS; 099 II :1: 39<br />

proud one . . . although we had St. Thomas's Church in<br />

there for many, many years. But they never associated together<br />

in those early days. Those days, Catholic boy went with Cath-<br />

olic girls, Protestant boys wentwith Protestant girls. Of<br />

course as you know, those things were all changed now. It's<br />

time w ill heal and change all things, there's no question<br />

about it. Not unusual for marriages now, inter-marriages in<br />

the religious. . .as well as in some places <strong>of</strong> the races,<br />

And the community has progressed right along. I don't<br />

knsw whether it's any worse or any better <strong>of</strong>f. And just like<br />

our old merchants years ago, Kennedy - you had to belong<br />

to the Catholic Church to work for him. McCormick's, Lever<br />

Brothers, you had to be Protestant - if you wasn't Protestant,<br />

you didn't work for them. And it was just like years ago when<br />

L remember as a young boy first Jewish merchant we let come<br />

in the neighborhood. It was Harry Hockrnanf little store<br />

there just part <strong>of</strong> Cavacos . . . maybe eight foot wide, and<br />

when he opened up there he had to close up and be out <strong>of</strong> the<br />

neighborhood around 6 o'clock at night. And Harry<br />

come out here fox years, and eventually came out here and<br />

become one <strong>of</strong> our successful merchants and owned a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

property.<br />

There were a lot <strong>of</strong> nice Jewish merchants out here, but in<br />

those days prejudice was up again.<br />

Hawea: When was that . . . when did Hockman's first open up?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : Hockman come out here I 'd say about 1910, 1912 . . .<br />

in that area; I couldn't say exactly, and that was when 36th


Street . . . the places set back, they wasn't all built<br />

out, Cavacos was, but they wasn't. Ruth McKenzie and all<br />

them places set back and at the carner up there- Weinstein.<br />

Used to call it Cherry Row sornebocfy said - I don't know, I<br />

wouldn't verify that.<br />

Like Hickory Avenue on the southwest corner had a<br />

front yara there and a grocery store there set back. Then<br />

there was two houses set back and then the next house that<br />

set back barber shop. In them days where the shoe-<br />

maker shop is places you had to go 5 or 6 steps to get to<br />

the delivery room; since then the floors have all been<br />

lowered. And in the hall there - the apartment where the<br />

El Paso and all, that was McCann's Hall. Then they tore<br />

that MeCann's Hall down and built up.<br />

And this man to go in and then wash away when he got done<br />

putting doors and windows in the back, the place was fin-<br />

ished he built a spite wall - it's still up down there.<br />

I mean like that . . . and where G rim's Restaurant<br />

was, Thompson's had a grocery store.<br />

Hawea: You said something about having to be a Protestant<br />

to be a foreman in the mills.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, mostly everybody worked in the m ills was Prot-<br />

estant - there was no question about it. It wasn't that<br />

many <strong>of</strong> them out here, see. In fact, in a lot <strong>of</strong> places you<br />

worked in the kids they used to fight among themselves; used<br />

to holler Catholic - you know, they say ~atholic and all<br />

that kind <strong>of</strong> stuff, you know. But, as I say, that stuff


LEv7IS fO99 II:I:41.<br />

has all gone over the road now. These's a few people now<br />

that's prejudiced, but such a minority you wouldn't know<br />

where to find them, see.<br />

RaWeS: Was there one area where Catholics Lived?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they lived through the neighborhood; but they<br />

were clans, to put down in plain fact people were clannish in<br />

those days, that's all there is to it.<br />

Harvey: Were there divisions among the Protestants? Maybe<br />

was tension bekween Baptists and Methodists . . ,<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, the families; some <strong>of</strong> them were southern<br />

sympathizers - they went to the Protestant church and the<br />

northern people went to the Methodist or Episcopal. And you<br />

had Mt. Vernon and Grace, Woodberry was Methodist Episcopal,<br />

and Hampden Church was Methodist and Protestant. See, Hampden<br />

Church ain't been built so many years . . . Oh, 3 say many,<br />

maybe better than fifty years - but that was just a little<br />

church set there. A fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Reverend Stone<br />

come here. And the congregation helped to build that<br />

foundation and all. there. For his house first: they built<br />

the house first and then later on they built the church.<br />

Another fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Arch Ford was a great<br />

organizer; he built one <strong>of</strong> the biggest bible classes in the<br />

country here - people come from all over the country here<br />

to see it. He had 500,000 members down there. He go round<br />

Sunday morning around these fellows who didn ' t go to church,<br />

and he, himself, I always felt no disrespect to<br />

Reverend Stone that Archie Ford was actually


LEI~IS~C)~~ 11:1:42<br />

the church. I always thought that he. . .and a lot <strong>of</strong> people.<br />

Hawes: Did the churches have anything to do with politics?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, no . . . politics was never talked in church.<br />

Politics are discussed more in places now. You went down<br />

the recreation building you couldn't discuss politics there.<br />

Like if you say here and I hear polities there - really<br />

shouldn't be, but i t's done. I mean, I don't mean that to<br />

be nasty . . . I don't go for that, but in those days that<br />

wasn't done, see. Oh, the men got on the corners and dis-<br />

cussed and walked out and talked among themselves and they<br />

had their political campaigns. And <strong>of</strong> course as always<br />

there was always booze to be given outtlaughsl.<br />

And I worked in the neighborhood here and old Sharkey<br />

used to be down in the 23rd precinct. Used to stand down<br />

there by Jake Fair's store, that's by. . .below the school<br />

there and I worked in the neighborhood and Sharkey said,<br />

"You voted yet?" "Nope," I said, "1 ain't going to vote un-<br />

less you get a drink." Sharkey said, "I haven't got a<br />

thing." Well, I was working - I wasn't going to drink any-<br />

way, "Well, don't: talk to me about voting; if my vote ain't<br />

worth a drink, it ain't worth it." I went on down and walked<br />

around and come back up through there and Sharkey standing<br />

there and he called me over and said, "Come on down the<br />

alley a minute, J got you a drink! " Ilaughs] He didn' t<br />

know I was a Republican, as far as that goes; 3 got a kick<br />

out <strong>of</strong> it. Of course, personally, the farthest thought from<br />

my mind was a drink because I was working. The two <strong>of</strong> them


LEW9S;099 I1:1:43<br />

don't go together. I went to people's homes and I said I<br />

dian'e want to go there smelling <strong>of</strong> booze.<br />

But today I think it's much nicer - people are more<br />

friendly in certain ways; <strong>of</strong> course they're not as close as<br />

it was in the old neighborhood. In the old days people<br />

took care <strong>of</strong> each other. Somebody got sick, somebody in<br />

the neighborhood there took care <strong>of</strong> him. Up at night, the<br />

womenfolk . . . same way with food, cooking, looking after<br />

children. You didn't have all this welfare and all this to<br />

go to because they took care <strong>of</strong> their own: they shared. And<br />

I hated to see that go away because people did know each<br />

other, they were friendly and those days you didn't have<br />

ice boxes to keep stuff like you can keep now. So if you had<br />

a lot: <strong>of</strong> stuff you gave it to a neighbor. Wasn't because<br />

the neiqhbor couldn't afford to buy it, it was because<br />

you had it. And they done the same with you.<br />

Today if you go to hand something to a neighbor , why<br />

they get insulted. I mean, I laugh . . . I just went<br />

down to visit some friends and brought back 30, 40 fish.<br />

And we don't eat too much fish at home. There's no use<br />

bringing them up here to give away. Could have gave them<br />

to somebody - Oh, there must be something wrong with it or<br />

we wouldn't be giving it to you [laughs]. 1 was going to<br />

buy crabs to bring up, but they were steamed Sunday and<br />

Sunday when they're busy, same boys get careless. If I'd<br />

have stayed until Tuesday, I'd have bught - -<br />

What do you think steamed crabs are worth down there? You


LEWIS; 099 I1 : It44<br />

won't believe this - jirnmy crabs - four dollars a dozen<br />

steamed. And jimy crabs are all male and heavy crabs;<br />

they ain't - crabs down around the crabbing place when<br />

you say jimy crabs they'll sell you crabs . . . four<br />

dollars a dozen.<br />

Rawes : Who were like and John Dunnigan and Sharkey<br />

. . , who were they supporting?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they were Democrats - they were the ones, they<br />

come along; didn't matter who the Democratic candidate was -<br />

that's who they were for.<br />

Hawes : But there wasn't anybody . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: We51, I mean you could go back to the cops and all<br />

the different ones there - I don't remember all <strong>of</strong> them back<br />

there . . . I mean, Wilson. Let's see, who wasn't running<br />

there In the twentieth row; Wilson was running in the sixteenth<br />

I'm trying to think who run in the twentieth. . ,Narding beat<br />

him, but I'm just trying to think who it was. I did know,<br />

too. and then Coolidge was running in'24. It<br />

was three <strong>of</strong> them running at that time - an Independent, a<br />

Democrat and Republican. That was the first election 1 voted<br />

in - '24.<br />

Harvey: Well, hew about local politicians in that time; say<br />

for City Councilman and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: We never had any City Councilman out here in my time<br />

and we never , . . we had Johnny Krebs was in the House <strong>of</strong><br />

Delegates; he was a Democrat. We did have a couple ef them.<br />

But Johnny's the only one I remember. ~ u we t were never able


LEWXS;099 II:1:45<br />

to put a delegate in from over here. They used to call<br />

Roosevelt Park before they named it, and <strong>of</strong> course<br />

Roosevelt Park after the first Roosevelt, but it used to be<br />

West Park. West was a prominant Republican politician.<br />

Hawes: Was there samebody they answered to . . . was there<br />

some more powerful person in <strong>Baltimore</strong> that they answered to?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, back in those days . . . I'm trying to think<br />

. . . Sonny Mahon, padgett, those fellow Democrat leaders. ~adgett,<br />

he was down toward South <strong>Baltimore</strong>, Brooklyn. Sonny Mahon was in<br />

around Fremont Street and in through there. I trying to think<br />

<strong>of</strong> the politicians over East <strong>Baltimore</strong>. Then after he<br />

passed on Willie Curran come along. Well, them people used to<br />

give out Christmas baskets and everything else, And, <strong>of</strong><br />

course in those days the 'R' hotels were headquarters for<br />

the Democrats. That was always a Democrat headquarters<br />

there, at the 'R' Hotel.<br />

Harvey: How do you figure that they were never able to<br />

elect a councilman from Hmpden?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, I really don't know why and I wouldn't want to<br />

say - I don't know; there wasn't many out here that run for<br />

it. I don't remember; only token running like Buck Griffiths<br />

he run and Lizzmos: <strong>of</strong> course that was in late years.<br />

Frank Robey" only elected and he was a Democrat. Frank was<br />

elected to the Clerk, and he had it until he died.<br />

Frank lived in this neighborhood; foreman worked in the<br />

mills, worked his way up, store and he went into the laundry<br />

business here on Hickory Avenue where they tore out.<br />

down there. And he never carried this district in an election.


LENIS;O99 II:1:46<br />

Yet he was elected city-wide for years, yet he was a Demo-<br />

crat. Bill Fischer,he run for Mayor from out here, but he<br />

wasn't elected - he was a Democrat politician.<br />

awes : He was from Hampden . . , Bill Fischer<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : Yes, lived there right below Church. Bill<br />

played the violin and he had a orchestra: used to go around<br />

play at affairs and all, nice fellow.<br />

Hawes : And he ran for City Council?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, he run for Mayor, but he had a big job sawn<br />

there in the Braening Administration and he helped, I*m told,<br />

afterwards and he got a lot <strong>of</strong> boys out there and then Paul<br />

Zimmerman - he was a Republican ward leader out here for years-<br />

13th ward- he got Broening, put him down there in Municipal<br />

Building and even though when Broening let us, Democrats come<br />

in, they all kept Paul On - a good man. He was fair with<br />

people. Paulkept that job until he died. Pauldied about '38,<br />

'39. Re was Republican Ward out there. I tell you,<br />

nobody wants those jobs: they're thank you jobs.<br />

back . , . oh, I wasn't up here lonq bought this house they came and<br />

wanted me to take precinct, then they come back and wanted me to take<br />

ward leader. I told him no, I wouldn ' t do it, I work and I didn ' .t: have<br />

it, I mean, it takes time for them kind <strong>of</strong> things and I wasn ' t in<br />

for politics myself and a lot <strong>of</strong> o ther men wasn't. And t he only<br />

way I took the precinct - the Republican party is a minority<br />

party in this district and most <strong>of</strong> all <strong>Baltimore</strong>, but I believe in<br />

the two-party system. I never voted a straight ticket in<br />

my life; I vote for people. I look at what they're doing,


LEWTS;Q99 If:1:47<br />

I don't make my mind up the week before election, My mind<br />

is made up a long time before election whether a man deserves<br />

to go back or not, and I feel that way. Mr. Keller got me to<br />

work up an Cox Street; somebody didn't show up, and then, as<br />

soon as they could,thcy got somebody in on it . , . Gordon<br />

Parrish had the precinct down here and they wanted me<br />

to take that and I told them no. And then Gordon got sick<br />

and they got me to come down and Gordon wouldn't take it any<br />

more.<br />

HaweS : Parrish who ran the cleaners?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Parrish used to live across the street there where<br />

the barber shop is, Of course, he's dead now and Gordon<br />

said no, he wanted me to keep it. And it was alright; I<br />

mean it didn't intexfexe with work any. Of course I didn't<br />

attend any meetings and stuff, I had to go down Election<br />

Board for instruction at the election. And the disgrace <strong>of</strong><br />

the whole thing is the city or the state, whoever had charge<br />

<strong>of</strong> the ELectian Board, does not pay the minimum wage. I don't<br />

know how they getting away with it.<br />

Harvey: So that was your job as a Republican judge at the<br />

polls, you mean?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That's the only thing I ever done; I never bothered.<br />

I get literature and stuff, but I get: that mostly because I<br />

liked the different representatives, about things I don't like<br />

or think ought to be done. But out here I don' t think any <strong>of</strong> the<br />

younger people were really Stoeksdale, he was a judge, he<br />

was a Republican. There are different appointments they get.


LEWISt099 II:I:48<br />

but they very seldom run for the <strong>of</strong>fice. Johnny Krebs,<br />

the only one; belonged to the House <strong>of</strong> Delegates.<br />

Harvey: When was he around now, do you know?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : That was around . . . I can pinpoint that , . , Johnny<br />

was elected around '23 and he was in up until about '27 oz: '28.<br />

He was a little little short guy.<br />

Harvey: What was his . . . do you remember what<br />

he ran on - what kind <strong>of</strong> issues he addressed?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, I couldn't . . . because I was away when he . , .<br />

I guess generally it was 1922. But when 5 come home Johnny'<br />

was in the House <strong>of</strong> Delegates. In those days you had<br />

issues you got like - now. They always have some big thing<br />

they're going to do. It's like now - they keep the country<br />

in a turmoil - right now it's the gas thing; before that it<br />

was the SALT agreement; before that it was the Israel thing.<br />

And they got people so excited half a£ them don't know what<br />

the heck's going an anyway. Let's face it - E mean this oil<br />

situation learned men told you back in '72 that you had to<br />

make preparations for it. And everybody sits there and lets<br />

you go, and then all <strong>of</strong> a sudden why, he's losing his<br />

prestige and a11 this and that now - so, what's he do . . .<br />

Oh, the oil thing's a big crisis- I'm going to do this.<br />

Fires half his Cabinet. Why fight the Cabinet? He's the<br />

leader. And it's been that same way every election.<br />

Coolidge came in under an awful mess - one <strong>of</strong> the worst<br />

messes there was. Kept his mouth shut and straightem< the<br />

country out. VJhen A1 Smith run against Hoover, Hoover won.<br />

Hoover was a Independent and he was over on the other side


LEI.JIS; 099 I1 : 1 : 49<br />

when World War I broke and he helped to get all the Ameri-<br />

cans, different people from that side over and organize the<br />

food stock. Right after he was elected all them countries<br />

over there owed this government money for the war. And the<br />

government had guaranteed the money to the manufacturers . . .<br />

you let them have credit, we guarantee it. And them people<br />

de~lared a moratorium and refused to pay it back; that's why<br />

you had the Depression.<br />

But then Roosevelt runs - the gamblers and one thing and<br />

another put Roosevelt up to run . . . and Roosevelt run, which<br />

he had a right to do. That's his business, When a guy<br />

tried to shoot him down in Florida, butthey killed the<br />

Chicago mayor. Roosevelt come back and none <strong>of</strong> the guys<br />

over attempt to do; they just made you turn all<br />

the gold money you had, unless it was heirlooms and made it<br />

illegal up to just two years ago. Under Republicans they<br />

brought back - you couldn't even buy, you<br />

might want ta call it a souvenir - called pro<strong>of</strong> money. In<br />

other words, when you buy pro<strong>of</strong> money made by England or<br />

anywheres else you pay an awEul premium on it. I don't<br />

mean . . . and it's the sane way in this country. We could<br />

buy their silver coins, but we couldn't buy their gold<br />

coins, and you couldn't go out <strong>of</strong> the country where they<br />

used gold money, like Mexico and those places, and get gold<br />

money and bring it back to this cauntry. In fact, it was<br />

illegal for you to have it. And those kinds <strong>of</strong> things -<br />

you always got issues. I mean,my argument, tlr. Roosevelt.


LEWIS;O99 II:1:50<br />

Mr. Roosevelt done a lot <strong>of</strong> ham to this country that we'll<br />

never recover from. And this man here we got now, no dis-<br />

respect to him, hers a fine gentleman he's entitled to his ideas,<br />

but he's made enemies all over the world. We got thrawed out <strong>of</strong><br />

everyplace, the Phillfpines, we set them up as a democracy<br />

- now it's dictatorship. They told us we could get our<br />

troops out <strong>of</strong> there, we can use that airfield. But our<br />

troops have got to leave and we paying them twenty million<br />

dollars a year rent for that airfield. Same way in Panama.<br />

Harvey: Let's get it back to Hampden. I wonder if that<br />

tension with the Catholics you were describing up until<br />

World War I . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Who was?<br />

Harvey: You were saying . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, the tension was between the people. I mean,<br />

in other words, in them days the religious issues were fired<br />

on. Those days people went to church. In other words,<br />

these churches around here in them days had people - they<br />

weren't empty like they are now. They all had big congregat-<br />

ions. And you went to church children from the children up.<br />

You take in them days it wasn" a question <strong>of</strong> whether you<br />

were going to Sunday School ar not. If you was too sick to<br />

go to Sunday School, you were too sick to go out. The kids<br />

knew that. You went to Sunday School. f went to Sunday<br />

School - started out in little teeny chairs and because<br />

everybody was the same way. Everybody went to church.<br />

Harvey: How did the tension with the Catholics come up ill<br />

politf cs?


LEWIS #099 2:1:51<br />

liewis: Just that they didn't - just as I say, now over in<br />

the tenth ward Sonny hahone and Curran<br />

where there was a big Catholic settlement. See, that4 s<br />

how part <strong>of</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> was. Was Catholic, and they all<br />

stuck to ether down there. They tried to hire fellows out<br />

here to try to get Democrat votes out here. Just like anybody,<br />

they tried to get people to work in different neighborhoods<br />

for them, but Sonny Mahone and them fellows, you got a jab in<br />

the city - like in those days, was horse and wagon driving a<br />

cart and stuff like that, you had to have their approval.<br />

And . . .<br />

Harvey: Well, did the Catholics in Hampden tend to be Demo-<br />

crats?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Mostly all, mostly all.<br />

Harvey: HOW do you think the Republican power - say, up<br />

until the First World War into the twenties, how did it<br />

dissipate?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, it went down for the simple reason that these<br />

people coming up from the south were Protestants and all<br />

were Democrat because they were southerners, You see, if<br />

you go back and study history, England backed the South,<br />

They had all them slaves, all <strong>of</strong> them. And that was it.<br />

Of course, Maryland was a Catholic settlement to begin with.<br />

But there were different sections; over in the old tenth<br />

ward Protestants didn't go over in the old tenth ward over<br />

around Greenmount Avenue down below North Avenue over there.<br />

Hawes: But the Catholics here were Democrats and the


southerners were . . .<br />

LEWISi099 XI: 1:52<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: They were Democrats: they sympathisized with the<br />

South and so on.<br />

Hawes : The southerners were Protestants.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: They were Protestants, but they were Democrats.<br />

A lot <strong>of</strong> these people come up here to work, but most <strong>of</strong><br />

them big land owners if you look down there you'd findthey were.<br />

And same way with Southern Maryland. In other wards, Federal<br />

Hill; the Federal troops fortified that, and that's why the<br />

<strong>Baltimore</strong> Merchant was in trouble. They'd have the<br />

city down. And the first bloodshed really shed in the Civil<br />

War between troops was Massachusetts Regiment at Light and<br />

Pratt Streets when the southern sympathizers here in Maryland<br />

attacked them, they had to shoot at them. But those are the<br />

things, but out here we never had anyone to speak <strong>of</strong>. You<br />

had ward leaders . . . I'm just trying to think . . . got a<br />

whole Democrat ward do me a favor in the late twenties.<br />

I forget the name - Bob . . . lived over on <strong>University</strong><br />

Parkway. And I called him up -thg. do favors for Republicans<br />

as well as you would the Democrats. You could go to a Demo-<br />

crat with a favor; if he felt like doing it, he did it; if<br />

he didn't he didn't want ta tell you no. In other words,<br />

Cliff Case, he was Secretary to a Congressman. And he<br />

couldn't do what I wanted; I wanted a letter. Frank Robey<br />

at that time was clerk down here and I said, "Prankn. He<br />

said no, he was in a different one, so I was sitting home<br />

and I can't think <strong>of</strong> that fellow's name - Bob; I never met<br />

him until later in the gear - X called him up and told him


LEWIS;099 II:1:53<br />

what I wanted, told him who X was, told him I was Republican<br />

and he was a Democrat. I said I need this letter and I'd<br />

like to get it. He asked me to go to the union, I told all<br />

the businessmen, Paul , Billy Burns, Charlie Benson,<br />

Cavacos. He said that's enough; so he told me he<br />

said give me a call tomorrow night. Next night he called me<br />

he said it's in the mail for you - I'm sending you a letter,<br />

a copy <strong>of</strong> the letter to send to the other party as a letter-<br />

<strong>of</strong> introduction I told hrm,<br />

I said anytime you got a candidate that"^ in trouble, I'm<br />

as close as the telephone. He never did call me up to support<br />

anybody.<br />

But, I mean I never worried whether a man was Democratic<br />

or Republican, never worried me. And my wife up until recent<br />

years has always registered Democrat. My wife and I went in to<br />

register together because we were about the same age. They<br />

laughed like the dickens. . . Boy, ain't that a family, she's<br />

Democrat and he's Republican, I said look, I never told my wife<br />

how to vote; 1 always polls . I go, I know<br />

the average person don't figure it but it costs you twenty,<br />

twenty-five dollars a year tax to go to the polling places.<br />

And it w ill figure twenty or twenty-five dollars before I 'm<br />

going to exercise the right to let them count it. And<br />

that' s the way people should feel.<br />

Hawes:<br />

Mr. <strong>Lewis</strong>, what about Frank Robey - when did he<br />

start to be involved in politics?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: I imagine Frank started probably in the twenties -<br />

a little after the early twenties, Because he worked in the


LEWIS; 099 I1 : 1 : 54<br />

mill, then he come out and started in the co-op; he and<br />

Martin and Heath. And at 28th and Huntington, and that<br />

didn't work out. And Frank started the store up here.<br />

Wasn't too long after that he got in politics,<br />

Hawes : HOW did he get started? What did he do first?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: What do you mean - politics? Just in the neighbor-<br />

hood; you know fellows meeting around the clubs, there was<br />

different ones and they figured the folLawing he had, to<br />

carry votes, and he did. And he had a minor j oh; I dan ' t<br />

know just what it was. Then when he wrote to the Clerk <strong>of</strong><br />

the Court . . .<br />

See, in the old days you done something like you try to<br />

do now - they tried to keep those jobs in each district,<br />

to keep everybody happy. Of course Frank had down there where<br />

you get your marriage licenses and business permits ani3 all.<br />

And I danCt know when Frank got in down there; I think<br />

Frank got in there in the late twenties or early thirties<br />

Clerk <strong>of</strong> the Court. And he wasn't a acllege boy.<br />

See, wasn't: too many lawyers down there - w ell, there<br />

wasn't many colleges. But you didn't need a college . . .<br />

Today, the average guy that finished the eighth grade the<br />

old days today. I mean, I hate to say<br />

that; I don't mean to be nasty, but facts are facts and you<br />

deal with it, you seen them - they can't add, they can't<br />

read, they can't write. And I feel sorry for them - I<br />

think it's terrible when a person can't count.<br />

Hawes: Well, what kind <strong>of</strong> things did Robey do in ampd den?


LEWIS;099 XI:lz55<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, in the neighborhood, as far as political,<br />

he got a lot <strong>of</strong> boys jobs in the city down there - in his<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice and other jobs down there and different places.<br />

Like all politicians - highway departments and things like<br />

that, lot <strong>of</strong> that. and . . .<br />

[END TAPE I1 SIDE I; BEGIN TAPE I1 SIDE 21<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: . . .I get my job by being elected,<br />

Hawes: What 1 wonder is: who supported Robey from Hampden?<br />

Who were the people?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Oh* all <strong>of</strong> us old-timers supported, but we never had<br />

enough vote to carry the district for him.<br />

Hawes : What about the businessmen?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Businessmen all liked Frank. Businessmen only got<br />

one vote; in fact today in the late years there's very<br />

few businessmen live in Hampden. And one t ime every merchant<br />

on 36th Street all lived in Hampden. Now you don't have<br />

that.<br />

Harvey: What effect do you think the m ills and Poole and<br />

Runt - the other industries - have on politics around here?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, that was never talked; you never heard people<br />

in the m ills, the bosses or anything at all, talking politics.<br />

mid the big bosses - see, old man Bowersox down here, he<br />

was one a£ the overseers in the mill and he was Catholic.<br />

He was Catholic, I just happened to think; he was one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

only ones I remember was a boss.<br />

HaWeS : That was Mt, Vernon.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, Bowersox - no, he had Druid M i l l and Park M ill,<br />

and he lived right there at Buena Vista Avenue. Big house


up on the . . .<br />

LEWIS;099 II:2:56<br />

See, all the big bosses had them big stone houses.<br />

But politics was never talked in them places, just like the<br />

bonze wasn't allowed out here - different things was taboo<br />

out here. And, I mean, the Carroll place down there: their<br />

estate down there - that was a beautiful place. But, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, the last Carroll that was living just wasn't all<br />

there and down. Prank Robey's wife was a<br />

Joeckal. They lived around here. Well, her brother still<br />

lives down here. Frank come in from E llicott City, that's<br />

where he come from originally. Ha worked in mills out in<br />

Ellicott City, came here during World War I, the beginning<br />

<strong>of</strong> it. And then he stayed here. There's a lot <strong>of</strong> them did.<br />

Harvey: Rww about Jack Pollack - what effect did he have<br />

on politics?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, Jack Pollack come here f rom New York, Jack<br />

Pollack beat a murder rap in New York and come here and<br />

old Mrs. Bernschmidt fought him to a grand standstill,<br />

Harvey: Who did?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Mrs. Bernsehmidt - Pred ~ernschmidt" wife, the<br />

beer man's wife. Of course, the beer man was dead before<br />

World War went dry. George ~ernschmidt's beer GBS.<br />

And she fought him to a standstill. And she told people<br />

what was going to happen: she told them the truth. Today,<br />

the gamblers have control <strong>of</strong> politics; no question about<br />

it. They said Dewey ran in New York, and<br />

Dewey was State's Attorney in New York, Came down here and


LEWIS;099 ZL:2:57<br />

and firs. Bernschmidt - little old woman, dried up, she only<br />

weighed about 75 pounds soaking wet, lived over on Univers-<br />

ity Parkway - and she was down here building schools at<br />

that time. And she would go around and climb ladders and<br />

everything else see they were putting in stuff they were<br />

supposed to. And, mister, when she went down to anywhere -<br />

Annapolis, City Hall: the doors was thrwed wide open to her,<br />

mister. Don't you think it wasn't. They all respected her<br />

because she'd jump an them and . . . she had facts. She<br />

had the kind <strong>of</strong> facts that we ought to have today.<br />

In those days she had two people on committees for each<br />

school. You seen something that went on in those schools<br />

shouldn't be going on to, you could call up and tell her.<br />

But you wrote it down, time and everything else; when she<br />

took something up, she wrote it dawn. And she done a lot.<br />

You see this school up here at Roland Park? She made them<br />

tear the whole third floor <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> it. She went to Europe<br />

they put that third floor supposed to be three bricks, they<br />

only put two - they <strong>of</strong>fered to cut the price on it and every-<br />

thing else. She said no way. That's the kind <strong>of</strong> fun [laughs]<br />

don't matter if I see it. She come back quicker than<br />

they thought she was.<br />

Harvey: She wasn't from Hampden.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, she was from <strong>University</strong> Parkway, right when you<br />

go up Keswick Road and go across - that house up on the side,<br />

big house up these.<br />

Harvey: Did she have an <strong>of</strong>ficial function? Did she work


for the city, or what?<br />

LEWIS:099 II:2:58<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Only watchdog - she wasn't elected to nothing, but<br />

she had so much on them politicians that they all. were<br />

scared to death cf her; they didn't want Marie on their back.<br />

Harvey: When was she around, now - about what year?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Oh, about - the first I knew anything <strong>of</strong> her was<br />

around '24. 1 think she died; I don't know if she died after<br />

World War I1 or not, You take that, you know Union Memorial<br />

Hospital over there on the east end; that whole block there,<br />

She built that in memory <strong>of</strong> her husband. Furnished it and<br />

everything else, four stories high, That was the Bernschmidt's<br />

section; you still got the plaque over in that old building.<br />

: M r. <strong>Lewis</strong>, not exactly politics but maybe part <strong>of</strong><br />

politics . . .who were the people in Hampden the last fifty<br />

years since the twenties stay?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: In these Last years Jack Pollack control this district.<br />

He controlled it. Mike Triplett worked for him. And George<br />

Bailey worked for Mike . . . or, Jack Pollack. W i l l i e<br />

Curran, when Pollack comes down, Willie Curran (former Mayor)<br />

he had Dr. Morrissey he was the coroner out here. The<br />

Powers Boys drugstore. They were a11 Willie Curran's. Now<br />

Willie Curran, he was a Catholic - staunch Catholic. So<br />

was Dr. ~orrissey and Dr. Powers. And they were with<br />

Willie Curran and Pollack come out and started to build up.<br />

In the meantime Robey started to build up and then,<br />

<strong>of</strong> course, Keller - Leonard Keller - was his lieutenant.<br />

And Leonard Keller up until Robey died. You wanted anything


LEWIS; 099 11: 2: 59<br />

from rank you were supposed to go to Leonard to get it from<br />

him.<br />

R ~ b y ?<br />

: How did Dr. Morrissey and Dr. Powers fit in with<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they were in with curran and Pollack, they said.<br />

In the neighborhood Powers had the drugstore at Elm Avenue<br />

where Murphy's is. And then they finally sold that property<br />

and moved out to Chestnut Avenue. That's where they went and<br />

went out <strong>of</strong> business. One <strong>of</strong> them died, the other one was<br />

gist: down at the Penitentiary. Dr. Morrissey was about 3 drug-<br />

houses below that alley on Roland Avenue below 37th Street,<br />

3-store house. He was a coroner around here, the last<br />

coxonex that is before they took all that down the morgue<br />

downtown. And they . . .<br />

Rawes: They sort <strong>of</strong> go out as Pollack came in?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Then Pollack kept building up in the neighborhood and<br />

through his club over there - Jack Pollack's Club - just<br />

like the Stonewall Club put McGuirk in <strong>of</strong>fice. McGuirk's<br />

a big leader in South <strong>Baltimore</strong> with that Stonewall Club.<br />

Harvey: Did people in Hampden oppose Jack Pollack?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Oh, a lot <strong>of</strong> people opposed him all over <strong>Baltimore</strong><br />

City, but he had too much money behind him.<br />

In other words,<br />

you take Jackson, you take D' AZesandro I the old<br />

man). Of course, he didn't last too long in it . .<br />

You see what they do, where they get their<br />

business agenda - they helped elect these men. So you got<br />

a bunch <strong>of</strong> dmp trucks and you want to hire them out to<br />

the city, right?<br />

The only way you can hire them out to


LEWIS #099 2:2:60<br />

the city is buy your insurance through me. If you don't<br />

have your insurance through me, you don't run a truck<br />

there. And if you drop that insurance, you're out - I<br />

don't mean to be nasty on such cold facts. That's what<br />

they have rackets - they've always.had some way or other to<br />

do it, Old days I don't know just how to do it, but in<br />

late years it's been mostly through insurance on trucks and<br />

stuff like that or your employees.<br />

Harvey: Well, what was the relationship do you know <strong>of</strong><br />

Prank Robey to Jack Pollack?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Just that they were in the same party. They were<br />

opposite each other. Frank wasn't in with Robey at all.<br />

Harvey: You mean Robey wasn't in with Pollack at all.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That's sight. Robey had his watchers at the polls,<br />

pollack had his, Had to run us around. when I first<br />

went to the polls Jack Pollack sent men to every polling<br />

places to help you get the polling machines and stuff set<br />

up. And they all would come around with c<strong>of</strong>fee. And then<br />

Keller, he come around later on w ith c<strong>of</strong>fee and sandwiches.<br />

And it was a good thing; people don't realize it, but you<br />

got to get up them days when it used to be 6 o'clock. That<br />

meant you had to get there by 5 to get in there by 6 and<br />

it takes you a good hour to get everything ready ta operate.<br />

Hawes : Did Robey ever openly do anything to oppose<br />

Pollack?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Do what?<br />

awes : Oppose Pollack?


LEWIS;099 II:2:61<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they'd have their different candidates in the<br />

primary - PoLlack might be supporting this one, Robey support-<br />

ing that one. And then, f mean this was something w ith any-<br />

one in politics . . . they all got their watchers out and<br />

nobody knows how you!.re voting exactly, but they haw just<br />

about. f used to didn't vote until about 4 o'clock in the<br />

evening because I'd find out what the score was : they made<br />

a deal they're going to put one candidate in front <strong>of</strong> another<br />

one, so you vote that way, if they were good men, <strong>of</strong> course.<br />

But it's still done today in the primaries. Cut them<br />

the Last minute . . . 1'11 tell you - you don't think this<br />

election with Hughes was done because sf popularity, I hope.<br />

I hope you not that . . .the word come down we going to<br />

knock him out and we're going to put Hughes in - it was all<br />

done after, say, 11 or 12 o'clock. Nokdy had a chance. I<br />

mean, just like voting . . . today you talk to a person<br />

about cutting the ticket they don't even know what you're<br />

talking about.<br />

Do you know what cutting the ticket is? Do you know<br />

how to cut a ticket? I mean, even when you went to vote, a<br />

man says cut your ticket for my man . . , do you know what<br />

he means? Well, I'll tell you what it means * . .There's<br />

four people running, six people running for five <strong>of</strong>fices.<br />

Instead <strong>of</strong> voting for five, you vote for his candidate alone<br />

and give him one vote over everybody. And today you don't<br />

even hear it discussed. It's like today people are not<br />

educated you do not need an education. They<br />

cannot borrow money unless it's approved by the voters and


LEWIS:099 II:2:62<br />

people won't vote against it, and they raise hell because<br />

their taxes went up. And it's . . . one <strong>of</strong> the things that<br />

I'm so opposed is these school loans. If they want to build<br />

a school right now -I88 that will be on the ballot<br />

by the lean, now by the time that school is built, half that<br />

money's gone. And I say they shouldn' t be allowed to<br />

borrow money for two years. In other words, you want to<br />

build a school in '$1, we're going to buy it this year.<br />

Harvey: In 1938 they had the celebration out here; the fifty-<br />

yeas celebration. Was there any attempt at that t ime to<br />

form a political organization?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No . . . you see, back in the twenties after World<br />

War I things started to happen. World War XI finished it <strong>of</strong>f.<br />

You had all these organizations - Junior Order <strong>of</strong><br />

Woman <strong>of</strong> the World, Red Men, Odd Fellows, and everybody<br />

belonged to a lodge. That was the only activities the men<br />

had at night, see. See, your prohibition was on - you could<br />

go to a speakeasy, but you don't >now whethex that was going<br />

to get raided ax not. Nobody wants to stay in a speakeasy.<br />

And that's where politics was talked ever, and one thing<br />

and another. You" 90 in them organizations and talk polities,<br />

well, this man belong to organization and in those days all<br />

them organizations had ; and everything else,<br />

see. You take Junior Order <strong>of</strong> United American Mechanics<br />

up to World War I had ta call them Junior Mechanics. They<br />

used to train them with rifles and everything else; they<br />

used to have two weeks down to Betterton same as the National


LEWfS;099 I1:2:63<br />

Guard. And ever since I was a little fellow they always<br />

marched up to graveyard with the Grand Anny Men right up<br />

to the cemetery because this cemetery got lots <strong>of</strong> Grand<br />

Army men up there; in fact, I'd say I guess there's five<br />

or six hundred <strong>of</strong> them up there. In them days people . .<br />

Harvey: Did lodges tend ta line up with one party or<br />

another?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they . . . not necessarily. As n rule they<br />

stuck together up here mostly they backed Republican cand-<br />

idates. As I tell you, it was a Republican stronghold.<br />

But there was Democrats in the organizations that didn't<br />

say nothing, and a lot <strong>of</strong> times in those days people would<br />

be petty. Keep you out <strong>of</strong> organizations.<br />

Harvey: Do you think that the lodges sort <strong>of</strong> went downhill<br />

in the twenties?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: The lodges was destroyed by the foreign element,<br />

because the lodges were against immigration. After immigration<br />

gow broke down tha-t: they can bring anybody in here they want<br />

regardless whether we got people working or not, it lost<br />

its principle and their activities, and young men don't qa<br />

for it.<br />

Hawes: When was that , . , when did that happen?<br />

~ewis: Back in the t wenties, after World War X - they<br />

brought lodges and they did everything they<br />

could to keep them out. And then, <strong>of</strong> course, when RooseveLt<br />

went in there in the thirties, why the barrier was down on<br />

immigration. And just brought them in here. Just like now,


LEWIS;099 II:2:64<br />

look how many they can bring in here . . . I'm not talking<br />

about these boat people . . . they bring in here now, and<br />

yet we got unemployment, Then they tell our American girls<br />

not to have children and then them people come in here<br />

breeding families. I'm not trying to be nasty, I mean . . .<br />

Hawes: What about besides politicians, beyond politicians<br />

. . .who were the people in Hampden over theyears who you<br />

remember that people turned to for leadership. Not necess-<br />

arily political leadership?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, you take Benson out there, T.C. Davis, Coleman,<br />

a11 those businessmen would help the people out.<br />

talk to those people and they took care <strong>of</strong> their own.<br />

Hawes: Did they have any organizations. Were they in any<br />

organization in any way: did they help each other?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, most <strong>of</strong> the businessmen out here helped each<br />

ather with the property improvement and the property.. You<br />

take Benson's was a big factor here. They one time named a whole<br />

row <strong>of</strong> houses down there back <strong>of</strong> Buena Vista Avenue<br />

it was called Benson Street. It was before my time, but by the<br />

time they -it burned out. And then their store was down<br />

there on 36th Street. And they come up and took that<br />

property over from Hickory Avenue to Roland Avenue and up<br />

Roland Avenue up above where That was all<br />

there. And they donated the ground for Grace Church. Of<br />

course, they sold the ground Xnothe and built that Knothe<br />

building there. That was in 1928.<br />

Hawes: Benson donated the ground for . . .


LEWIS;099 3I:2:65<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Grace Church, yes. To build it on . . . told you<br />

the pxice, <strong>of</strong> course. There were pillars in Grace Church.<br />

George Benson was Sunday School Superintendent for years.<br />

Charlie, he was a bachelor; he never married.<br />

It was all like people, see you'd have to know them -<br />

the only time, even though you get mad at a family was<br />

neglected by carelessnes <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the parents - they always<br />

seen that they had something to eat or a job or something<br />

like that. Of course, Cavacos the same way. out. One<br />

time today, there were two factions <strong>of</strong> Greeks in this<br />

country, and Cavacos brought them together. He was a big<br />

chu~ch leader: not only in Maryland, but all over the<br />

country. And Mr. Gus liked me ever since X was a kid and<br />

as I got older belonged to some organizations and traveled<br />

around tagether and he was influenced by things that happened,<br />

It was funny in 1939 my w ife took her kid brother<br />

to Atlantic City over Labor Day. Got down there couldn't<br />

get reservations, so coming back out Atlantic City and I<br />

stopped at the little hotel, Greek people, and I asked them<br />

if they had anything. They said no, and I said, do you have<br />

any idea where I can go close up the road?<br />

brother with us. He said, what part are you<br />

from? I said Hampden. He said do you know Cavacos. I<br />

said, I know M r. Gus xeal well: I said Mr. Gus so-and-so<br />

and so-and-so. Wait a minute - went out and talked to his<br />

wife and them people gave us their bed and put a curtain<br />

up there and my brother-in-law so we could have privacy.


LE1?1S:099 11~2: 66<br />

And they slept in the kitchen <strong>of</strong> the hotel. Him and his<br />

wife slept in the kitchen. Of course, we had to eat there;<br />

we went in all told when the holidays were over.<br />

Hawes: Maybe you know something about I%e been told,<br />

that when Theodore Cavacos bought what's the bbok store right<br />

now on the corner <strong>of</strong> Roland and 36th.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That's his brother.<br />

: Right . . . that he had some problems - people<br />

didn't like . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they pulled a deal over there. They built<br />

that store out by the city line, and then they went into<br />

court. Built it first and spent plenty <strong>of</strong> money and went<br />

into court to tear it down. Used to be in the front <strong>of</strong><br />

the store before they tore it down<br />

Hawes: But who fought him? Flho were the people who<br />

fought him?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: He fought Roland Avenue, the property owners.<br />

Everybody fought him, and <strong>of</strong> course, he got away with it.<br />

And just Like I say when they left Greece, these Greeks<br />

left Greece, they stole a lot <strong>of</strong> ornaments. I told you<br />

this before, and the woman used to show up all around<br />

Washington and nobody even know what it was - the people<br />

couldn ' t understand why the police didn' t do some thing<br />

about it. But they finally, after three or four years,<br />

located them, it was in the cellar where Bansen got his<br />

television shop. They dug them out <strong>of</strong> there, but Theodore<br />

Cavacos he was crazy. In fact, he died in an insane asylum.


LEWIS;O99 lf:2:67<br />

And, <strong>of</strong> course, Gus was the oldest and he was boss,<br />

just like Tass is the boss now. Tass is the<br />

head knocker and you'll find that Gus Cavacos done a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> good work out here, Weinstein done a lot <strong>of</strong> good work<br />

out here. I know Weinstein used to come 0u.t here right<br />

from World War I - and they were out there next to where<br />

the bar is, Roaches, that's where they started out, and<br />

Max, Morris' brother was a great big Xussian. They were<br />

Russian Jews and about ten feet and about<br />

that wide deliver around Re was a brutal<br />

man. But they were all . . . myself, 1 say it's what you<br />

are because you were born that way. Same way as people's<br />

religion; as far as I was concerned the average person<br />

is a Catholic, Protestant, Jehovah's Witness<br />

because they were brought up that way.<br />

Hawes: How did those kinds <strong>of</strong> leaders relate to Frank<br />

Robey in politics and like that?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they knew him out here, he was out here, He<br />

was a friendly man, Frank Robey was a friendly man; he wasn't<br />

a dxinking man. Never give anybody any trouble; he worked<br />

hard - everything he had he worked and made for himself.<br />

Hawes: Did they support him, or , . .3<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: They all supported, but people wouldn't vote for<br />

him. I mean, he just never carried this district. The<br />

people . . other words, some people come to you hungry for<br />

something and you can' t give them and then you're<br />

and then they get this and that one to get it. And I laugh


LEWLS;O99 I1:2:68<br />

at them. A man can't do something for you, he can't do<br />

nothing for you. He can, he does. After all, your boss<br />

can only do so much for you. He can't d~ nothing else and<br />

his boss or anybody else. Just like where I went to work<br />

you realized your company didn't make money you didn't<br />

have a job. Today you hear them all say oh, to hell with<br />

the company. You hear them say this and that; if the<br />

company isn't making money they're going to go broke, and<br />

you're out <strong>of</strong> a job. Of course, you got unwtploymene and<br />

all that, but that's running out on a lot <strong>of</strong> us.<br />

Harvey: What kind <strong>of</strong> organizations were you in with Gus<br />

Cavacos? I think earlier you said that you were in some<br />

organizations w ith GUS Cavacos?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: I was in the Masonic Fraternity w ith him and a<br />

couple branches <strong>of</strong> theirs. Gus was a Masan and then, <strong>of</strong><br />

course the ether organization, you had to be American born<br />

to belong to them. Most 05 the people couldn't belong to<br />

them. Only American born could belong to them, But that's<br />

how I come around with Gus, silly Burns, a31<br />

<strong>of</strong> us - we all went around together. They were older men<br />

than I, but I enjoyed being with them.<br />

Harvey: From the Masons? Was that Piekering Lodge?<br />

~ewis: Pickering Lodge; Gus belonged to King David. Mast<br />

<strong>of</strong> them around here belonged to Piekering Lodge because<br />

~ickesing Lodge was founded in Mt. Washington and then moved<br />

to Hampden. And a L ot <strong>of</strong> lodges - we built a big temple<br />

downtown and used to m eet around. And then when they built


LEWIS:099 fI:2:2:69<br />

the temple on <strong>Charles</strong> Street the lodges had to get down<br />

Haaes: T heard that there was some reasons why Gus didn't<br />

get into Pickering Lodge,<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: He didn't get into Pickering Lodge because he was a<br />

Greek. Xing David" haa a lot <strong>of</strong> Greeks in it. Just like<br />

pretty well; today, it's different - they<br />

had even Gentiles in there. temple was Jewish.<br />

and many were German. Same way with - mostly<br />

German descent. In other words, the object was you were<br />

friends and you associated but you go in your lodge and<br />

all. Just like I been over all the town and Pennsylvania<br />

and all. Same way with Gus. But it was nothing in the rules,<br />

it was just an unwritten rule that you went with your own.<br />

Just like today; it amuses me with integration. Colored<br />

people like to be among themselves; Jewish people like to<br />

be among themselves - there was never no law on it.<br />

Tommy DtALesandro don't have to live down Little<br />

Italy. He can live anywhere he wants, but a lot <strong>of</strong> them<br />

want to live there. Park Heights Avenue - when the Jews<br />

lived down around L ittle Italy i n Old Town they went out<br />

Park Heights Avenue. Nobpdy run them out there. But<br />

down around Central Avenue, <strong>Baltimore</strong> Street where Little<br />

Italy is now - that was Jewtown. You can read that in<br />

the library; I mean they moved out Park Heights Avenue.<br />

When they went out Park Heights Avenue nobody was bothering<br />

them, but when you got up around the race track


LEWIS; 099 11: 2 :70<br />

3 mean, and you find in many countries the same way. YOU<br />

take if we went to a foreign country; when we yo wouldn't<br />

we want to be around a bunch <strong>of</strong> Americans kalking English,<br />

know what we're talking about? And that's all,<br />

Harvey: Would you tell us a little bit more about the<br />

Junior Order <strong>of</strong> Hechanies . . . you were in the Golden Rule<br />

br aneh?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Golden Rule Council, that's right.<br />

Harvey; It got so big that they started another one, *he<br />

Monumental?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Monumental, that's right, Those days if you were<br />

sick, they paid sick benefits, four dollars a week and then<br />

you got three hundred dollars at death. You didn't, your<br />

widow did. Sort <strong>of</strong> an insurance, and then they had a home<br />

out there in Ohio you was eligible to go to. And <strong>of</strong> course,<br />

if you was sick, come out and see you and if things<br />

were going bad you needed a house and food or something like<br />

that, that was all taken care <strong>of</strong>. In other words, that was<br />

the way it was. That's why you didn't have all this welfare<br />

and all this administration.<br />

Harvey : How did it start; the Junior Order <strong>of</strong> ~echanics?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: 1 couldn't tell you; it was an old oxganization<br />

started way back - I don" know how far, actually never said<br />

in the history <strong>of</strong> it, But 1 do know it started back in the<br />

early 1800's.<br />

Harvey: You weren't involved in the beginning <strong>of</strong> the local<br />

branch?


LEWISi099 I1 :2 :71<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No I didn't go in - 1 guess it was 1919 that I went<br />

in. But then f was Counselor and then they elected me Chairman<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees. Had a lot <strong>of</strong> money; there were a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> owned that building out there. They had stock in<br />

the old <strong>Baltimore</strong> Trust Company. Fortunately, they got rid <strong>of</strong><br />

that before they went bankrupt, I saved $10,000 there [laughs].<br />

But that was more or less an accident,<br />

But those organizations and the people - see, the members<br />

you didn- get paid for that. It was just like a f ellow said<br />

termed the or races or anywhere - he don't get paid<br />

far that. He don't even get any expenses, that is personal<br />

expenses. Of course, any charity he gets reimbursed for<br />

that. All them organizations, &ions Club - all them -<br />

Optimists, they all do a certain amount <strong>of</strong> charity work.<br />

Yau don't hear a lot about it, and that's the way it should<br />

be. I think it was much bettex the way we took care <strong>of</strong> our<br />

own then it is now, because there wasn't a whole lot <strong>of</strong><br />

recores or anything else.<br />

I was in the organization not too long ago . . , well, we<br />

always give a floral design. At times, my job take care <strong>of</strong><br />

floral designs. I had to know the family was up against it,<br />

and I went to the woman and I asked her. I know things are right<br />

rough for you; if you want, I'll give you a check instead <strong>of</strong> a<br />

floral design. She said we can use that money a whole lot<br />

better than we can use the floral. design. So 1'11 be honest<br />

with you, I had that privilege. I added more<br />

onto it and I give it to her. 3 had a monkey raised hell


LEWIS;099 II:2:72<br />

because we didn't have a floral design, and he got up in the<br />

meeting and questioned about the floral design. I said it<br />

was all taken care <strong>of</strong>. I didn't see it. . .I said I didn't<br />

care whether you seen it; I just told you it was all taken<br />

care <strong>of</strong>. So, after the meeting was over 1 took him aside<br />

and I said I want you to do me a favor. He said, what's that?<br />

I said I want you to go down and see his wife and<br />

ask her if the organization gave her anything for her husband.<br />

After a few minutes he turned white, walked away. Later on<br />

he come back to me and he says, I'm sorry I was so damned<br />

dense. I mean, we were no organization to do that. We had<br />

a guy that was sick, arm broke. I went up there to see him<br />

how he was. Hell, they were ready to shut his . , ,<br />

[END TAPE I1 SIDE 2; BEGIN TAPE III SIDE 11<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: . . .they know you don't squander their money: I<br />

mean if somebody really wanted to know what I done w ith it,<br />

I would tell them, but 1 'rn not going to get up in front <strong>of</strong><br />

the meeting . . .<br />

Harvey: OK, let me put an introduction on here again, Mr.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>. This interview, this is Tape 11 <strong>of</strong> an interview with<br />

Mr. Roy <strong>Lewis</strong> <strong>of</strong> Hampden. The interview was conducted at<br />

the Hampden Woodberry Remington Community Center an July 29,<br />

by Bill Harvey and Susie Hawes; <strong>Baltimore</strong> Neighborhood<br />

Heritage Project.<br />

Let me ask you this: how would you compare the old<br />

lodges, the Mechanics, and all them to the<br />

groups today, the new clubs like the Barn Burners and Pang-<br />

ers, and so forth?


LEWIS; 099 III:1:73<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Oh, well the moral and religious issue involved;<br />

I mean you have to have good character to get in any <strong>of</strong> those<br />

organizations. If you was in trouble with -the law or some-<br />

thing like that, forget it. You have to be <strong>of</strong> good character,<br />

one thing and another; you take in those days even though<br />

had a pool parlor out there where had that saloon<br />

now; if you hang in there you couldn't get in any <strong>of</strong> those<br />

organizations. Although he rented the pool room from the<br />

Junior Orders - they owned that bui1ding.Y~~ were with better<br />

people; now before my time, be£ ore come around, the<br />

visited each other; they go across town and all that in those<br />

days. And according to the records and the older men I talked<br />

to, it was mostly a walking case . . . walk over these other<br />

lodges and all and learn different things, and they'd have<br />

a little xefxeshment. And sandwiches and c<strong>of</strong>fee, stuff.<br />

And then they'd come visit you; occasionally we had them out<br />

here. The lodge would visit us and we always had refreshments.<br />

Even though they were small, them buildings, they all<br />

had a kitchen and all. That's why they could do those things.<br />

Today, the national organizations are vanishing, except for<br />

the Lions and Optimists and different ones. And most <strong>of</strong> those<br />

are where only two men in the same business can belong. And<br />

the Optimists, two jewelers, two grocery men, two undertakers,<br />

two lawyers, two doctors, two general merchandisers, The<br />

same way goes for those other clubs. So, they're really<br />

youx business leaders, and most <strong>of</strong> them work in the community;<br />

most <strong>of</strong> them have a pet project. The Lions it's the Eye Bank,<br />

the Optimists it's the Boys, and <strong>of</strong> course today I'd say


LEWIS #099 3:1:74<br />

that they also take in the girls. But that is a point <strong>of</strong><br />

it wa& helping the children out to go along. In other words,<br />

we sponsored baseball games and basketball games, But some<br />

<strong>of</strong> the children can't get equipment, so you don't embarrass a<br />

child if he's not in position to get it: we always arranged<br />

some kind <strong>of</strong> a deal that he won the equipment he needed, him-<br />

self. Things that you do - and make them feel good. A child<br />

gets out and learns- Now, most parents are busy making money<br />

for their children and they don't really enjoy their children,<br />

and when they come out with the men it gives them a chance to<br />

see what they can do when they go out, I've had children<br />

setting next to me didn't know they how to . . . at the<br />

dinner - and I supervised and look after them, and I didn't<br />

have no trouble with them. Later on, 3 met them different<br />

places out and they always came around me. But the parents<br />

give them money and all that, a lot <strong>of</strong> them. But they just<br />

don't have the the to take care 05 them or take them any-<br />

where.<br />

Harvey: Is it accurate to say then that the new clubs are<br />

more social clubs, wheras the old lodges dealt more with<br />

moral and political things, and that there were more rigid<br />

requirements for getting in?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That's right.<br />

Harvey: What kind <strong>of</strong> requirements did they have fox getting<br />

in to, say, the Junior Order <strong>of</strong> Mechankcs?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, those days you had to be clean character. You<br />

couldn't have no police record and you had to be a church-<br />

going person. And then, even then, something that maybe a


LEWIS: 099 111:1:75<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> people didn't know - we could blackball them, And it<br />

wasn't three blackballs . . . one blackball. And they blackball<br />

you and that's all there was. And nobody knew why you were<br />

blackballed or anything else, you were just blackballed, that's<br />

all.And you seen things happen surprise you: 1 seen things happen.<br />

Harvey: Did y ~ have u to be Protestant to be in the Mechanics?<br />

~ewis: Most <strong>of</strong> them, yes. Knights <strong>of</strong> Columbus was the Cath-<br />

olics, see. It wasn't so much them organizations wouldn't<br />

take Catholics - Catholics wasn't allowed to join then.<br />

Their own faith wouldn't allow them to join.<br />

I mean, you hear a lot <strong>of</strong> this story about Catholic this<br />

can't do this; Catholics can do<br />

it but the faith don't believe in it and they don't do it.<br />

Harvey: You said a f ew times that<br />

the lodges worked against immigration, What kinds <strong>of</strong> things<br />

did they do? What did they do?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: The Congressmen and senators. They spent money in<br />

political campaigns and stuff like that for congressmen and<br />

senators to keep them from coming in here. And there was<br />

always a certain amount. But that's how our country become<br />

over-populated. Now they're bringing them in. You figures<br />

a thousand <strong>of</strong> these coming in and children and all.<br />

Harvey: Were there other political issues that those lodges<br />

addressed themselves to? Let's say World War I.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, they were all against that. Wilson, right be-<br />

fore he was . . . w ell, during the election absolutely it<br />

wasn't going ko war; no, sir, peace - it was absolutely for


LEWIS; 099 1x1 :I r76<br />

peace, and even in the inaugural address on March 4 - No,<br />

sir: it wasn't going to war. And yet, by April 18 they<br />

were in the war.<br />

Harvey: Did the Junior Order <strong>of</strong> Mechanics oppose entry in-<br />

to the war?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Sure, all <strong>of</strong> them opposed entry into the war - it's<br />

a terrible thing. Why should we get involved in the European<br />

war? We had nothing at stake; that was the Europeans fight-<br />

ing each other. It's true, this country here mast <strong>of</strong> us<br />

were English speaking people, but there's no reason in the<br />

world that we should lose our . . . our cream <strong>of</strong> our<br />

crop. Don't forget - your Army wasn't drafted or enlisted<br />

<strong>of</strong> your men. And you figure you got the cream <strong>of</strong> your crop<br />

killed in World War T and cone back and those we lost a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> the cream <strong>of</strong> the crop in '41 to '45 - men we had killed<br />

one and another. And then we come back in V iet Name<br />

Today, you could hardly . . . you could hardly get an<br />

Army together to fight.<br />

Harvey: Was the Mechanics a secret organization?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: We'd call it secret in the fact that they didn't tell<br />

You all the business. You took an oath <strong>of</strong><br />

allegiance to them, the same as you'd go into the court and<br />

swear the truth and the whole truth. The same as any organi-<br />

zation, but as far as being secret, or anything subversive<br />

or against the government or anything like thnt,patriotic<br />

organization . . . in other wards, one thing that any organi-<br />

zation you pledge allegiance to the government when you join.


Harvey: When was the decline <strong>of</strong> the Mechanics?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Oh, them organizations started to decline in the<br />

twenties after World War I and the Depression. They declined,<br />

and <strong>of</strong> course the automobiles come along, radios come along,<br />

stuff like that - just like moving pictures. Movies was<br />

everything. Moviesstartedhereon Street<br />

Avenue then they came out on 36th Street<br />

and you had the - next to where<br />

the Junior Order these where the building there, why<br />

you had the Across the street. Then Mr. Hicks,<br />

he was the tinsmith and he started movie there<br />

we had those two movies.<br />

Today, you've seen whathappenedto movies. They've<br />

outlived their usefulness.<br />

Harvey: Are you saying that the orders declined partly<br />

because there were other things to do in the evening?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That's right - those days people . * . in other words,<br />

now, I don't know - you people are young. And I don' t<br />

get around much with young people, either. But in our day<br />

we had pools; we had watermelon parties. And then we<br />

had surprise parties - everybody brought a package. md we<br />

had to make our own fun, and we had a good time. You talk<br />

to people and say<br />

some <strong>of</strong> them would laak at you.<br />

And yet it was a lot <strong>of</strong> fun; nobody got messed up. Young<br />

people had a good time; same way at watermelon parties.<br />

You didn't hear a lot about washing faces, but I went to a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> watermeLon parties and there wasn't no washing faces<br />

because you just didn't do that to your girlfriend. We were


LEWISt099 II1:1:78<br />

all little kids, it's true - 12, 13, 14 years old, but you<br />

respected the girls and they respected you. Or you might<br />

squirt a little seed at somebody, something like that, and<br />

we had a way <strong>of</strong> having fun, but we . . . I've heard people<br />

say about how they washed everybody's face and all this and<br />

that, but f never seen any <strong>of</strong><br />

that. But that was the story - it was the same way today.<br />

Today we buy crabs . . . in those days you went down and<br />

got crabs; I mean in latex years when I got so I didn't have<br />

time to crab, I used to go down the maxket there and f always<br />

bought 60 - that's 5 dozen to a bushel. And they were nice<br />

size erabs. And you always got a couple extra and they m ight<br />

have some dead ones in there. Then you'd steam them and<br />

crowd come around and you sit down and eat crabs.<br />

You'd have a little beer w ith it, but f mean, it wasn't no<br />

booze party or anything; you come in and drink because a sweet<br />

drink don't go good with crabs. Of course, I can eat crabs<br />

with anything most anybody else, but it tastes better with a<br />

glass <strong>of</strong> beer. ~ut, they were things you figured out.<br />

Now we used to go down to Fort Smallwood when the old. . .<br />

and we used to take a big iron pot with us and vinegar and<br />

mustard and everything and our bathing suits and we would<br />

buy old meat and would make a trout line, make it 50 feet<br />

long and pole and hang a bushel basket on it. And a crab<br />

got on it and we'd swim around and we'd pull on the line and<br />

we'd get him in the bushel basket and the first thing you<br />

know, we'd get nothing you could get out and put them in a


LEWIS;099 III:1:79<br />

bag and when we had enough we'd go out and<br />

along the beach and go over build a fire and steam them<br />

there, eat them. When we got done eating them we always<br />

got a shovel along, dig a hole in the sand, bury the crab<br />

shells so there wouldn't be no odor. .Fort Armistead.<br />

But today, you know, if I say let's go to Gettysburg, you<br />

jump in the car and back before . . . When we went to Gettys-<br />

burg you got up there took a lunch. Left here 8 o'clock and<br />

took a lunch, got up to Gettysburg and done a little bit <strong>of</strong><br />

that, eat your lunch, it was time to come back. You didn't<br />

have roads like you have now; you had in the roads,<br />

you had to go slow because you went to Gettysburg<br />

you just had to miss one <strong>of</strong> them and boy, blew your<br />

muffler. Those are the kinds <strong>of</strong> things that you did to pass<br />

the time away and, as I say, most everybody was church-going<br />

. . . don't forget, you had Sunday service pretty much all<br />

day. You had Sunday School, church, and then the young<br />

people in the afternoon. Then the night church<br />

services. And then you had choir rehearsals, you had Wednes-<br />

day night church services and that was it. And wintertime<br />

there wasn't too much<br />

nobody could afford to heat a11 their homes. In the twenties,<br />

we did start When I was a boy every-<br />

body lived in the kitchen. But, don't kid yourself; the rest<br />

<strong>of</strong> the house was cold and most <strong>of</strong> them had heat in them, but<br />

people couldn ' t afford to buy the stuff . Beat the house


LEWISr099 111:l:BO<br />

around Christmas time. Somebody died, because In them days<br />

you didn't lay you out in the funeral parlor, laid you out<br />

at home.<br />

Harvey: OK, let me just ask you a few questions for the last<br />

tape and maybe we can wrap It up - just a few things that<br />

hit me funny when I listened it.<br />

Why do you think so many people from Bampden worked for<br />

the Transit Company?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Well, one thing I'd put it this way: They had a<br />

terminal out here in Roland Park. They also, up on Falls<br />

Road there right by CockeysvilLe. Of course they only used<br />

that for storage most in my day and they had the 25 line.<br />

And then they had Oak Street, big base there. And<br />

~ ' say d one time most everybody out here worked for the rail-<br />

road, Mt. Vernon yards down there was the biggest railroad<br />

yards Pennsy had around there before moved to<br />

Atld there was no telephones and you had to live close to it<br />

so the caller could go out. And the telephones got popular,<br />

the railroaders spread out.<br />

Harvey: Am I. riqht to think that, though, that a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

people in this area did work for the transit company?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: You had a lot <strong>of</strong> people work here for the transit<br />

company, but at one time it was a toss-up whether the young<br />

men worked - the railroad because<br />

the railroad didn't have ladies. The railroads or the mills<br />

. . . you made bigger money with the railroads and m0s.t: <strong>of</strong><br />

them went to the railroads. ~ike my grandfather and them


LEWI5;099 III:I:81<br />

they worked in the mills. But my father he worked in the<br />

railroad. His cousins and all most <strong>of</strong> them went to work for<br />

the railroad because it was right down here in Mt . Vernon and<br />

used to go across the street down into there and then in<br />

about 1906 they moved in over Orangeville in East <strong>Baltimore</strong>.<br />

That's why most men worked in the transit - it paid more<br />

money than the mills did, and it was outside work and it<br />

was cleaner and in war time they needed help because a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> mechanics and a11 could make more in the shipyard.<br />

You was supposed to be 21; I bought my first pair <strong>of</strong> long<br />

pants - told the guy I'd buy the pants from him if he'd<br />

let me put them on there. And he did, and I went up and<br />

Dick Russell said to me,"How old are you?" And I said while<br />

1 was lying, might as well say a good one - I said 25. And<br />

he said where was I born and I told h im and I got the job.<br />

And I was just 17. But they paid good money. Today you<br />

wouldn't call it good money . . . 45 dollars a week, 7 days,<br />

too *<br />

Harvey: When we talked before, you told me about some<br />

strike breakers that they brought in who were foreigners.<br />

You said later that there were the workers came in from aown<br />

South . . . the area <strong>of</strong> Culpepper County, Virginia.<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : No, no they came up here to wbrk. A lot <strong>of</strong> the young<br />

fellows went in the army and the shipyards here just like<br />

World War If had thousands <strong>of</strong> people come into <strong>Baltimore</strong><br />

because <strong>of</strong> all this stuff. See, that's when HoSabird came<br />

into being during World War I. So did Edgewood. And they<br />

brought them in, No, they weren't strikebreakers.


LEWIS;Q99 111:1:82<br />

Harvey: Ok, who was your uncle who was a boss in the<br />

Rope Room, Lampwick Room?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: That was my great uncle, Jess <strong>Lewis</strong>. Worked in<br />

the mill for years and then Crown, Cork and Seal got h im to<br />

go down there; didn't have much a£ an education, but he<br />

could design a tuff. He had charge <strong>of</strong> the rope room,<br />

lampwick, mailbag.<br />

Harvey: And you told me the man who ran the saloon at<br />

Lafayette and Falls Road . . . what was his name?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: Stocksdale run the saloon before Prohibition. That<br />

was another, . .they all from out <strong>of</strong> town - they all<br />

come from out <strong>of</strong> town with their Load, stop there and get a<br />

beer and maybe hit the free lunch counter. Because all<br />

saloons had free lunch counters in those days, but see when<br />

we used to come up when we come up we went<br />

had to came up Calvert Street. Then they built ,the Falls-<br />

way. Fallsway over from Milford Avenue on down to Pratt<br />

Street, the other side 05 Pratt Street. It's open from<br />

Lombard Street now. Then we used to come up, come up Falls-<br />

way and come around and up and always stopped in there.<br />

And that was one <strong>of</strong> the stops. Of course, today all that<br />

stuff's gone; Fallsway is about ready to go, you might as<br />

well say. But see, the Jones Falls was clean for years.<br />

Down there in Clipper Road, where they used to have the<br />

filtration plant. Clipper M i l l and Mt. Vernon had theirs.<br />

All them places, they had what you call cesspool almost<br />

now, small filtration.


LEWIS;O99 III:1:83<br />

But, Mom and Pop Railroad was down there and that was<br />

all ~talians lived on Maryland Avenue down about, ah I guess<br />

where that alley comes through there now from Maryland<br />

Avenue above Lakewood Avenue. Houses there, all tole down.<br />

Harvey: Do you remember the flu epidemic, M r , <strong>Lewis</strong>?<br />

Anybody in your family catch it?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: No, our family was pretty lucky; a lot <strong>of</strong> them died<br />

and the undertaker over there . . , <strong>of</strong> course them days you<br />

used rock boxes before you put the caskets in. And <strong>of</strong><br />

course they used to put them together, the undertaker. But<br />

they were dying: so fast they were sending them out: knocked<br />

down - they used to pay us boys to put them together over<br />

on his sidewalk. And then he'd take his horses and haul<br />

them up to the graveyard. Of course, them days most all<br />

<strong>of</strong> them was buried in St. Mary's in this neighborhood.<br />

And when you were buried out in the other places you had to<br />

take the rock boxes out there. ~ u we t all went around<br />

there and nailed them together and we all nail them together.<br />

Of course, they were put in the caskets, used to<br />

have his horses in back <strong>of</strong> us, carriages back there, hearse<br />

and all. This boy's father, older one. Of course, my grand-<br />

father - 1 never knew him. I remember them talking about the<br />

old gentleman's place down there, but he had the place down<br />

there but people that lived in it before he moved into it,<br />

Because they had moved out to Clipper before I was born,<br />

went over on Chestnut Avenue. Old Man lived in one<br />

end <strong>of</strong> the house, and lived up there for years,<br />

but they lived up this end. Which you all pointed aut kids


LEWIS; 099 119: :1: 84<br />

in them days talked about ghosts and all that kind <strong>of</strong><br />

stuff ; den' t go past there, ghosts come out <strong>of</strong> there [laughs] .<br />

And used to tell ghost stories, scared to go home [laughs].<br />

Those were the good days, and 1 say we had our fun and, <strong>of</strong><br />

course as I say in those days when it got dark you was home.<br />

You wasn't out, and I say then today f think children ought<br />

to be in at night; I don't think they ought to be out. Of<br />

course now, if you go somewhere, alright. I think they mak-<br />

ing childxen old too quick. Graduation exercises in public<br />

schools I feel they wait later on 1 think later on they be<br />

by theixself and go out and worry. But I find that today<br />

in the neighborhood you still got men that does stuff in<br />

the neighborhood and not political bosses or one thing ar<br />

another. And you dan't hear about it. And I think it's<br />

mighty nice.<br />

Harvey: . . . say that again . . .<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong> : below old Cedar Avenue Bridge on Falls<br />

Road. That's why the second dam's down there - used to run<br />

water in it. Take the roads and there.<br />

Where that Falls Road runs through where Potts and Callahan<br />

that's where the ald City Lee company was . . .<br />

the Old City Ice Company.<br />

Harvey: When did McMannis close up shop?<br />

<strong>Lewis</strong>: 1 guess McMannis closed up 3 would say just about<br />

World War I or right after that. They stood these for a long<br />

while, but see, there was nobody but farms around here and<br />

nobody didn't haul it in to them anymore, to grind it and all.<br />

See, at one time there was quite a few farms around here;


LEWIS: 099 fII:1:85<br />

now it was before my . . . the last £am. that I knowed that<br />

operated was Roach's, where Maryland Casualty is, and I<br />

nevex can remember the man's name up here on Falls Road.<br />

The farm house is still standing, one <strong>of</strong> them. But where<br />

Medfield and all built up there. But we boys used to go<br />

swimming at the trestle and we'd come up there sometimes,<br />

steal roasting ears out <strong>of</strong> there and take them down, build a<br />

fire down in the old meadow there. And he'd run us, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, if ha seen us. Same way with and sickle pears and<br />

stuff - used to go steal sickle pears and he run us if he<br />

seen us, but he never shot any <strong>of</strong> us at all. We steal apples<br />

out <strong>of</strong> Poole. Of course, with Poole more than anything<br />

else had a lot <strong>of</strong> apple trees. The boys go in these<br />

and get green apples, afraid make them sick. But the police<br />

never could catch them. Just as you about<br />

7 foot with fences. Just about the time you went to jump<br />

over the fence, that piece <strong>of</strong> leather the police had around<br />

their belly and they were mounted police. He could always<br />

catch you - one or two raps with that, and you went over<br />

the fence. You cleared the top <strong>of</strong> the fence when you was<br />

up on that rail, but he never could catch you. Be didn't<br />

want to catch you, anyway - the old Officers Dunn, old man<br />

Boon@ . . . And that was what boys done those days. That was<br />

the most mischevious thing. I mean, if you broke a window,<br />

you went home and told about it. If you didn't, somebody<br />

else told on you anyway. You paid for it. Boys had stone<br />

battle - weren't any angels.


LEWIS; 099 I31:1:86<br />

The girls wasn't angels either. They fought too; about<br />

as human as they are today. Of course, wasn't as dignified<br />

[laughs].<br />

Harvey: Thank you . . .

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