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Howard Herron Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

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<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Norris L Brookens Library<br />

Archives/Special Collections<br />

<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> <strong>Memoir</strong><br />

H436. <strong>Herron</strong>, <strong>Howard</strong> (1897-1986)<br />

Interview and memoir<br />

5 tapes, 450 mins., 2 vols., 108 pp.<br />

<strong>Herron</strong>, long-time resident and businessman in Auburn, <strong>Illinois</strong>, discusses early<br />

20th century home and social life in Auburn: his family history, cooking and<br />

home remedies, housework, rural education, courtship and marriage, social<br />

events, entertainment, immigrants, Auburn businesses, the Great Depression and<br />

WPA activities, electricity and early radio, and activities <strong>of</strong> the Ku Klux Klan. He<br />

also recalls the business district fire <strong>of</strong> 1910 and fire protection, WWI, 1918<br />

influenza epidemic, Pearl Harbor and the WWII homefront. He discusses his<br />

careers: farming, horse racing, real estate, ownership <strong>of</strong> an automobile dealership,<br />

and coal mining. He recalls coal mining union activities, violence between the<br />

PMA and the UMW, and black lung disease.<br />

Interview by Shirley Marshall, 1980<br />

OPEN<br />

See collateral file: interviewer's notes, photocopies <strong>of</strong> automobile advertisements,<br />

photographs <strong>of</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> and his family, scrip issued during the Depression by the<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> Credit Clearing Committee, and a 1942 automobile price list.<br />

Archives/Special Collections LIB 144<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

One <strong>University</strong> Plaza, MS BRK 140<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> IL 62703-5407<br />

© 1980 <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees


Preface<br />

This manuscript is the product <strong>of</strong> a tape-recorded interview conducted<br />

by Shirley Marshall for the Oral History Office, Sangamon State<br />

Universlty in November <strong>of</strong> 1980. Shirley Marshall transcribed and edited<br />

the transcript. Mr. <strong>Herron</strong> reviewed the transcript.<br />

<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> was born in Batchtown, Calhoun County, <strong>Illinois</strong> in 1897 into<br />

a miner's family. The family moved to Auburn, Sangamon County, <strong>Illinois</strong><br />

when <strong>Howard</strong> was about six years <strong>of</strong> age. Except for a twenty-two month<br />

tour in the navy, <strong>Howard</strong> has spent the rest <strong>of</strong> his life in Auburn.<br />

<strong>Howard</strong>'s many occupations include being a jockey, a car salesman then<br />

owner <strong>of</strong> the Chevrolet dealership, a real estate broker, a coal miner<br />

and a farm worker.<br />

~oward's recollections include commentary on early Auburn businesses,<br />

schools, WPA and PWA activities in Auburn, and early home and social<br />

life. He provides eyewitness testimony to the 1910 fire that destroyed<br />

the business district <strong>of</strong> the city and also describes the 1911 cyclone.<br />

This interview was conducted in his mobile home which is located next to the<br />

American Legion Home in Auburn.<br />

Shirley Marshall is public librarian in Auburn and is beginning a<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> oral histories <strong>of</strong> Auburn to be housed in the Auburn<br />

Public Library.<br />

Readers <strong>of</strong> the oral history memoir should bear in mind that it is a<br />

transcript <strong>of</strong> the spoken word, and that the interviewer, narrator and<br />

editor sought to preserve the informal, conversational style that is<br />

inherent in such historical sources. Sangamon State <strong>University</strong> is not<br />

responsible for the factual accuracy <strong>of</strong> the memoir, nor for views<br />

expressed therein; these are for the reader to judge.<br />

The manuscript may be read, quoted and cited freely. It may not be<br />

reproduced in whole or in part by any means, electronic or mechanical,<br />

without permission in writing from the Oral History Office, Sangamon<br />

State <strong>University</strong>, <strong>Springfield</strong>, <strong>Illinois</strong> 62708.


Table <strong>of</strong> Contents (cont.)<br />

Auburn Business District Fire <strong>of</strong> 1910 .............. 54<br />

Spurlock-James Shooting ..................... 56<br />

Progressive Mine Workers <strong>of</strong> America ............... 56<br />

Pearl Harbor Announcement .................... 57<br />

Establishing Real Estate Business ................ 58<br />

Pasniks-Brendle Shooting .................... 60<br />

Formation <strong>of</strong> the REA and PWA .................. 60<br />

Announcement <strong>of</strong> F?)R's Death ................... 61<br />

Ms . Lanham and School Days ................... 62<br />

Automabile Dealership Franchise ................. 64<br />

Social Events in Auburn ..................... 66<br />

World War I1 Homefront Efforts ................ -70<br />

Observations on Vietnam War ................... 75<br />

Ku Klux Klan in Auburn ..................... 76<br />

Electricity ..........................-80<br />

Home and Social Life in Auburn ................. 82<br />

EarlyRadio ........................... 85<br />

Reflections on Childhood ................... -88<br />

Dr . Malmgren. Mayor <strong>of</strong> Auburn .................. 90<br />

Parks Home ........................... 90<br />

Reflections on Present Life ................... 92<br />

Governor Horner Anecdote .................... 94<br />

Coal Mining Days ........................ 96<br />

Faust's Slaughter House ..................... 96<br />

Frank Halford. J . P ....................... 96<br />

Chautauqua ........................... 96<br />

Traveling Carnivals ...................... -98<br />

Saloons and Prohibition .................... 100


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong>, October 28, 1980, Auburn, <strong>Illinois</strong>.<br />

Shirley Marshall, Interviewer.<br />

Good morning, <strong>Howard</strong>.<br />

Good morning.<br />

<strong>Howard</strong>, when and where were you born?<br />

I was born in Batchtown, <strong>Illinois</strong>.<br />

And on what day?<br />

On March 28, 1897.<br />

Who were your parents?<br />

Thomas J. <strong>Herron</strong>, or no, Thomas <strong>Herron</strong> and Sarah Elizabeth Berron.<br />

Can you tell me something about your father's side <strong>of</strong> the family?<br />

Yes, my father's father and my grandfather came down the Ohio River<br />

to Cairo and then they came up the river to Calhoun County and there they<br />

located and went into the horticulture business <strong>of</strong> raising apples and<br />

there they lived and died.<br />

Q: What nationality were they?<br />

A: Irish and English. My father and grandfather were Irish and my<br />

mother and grandmother was English.<br />

Q: Do you remember your grandmother's maiden name?<br />

A: No, I don't, never knew that.<br />

Q: Did they come over from the Old Country?<br />

A: I don't know that.<br />

Q: But they did have an apple business?<br />

A: They had orchards, they planted the trees and raised orchards. Built<br />

a log house they lived in. They were pioneers in those days.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> boat did they come down the Ohio River in?


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 2<br />

A: I wouldn't know that. I didn't hear. All I remember is them<br />

telling me about how they came down the river. My uncles told me.<br />

Q: How many children did your grandparents have?<br />

A: They had two boys, John and William.<br />

Q: Were there any girls?<br />

A: No, no girls.<br />

Q: Two boys?<br />

A: Two boys.<br />

Q: One <strong>of</strong> them had to be your father?<br />

A: Yes. No, one <strong>of</strong> them was my uncle. Oh, yes, this is my father's<br />

side you are talking about.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: Yes, yes, one <strong>of</strong> them was my father. Oh, I was wrong there because<br />

there was eight boys and one girl.<br />

Q: Eight boys and one girl.<br />

A: On my father's, I was thinking on my mother's side.<br />

Q: Okay. So John and William are uncles on your mother's side?<br />

A: Yes, on my mother's side. There was Tom and Tim, they were twins,<br />

that was my father, Tom was my father and Tim, his twin brother. And<br />

there was Fulton and he was struck by Lightning while plowing in the<br />

field and there was Tom, Tim, Fulton, John, Simon, Sylvester; how many we<br />

got there?<br />

Q: Six, six boys so far. You said there were eight boys.<br />

A: Scott, I can't think <strong>of</strong> the other one.<br />

Q: Who was the girl?<br />

A: Dora, D-o-r-a.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> these uncles or your aunt?<br />

A: Oh, yes, they always had family reunions I remember going to. My<br />

Uncle John moved here before we did.<br />

Q: To Auburn?<br />

A: Yes, he was an engineer at the mine, coal mine.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 3<br />

Q: I see.<br />

A: And he got my uncles and my father to come up here looking for<br />

greener pastures and he came and my uncle got him a job at the mine.<br />

Q: Oh, your father worked in the mine?<br />

A: On top, he was into firing the boilers. Made the steam that hoisted<br />

the coal.<br />

Q: And your mother's side <strong>of</strong> the family. Do you remember anything about<br />

them?<br />

A: They were Surgeons, Surgeon was the name for them. They also were<br />

pioneers, but I don't know how they got here or where but there was just<br />

two boys, John--William and John.<br />

Q: And your mother?<br />

A: And my mother and her sister, Maggie and a sister Madie.<br />

Q: And a sister?<br />

Q: Madie?<br />

Q: And your mother's name is?<br />

A: Sarah Elizabeth.<br />

Q: What nationality were they?<br />

A: They were Irish, Scotch Irish.<br />

Q: And do you know whether they came over from the Old Country?<br />

A: No, I don't know. I know my uncles always were so proud <strong>of</strong> the Irish<br />

but I didn't care much about it. Didn't pay much attention to it. My<br />

Uncle Bill was always proud <strong>of</strong> being an Irish.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> religion did they have?<br />

A: Protestant.<br />

Q: On both sides <strong>of</strong> your family, Protestant, okay. When were you born<br />

again, 18901<br />

A: Eighteen hundred ninety-seven, March 28, 1897.<br />

Q: March 28?


<strong>Howard</strong> Hexron 4<br />

A: Eighteen hundred ninety-seven.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: Eighty-three years old now. I'll be 84 this coming March.<br />

Q: Was your father in Auburn at the time that he met your mother?<br />

A: No, they were all, I remember them telling me, us boys, the stories<br />

when they, my father and his brothers, two or three <strong>of</strong> them would put in<br />

the crops, help their father put in the crops. They'd get their horses<br />

ready and they would take <strong>of</strong>f for Kansas and they were cowboys. They<br />

would meet--I remember them going into Dodge City, I'm talking about<br />

Dodge City where they would have a cattle drive and drive their cattle<br />

from Texas up to Dodge City where they had--there was no railroads then.<br />

I can remember that they would swim their horses across the Mississippi<br />

River and they would always be sure that they took a title for their<br />

horse because if you didn't have a title to your horse and they caught<br />

you with a horse, they would string you up on a tree.<br />

Q: Oh, dear.<br />

A: Oh, that was the days they did that to stop the thieving and stealing<br />

<strong>of</strong> horses. That's the way they told that to me. we'd sit around and eat<br />

popcorn and they'd eat half <strong>of</strong> it and they'd tell us all their experiences.<br />

That was all the entertainment we had in the wintertime.<br />

Q: What was Dodge City like in those days?<br />

A: Oh, I wouldn't know.<br />

Q: Did they tell about any barroom fights or any shootouts or anything<br />

like that?<br />

A: Oh, I suppose they did but they didn't tell us.<br />

Q: Did they meet any famous sheriff?<br />

A: Well, I remember one time they was, word got out that in Hamburg,<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> that Jesse James amd his gang were there and that they were<br />

going to head south, just north <strong>of</strong> my aunt's house, my Aunt Maggie's.<br />

There was a road there going from their home to what they called Red's<br />

Landing on the Mississippi River to a big cutaway in the road and a big<br />

bank on each side. Several <strong>of</strong> Charlie ~c~ab's boys and a lot <strong>of</strong> them got<br />

up on this bank and they were laying for Jesse James. And they all had<br />

their guns and they was ready to kill him, but they all got chicken and<br />

they didn't, none <strong>of</strong> them would shoot. So Jesse James and his gang<br />

passed on and went an around to Red's Landing, that's on the Mississippi<br />

River. And there was a poor guy that lived along the--he was a River Rat<br />

you might say that lived on there and he never had anything. But he took<br />

his boat and he hauled the James boys across the river and they swam<br />

their horses across. And from that time on this man and his wife and<br />

family had all the clothes and food and everything they ever wanted. I


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5<br />

guess Jesse James wanted to make it right with them, that they didn't<br />

have to depend on anybody after that. This McNab told me that story and<br />

I know he used to work in a grocery store here when they moved up here to<br />

Auburn fr>om Hamburg. And they just didn't get them all right then, that<br />

they'd get them, so they just, none <strong>of</strong> them would do the job.<br />

Q: But he actually did see Jesse James?<br />

A: Yes, he told me several times the same story and I know it was true<br />

because every time he told the story the same time, three times, you know<br />

it was right and he was telling the truth because you can't remember how<br />

you tell it.<br />

Q: That's good. So your uncles were cowboys, farmers . . .<br />

A: My uncles and my father.<br />

Q: Your father was also a cowboy?<br />

A: Yes, when they wanted food they would just go out and kill ducks or<br />

rabbits or anything, Their log cabin is still right there, still on<br />

Birds' farm where they were born and raised.<br />

Q: Is that right?<br />

A: Still stands there.<br />

Q: Isn't that close to here?<br />

A: Oh, yes. Down here just south <strong>of</strong> Hamburg, <strong>Illinois</strong>. Right next to,<br />

our family cemetery is there too.<br />

Q: Is<br />

that where most <strong>of</strong> your family is buried?<br />

A: We 11, not most, I wouldn't say most but there is quite a few buried<br />

there, cause as they grew older they scattered. They were like quail you<br />

know.<br />

Q: But you did get together and have family reunions?<br />

A: Oh, yes, we do, we have one every year. Had a <strong>Herron</strong> family reunion,<br />

was held here the first Sunday in October and there was about forty some<br />

here.<br />

Q: Do you still do that?<br />

A: Oh, yes and there was some from Detroit, Chicago, Centralia and they<br />

come from all over.<br />

Q: What are some <strong>of</strong> the things that the people grew up to do?<br />

A: Oh, getting back to my Grandfather <strong>Herron</strong>, his sister was the second<br />

wife <strong>of</strong> President <strong>Howard</strong> William Taft. She was the second wife <strong>of</strong> his<br />

and she was, now this is, I'm quoting family history they have and I know


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6<br />

b-<br />

it's a fact because when Governor Green was inaugurated, he was governor<br />

<strong>of</strong> the State <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>, they had the governors <strong>of</strong> all the states invited<br />

to the inauguration and they was to wear the dress in the olden times.<br />

And my father's, my grandfather's sister, she wore the, the governor's<br />

wife <strong>of</strong> Ohio if I can get it right, wore the same dress that Emily <strong>Herron</strong><br />

Taft wore when she wore that gown to the inauguration <strong>of</strong> Governor Green.<br />

Q: That's interesting. Do you have pictures <strong>of</strong> those?<br />

A: No, I don't. No, all that was just history traced back. We have a<br />

historian. I got a cousin that used to be a school teacher. She got all<br />

this stuff.<br />

Q: Well, that's very good.<br />

A: They have to read most <strong>of</strong> this a time or two. hat's where I got<br />

this. She read this at the reunion.<br />

Q: That's interesting. Was there anyone else in your family that was<br />

important?<br />

A: No, no. I was the first Chevrolet dealer in Auburn.<br />

Q: Where was your Chevrolet Company?<br />

A: Right, I started that business right over there.<br />

Q: That's Fifth and Adams?<br />

A: First day <strong>of</strong> August, first day <strong>of</strong> October, 1926, I started the<br />

Chevrolet business.<br />

Q: How did you get into that business?<br />

A: Well, I used to work in the coal mine, and my mother was sick, and I<br />

quit school, and I went to work in the coal mine to help my father pay<br />

the doctor bills and my mother, then she died.<br />

Q: How old were you then?<br />

A: I was about, she died on the 17th <strong>of</strong> December, 1917, now when she<br />

died I volunteered to join the navy. I figured well, I was working in<br />

the coal mine in Divernon and I moved back over here and so I said to the<br />

boys up there after the War was over I went through the navy all during<br />

the War and then when I got discharged I didn't go back to the coal mine.<br />

I was sitting in the barber shop and I said to Bill Hooks, the barber,<br />

"I'm going over here and get a job selling Fords," and he said, "You<br />

can't even run one, how are you going to get a job?" I said, "I can learn."<br />

Finally I went over and I shook hands and I shook hands with Mr. Latham<br />

and I said, he just purchased this agency, chis Ford Agency, and I said,<br />

"I always thought you needed a good salesman." He said, "What makes you<br />

think we need a good salesman?" I said, "Well, I looked around here and<br />

I don't see, I see a lot a sharp cars and tractors around here and nobody<br />

taking them away from you," and he said, "I'm going to give you a job just


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7<br />

on account <strong>of</strong> your guts." So I took a job selling Fords, $25 guaranteed<br />

and 3 percent override commission and what I wanted was to get him to<br />

furnish me with a car. I couldn't buy a car, coal miners' salaries<br />

didn't pay enough and anyway I gave all my money to my dad to help pay<br />

the bills. I was wanting that job so I could have something to ride the<br />

girls with so I got him to furnish me a car. And he said, "When do you<br />

want to start?" I said, "Well, Mr. Latham, I don' t know how to run one."<br />

He said, "What? You want a job selling them and don't even know how to<br />

run one?" I said, "1 can learn." He said, "Wally." Wally Fleming was a<br />

mechanic and he said, "Take this guy out and teach him, get one <strong>of</strong> those<br />

old cars out there and show him the road and head him north out <strong>of</strong> town,<br />

so he can learn to drive." I never will forget the roads were dusty, or<br />

frozen, they weren't dusty, they were just frozen and horse tracks and<br />

just as raugh as they could be. I stayed with it and you didn't have to<br />

know very much to learn how to drive a Ford car. And so I went on and<br />

that was in January.<br />

Q: How old were you then?<br />

A: I was about 21 and so he said one day, "Where's all these automobiles<br />

you said you were going to sell?" I said, "1'11 get 'em, 1'11 get 'em."<br />

I said, "What I need is I need a new car," they gave me an old car. I<br />

said, "What I need is a new car so I can create a little attention like<br />

when I go into a town like Glenarm, Divernon or Thayer." And so he<br />

said, "What do you want?" I said, "Give me a new touring car. I can<br />

haul a lot <strong>of</strong> girls in that." (laughs) So he started out and I said,<br />

"1'11 show you one <strong>of</strong> these days," and I had a lot <strong>of</strong> them lined up. See in<br />

them days we had to wait on your turn to get one and so I started out on<br />

the road, the weather got nice, the farmers all drove the roads. I<br />

started out to Glenarm, I had a deposit on a car they were trying to buy.<br />

For $450 you could buy a Ford car then and I got a $25 deposit on one<br />

there and I went to Divernon and I got one there, and I went to Thayer<br />

and I got two. I come in and I had a $100 deposit on four automobiles.<br />

The old man said, "BY God, you can sell cars," and so 3: went right then<br />

and I stayed with them until--that was about 1922. In 1926 I began to<br />

lose sales to Chevrolet and I said, "Somebody is going to come in here<br />

with Chevrolets and it might as well be me." So I went to the banker and<br />

I had these fingers mashed <strong>of</strong>f over there in the garage and the insurance<br />

company gave me $750. 1 had my car, a demonstrator, 1 hadn't paid on<br />

that in about a month. I owned it myself and so T went to the banker<br />

here. My uncle used to be president <strong>of</strong> the bank, Simon <strong>Herron</strong>, and he<br />

was also supervisor and a member <strong>of</strong> the high school board and he didn't<br />

like it. He lived on a farm out here. So he give up the presidency <strong>of</strong><br />

the bank to Mr. Stockdale. I told him, I said, "Chevrolet, General<br />

Motors is going to have a big meeting in St. Louis and I can get down<br />

there and get that franchise from Chevsolet for this city." And he said,<br />

"Well, that's a good thing. Auburn needs something like that." I said,<br />

"Well, I don't have very much money." He said, "How much money you got?"<br />

I said, "$750 and I got enough money to buy Grant out, Grant Tire<br />

Company there, the stock that they had." So he said, "Here's the checkbook,<br />

go down there and get you a carload <strong>of</strong> cars and give them the check just<br />

like you have the money." And he said, "When you come back give us the<br />

number <strong>of</strong> the cars and then when you sell them come in and pay it <strong>of</strong>f ."<br />

I said, "Okay." So I did and I got the contract, the franchise, and I


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 8<br />

started in and I had $750 invested. And I didn't more than get<br />

started than my wife, she, in the meantime, and I got married too, and<br />

she come home that evening and she was crying. And I said, "What you<br />

crying about?" She said she went to a Sunday School class party and she<br />

said, "Everybody says you're going to go broke," I said, "I got some<br />

news for you, I'm broke to start with." And I said, "Don't let that<br />

worry your little pretty head at all, cause I'm broke now. It's either<br />

got to go or else." So I kept it two years and Chevrolet wanted me to<br />

put in their system <strong>of</strong> bookkeeping and a monthly report <strong>of</strong> my entire<br />

business and everything. And they also wanted to own you, so I wouldn't<br />

stand for that and I told them, "You get me a fellow that will buy this<br />

place. I'd like to have a bigger place." I said, "I've been selling<br />

automobiles four years now. I got enemies and I've got friends. I'd<br />

like to have a bigger agency." So they said all right and I sold it out<br />

for $8,000. I started out with $750 and sold it for $8,000. So they<br />

said, "Well, go over to Hoopeston, <strong>Illinois</strong>." Well, I went over there<br />

and I didn't like it and I said, "No, Hoopeston's a canning factory over<br />

there." I said to the hotel manager, "This town looks like a pretty good<br />

business town." I said, "How's this Chevrolet dealer doing here?" He<br />

said, "Oh, he's no good, he sells them Chevrolets and says anything goes<br />

wrong with them, and they need fixing," he says, "go on and fix it yourself."<br />

The dealer says, "What do you think you're getting here, Cadillac?" He<br />

says, "Go fix it yourself." So then I came back and this hotel manager<br />

said, "Right now things are pretty good here. When the canning season's<br />

over you couldn't raise a dog fight out here in the streets." I said,<br />

"Well, that's enough for me." I come back and so Mr. Non, he called me<br />

up and said, "We got a place for you now, what do you think <strong>of</strong> it?" And<br />

I said, "No good." I didn't like it. See, I said if you find a place<br />

that I like, I didn't like it. We couldn't get along at all. The<br />

telegraph, the telephone operator was a good friend <strong>of</strong> mine and she<br />

called me and she said, "I'm going to let you in on something.'' She<br />

said, "I overheard the talk," she was piking. She said, "Mr. Non told<br />

the branch manager, road manager here, whatever you do, sell that contract<br />

to <strong>Herron</strong>. Get him back in that business." So I took that and I said,<br />

"Well you have to change the rules a little bit. You can't dictate to<br />

Chevrolet Motor Company." I said, "Well, they can't dictate to me either.<br />

I'm a member <strong>of</strong> the Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce. In fact I'm secretary <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce here. I belong to the church and I went to the<br />

schools here. I'm bigger in Auburn than they are. They are bigger than<br />

I am in Detroit but not here." He said, "Well, you're kind <strong>of</strong> independent,<br />

ain't you?" And I said, "Well, I hope to be all my life, independent and<br />

I don't have to be some servant to anybody.'' Well, that was the end <strong>of</strong><br />

that.<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, I would like to ask you some questions about when you were a<br />

little boy and what you can remember about your mother and your father.<br />

What was the home like when you were a little boy?<br />

A: Well, we always had a pleasant home. My father was a good man and so<br />

was my mother, a good woman, and I remember the first home I remember was<br />

in Batchtown, <strong>Illinois</strong>. We lived, my father bought what you call, used<br />

to call the creamery, had a creamery, made cheese and stuff there. And<br />

so they went out <strong>of</strong> business and my father bought that and he changed it<br />

into a home, fixed it into a home, and it was a nice home. There's where


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 9<br />

I remember starting to school, I went to school, that was the first time<br />

I went to school. Right by my house was a big ravine and my father used<br />

to set traps out there and I seen my first skunk out there. I went to<br />

school there the first year and then the next year we moved to Auburn.<br />

Q: Well, back there in that home, can you remember what the kitchen<br />

looked like?<br />

A: No, I don' t.<br />

Q: A cook stove?<br />

A: Oh, they had a wood stove, everything was wood.<br />

Q: Did you have to help carry the wood?<br />

A: Oh, yes, my brother was older than I was, and he would chop it, and I<br />

would carry it, and we would cart it up under a big ravine that sat on<br />

the east side and on the west side was where we would put wood in under<br />

the house to keep it out <strong>of</strong> the snow. We carried this wood up as we<br />

needed it. I remember my father. In those days, they were young people<br />

and they had a dance, and my father, I know, I remember them talking<br />

about it. I guess I had gone to bed or they had put me to bed and it<br />

wound up a big free-for-all fight. The Beeves boys, 1 remember him<br />

telling about it, the Reeves boys came down there and they were going to<br />

break up the dance and it wound up in a fight. My father had on a coat<br />

and a vest and one <strong>of</strong> them cut him with a razor, he cut right down and it<br />

didn't go through the vest. They played rough in them days, very crude<br />

as I found out later as I got older. Then we moved to Auburn.<br />

Q: Well, how old was your mother and your father when they married?<br />

A: I wouldn't know, I never did know.<br />

Q: They never said? How many children did they have?<br />

A: Well, there was three boys and one girl and my little sister died<br />

with pneumonia. I never did remember her. But I heard them tell about<br />

her. She died <strong>of</strong> pneumonia.<br />

Q: Were your brothers both older than you?<br />

A: No, my oldest brother, Cecil, run a cafe here in town until he died.<br />

And my youngest brother died in 1960 something.<br />

Q: And what was his name?<br />

A: Paul, his name was Paul. Cecil was my oldest, and <strong>Howard</strong> is mine.<br />

Q: Did Paul live here in Auburn too and what did he do?<br />

A: Well, he worked in the coal mine and when the coal mine shut down,<br />

why he worked for me in the garage, ran the gas pumps and things like<br />

that.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 10<br />

Q: When you were a very small boy before you went to school, what are<br />

some <strong>of</strong> the remembrances that you had. What are some things that you did<br />

in the summertime?<br />

A: Oh, when we lived here?<br />

Q: No, when, before you went to school.<br />

A: I don't remember that.<br />

Q: Did you go swimming at any ponds or fishing?<br />

A: Now there was no water around there, only the Mississippi River was<br />

about three miles from Batchtown, maybe four but we just used to always<br />

go out with mother and we'd go take buckets and we'd go out and pick<br />

blackberries. And I remember that the snakes would get up and lay in the<br />

top in those bushes, in the blackberry bushes because when the birds<br />

would come to get the berries, the snakes would grab them birds and eat<br />

the birds. I remember we would get chiggers all over us and so we'd get<br />

home and we had a summer kitchen.<br />

Q: What's a summer kitchen?<br />

A. Well, that's a place where mother washed. They had a wood stove out<br />

there and a boiler and they'd heat the water and have a wash machine you<br />

cranked by hand and they, I think she baked some in there too, if I'm<br />

right.<br />

Q: Was it screened in?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: To keep cool?<br />

A: Oh, yes, it was, the walls inside were just 2 x 4's and that was what<br />

we called a summer kitchen. They used to cook out there a lot <strong>of</strong> times<br />

in the summertime. I remember we played marbles out there on the floor<br />

and my mother, oh, she was a wonderful cook, and she could make candy<br />

that would melt in your mouth. Pease's don't make any chocolates any<br />

better than she could. And she would hide that candy and we knew when we<br />

come home we could smell that she'd been making candy that day. And we<br />

would play marbles in the summer kitchen in the fall <strong>of</strong> the year. And so<br />

my brother, I don't know what made him do it, lifted the lid <strong>of</strong> the<br />

washing machine and they found a big batch <strong>of</strong> the candy and he said, "I<br />

found it boys, I found it." I remember one time when we were picking<br />

blackberries and came home and the church, I forget what church it was, I<br />

think it was the Methodist Church, it was about two blocks or a block and<br />

a half, maybe a block or a block and a half from us. And there was a<br />

hallway or a breezeway between the summer kitchen and the house and<br />

lightning struck there and it carried over and it knocked my mother down.<br />

It didn't hurt her, it just knocked her down and apparently she wasn't<br />

hurt, but we were all excited over that, <strong>of</strong> course. But getting back to<br />

these chiggers. We'd get chiggers all over us out in these blackberries,<br />

oh, they'd grow wild out in the country, great big beauties. And mother,


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 11<br />

she'd get a rag, a coal oil rag, and she'd make us boys strip <strong>of</strong>f and<br />

she'd take this rag and just rub it all over us and then take a bath.<br />

The kerosene would kill the chiggers. Did you ever get chiggers?<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: You know what they<br />

are.<br />

Q: Terrible.<br />

A: Itch. That's how they got rid <strong>of</strong> the chiggers.<br />

Q: So you probably remember her blackberry pies. Was that one <strong>of</strong> your<br />

favorite things that she fixed for you?<br />

A: Oh, yes, she was--we belonged to the Methodist Church and she<br />

belonged to the Ladies Aid Society and whenever they had a cookout or a<br />

bazaar or whatever you call it, and my mother's bread was always spoken<br />

for before she got it there, because she could make good bread. I<br />

remember we would come home and we'd smell that chili sauce cooking and<br />

I'd want the heel <strong>of</strong> the bread and some chili sauce on it. It'd make you<br />

want to fight your father when you smelled that chili sauce cooking.<br />

Q: What were your favorite meals that she fixed?<br />

A: Oh, she'd fix everything. We had plenty <strong>of</strong> meat. We raised hogs.<br />

We had a pen that had three, four or five hogs in it, my father would<br />

butcher those hogs and we had a smokehouse-like and put that meat in this<br />

and cure it, smoke it with hickory and sassafras, hickory wood, sassafras<br />

and some other kind <strong>of</strong> wood.<br />

Q: Where do you get sassafras?<br />

A: Out in the timbers.<br />

Q: Is it a tree or a root or what is it?<br />

A: It's a tree, a little tree, shrubbery, and you pull up the roots, cut<br />

<strong>of</strong>f the roots and you boil that and every spring we always had to have<br />

our sassafras tea and sulfur.<br />

Q: And sulfur? What was the sulfur for?<br />

A: Oh, I don't know, they said--and acifidity. Did you ever smell<br />

acifidity?<br />

Q: I never heard <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

A: Acifidity. She used to make little bags <strong>of</strong> it. If you ever smelled<br />

it, you wouldn't want it. She'd make little bags and string around us<br />

with a chunk <strong>of</strong> acifidity. It's a gum-like stuff and if you hang it<br />

around your neck, it's supposed to keep you from getting sick. Old<br />

maid's tales. And then my dad, he'd make everyone <strong>of</strong> us wear one <strong>of</strong><br />

those and oh, I used to hate him when he gave us that acifidity and every


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 12<br />

kid in school had to have it. That was an old witch's tale, that's about<br />

all it was. If nothing, the smell would keep everything away, animals<br />

and all. It was terrible. (laughs)<br />

Q: Was your father a farmer?<br />

A: No, he was a barber. He was a jack <strong>of</strong> all trades. He was a barber.<br />

He come up here, my uncle got him a job as a fireman <strong>of</strong> the boilers, but<br />

way later on he owned some thrash machines. As I got older and my brother<br />

got older, we had to take the wagon and the team and we'd haul the water<br />

tank for the engine and he had a separator and a clover hauler.<br />

Q: A clover hauler?<br />

A: Yes, it took the seed out <strong>of</strong> clover and the hay, just like you would<br />

wheat or oats. You've seen thrashers, haven't you?<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: Well, a clover hauler is just like a thrasher. It's the same thing<br />

as a separator only for finer seeds. And he would do custom work for<br />

farmers, thrash their wheat and then in the wintertime, well, he was a<br />

barber.<br />

Q: I see.<br />

A: He was a good provider.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> hair cuts did he give in those days?<br />

A: Just like I got today. They didn't have whiskers. My son's hair,<br />

it's like Abe Lincoln's. I started growing a moustache one day and I<br />

said this ain't for me. It's so easy to cut <strong>of</strong>f and you have to trim<br />

them and everything. His wife trimmed his beard for him and everything<br />

and I said, "Give me the razor." They had a Gillette razor. I shaved<br />

today, I generally shave everyday.<br />

Q: Did your father have a moustache?<br />

A: Yes, he'd come home from that coal mine and the dust was in it and<br />

his breath would freeze from that ice and he'd (sniff) spit it out and it<br />

was enough to gag a pig.<br />

Q: Did they have chickens too?<br />

A: Oh, yes, we had chicken pen.<br />

Q: Did you raise your own vegetables?<br />

A: Yes, we had our own garden.<br />

Q: You probably had to do quite a bit <strong>of</strong> work around the house.


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 13<br />

A: I'll never forget as long as I live when we moved to Auburn they were<br />

having a big carnival and picnic at Virden on the 4th <strong>of</strong> July. We had a<br />

sweet potato ridge farther from here to your--there was three <strong>of</strong> them, a<br />

ridge for each one <strong>of</strong> us boys as long as from here to your car out there<br />

was in garden. And Dad said, "Now boys, you clean all those weeds out <strong>of</strong><br />

those sweet potatoes, 1'11 give you a dollar apiece and you can go over<br />

to Virden to the picnic." Well, we could go to Virden for a nickel.<br />

Then when we got down to Virden we'd have $.go to spend, nickel down and<br />

a nickel back and we just worked like Trojans that day to get that done.<br />

And about 11:OO boom, boom, boom, the thunder started coming and by this<br />

time we got done and here she come. It rained and it rained like a<br />

torrent and he said, "Oh, boys, better stay home today and guess we can<br />

go over some other day," and that about fixed me. That was one <strong>of</strong> my<br />

first disappointments. I hated that day as long as I lived. I hated<br />

Minnie Christensen, too. When I started to school here I had to go in<br />

the second grade and my school teacher was Minnie Christensen and she<br />

asked me my name and I told her <strong>Howard</strong> William <strong>Herron</strong>. Well, she didn't<br />

put dawn the <strong>Howard</strong> and so she said, "William, William," and I looked<br />

around for William and I didn't see William and finally she said,"Youl'<br />

and "Aren't you William?" And L said, "No, Ma'am, I'm <strong>Howard</strong>." And she<br />

had me come up right in front <strong>of</strong> the class and she had a paddle about<br />

that long and about that wide and a hand on it and boy she spanked my<br />

butt with that thing right in front <strong>of</strong> everybody. And I hated her guts<br />

till she died. I was right, she didn't write it down, see and so she<br />

never apologized and I never did either and so that's the way it stood.<br />

I said, "You put down <strong>Howard</strong> William <strong>Herron</strong>, that's my name." I said,<br />

"That's what I told you." And she said, "I whipped you for lying to me."<br />

And I said, "I didn't lie to you." And she said, "Yes, you did, I'll<br />

whip you again if you don't think you did." So I just shut up, I saw I<br />

couldn't win. So I just hated her guts from that time on. But I had a<br />

fine teacher, she's living today. She's over a hundred years old, Eva<br />

Hedrick, and she taught me more in school than anybody. And she was a<br />

fine woman and up till this day every year I take a big bouquet <strong>of</strong><br />

flowers to her and have as Long as I can remember.<br />

Q: That's wonderful.<br />

A: And one day she said, I was running a movie picture machine for the<br />

theater here and I was staying up late till 11:OO and sometimes it was<br />

midnight before I'd get home. And she told my dad that he ought to make<br />

me quit. She had an interest in me. She was my Sunday School teacher<br />

too and she said, "You stay after school." I said, "Oh, my God, what<br />

have I done now?" In them days we had to line up and you had to walk<br />

clear out and stay in Line till you got outside. You didn't just run out<br />

haphazardly across the yard or anything and there was a teacher that<br />

stood there and watched you until you all got out and you didn't get out<br />

<strong>of</strong> line. And anyway I said, "What have I done now?" And so, she came<br />

back in and she said, "Get over," I slid over and she sat down beside me<br />

and she said, "Get out your arithmetic." And I did and she says, "Now,<br />

<strong>Howard</strong>, you're just as smart as the rest <strong>of</strong> these children. Why can't<br />

you paper a room?" And I said, "I don't know, I just can't do it right."<br />

And she explained it all to me and we went all through it and everything<br />

and you know it was just like a boil. It come to a head and I got the<br />

knack <strong>of</strong> it and I didn't have no trouble from that time on, and I've


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 14<br />

always been grateful to her for that. And here I thought I was going to<br />

get spanked for something I had done wrong, and she just wanted to help<br />

me and I never will forget her, and to this day she is still living.<br />

Q: What was your school like?<br />

A: Oh, it's all torn down. There was two rooms. One was the first<br />

grade and the second grade in the old building. There was eight rooms,<br />

four rooms on the first floor with a great big stairway, upstairs, front<br />

and back, and there was four rooms upstairs. High school was upstairs<br />

and well the two rooms upstairs, the third and fourth, fifth, sixth and<br />

seventh grades were on the four rooms on the first floor and two rooms on<br />

the second floor and the other two was the high school. Of course that<br />

was back in 1900, 4, 5, 6, along in there and . . .<br />

Q: Where was the school located?<br />

A: Right down where it is now. That was all playground. We used to<br />

play there.<br />

Q: Where did you live at that time?<br />

A: I lived in the west end <strong>of</strong> town up here. And my father, when we came<br />

here, he bought the house where Bill Coker lives now and I guess he could<br />

get $20,000 for it now. My father bought that house for $750 brand new,<br />

nobody ever lived in it when we came to Auburn in 1904, he bought that<br />

house for $750.<br />

Q: Where is that located now?<br />

A: It's on, I'll have to get the telephone book here to find the street.<br />

Q: That was on West Monroe Street. So you walked to school?<br />

A: Yes, we had to walk to school rain, sleet, snow or what. I sure<br />

walked up there and old John Richler was the janitor and they wouldn't<br />

let us bring our lunch regardless and the school board upheld it.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape One, Side One<br />

Q: Good evening, <strong>Howard</strong>. Let's talk about some times when you were a<br />

kid again and you told me what you did in the summertime, but what are<br />

some <strong>of</strong> the things that you can remember that you did in the fall?<br />

A: Well, we gathered nuts and, <strong>of</strong> course, we had on Halloween, we had<br />

pumpkins and we, <strong>of</strong> course, we always had cows and we had a big pumpkin<br />

patch and cut the pumpkins up to feed the cows.<br />

Q: You did?<br />

A: Oh, yes, they'd eat the pumpkins, the cows would eat the pumpkins.<br />

We cut them in small chunks. They loved those pumpkins.


<strong>Howard</strong> Hezron 15<br />

Q: Didn't your mother make pumpkin pie out <strong>of</strong> them?<br />

A: Oh, yes, she made pumpkin pies. She was a wonderful cook until she<br />

got sick and . . .<br />

Q: Did you make jack-o-lanterns?<br />

A: No, no, my uncles, after my Grandfather Surgeon died, my two uncles,<br />

they kept or stayed on the farm and the apple orchards they run them.<br />

They would come to Batchtown with a big wagon on Thanksgiving Day and on<br />

weekends and they'd get mother and us boys and they would always want us<br />

to go out there with them because they had an old elderly woman that kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> cooked for them. She always smoked, old Mrs. Powell was her name, and<br />

she always smoked a clay pipe and I remember that real well. And my<br />

Uncle John, my Uncle W i l l had an organ and he played the organ and so . . .<br />

Q: You said you went out there on a wagon?<br />

A: They'd come into town with a big wagon and get us to go out. And<br />

they always wanted my mother to come out and stay the weekends and do a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> the cooking for them because this old lady Powell wasn't much <strong>of</strong> a<br />

cook. And so they would keep us out there, get us to stay, they'd<br />

entertain us, they'd do anything to get us to stay out there with them.<br />

Q: This wagon was pulled by a horse?<br />

A: Yes, two horses.<br />

Q: Two horses?<br />

A: Yes, it was just an ordinary wagon that had the spring seats. On<br />

Thanksgiving Day we either had a goose for Thanksgiving or a goose for<br />

Christmas. My mother always had one <strong>of</strong> the two. We had a goose for<br />

Thanksgiving or so that she could get the goose grease and she would mix<br />

that goose grease with turpentine and camphor and grease our chests when<br />

we had colds. And that was . . .did I tell you about the acifidity?<br />

Q: Yes, you did. So she made up medicines, some home remedies?<br />

A: Home remedies.<br />

Q: Did you raise geese at your farm?<br />

A: My uncles did, but we didn't, we lived in town.<br />

Q: Oh, that's right.<br />

A: But my uncles sometimes they'd have geese, where they got them I<br />

don't know, but they always had them.<br />

Q: What other type food did your mother fix for Thanksgiving?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 16<br />

A: Oh, pumpkin pie and popcorn balls and cracker jacks. She made some<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> cracker jacks, too. On Christmas, we put up some stockings and<br />

if we got an orange or a pocket knife or a new pair <strong>of</strong> stockings we had a<br />

wonderful Christmas in them days. We were poor people. The mice didn't<br />

stick around very long.<br />

Q: Did you make little gifts for each other?<br />

A: No, we did that in school. Teachers, they'd draw turkeys and<br />

everything on the blackboard and then we'd make them out <strong>of</strong>, cut them and<br />

take the scissors and cut them out, turkeys and geese, out with the<br />

scissors, out <strong>of</strong> paper.<br />

Q: Did your grandparents come to these Thanksgiving dinners or Christmas<br />

dinners?<br />

A: Well, not my mother's father. My mother's father and my grandfather<br />

on my mother's side didn't because they were, my Grandpa Surgeon passed<br />

away. I remember one time he was pretty sick and Dr. Barry, in them days<br />

you see they didn't have nurses or anything, the neighbors would go in<br />

and sit up. My Uncle Scott, that's my father's brother, he lived right<br />

close there too and he and a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Grant Cunningham<br />

would go over and sit up with Grandpa Surgeon. And Dr. Barry said that,<br />

he always, my grandfather always said, "Give me a toddy. I want another<br />

toddy." That was whiskey and warm water and sugar and they, I was told<br />

this by my Uncle Scott and Dr. Barry, said now, "Don't give him anymore<br />

toddys, he's had enough for the night." So this Grant Cunningham, that<br />

night my grandpa said, ''I want more toddy, I want more toddy." And so<br />

Cunningham said to my Uncle Scott, "Well, hell, Scott, let's give him a<br />

stiff one." So they did and he fixed him a stiff one and contrary to the<br />

doctor's orders. And the old guy drank it and he got better and he lived<br />

two more years. That's the truth.<br />

Q: How about the grandparents on your father's side? Did they come to<br />

the dinners? Did you go to visit them when you were little?<br />

A: Not much then. They lived north. See they lived north <strong>of</strong> Batchtown,<br />

near Hamburg. Hamburg and Batchtown was, it was about say maybe eight or<br />

ten miles south <strong>of</strong> there. And the only means <strong>of</strong> transportation was horse<br />

and buggy or horse and wagon and it was too far to go and the horses<br />

would get tired. They didn't have nothing but log cabin and my father<br />

and brothers and all his brothers and them they had to--I told you the<br />

other day that this log cabin still is there. And they had a l<strong>of</strong>t and<br />

the boys would get up there and I heard my father tell how the snow would<br />

drift in the cracks and they'd push the covers <strong>of</strong>f. And they all had<br />

feather beds and they killed wild ducks and they raised ducks too and<br />

they saved the feathers to make these feather beds. And they would push<br />

this snow out and then go downstairs at the fireplace and they didn't<br />

have a stove. And my grandmother used to cook with a, she would take a<br />

kettle, iron kettle and she'd mix corn bread up and cakes and stuff and<br />

she'd cook it. And she'd just put the lid on there and she'd get the<br />

coals in the fireplace and how she did it, 1'11 never know. But she'd<br />

cook that stuff in there and cut that coal and she'd stick it in there<br />

and put the coals over the kettle, in the iron kettle and she knew just


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 17<br />

when to take that corn bread out and when to take that cake out.<br />

just delicious and we ate cornbread and muffins.<br />

It was<br />

Q:<br />

What did your grandmother look like?<br />

A: Oh, she always had a, I don't know what you call them, a Mother<br />

Hubbard dress or whatever you like. And she was grey headed and had kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> a square face, and grey hair, <strong>of</strong> course. And my grandfather he was<br />

not a very tall man, he wasn't as tall as I am and he had great big long<br />

whiskers come clear down here to a point and they were just white as<br />

snow. He chewed tiger fine cut tobacco and never ever got a little <strong>of</strong><br />

that amber tobacco juice on those whiskers when he'd go to spit, he'd go<br />

(spit) like that and he spit from here to that cabinet over there. My<br />

mother, when we lived in the west part <strong>of</strong> Auburn, he'd come down and they<br />

lived the first house south <strong>of</strong> what used to be the Christian Church, it's<br />

torn down now. And my mother would say, "Well, the preacher's in town,<br />

going to have dinner over at Aunt Dora's today." Grandpa's coming down<br />

the road and he come down the street that the road goes out <strong>of</strong> town and<br />

here he come with his came and he walked for about a block and then he<br />

stopped and look all around and then he would go, stop and go another<br />

block. And he lived to be, I don't know how old he was. I thought I had<br />

some pictures <strong>of</strong> him here but I don't know. I'll look and see if I can<br />

find them but I don't think I can.<br />

Q: Did your grandparents move to Auburn when your father moved to Auburn?<br />

A: No, they were here, they were here first. They lived on a farm out<br />

west <strong>of</strong> town here. The first house going west toward Waverly on the<br />

north side <strong>of</strong> the road. That's where they farmed. When we got to Auburn,<br />

we came in here on the C&A Train, and we walked out there, and we stayed<br />

all night there the first night we came to Auburn. Our clothing and our<br />

furniture and what we had and everything was put on a steamboat Villa<br />

Calhoun, and you go down to Alton, and then they transferred it on to the<br />

C&A Railroad, and then they shipped it here to Auburn.<br />

Q: Can you remember that trip by steamboat?<br />

A: Oh, yes, I had my first "boughten" pants. And I remember they hauled<br />

everything on this steamboat to Villa Calhoun and they had a big stairways<br />

going up. You've been on one, haven't you? The big stairway goes up and<br />

they had a great big bull tied down here. And they had him tied tight<br />

and he couldn't get out and we'd run back up the stairs. We were devils<br />

I guess.<br />

Q: How long a trip was that, from when you started until you got to<br />

Alron?<br />

A: Well, we got up early in the morning and a big wagon took us to<br />

Waverly to the West Point landing. That's when we got on our way from<br />

Batchtown to the West Point and the steamboat Villa Calhoun would land<br />

there and we loaded up. And oh, I thought it was fine to be on a boat<br />

and the negroes took it, you know, and we go down to Alton. And then<br />

they pulled into Alton, and then they unloaded stuff, and I don't know<br />

how drays took it and went to the depot here and get it. So then we, my


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 18<br />

father bought this house I told you about for $775 or $750, that's it and<br />

a brand new house.<br />

Q: Did you say that a dray brought your belongings?<br />

A: No, no, my uncle, I don't know what took it from the boat to the<br />

railroad but my grandpa had teams <strong>of</strong> horses and wagons and they rode it<br />

down then to their house down there.<br />

Q: Was that your first steamboat ride?<br />

A: That's the first steamboat and first train I ever seen.<br />

Q: And the first train ride? What was the train like?<br />

A: Oh, I can't remember now. We came on the C&A train and we stopped<br />

here. We got into Auburn about 6:00 at night, just about this dark and<br />

they didn't have that many street lights like they have now. And so we<br />

walked out to my father's, my grandfather's. And then the next day they,<br />

I guess it was, they come in with their wagon and loaded the furniture<br />

and they took it down to that house that my father bought and there we<br />

started living again. That's where I started school from there.<br />

Q: Can you remember what the inside <strong>of</strong> that train looked like when you<br />

came over?<br />

A: No, just an old style train.<br />

Q: Steam engine?<br />

A: Oh yes, steam engine. It had a bell on it that rang most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

time, a steam bell.<br />

Q: Did they stop at every little town?<br />

A: No, mostly. There wasn't that many towns between. Alton and Upper<br />

Alton and Eodfrey and Carlinville, Girard, Virden and Auburn. hat's<br />

about all the stops there were.<br />

Q: When you were talking about riding on the wagon when you were a<br />

little boy, did you ever have hay rides?<br />

A: Oh, yes, later on when I went to school we had hay rides. Some <strong>of</strong><br />

the children and their folks would have a wagon that lived at the edge <strong>of</strong><br />

town and I remember we had one big party out at the <strong>Illinois</strong> State Game<br />

Farm that used to be out south <strong>of</strong> town where the country club is now.<br />

And that was the State Game Farm where they raised pheasants by the<br />

thousands and shipped them all over the state and the hunters would go<br />

out and kill them. And Doc Weaver was the state commissioner here in<br />

town and it employed about twelve or fourteen men out there and if a<br />

fellow had a job with them he had a pretty good job. They'd always meet<br />

uptown on the square at a wagon and they'd go out to the Farm on the hay<br />

rack or on the wagon. I remember one time, I can't remember her last<br />

name but she was English, her father was a gameskeeper from England who


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 19<br />

came over here. Gertrude was her first name and she had a birthday party<br />

out there and out at the farm and everybody was invited in our class and<br />

everybody was boy, girl, boy, girl. I had my first date that night.<br />

Q: How old were you then?<br />

A: Oh, 1 was ten or twelve years old then and Anita Bradley was her<br />

name. She's dead now and oh, all we done was held hands and help them<br />

over the fence or something like that. Went out in the timber and picked<br />

flowers and came back and had ice cream and cake and then they brought us<br />

all back to town and we played ring-around-the-rosie, old style games.<br />

Q: Talking about this pheasant farm, what would be the price <strong>of</strong> a<br />

pheasant in those days?<br />

A: Oh, they didn't sell them.<br />

Q: They did not sell them, they were not used to eat?<br />

A: No, well, yes, they were, they would ship them in crates to other<br />

parts <strong>of</strong> the state and turn them loose to inhabit the state with the<br />

pheasants. The farmers got so that they hated the pheasants because the<br />

pheasants would go along and the corn would get up about that high and<br />

they'd pull the corn up and they'd eat the grain <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> it, finally the<br />

State had to do away with the State Game Farm. I remember one time they<br />

had a cyclone came over across here and it blew over all the coops and it<br />

just killed them by the thousands. They took two cars from the railroad<br />

here and then went out and went around and picked up them dead birds and<br />

put them on these boxcars and took them to Chicago and took them to the<br />

poor people. They were New Pork dressed. That same night <strong>of</strong> that cyclone<br />

we went to Pawnee to a football game at the high school over there, and<br />

it broke all the window lights in the train and had telephone poles down<br />

on the tracks between here and Pawnee. And we couldn't, some <strong>of</strong> us, the<br />

rest <strong>of</strong> us had the hotel reserved there, all the rooms in the hotel, what<br />

rooms they had. And some <strong>of</strong> the boys, some <strong>of</strong> the Pawnee football players<br />

took some <strong>of</strong> the boys home with them to stay all night and about ten <strong>of</strong><br />

us stayed up in the jail, the courtroom. And the pr<strong>of</strong>essor over at<br />

Pawnee went, every town had a livery stable then, didn't have automobiles<br />

then. If you went any place, you'd go hire a horse and a buggy. And so<br />

the pr<strong>of</strong>essor, went and got blankets, horse blankets, they had nice<br />

cloths, they kept the horse blankets clean, they were nice, and they gave<br />

us all a blanket a piece and that's when we came home. When we went over<br />

there it was just short sleeve weather and that's, that was the eleventh<br />

month, eleventh day in 1911 when it happened. I'll never forget it as<br />

long as I live and we slept on the tables there in the courtroom and come<br />

home the next morning on the train. And the window lights were out and<br />

it was pretty cold and we had a horse blanket around us. We brought the<br />

horse blankets to school and they got them all together and took them<br />

back over to the livery barn.<br />

Q: A cyclone in November?<br />

A: Eleventh month, eleventh day in 1911. Quite a cyclone in Texas too<br />

then. They said the ~utton's Clothing Store here that hail came down


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 20<br />

eleven inches in circumference. It went through the skylight and they<br />

picked it up and measured it and it was eleven inches in circumference.<br />

Q: Good heavens!<br />

A: It was quite a storm. We couldn't come home, and we went over there<br />

in a team <strong>of</strong> wagons and two horses when we went over there to play football.<br />

Q: How<br />

Pawnee?<br />

long would it take you to go by horse and wagon from here to<br />

A: Oh,<br />

about three or four hours.<br />

The horse could only go so fast.<br />

Q: Did<br />

you ever own a horse when you were young?<br />

A: We1 1, I was a jockey. When we had a racetrack here, a fellow by the<br />

name <strong>of</strong> Bert Vaughn had a running horse and they couldn't get anybody to<br />

ride him. I always did love horses and I was working for Jerico. He had<br />

two race horses. One was named Shoestring Billy and the other Silver<br />

Abbey. This Dr. Wheeler says have a running race and the last one in the<br />

race would be a running race. Bert Vaughn owned this running horse and<br />

he said, "I haven't got any jockey." Dr. Weaver said, "Well, here's a<br />

jockey right here," and he grabbed me. He said, "You' 11 ride him." And<br />

I said, "Yes, I'll ride him." And so I did, but I didn't win the race<br />

because he was a good ole horse. He was a tall, long-gaited horse, he<br />

didn't get started, so he couldn't get away very fast, you know. And St.<br />

Louis Joe, a horse we called him St. Louis Joe, he was faster and so he<br />

got away quicker than, but when the race was over well, he just got<br />

stretched out and started to run good because he would take a long stride.<br />

Q: Was horse racing a popular sport then?<br />

A: Oh, yes, Auburn had a racetrack. Virden and New Berlin had a<br />

racetrack and it had a meet this week and then in Virden next week, this<br />

week, this week.<br />

Q: Did you have any famous jockeys in this area?<br />

A: Well, I guess I was about as famous as any <strong>of</strong> them and I went, I<br />

heard <strong>of</strong> a, well I was about fifteen years old then, and I heard <strong>of</strong> a<br />

fellow in Carlinville that had a horse, good running horse. So I went<br />

down there to see this fellow and made a deal with him that I'd take the<br />

horse and we'd split the pr<strong>of</strong>it on him. And so I started. Spring News<br />

was the horse's name. His mother was Evening News and his father's name<br />

was Main Spring by Evening News and the colt was Spring News. That's the<br />

one I rode and I remember the race was held at Virden and I took this<br />

horse. I walked and rode him a while and then I'd get tired and I'd get<br />

<strong>of</strong>f. It was quite a ways from Carlinville to Virden and we got there.and<br />

I put him in the livery barn and I guess I slept all night with him in<br />

the stall. Horses will never step on you and I put a rope across the<br />

corner <strong>of</strong> the stall because he would smell around you and just keep you<br />

awake. So John Quinn, Earl Faust and Ted Reagan came down there and John<br />

Harms and they said to me, "Can you win with him <strong>Howard</strong>?" And I said,<br />

"Well, I think so." I said, "I haven't even got $10 for the entry fee."


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 2 1<br />

They said, "Well, we'll pay the entrance fee and we'll make it worth your<br />

while if you win this race, we're going to bet a lot <strong>of</strong> money on you.11 I<br />

said, "I'll ride him as long as he's got hair." And two horses, there<br />

were three or four horses in the race but these two, Guy Housman (name <strong>of</strong><br />

a horse) and my horse, we broke together. They said we could put a horse<br />

blanket over us all the way around the track. We got to the last turn,<br />

he was crowding a little bit, and I just took my bat, I had a bat about<br />

that long, and I said, "Lay over, lay over." And he pulled his horse<br />

just a little bit and threw him <strong>of</strong>f stride and that let me get about that<br />

far ahead <strong>of</strong> him and that's they way we finished. They gave me $25 for<br />

riding, winning that race. I got the purse too, the $50 purse. I got<br />

that. Of course, I had to split that with Mr. Utt the fellow that was<br />

the owner <strong>of</strong> the horse. So then it went on, the race business flourished<br />

quite a bit and Tom Strevey in Taylorville, he was a blacksmith, and he<br />

told me about a horse in Edinburg owned by Dr. Walter, a veterinarian in<br />

Edinburg, had a horse named Tapioca. She was a good old mare and she<br />

could run half a mile like a streak <strong>of</strong> lightning. So Tom Street brought<br />

her over here to me and I rode her in a race here and won it easy. And I<br />

went in the circuit every week in the county fairs in the fall <strong>of</strong> the<br />

year. And I'd have to go to school and then I'd get on the interurban<br />

and they'd go over there and Strevey would take care <strong>of</strong> the horse and I'd<br />

be there the day <strong>of</strong> the race to ride the horse. And so it wound up, I<br />

know it wound up in a free for all fight out here. Shoestring Billie and<br />

Gift-<strong>of</strong>-Million was the two horses, whichever one got the pole, the pole<br />

means the inside track, and whoever would get around that pole, he<br />

generally won the race. This fellow named Jerico had a barn out there<br />

where they cooled the horses <strong>of</strong>f and shed them so the sun wouldn't get to<br />

them. And so it was going down there into the barn and the first heat<br />

was over and Ned Provines drove Gift-<strong>of</strong>-Million and Jerico drove<br />

Shoestring Billie. And Jerico took his buggy whip and hit Provines right<br />

across the face with it and started the fight. That was in the fall <strong>of</strong><br />

the year, that was the last, the races had been going on for a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

years, and anyway that was how they wound up the race. They had a nice<br />

big grandstand out there and everything on the way to the cemetery, just<br />

right where those oil tanks are, just right across the street. If you<br />

get on an airplane, I flew over it in an airplane and you can see even in<br />

the corn, you can see a difference where, you can see the indentation<br />

where that racetrack used to be. But that wound up the racetrack.<br />

Course them days you didn't have auto- mobiles, you'd go then to the<br />

livery stable and rent you a horse and a buggy, and they had lap robes<br />

and everything. That's the way it was for transportation. I remember<br />

when Dr. White got a car here. Us kids, it'd make a track in the dust<br />

and us kids were barefooted and we'd run around and we'd track that dust<br />

so we got to see the car. It was quite a site in them days.<br />

Q: Your first car. The first time you saw a car?<br />

A: The first time we saw a car. Dr. White owned it.<br />

Q: What did it look like?<br />

A: Well, it looked like an old car, looked like an old Ford. It didn't<br />

have a steering wheel, it had like this.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 2 2<br />

Q: A rod or a guide?<br />

A: You didn't have a wheel to turn.<br />

Q: Did it have a top on it?<br />

A: No, yes, no, it didn't either. It didn't have a top. I think I<br />

lived in a wonderful age and I suppose you and other children or kids are<br />

going to see more than I ever seen because you can't stand in the way <strong>of</strong><br />

prosperity, progress. Because well, everything, I seen the horse and<br />

buggy go, I seen the automobile come, I seen the radio come, I seen the<br />

television come, I seen them go to the moon, or the planet up there and I<br />

guess I've seen quite a bit.<br />

Q: Yes, you have.<br />

A: And you and a lot <strong>of</strong> people your age. You'll see a lot more stuff.<br />

Q: It's hard to imagine.<br />

A: Yes, you can't stand in the way <strong>of</strong> progress.<br />

Q: Well, let's go back again a little bit to springtime when you were<br />

little. Do you remember what Easter was like?<br />

A: Oh, yes, we just had Easter eggs, that's about all that, and we all<br />

went to Sunday school <strong>of</strong> course and that was the birthday <strong>of</strong> Christ or<br />

the Resurrection.<br />

Q: Yes, did your mother have a new hat?<br />

A: Oh, yes, my mother, she made hats.<br />

Q: She made hats?<br />

A: Yes, my mother was a good seamstress. She made hats and she was a<br />

good and wonderful cook and she always had some kind <strong>of</strong> a doings around<br />

Easter.<br />

Q: She designed her own hats to wear to church?<br />

A: She designed them and she made them and sold them. She made all our<br />

clothes until we came up here and I had my first "boughten," first pair<br />

<strong>of</strong> "boughten" pants and oh, I always thought that was the finest thing I<br />

ever had. Because she'd take Uncle John and Uncle Bill's suits and she'd<br />

cut them down and rip them all up and make me and my brother a suit <strong>of</strong><br />

clothes just like she could anybody. She could sew, in them days, they<br />

had to do that.<br />

Q: In church, did you sing?<br />

A: Yes, we had Mrs. Hedrick, I told you about her. She was my Sunday<br />

School teacher and they'd always have an Easter Cantata or something like<br />

that, whatever you call it.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong><br />

Q: Cantata?<br />

A: Cantata. They'd have everybody speak a little piece. I guess they<br />

still do it.<br />

Q: Did you have a special Easter dinner?<br />

A: Well, no, at home we did but not at church.<br />

Q: Did you have traditional ham?<br />

A: Oh, yes. Oh, I don't know about that.<br />

Q: Did you color eggs?<br />

A: My mother used to color eggs. They'd get sassafras roots and color<br />

them, used the roots to color them.<br />

Q: What color did you get from sassafras?<br />

A: Beige, browns and some other kind <strong>of</strong> weed they got they used for<br />

coloring, I can't remember. I know, well, it was just first one thing<br />

and then another.<br />

Q: What were 4th <strong>of</strong> July celebrations like when you were a boy?<br />

A: Now you're getting to where you're coming into the Auburn's Free Fish<br />

Fry. They used to have the biggest affair here. We had ten saloons and<br />

nine churches and they had a big platform built in each corner <strong>of</strong> the<br />

square. And they bought fish by the ton, and they'd build it, and they'd<br />

fill it with lard, and they'd fry this fish. And you'd come and get all<br />

the fish you wanted for nothing. The saloons furnished the money and<br />

Auburn had a band. They didn't have a high school band in them days,<br />

they'd have just an ordinary band with different ones around town, taught<br />

themselves mostly. They could play pretty good and they had outside<br />

entertainment would come, actors and tumblers and things like that. And<br />

I remember the people would come here and they'd bring, oh, from Virden,<br />

Thayer and Waverly, they'd bring a wagon and bring their tea and hay and<br />

corn for their horses. And they'd sleep under the wagons, and they had<br />

their own blankets and stayed for the three day fish fry. All free.<br />

Q: Three days?<br />

A: Three days and before the fish fry we'd get in cars and they'd take<br />

the band. And I always went with them and we had a billy goat we'd take<br />

along too. And we'd get <strong>of</strong>f in a town and we'd parade and tell them all<br />

about the fish fry and us kids, we'd go along. We had a little fish<br />

about this long out <strong>of</strong> cardboard and a string in there with a loop and<br />

we'd hook that on to all the cars and it was in every business house<br />

about the Auburn Fish Fry. And I remember the tumblers would be on one<br />

corner and on one they had a tall pole. They set it up in front <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Nazarene Church or just about in front <strong>of</strong> it and I forget how tall it<br />

was. And they had a cable run from it to the northwest corner <strong>of</strong> the<br />

square and this Okay Stewart was his name, and he got on this platform


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong><br />

and he had these pink tights and He'd holler, "Is the man with the gun<br />

ready? If the man with the gun is ready I'm all ready too." They'd<br />

shoot the gun and this fellow would hang by his teeth on a rubber grip.<br />

And this boy'd just come down on this pulley that was two blocks long and<br />

he was really yelling something and he had a big blanket and a canvass <strong>of</strong><br />

some kind and when he hit, he stopped him so he wouldn't get hurt.<br />

Q:<br />

It makes your neck hurt thinking about it.<br />

A: It didn't hurt me. We were anxious to see it. We were always ready<br />

to see it. My father raised from four to five hogs and he, after we sold<br />

that house, we bought another house that had a whole block in the southwest<br />

part <strong>of</strong> town. And we had a cow and he always raised four-five hogs and<br />

Lou Alberts and Butch Harms would butcher. They'd make a date like if<br />

they come the 5th <strong>of</strong> December this year to kill your hogs and they'd come<br />

in and all we had to do was get the wood ready and they'd come in with<br />

their wagon and tripod or whatever it is. They'd be there about 4:30,<br />

5:00 in the morning and they'd have all those hogs shot and hung up on<br />

the trestle there and they had them a11 cut up, lard rendered, and<br />

sausage made. And us kids would go down the street giving everybody some<br />

liver, everybody had liver when we butchered. And so they would make a<br />

date next year for the same time. Everybody had them around town, had to<br />

raise their own hogs. My father had a smokehouse and they used sassafras<br />

and hickory and sassafras, hickory and something else, some kind <strong>of</strong> wood<br />

they smoked it. Boy those were good hams too. That was the best ham. I<br />

can taste them yet.<br />

Q: Those smokehouses, were they all enclosed?<br />

A: Well, yes, they were enclosed, but they has a. . . .<br />

Q: Had place for the draft?<br />

A: Smoke would come out through the cracks, but they'd hang them hogs up<br />

in the wintertime and they'd salt them, put salt over them and they'd<br />

hang them up. And the first time that they thawed, they would get around<br />

the hams, so then they'd brush all that salt <strong>of</strong>f and then they'd take<br />

sugar and stuffing. It really tasted good. We traded in the store, and<br />

they took milk. We never paid anything at the grocery store because we<br />

just traded milk. He had three children, him and his wife and we took<br />

milk to them about everyday. And groceries never cost like they do naw<br />

and we just traded groceries for milk. And I took care <strong>of</strong> Dr. Britton's<br />

horses. I told you I loved horses. I took care <strong>of</strong> Old Dr. Britton's<br />

horses for him and if we needed a doctor why he would come and he never<br />

would charge us because I took care <strong>of</strong> his horses and he never would<br />

charge us.<br />

Q: Did you do the milking?<br />

A: Oh, yes, a lot <strong>of</strong> times.<br />

Q: How much milk would you get from a cow?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 25<br />

A: Oh, we had a cow one time, we bought a gurnsey cow and we had to milk<br />

her three times a day. She gave so much milk and we had an over supply<br />

<strong>of</strong> milk. We'd just feed it to the hogs. And I'll never forget my father<br />

said to me one day, he was going out to thrash and he said, "<strong>Howard</strong>, I<br />

want you to put some lye, worm them hogs with a little lye." I didn't<br />

know. I got a can <strong>of</strong> lye and a bucket <strong>of</strong> water and dumped in there and<br />

in the trough and the pigs would drag one way and then they'd squeal and<br />

bite the dirt. So anyway it didn't kill them but it killed all the<br />

worms. Dad would be gone all week thrashing wheat. They'd go from one<br />

house to the other thrashing and when he got home well, he didn't know<br />

about this and I didn't tell him. I learned not to put that much lye in<br />

the water. That was too much.<br />

Q: Well, when you were ten years old, you said you worked on a farm.<br />

A: Oh, yes, I went work for Beansy Blockly out here. I had what you<br />

call a sulky low. Three horses. All you had to do was sit on there and<br />

drive the horses and then kick your foot. I got two bits a day and my<br />

board, and the next year I got fifty cents a day and my board, and then<br />

the next year I finally got a dollar and my board.<br />

Q: Wow!<br />

A: That was when school was out. Everybody had something to do in them<br />

days. If you didn't work, well, you didn't eat I guess. I remember<br />

mother used to say, "Boys," we'd play out in the yard and she'd say,<br />

"wash them feet," and we'd go back and pump the water on them. And I<br />

tell you I'll never forget, she said, "Now I want to see them feet, them<br />

sheets are getting too dirty too quick." We didn't wash them, we just<br />

pumped water. It was cold, you know, coming out <strong>of</strong> the well and we<br />

didn't want to get our feet cold and so we just pumped and she'd hear the<br />

pump going and think we were washing them, but we didn't wash them.<br />

Q: Did you go barefoot a lot?<br />

A: Oh, yes. We didn' t take our long underwear <strong>of</strong>f until the 1st <strong>of</strong> May,<br />

then we got to go barefooted. Then we would go barefooted until frost.<br />

We'd go swimming out here and we just ran <strong>of</strong>f and went swimming out in<br />

the creek out here. And she forbid us to go unless some elderly people<br />

went with us so we would come home and have dirt on our face and I suppose<br />

she knew we had been swimming.<br />

Q: Did you learn how to swim by yourself?<br />

A: Oh, yes, had to. If it hadn't been for Charles Martin, I wouldn't be<br />

here today. There was a log across the creek and there came a big rain<br />

and Sugar Creek was coming out. And I went and jumped in the water out<br />

there before I could really swim very good. The current was so fast it<br />

took me and Charlie Martin out on that log and a board was on the log and<br />

he grabbed me by the hair and throwed me up and walked me back and got me<br />

out.<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, how old were you then?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 2 6<br />

A: Oh, about ten, twelve. Maybe fifteen, I don't know. But I learned<br />

to swim good from that time on.<br />

Q: Did you ever have a pet?<br />

A: Oh, yes, we had dogs. I had a dog. I had a little terrier and my<br />

brother he had an "old red" they called him. Loren Gates, my neighbor,<br />

had a shepherd dog and in them days, they didn't plow the fields where<br />

the wheat was in the fall <strong>of</strong> the year because they didn't have time then.<br />

They just had all horses and the horses couldn't get the work done like a<br />

tractor does.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape One, Side Two.<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, do you want to continue on about your dog story?<br />

A: Well we generally had a weenie or two around, we had a ice box with<br />

just ice and a lid and we would get up about five in the morning and one<br />

<strong>of</strong> us would go down and take a weenie and go down to ~ave's house when<br />

they got up, we'd give Old Water Boy a piece <strong>of</strong> that weenie and we'd lure<br />

him over to our house. Then all three <strong>of</strong> us, I and my brother and Ron<br />

Gates, would take our dogs and go out in the fields in the country, the<br />

rabbits were thick then. We would go down to those fields and we would<br />

holler, "Here it comes," and Old Water Boy would stick up his head and he<br />

made about two or three jumps and he reached over and grabbed those<br />

rabbits. We'd cut their heads <strong>of</strong>f and slit them in the stomach and throw<br />

their intestines out. It was nothing to go out and get fifty rabbits and<br />

skin the hair <strong>of</strong>f. We went over to Wineman's store. He would give us<br />

fifteen cents for those rabbits and he'd sell them for twenty cents.<br />

He'd hook the hind leg and he always left one foot on, They'd hook those<br />

rabbits all over that pole and the women would come in and see a rabbit<br />

that they want and then they would freeze them. We had cold winters and<br />

lots <strong>of</strong> snow in those days. More then, than they do now, I think.<br />

Bobsleds, everybody had a bobsled, every farmer did. So that's the way<br />

we earned our spending money. We'd easily get fifty rabbits in a day.<br />

They were just thick.<br />

Q: Did you shoot them with a gun?<br />

A: No, the dogs would catch them, we didn't have any guns. Guns cost<br />

money and shells cost money. We just had a knife so we could cut their<br />

heads <strong>of</strong>f and we just cut them right down here and give them a pull like<br />

that, (indicating) and the guts would fall out and we'd pull the hair and<br />

the hide <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> it. Then take them up to Wineman's.<br />

Q: Did you take some home to Mom to cook?<br />

A: Oh, she had rabbits whenever she wanted them. I ate so much rabbit I<br />

could hop. (laughs) We enjoyed it.<br />

Q: So besides your farming, what else did you do as a young boy for a<br />

job?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 27<br />

Q: Well, my first job outside <strong>of</strong> farming, every evening after school,<br />

was at Butler Poultry company down here. They'd go out to the country,<br />

every farmer raised chickens, and they'd bring these chickens (into town.<br />

They had what they call ruffers, they would hook them in the hooks there<br />

and they would stick them in their brain and they would throw them over<br />

to us kids. We'd pick the pin feathers <strong>of</strong>f and then they put them all in<br />

a barrel and put a big cake <strong>of</strong> ice on them. Then they would put burlap<br />

over the top and take them out to the depot, and the train, they called<br />

it number eighty. It came in at eight o'clock, and they would ship them<br />

to New York. They were New York dressed, they didn't even take the<br />

intestines out <strong>of</strong> them at the Butler Poultry Company down here.<br />

Q: Where was that located?<br />

A: Right down here where the city had their machinery. That was the<br />

Butler Poultry House. (3rd and Washington Street)<br />

Q: The city garage?<br />

A: Yes. Us kids would get, they got five cents for ruffing and killing<br />

them and we got two cents for pinning them. We worked all day and made<br />

about forty cents, but we had something to do, we'd get chicken lice all<br />

over us. They don't hurt you but they'd run you to death, they would run<br />

a11 over you.<br />

Q: So what did you spend your money on then?<br />

A: Oh, ice cream cones.<br />

Q: Where did you get your ice cream cones?<br />

A: Well, they had ice cream then.<br />

Q: How did they keep that ice cream cold?<br />

A: They had some kind <strong>of</strong> a big barrel like thing and a big can about<br />

that long, about ten gallon, about that big around and they put ice all<br />

around it and pushed half <strong>of</strong> it down and put salt around there. Did you<br />

ever see them make homemade ice cream? Well, that's the way they had<br />

that can, they packed it in there, and they and a cork down in the bottom,<br />

and they pulled it out and let the water out and then they'd do the same<br />

thing and keep it cold that way. Charlie White had a popcorn machine,<br />

you could get a sack <strong>of</strong> popcorn for a nickel and every Saturday night<br />

they had a band concert. Every Saturday night was a big night. The<br />

farmers came to town, and the band would play.<br />

Q: Did they dance?<br />

A: No.<br />

Q: There was no place to dance.<br />

A: They had a dance at the opera house, that is what they called it,


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 2 8<br />

Q: Where was the opera house?<br />

A: Well, it was on the left side <strong>of</strong> the square, back over where, do you<br />

know where that there Kay's place used to be? The upstairs covered two<br />

buildings there, there used to be a stairway going up there, but it is<br />

closed up.<br />

Q: Did they have a stage?<br />

A: Yes, a stage. They would have a band and these shows would come to<br />

town. And there was a Negro, he'd walk out in the street, and he'd spin<br />

that wife around like that and he was just advertising for the show that<br />

night. And a lot <strong>of</strong> times us kids would come home from school and some<br />

<strong>of</strong> them drunks and the saloon keepers would get drunk too and they'd<br />

throw money out in the street in the mud and us kids would go out in that<br />

mud and get that money and then we went home and washed our shoes <strong>of</strong>f.<br />

Q: Can you remember some <strong>of</strong> the plays that you saw there? Some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

entertainment?<br />

A: Well, by name I don't think I could, but my brother and I used to go<br />

to the shows and we could go home and put the whole show on verbatim for<br />

my mother and dad. They had Uncle om's Cabin and I don't know what all.<br />

Q: You speak <strong>of</strong> your brother quite a lot but you had two brothers, is<br />

that correct? Were you closer to one than the other?<br />

A: Well, my oldest brother was, he was kind <strong>of</strong> fleshy, they called him<br />

Fat. They nicknamed him Fat. He was the best-hearted one <strong>of</strong> the whole<br />

bunch. My youngest brother, he was kind <strong>of</strong>, I don't know how to describe<br />

him, he was kind <strong>of</strong> a loner, you might say, and he died, about six years<br />

ago. He was a good boy but he was a little subdued.<br />

Q: So it's your older brother that you went to the movie with or went to<br />

the shows with?<br />

A: Yes. He ran a cafe here on the west side <strong>of</strong> the square for years<br />

until he died. He died <strong>of</strong> cancer <strong>of</strong> the lungs. He smoked cigarettes. I<br />

told him it was going to kill him.<br />

Q: Were there any movies when you were a boy?<br />

A: Yes, they started what they called a Nickelodeon on the east side <strong>of</strong><br />

the square. There was a vacant place there and you could see a picture<br />

show for a nickel. Nickelodeon.<br />

Q: Silent movies?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: And someone played---<br />

A: Keystone Cops and the girl played the piano. Louise Hakes played the<br />

piano .


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 2 9<br />

Q: Was she from around here?<br />

A: Yes, her father ran a saloon.<br />

(2: That takes quite a bit <strong>of</strong> talent playing one <strong>of</strong> those pianos?<br />

A: Louise was . . . .<br />

Q: Did she play fast?<br />

A: Yes, she was pretty good at it though. And there used to be a Chili<br />

Parlor on the south side <strong>of</strong> the square. I'd go in there, by the livery<br />

stable, old John Isaac had a saloon and Sug Armstrong had a chili parlor<br />

there. Just a little narrow place on the sidewalk. Had stools in there<br />

and a little table. Tables like booths and he made good chili too. Gave<br />

ten cents for a bowl <strong>of</strong> chili.<br />

Q: Describe what the inside <strong>of</strong> a grocery store looked like when you were<br />

real young.<br />

A: Well, this Wineman store I was telling you about had four clerks and<br />

a bookkeeper and you'd come in the store and tell the clerk what you<br />

wanted and he would go get it for you and he would weigh it on the<br />

scales. They had a barrel <strong>of</strong> sauerkraut and a barrel <strong>of</strong> pickles and<br />

sacks <strong>of</strong> potatoes and they had two delivery wagons. One for the east<br />

side <strong>of</strong> town and one for the west. The people would call, if they had a<br />

phone, or they would send their children down and list the groceries they<br />

want. They'd fill them all up and charge them and you'd go in on pay<br />

day. Most <strong>of</strong> the people worked in the mine here or the game farm, and<br />

they would, about 10:OO in the morning well, the east side would start<br />

out with his route and the west side would start out with his route and<br />

then when the dad would go to pay the grocery bill, the kids that were<br />

along would get a sack <strong>of</strong> candy.<br />

Q: Oh, what kind <strong>of</strong> candy?<br />

A: Oh, Christmas candy mostly, ordinary candy. They didn't have it<br />

wrapped like that. They had trays in there, a showcase to keep the flies<br />

<strong>of</strong>f.<br />

Q: Did you have licorice?<br />

A: Licorice whip, and when they had . . . .<br />

Q:<br />

What was your favorite kind <strong>of</strong> candy?<br />

A: They had a butcher shop and he didn't sell nothing but meat and if<br />

you were going to town, a kid would say, "Are you going to the market, to<br />

the butchers, can I go with you?" Well, if you get twenty cents worth <strong>of</strong><br />

beef steak, it would be enough for three or four people and the butcher<br />

would give you a weenie and if a kid would come in he would get a weenie<br />

too.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong><br />

Q: Like the bank does with the suckers?<br />

A: Yes. I'll never forget a boat full <strong>of</strong> English came over here and<br />

they, Willie Turner was one <strong>of</strong> their names and Jimmie Richardson, and we<br />

were out in the yard one day and he says, "Where does the chemist live?"<br />

And I didn't know what a chemist was and I said, "What do you mean a<br />

chemist?" and he said, "Where you get the pills, the medicine." I said,<br />

"You mean the Doctor?" He said, "No, the chemist, the chemist. Where<br />

you get the balls, the balls, the baseballs." "Oh, you want the<br />

drugstore." He wanted to know where you could buy a baseball. They just<br />

didn't know what that was in England. A baseball. Boy they all went for<br />

baseball. People would come in here, some Italian family would come in<br />

and they'd write back to Italy or France. This town was originally<br />

farming town but they would go out to the coal mine and they'd send them<br />

money to come over here. They would get them a job in the mines. That's<br />

how, at one time this was all made up after a few years, the mines got<br />

going so good here and why there were Czechoslovakians, Lithuanians,<br />

Polish, Irish, French, Italian, everything. That's why we got Yasinski's<br />

and all, Baschieri and it used to be Jones, Brown and <strong>Herron</strong> and Smith<br />

and names like that.<br />

Q: Most <strong>of</strong> these people settled on the east side <strong>of</strong> town?<br />

A: Yes, most <strong>of</strong> them settled on the east side <strong>of</strong> town. They kind <strong>of</strong><br />

kept to theirselves.<br />

Q: Was there a language problem?<br />

A: Well, to a certain extent. When I started the Chevrolet business, I<br />

was the lawyer, the secretary, their advisor and they'd come to me with<br />

all their problems and I always treated them right and honestly. And<br />

I'll say this, they were good people to pay their bills, better than the<br />

Americans. The Americans would cheat you out if they could. Not the<br />

foreign people. I'll never forget I sold a fellow a car, Felician Gignet<br />

was his name.<br />

Q: What's the name?<br />

A: Felician Gignet. I sold him a used car and he had paid it all but<br />

$40. This was later on, during the depression <strong>of</strong> 1929 and I bought Dr.<br />

art's house then. I had just come back, I sold my business, and come<br />

back from California, we went to California, my wife and son and I, put<br />

my money in three banks and they all went broke. I had to start over and<br />

Felician came down to my house and he stood there and he had his hat in<br />

his hand and he said, "Mr. Percy, I owe you but I cannot pay." He said,<br />

It<br />

I got no money, I got no work, I got no money." I said, "Well, let me<br />

look at the books," and I went in and he only owed $40. And I had made a<br />

pretty good pr<strong>of</strong>it on the car and I said, "Just forget it, Felician," so<br />

I wound up tearing the bill up and he had the rear end <strong>of</strong> his pants out<br />

and I gave him a suit <strong>of</strong> clothes. He was honest and most <strong>of</strong> the foreign<br />

people were very honest. They had to be, they were taught that way over<br />

there.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 3 1<br />

Q: When did Auburn have their first coal mine?<br />

A: Well, they were here when I came. We came here in 1904 and they were<br />

here because my dad went to work at the Lefton Mine. There was the<br />

Lefton Mine, the Auburn Alton Coal Company and the Solomon Mine.<br />

Q: And your father went to work in a coal mine and he was also a farmer?<br />

A: Well, no, he wasn't a farmer, he owned the machines later on. Be<br />

became involved with the thrashing machine, that was later on, but when<br />

we came here we were just poor people from Calhoun County, so poor that<br />

the mice wouldn't stick around.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> hours did he have to work at the coal mine?<br />

A: Eight hours a day.<br />

Q: Five days a week or six?<br />

A: Six days a week and sometimes he'd work seven and they'd give him a<br />

little overtime because they had to clean the boilers. They had to clean<br />

the lime out <strong>of</strong> the boilers. Did you ever see a tea kettle lime up? The<br />

boilers would lime up with this hard water, the steam would run the<br />

engines that hoisted the coal up out <strong>of</strong> the line and . . . .<br />

Q: That was his job then?<br />

A: He went to work firing those boilers. Scooped the coal in, they had<br />

to carry the ashes out. They used a wheelbarrow. My uncle was the<br />

hoisting engineer, he had one <strong>of</strong> the best jobs--you had to have so many<br />

years experience and state license to be a hoisting engineer. He went<br />

into the thrashing business with the farmers. He baught engines and a<br />

separator and a boiler and paid for it by the month.<br />

Q: Did you ever work for the coal mine?<br />

A: Oh, yes, I started working for the coal mine at a dollar and a<br />

quarter a day.<br />

Q: How old were you?<br />

A: I lied. I said I was sixteen, but I was only fifteen.<br />

Q: You had to be sixteen to start working?<br />

Q: You had to go to school till you were sixteen. My mother was sick<br />

all the time and bedfast and we had to have the doctors come from<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> and we just well throwed the money out in the street because<br />

that doctor couldn't do no good, but we tried. When your mother is sick,<br />

you do anything you can to try and help. So I quit school, the eighth<br />

grade and that's as far as I got and I went to work at the coal mine.<br />

Q: What job did you have there?


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 32<br />

A: Open and shut the door, letting the mule and driver through. The<br />

mule would pull a cart with coal on them and I had to have the doors to<br />

shoot the air to make the air go down in the mine. And this fan would<br />

blow down the air about a mile or two and I'd have to open the door and<br />

let the mules and the driver in. The cars had no brakes on them. He'd<br />

whistle and I would hear him coming and I'd open the door and then when<br />

he'd get by I'd shut the door. That's all I had to do and sometimes I'd<br />

go to sleep and someone would come and wake me up.<br />

Q: Were there any bad accidents in the mine?<br />

A: Sometimes. When a man got killed, well, everybody would quit work<br />

for the day. Not too many. They were pretty careful. So then I got a<br />

job as what they call a greaseman. I was greasing the cars that haul the<br />

coal and I got $2.62 a day. I was making the money. Later on I got a<br />

job driving a mule and taking the coal, that paid $2.84 a day.<br />

Q: Was that kind <strong>of</strong> dangerous?<br />

A: Yes, you had the mules in front <strong>of</strong> you and you had to stand there<br />

with one foot on the platform and one on the tailchain and the other hand<br />

on the mule's rumpus. If you come to a hill you had to go down a hill<br />

pretty fast and you'd always jump <strong>of</strong>f and put a scrag in the wheel, make<br />

the wheel slide on the iron rail, hold it back and then you'd hitch on<br />

the back and hold your head around and look this way and kind <strong>of</strong> shine a<br />

little light for the mule but them mules could see in the dark. When<br />

they went down there, they never came out until the spring, until the<br />

mine shut down.<br />

Q: Could they go blind?<br />

A: They would be blind for a day or two because the light was bright<br />

when they first were brought out. They'd wander round and stuff like<br />

that. But after a day or two on top, first <strong>of</strong> April when the mine would<br />

generally shut down, they didn't need the coal so bad, they'd come out <strong>of</strong><br />

the mine and they'd bring the mules out and put them out in the pasture<br />

and pull them back in the fall, back down in the mine in the fall.<br />

Q: The mines didn't operate in the summer?<br />

A: Some <strong>of</strong> them did, but this one over here the Old Auburn-Alton Coal<br />

Company, generally furnished some coal for the railroad and they didn't<br />

use as much.<br />

Q: Where was that mine located?<br />

A: Just north <strong>of</strong> ~utler's Poultry House.<br />

Q: Is that where the area sunk in about fifteen years ago?<br />

A: Yes, you know where the lake is out there at the ballpark, little<br />

lake they got there? Well the tire yard was there. The tire yard was<br />

here and the tile yard was here and the mine was here and Butler's was<br />

here. The mine shaft went down and then a little ways was a fan, a great


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 33<br />

big steam engine fan which ran day and night to keep the air blowing<br />

through that mine.<br />

Q: So it is possible that the house that I lived in over on Park Avenue<br />

was right on top <strong>of</strong> a mine?<br />

A: Yes, it was. There is a coal belt right underneath us right now.<br />

Q: Well, what would happen, you think, if we had an earthquake here in<br />

Auburn?<br />

A: Oh, it is 365 feet down there, straight down. There was a big fire<br />

down there and the west side <strong>of</strong> the fire was a couple blocks west <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Methodist Church. The mine got on fire and the air and the water and the<br />

sulfur somewhere caught fire and they had to seal the whole part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

mine <strong>of</strong>f. They used kind <strong>of</strong> a plaster <strong>of</strong> Paris and brick and cement and<br />

shut the air <strong>of</strong>f. They had to smother it out and its all mine two or<br />

three miles west <strong>of</strong> town, east <strong>of</strong> town, all mined out.<br />

You asked me if we had an earthquake here, I'm telling you now that there<br />

is many a layer <strong>of</strong> rock and slate and six to eight feet <strong>of</strong> coal space<br />

that we wouldn't fall any farther than that. It's the least <strong>of</strong> our<br />

worries because I have been here all <strong>of</strong> my life since I was about seven<br />

years old and it never failed yet. But now when the Peanut Mine, the old<br />

mine here where I started, when it closed down, they would take the mules<br />

out <strong>of</strong> the mine, bring them up one at a time, put them an pasture and<br />

then when the demand for coal became greater in the fall, they would take<br />

them back down in the mine again. Then when the Peanut here, everybody<br />

called it the Peanut Mine, when it closed down the last time, Charles<br />

McMann and myself went to Divernon and we got a job on the night shift<br />

over there driving the mules. The Divernon Mine was one <strong>of</strong> the finest<br />

coal mines in the country, ever known around here. They had a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

rock top. Just solid rock and you had no props to hold it up or anything.<br />

It was a good clean mine. We worked there and we got, as the day shift<br />

lost their drivers, we moved from the night shift to the day shift. Then<br />

World War I started to come. France and them were in to it and we were<br />

involved to the extent that they raised our pay to $5.00 a day, from<br />

$2.84 to $5.00 a day because they wanted coal. In the meantime my mother<br />

died and I came back over to Auburn.<br />

They wanted me to get Dr. Woolover, that I spoke <strong>of</strong> that owned this<br />

horse, and this veterinary at Edinburg, bought twenty-one horses and<br />

mules for France and they had them all assembled in the livery barn at<br />

Chatham, <strong>Illinois</strong>. He had me go and take those twenty-one horses from<br />

the Edinburg. When I got them all tied together and put my saddle in<br />

the car, I went to Chatham. Si Shelton ran the livery barn in Chatham.<br />

He helped me and we got them all lined up and we tied a lead on the back<br />

horse to bring in to the tail <strong>of</strong> the front horse. We went down the road,<br />

so I had a buckskin colored horse and horses are like sheep, you get one<br />

with an odd color they follow him better. And so I got as far as Beamington,<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong>, that was about two thirds <strong>of</strong> the way to Edinburg. Well, I had<br />

to water the horses. A fellow had a little grocery store there, all it<br />

was was a house and a watering trough and this was at Beamington. He<br />

helped me water them and get them tied together again. I left Chatham


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 3 4<br />

about 8:00 in the morning and I got to Edinburg with my twenty-one horses<br />

about 4:00 in the afternoon. Then I caught the train from Edinburg to<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> and the Interurban train from <strong>Springfield</strong> to Auburn and my<br />

job was through. Well, my mother as I said had died, and my father had<br />

gone to St. Louis so I just decided that I was going to be in the draft.<br />

I was only nineteen years old then and I would soon be called in the<br />

draft and so I just went and got four <strong>of</strong> the guys to go with me. We all<br />

went and joined the navy and we got as far as Peoria and the fellow said<br />

to me, "Do you want to join the navy?" And I said, "Yes." "Well, you<br />

better get downstairs and eat all the bananas you can and drink all <strong>of</strong><br />

the water you can because you aren't going to make the weight." I didn't<br />

weigh about 130 pounds. Had to have 136, so I did and when we came back<br />

I think he still gave me a pound extra and anyway I got into the navy.<br />

1'11 never forget, the draft was going out <strong>of</strong> Peoria to the Great Lakes<br />

in Chicago Training Camp and four <strong>of</strong> them got on the draft and I was left<br />

there all alone by myself. And I was the instigator <strong>of</strong> the whole thing<br />

and I felt pretty put out. But they put me up in the best hotel and I<br />

got a ticket to the show. The next day was Sunday and they didn't have<br />

the draft going out <strong>of</strong> there--they called it a shipment, a draft. And<br />

they went Monday morning, they had another draft going to Great Lakes, so<br />

I went with them. Well, I went to the navy.<br />

Q: What was Great Lakes like at that time?<br />

A: It was a training station for the sailors.<br />

Q: Did you have wooden barracks?<br />

A: Oh, brick barracks.<br />

Q: Nice barracks?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: What was your training, what did it consist <strong>of</strong>?<br />

Q: Apprentice Seaman, Seaman and I went through what they call the<br />

Coxman School, C-o-x-m-a-n. Coxman School. I was shipped out after six<br />

weeks <strong>of</strong> training. I was shipped to Erie, Pennsylvania and I boarded the<br />

- U.S.S. Essex that was a training ship. So was the train out <strong>of</strong> Great<br />

-9<br />

Lakes. Then I was sent to board ship, Blueridge Troop Ship, troop ship<br />

called the Blueridge and after that. . . .<br />

Q: How large was a ship like that?<br />

A: A passenger ship. On the Great Lakes. Had to cut twenty feet <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong><br />

the bow and about eight feet <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> her stern and we had to take it round<br />

through the lakes and up to Quebec and that's when I ran in terrible cold<br />

weather up in Quebec, Canada. Then we got to the Boston Navy Pard, I was<br />

transferred to destroyers. And our duty then was to take care <strong>of</strong> the<br />

convoy, we kept watch out for the submarines, to keep them from destroying<br />

our convoy <strong>of</strong> men and food and everything we were shipping over to England<br />

and France.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 3 5<br />

Q: Did you see any submarines?<br />

A: Oh, yes I saw lots <strong>of</strong> submarines. We dropped depth charges but we<br />

didn't know whether we got on, if we dropped depth charges, if we saw the<br />

big oil slick, we knew we got them. If we didn't see an oil slick, well,<br />

we weren't sure if we had them, I never was, I was scared. We got<br />

through all right.<br />

Q: Were you ever attacked?<br />

A: Oh yes. We had a man that always stayed in the crow's nest way up<br />

high on a ship and he would have glasses. If he would see a periscope<br />

anywhere--once in a while some guys would decide that they would just<br />

want to see them shoot. They were all young fellows, full <strong>of</strong> hell, some<br />

<strong>of</strong> them were more than full <strong>of</strong> hell. . . . I was glad when it was all<br />

over.<br />

Q: How long were you out at a time?<br />

A: The first time we went clear across, carried the convoy across and<br />

headquartered in France and we would come back with oil and water and<br />

food. Then come back with another convoy about halfway and they would<br />

meet a convoy coming from the States and we would take over the care for<br />

them and they would take over the care <strong>of</strong> us so we just stayed in France<br />

back and forth, we always got halfway across. That began to get<br />

monotonous so. . . .<br />

Q: That's a lot <strong>of</strong> water, isn't it?<br />

A: A lot <strong>of</strong> water between here and France.<br />

Q: What time <strong>of</strong> year was this?<br />

A: Mostly the wintertime.<br />

Q: The winter?<br />

A: Fall and winter. We were halfway across the ocean coming back and we<br />

got word that we were missed and we were very happy. So we got into<br />

Boston then, we'd change ships, I can't tell you all the names <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

We'd take these destroyers and run them awful hard and they had to be put<br />

in the dry dock about three or Sour months to get the particles scraped<br />

<strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> the bottom, get them general overhauled for safety and. . . .<br />

Q: How long were you in the navy altogether?<br />

A: Twenty-two months and twenty-two days. I have my discharge up here<br />

in my lockbox.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> pay did a seaman get in those days?<br />

A: Oh, about a dollar a day. I think it was $36 a month.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 36<br />

Q: What was your food like?<br />

A: Good food, we had good food.<br />

Q: When you stopped at France, did you have time to see any <strong>of</strong> the<br />

country?<br />

A: Well, yes, we would go to shore at night and take a chocolate bar or<br />

a cake <strong>of</strong> soap and trade that for food and anything else in France because<br />

they didn't have any soap or chocolate candy or nothing like that. If<br />

you wanted a date with a gal all you had to do was to have a chocolate<br />

bar. I was sent out with the receiving ship, what they called a receiving<br />

ship, nothing but a camp. So I got a job, a fellow named McPherson and I<br />

was in the Boston navy yard. They sent us what they called subsistance,<br />

where they gave us $2.50 a day to live on the outside, and I got a job<br />

working at a restaurant just outside <strong>of</strong> the navy yard. This fellow that<br />

owned that, he and Vic McPherson, they were Commissary Stewarts in the<br />

navy and they wanted me to stay there and go to work at the bar for the<br />

restaurant. They owned five restaurants, so I stayed there until I got<br />

homesick.<br />

Q: How long were you there?<br />

A: I stayed there about three months, and I told them I had to get home<br />

and settle in the States.<br />

Q: Did you make lots <strong>of</strong> friends in the navy?<br />

A: Oh, yes, but I've forgotten all <strong>of</strong> them now. They all scattered.<br />

Q: Did you keep in contact with any <strong>of</strong> them afterwards?<br />

A: Some <strong>of</strong> them every once in a while. They soon died out. They had<br />

their home lives the same as I did. But anyway I went back to this when<br />

I got out <strong>of</strong> the navy, I left McPherson and them. I quit and I come back<br />

home here and I went to Divernon. I worked a while and then I quit the<br />

mine and then I went to get a job at Mr. Latham's selling cars. I told<br />

you about before.<br />

Q: Can I ask you a few more things about the coal mine? I've never been<br />

in one and it is hard for me to imagine how back in those days they had<br />

equipment to dig that deep, what did they use and how did they go about<br />

that?<br />

A: Well, they didn't dig, they would drill a hold, they'd drill in there<br />

and then they'd shoot a little shot here. Then they would put a deeper<br />

shot in here, a hold about that big around and fill that full <strong>of</strong> powder<br />

and then would tamp that with clay and wet paper or whatever and there<br />

would be a shotfire come around at night. All the men in the daythe<br />

would be quitting and going home and there would be nobody in the mine<br />

but a couple <strong>of</strong> shotfires. They would come around in the afternoon and<br />

count your shots and they would go around and light these shots on the<br />

run. They would light the shots and keep on running and that would all<br />

be blown out and that would blow that coal out.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 3 7<br />

Q: That must have been a very dangerous thing.<br />

A: It was, but the shotfires were dangerous, not ours. The shot-fire<br />

had the most dangerous part <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> money or compensation did they get for that type <strong>of</strong><br />

work?<br />

A: I don't know, but they got a pretty good wage, but, they couldn't<br />

build mansions with it. But anyway. . . .<br />

Q: Now that's how they got the veins <strong>of</strong> mines. How did they get down<br />

that deep to start with then? How did the mules get all the way down<br />

there?<br />

A: They had just like an elevator, you'd go straight down.<br />

Q: What did they dig those with? By hand or did they have machines that<br />

did that?<br />

A: No, hand, Just dug them by hand. They had to dig a hole there as<br />

big as twelve by twelve straight down. They hoisted the dirt and all<br />

that stuff out and then when they got to the coal vein, they started<br />

spreading out. They'd bring the coal out and up. They had a cage and<br />

they would put a mule in the cage. A man would stand on the top <strong>of</strong> the<br />

cage and have a rope around the mule's head--and this mine over here was<br />

a small mine--and they had to turn his head halfway to get him and bring<br />

him up and put him in pasture. They did the same proce-dure when they<br />

put him down in the ground. The mule, when he went to a coal mine, he<br />

was there maybe for a year before he ever got out. They had a barn down<br />

there and a manger and hay and lots <strong>of</strong> mice and rats down there. They<br />

went down with the hay and stuff.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> light though, was there a light in that barn?<br />

A: No, you had a light on your head.<br />

Q: Well, the mules were in pitch black I suppose?<br />

A: They got so where they told me the mules could see. I think they<br />

could see in the dark like a cat after they were there so long. Anyway<br />

that was very crude to what it is now. Now they don't, the coal mines<br />

are dug on a slope and everything comes out on a conveyor. If you ever<br />

have a chance to go to Pawnee you can see a conveyor coming up out <strong>of</strong><br />

there going right over across 104 to the big power plant, and it goes<br />

right from the coal mine to the power plant, and goes into the power<br />

plant and the power is sent to Chicago, but that's all modern stuff now.<br />

If I was to go in the coal mine now, I'd be lost.<br />

Q: Did they get the coal <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> the walls more or less with picks?<br />

A: They would shoot it. They'd blow that out and like this is the wall<br />

here, we don't call it a wall, they called it a face then and you'd go in<br />

this way.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 38<br />

Q: Straight in?<br />

A: No, angled.<br />

Q: Angled.<br />

A: And you'd put the powder and everything and that would blow that<br />

right out that way.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Two, Side One.<br />

A: Then that would be a vein. They would take that, shoot on that side,<br />

they would drill a hole on that side and only deeper, deep as this would<br />

allow, and then that would be a vacancy here for this shot to come up.<br />

Otherwise it would be on what they call on the solid. That's when you<br />

had a shot on the solid, that was a blow, that would blow a shot back and<br />

create a dust and have a dust explosion. And that's what Panther Creek<br />

Mine--I told a fellow there one day I says I was driving, I was riding<br />

trips for Bill Daugherty.<br />

Q: You were riding what?<br />

A: Trips.<br />

Q: Trips?<br />

A: Trips, that is a trip <strong>of</strong> cars, coal mine cars. They were being<br />

loaded.<br />

Q: You told this fellow?<br />

A: I told him, 1 said, "If I ever saw a shot as that one, that's one."<br />

He says, "Oh, what do you know about coal mining, Mr. Old Fellow you?" I<br />

said, "I know enough that I have got my license to dig coal if I wanted<br />

to and that looks like it's on the solid to me." And he sayd, "Oh, go on<br />

and tend to your business," and so I did. And that shot was a windy shot<br />

and that's the one where that night Lon Coski got killed.<br />

Q: Lon Coski.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: How old a person was he?<br />

A: Oh, he was about 45-50 years old. He was a shotfire.<br />

Q: And he had a family here in Auburn.<br />

A: He lit the shot that killed him, but then the other fellow packed the<br />

shot, he drilled them and tamped the shot that killed him. Anyway. . . .


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 3 9<br />

Q: When someone was killed like that. . . .<br />

A: The mine stops.<br />

Q: Do they have some sort <strong>of</strong> signal or whistle or anything that they<br />

used?<br />

A: No, just when the driver would come in from the bottom with the empty<br />

cars, he'd say, "Well, so and so got killed or there was a big fall and a<br />

ro<strong>of</strong> came in in some places, got several men under." Everybody would<br />

quit and they would all go home.<br />

Q: Well, didn't they have rescue squads in those days that would go back<br />

and try and get these people out?<br />

A: Yes, there was, they were crude, they would just work day and night<br />

to try and get men out. To get their brother coal miners out,<br />

Q: Did the families come and stand outside and wait?<br />

A: No, they never did around here. Now, they did at Cherry Mine when<br />

that was a terrible explosion up at Cherry, <strong>Illinois</strong>. I saw pictures <strong>of</strong><br />

them standing around, people waiting and waiting to see if their husbands<br />

were going to come out.<br />

Q: Was there ever any compensation for the families <strong>of</strong> these miners, I<br />

mean what did they do then?<br />

A: There was some, but nothing compared to. . . . That's why the<br />

miners had the strike here so <strong>of</strong>ten, to get better conditions. That's<br />

why Virden had a mine down there that brought in a bunch <strong>of</strong> Negroes that<br />

were going to run that mine, and that's what they call the Virden Massacre<br />

or something. White coal miners around Virden and Auburn went down<br />

there. They had barricades built <strong>of</strong> hay bales and everything where they<br />

were going to house these Negroes, they started shooting when the train<br />

backed up. The engineer just pulled the train out. They just left and<br />

they never came back, so they gave that up as a bad job, the miners won<br />

that fiasco or whatever you call it.<br />

Q: Then there were unions back then in your day?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Did you belong to a union?<br />

A: Oh, yes.<br />

Q: What did you have to pay as a union member?<br />

A: Oh about a dollar and a half or two dollars a year, a month maybe, a<br />

dollar a month, something like that. That was in its infancy. It was a<br />

hard struggle for the miners to get to where they have got to now. Now<br />

the miners get good salaries. They live like gentlemen and they have<br />

nice homes and they have nice families. They are staking another coal<br />

mine out here by Lowder now.


1 <strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 40<br />

Q: Did you read in the paper just two weeks ago there was a bad mine<br />

disaster in Virden that killed a young man. So they still do have<br />

accidents.<br />

A: Oh yes, but that was mostly the fault <strong>of</strong> the company. There's always<br />

a squabble between the union and the company because the company would<br />

take every advantage for their part and the union people had to Eight<br />

for, stand up for their rights. I have a friend right now that works in<br />

the mine and he makes about $50 a day. But he works and they produce<br />

well, one man can produce about twenty times the amount <strong>of</strong> coal a day<br />

that we used to do then back in the old days.<br />

Q: When you worked at a coal mine here, did most <strong>of</strong> the people in this<br />

town have coal type furnaces?<br />

A: Yes, everybody did.<br />

Q: And was there a company that delivered this coal to their homes?<br />

A: No, anybody in town would, half a dozen or more men, what they called<br />

draymen.<br />

Q: Drayman? What is the word dray?<br />

A: Well, d-r-a-y and m-e-n, I guess. They're teamsters, they were<br />

draymen or teamsters and they had a team and a wagon and if you wanted a<br />

load <strong>of</strong> coal you would meet him on the street and you'd say, "Hey, Dick,<br />

get me a load <strong>of</strong> coal." They'd haul a load <strong>of</strong> coal and if you worked at<br />

the coal mine, you give them your number and they would just charge you<br />

and the union would take it <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> your pay. That's the way you got your<br />

coal.<br />

Q: Were these wagons very big and sturdy?<br />

A: Oh, they were just ordinary wagons. They would scoop it in and scoop<br />

it out. Everybody had a coal shed and cob house or kindling house and<br />

they had to. . . .<br />

Q: I'm curious about the woman's side when these miners came home black<br />

all over, with dust all over their clothes, did you have some place to<br />

wash outside <strong>of</strong> the house?<br />

A: Some <strong>of</strong> them had what you called summer kitchens. They would have<br />

water warm for them and they would come and take a bath and you would<br />

never know they were coal miners after they were home a while. Then, see<br />

that's one thing that, where the unions had to fight, now they got wash<br />

houses right at the mine and they are nice too. But they took their time<br />

and strikes and everything, perseverance for the miners to fight for<br />

their rights and compensation in case someone got hurt, the coal mine<br />

would pay the doctor bills. But that took time and the coal miners had<br />

to go a long ways before they got those conditions. But now they've got<br />

very good conditions and there are not so many, I don't think there is<br />

near as many casualties in the mine now as there used to be and they<br />

don't have props. They used to have to prop coal up. Posts like that


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 41<br />

would hold that slick stuff from falling down. Now they don't do that.<br />

They put a bolt up in there and they have a piece <strong>of</strong> slab iron and they<br />

put that up there and it holds it up. I know if I was still a coal miner<br />

today, I would get lost.<br />

Q: I was always curious--aren't you taking a chance <strong>of</strong> digging down in<br />

hopes that you'll find coal or was there some way that you could detect<br />

that there was actually coal?<br />

A: Oh, they know, they drill, the same way that they drill for oil.<br />

They drill test holes and they get those casings, every time they take a<br />

casing out they analyze it, see what it is. They know, they can tell how<br />

deep that coal is and some places, I have seen them where the coal vein<br />

was nine feet deep. The contour <strong>of</strong> a coal mine is similar to the contour<br />

<strong>of</strong> the land above. You can tell where creeks are and they have hills<br />

down in the coal mine. I used to drive a mule out here at Peabody Coal<br />

Mine and when we were out at the southwest part <strong>of</strong> the underground, and<br />

we'd get to the top <strong>of</strong> the hill and when we started down, well, I had<br />

what they called spragues, about that big around and about that long.<br />

And he'd slip that in the holes <strong>of</strong> the wheels and we'd slip that in there<br />

and then we would just slide down and we'd slip that in there on two<br />

wheels and it would just slide down. Two wheels were on the one side<br />

running and we would put one sprague in the car and two and another and<br />

depending on the size <strong>of</strong> the hill and you'd go down the hill and that<br />

mule had to outrun that car to keep him from--he was an his own.<br />

Q: Did mules get killed down there?<br />

A: Oh, lots <strong>of</strong> times. Then you'd get on the back car and as a rule you<br />

would hold your head down a little bit to kind <strong>of</strong> make a light for the<br />

mule as much as you could. But then when you got down, you'd get <strong>of</strong>f and<br />

just jump on the front end and you would ride down this bumper there and<br />

one foot on the chair here and one foot on the bumper and one hand on the<br />

mule's rump. Sometimes those mules were mean and they would kick you.<br />

Sometimes there were a lot <strong>of</strong> good mules and sometimes you would find a<br />

mean one.<br />

Q: Did you ever get kicked by a mule?<br />

A: Oh, yes, I was kicked by a mule on the farm. That's their only<br />

weapon.<br />

Q: These lights you had on your hats, What were they, battery operated<br />

or were they, . . .<br />

A: They used to be what they called sunshine kind <strong>of</strong> a salve like, more<br />

like a vaseline, that they would put in there and they had a big torch on<br />

it and a baffle on the back so the flame wouldn't come over your head.<br />

Q: A baffle?<br />

A: A baffle over your head so that the flame, the torch wouldn't come<br />

over your back over your head. And then they got to where they used<br />

carbide lights, a little lamp about this big. And you'd unscrew a part


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 4 2<br />

<strong>of</strong> it and put about half full or two thirds full <strong>of</strong> carbide and screw it<br />

up here. And then there was a little tank <strong>of</strong> water up here and you could<br />

set that with the gauge and that water would drip down in to that and<br />

that made the gas and you lit your gas and that was good light.<br />

Q: You could make it brighter or dimmer?<br />

A: Well, <strong>of</strong> course if you got too much water on it you would put it out.<br />

You would learn to run your light.<br />

Q: The carbide has an odor to it, doesn't it?<br />

A: Stinky odor. But it furnished a good light, they were not real<br />

bright lights. Tt was made <strong>of</strong> carbide gas you would burn the gas you<br />

always had a cigarette lighter.<br />

Q: I'm curious, was it terribly cold and damp in these mines?<br />

A: Nice and warm, when I walked out that coal mine, out south, Peabody<br />

Coal Mine--I know one morning I just dreaded to go, it was seven below<br />

zero and 1 hoped night never would come. I had to walk home and there<br />

was no way <strong>of</strong> transportation and you had to walk along the side <strong>of</strong> the<br />

railroad to get back into Auburn. I had everything wrapped around my<br />

head and everything else and that was when my mother was sick then. I<br />

would get home and I would have to do the cooking for my dad and my<br />

younger brother and get up at 4:00 in the morning or 5:00 and cook<br />

breakfast and get ready to go back to the coal mine. You would have to<br />

face that seven below zero and oh, I tell you, it was hell.<br />

Q: But once you got down under there, it was warm?<br />

A: Oh, everybody would hurry to get down, it was just like going into a<br />

cellar. It was nice down there.<br />

Q: Was coal dust kind <strong>of</strong> hard on the miners? Did they wear something<br />

over their nose and mouths?<br />

A: Some did and some didn't. hat's why now they have what they call<br />

Black Lung. The coal miners have what they call a Black Lung now. They<br />

finally got it the last few years, within the last four years or five,<br />

Congress passed the law well--I got the Black Lung and we had to go--you<br />

had to work in the mine so long and the doctor would send you up to the<br />

hospital. You'd blow in a thing and then they would take your picture,<br />

they seat back for me for four months after I did that, they sent one<br />

into Baltimore, Maryland. I got a letter and they wanted me to come back<br />

to the Memorial Hospital, they wanted a second picture <strong>of</strong> my lungs. So I<br />

did and they took a second picture <strong>of</strong> my lungs and they would give you, I<br />

collected about, well, they pay from the start, I forget how much money.<br />

But it's a sub- stantial pay and they still, if any medicine pertains to<br />

my lungs, why they pay for the medicine. Your Black Lung check comes<br />

every day. That's a law. That's where the union comes in. These men<br />

were just dying with TB and asthma and emphysema and everything. And<br />

they finally got this law through, this Black Lung Law, every ton <strong>of</strong> coal<br />

that comes out <strong>of</strong> the coal mine wherever it be, has to pay so much tax


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 4 3<br />

into the government for this Black Lung. The widow women, a lot <strong>of</strong> widow<br />

women was left, their husbands died from it, they get-- lot <strong>of</strong> women<br />

right here in Auburn--they get Black Lung from their husband. Now after<br />

they awarded me the Black Lung, I got a letter from them if I would prove<br />

up that I was married, that I would add so much too for my wife. And so<br />

I did and they well, after she passed away I had to tell them and they<br />

took <strong>of</strong>f what they was giving for her. It was a wonderful thing. Black<br />

Lung.<br />

Q: Are you taking medicine for that?<br />

A: I take Quinidine. I take one pill every morning.<br />

Q: Do you have any trouble catching your breath?<br />

A: No, I had a heart attack. I had a heart attack in 1949 and I was in<br />

the hospital in Milwaukee. I was on my way to Canada and it hit me there<br />

and I was in the hospital three months and for two months I couldn't get<br />

out <strong>of</strong> bed. I got over it I guess and I am still taking medicine.<br />

Q: I understand that during World War T there was a terrible flu<br />

epidemic, do you remember anything about that?<br />

A: Yes, <strong>of</strong> course I was in the navy then and I was appointed police <strong>of</strong><br />

the ship and you worked four hours on and about eight hours <strong>of</strong>f. And<br />

then you'd go back four and on the ship where the heat comes from the<br />

boiler room up there, they would pile up there, the men would and cold<br />

and sick and everything else. And they had their pea coats on, that was<br />

a heavy blue coat, and the captain would say, "Get them <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> there, get<br />

them <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> that thing." You would get them <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> it and you'd go away<br />

and come back and they would be piled up there again just like they were<br />

before, and you had to do it again, and you hated to do it but. . . .<br />

Q: They were trying to keep warm?<br />

A: Yes, but the captain wanted them <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> there, and if they did have<br />

the flu they would give it to the other guy. I remember our Chief Mate,<br />

Red Griep was his name, we pulled into New York and we had to take him<br />

over to the side in a stretcher and put him in a boat and take him to a<br />

hospital. And he looked up and smiled and he said, "Look out now, don't<br />

you drop me." If we would have dropped him we would have dropped him in<br />

the water <strong>of</strong> course, but we took him and he did die that night. But I<br />

was very fortunate, I went through it all and I never got sick. When I<br />

was at Great Lakes I had a job <strong>of</strong> taking eight men, firing squad were<br />

called there, pallbearers, and there was more than eight men, there was a<br />

firing squad. I'd take an eight men, firing squad and pallbearers and<br />

color guards and they would meet us at the Great Lakes Training Station.<br />

This was my first job in the navy. They would take us to some funeral<br />

home and we had some sailors died and we would conduct a funeral there<br />

and then. They would take us in taxicabs to the next funeral. We'd make<br />

four funerals a day. That was my job for a while. I was glad to get rid<br />

<strong>of</strong> that job. They had an awful nice meal for us at the place where we<br />

would go. I saw them lined up at Great Lakes, they died like flies.<br />

They didn' t have boxes to send them in. They would just cart them up.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 44<br />

It was below zero and they would have a tag on them, a big tag with their<br />

name and number and where they lived and everything else about him, the<br />

father's name, on his big toe and they would cart them along.<br />

Q: That must have been very frightening.<br />

A: A dead man would never hurt you.<br />

Q: But I mean to know that so many were dying.<br />

A: Well, you just hoped you wouldn't get it. I can say knock on wood, I<br />

never even got a cough all during the flu epidemic. And then I, after I<br />

got home here, I asked, "Where's Mr. Wineman here, where's Mr. Arbuckle<br />

who used to run the livery barn, Wineman and Arbuckle." They said, "Hey,<br />

they kicked the bucket with the flu." Well, the story and they told me<br />

that after the fellows that drank a lot <strong>of</strong> liquor, if they got the flu,<br />

it killed them. And if you got the flu and you weren't a drinker, they<br />

would give you whiskey and it cured the flu. That's what their best<br />

remedy the doctor would give you, they'd give you whiskey. That's what<br />

they tell me. The flu epidemic was practically old when I got discharged<br />

and got home.<br />

Q: There were other boys that left Auburn when you did for the navy.<br />

Did you see them or did they make it through?<br />

A: Yes, they all, one fellow, he got color blind. He got chickenpox and<br />

got color blind and he's dead now and they are almost all dead, the five<br />

that went together with me.<br />

Q: But they didn't die during the war?<br />

A: No, I know one died in California, he was in the plumbing business.<br />

And Fritz Ruski, that was a friend <strong>of</strong> mine, he and I, Ruski and I, stayed<br />

together. A fellow name <strong>of</strong> Harris, he was captain <strong>of</strong> a PT boat, that's<br />

one <strong>of</strong> these here guard boats. And there was Ruski, he went to<br />

gunnersmen's school and I went in the cocksman school at Great Lakes and<br />

we could see each other. He was on the second floor and I was on the<br />

first floor so we had to sleep in hammocks and they didn't have no beds.<br />

Everything was hammocks aboard ship too, you had a hammock, there wasn't<br />

any room for a bed. You had to learn to lace your hammock and put it up<br />

there and you got graded on everything. You had to learn it all. So<br />

then Grider, a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Grider, he died with a heart attack,<br />

he was, and Hank Harms, he died here just a while back, a couple, about<br />

three years ago I guess. He died, and Fritz. . . .<br />

Q: Was there a Fritz?<br />

A: Fritz Ruski.<br />

Q: How did it affect the people that stayed at home, were they all<br />

trying to conserve or. . . .<br />

A: Oh yes, they did everything, they knitted sweaters for us and sent us<br />

sweaters and gloves. And they, I know the KP Lodge here, they sent me an


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 45<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> watch, somebody stole it and they cut a hole in my hammock and<br />

got it but that wasn't their fault. The KP Lodge sent everyone <strong>of</strong> us,<br />

everybody that went from Auburn, a watch. There was a lot to do back<br />

home here too. You had to keep the home fires burning and there was<br />

supplies, they were keeping the supplies for the army and the navy both.<br />

In them days, cannons over in France and everything, cannons were drawn<br />

by horses and mules and that's where Doc Woolover from Edinburg would<br />

line up these horses and he was selling them over to France, that was a<br />

business for him. I told you about that.<br />

Q: Was your father still working in the coal mine while you were in the<br />

service?<br />

A: No, he was, yes, he was a fireman. He made steam to run the machinery.<br />

Q: Did you get terribly homesick while you were away?<br />

A: No, not too bad, oh, I never, the first night I laid in my bunk and I<br />

cried pretty much. I was in the middle <strong>of</strong> the ocean and it was rough and<br />

I said, ''What did I get into?"<br />

Q: id you ever get seasick?<br />

A: Oh, yes, not very <strong>of</strong>ten.<br />

Q: It's terrible, isn't it?<br />

A: You get used to it, but I remember I was very fortunate, I was<br />

transferred to four different ships eventually. One station and four<br />

different ships and every place that I went to Dr. Woods from Cincinnati,<br />

Ohio, he was just a civilian doctor who volunteered for army work. He<br />

was either on that ship when I got there or I was on the ship when he was<br />

transferred there and we got to be good friends and I would go down in<br />

what they called Sick Bay. He would say, "Open your mouths and you can<br />

say aaah." He was a pretty good friend. I, my hair was starting to come<br />

out, and he said just get some straight alcohol and he got it for me and<br />

every day put that alcohol on it and I did and I still got a little hair.<br />

Q: You think that helped?<br />

A: Well, it must have. He told me to and I did it.<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, I'd like to ask you about some events that happened in your<br />

life. What year were you married?<br />

A: I was married in 1919. I'll have to go back on that.<br />

Q: Where did you meet your wife?<br />

A: At her house.<br />

Q: She lived here in Auburn.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 4 6<br />

A: When I got home from the service I was sitting out there at the park<br />

with some fellows and a cousin <strong>of</strong> mine lived out near, out south <strong>of</strong> town.<br />

Bert Jenkins was his name and he come over and he said, "<strong>Howard</strong>, I need a<br />

man to help with the thrashing." And he said, "I would like for you to<br />

come out and help." And I said, "well, I don't have any overalls or<br />

nothing to wear, just got white shirts and blue pants, blue serge pants."<br />

And he said, "Oh, come on. You can always wash them or get new ones."<br />

And I said, "Well, I'll try. I'm not used to the sun," and I wasn't<br />

tanned at all then. So I went out with him and he gave me, hitched up<br />

with a mule and a young mule tied to the old mule, and he sent me over to<br />

J. C. Nuckols' house to help thrash. Now I rode a bundle wagon over<br />

there. That happened to be my wife's father farmed that and that's where<br />

I met my wife.<br />

Q: What's a bundle wagon?<br />

A: They used to buy combined wheat and they didn't combine it they just<br />

binded it. They bound it with a string and tied them all up and put a<br />

cap on one and they would let it sit there until it was thrashed. You<br />

would have to put those bundles on a wagon and haul them into the thrash<br />

machine.<br />

Q: How much did one <strong>of</strong> those bundles weigh?<br />

A: Oh anywhere from ten to fifteen pounds, twenty.<br />

Q: Depending on whether they were dry or wet?<br />

A: It had to do with how heavy the yield <strong>of</strong> wheat was. I don't know<br />

what you call the stem <strong>of</strong> the wheat. The grains was in there and then<br />

the machine ran through it and shoveled all the grain out into the wagon<br />

and then it was sold.<br />

Q: So your wife lived there on the farm?<br />

A: And <strong>of</strong> course we had dinner there and I met her then. So they called<br />

me "The Dude" because I had a white shirt and all <strong>of</strong> the rest <strong>of</strong> them had<br />

overalls and blue chambray shirts. And out in front <strong>of</strong> her house was<br />

beautiful maple trees and the field that we were loading the wheat out <strong>of</strong><br />

was south <strong>of</strong> the house. They would come by there and I was head <strong>of</strong>, they<br />

were ahead <strong>of</strong> me a couple <strong>of</strong> wagons, and I stopped there in the shade and<br />

the team was hot too. And my wife and her sister and Buelah Shutt came<br />

out and wanted to how if I would like to have a donut and I said yes.<br />

And they had iced tea and donuts. That's where I met my wife, right then<br />

and there.<br />

Q: How long did you court her before you married?<br />

A: Oh about a year. Her brother was a good friend <strong>of</strong> mine too. I sold<br />

Fords then and I got a job, that's when I got the job selling Fords, when<br />

I wanted a car. 1. was getting a car furnished and every time on Sunday I<br />

was always invited out for dinner. Her brother would invite me and so, I<br />

guess, every evening, all the boys and girls around the neighborhood all<br />

gathered there and they had a sandwich <strong>of</strong> some kind. And they would fly


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 4 7<br />

out and go to different places, shows, dances. I was married the eighth<br />

day <strong>of</strong> February and 1 will have to look in the Bible for the exact year.<br />

Q: How old were you?<br />

A: I was about, we would have been married about sixty years now. I'm<br />

eighty-three.<br />

Q: You were about twenty-three years old.<br />

A: Twenty-three or twenty-four years old.<br />

Q: Where did you get married?<br />

A: There was a Methodist preacher in Carlinville. We went to<br />

Carlinville to get our license. It was in February and my brother-in-law<br />

had the flu. I went out to get her and I was rooming in that house right<br />

across the street over here, Ms. Kitty McGinnis. I had rented a house<br />

where Dr. ~ouse's dental <strong>of</strong>fice is now and I rented that house all furnished<br />

from Mrs. Clark. I had it a11 ready so the day I was to get laarried, I<br />

got up about 6:00 in the morning and took all my clothes over there and I<br />

went out to her house to get her and then we went on to Carlinville. You<br />

didn't have to have no doctor's certificate to go through that so we went<br />

to Carlinville to the Court House and got a license to get married. I<br />

asked him if there was a Methodist minister around and he said, "Yes, I<br />

got one right down the street about a block." He said, "1'11 call him up<br />

for you.'' I said, "DO," and he called him. And so we went down and he<br />

called a Negro for the witness and the Methodist preacher performed the<br />

ceremony and we got in the car and we went back uptown. They had a<br />

bakery shop there and they had little angel food cakes about that big<br />

around (indicating) and so I got one and c<strong>of</strong>fee and that was our wedding<br />

cake. So then we got to St. Louis to honeymoon. I didn't have enough<br />

money to take a train, so we went to St. Louis and we went to the shows.<br />

I never will forget she wore rayon stockings and they slipped down. Most<br />

<strong>of</strong> the stores, the buildings, were closed, business houses, except we had<br />

to go about two blocks from the hotel to the theater. She would get back<br />

in there and pull up her stockings and I'd stand in front <strong>of</strong> her. We<br />

went to the Orpheum Theater there and then we came back and we stayed all<br />

night at the hotel. I said the next day, I said, "Why are we staying<br />

here for, spending money for a hotel when we got a home?" And she said,<br />

"Well, that's all right, I'd rather go home." And I said, "Let's go."<br />

So we got home and that night they had a big snowstorm on the way home<br />

and had a big chivaree.<br />

Q: What's a chivaree?<br />

A: Well, everybody in the neighborhood, anybody gets married or anything,<br />

they got shotguns and tubs and horns and everything else and they all<br />

gathered around. And then when the wedding supper comes in they all come<br />

out behind the rooms and trees and everything else and made all kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

noise and they always had a big feed. They brought a lot <strong>of</strong> presents<br />

too. That was the starting <strong>of</strong> our wedding and my wife and . . . . let me<br />

look here in the Bible. . . . T was married the eighth day <strong>of</strong> February,<br />

1923, Carlinville, <strong>Illinois</strong>.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 4 8<br />

Q: Do you want to talk with me about some trips you might have taken<br />

during your married lif el<br />

A: Oh yes, we took a trip when Tommy was a little fellow.<br />

Q: Tommy's your son?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: When was he born?<br />

A: He was born the fourth day <strong>of</strong>--my father-in-law gave us this book<br />

when we were married--he was born September the fourth, 1927. At St.<br />

~ohn's Hospital.<br />

Q: So you took a trip with him?<br />

A: Well, not then, I don't know, several years after that. Five or six<br />

years after that. We took a trip up to Detroit and went to Canada and<br />

went all through Canada and down through Buffalo, New Pork. That was our<br />

honeymoon really.<br />

Q: Did you see Niagara Falls?<br />

A: Yes, we stayed all night right there and then we went to New York,<br />

Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington D.C., all through the National<br />

Geographic Zoo there. And then we went on to Virginia and Kentucky,<br />

through Tennessee and the Black Hills, and then we went back up to<br />

Kentucky. My wife was born in Kentucky and we had cousins there and we<br />

stopped there and I guess we stayed a week.<br />

Q: That was a nice long trip then.<br />

A: Yes, it was.<br />

Q: And what did you travel in?<br />

A: I had a new Plymouth automobile. I was selling them. I had my own<br />

business. The next year after I sold the Chevrolet business-- we went on<br />

the twenty-second <strong>of</strong> July, 1927. I sold my business and put the money in<br />

all three banks and we went to California and went up to Washington. I<br />

knew a fellow when he lived here on the farm. Mr. HunLey was his name<br />

and I sold him a tractor, all farm tools and everything. He sold out and<br />

moved to Longview, Washington, and he came back here on a visit and he<br />

said, "If you ever come West, be sure to come and see me." I said maybe<br />

I will. So we went out there and they treated us royally. His daughter<br />

ran a grocery store right along the river there but I forget the name and<br />

it was during the Salmon Run. These fishermen along there, his daughter<br />

made arrangements for us to go with them on the Salmon Haul. So he and<br />

she and I and Tom went along with these regular fishermen. They had two<br />

boats. They'd start out this way; they would feed the nets out, and they<br />

would go clear across that river, and they would float until the boats<br />

came together, and the nets were together. They had an Oldsmobile motor<br />

in the back <strong>of</strong> the boat and I sit there and would throw it in and out <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 49<br />

gear. There would be fish that would come in there that would be three<br />

feet long and they'd hit them over the head with a club. Big salmon and<br />

they would roll them over. When they got the catch, they got the nets<br />

all reeled in, then we pulled up along side a canning factory for fish.<br />

A big ship, and these men sold this catch to the canning factory and they<br />

would give them a check for it. They begged us to come and go with them<br />

the next day again because they said that we brought them good luck.<br />

They are very superstitious. But no, we didn't want to go any more.<br />

They wanted me to stay there and they said, "If you'll stay here, I'll<br />

furnish you all the trucks and everything else." There they didn't burn<br />

coal, they burned wood. All I would do was to supply wood for the winters<br />

and so my wife said, "No way, too far from home." But before we got<br />

there we went through Yellowstone Park and we watched Old Faithful blow.<br />

Then Tom wanted to go to the toilet and I took him over to the place and<br />

there was a building there, a big building. There was a bear coming from<br />

the south and one coming from the west going east and they were going to<br />

meet. I was a little ways from them and I started growling and I'd go,<br />

11<br />

R-r-,<br />

I I<br />

r-r-r. And I said to Tommy, "Watch those bears." Just as soon<br />

as they met they just started running. And then we went over to the<br />

restaurant there, a place in the park and I ran into a fellow, a friend<br />

<strong>of</strong> mine from Divernon. He started a southern route up through California<br />

and Arizona and around that way and I was going up the northern way, and<br />

anyway that was before we got around in Washington. I should have told<br />

you about that sooner, but anyway we went back down to San Francisco and<br />

I had a friend there. And we rented an apartment right next to him and<br />

we stayed there a week. We went from there on to Hollywood and we didn't<br />

know we was in Hollywood and we got us an apartment for twenty-five<br />

dollars a month.<br />

Q: Did you see any movie stars while you were there?<br />

A: Oh yes, a friend <strong>of</strong> mine, a school mate, he was selling Fords there<br />

and we--I can't think <strong>of</strong> his name--he was a notorious actor and some<br />

wealthy woman married him. We delivered a new car to him on Christmas<br />

Day. We stayed there all that winter and I got a job selling the<br />

automobiles and <strong>of</strong> course the depression had hit then. 1 got a letter<br />

from my brother-in-law and he said all the banks here went broke and I<br />

had a job selling cars to Harms Chevrolet Company. I was the leading<br />

salesman and I sold one new car and one used one. But those fellows who<br />

owned the business there, they gave us all a turkey for Christmas. That<br />

was Wilmington, California, just halfway between Long Beach and San<br />

Pedro, California. So then at Wilmington there was a girl that used to<br />

be neighbors. She was married to a fellow from here, Casey Jones we<br />

called him. He was an engineer at the mine and he and his wife, they<br />

moved to California and they had the filling station there. I'd loaf<br />

over there and my wife would be there visiting with her <strong>of</strong> an evening.<br />

So in 1933 we left there and I'm most certain it was 1933.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Two, Side Two<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, we're talking about your trip to California and you were just<br />

explaining to me about an earthquake.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5 0<br />

A: That was at Long Beach, California. We were on the train and left<br />

the day before. We didn't get in the earthquake. We weren't there when<br />

it happened but it was bad.<br />

Q: Did you hear from your friends that were still there?<br />

A: Oh, yes, and they were all right. They weren't hurt or anything.<br />

This was around about five or six miles around there. Long Beach was<br />

where the damage was done. That's where they brought this steamship,<br />

they got her there now and people pay to go out and see it. We got home,<br />

and my father-in-law and my brother-in-law, they met us at the Wabash<br />

Railroad Depot and we got home and we were glad to get home.<br />

Q: No place like home.<br />

A: A friend <strong>of</strong> mine, Jack Pierce, came down, heard I was in town, and he<br />

came down and said, "~ave you got any money, <strong>Howard</strong>?" I said, "I got<br />

$300." He said, "Let me have half <strong>of</strong> it." I said, "Okay," and he said,<br />

"I don't have enough money to make change." I dedided to sell my car, I<br />

had a Buick car, and sold it in California to a doctor to get home on.<br />

And I had a $1,000 Government bond originally in the Farmers Bank<br />

Building lock box in <strong>Springfield</strong>. They wouldn't let my brother-in-law<br />

have a key to get in and get it out so I had to do it myself. If I<br />

hadn't had that $1,000 bond I would have had to stand in the soup line<br />

with the rest <strong>of</strong> the people. But I got it out just as soon as I got<br />

home. Jack Pierce didn't keep that money not over two weeks and he gave<br />

it back and wanted to pay me interest. I said, "No, forget it," cause we<br />

were good friends.<br />

Q: Well, things were bad here in Auburn?<br />

A: Oh, yes, they had soup lines. People don't know what hard times was.<br />

Oh, I want to tell you. I've got a piece <strong>of</strong> script that we used, script<br />

for money and I got some in there. Just a two dollar and a half one, I<br />

think. They had a clearing house in <strong>Springfield</strong> and if you were worth<br />

it, you could sign a note for it and they would give you $100 worth 05<br />

script. Now, you used that script. It was just like money. I'll show<br />

it to you after while. They took that and used that for money and each<br />

fellow would endorse it. If I owed you two dollars and a half, why, I<br />

would endorse it and give it to you and you're paid. Then you could go<br />

on and pay somebody else you owed and finally it would get back to the<br />

clearing house and that's the way we did business for a while.<br />

Q: Would that be sort <strong>of</strong> like the beginning <strong>of</strong> writing checks as we know<br />

it today?<br />

A: Oh, no. Well, I guess maybe it was. I don't know but 1'11 get one<br />

<strong>of</strong> them and show you right now.<br />

Q: Okay.<br />

A: The depression was the mines closed down, a lot <strong>of</strong> them, they had no<br />

coal to sell, no place to sell the coal, they didn't work steady and they<br />

had soup lines. The Miner's Union, for instance, they went in and they'd<br />

have a soup kitchen over here.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5 1<br />

Q: Where did they have that?<br />

A: That was where Rua's store is now. And the people would just line up<br />

there and go to get soup, but we didn't have to because I had that $1,000<br />

bond.<br />

Q: Did most people have their own gardens and try to raise their own<br />

stock?<br />

A: Oh, yes. When I, my father, we always had about four or five pigs<br />

and we had a cow and we'd butcher those pigs. Mr. Billy Alberts and<br />

Butch Hahn, they would come to our house and all we'd have to do is have<br />

the wood ready. They would come and kill those hogs, and have their<br />

stomachs strung up on the poles, and have them dressed, and the lard<br />

rendered and the sausage made, and ready to leave for home by 4:00 in the<br />

afternoon, but they'd get there about 4:30, 5:00 in the morning. Before<br />

we got up they'd shoot those hogs and have them dressed and scalded and<br />

everything. And then we'd have to make a date that year for the next<br />

year. Say if it was the twelfth <strong>of</strong> December, we'd have them for the<br />

twelfth <strong>of</strong> December, we'd have them for the twelfth <strong>of</strong> December the next<br />

year. Everybody, that was their business was butchering hogs. Of course<br />

now you can't even. Why, I went over here at the butcher place, the<br />

locker, and I wanted to buy a couple <strong>of</strong> hog's heads. My sister-in-law<br />

makes the best head cheese you could ever eat and they said, the guy<br />

said, "I can't sell you any. Anything that's been shot with a lead<br />

bullet, the state won't let them eat it." I said, "That's a bummer.<br />

They eat them all their lives and the pioneers and everybody else that's<br />

the way they killed the game was with a rifle."<br />

Q: Well, did the people try to help each other pretty much?<br />

A: Oh, yes, when we butchered the hogs, well my brother and I had a<br />

little wagon and Dad would fix it all up. We went down the street<br />

distributing liver to all the neighbors, whoever wanted liver, and then<br />

when they butchered they gave us some. See. Because we wouldn't all<br />

butcher at the same time, you get tired <strong>of</strong> the liver, liver everyday.<br />

And I told you about the smokehouse, how they used it to cure that meat.<br />

Q: Yes. Well, since the mines closed down, was there enough coal for<br />

people to keep warm in the winter for here in Auburn?<br />

A: Oh, yes. There was--one <strong>of</strong> them would stay. As a rule, you filled<br />

your coal house in the fall, and a lot <strong>of</strong> them cut wood and some <strong>of</strong> them<br />

burned wood too.<br />

Q: Did any <strong>of</strong> them lose their homes?<br />

A: Oh, yes. And I bought a house when the banks ran broke and that was<br />

from a result <strong>of</strong> this depression. We call this a depression. This ain't<br />

no depression and they blamed poor old Carter for it. He didn't have no<br />

more to do with it than you and I did. I bought a house from the First<br />

Federal Savings and Loan, a building and loan in <strong>Springfield</strong> for $400 and<br />

all I had to do was just pay the payments on it. I had to pay nothing<br />

down and two or three years later I sold it for $3,000. But I put a new<br />

furnace in it. Then they had this building here, this American Legion


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5 2<br />

building and we bought that for $250. This whole block here and <strong>of</strong><br />

course we remodeled that building there. So that's how times was tough.<br />

Q: Did you live in the American Legion Home?<br />

A: No, no. 1 bought a home for $1500, a nice place up there and I sold<br />

it for $4000 to Doc Surface and it's a nice bungalow. I bought it at an<br />

auction. See after the receivers, all these fellows who went broke and<br />

these merchants and banks went broke, these mortgages were due. They<br />

couldn't collect the mortgages and everything so they, some man, I forget<br />

his name now, he was the overseer <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> it. They had an auction sale<br />

and sold all these houses at auctions and I bought two <strong>of</strong> them at auctions.<br />

And I bought one, this one over here, and bought that from the First<br />

Federal. I didn't have to have any money to buy that, and this one over<br />

here. I bought with the money on it. And the Building and Loan started<br />

again and they loaned me money to buy that, I bought another one up in<br />

the west part <strong>of</strong> town from old man Garver and I sold it later on.<br />

Q: Did you rent this property out?<br />

A: No, well, yes, I rented the Garver property out but T sold it to Mr.<br />

Ward, the retired Methodist Minister. One <strong>of</strong> the houses I sold to Doc<br />

Surface and then Marie Riehle, my wife and I and her mother, they took<br />

over the operating <strong>of</strong> the Commercial Hotel where Marie is. Marie was<br />

traveling with her husband and so we kept it about a year. I give it up<br />

because I went back in the Ford business.<br />

Q: But you ran the hotel business there for a year?<br />

A: Just about a year, yes. My wife and her mother and I still had a<br />

partner with Schuster in the Ford agency.<br />

Q: Did your wife and mother do the cooking there?<br />

A: Oh, yes, they did the cooking and made the beds and everything else<br />

in there. They hired help, a girl that lived out in the country,<br />

Florence Perkin was her name, and she'd come in and help work.<br />

Q: Do you remember what kinds <strong>of</strong> things were being done through the WPA<br />

here in Auburn.<br />

A: That came later on.<br />

Q: That came later on?<br />

A: Oh yes, this pavement was laid here.<br />

Q: Around the square?<br />

A: Around the square. *<br />

Q: About what year do you think that was?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 53<br />

A: Oh, 1933 or 1934, I know the water works was put in here, city water<br />

was put in here 1934. I got a job with timekeeping for the contractor<br />

that put it in but the PWA loaned the city the money to do it.<br />

Q: I see. Before that everybody was pumping water from wells?<br />

A: Yes, had their own well and you had a square box on the top <strong>of</strong> it, <strong>of</strong><br />

your well platform and you'd have spike nails driven around and ropes and<br />

you'd lower your butter down in there and your milk down in that well to.<br />

0 . .<br />

Q: Keep it cool?<br />

A: Keep it cool and I remember my mother lost her false teeth in there<br />

in that well and we had to pump that well dry. My brother was the littlest<br />

one, he went through that hole in the box and he went down and Paul, that<br />

was his name, and he went down and found mother's false teeth. She<br />

scalded them and cleaned them <strong>of</strong>f and went right along, nobody ever heard<br />

<strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q: Didn't that take a lot <strong>of</strong> work pumping that dry?<br />

A: Oh yes. We just had to pump day and night because the water kept<br />

running in but we finally we got a--my father had a thrash machine wagon,<br />

tank that they hauled water for the thrash machine. We put that big hose<br />

down there and then we'd get on that and we'd have that pumping and then<br />

we'd have the regular pump too. We never would have got it dry if we<br />

hadn't had that pump on that wagon. But now, later on we got gasoline to<br />

do that pumping. My brothers, we had to do it the hard way.<br />

Q: What was a woman's routine like back in those days? Did she have to<br />

get up pretty early and pump the water and heat it up?<br />

A: Well, course, T had it a little different. I had to cook and<br />

everything else. I worked at the mine and I'd get up about 4:30 and I'd<br />

build a fire in the cook stove. I'd fry potatoes and sausage and stuff<br />

like that and then I'd fix my dinner bucket: for my dad and I. My brother,<br />

Paul, he had to fend for himself when he got up.<br />

Q: What was a dinner bucket like? What did you have in it?<br />

A: Well, there was two sections. It was around this way and then there<br />

was a section that fit like a double boiler only it had a bail to it.<br />

And our water, we carried the water in the lower part that we had to take<br />

in the mine and have to drink. And then the upper part was for the food<br />

and we put a lid on and then a bail on there.<br />

Q: Did you take sandwiches or did you take soup or what did you take?<br />

A: No, just sandwiches and pie and cake and things like that. And<br />

water.<br />

Q: Did women back in those days so all their own baking?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5 4<br />

A: Yes, mostly, they used to have an interurban track, that used to go<br />

around town here. A car went every hour and they used to ship from<br />

Hartman's Bakery in <strong>Springfield</strong>. They used to ship baskets full, great<br />

big wicker baskets full <strong>of</strong> bread for the grocery stores here. They had a<br />

bakery shop started later on then but my mother before she got sick, she<br />

was one <strong>of</strong> the best bakers. Whenever there was something to do with the<br />

church, well, she'd always furnish the bread and her bread was all spoken<br />

for before we got there. They used to make chili sauce and pickled and<br />

canned everything. Everything was canned, they didn't have any canned<br />

goods like they have now.<br />

Q: When your wife and your mother-in-law ran the hotel, did they had to<br />

cook three meals a day and work a11 day ling at it?<br />

A: Yes, we had a telephone. A big sleet storm come through here and<br />

broke all the wires down and the telephone company, telegraph along the<br />

railroad. They stayed there and they'd travel clear from Girard in order<br />

to get to stay here at the hotel and they'd cook everything and they<br />

served Sunday dinner.<br />

Q: About how many people did they cook for?<br />

A: Oh, about twelve on this crew that come through fixing the telephone<br />

wires. They were here about three or four weeks and they cooked for them<br />

all the time.<br />

Q: About how many rooms are in that hotel?<br />

A: I think there's twelve rooms upstairs.<br />

Q: Do you remember the terrible fire back in 1910 that burnt that side<br />

<strong>of</strong> the square down?<br />

A: I remember to the extent that we saw it on the way to school. We<br />

seen it smoking and we hurried out. I remember all the stores that used<br />

to be there and everything. Oh, Henry Riehle, he had a butcher shop<br />

there where ~i's Beauty Parlor is now and then the hotel was where the<br />

hotel is now. It was a frame building. It burnt to the ground. And<br />

then Shoot Armstrong had a bowling alley there and John M = K ~ had ~ a<br />

grocery store along the east side there <strong>of</strong> the square and there was<br />

Schlitz Saloon there, sold Schlitz beer. I don't remember who operated<br />

that now but that's about the extent ot it.<br />

Q: Does anybody know how that fire started?<br />

A: No. I never did hear. I wouldn't know.<br />

Q: What were the fire departments like in those days?<br />

A: Oh, I can't hardly tell you. They had two wheels, it was on kind <strong>of</strong><br />

a wagon like and there was a big bar across here. There was a big brass<br />

pump in here and there was one on each side. About four men would get on<br />

this side and four on that side, then it would go up and down.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 55<br />

Q: Oh, they had to pump?<br />

A: They pumped the water for the Eire and the wagon. There was a great<br />

big wagon that held the hoses up and the first wagon--the first man that<br />

got a team <strong>of</strong> horses there, and got it hooked on to the fire department,<br />

he got $2.00 for hauling the fire engine to the fire.<br />

Q: Oh, so the volunteers had to provide the horses too?<br />

A: Yes, well, they'd just grab any horse, any man that come along with a<br />

wagon, then they'd go get the fire, Nine chances to ten, it was all<br />

burned down when they got there.<br />

Q: I undersand it started very early in the morning.<br />

A: Well, we didn't know it. I was asleep and I didn't know anything<br />

about it until we went to school and saw it still smoldering there.<br />

Q: So there's been a great improvement in our fire department over the<br />

years?<br />

A: Oh, my yes, we have an up to date fire department here now. We've<br />

got one station over on the east side <strong>of</strong> the square and one right in back<br />

<strong>of</strong> the building here.<br />

Q: It's still volunteer though, isn't it?<br />

A: Yes, but they train and they've got good equipment, but it's<br />

volunteer. I read one time where in Pennsylvania, had one <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

outstanding volunteer fire departments there. And the volunteers there,<br />

they had just like they have in <strong>Springfield</strong>, they all slept upstairs and<br />

they'd slide down the poles and get--but they'd come and stay all night<br />

there in their turns. Then the next night they weren't there and every<br />

so <strong>of</strong>ten somebody would have to stay there and sleep twenty-four hours a<br />

day. Then they'd get a relief in the morning, then they'd go to work. I<br />

read that. That was in Hershey, Pennsylvania, the name <strong>of</strong> the town that<br />

had such a outstanding volunteer fire department.<br />

Q: Well, here in Auburn though the men go to their own homes and if<br />

there is a fire, they have a special phone, don't they?<br />

A: Oh yes. Now they have--each one <strong>of</strong> them carries a beeper on his<br />

belt. And like my wife, she got up, she had a stroke, her memory was<br />

bad. So I had to go to the toilet and I went in there and I saw her<br />

light and I thought, "What was she up for at this time <strong>of</strong> night." And I<br />

opened the door and she wasn't in there. It was eight below zero and I<br />

called the police. They said they'd get the squad car and ride out. In<br />

about thirty-five minutes I think from the time I called them, they found<br />

her out in the northwest part <strong>of</strong> town. She didn't have nothing on but a<br />

little hood thing around her head and no stockings and well, she was just<br />

half way dressed. And when she come back her legs were just as red as<br />

fire and she just made a beeline for her bed and crawled in the bed. I<br />

thought sure she'd have pneumonia or something but it never even made her<br />

sick.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5 6<br />

Q: Can I ask you if you remember a couple <strong>of</strong> fellows in town by the name<br />

<strong>of</strong> James and Spurlock? Do you remember anything connected with them?<br />

A: Well, right where the Senior Citizens Building is now, James used to<br />

keep books for Latham Motor Company when I was there selling cars. And<br />

so they got in business together, Spurlock and James. They were putting<br />

in this water works then and Louis Riehle, drove up to get some gas.<br />

James had it all planned, they had a new Ford in their showroom and James<br />

was going to get that Ford and take <strong>of</strong>f and leave town and take all the<br />

money. Spurlock was there and he was sitting waiting for him in the car.<br />

He had a little revolver. Inside the toilet up over head was a rack and<br />

they just put a shotgun up there. James acted like he was going to the<br />

toilet and he saw that rifle up there on the wall and he reached up and<br />

got that shotgun and he came out and he shot Spurlock and killed him. He<br />

just picked him up and threw him over behind some oil drums. Spurlock<br />

was a little fellow and James, a big fellow. Then James saw Louis Riehle<br />

out there with his truck waiting for him and to come and serve him gas.<br />

And he (Riehle) heard the shots and he (James) knew he was caught, but he<br />

just took that shotgun and that brake rod and just put it on his chest<br />

right here and took this brake rod and pushed on the trigger and just<br />

killed himself right then. Just that quick too. He killed James and<br />

then killed himself. A lot <strong>of</strong> weird things happened at Auburn, any other<br />

town. Every town is a Peyton Place, did you know that?<br />

Q: Did you ever remember an Elmer Morris?<br />

A: Yes, he was a good carpenter.<br />

Q: Do you remember that day that he was struck by a train and killed?<br />

A: No, I lived in <strong>Springfield</strong> then but I knew Elmer Morris real well and<br />

he was a good friend <strong>of</strong> mine. He lived out here on the farm then, but he<br />

worked at the mine. His son was a good carpenter later on. His son was<br />

in school when that happened,<br />

Q: Do you remember back in 1932 when more than four-hundred miners from<br />

Auburn made a trip to Taylorville to oppose the $5.00 wage law that<br />

Taylorville miners had to work under?<br />

A: No, that was, you got the town wrong. They went to southern<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong>. That was a form <strong>of</strong> what they called a PWA. It was pulling<br />

away from the United Mine Workers. They went down there in trucks and to<br />

stop the non-union fellows from working. They got a section down there<br />

they wasn't looking for and they had to run all through the corn fields<br />

and they took their trucks and everything else and finally they,<br />

Progressive Mine Workers <strong>of</strong> America, that's was what it was. They was<br />

forming, it wasn't Taylorville, it was southern <strong>Illinois</strong>.<br />

Q: But there was quite a lot <strong>of</strong> miners that banded together and went<br />

down there, is that correct?<br />

A: Yes, yes. There wasn't over one-hundred fifty or two-hundred <strong>of</strong> them<br />

at the most. Now that happened when we were in California.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 5 7<br />

Q: I see.<br />

A: But 1 knew all about it.<br />

Q: They met up with some volunteer sheriffs and police workers that kind<br />

<strong>of</strong>....<br />

A: Protect the men down there.<br />

Q: Damaged their cars?<br />

A: Yes, Ben Lewis, they finally found his car and the State Police got<br />

his car back for him. He loaned it to them. Ben Lewis was a farmer but<br />

he loaned them his truck when they went down there. They went through<br />

the cornfields and everything to get away from them. The folks that went<br />

down from Auburn, they weren't prepared for all that gun work, They<br />

wanted to do it peacefully.<br />

Q: So they had quite some stories to tell when they got back?<br />

A: Oh, I guess they did.<br />

Q: Do you remember back in 1932 when the library was started here in<br />

Au bur a?<br />

A: Well, yes, but I didn't pay much attention ta it. I couldn't tell<br />

you much about it.<br />

Q: Do you remember where it was located?<br />

A: No, I don't. See, after World War 11, that's when the Japs blew up<br />

Pearl Harbor.<br />

Q: Yes. Do you remember where you were the day that they bombed Pearl<br />

Harbor?<br />

A: I lived in <strong>Springfield</strong> and I belonged to the American Legion and my<br />

son belonged to the Sons <strong>of</strong> the American Legion. I was going over there<br />

to get him and they came running in and said they bombed Pearl Harbor.<br />

There was an awful excitement then, I tell you. I lived in <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

then, I moved to <strong>Springfield</strong> and I sold cars for Latham Motor Company.<br />

This war comes on, I volunteered for war work.<br />

They sent me to the fairgrounds. There was an Army Air Force Depot and I<br />

was on the Fire Department there. I got promoted to where I was Captain<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Fire Department. And then when the war was over, the war lasted<br />

about five or six years, and all that time we had so much lumber piled up<br />

there, oh tanks, trucks and everything else. I moved out when my motherin-law<br />

died and we moved out here to keep house for my father-in-law.<br />

They wanted me to stay where I could be on call for the fire because<br />

there was a lot <strong>of</strong> perishable stuff. All that airplane stuff was all<br />

over the fairgrounds and I had, in order to keep my job, we moved back to<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> and I stayed there. A11 the the I kept thinking, "Well, now<br />

there's going to be a good living between the guy that's got and the guy


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 58<br />

that wants because all this lumber around here was," there was no houses<br />

built or anything else. So I went over to the library and I got books on<br />

real estate and studied Fee Simple back in England and I wanted to start<br />

selling real estate, so I did. I got a job selling real estate with Lou<br />

Hannon and Matt Strum.<br />

I sold the first house in <strong>Springfield</strong>, the first brick bungalow for<br />

$15,000, and I was the %oy Wonder". After I sold this house I said,<br />

"Now Nat, I'm ready for my commission," and he said, "I don't owe you<br />

commission." He says, "1 ain't going to keep track <strong>of</strong> your social<br />

security and stuff." He says, "Go over and get your license with the<br />

state." I said, "Well, I can't do that yet till they have a class to<br />

take the license exam." 1 went, I was prepared and I went over there and<br />

took my exam and I didn't have a bit <strong>of</strong> trouble. In 1934 I don't remember<br />

the date, I have my license hanging on my <strong>of</strong>fice in there now. You had<br />

to have your license framed so everyone could see and so that's how I got<br />

in the real estate business and I was in the real estate business ever<br />

since. I'm the oldest real estate broker id <strong>Illinois</strong>, in Sangamon County,<br />

and by age and most certain, I'm the oldest by years <strong>of</strong> experience. I<br />

can tell you what year 1 got my license, my first license.<br />

Q: Did you do pretty good in your real estate business?<br />

A: Oh, yes.<br />

Q: Did you have a company <strong>of</strong> your own?<br />

A: I was just my own man.<br />

Q: You were your own man. Your <strong>of</strong>fice was in your home?<br />

A: Right in there. I have to have it displayed there. My first <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

was in <strong>Springfield</strong>. hat's over where they called it the Diane's Sweet<br />

Shop there, Tom and Sally's Card Shop and I had a big neon sign, H. W.<br />

<strong>Herron</strong>. Had a big neon sign right across there and Jim O'Brien went in<br />

with me for companionship. Be had a phone and 1 had a phone but there<br />

was no trick to selling. If I met somebody on the street and they'd say,<br />

11<br />

Hey <strong>Herron</strong>, how would you like to sell my property?" "What do you want<br />

for it?" I says. "Well, I've got to have $4,000." I said, "Okay, maybe<br />

I can sell it for six." See in them days, they'd take it away from you.<br />

So it was a good business to be in.<br />

Q: The real estate business isn't too good right now.<br />

A: No, I haven't made $60 all year. That was when I appraised a house<br />

here for the high school. Armando Tranquilli, he was over taxed and he<br />

took it before the Board and Review and had his tax reduced. I didn't<br />

want to charge him but he stuck a $20 bill in my pocket. I couldn't<br />

fight him <strong>of</strong>f.<br />

Q: Do you remember any people by the name <strong>of</strong> Pulliam from Auburn?<br />

A: Pulliam?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong><br />

Q: Robert Pulliam?<br />

A: No. I guess there used to be a Pulliam over around Lowder.<br />

Q: Well, a Robert Pulliam was one <strong>of</strong> the first settlers in Sangamon<br />

County.<br />

A: Oh, that's way before my time.<br />

Q: Do you remember any important sports figures from Auburn? Anybody<br />

that was in sports?<br />

Q: Oh, yes. Auburn used to have a champion football team, in the state<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> here.<br />

Q: What year was that?<br />

A: Oh, 1'11 tell you who can tell you more about that than anybody and<br />

he can show you the pictures. He's got the pictures <strong>of</strong> the team. Duncan<br />

Barbee.<br />

Q: Duncan Barbee.<br />

A: Tell him that I sent you down there.<br />

Q: Okay. Do you know anybody named Bart Lewis?<br />

A: Oh, yes. I just sold twenty-two acres <strong>of</strong> land out here where the<br />

Beatty Implement Company was, for his (Bart Lewis') daughter. He was the<br />

United States Champion Bubble Shot, shotgun and he--have you ever seen a<br />

trap shoot. Clay pigeons where they had them shoot two out and he'd go<br />

boom boom and get them both. He worked for the Western Cartridge Company<br />

in Auburn. He traveled for them and he owned a farm out north <strong>of</strong> town.<br />

They were quite chummy, him and his brother Bob, and they would go to the<br />

picnics. Everybody would get drunk and everything and they'd bet who<br />

could light a match with a .22 rifle. Bob would hold it in his mouth and<br />

he would too. He'd just stand there and hold this match like that and<br />

old Bob he'd stay <strong>of</strong>f about fifty yards and he'd shoot that rifle and<br />

light that match. And they charged so much to get to see how to do that.<br />

They made a lot <strong>of</strong> money on the picnics, oh, they had all kinds <strong>of</strong> things<br />

going on.<br />

Q: I think I read where one time they gave away a Ford (at a picnic).<br />

A: Yes, that was later on though. Max Lehman gave that. The funny part<br />

<strong>of</strong> it was that it was a little crooked. ~essler's owned the Ford agency<br />

here and they bought, the American Legion raffled <strong>of</strong>f this Ford. Kessler,<br />

he took about $50 worth <strong>of</strong> chances on it, the dealer that sold them the<br />

Ford. And 10 and behold, they drew his number and it looked crooked but<br />

it wasn't so Kessler gave it back to the American Legion and they did it<br />

over again. They raffled <strong>of</strong>f twice and that was where they got some <strong>of</strong><br />

the money to remodel this building here. I was the first and the only<br />

charter member <strong>of</strong> the American Legion here that's living. The rest <strong>of</strong><br />

them are all dead. We formed the charter in 1922, 1 think it was. Right<br />

after the service.


<strong>Howard</strong> Herroa 60<br />

Q: Do you remember anything about the attempt to bomb Bill Pasniks'<br />

home? What that could have been about?<br />

A: Yes, well, Bill Pasniks killed a fellow. I don't know whether he did<br />

it or not, I didn't know anything about that. But I know that Bill<br />

Pasniks was playing rum over here at the Brendle Saloon and him and<br />

Brendle got into a dispute over something. Pasniks went home and got his<br />

gun, come back and shot Brendle who was sitting in a chair. Just shot<br />

him right there and went on home, but he got out <strong>of</strong> it. In them days if<br />

you had enough money, you could get out <strong>of</strong> anything.<br />

Q: Did he have money?<br />

A: Well, he sold his home and everything. He took <strong>of</strong>f and he went to<br />

Detroit and stayed up there with his son I think. But the house is still<br />

there, they didn't bomb his house, but they might have, but I didn't know<br />

anything about that bombing. I was living in <strong>Springfield</strong> then.<br />

Q: Do you remember when the REA was formed? When they first had<br />

electricity for the farmers?<br />

A: Oh yes, that was about 1934, shortly after the depression, that was<br />

along about PWA time. Franklin D. Roosevelt's the fellow for that.<br />

Q: What did you think about Franklin Roosevelt?<br />

A: One <strong>of</strong> the greatest presidents we ever had outside <strong>of</strong> Barry Truman.<br />

He was one fine man. You have no idea how bad things were then. Nobody<br />

had anything. The banks went all broke. He closed every bank in the<br />

United States and they couldn't open them until they proved theirselves<br />

liable and able to do business. And he started PWA, Public Works<br />

Administration and he had the farmers producing so much pork that the<br />

farmers couldn't get anything for their pork. They'd take these little<br />

pigs and you'd just kill them and bury them. I remember when the<br />

Republicans would all say, "Oh, he killed them little pigs." Well, it<br />

was the greatest thing he ever done. He got the farmers on their feet<br />

and he had fixed it, oh, I can't go into it. Men couldn't get work<br />

because nobody had that much to hire them and there was a big slag pile<br />

out here. Peabody Coal Company washed their coal and put that slag there<br />

and it was burned to red shale. I was in the garage business there later<br />

on and T furnished a truck and everything and a driver and hauled it all<br />

away and fixed the roads so they could get to the cemetery through the<br />

mud. They made sidewalks here and they done everything, they got PWA to<br />

give the money to them and taxes, later on we made a little money, See<br />

if nobody is working, they ain't paying taxes. They got all the work and<br />

they got them paying taxes and then they took that money to pay <strong>of</strong>f the<br />

debt that they give to us. He was a wonderful man. He was a smart man.<br />

I tell you I cried when he died. He died with a cerebral hemorrhage.<br />

Q: You could remember that day?<br />

A: Yea, sir.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6 1<br />

Q: Wasn't that a Sunday?<br />

A: I don't remember that. I just remember when it happened. He was<br />

down at the home they had for crippled children. They all took shots to<br />

get rid <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q: Infantile Paralysis.<br />

A: Yes, infantile paralysis. See, he had infantile paralysis. He<br />

walked with braces, Roosevelt brought America out <strong>of</strong> the doldrums.<br />

America was down and everybody was disgusted. You had nothing to bank on<br />

or nothing else but Franklin D. Roosevelt, he was an old timer, you<br />

talked to him. He said, "How are you?" Oh, he was the finest man that<br />

there eves was. But Harry Truman was Vice President and he just took<br />

over and <strong>of</strong> course he was a student <strong>of</strong> FDR and he kept it on. Truman was<br />

the next best, well-liked President. I guess him and Roosevelt ever was<br />

outside <strong>of</strong> George Washington and Abe Lincoln, but I think they played Abe<br />

Lincoln, played that to death, <strong>Springfield</strong> has.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Three, Side One<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, I would like to ask you about Kitty McKinnis who you told me<br />

one time owned a set <strong>of</strong> apartments where you lived.<br />

A: That's right and that was on the corner <strong>of</strong> Fifth and Adam Street and<br />

everybody knew her as Miss Kitty. She was employed by the bank at Auburn,<br />

the Auburn State Bank. There was mostly men that roomed there at that<br />

time, instead <strong>of</strong> apartments, they are apartment buildings now. There's<br />

four apartments in that building, but before she sold it out, well she<br />

had I and Mr. Pierce and Jim, I can't think <strong>of</strong> his last name now.<br />

Q: Well, Kitty worked at the bank and then did she come home and sort <strong>of</strong><br />

take care <strong>of</strong> the apartments too?<br />

A: Yes, she did and toward the last though Mrs. Bradley and her got a<br />

room there and they took care <strong>of</strong>, kept the apartments clean and everything.<br />

Q: And Kitty never told you about any <strong>of</strong> the old time days?<br />

A: No, she never ever did.<br />

Q: But you did mention a Ms. Johnnie Lanham?<br />

A: Yes, well, Ms. Johnnie Lanham, she used to be my school teacher in<br />

the sixth grade and she was a wonderful woman. Her father lived to be<br />

over 100 years old and after he passed away, why she later come to, when<br />

my wife and I and my son, I sold my business and we moved, took a trip to<br />

California, and Ms. Kitty or Ms. Johnnie Lanham came to room at our<br />

house. And she stayed there until she moved to the Parks Memorial Home<br />

and there she took a lifetime membership in that, Parks Memorial Home and<br />

she lived there until she died. She was over 100 herself, I think,<br />

before she passed away.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6 2<br />

Q: What are some <strong>of</strong> the things that Ms. Lanham told you about in the old<br />

days?<br />

A: Oh, she was quite a Republican and she, <strong>of</strong> course, lived during the<br />

Civil War. Her father was a veteran <strong>of</strong> the Civil War and he was quite<br />

comical and full <strong>of</strong> fun. If the kids would tease him or anything he<br />

would take his cane and hit them across the shin with it. Everybody had<br />

a lot <strong>of</strong> fun with him. He had great long white whiskers and that's-about<br />

all I remember.<br />

Q: Did he fight for the North or for the South?<br />

A: The North, but Ms. Lanham I know she always worked to help the best<br />

she could to get a Republican selected. I remember one time in school<br />

she was telling us about, teaching us about politics, how they work and<br />

she said, "Above all things remember our President right or wrong, he is<br />

our President." I never did forget that.<br />

Q: That's very good.<br />

A: And so anyway she lived at the Parks Memorial Home where she passed<br />

away and when that was I don' t remember.<br />

Q: Did your teachers have a pretty good influence on your life, do you<br />

think?<br />

A: Well, yes, she and Mrs. Eva Hedrick had the most. I couldn't paper a<br />

room, I could never get it right and besides that she was my Sunday<br />

School teacher. I worked <strong>of</strong> an evening for a picture show here and I ran<br />

a movie picture machine that had the old arc lights instead <strong>of</strong> the lighting<br />

they have now. I would never get home until about 11:OO or later and<br />

sometimes I would go to sleep in school. One day she--I' 11 never forget<br />

this--she said, "You stay after school." She pointed at me and I said,<br />

"Oh, boy, what have I done?" In them days we had to form a line and we<br />

walked, marched right out in line to the end <strong>of</strong> the street and until you<br />

got out in the street. She ran a tight ship and there was no fooling<br />

around. I was worried about what I was kept in for. When she got back<br />

from after she watched the children all go out to the end <strong>of</strong> the street,<br />

and then she came back and she said, "Scoot over." I scooted over and<br />

she sat down beside <strong>of</strong> me and said, "Now get out your arithmetic." I<br />

forgot something I should have said. Before that a11 happened she come<br />

down to my house and talked to my mother and father. Said that I wasn't<br />

quite attentive enough in school and that there was something wrong and<br />

she wondered what it would be. They said, "Well, he stays up late at<br />

night." She says, "Well, I would think that you would put a stop to that<br />

and that will help a lot with his work." So my dad said, "You'll have to<br />

give up that job running that movie picture machine." So I did and<br />

anyway getting back to where she had me get over there in the seat and<br />

get out my arithmetic. She says, "Now you're just as smart as the rest<br />

<strong>of</strong> the children, <strong>Howard</strong>. Whey can't you paper a room?" I couldn't take<br />

out the doors and get it right you know. In fact I didn't set my heart<br />

to it enough and I was shirking on the job I guess you would call it now.<br />

Anyway it was just like a boil after it burst, it just hit me or triggered<br />

it and I got the knack <strong>of</strong> it and I had no trouble after that. I think I


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6 3<br />

told you before I always used to send her a bouquet after that. She was<br />

a fine woman and she is still living, Ms. Eva Hedrick is. Course the<br />

poor soul, she's senile now. But she was a fine woman and I always<br />

appreciated what she did for me.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the principals that were at the school?<br />

A: Yes, there was Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Parren, and Montgomery and Chapin, Chapman,<br />

Dr. Chapman, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Chapman. I remember those three. This Marion,<br />

I'm trying to think <strong>of</strong> his last name, Lucus.<br />

Q: Marion Lucus?<br />

A: I think that's right. He was a little fellow, And that's about all<br />

that I remember.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> games did you play at school in those days?<br />

A: We played weak horse.<br />

Q: Weak horse?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: How do you play weak horse?<br />

A: There was fences around the north side and one fellow would stand<br />

with his legs like this and another fellow would stand with his head in<br />

between his legs and you would hold his shoulders. Another fellow would<br />

just line up that way and make a horse and the other one would run and<br />

jump and jump, see how far up they could jump up on the horse. The<br />

horses would begin to wiggle and try to throw them <strong>of</strong>f and as soon as the<br />

fellows hit the ground, they lost. No prizes or anything, just to pass<br />

time. And then we played shinny on your own side, everybody had a club<br />

and a croquet ball. We had a big ground down there where the old school<br />

building used to stand and you just get whatever side you get on. You<br />

hit the ball and you played that until recess was over and the school<br />

bell would ring and we had to go into school. I never will forget one<br />

time Earl Mead was practicing throwing a hammer and the hammer throw.<br />

You'd swing it around and around and the lead ball. And John Bressler,<br />

the janitor, was walking out there and that lead hammer hit him right<br />

between the shoulders. He went down to the ground, so they gave him a<br />

little first aid but he got all right. Wasn't too much damage done.<br />

Q: Was this the janitor that was there for such a long time?<br />

A: Yes. John Bressler.<br />

Q: Do you remember anything about John ~ressler's family?<br />

A: He had a son that was in the National Guard, Frank, that's all that I<br />

. . . . I think his wife had died young and that was all, they batched.


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 64<br />

Q: Did they ever have dances when you were in school?<br />

A: No, see I never went past the eighth grade. That's as far as I got.<br />

I had to quit the eighth, I quit school at the eighth grade and went to<br />

work at the tile yard and from the tile yard to the coal mine in order to<br />

help my father pay the doctor bills. We had a doctor come out here from<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>, a chiropractor and we just as well throwed our money in the<br />

street. But we tried. As long as your mother's sick, you do anything to<br />

help her. We learned to cook, all <strong>of</strong> us. And that was another thing Mr.<br />

Hedrick and Ms. Lanham would do. I would sit home this week and do the<br />

cooking and my mother would tell us from the bed what to do and we all<br />

learned to cook. Everyone <strong>of</strong> us can prepare as good a meal as anybody<br />

and I've stayed in good hands ever since. Well any way my older brother<br />

and I would be working and staying home and cooking and the housework,<br />

Ms. Hedrick would bring the homework home and she'd sketch it out and<br />

then I'd do it and that's the only way we kept our schooling up.<br />

Q: Well, that's good.<br />

A: And Ms. Lanham did the same thing with my older brother. He was<br />

ahead <strong>of</strong> me in school and when Ms. Lanham was teaching, well, she'd make<br />

it out and give it to me and I'd take it home and give it to my brother.<br />

Geography, arithmetic and that.<br />

Q: When you were a boy, you had a lot <strong>of</strong> different jobs and you worked<br />

hard. Did you ever at moments say I want to be something when I grow up?<br />

Was there something in particular that you thought you'd like to do?<br />

A: Well, yes. I never gave it much thought as long as I was, until I<br />

was working in the coal mine and the coal mine was figuring on closing<br />

down. There was rumor that they were closing down and I said, "I'm going<br />

to get out <strong>of</strong> this business." I said, "I worked in a coal mine a11 my<br />

life and I never will own one." And so I got a job selling cars for<br />

Latham Motor Company and I had told you that before. So 1 sold cars for<br />

Latham Motor Company for about a year and then he sold the business to<br />

some fellows from Clinton or Lincoln, <strong>Illinois</strong>. A fellow named Bob<br />

Tribbit came to manage it, the Ford Motor Sales, and so that's when I got<br />

my fingers mashed <strong>of</strong>f and I got $750. That's when I told you prior to<br />

this when I went into the bank and got the backing <strong>of</strong> the bank to go to<br />

the General Motors meeting in St. Louis and get the Chevrolet franchise.<br />

I went two years after I started, or two and half years after I started.<br />

I quit the coal mine and started to work there. I said, "I owned a<br />

business <strong>of</strong> my own, so I was headed right." So I stayed, sold<br />

automobiles until I was in the automobile business practically in and out<br />

for--I sold the Chevrolet and brought the Ford. I kept it a while and I<br />

sold it and the war come on and I volunteered. Well, before that, after<br />

I had sold out, I sold cars for Metropolitan Chevrolet Company in<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> and then World War I1 came on and I volunteered for war work.<br />

You had no cars to sell. There were seventeen salesmen there and I<br />

belonged to the One-hundred Car Club and I sold one-hundred cars in a<br />

year. You had to sell one-hundred cars a year and they all had a big<br />

turkey banquet. The guys that won, divided up in teams and the team that


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6 5<br />

sold the most cars, they ate turkey and the other guys had to sit across<br />

from them and ate beans and it was fun. They had a big celebration,<br />

party, <strong>of</strong> course. So I volunteered for war work and they sent me to the<br />

fairgrounds with the Fire Department. I studied it pretty good and I got<br />

to be a Captain <strong>of</strong> the Fire Department there.<br />

Course that war lasted about five or six years and there was a depot,<br />

Army Air Corps and the Army Air Corps took over the State fairgrounds.<br />

There was so much lumber piled around there and oh, just tons <strong>of</strong> it you<br />

might say. And I said to myself, "Well, if its going to be a good living<br />

between the man that's got and the one that wants. They're not building<br />

any houses and I'm going to get in the real estate business." So I went<br />

up to the library and I got books and Fee Simple back in England. And I<br />

went and I told you what I sold some real estate-- first $15,000 bungalow.<br />

And I was forced to work for--after I got a job selling real estate when<br />

the war was over and I sold that house. When I told them I wanted my<br />

commission they said, "Well, I don't want to pay no commission, go take<br />

your examination." So I did and I got my license and I just moved down<br />

the street from them and went in business for myself.<br />

Q: Well, if you had it all to do over again, would there have been any<br />

changes in the kind <strong>of</strong> work that you might have done?<br />

A: No, I was happy with it all.<br />

Q: You were happy with it?<br />

A: Very happy. I got married when I was selling Ford cars.<br />

Q: Tell me a little bit about your wife. Did she have certain hobbies<br />

or. . . .<br />

A: She was a fine woman. I never will forget one time after I started<br />

in business for myself she belonged to the Methodist Church and Sunday<br />

School and they always had a party. Once a month they had this party and<br />

I come home one evening and she was crying. I said, "Why are you crying?"<br />

She said, "They all say you're going to get broke." I says, "Listen," I<br />

put my arm around her. I said, "You tell them don't worry about it. I'm<br />

already broke to start with and I can't go broke. I'm already broke."<br />

She started laughing. When World War I1 come on and my son joined the<br />

Navy and I was working at the fairgrounds where I worked twenty-four<br />

hours <strong>of</strong>f and twenty-four on, she didn't want to be by herself. We lived<br />

in <strong>Springfield</strong> then and she went over to Rolands Department Store and got<br />

her a job as a salesclerk.<br />

And so the first time I come home she walked all around and she said, "I<br />

have you know I'm a saleslady now." So she worked and she went from<br />

there to Myers Brothers. She worked for Myers Brothers for years. She<br />

liked, well we moved to <strong>Springfield</strong> so she could work another six months<br />

at Myers Brothers--well, if she could have done that, she could draw a<br />

pension from Myers Brothers and besides her social security. But she had<br />

this stroke and she got sick and she never regained.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 66<br />

Q: How old was she when she had this stroke?<br />

A: Well, when she died she was about eighty-one. About eighty years old<br />

when she had the stroke. The first one, then she had two or three. She<br />

was in Parks Memorial Home for two and a half years.<br />

Q: When you were first married, what kind <strong>of</strong> social activities were<br />

there here in town?<br />

A: Oh, I belonged to the American Legion and I was Chairman <strong>of</strong> the<br />

American Legion Dance Club. We had a dance about every two weeks,<br />

commercial dance I guess. It was $2.00 a couple. We had big orchestras<br />

come in here and play and one night I had two orchestras come in. We<br />

always had contracts with them, Dunlap out <strong>of</strong> Jacksonville, and Fate C.<br />

Marble and his Alabama Coons they called them from St. Louis and here<br />

come Fate C. Dunlap and Marble had forgot to send me a contract to sign<br />

and I sent it back to him and his band. Six piece band came in a train<br />

there and they got in here and so here I was the chairman <strong>of</strong> the Dance<br />

Club and had two orchestras.<br />

Well, I got busy and I said well, I went to Earl Hines restaurant here.<br />

"Would you be willing to feed these six orchestra men from Jacksonville<br />

if they will play for an evening meal?" He was a member <strong>of</strong> the American<br />

Legion too so he said, yes, he'd help out. So when I went over to the<br />

theater and I got them and the boys from Dunlap said that they could put<br />

on a vaudevilles show if they let them in free. They could come to the<br />

dance and they didn't have to pay anything but just enjoy it. So the<br />

theater paid them a little something and a Negro band is what it was, and<br />

anyway they had to pay their own dinners and that. So they played for<br />

the dance and the boys from Jacksonville, they got their supper and they<br />

got to dance free and they took it all good naturedly because it was just<br />

one <strong>of</strong> those mistakes. Marble said, "It was all my fault, T should have<br />

sent you the contract."<br />

Q: That's good. Well, did you ever go to a place called Irvin's Park?<br />

A: Yes, that was way when I was just a kid. They had picnics there and<br />

they always had a dance every weekend there. They had special cars run<br />

from St. Louis to <strong>Springfield</strong> down here and they would stop <strong>of</strong>f there and<br />

unload the people. There was a great big dance hall and a saloon and a<br />

restaurant and they had picnics out there too.<br />

Q: Who owned that?<br />

A: Jim Irvin owned that. Irvin's Electric Park it was known as.<br />

Q: Where was it located?<br />

A: Just about two and a half miles north <strong>of</strong> Auburn. On the ITS Railroad<br />

and there would be a car on this ITS Railroad that would go each way<br />

every hour from St. Louis to Peoria and its all torn down now. You see<br />

those mobile homes along there when you go out south <strong>of</strong> town here. Well<br />

that used to be a railroad right <strong>of</strong> way. It went right around town here<br />

and then straight north was Irvin's Park. That was a big attraction, oh


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 67<br />

they came from Ear and near, to go to Irvin's Park. And they would spend<br />

every Sunday. Every Sunday was a day <strong>of</strong> picnicing, and dance there.<br />

They took in so much money out there. When I was a young kid, I'd see<br />

them. They had the deputy sheriff and taking the money in the bag and<br />

they had one <strong>of</strong> these there three wheel scooters. Did you ever see them<br />

operate. . . .<br />

Q: Oh, they called them Herdie Gerdies, didn't they?<br />

A: Oh, something like that. They were scooters <strong>of</strong> Herdie Gerdies and<br />

they would bring up money and the bank. This deputy sheriff, he'd ride<br />

with Irvin and one man pulled this thing and it had three wheels. Two on<br />

the main line and across the middle at an angle like. That was a Herdie<br />

Gerdie or whatever. We called them scooters. A boxcar inspector, or a<br />

car inspector, he used one. And one man could lift that up and take it<br />

<strong>of</strong>f the track and put it back on by himself. There was a lot <strong>of</strong> times<br />

when they had a big picnic out there they'd have a bag full <strong>of</strong> money and<br />

they'd bring it in and put it in the bank.<br />

Q: They weren't afraid they'd be robbed between Irvin's Park and the<br />

bank?<br />

A: Oh, they had a shotgun. The deputy sheriff would ride on the back <strong>of</strong><br />

it with a shotgun.<br />

Q: Was there much crime at all in. . . .<br />

A: Not much, well we had a few fights. Lots <strong>of</strong> drunken fights.<br />

Q: But you did have a jail?<br />

A: Auburn had a jail. We had a fire department. Whoever we got a hold<br />

<strong>of</strong> first, the fellow who had a team <strong>of</strong> horses and get over there and he<br />

come to the fire and he got two and a half for doing that. And then they<br />

had a big bar right across there and three or four <strong>of</strong> us would ride and<br />

get on that side and four or five on this side and they'd pump that by<br />

hand.<br />

Q: By hand?<br />

A: Had nothing only cisterns to get the water out in the water system.<br />

The water system went in here in 1934.<br />

Q: Do you ever remember a very dry summer when you were a kid when there<br />

wasn't much water in the wells and you had to be careful about that?<br />

A: Yes, oh I can't remember the year. I can't remember the year but it<br />

was along about in 1935, I think it was. Along in there and the corn was<br />

dried up in the field. It got up to 115 degrees above zero and I remember<br />

Fred Lockridge and my brother and my father-in- law farmed out south <strong>of</strong><br />

town here. And the roastin ears would get about that big and the corn<br />

was just burnt up and I said to Fred Lockridge one time, "Can't you feed<br />

that to your cattle?" And he said, "No, they won't eat it, it's bitter."<br />

It just turned black, the corn just turned black. That was the worst<br />

that I have ever seen,


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6 8<br />

Q: So times were pretty hard for the farmers if the weather wasn't good?<br />

A: Farming is the biggest gamble there is. He depends on the weather<br />

and the chinch bugs and army worms and everything.<br />

Q: And even in the stock market.<br />

A: And the stock market.<br />

Q: Well, that's changed now. They know pretty well, they got rid <strong>of</strong><br />

the--they pulled the hedges out <strong>of</strong> here. They used to have a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

hedge fences around here. The farmers pulled them out <strong>of</strong> the ground.<br />

They take a lot <strong>of</strong> moisture out <strong>of</strong> the ground and fertility too and they<br />

had to take those, most <strong>of</strong> the farmers fences are a11 pulled out now.<br />

Q: What was a hedge fence like? I mean how did they make them?<br />

A: Well, it just looked like, you've seen them over here. It's like--<br />

they just let them grow up and make highposts then they cut it down and<br />

make post, fence posts out <strong>of</strong> them. They got rid <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> that hedge.<br />

The chinch bugs harbored there, and they laid their eggs in there, and<br />

they'd hatch in the spring and they'd kill the wheat and corn. The army<br />

worms, 1 remember army worms come through south <strong>of</strong> the cemetery here one<br />

the. They would drag a log along and mash the worms. They took a post<br />

hole digger and made a big hole and they put a tar line there. They'd<br />

come across the tar line and they'd get there and they would put kerosene<br />

in there and it would burn them worms up, those were army worms and cinch<br />

bugs<br />

Q: You didn't have insecticides then. The government didn't subsidize?<br />

A: No, no subsidizing.<br />

Q: So times could have been very hard for them.<br />

A: They were. Farmers didn't farm as big as they do now. My fatherin-law<br />

farmed bigger than everybody. He farmed 600 acres <strong>of</strong> land out<br />

there. He didn't own it, he rented it and he farmed the estate.<br />

Q: The people had animals and their own gardens and their own chickens?<br />

A: Everybody in town had chickens and when we lived in town here my<br />

father owned a whole block up there. We had four or five hogs that we<br />

would butcher every year, and we had a cow and we milked it and we would<br />

deliver milk, had the milkman here named Beech. He ran the wagon that<br />

had a ten gallon milk can in there and he had a little strainer like. If<br />

a fly would drop in there he would get it out so the women didn't know it<br />

and nobody died <strong>of</strong> diphtheria from it or typhoid fever. He ring a bell<br />

and the women would come out with a bucket about that big around and<br />

about that tall.<br />

The kids would take their lunch to school and they'd hear the bell ring.<br />

They'd get out there with their little bucket and pay a nickel for a half<br />

a gallon or a quart <strong>of</strong> milk. hat's what it cost them. Most <strong>of</strong> the


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 6 9<br />

farmers came to town and they sold their eggs to the grocer and the<br />

people bought the eggs. They made butter and they sold their butter.<br />

Also, we didn't know what creamy butter was then. We didn't know what<br />

oleo was then either. That was invented later.<br />

Q: How did people keep their things cold or cool?<br />

A: Every well had a box at the top and it had spike nails in it and a<br />

rope. You'd put your butter in one <strong>of</strong> the cans and bucket and put that<br />

down there. If you had milk you put it in there and if you had fresh<br />

meats you put it over here in this. Did I tell you when my mother<br />

dropped her false teeth in there and we had to pump it dry to get her<br />

teeth out?<br />

Q: Did you have an old ice box?<br />

A: No. Later we did but Butler, he had the poultry out here, and he<br />

handled ice. ~e'd go down to Virden and pick up the ice. They had to<br />

wait till the pond froze up, the creek and then they'd go out and cut<br />

that ice and put it up in the winter. They put a lot <strong>of</strong> sawdust around<br />

it to keep it and then they would have to wash the sawdust <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

~he~'d waste half <strong>of</strong> it doing that that way. There was not much ice.<br />

Q: Did you have house to house ice delivery or anything like that?<br />

A: Later on, when we were progressing. When we started to progress,<br />

see.<br />

Q: Well, I would like to talk a little if you don't mind about World War<br />

I1 and how it affected the people at their home. <strong>Howard</strong>, this is a very<br />

special day in your life probably because you spent part <strong>of</strong> your life in<br />

World War I and you probably have a lot to tell me about the Armistice<br />

Day.<br />

A: Well, yes, I was in the service twenty-two months two weeks,<br />

twenty-two months and twenty-two days.<br />

Q: Do you remember when they started celebrating Armistice Day?<br />

A: Well, we were halfway in between here and France and on the ocean<br />

coming back with the convoy and we got the news on the ship. Of course<br />

when we landed in New York then there was--it was two days before we got<br />

into New York. And <strong>of</strong> course, the big parade and everything was on then<br />

and everybody was having a good time. Glad that it was over.<br />

Q: Did you parade in Auburn?<br />

A: No, well, I didn't get back to Auburn for oh, two or three months<br />

after the Armistice Day.<br />

Q: But I mean every year Auburn had their little parade and the American<br />

Legion men all participate?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7 0<br />

A: Used to but they're getting down to where they don't. They have a<br />

banquet every year, the American Legion and the Veterans <strong>of</strong> Foreign War<br />

have a dinner for all <strong>of</strong> us and our wives. And tonight they are having<br />

one and I don't even think that there will be only five veterans left.<br />

I'm the only living charter member in the American Legion and the rest <strong>of</strong><br />

them have all passed on.<br />

Q: Did you eves march in one <strong>of</strong> the American Legion Parades?<br />

A: Oh yes. Every year. I missed it there for a while. There was quite<br />

a few <strong>of</strong> us in them days.<br />

Q: And you would go over to Veterans Park?<br />

A: Yes, and go past the Senior Citizens home and to Veterans Park.<br />

Helen Harms, I think, planted a tree in the park here, in honor <strong>of</strong> her<br />

first husband. He enlisted at the same time that I did and we'd stop<br />

there and fire a salute and then we'd go on to the cemetery and have a<br />

program. We'd have a speaker and fire a salute and play taps. And we<br />

would have one to play taps up there and we would have one way down at<br />

the end <strong>of</strong> the cemetery and he'd bring the echo back. He'd play the<br />

echo.<br />

Q: I always thought it was a very impressive ceremony.<br />

A: It was. But they're getting down now, I think there's only about<br />

five <strong>of</strong> us left, but I'm not sure. Frank Fitzue, he's in the nursing<br />

home in Virden, and there's supposed to be four <strong>of</strong> us there tonight and<br />

there's several widows <strong>of</strong> course. Ladies live longer than men.<br />

Q: Sometimes.<br />

A: Sometimes, they say the good die young. (laughs)<br />

Q: We were going to talk about World War I1 a little bit and how it<br />

affected the people on the home front. Do you remember some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

things that the people had to do during the war to help out or to do<br />

their part?<br />

A: They rationed gasoline and that was the biggest thing. And the sugar<br />

was rationed and meat was rationed. The rents were frozen on the houses,<br />

people renting, and they just put the freeze on about as much as they<br />

could.<br />

Q: Were tires hard to get?<br />

A: Yes. We had to have an order from a place, I forget what they called<br />

it now, but there was a headquarters in each county and you had to go<br />

there and have, like if you were working for the ammunitions factory out<br />

in Illiopolis, that was east <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong>. Everybody that traded there<br />

had to go to the headquarters and the manager, they made ammunition<br />

there, and lots <strong>of</strong> people worked out <strong>of</strong> there and there was plenty<br />

employment. You had to get orders for a tire. I was selling cars for<br />

the Metropolitan Chevrolet when the war broke out and we kept our


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7 1<br />

demonstrators.<br />

premium then but. . . .<br />

We had no more cars for sale and automobiles were a<br />

Q: Did a lot <strong>of</strong> people have to jack up their cars during the duration?<br />

A: No, nobody wasted gasoline but everybody cooperated with it as they<br />

could and had plenty to eat but it was rationed.<br />

Q: Do you remember if shoes were rationed?<br />

A: No, I don't remember that, did you?<br />

Q: Yes, I remember that.<br />

A: No, I never did.<br />

Q: I guess because <strong>of</strong> the rubber soles.<br />

A: I never needed any shoes. I had plenty. But it lasted about six<br />

years, I believe it was about six years. s hat's when I learned to. . . .<br />

Q: What did or how did they ration things?<br />

A: Stamps. Books <strong>of</strong> stamps. People smuggled them.<br />

Q: Oh dear, a lot <strong>of</strong> that went on? Black market, is that what it was<br />

called?<br />

A: There was black market in meat then and things like that too. Some<br />

wouldn't partake and some did, but it was that way with everything.<br />

There were bootleggers, the country was dry. You wouldn't remember that<br />

I guess.<br />

Q: No, but Ive heard <strong>of</strong> that. According to some <strong>of</strong> the tales there was<br />

quite a bit <strong>of</strong> that going on here in Auburn.<br />

A: Oh tes. You didn't have to go far. There was home brew and what<br />

they called Deigo Bed Wine. They'd shoot the barrel with ether some way<br />

and you better not drink very much <strong>of</strong> that because it would make you<br />

sick. I never was much <strong>of</strong> a drinker. I never partaked in that very<br />

much.<br />

Q: During that time had you ever heard <strong>of</strong> any rumors about any Chicago<br />

gangsters being hiding out in Auburn?<br />

A: Oh yes. I knew one time they came down here, they'd come down here<br />

and load their trucks. There was a place out here south <strong>of</strong> Auburn that<br />

was manufacturing this alcohol. And they had the big vats and everything,<br />

concrete vats. And they'd go in to <strong>Springfield</strong>, they broke a wheel on a<br />

truck and they had to get a wheel for that rtuck. Nobody was ever arrested<br />

or anything else.<br />

Q: People weren't being arrested for making their own booze then?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 72<br />

A: Well, not much. The states attorney would come down and the sheriff's<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice, they would come down and raid the places but nobody ever went to<br />

jail very much. They must have dealt under the table a little bit, that<br />

was all. That's always in anything like that, seems like when there's a<br />

demand for it, they can raise the price, or they will get it some way.<br />

Q: Well, let's go back to World War 11, we got <strong>of</strong>f the subject just a<br />

little bit, but do you remember whether the housewives did anything<br />

special during the war to help out?<br />

A: Oh, they made bandages for the wounded soldiers and the churches<br />

would have meetings and women would attend these meetings. They'd have<br />

c<strong>of</strong>fee and donuts or something like that. They'd all make bandages and<br />

pads for the heavy wounds and they sent them into the Red Cross.<br />

Q: Would they knit gloves and scarves and hats?<br />

A: Yes, I had a sweater myself that they knitted. They sent them to our<br />

ship, the first ship that I was on and there was about 125 on that ship.<br />

It was a destroyer and everyone <strong>of</strong> us got a new sweater and I don't know<br />

where they came from but the Red Cross brought them there. When we was<br />

on the other side <strong>of</strong> the ocean, we were in France they had cigarettes,<br />

but you'd have to buy them from the Red Cross, but the Salvation Army you<br />

would get them for nothing.<br />

Q: What were your feelings about the Red Cross? Do you think that they<br />

were doing a good job?<br />

A: Yes, but then there is always gripers. Everybody can't do anything,<br />

but somebody will gripe about it. But they did a lot <strong>of</strong> good. I know<br />

when after the war was over and, I moved to <strong>Springfield</strong>, my wife and I<br />

and Tommy, we lived at 514 West Monroe Street. I had the hiccups so bad<br />

that nobody could stop them. And so Dr. Clark, my sister- in-law's<br />

brother-in-law was a doctor and he was a captain in the army. . . .<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Three, Side Two<br />

A: Yes, he tried to stop the hiccups, I had them for two or three days<br />

and two or three nights. So they got an order from the Red Cross to stop<br />

the fast train that went from Chicago. We called it the Red Flyer or<br />

something like that from Chicago to St. Louis. They put me on a stretcher<br />

in <strong>Springfield</strong> and took me to the Jefferson Veterans Hospital in St.<br />

Louis. My wife went with me, she rode up in the baggage car with me.<br />

1'11 never forget I would vomit, it was just like c<strong>of</strong>fee grounds. They<br />

had an ambulance meet me at the depot and they took me to the hospital.<br />

I was down there about seven or eight days before they got them stopped.<br />

They did everything.<br />

Q: Heavens, that must have been a terrible experience.<br />

A: I'll say so, I was pretty sore, jerking like that.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7 3<br />

Q: What did they say was wrong?<br />

A: Just, I had the hiccups, hiccups is a spasm <strong>of</strong> the diaphram, is what<br />

it. And they put me in ice water and I remember one time they give<br />

me--they said, "Do you drink?" And I said, "No, not habitually." So<br />

they brought me a glass with the best tasting whiskey I ever tasted.<br />

Several years after that I had, the Red Cross, I'm getting ahead <strong>of</strong><br />

myself, the Red Cross paid my bill and they sent me a notice. I<br />

reimbursed the Red Cross because the hospital fees were not much, they<br />

didn't cost me anything. They didn't cost me anything when I had a heart<br />

attack that time in Milwaukee, but I carry a card in my pocket now that<br />

anytime I need to go to a Veterans Hospital all I got to do is present<br />

that card and they'll take me right into the hospital.<br />

Q: Back to some <strong>of</strong> the things that the housewives did, do you remember<br />

if they saved grease and . . . .<br />

A: Yes, they did. There was prizes given for canned goods with labels<br />

on them and a lot <strong>of</strong> them saved those labels and turned them in and then<br />

they got premiums. I started to tell you about later on I had this<br />

hiccups again. That was several years later and they took me to St.<br />

~ohn's Hospital and Dr. Koeningsburg was my doctor. They did everything<br />

they could think <strong>of</strong> to do to stop them. They called Dr. Stocker from the<br />

T.B. (Princess) Sanitarium and that was before it was closed down. They<br />

took me up and they cut on this side. There is a scar there across here,<br />

that's what they call the vagus nerve.<br />

Q: On your neck there?<br />

A: Yea. And they said that ought to stop them. Well, it didn't. So<br />

then the next day they took me up and they cut the vagus nerve on this<br />

side <strong>of</strong> my neck. There is a scar right down there that you can't see on<br />

account <strong>of</strong> my collar now. That stopped them and they fixed my bed when I<br />

got home. The head <strong>of</strong> the bed had two pieces <strong>of</strong> four by four and they<br />

raised it up, the head <strong>of</strong> my bed and I had to sleep like this with my<br />

head up higher than my feet. 1 haven't had the hiccups since. That was<br />

fifteen or twenty years ago.<br />

Q: Well, that's a terrible thing to have the hiccups so long. Did<br />

somebody ever try to scare you out <strong>of</strong> them?<br />

A: Well, they scared me, they had me blowing in a paper bag and the<br />

Jefferson Barracks had a tub that had ice water and they bathed me in<br />

that. They did everything, anytime anybody suggested anything, they<br />

tried it.<br />

Q: They were kind <strong>of</strong> experimenting on you then?<br />

A: Well, nothing was doing it, stopping them so they just kept it up<br />

till they could stop them.<br />

Q: Do you remember if people who had sons in the war placed a star in<br />

the window, didn't they, for every son that they had in the war?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 74<br />

A: Yes, but you see I was in World War I and I wasn't here then. And I<br />

didn't know then after the war, well, it was quite a while before I got<br />

back to Auburn because it was about four months before they got us all<br />

discharged.<br />

Q: During World War 11, do you remember whether they had blackouts or<br />

not in your area?<br />

A: Yes, they did, they had sirens going and they were supposed to meet<br />

at certain places. In case a bomb would hit, you'd go there to the<br />

schools or churches or different places and you'd get into the basements<br />

or what ever.<br />

Q: Those were bomb shelters then?<br />

A: Yes, that's what they called bomb shelters.<br />

Q: Did they have people that organized this like the Civil Defense?<br />

A: Yes, they were in different areas in the city. Like in this part,<br />

wards, there were four wards here and each ward had a place and that was<br />

where they'd go.<br />

Q: Usually how long did those drills last?<br />

A: Oh, not too long, not over a half hour, they'd practice them.<br />

Q: Were you warned in advance?<br />

A: No, they had the fire alarm, they'd pull it by surprise and everybody<br />

would go there and that was the way they did it. As soon as they all<br />

gathered, it only lasted about 30 minutes and then everybody would go<br />

back to their business or work or whatever. The businesses would lock<br />

their doors and go to them.<br />

Q: Now you talked about one place in Riverton that became an ammunition<br />

factory. Did a lot <strong>of</strong> factories . . . .<br />

A: No, that was Illiopolis.<br />

Q: Illiopolis, 1'm sorry. Did a lot <strong>of</strong> factories sort <strong>of</strong> change over to<br />

some wartime activities during that time?<br />

A: No, the government came in there and they built roads and they built<br />

the buildings and everything else. They manufactured the bullets and the<br />

shells and everything else. They had two shifts, they worked day and<br />

night. They had a night shift and a day shift. Those buildings are all<br />

still out there. They sold them to different ones and I know some people<br />

had a big hatchery out there where they hatched ducks and chickens andthey'd<br />

sell them. The farmers would go in there and get their chickens.<br />

They'd have incubators at home. I think there was a grain business out<br />

there too. Some kind <strong>of</strong> grain purchasing, grain and seeds.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7 5<br />

Q: Did a lot <strong>of</strong> women go to work?<br />

A: Yes, mostly women. They had a special train that would go from<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> out there and a special train to bring them back.<br />

Q: Was that sort <strong>of</strong> when slacks came in to the picture? Women started<br />

wearing slacks and handkerchiefs around their heads to keep their hair<br />

from being caught in the machinery and so forth?<br />

A: hat's right. Everybody did what they were told. To harmonize and<br />

make everything work out.<br />

Q: Was money hard to get at that time? Were people . . . .<br />

A: No, no, money was plentiful.<br />

Q: They had money but they couldn't buy a lot <strong>of</strong> the things that they<br />

wanted probably?<br />

A: Well, everything was rationed. You couldn't buy to excess. There<br />

was no waste. At Illiopolis they had mounds built. They'd dig down a<br />

little ways. They were what they called ammunition dumps and it just<br />

looked like, you've seen pictured <strong>of</strong> Eskimo ice huts? They are large.<br />

Q: They look like that?<br />

A: They looked like huts, they'd make these shells to put in cannons and<br />

they'd pile them up in there and they'd ship them out to overseas.<br />

Q: Do you remember anything about war bond drives?<br />

A: Yes, they had drives. If you didn't buy a war bond, you weren't very<br />

patriotic.<br />

Q: People seemed to be more patriotic during those times, didn't they?<br />

A: Well, yes, but they'll be that way again if we're ever attacked.<br />

Q: You're sure that. . . .<br />

A: Oh yes.<br />

Q: You have faith in this younger generation that they would go to war?<br />

A: Sure.<br />

Q: What do you feel about some <strong>of</strong> these boys that didn't want to go to<br />

Vietnam? Did you feel that that was justified?<br />

A: Well, no, I wasn't one <strong>of</strong> them, I was past that, but the way it<br />

turned out to be, it was an unjust war. It wasn't a war, they didn't go<br />

in to win. If they had gone to win, I don't think there would have been<br />

much hesitancy about it, about wanting to go. But when all the news came<br />

back with these booby traps and all those boys getting killed over there


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7 6<br />

and everything, and there's no, it didn't seem like it was organized<br />

right.<br />

They talked guns and butter. It finally got so that there was plenty <strong>of</strong><br />

butter and they had plenty <strong>of</strong> guns too and yet there, they didn't go into<br />

Vietnam to win. And that's why a lot <strong>of</strong> those boys didn't go and I've<br />

heard several other elderly fellows say if I had it to do over anything<br />

like that, I wouldn't go either. Because there wasn't, it's proven--that<br />

one thing I thought was going to hurt Nixon and that was because he said<br />

it was a just war in one <strong>of</strong> his speeches. Well, it wasn't a just war<br />

because what'd we ever get out <strong>of</strong> it? They just walked out, left the<br />

guns and airplanes and everything else there, that's it.<br />

Q: That war rather hurt our image towards the world, didn't it?<br />

A: Yes, it did. In a way we were fighting Russia more in a sense<br />

because Russia was supplying and China was supplying Vietnam. That was a<br />

bad place. The terrain was either <strong>of</strong> mountainous or it was swampy.<br />

Q: And those people over there, they had been in war most all their<br />

lives.<br />

A: Yes, France tried to whip them out and France withdrew and pulled<br />

everything back to France. Then United States took it up and I think<br />

Eisenhower was the first one that sent the troops in there. Then I was<br />

Cold one time that that's the reason that Johnson didn't run for<br />

reelection for President was because on account <strong>of</strong> that war and he knew<br />

he'd get beat. I just heard that, that's not my opinion. I heard that.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> a war do you think we might ever have if we are in one<br />

again?<br />

A: It'll be an atomic war. It will be over pretty fast and that's just<br />

my opinion.<br />

Q: Well, that's what we're asking you for is your opinion. <strong>Howard</strong>,<br />

let's talk a little bit about--it occurred to me that there was a Ku Klux<br />

Klan in Auburn. I never knew anything about that, have you ever seen one<br />

or know anything about that?<br />

A: Well, I never belonged to them but they'd meet out here south <strong>of</strong> town<br />

and they didn't do any. . . .<br />

Q: They weren't violent?<br />

A: Well, that was nothing but a political organization to elect Glen<br />

Small governor <strong>of</strong> the state <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>. That was all this Ku Klux Klan<br />

was for. That's the way it looked.<br />

Q: And was he governor?<br />

A: He was elected governor.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 7 7<br />

Q: He was elected governor?<br />

A: Yes. I was just a young fellow then. I was married though and I<br />

heard a politician say that that was what they were for, to elect Glen<br />

Small the governor.<br />

Q: About what time was this in your life?<br />

A: About 1925.<br />

Q: You were a young man then?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Did they ride into town?<br />

A: No, they just had a meeting out there out south <strong>of</strong> town here in a<br />

pasture out there and we drove by. They didn't bother you, you just went<br />

on by and they had a fellow standing at the gate and unless you belonged<br />

you didn't get in.<br />

Q: Did you ever see them in their sheets?<br />

A: Oh yes. And they had a big red cross, a big cross burning but it<br />

didn't last long. That's why a lot <strong>of</strong> them felt that was for that<br />

election purpose.<br />

Q: So you feel it was more political than religious?<br />

A: That wasn't my feelings exactly, but that was what I heard. The<br />

smarter guys were the politicians though.<br />

Q: I understood though that back in the olden days when Auburn was just<br />

getting its start, that the people who lived on the east side <strong>of</strong> town<br />

were not considered as good as the people on the west side <strong>of</strong> the track.<br />

Was there some sort <strong>of</strong> controversy there?<br />

A: Well, there was the east sid-and the west side but most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

foreign people settled on the east side. The residents on this side, I<br />

can say this for the east side, I was in business for myself later on at<br />

the tailend <strong>of</strong> that. But the foreign people, I was their lawyer and<br />

advisor, and a lot <strong>of</strong> them trusted me. They all traded with me and they<br />

all paid, when I sold out, everyone that could, came to pay their bills.<br />

I remember one fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Felitian Gignet, and I had bought<br />

Dr. Hart's house up here and I moved back from <strong>Springfield</strong> here, and he<br />

came down to my house. I'd sold him a car, a used car, and he came down<br />

to my house and he stood there with his hat in his hand and he said, my<br />

nickname, they call me Percy. He said, "Mr. Percy, I'm sorry, I owe you<br />

for $40 on the car but I can't pay. I got no money, I got no job." And<br />

I said, "Well, wait till I get my book."<br />

And I went and got the books and I said, "yes, that's $40." So I just<br />

got the papers and he turned around and I happened to see the seat <strong>of</strong> his<br />

pants was out. I went and got a suit <strong>of</strong> clothes I give him, and tore up


<strong>Howard</strong> Berron 7 8<br />

the papers. I said, "Felitian, call it square because I made a pretty<br />

good pr<strong>of</strong>it from the used car." He was a gentleman and as I say, now all<br />

the people that owed me money on the east side, they paid, pretty near<br />

everyone <strong>of</strong> them to the dime.<br />

Some people on this side, the aristocratic part as they called it then,<br />

they didn't. Well, I just got so tired <strong>of</strong> trying to collect it. During<br />

the depression you couldn't collect anything because they didn't have it<br />

either and they'd lie about it. The east people were more honest than the<br />

people over here, when you get right down to it. I just got so disgusted<br />

that one day I slipped down in the basement and I took the Accounts<br />

Receivable Ledger and it was $6,702. I'll never forget it as long as I<br />

live and I just threw it in the furnace and burnt it up. My wife said,<br />

11<br />

You're crazy", and I said, "No, I'm not." I said, "Those people are<br />

good to me and they paid their bills and they would pay if they could,"<br />

and I just got it <strong>of</strong>f my mind and started over.<br />

Q: That was very good <strong>of</strong> you.<br />

A: I didn't lose anything by it and I still have a lot <strong>of</strong> friends.<br />

Q: Do you think because some <strong>of</strong> these people spoke foreign languages and<br />

perhaps had different religious beliefs that that was one reason why the<br />

people on the west side didn't want to accept them?<br />

A: Oh, they accepted them, they accepted their business. But it was a<br />

case <strong>of</strong> some fellow would come here say from Italy and he'd write to<br />

friends. There would be about a half a dozen from Italy would come over<br />

here and they'd settle over there in that part <strong>of</strong> town. They would<br />

settle close to where a friend was and they mostly couldn't speak English<br />

very fluently and they learned as fast as they could. They learned<br />

faster than we would if we went over to their country. They couldn't<br />

mingle was all, because they didn't know our language and we didn't know<br />

theirs. But as I said, they learned it faster than we would if we would<br />

have been in their country. But a lot <strong>of</strong> good people over there and they<br />

all raised their children and they are all in school now and that's all<br />

forgotten. They have decent homes over there and that's all forgotten.<br />

Q: Do you think the people <strong>of</strong> Auburn today are, there's hardly any<br />

prejudice left?<br />

A: No, there's no prejudice at all.<br />

Q: What do you think the people <strong>of</strong> Auburn would say if the black<br />

community developed here?<br />

A: Well, that'sa.. . .<br />

Q: Do you think there would be some prejudice there?<br />

A: There would be bound to be. We had one Negro here, Dr. Wheeler. He<br />

was the State Game Commissioner and he had charge <strong>of</strong> the State Game Farm<br />

out here south <strong>of</strong> town and I told you about that before.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 79<br />

Q: He was black?<br />

A: He was a Negro and he had this--this Dr. Wheeler was a big fine man.<br />

He got this Negro here to practice boxing with him and they'd go out to a<br />

barn right where the Auburn State Bank is. Dr. Wheeler's <strong>of</strong>fice was<br />

right there and this barn was there and he had race horses and things and<br />

bull dogs. Ferguson was the name, Fergie, and everybody liked Fergie.<br />

He'd carry a wrench with him and a loaf <strong>of</strong> bread and whatever he would<br />

eat on it. Dr. Wheeler took care <strong>of</strong> him good and he didn't bother anybody<br />

and he was--everybody said, "Hello Fergie, how are you?"<br />

Q: Now Dr. Wheeler was black or. . . .<br />

A: No, he was a white man.<br />

Q: Dr. Wheeler was white, but Ferguson was the black man?<br />

A: Yes, he lived here until he died. I'll never forget to tell a story<br />

about him. Mr. Hart was secretary <strong>of</strong> the Building and Loan Association<br />

here. He had a farm right out south <strong>of</strong> town here and go over and catch a<br />

car on into town. Ferguson had a big stand and each farmer would cross<br />

the railroad and the farmers would bring their milk in and ship their<br />

milk in the cans to <strong>Springfield</strong> and they had this stand built on post<br />

legs. They'd stand on that platform and put the milk right into the<br />

railroad car.<br />

So a bad storm was coming up and Mr. Hart was a very religious fellow,<br />

Sunday school leader and so forth. He said, "Ferguson, you prepared to<br />

meet your maker?'' Fergie grabbed him by both hands and he said, "Mr.<br />

Hart, don't you go away and leave me here now." I guess it was true too.<br />

In a way he was kind <strong>of</strong> afraid <strong>of</strong> death <strong>of</strong> Negroes. He said, "Mr. Hart,<br />

don't you go away and leave me here now."<br />

Q: Do you ever remember seeing an Indian?<br />

A: Not here. I saw them in shows.<br />

Q: Do you ever remember hearing anything about Indian mounds or anything<br />

about Indian reservations that happened to be in this area?<br />

A: No. There was some down there around Cahokia Mounds down near St.<br />

Louis and over by Macomb, there are Indian mounds over there. Not: around<br />

here.<br />

Q: Did you ever remember a Charles McMahon?<br />

A: Oh yes.<br />

Q: Do you remember when Charles McMahon escaped a burning building that<br />

claimed the life <strong>of</strong> Harry F. Winkley Jr.?<br />

A: No, I don't remember that. But this Charles McMahon, he and I were<br />

roommates. We went to Divernon and got a job in the coal mine there. We<br />

were both at the same boarding house and we were roommates.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 80<br />

He was quite a poker player. He was a good one. He was tongue-tied. He<br />

talked like it.<br />

Q: Oh, was he?<br />

A: Yes. There was a guy named Guiney who ran a hot dog and chili stand<br />

there on that street just in front <strong>of</strong> the elevator there. Be had worked<br />

for him. Guiney was his name. His father owned a restaurant and McMahon<br />

used to work there for him. When Guiney would go home he would stay<br />

there and run the place. Fellows would go in there and I'll try to tell<br />

you just like it. Somebody would come in and they would order chili and<br />

hot dogs and they'd tell them to charge it. Charles McMahon would say,<br />

"Jesus Christ, you come here and get a hot dog and you eat chili and you<br />

say charge it." He says, "1 ain' t going to do it." He says, "So how are<br />

you getting your money?" He said, "Well, I have to charge it I guess."<br />

That was when he was a young boy.<br />

He was the only kid in town that had a pair <strong>of</strong> felt boots, We'd hop the<br />

bobsled and the farmers would come into town in the snowy weather and<br />

everybody had a bobsled but they didn't have any cars then. They came to<br />

town in their bobsled and we'd hop bobs. We'd hop on the sled and they'd<br />

give us a ride out in the country and we'd meet another one coming in and<br />

we. . . .<br />

Q: Now a bobsled was pulled by a horse? Two horses?<br />

A: Yes, as a rule. Now a sleigh was a cutter they called it. It was<br />

pulled by sometimes one horse or two horses, whichever they wanted. They<br />

all had sleighbells and buckles around the horses and the horses would<br />

trot. The sleighbells were kind <strong>of</strong> noisy when you were out in the evening<br />

on a still night and the sleighbells could be heard going different ways.<br />

If a fellow had a good horse and a sleigh, he'd get a good girl. (laughs)<br />

You'd hear the sleighbells ringing.<br />

Q: That must have been kind <strong>of</strong> nice because you go out on a night now<br />

and all you hear is the roar <strong>of</strong> the automobile engines. I suppose they<br />

didn't have electric street lights so much then like they do now and<br />

maybe it was darker.<br />

A: They didn't then, that's true. They did have a light plant here,<br />

city owned. When they started the first electric machines and irons, at<br />

1Q:OO in the morning they could turn on their iron and do their washing,<br />

otherwise they couldn't. Tt cost too much to fire it up and there was a<br />

time set when you could use it and a time set when you couldn't but most<br />

everybody had coal oil lamps. I got one in there yet. My wife. . . .<br />

Q: They had coal oil stoves then too, didn't they?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Did that sort <strong>of</strong> follow the wood stove and the coal stove?<br />

A: Yes. They were called little heaters. You filled it with about a<br />

gallon <strong>of</strong> kerosene and had a wick to it and you had to watch them.<br />

~he~'d go up in smoke if you didn't watch them.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 8 1<br />

Q: Were there lots <strong>of</strong> fires due to this type <strong>of</strong> cooking?<br />

A: No, not anymore than there is I guess now. Well, yes, there might<br />

have been more but everybody had to be careful. Your children was taught<br />

to stay away from the fire.<br />

Q: When electricity came, I guess the housewives, it was kind <strong>of</strong> a<br />

wonderful thing for her. She could have the electric iron and did she<br />

have an electric washing machine with a wringer on it?<br />

A: Well, we didn't for a long the. 1 know we had one that you had a<br />

wheel that you turn like that. Some <strong>of</strong> them had them where you could put<br />

your foot like this and run it.<br />

Q: That you could pedal?<br />

A: You could push your foot and pull back and push the handle and push<br />

forward the same way an your foot. Ours had a wheel to crank and mother<br />

would set an alarm clock there and she'd say, "Fifteen minutes now,<br />

boys. "<br />

Q: Oh, you boys had to crank that for fifteen minutes?<br />

A: Yes, when there was washing to do.<br />

Q: And what kind <strong>of</strong> soap did you use for your clothing?<br />

A: Homemade soap. They saved the grease to make the soap. They put the<br />

soap with lye and that's what made the soap.<br />

Q: Did you ever have to help with that?<br />

A: Oh, I stirred it a lot <strong>of</strong> times.<br />

Q: How did they make the cakes <strong>of</strong> soap?<br />

A: Oh, they just let it set. After they cooked it so long, they got the<br />

grease hot and put the lye in it and stirred it so long. And then just<br />

leave it, put it, put a wooden lid over it, the kettle, and soon as it<br />

got cool, take it out and cut it.<br />

A: How <strong>of</strong>ten would a person have to make soap then?<br />

A: Oh, two or three times a year.<br />

Q: Oh.<br />

A: My mother used to--she'd set the clock and go and we'd sneak up five<br />

minutes, we'd turn the clock up. we'd turn it up five minutes on her.<br />

She was pretty doxy. It was like at night she would say, "Boys, wash<br />

them feet." And we'd go out to the well and pump the water and we'd go<br />

to the back door and she'd say, "I want to see those feet." She said,<br />

"Them sheets are getting dirty too fast." And when she washed she'd have<br />

to boil the clothes. If they weren't boiled they were terrible. You


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 8 2<br />

didn't have the detergent like they have now, bleach, and everything.<br />

They had a big old copper boiler. There're antiques now, sold high, and<br />

the women would boil the water and put the sheets and pillow cases in<br />

that washtub right next to it. Then take a long stick and hold that up<br />

and then they'd switch it over into the tub and. . . .<br />

Q: That must have been an all day process?<br />

A: It was an all day process and then pretty near everyone had a summer<br />

kitchen they called them. They had clotheslines in there and they hung<br />

their clothes up in there. We had a little laundry stove and we built a<br />

fire in that to keep it warm in there and the heat would dry them. It<br />

was nothing to go by a house where there was clothes hanging on the<br />

clothesline and a pair <strong>of</strong> long-johns hanging there that looked like a man<br />

hanging by his hands. The wind would blow them and they were froze<br />

stiff. Well, we just had to do it, that was the way <strong>of</strong> life.<br />

Q: On the very coldest winter days, how did you manage to stay warm?<br />

A: Oh. . . .<br />

Q: You couldn't have a stove in every room?<br />

A: No, but we had at least two. One in the living room and one in the<br />

kitchen, had a big cook stove in the kitchen and the heating stove. My<br />

father bought what they called a hard coal burner. Had to get the coal<br />

from Pennsylvania, I think.<br />

Q: Why did you have to get coal from Pennsylvania?<br />

A: It was what they called hard coal and there was no ashes to it. When<br />

it got burned there was just a white ash. There was glass all around it<br />

and it would just light up the whole room and you were society when you<br />

got a hard coal burner.<br />

Q: We're going back to some <strong>of</strong> those things now, did you know that?<br />

A: The hard coal burners? I don't know.<br />

Q: The wood burning stoves?<br />

A: Oh yes. Well, they've got some kind <strong>of</strong> a way now that they can but I<br />

don't know <strong>of</strong> anybody around here that--a few put in fireplaces but not<br />

very many put in the other.<br />

Q: Did you burn the front side <strong>of</strong> your body and freeze the back side on<br />

these stoves?<br />

A: I can tell you about a real case <strong>of</strong> that. My youngest brother, Paul,<br />

when we lived up in the west part <strong>of</strong> town and we had to walk to and from<br />

school and I told you before Bressler wouldn't let us bring our dinner.<br />

Said there was too many crumbs and he had to clean them up and the School<br />

Board stuck with him. Anyway we got home this one evening from school<br />

and mother wasn't there. She'd gone some place, the Ladies Ald Society


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong><br />

or something at the church, and my brother said, "Oh, I've got to go to<br />

the toilet." He ran out to the toilet and he came back. I had to turn<br />

the heat on and 1 had it good and hot. The stove would get red. He came<br />

back and he pulled down his pants and backed his behind up to the stove<br />

and he just went like that. (makes searing naise) He had a big blister<br />

on each cheek <strong>of</strong> his butt.<br />

Q: Oh my goodness.<br />

A: He had to sleep on his stomach for about a month. Oh, he cried, but<br />

there was nothing we could do but to put same lard or butter on it.<br />

Q: Did you have feather beds to sleep on?<br />

A: Yes, everybody had to have feather beds.<br />

Q: That must have been nice and warm?<br />

A: It was. That's how we kept warn. Some <strong>of</strong> them had--for each bed<br />

mother had a feather bed quilt, just about that thick all filled with<br />

feathers. She'd sewed it by hand and most every house in town would have<br />

what they called a quilting horse. Women would sew the patches or emblems<br />

on them and then they'd roll it up. When they got it rolled up they'd<br />

have a quilt done. They'd have quilting bees. Some woman would have a<br />

quilt or two. They could make a couple quilts in an afternoon.<br />

Q: Some sort <strong>of</strong> a social gathering?<br />

A: Yes. Back when they were first started here, I can remember this<br />

when I was little. Mr. Stout, who ran the drug store and he told me<br />

about this now. I didn' t see it. He said, "<strong>Howard</strong>, you know, we use to<br />

have a singing school." I was young fellow about 18 years old when he<br />

told me this. Be said, "They had a singing school and we'd meet at Mrs.<br />

~rown's for the day." He said we had a teacher here that knew a little<br />

about singing and he'd sing a song and a verse and then we'd all sing it<br />

and that' s how they learned the song. Everybody in town would learn the<br />

songs, church songs and otherwise. When they got--Mrs. Brown, maybe next<br />

week, she'd serve a glass <strong>of</strong> water and then next week, Mrs. O'Brien would<br />

serve a piece <strong>of</strong> cake and the next house they served cookies and a cookie<br />

and a drink for them. That's where they got the saying, "Try to outdo<br />

the Jones."<br />

Broke up the singing school, they served them too much. It broke up, the<br />

singing school and then he said they finally got a band organized here<br />

then. They used to have a big wagon and it had seats across there like<br />

that. You've seen pictures <strong>of</strong> them like a circus. You've probably seen<br />

them in a circus parade. The band wagon was pulled by horses and that's<br />

what they called the band wagon. Auburn would take their band wagon and<br />

the band would go to Waverly. They'd have a picnic and Auburn would play<br />

fox them and then later in Auburn or Virden. Every town had a band<br />

wagon.<br />

Q: Back in the olden days, did people have player pianos and Victrolas<br />

and things like that in their homes?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 84<br />

A: Didn't know what they were.<br />

Q: You didn' t have one?<br />

A: Didn't even know they existed.<br />

Q: Where did they get their instruments, these that were able to play in<br />

the band?<br />

A: Oh, I don't know, they had a few horns and base fiddles and violins<br />

and banjos and accordions and French harps and all that stuff, but I<br />

don't know where they got it, I guess they sent to Sears Roebuck and got<br />

them. My mother and my father and his brother, my uncle they'd, we lived<br />

by them, an alley between us. They'd send down to the Sears Roebuck and<br />

get a big order between them. We'd get sugar and everything else there,<br />

Sears Roebuck. They'd ship it in and. . . .<br />

Q: Did Sears and Roebuck put a catalog out back in your days?<br />

A: Yes, everybody had to have a catalog in the privy. (laughs) By fall<br />

you were over in the harness section. (laughs)<br />

Q: Well on the hottest days <strong>of</strong> the year I guess everybody was pretty<br />

glad when electric fans were invented?<br />

A: Whoever was thrashing on the farms, he would have a dinner, they<br />

always fixed a nice dinner. Neighbors would help and they'd have big<br />

long tables and they could seat 18 to 20 at a table and they had them<br />

dinners. I can't remember what I wanted to tell you.<br />

Q: During the summertime when they had electric fans.<br />

A: Oh yes. The flies, they had the screen doors, the best they could<br />

get. And <strong>of</strong> course when you opened the screen doors they would get in<br />

and all the girls, young ladies, would want to see the boys too. They'd<br />

come in for dinner and they had great big limbs they cut <strong>of</strong>f the trees<br />

with the leaves on them and they'd stand by the table and fight the flies<br />

<strong>of</strong>f for you. That was their (girls) job. The boys that worked out in<br />

the field.<br />

Q: Just like the king and his harem then?<br />

A: (laughter) Not quite. Many a match was made I guess through that.<br />

I know that's where I met my wife was helping thrash over there. I told<br />

you that before.<br />

Q: When was the first time that you had a radio in your home?<br />

A: After I got married.<br />

Q: Did you have a favorite radio program back in those days?<br />

A: Some fellows gave chain stores the dickins. Everybody would listen<br />

to him. A fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Kessler here used to make radios and


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 85<br />

he'd get those plastic boards and saw them and they come ordered that<br />

way. You could order one and then he knew how to do it. He was an<br />

electrician.<br />

Q: He would put it together?<br />

A: He would put it together. That was the first radio. They would squeal<br />

and squaw and we had an awful time getting them tuned in. Dr. Britton came<br />

in the drug store one morning and he said everybody had to tell what program<br />

they got last night. He said, "Well, I got chili last night." I said, "You<br />

did?" He said, "Yes, yes, I did, 1 got it on my vest." (laughs)<br />

Another story he said, I don't know if you want to write this or not. 1<br />

used to get constipated once in a while and then I'd have to call the<br />

doctor. Doc Britton here, he'd come and he said, "Now <strong>Howard</strong>, I'm getting<br />

tired <strong>of</strong> coming out here and opening you up." He said keep my head cool<br />

and my feet warm and my bowels open and I'd do fine.<br />

Q: He had a philosophy for lots <strong>of</strong> things along with his medication.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Four, Side One<br />

A: Well, when Auburn had the first fish fry his [Doc Brittoa] <strong>of</strong>fice is<br />

over there on that southeast corner <strong>of</strong> the square, northeast corner <strong>of</strong> the<br />

square and they'd always put the merry-go-round there. His barn was back<br />

there and I always took care <strong>of</strong> Doc Britton's horses for him. I always<br />

loved horses even when I rode them in the races here. This old fellow that<br />

owned the merry-go-round he said--Doc House was standing there and old<br />

Doc had his arm around me. He took my hat <strong>of</strong>f and swished my hair and he<br />

told this old fellow that owned the merry-go-round. "This is my boy."<br />

He didn't have a boy at that time. He had a boy later on and he said,<br />

h his is my boy." He said, "~r. Britton, if this is your boy ," he put<br />

his arm around my shoulder and he said, "Sonny, boy, you can ride this<br />

merry-go-round anytime for nothing. You get on and ride." So I did, I<br />

was the envy <strong>of</strong> the town. (laughs) I'd just hop on and ride until I'd<br />

get tired and I'd hop <strong>of</strong>f and on. I told Doc Britton, I said, "He told<br />

me to do that." Every year they would come back there and I'd say, "I'm<br />

DOC ~ ritton's boy." And he said, "Oh, 1 ain't forgot you." And I had it<br />

good for two or three years. I would ride that merry-go-round. (laughs)<br />

Q: But did you have a favorite radio program, did you like Fibber McGee<br />

OF. . . .<br />

A: Fibber McGee and Molly and Amos and Andy and that's about it.<br />

Q: And you got all the news I guess?<br />

A: We got WLS from Chicago and they had. . . . I can't remember.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 86<br />

Q: Did you ever hear Lawrence Welk?<br />

A: No, he wasn't even born then.<br />

Q: He wasn't?<br />

A: I don't suppose.<br />

Q: Was that the closest radio station you had, WLS?<br />

A: St. Louis. KSD in St. Louis and WLS in Chicago. They had a quartet.<br />

Q: Barbershop?<br />

A: No, I can't think <strong>of</strong> their name.<br />

Q: Would it be on the radio you mean?<br />

A: The Blue Ridge Mountain Boys or something like that.<br />

Q: Oh.<br />

A: And they were a quartet.<br />

Q: Did the people <strong>of</strong> Auburn like square dancing and that kind <strong>of</strong> music<br />

when you were young?<br />

A: Well, when I was a kid they did but when I was able to go to dances<br />

they didn't. They had them at their homes out in the country. If<br />

somebody was going to have a dance, everybody was invited, everybody<br />

would tell everybody. You didn't have any special people, just word <strong>of</strong><br />

mouth. I was chairman up there, I told you about that.<br />

Q: What was the population <strong>of</strong> Auburn along the time that you were a<br />

teenager ?<br />

A: I don't suppose it was over 1500 people.<br />

Q: Well, that's pretty good. It hasn't grown all that much since you<br />

were a teenager, has it?<br />

A: I said 1500, I guess.<br />

Q: Well, it's about twice that now.<br />

A: Well, it wasn't that big. I don't suppose there was even a thousand<br />

people here.<br />

Q: And everybody knew everybody?<br />

A: Oh, yes. When I was in business over here I knew everybody and pert<br />

near how much money they had in the bank. They don't think I did but I<br />

thought I did.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 8 7<br />

Q: So if somebody was in need most <strong>of</strong> the neighbors sort <strong>of</strong> took over<br />

and helped?<br />

A: Oh yes. When there was a child born on the block well they'd help.<br />

The day before two or three mid-wives in town they'd say, "We're going to<br />

have a ganny dance, figure we're going to have the ganny dance tomorrow."<br />

They figured the baby would be born tomorrow and they called them ganny<br />

dances. They'd say so-and-so is going to have a ganny dance tomorrow.<br />

Q: So the women made little baby clothes.<br />

A: One would boil the water and the other would boil the chicken and<br />

have chicken soup and they'd get ready for it. Everybody helped each<br />

other.<br />

Q: That's nice. Do you think there's so much <strong>of</strong> that nowadays?<br />

A: Well, there's more or less--when my wife died, we belonged to the<br />

Methodist Church and she taught Sunday School, and she helped them with<br />

church work too. When the funeral was over, refreshments would be served<br />

at the church. When you got there you didn't ever see such dinner in<br />

your life. Everybody brought dishes <strong>of</strong> food and ham and chicken.<br />

Everybody at the funeral was welcome to come. And <strong>of</strong> course, I give a<br />

donation to the church because the people that did it did it out <strong>of</strong> the<br />

goodnesss <strong>of</strong> their heart and I made a donation to the church for it.<br />

They did a good job. I would give it to the church anyway. But that's<br />

the way, everybody helped each other.<br />

Q: Well, people still care, but they seem to be going at a faster pace<br />

nowadays, don't you think?<br />

A: Well, it was nothing to walk into town three or four miles in them<br />

days. If you didn't have a horse and buggy, you'd walk.<br />

Q: If you would ask a kid to walk that far now, they'd think that was a<br />

terrible thing, wouldn't they?<br />

A: Well, they would have their father prosecuted. These kids go along<br />

here everyday. They eat and go to school and they want allowance. Well,<br />

I didn't know what an allowance was in my life until I got to working for<br />

myself and I made my own allowance. Course my dad was--I'll never<br />

forget one time he said--we had three sweet potatoes rows. My dad said,<br />

"Boys, there's three boys and three rows <strong>of</strong> sweet potatoes. You can cut<br />

all the weeds out <strong>of</strong> them sweet potatoes and you can go to Virden to the<br />

picnic and 1'11 give you a dollar a piece." We thought that was a fine<br />

thing, and it was. It cost a nickel to go down and a nickel to come back<br />

and we had all <strong>of</strong> that money to spend. Our rides would never cost over a<br />

dime in them days and now they're 75~, 8 5 ~ and maybe a dollar, I don't<br />

know. I haven't been on the merry-go-round lately.<br />

Q: Well, you were talking about the sweet potatoes.<br />

A: Oh, yes, about 11:00, we was just finishing up and we had them all<br />

done. A big black cloud come up and thunder started to roar and it was


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 8 8<br />

just pouring down rain. Dad said, "Oh boys, you better stay home I<br />

guess, you can go next week." But that took all the joy out <strong>of</strong> it, that<br />

rain. We was all set to go to Virden to that carnival. We were treated<br />

good as we could be.<br />

Q: Do you think kids are more spoiled today than they used to be?<br />

A: Oh yes, you had your chores to do. We had a coal house and a cob<br />

house and a wood shed. And during the summer when we would go home from<br />

school, we would go through the alleys. The stores would have a pile <strong>of</strong><br />

boxes, they'd ship oranges in crates, and they'd have crackers in boxes<br />

and loose crackers and oyster crackers in boxes. We'd get one <strong>of</strong> them<br />

boxes, and especially if it was raining, we'd cover our heads with it and<br />

walk on home. When we got home we'd cut that all up and put it in the<br />

wood house shed and they'd have us take a batch in every night for the<br />

cook stove to build a fire. We had a big chunk like this to put in the<br />

heating stove and it would hold all night and it would heat up the house.<br />

We had our chores to do and we had them done. You had to get out and do<br />

it after dark.<br />

Q: Did parents punish their children more do you think in those days? I<br />

mean did you ever get spankings or. . . .<br />

A: I don' t, I can' t even remember when my father spanked me. I knew if<br />

I had to do it and I was taught, you was taught when you were little.<br />

Q: You had your responsibilities.<br />

A: I remember one time we was down in Kentucky. I wasn't there, my wife<br />

was telling me about it, but she was born and raised in Kentucky and now<br />

they feed the kids first. We didn't get fed first, we would wait till<br />

the old folks ate and then we got to eat. She said her cousin Jack was<br />

sitting at the back porch and he started to cry. He said, "There goes<br />

the last piece <strong>of</strong> chicken, we're not going to get any." So that's the<br />

way it was. But there was always plenty for the kids. You weren't<br />

robbed blind, you were told. You were told what you had to do and you<br />

knew you had to do it and you did it. But it's got away.<br />

Q: I think it would be very difficult on these spoiled children if there<br />

ever came a time when things not so easy. Jobs are harder to get and<br />

money is tighter. I think they're going to find it more difficult.<br />

A: They don't how what hard times are. Getting back to Dr. Britton.<br />

He later on had a boy and a daughter and I was older than them and his<br />

boy was kind <strong>of</strong> a sissified kid in a way. They called him "Sister Red"<br />

at school. And he said to me, "There's one thing about it." I said,<br />

hat's that DOC?" He said, "He's got a champagne appetite and a peanut<br />

income." He always wanted the best. Of course Doc didn't give it to<br />

him. He said he had a champagne appetite and a peanut income. I never<br />

did forget that.<br />

Q: Do you think discipline in school was better in your days than it is<br />

today?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 89<br />

A: Yes, I got spanked the first day I went to school. Minnie<br />

Christianson, it wasn't my fault, I told you about that.<br />

Q: Back in those days they did spank children?<br />

A: Yes, sir. They knew when to behave too.<br />

Q: Embarrassed you in front <strong>of</strong> your classmates and now they don't do<br />

that.<br />

A: I remember I was in the fourth grade and Miss Leila Smith was my<br />

teacher. She had a hat with a red bird on it and it happened right over<br />

here on this corner. They had a big tree with a bush like what they<br />

called snowballs, in the summer they were white. Cockie Bowman, they<br />

called him Cockie because he was always cocky. He threw a snowball as<br />

she went by. He cut loose <strong>of</strong> the snowball and he hit that hat and<br />

knocked her hat <strong>of</strong>f. She saw who it was and she was in our class too and<br />

school didn't more than take up and she said, "Charles Bowman, come down<br />

here." He got down there and she had her paddle and she said, "Lay down<br />

on this bench." That was a recitation bench. Everybody marched up. . . .<br />

Q: Recitation bench?<br />

A: It was a big long bench in front <strong>of</strong> the school room and so she<br />

started working on him. He jumped up all the time. She said, "Come<br />

here, Andrew." Andrew was a guy that everybody called him Corky. She<br />

said, "Sit right down on his head." He sat right down on the top <strong>of</strong> his<br />

head and boy she flew into him with that paddle good. I never did forget<br />

that. Corky Bernard, they're both dead. I guess I'm about the only one<br />

living in the whole durn works.<br />

Q: What do you think about the kids now, that in some <strong>of</strong> the schools the<br />

teachers have to have policeman in the hallway to protect the teachers?<br />

A: Terrible, terrible. I don't know what's going to come.<br />

Q: Do you think it's their upbringing?<br />

A: Well, I would think it begins at home. Well, I tell you I can see it<br />

now and I probably was a party to it more or less. But my son, I'm proud<br />

<strong>of</strong> him. He never gave me any trouble in any way and he's retired. He<br />

was Supervisor <strong>of</strong> Engineers for the Bell Telephone Company in Chicago.<br />

Anyway, if you're taught at home how to behave-- and we taught Tommy to<br />

always be nice to elderly people and to this day if he sees an old lady<br />

going across the street, he would help her. He even did that when he was<br />

a little kid and I always told him that was a nice thing to do.<br />

I told him one time, there was some kids out to our house, it was a small<br />

place about twelve acres <strong>of</strong> pasture and all, and there was a big chicken<br />

house there. I had some chickens, I was raising a few chickens and there<br />

was three or four kids there playing with Tom and they were about four<br />

or five years old. And one <strong>of</strong> them left the door open and the chickens<br />

got out and I wanted to know who did that. None <strong>of</strong> them spoke up and


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 90<br />

finally Tom said, "I: did it, Daddy." And so when they left I said, "Come<br />

on, Tom, I want to talk to you." He came over and sat down by me. I<br />

said, "~'m going to tell you something now, I'll stick with you if you'll<br />

always tell me the truth. I'll stick with you, anything but murder. I<br />

won't stick with you for that. And I don't think he ever told me a lie,<br />

I don't believe he did. I told him when he was in high school, "Now<br />

Tommy, you're in high school and you're going to be going with the girls.<br />

Pick out the girl that you might want to make your wife," I said.<br />

We got in the car and we drove over to Tobin's farm, they raised Black<br />

Angus cattle. I said, "You see thase cattle over there." I said, "They're<br />

all pure bred." I said, "When you get married, marry a pure bred. Check<br />

in their family and see if there is any criminals in the family and no<br />

tuberculosis." It was terrible in those days. If you got TB you was a<br />

1 I<br />

goner". They help that now with medicine. So when 1 laid in the hospital<br />

in Milwaukee and he was working--he was a lineman then for the Bell<br />

Telephone Company. He had about three or four years in, two years in by<br />

that time. He was working in Beardstown and we lived in <strong>Springfield</strong>. He<br />

met a girl there, a telephone operator over there. I told him to pick a<br />

girl with character. "Look at her mother, chances are your wife will<br />

look like her mother." You know I was in Milwaukee in this hospital in<br />

the bed laying there, and I got a letter from him and he said, in his<br />

closing statement, "Dad, I think I met the girl I want to make my wife."<br />

And down at the bottom he said, 'IPS, she's a thoroughbred."<br />

Q: Oh, he remembered that.<br />

A: I was kind <strong>of</strong> glad. He's been a good boy. He's retired and he don't<br />

have to want for anything.<br />

Q: Do you remember when Dr. Malmberg came to town?<br />

A: Yes, sir. He didn't have nothing but his suitcase and he lived in a<br />

little four room house down here on Fifth Street here. He had an <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

where there's a chiropractor here now, what's his name? His <strong>of</strong>fice was<br />

there then.<br />

Q: Dr. Kessler?<br />

A: Yes, that's where Malmberg's <strong>of</strong>fice was then and he did real good<br />

here. Dr. Malmberg was well liked.<br />

Q: So he was not a rich man when he came here?<br />

A: No, he made it himself.<br />

Q: He later became Mayor <strong>of</strong> Auburn?<br />

A: Yes. And I don't know, he built that building out there where they're<br />

at now. This Parks Home over here was given to them by Mrs. Parks and it<br />

was just a frame building, a big two story frame building. It had a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> room. And they owed $1800 and my father-in-law was over there and <strong>of</strong><br />

course he was 87 years old. We wanted him to come in <strong>of</strong>f the farm and go<br />

over there. He had his own room and it was $65 a month was all it cost<br />

him. Room and board and everything else and he was allowed to bring his<br />

own furniture in.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 9 1<br />

Mrs. Church told me, we can never raise enough money to pay <strong>of</strong>f this<br />

mortgage that we owe, $1800. So I said, "Well, I'll see what I can do<br />

about it." I had a friend that was a farmer out here and I said, "He<br />

always come to me for advice and everything." I said, "Paul," I said,<br />

"What are you going to do with your money when you die?" He had quite a<br />

bit <strong>of</strong> land and I said, "If you'd give $300 and I'd give $200, we can<br />

raise enough money to pay <strong>of</strong>f that mortgage for them, the Parks Home."<br />

He said, "Let them get their money like I got mine."<br />

So I just didn't think anymore <strong>of</strong> it and then about a week after that<br />

why, or two weeks maybe he come up, he lived up in the west end <strong>of</strong> town,<br />

he came down and wanted to know about things. He drove up and I was<br />

reading the paper under the shade tree and it was early in the morning<br />

about 8:OO. He sat around and sat around and I said, "What's on your<br />

mind, Paul, what do you want now?" He said, "You know you were talking<br />

about raising that money over there for Parks Home." I said, "Yes, I'm<br />

still trying." He said, "I believe I'll take you up on that." I said,<br />

"All, right." So we started and we finally--it wasn't about two weeks,<br />

and so he said, ''I'll give you $200 don't put it down as Beatty Implement<br />

Company. I don't want people to know how much I give and I'm not doing<br />

it for advertising," he said. We did put down Beatty Implement Company<br />

but we didn't say how much.<br />

Some people just gave us a dollar. We had the Auburn paper publish it<br />

every week. It was almost two or three weeks at the most. Some gave $5,<br />

$10, some $1, $2, $2.50 but we never upt it down how much and so we got<br />

it raised.<br />

I think it was $3,000, I went down to see Mrs. Church. We took it and<br />

paid <strong>of</strong>f the note and it was marked paid. I took it back there and she<br />

cried and we gave her the rest <strong>of</strong> the money and said, "Just take the rest<br />

<strong>of</strong> this money and I: don't know who to give it back to, you buy things<br />

that you need here." So then about a year after that, well, when we got<br />

back home T said to Paul, "Now tell me the truth. How much did that<br />

lower your income tax by?" He said, "Oh, <strong>Howard</strong> you're too smart." I<br />

said, "It put you in lower income tax bracket, didn't it?"<br />

About two years later Dr. Malmberg called me one day and he said, "<strong>Howard</strong>,<br />

did you ever keep the records <strong>of</strong> the money you raised to pay <strong>of</strong>f that<br />

home over there?" "I did," I said, "I got the little book and I got the<br />

amount everybody gave." He said, "Can we have it?" I said, "For what<br />

purpose?" He said, "Well, it was for business purpose." He said, "For<br />

business purposes but I'll tell you, I'm figuring on buying it." He<br />

said, "I hope you don' t tell anyone." Be didn' t want it to be known yet.<br />

So I said, "Yes, you can have it but I want it back." And I still got it<br />

and he said give it to Mary, his secretary and he said, "Now, we're going<br />

to send everybody a letter that donated telling them they could have<br />

their money back or they could take stock in the place." I said, "That's<br />

fine, that's all right." Pert near everyone took their money back because<br />

they knew it was going to be personal. So Beatty and Malmberg practically<br />

owned that nursing home.<br />

Q: Before it was a nursing home, when it was a two story white frame<br />

building, who lived there?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 9 2<br />

A: Mss Izzie Parks. She belonged to the Advent Christian Church and<br />

she gave it to them to operate a home.<br />

Q: Did she live there alone?<br />

A: Oh yes. Well, her sisters and folks all died <strong>of</strong>f but she lived there<br />

by herself and she had a cow. And she had a man come and milk the cow<br />

for her and work around the yard.<br />

Q: Wasn't that a big long yard with a drive right up through some walnut<br />

tree?<br />

A: All those trees there, well, you know where that home is now.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: Right down south clear out there, there were two rows <strong>of</strong> trees in the<br />

driveway and a sidewalk.<br />

Q: It must have been beautiful?<br />

A: It was and on the west side <strong>of</strong> it was two or three apple trees and us<br />

kids would eat them. The school building was right where this one is now<br />

and all that was school yard and an outside toilet. The girls was on one<br />

side, on the south side and the boys on the north side. Didn't have<br />

plumbing in those days. There were two apple trees along in there and we<br />

could get one anytime we wanted an apple. It was all right with Miss<br />

Izzie. She had them there for a purpose I guess and she was a nice<br />

woman. She was so precise.<br />

Q: Was she?<br />

A: Oh she was so nice. She was a fine woman. She was so religious,<br />

they said. She came in the drug store. She said she'd like to have a<br />

can <strong>of</strong> concentrated falsehoods. She wouldn't say "lie". It wasn't true<br />

but Googie Fitz made that story up about her. I don't know if there's<br />

anything else I can tell you.<br />

Q: Yes, I want to ask you your feelings about some things. Do you feel<br />

that the country is doing enough for the elderly?<br />

A: Well, I don't know, I really don't think that they do.<br />

Q: Do you feel that the social security laws are fair to widows who have<br />

never worked?<br />

A: Social security laws are only fair to the doctors. The American<br />

Medical Association, all the doctors contributed to a lot <strong>of</strong> money to<br />

fight social security law. They finally got the social security law<br />

through after all and it was the greatest bonanza that happened. The<br />

doctors were afraid there was going to be a set price. They could all<br />

lay a charge, that's the reason why they fought it and now that they got<br />

it why, look at the price that the doctors get. Social security for<br />

instance, my doctor bill for instance, was $20, <strong>of</strong>fice call, $18 or $20


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 93<br />

an <strong>of</strong>fice call. They don't regulate the price the doctors can charge at<br />

all. There's Medicare. Now you pay extra for that Medicare. You have<br />

to pay the doctor and then you send your bill to them and they'll send<br />

you 80 percent <strong>of</strong> what they call reasonable doctor's charge. They have<br />

an $18 <strong>of</strong>fice call, they'll say $10 is a reasonable charge and that's all<br />

they'll pay, 80 percent <strong>of</strong> that $10.<br />

Q: I saw on TV the other night that social security funds will be short.<br />

A: I saw that too. They predicted if Reagan was elected, Reagan said<br />

that he wanted to put the social security in the hands <strong>of</strong> the states and<br />

make it be voluntary. But it would never work. It was voluntary before<br />

because the young folks had to keep the old folks and the old folks wore<br />

themselves out raising the yaung ones.<br />

Q: Do you think that was a good thing that the grandparents lived with<br />

the children and raised the young children while they, the children went<br />

out to work?<br />

A: Well, it had to be.<br />

Q: But you as an older person prefer to live independently?<br />

A: hat's the reason ~ ' m here now, I don't want to ever have to go to<br />

the nursing home. My wife had to go there and it cost me $30,000 for two<br />

and a half years for her to stay in Parks Home. That didn't pay the<br />

doctor bill, or the drug store. But I don't regret it. 1'm just happy<br />

that I had it to do with.<br />

Q: But you really prefer to live alone? You would not like to live with<br />

your son and daughter-in-law?<br />

A: No house is big enough for two people, two families. My father-in-law<br />

and my wife and her sister and their brother, he's got a nice farm around<br />

here. We wanted him to quit the farm and come and stay with us three<br />

months or four months and then her four months and then with Bud four<br />

months. He said, "No way." He said, "No house is big enough for two<br />

families." He said, "I got my ways and you've got your ways." Be said,<br />

"1'11 get in your hair and you'll get in my hair and we won't be friends<br />

and we won't be relatives anymore, we'll be enemies. T want it this<br />

way. "<br />

So one day, we couldn't get him to leave the farm, and my wife and I and<br />

Tommy we moved out there. My wife kept the house for him and cooking and<br />

everything. So one day I was out there I was listening then to a football<br />

game one Sunday afternoon and he was sitting in there in his chair. He<br />

hollered out, "<strong>Howard</strong>, do you suppose there is a place over there at<br />

Parks Home so I can get a room there." I said, "Boy." I jumped up and I<br />

said, "1 don't know but we can sure find out in a hurry."<br />

And we got in the car and rode over there. He said, "Mr. Nuckols, we got<br />

a nice front room here and you can bring your own dresser and your bed<br />

and everything here and put it in here. It'll be $65 a month and you'll<br />

get your board and everything else for that and care and everything." He


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 9 4<br />

said he wanted to move in right away. He said, "You can't, Mr. Nuckols.<br />

You have to wait until we have it painted and redecorate it and everything.<br />

It will take about four days," they said.<br />

So they repainted it and decorated it up and he lived there until he<br />

died. He was happy. He walked down, he'd shovel snow from that Parks<br />

Home clear around here to this street. ~e'd get up early in the morning<br />

and he'd come up here and walk around the square. The fellows he used to<br />

trade with, the harness maker and the blacksmith and my brother-in-law,<br />

or my brother and my sister-in-law. They ran a restaurant or cafe on the<br />

west side <strong>of</strong> the square right, where that Kay's store used to be, and<br />

she'd always put a piece <strong>of</strong> pie and then he'd go on down there. Mrs.<br />

Church spoiled him too. We had him come down to our house for dinner on<br />

Sunday and holidays and shortly after dinner he'd soon get tired and he'd<br />

say, "<strong>Howard</strong>, if you ain't real busy, I'll just let you take me home."<br />

He was happy and we took him home. Mrs. Church wauld put a piece <strong>of</strong> pie<br />

back for him. They were all that way. Course it wasn't as populated<br />

over there as they are now. It's a big thing now. There was only half a<br />

dozen, maybe ten at the most over there in them days.<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, who is the most important person you ever met?<br />

A: Well, I don' t know, that would be hard to say.<br />

Q: That's hard to say.<br />

A: I m et some captains in the navy who was great men.<br />

Q: Did you ever know any governors?<br />

A: Yes, I did know Governor Dunn, no, Governor Horner. Everybody liked<br />

Governor Horner. He was a fine man. He was a Democrat but the Republicans<br />

and Democrats and everyone, all he had to do was run and he got elected.<br />

When he died, he died <strong>of</strong> a heart attack and his entire estate was $600<br />

and he could have been a millionaire. If it had been anybody else. . . .<br />

but Horner's entire estate was $600 and he was an honest man. The funny<br />

part <strong>of</strong> it was the <strong>Illinois</strong> State Journal was a Republican paper and the<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> State Register was a Democrat paper and they were both for<br />

Horner. It didn't make much difference what politics they had, they were<br />

for Horner. He was a good man and I went to a football game over in<br />

Champaign the day they dedicated the stadium there and that's the day<br />

that Red Grange ran wild over Michigan.<br />

This side <strong>of</strong> the river there was a little place there that sold chili and<br />

hot dogs. We pulled in there and Horner was there with his driver, he<br />

(Horner) was a bachelor and his driver and a couple <strong>of</strong> fellows he had<br />

with him were getting a hot dog. There was a little kid standing there<br />

and he was looking at Governor Horner. Governor Horner was a pretty good<br />

sized man and you wouldn't even think Horner was even noticing that kid.<br />

But Horner said to that kid, "You want a bite?" And that kid took a bite<br />

and he said, "Now you can have it, 1'11 get myself another one." That's<br />

the things he would do. He was just a good man.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 95<br />

Q: <strong>Howard</strong>, who did you most admire in your life time, was there someone<br />

you really admired?<br />

A: Franklin D. Roosevelt, he was a great man. When this country was<br />

down in the dumps, he. . . . I bought a house here for $400, over here<br />

from the First Federal Savings and Loan. And I didn't have to pay<br />

anything down, all I had to do was start paying the monthly payments that<br />

the fellow owed. The mortgage was much more than that but they let me<br />

have it at that price. Then I bought another house up there when they<br />

had an auction and I bought a house for $1500 and the house sold for<br />

3,000 in a year or two years after that.<br />

In the meantime, every bank went broke and people was losing everything<br />

they had. Closed everything they had down and they had to prove they<br />

could operate in the black, instead <strong>of</strong> the red or they couldn't open.<br />

Then the Bank Examiner's examined it and that's when they opened the<br />

banks. Then he put out a WPA, what they called a Works Progress<br />

Administration. That's how we got the City Water Works here in Auburn is<br />

through the WPA. We didn't have the money and they furnish the money for<br />

the wages to put these men to work and then when they got working and<br />

they got money, they became taxpayers. That was one <strong>of</strong> the reasons I was<br />

voting for Carter was because he was going to do the same thing. That<br />

was his motto. I admired Roosevelt, I believe, better than any <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

Woodrow Wilson was a good man. He was a better educated man maybe than<br />

Roosevelt but he didn't have the know how that Roosevelt did. I always<br />

thought Franklin D. Roosevelt was, and his wife would be next, because<br />

she was a wonderful woman too. You probably read <strong>of</strong> her.<br />

Q: Eleanor<br />

A: Eleanor Roosevelt. Those two were about the most famous people that<br />

I admired.<br />

9: Where is the prettiest place you've ever been in your lifetime?<br />

A: I believe Florida. Florida is the prettiest place. I went down<br />

there in the wintertime and it was summer down there. This Kapok Tree, I<br />

showed you there, restaurants there and fine places. If you ordered a<br />

steak and you wanted it medium well, you got a pink pick stuck in the<br />

steak it was medium, and if it was rare it would be red and if it was<br />

well done it would be brownish like. That's the way it was in the<br />

restaurants. You had to sit and wait. The whole state <strong>of</strong> Florida, I<br />

wasn't there only one winter. But towards the last I didn't like the way<br />

it started raining a lot like that but then I went to Phoenix, Arizona.<br />

My wife and I went to Phoenix, Arizona for six winters. 1 had a nephew<br />

and a niece out there.<br />

Q: Did you think that was pretty?<br />

A: It was pretty there but it was sandy and deserts but this Florida was<br />

all greening and in flowers. It was pretty and it was real nice.<br />

Q: Well, <strong>Howard</strong>, we're almost at the end <strong>of</strong> our interview and I just<br />

want to thank you so much for confiding in me a11 <strong>of</strong> your experiences.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 9 6<br />

There will be a lot <strong>of</strong> people in the future that will be very happy to<br />

read about your lifetime. I appreciate that very much.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Four, Side Two<br />

Q: Well, <strong>Howard</strong>, you wanted to talk to me a little bit about the coal<br />

mining days.<br />

A: Well in the days the mines would lay idle. Lots <strong>of</strong> times in the<br />

summer; the first <strong>of</strong> April, the mines would be shut down, because the<br />

houses weren't being heated and they din't need the coal. They took the<br />

mules out <strong>of</strong> the mines by putting hoods over their heads. The cage they<br />

brought them up in was small. The mules were then put out into the<br />

pastures. In the fall they put them back into the mines.<br />

Q: Why did they put the hoods on their heads? To keep them from being<br />

frightened?<br />

A: Well, they were coming out <strong>of</strong> the dark. They had been in the dark<br />

for about six months. They would let them get use to the light easy.<br />

Auburn also had slaughter houses.<br />

Q: What was the name <strong>of</strong> that?<br />

A: Faust's Slaughter House. They would kill the cattle there and butcher<br />

them. In those days a butcher house, or butcher shop, as it was called,<br />

handled nothing but meat. Faust had one on the south side <strong>of</strong> the square<br />

and Riehle had one on the east side <strong>of</strong> the square, about where Vi's<br />

Beauty Parlor is now. Right in that same spot. When the mines were<br />

idle, the men would loaf by the slaughter house. There were a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

trees out there, a lot <strong>of</strong> nice trees, shady grass. The men played poker,<br />

rum, seven-up and just anything to enjoy them-selves. They would always<br />

have a big keg <strong>of</strong> beer. They called that the "Coconut Grove".<br />

Q: After the big night club?<br />

A: Well, that was no night club. It was just a daytime affair. They<br />

were starting to talk prohibition then. One day someone in town swore<br />

out a warrant and had them arrested. They went out and arrested a whole<br />

bunch <strong>of</strong> the miners and brought them in. They brought them before the<br />

police magistrate and he was one <strong>of</strong> them, had been all day. They were<br />

brought before him and he fined everyone <strong>of</strong> them $8.00 and he was one <strong>of</strong><br />

them. (laughs)<br />

Q: Did they get upset with him?<br />

A: Oh yes, they did. I know that happened, but I don't know what<br />

happened after that.<br />

Q: Who was the police magistrate then?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 9 7<br />

A: A man named Grant. They called him Ulysses S. Grant, but that wasn't<br />

his name, that was his nickname. There was another justice <strong>of</strong> the peace.<br />

His name was MacMurdo. There was always a race between he and Judge<br />

Nuchols to who would be the justice <strong>of</strong> the peace. Then, another fellow<br />

got in who wanted to be the justice <strong>of</strong> the peace too. Course they only<br />

elected one. His name was Halford, Frank Balford. They called him<br />

llChappyll Halford for a nickame. I remember one instance very clearly,<br />

There was a Lithuanian man and his wife came into his <strong>of</strong>fice. His <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

was in the hotel, south <strong>of</strong> the theatre which is closed now. They said,<br />

'We want a divorce." He said, "All right you buggers." He was an Englishman.<br />

So, he wrote out some kind <strong>of</strong> papers. He had no more legal right to give<br />

them a divorce than you or I. And, so they left. They were drunk. They<br />

left arm in arm, although they were divorced. Later they came back that<br />

same evening after sleeping it <strong>of</strong>f and wanted to get married again. I<br />

happened to be there at the time. Old happy" Halford said, "Where is<br />

that bloody paper I gave you?" You know how the British talk. He said,<br />

"Gimme that bloody paper." So, they gave him the paper and he tore it up<br />

and said, "You're married again. Go right ahead, you're married again<br />

now." The man said, "She has to kiss the feet. In my country when you<br />

get a divorce, you have to kiss the feet." Old Chappy said, "Get out.<br />

There'll be no kissing the feet or the behinds either in this place.<br />

You're divorced now, get out." He charged them $25.00 when he divorced<br />

them and $25.00 when he married them. (laughs)<br />

Every summer a Chautauqua would be here. There would always be<br />

entertainment. I remember one time they had Billy Brian speak here.<br />

This was the beginning <strong>of</strong> pushing for prohibition. They kept at it and<br />

kept at it. Every year they would have a prohibition in the school yard.<br />

They had a big tent and raised a little money there. Everyone bought a<br />

season ticket. They had entertainment and a good speaker. So,<br />

eventually they had an election in Auburn Township. The city <strong>of</strong> Auburn<br />

voted for prohibition.<br />

No liquor could be sold in the city <strong>of</strong> Auburn, but outside the city<br />

corporate limits, outside in the township--the township was wet and they<br />

city was dry. That went on for two or three years. "Bubby" Jacobs at<br />

the livery barn had a Ford Model-T train car and Ed Orr had a Ford Model-T<br />

train car and they had a shuttle bus from Auburn to Thayer. Thayer had<br />

saloons; that was still in Auburn Township. They would take the miners<br />

or whaever wanted to go and charge them twenty-five cents for a round<br />

trip. They would haul them down and they would drink all they wanted and<br />

they would have their stub to get back and they would bring them home.<br />

That was Jacobs and Orr.<br />

Q: Can you tell me a little more about the Chautauqua? That sounds like<br />

an Indian name. What was the purpose <strong>of</strong> that?<br />

A: The Chautauqua? It was educational. There were quartets and bands<br />

and lectures. The Chautauqua would last for maybe three weeks, right out<br />

here by the schoolhouse. They had a program and you had to pay admission.<br />

The basic <strong>of</strong> it was prohibition.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 98<br />

Q: Did they bring their own seats?<br />

A: Oh, no. They had a big tent and the seats were folding chairs. They<br />

had a stage.<br />

Q: Who helped them put it up? Did they ask some <strong>of</strong> the boys from Auburn<br />

to help them?<br />

A: Well, they had a Chautauqua Committee. They had everything put up and<br />

ready and took tickets at the door. It always ended up with a speaker.<br />

His topic was life in general and what prohibition was doing to the<br />

country; causing divorces and . . . .<br />

Q: I wasn't aware that anyone could vote on whether they could have<br />

taverns or not after the amendment was passed.<br />

A: Well, this was before the amendment.<br />

Q: And there was lots <strong>of</strong> turmoil in every county and every city?<br />

A: This brought about the Volstead Act, which was prohibition in the<br />

whole United States.<br />

Q: Were there lots <strong>of</strong> women involved in getting rid <strong>of</strong> the taverns?<br />

A: Oh, mostly, mostly.<br />

Q: They objected to the men spending their money that way?<br />

A: Yes. And they had carnivals that would come in here. That may be<br />

digressing a little bit. They had carnivals come in here on a train,<br />

they had three or four passenger cars like. They had their tents and<br />

merry-go-rounds and everything else. They would pull their cars in out<br />

here at the park by the railroad, where the depot use to be. They would<br />

unload there in a circle. They didn't have hard roads then, so they<br />

traveled by train. I remember one time they had a balloon ascension.<br />

They would have a big trench built and they would throw hot water,<br />

kerosene rather, and the heat from the kerosene and wood would raise the<br />

balloon and a man would parachute out. That was the main attraction.<br />

Q: Did the balloon come back down where they could get it again?<br />

A: Oh yes. That was a business.<br />

Q: Did the carnivals have their om trains?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Did the people live in the cars?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Where did they get <strong>of</strong>f the track?


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 99<br />

A: They stayed right on the track.<br />

Q: They switched <strong>of</strong>f then.<br />

A: Yes, right by the elevator and the lumber yard. The land near there<br />

was all vacant and that's where they would hold the carnivals. One time<br />

they had what they called a hootchie-kootchie show. That was a girlie<br />

show. They would tell, "They're going to take them all <strong>of</strong>f tonight,<br />

boy." (laughs) I remember one time "Scoop" Gallagher's wife and Mae<br />

Leach and three or four women--I don't remember the rest <strong>of</strong> the names--Doc<br />

Laird was the mayor. After midnight this show was to go on for men only.<br />

These women waited until the show got started and the men all got in<br />

there and they had their butcher knives and they went around and cut the<br />

ropes and the tent fell in. It was the awfulest scramble <strong>of</strong> men you ever<br />

heard tell <strong>of</strong>. That was the end <strong>of</strong> the hootchie-kootchie show. (laughs)<br />

Q: Were you sorry the day the depot was torn down?<br />

A: It didn't make any difference to me.<br />

Q: You didn't think they should keep it and maybe use it for a museum?<br />

A: No. I know where lots <strong>of</strong> the brick are that were in it. My nephew<br />

got a lot <strong>of</strong> the brick. He's going to build a building <strong>of</strong> some kind.<br />

The bricks are hauled away, because the railroad wanted them hauled away<br />

so they don't have to pay taxes on it. I told you about the shuttle<br />

buses. In the spring or summer <strong>of</strong> the year I know two men would take<br />

great big wagons to Beardstown. Beardstown was known for its watermelon.<br />

They would take about a day and a half to drive to Beardstown. They'd<br />

load up a load <strong>of</strong> melons and then come back here and then peddle those<br />

melons. They would drive up the streets and sell the melons.<br />

Q: About how much was a melon in those days?<br />

A: A quarter.<br />

Q: Have you tried to buy one lately? Do you have any idea how much they<br />

are?<br />

A: About $2 now. Maybe I'm a little chintzy, but I make a list now when<br />

I go to <strong>Springfield</strong> to shop.<br />

Q: Then you think there's quite a bit <strong>of</strong> savings to go to <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

shopping?<br />

A: Oh, no question about it.<br />

Q: What about the gasoline it takes though?<br />

A: That would have to be taken into consideration. You would have to<br />

make a list <strong>of</strong> what you need and if you don't <strong>of</strong>fset the cost <strong>of</strong> the<br />

gasoline you're just as well <strong>of</strong>f to shop here. But, not many do that.<br />

You can go out here and see carts just full. They have about $100 worth<br />

in them.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong><br />

Q: I'm like you though. With my large family I save more by going to<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>. It's kind <strong>of</strong> a shame because small towns are very nice for<br />

a lot <strong>of</strong> things. We have nice shops like the flower shop. That's a real<br />

convenience.<br />

A: Use to be in Auburn we had three barber shops. They employed seven<br />

barbers. Now we have only one barber shop.<br />

Q: And one chair I guess?<br />

A: Yes, one chair and they let their hair grow. I don't let mine grow.<br />

I couldn't do that at all.<br />

Q: What did a haircut cost back in the day <strong>of</strong> the three barber shops?<br />

A: Twenty-five cents. Then they raised to thirty-five.<br />

Q: Was that sort <strong>of</strong> a place to go and just catch up on the news?<br />

A: Oh yes. While you were waiting your turn someone had something to<br />

say.<br />

Q: Do you think men are just as much gossips as women?<br />

A: No. I don't think they are. My wife use to tell me some stories<br />

that I would never hear in the barber shop. There was something else I<br />

wanted to tell you. I told you about the Methodist Church breaking down,<br />

didn' t I?<br />

Q: Are you a member <strong>of</strong> the Methodist Church? I saw some articles in the<br />

paper not too long ago about their history.<br />

A: Yes. I was about the next to the oldest one to belong there, but my<br />

picture wasn't in there. Eva Hedrick was my Sunday School teacher.<br />

Q: And she was a member <strong>of</strong> that church?<br />

A: Yes. Here while back she bought a new piano for the church.<br />

Q: I wouldn't imagine that an old maid school teacher would have very<br />

much money.<br />

A: Well she was always employed and they have teacher's insurance too.<br />

And they own their own property. She and her sister live together. I<br />

don't know whether I should tell about this or not. There was this<br />

fellow lived in Thayer they called l lack Cat". He advertised in the<br />

saloons down there. Of course, Auburn was dry. He advertised that he<br />

would devour a mouse alive. They were standing up and looking over<br />

people's heads, and sure enough, he took the mouse alive and he killed<br />

him and right there he bit his head <strong>of</strong>f and ate him. And he ate the<br />

mouse alive. Reeves Brothers promoted the thing. It was held in their<br />

building. And they lost a lot <strong>of</strong> business, because people were afraid to<br />

go in and drink out <strong>of</strong> the glass that fellow drank out <strong>of</strong>.


<strong>Howard</strong> Nerron 101<br />

Q: So they thought that something that was going to help their business<br />

ended up hurting their business after all?<br />

A: It sure did.<br />

Q: Well, that was some story. I guess it takes all kinds <strong>of</strong> people. I<br />

can't imagine anyone doing that though.<br />

A: Getting back to prohibition. There was a wholesale house here in the<br />

south part <strong>of</strong> town, and Bogart had a wholesale house over in the northeast<br />

part <strong>of</strong> town, just outside the corporate limits. You could go out there<br />

and buy a keg <strong>of</strong> beer and wheel it inside the city limits and drink it.<br />

That was all right. But, there were no saloons in Auburn.<br />

Q: What did some <strong>of</strong> these saloon owners do then for a living? Did they<br />

convert their shops to something different? Clothing or anything <strong>of</strong> that<br />

nature?<br />

A: No. They boot-legged, mostly.<br />

Q: I see. They sold with their doors closed, I guess?<br />

A: All the people would go outside the town to buy.<br />

Q: This beer that was being sold in the taverns in those days, was it<br />

homebr ew?<br />

A: No, it was real beer. That was before. . . .<br />

Q: Well, what kind <strong>of</strong> beer? Can you remember any <strong>of</strong> the brands?<br />

A: Oh, yes. Anheiser BUSC~.<br />

Q: Bow about Reisch?<br />

A: Reisch Brewery from <strong>Springfield</strong>, and Lamps Beer, Schlitz Beer, Pabst<br />

Blue Ribbon.<br />

Q: So the beer making industry was going to town then?<br />

A: Oh, yes. That was practically what brought on prohibition. You see,<br />

did I tell you how many churches and saloons there were?<br />

Q: There was one more saloon than churches, Is that correct?<br />

A: Yes, that's right.<br />

Q: Well, it must have taken some men to vote against it.<br />

A: Oh yes.<br />

Q:<br />

It couldn't have been all ladies to make it pass.


<strong>Howard</strong> <strong>Herron</strong> 102<br />

A: No, it wasn't all Ladies.<br />

Q: Probably a lot <strong>of</strong> the church congregations?<br />

A: That's right. The church foundations were the ones that did it.<br />

They had a secret ballot. They had booths and advertised before election<br />

day. Of course, they had to get all <strong>of</strong> these legal papers to hold all <strong>of</strong><br />

these elections.<br />

Q: But they repealed that amendment later on. So they must have thought<br />

it wasn't working out too good,<br />

A: It was working out too good, but it was national--after that came the<br />

Volsted Act. That was the entire United States. Then that was bootleg<br />

too. They made homebrew and made wine in their cellars.<br />

Q: Then that was when you heard so much about the gangsters from Chicago?<br />

A: That's right. St. Louis and New Orleans--every city. Well, finally<br />

the people didn't want it. It was worse and caused more trouble. So<br />

when Roosevelt was elected they did away with the Volsted Act.<br />

Q: Did the taverns open up again immediately in Auburn?<br />

A: Yes. For part <strong>of</strong> that they sold two percent beer, only two percent<br />

alcohol. Then, later they sold five percent.<br />

End <strong>of</strong> Tape Five, Side One

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