Source: WV History Film Project
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL
55
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 1, CAMERA
ROLL 185, SOUND 55
Q: Frances, let's kind of start in the middle. Tell
me about how the industrial revolution in West
Virginia and the way it developed? How it started
out for being for men only, not really including
women?
JJDD 0053
FH: Because of the nature of the Industrial
Revolution, it was mining, the extractive, all the
extractive industries, what we call basic industries
and those excluded women. Not necessarily by their
nature, but because of both tradition law, women
were not hired in those jobs. And so you have the
creation of hundreds of thousands of jobs, in very
short order, in West Virginia, and none of those were
for women.
Q: What starts to change that equation. When
does it start to change and how?
JJDD 0109
FH: I think first you have those kinds of changes and
you have a new economy that's being created; and
once you have that kind of new industrial economy,
other kinds of industry develop. In particular once
you have changes in transportation, once you have
changes in energy sources, then you can have more
factories and those will benefit women. Once you
have sort of a fledgling textile industry, a fledgling
garment industry, the glass industry develops, it had
been there but the glass industry develops, those are
industries where women could find a role -- even if it
was a small one in industries like the glass industry,
even if it was a small role, there was a role for women
there.
Q: When we think about West Virginia I think
all of us even those in the know think of it first as a
rural state, and second as an industrial state. What
was the interplay of the fact that so much of the state
was rural in the way of opportunities, both
employment and other, can evolve for women of this
time?
JJDD 0221
FH: It's because it's a rural state that you don't have
the kinds of opportunities for women you will find in
other states. There is a significant industrial
revolution in West Virginia and there's significant
industrial revolutions in other states but the difference
in West Virginia is so much of the state is rural that
the industries that develop in the rural areas are those
basic industries. For women to work in one of these
industries like the textile or like the garment industry,
you have to live in places like Wheeling or you have
to be in for example the whole Berkeley County;
JJDD 0287
And for a lot of women, that would mean moving
away from home because the women who worked in
these early industries were single women and that
would mean for a young woman leaving home and
finding her way to a city like Wheeling, finding a
place to live in the city, and then getting a job that
would create, give her enough money to make a
living. And in the first place you'd have to have
parents who would agree to let that daughter go.
Now, they did sometimes do that. Sometimes the
daughters from the coal mining areas would on
occasion leave home and go to the city to work in one
of these industries, but primarily, the women who
worked in those industries were the women in the
surrounding areas. So it didn't draw large numbers of
women out of rural West Virginia and into the cities
like Wheeling.
Q: Is it then sort of a two world set up in West
Virginia for women?
JJDD 0381
FH: It is in that women's lives in the rural parts of the
state, which is the majority of the state would
continue after the industrial revolution, after
industries have developed, their lives will continue
much as their mothers' lives had been and their
grandmothers' lives have been for decades. By that, I
mean the job opportunities that open up for women in
rural areas are either domestic work, which is no
great change from the kind of work women had
always done or -- this happened a lot in rural areas for
example where you have coal mining camps --
women do become wage earners, but its not -- we
don't even consider this industrial work because what
they were doing was taking in laundry, taking in
borders, they cooked, they just extended their service,
the kinds of productive labor they'd always done for
their families. And now in a sense they extend the
idea of the family by providing the same services to
others, but this time for money, for wages.
Q: Getting back to the women who are near the
cities or in the cities who are going out to a job. What
kind of a change is that have on their lives?
JJDD 0515
FH: I think it's a big change, but it's a temporary
change. It's a big change in that they're away from the
supervision of their families. They have experiences
that have nothing whatsoever to do with home and
family. But I don't think it has any kind of long term
impact, except the financial impact. They help their
families economically, and that's often an important
part of the family's income.
JJDD 0562
But since the women who worked in these industries
are young and they are unmarried for much of their
early decades, they're young, they're unmarried. It
changes them only temporarily. It doesn't prevent
them from marrying. It doesn't mean they've changed
their ambitions in life, which apparently they do not.
So you just have sort of a constant turnover of women
from these same areas, taking jobs that maybe even
their mothers had briefly before them. Later, later,
you'll find more and more married women doing these
kinds of jobs.
WEST VIRGINIA, ROLL 56,
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 2, CAMERA 186,
SOUND ROLL 56
Q: Tell me why we should care about this?
JJDD 0631
FH: The important thing about the industrial
revolution from the point of view of women is that it
wasn't an industrial revolution for women because
there's a blip -- where there had been nothing there's a
blip. Whereas for men, it's an explosion; it truly is a
revolution. You go from having most people in the
state involved in agriculture in some way or another
and that includes women by the way, to a change in a
matter of years when you have men, thousands of job
opportunities for men. For women, their lives
continue very much on the, with the same traditions
that they've had for centuries, really. And there's a
change that separates in a sense home from work that
happened in the early 19th century in much of the rest
of the country.
JJDD 0728
In West Virginia it happens at the end of the 19th
century, where there is a separation of spheres
between the home and work. And some women
would -- for some women, this sphere would change
also. But for most women, there's now -- work is
something that's done outside the home. I think this
will have long term impact on the way we think about
what women do and about what women have
contributed to West Virginia because what remains
behind when work moves out of the home is
obviously not work. So, the industrial revolution is
truly a revolution for men in the way they lead their
lives, in the way they define themselves.
JJDD 0810
But it's ironic that that revolution takes place a
century late in West Virginia, but it has the same kind
of impact, and that is that we've increasingly I think in
modern West Virginia thought of what women do in
the home as not work. But, in fact, when women went
into factories in West Virginia, like elsewhere, they
would take the kind of work they had done in the
home and just recreate in another environment and
recreate it for wages.
Q: Okay, we've got that down; now let's go over
that same train and ... do the condensed cream of that.
One way of saying that is .... instead of saying I think
this will change, give us a definite statement ...
JJDD 0941
FH: ... The industrial revolution is a real revolution
for men in that they go from a situation where they
had been primarily agricultural workers, and now
there are thousands of job opportunities that open up
and a wage structure and a new identity for men
outside the home or outside the farm and an identity
as a worker. There's no parallel explosion, no parallel
revolution for women in the state because the jobs
that do open up are not in the extractive industries and
in factories and so forth, for the most part exclude
women. So, instead, you have a separation of spheres
for women in West Virginia similar to one that had
taken place in other parts of the country a century
before, and that is what goes on outside the home now
is work, and what goes on inside the home is
something else.
JJDD 1024
It's not productive; it's not work, even though it's the
same work that West Virginia have been doing that
was productive, and it contributed to family income
for centuries. Now that's not valued. For those
women who do move out into the industrial work
force, their lives are changed only temporarily, and
I'm talking here about in the earliest part of the
industrial revolution because they merely take
women's work outside the home and convert it into
wage. They now do it instead in a factory
environment and they do it for wages. ... Because they
take essentially what we call women's work outside
the home and they do it now in a different
environment in a factory environment, and they do it
for wages.
JJDD 1106
But it's considered low skill and it's undervalued in
terms of the rewards as well. So, even for those
women for whom the industrial revolution has some
meaning, it does not re-define because they're
temporary workers, and the jobs they do are not
comparable industrially, are not comparable to the
jobs men are doing. Do you follow what I'm
saying?
Q: Exactly; but I'm really amazed that for a
women 20 years old to go in and spend a year, two
years, or five years working in a textile factor or a
cigar factory in Wheeling and have her own money
doesn't radically change her sense of her place in the
world?
JJDD 1183
FH: It didn't happen other places either. One might
assume that that kind of work would have
transformed that woman's identity, but because of the
nature of the work and because often these young
women gave their wages to their families, gave most
of the money that they earned to their families to help
support the family, in the early part of the industrial
revolution, it did not transform those women. Not in
West Virginia and it had not in other parts of the
country.
JJDD 1243
The changes had been temporary. Now, there will be
an accumulative significant change that will take
place because even though the numbers are very
small to begin with, there's steady growth and it never
goes backwards; it's always a steady, upward curve of
growth in women's employment. And over time, yes,
there will be a big change. You don't see that
initially; you don't see that in those first couple of
decades of the late 19th century, even into the early
20th century, you don't see that kind of
transformation.
Q: Let's talk about -- describe to me a little bit
more the kinds of women's work. Tell me about
it.
JJDD 1304
FH: Women's work is a term that historians have
created to describe the work that women traditionally
do in the home. It is productive work that is done in
the home; it's food preservation; it's sewing' it's textile
manufacturing; it's a certain amount of gardening; it's
eggs and butter. That's women's work. Even though
it wasn't always that term, it has not always been used
to describe the kind of household manufacturing and
household production that I'm talking about, but now
historians recognize the economic value. People
recognized the economic value of that all along. I'm
not saying they didn't, but as a society we didn't and it
was so taken so granted that it wasn't even worth
mentioning. But it was a part of the household
economy.
JJDD 1392
And in a pre-industrial economy, it's much more
important; it's much more significant and recognized
as much more significant than it will be in an
industrial economy. And especially so when we begin
to have less and less manufacturing in the home. It
changes the nature of women's work in the home. At
the same time these kinds of tasks, many of them are
moving outside the home where they are done by
other women.
Q: Not on the frontier, but pre-industrial, did
women see themselves as equals to men in terms of
supporting the family. Now we can look back and
say we recognize the family, they raised the chickens,
they sold them, milk and eggs and they tended the
garden and they took care of the 'lighter' tasks and the
men did the heavy clearing of the fields and all that,
but how did they conceive of the economic
functioning of the family in the rural state?
JJDD 1496
FH: The evidence we have, not about West Virginia,
but about pre-industrial society in general, indicates
that the idea of equality -- that women thought about
what they did in that kind of term -- seldom arose. It
didn't arise with the men. It was a well-integrated,
functioning family economy. And the participants,
including the women recognized the economic value
of that functioning because if they weren't there, if
they ceased to function for some reason, there were
economic consequences. But you don't find people
talking about that; the kind of analysis we do of that
today didn't exist. Women wrote about the chores
they did; they wrote about the tasks they did; they
wrote about how tired they were as a result of the
hard work they did. But they never used that for a
basis for making some kind of political claim,
especially a claim like equality. It didn't arise.
Q: Go out on a limb a little bit and tell me your opinion? Where things better for women in that pre-industrial ...
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL
57
TAKE 2, HENSLEY INTERVIEW, ROLL 187,
SOUND 57
Q: Francis, in the 18th and 19th century in West
Virginia we know a fair amount of what leaders both
national and state leaders did -- they were white men,
we know their exploits, their accomplishments
politically, materially, and also in terms of the
evolution of West Virginia. We know less about
women's experiences? What is essential to know
about women's lives, let's just say prior to the Civil
War?
JJDD 1688
FH: The important thing about women's lives in West
Virginia is not very spectacular. It isn't anything very
dramatic; it is that day-to-day contribution that a
woman makes to the survival of her family and for
example a wilderness or in a frontier state, which is
what West Virginia was for such a long time. It is the
contribution that individual women made and that
women in groups to their communities to building --
...
TAKE 3, HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 4, ROLL 187, SOUND ROLL 58 [she has said the wrong sound roll]
Q: You know what we know; what don't we
know; tell me about women's experiences?
JJDD 1778
FH: The important thing about women's experiences
isn't anything very spectacular. It isn't anything
gut-wrenching. Instead, it's the kind of contribution
that individual women made and women made to
their families' survival in a frontier state like West
Virginia. Whether it is the economic contribution,
whether it's the emotional contribution that women
made; it's the contribution that women made therefore
to the economic survival to the whole area, but it's
also the contributions that women made that go
unheralded for building community.
JJDD 1842
It's usually women who insist upon and who lead the
movements for schools, for churches and Sunday
school classes and so forth. For social clubs and
social activities, the kinds of things that knit a
community together are usually done and are
historically been done by women. And I'm sure
women served that role in West Virginia when it was
still overwhelmingly a rural state in a frontier stage of
development.
Q: What's your guess about how the factor that
we hear through everything which is the geographic
isolation that this state exists. What's your sense of
how that impacted women who are by your definition
"networking" and more socially concerned.
JJDD 1926
FH: The geographic isolation with regard to West
Virginia has to do with the isolation of West Virginia
from elsewhere. It has to do with the isolation of one
area from another area. Doesn't necessarily have to
do with the isolation of the individual within a
community. There are communities -- it depends on
which part of the state -- West Virginia is such a
diverse state that that would not be true for every part
of the state, but let's say for example in the southern
part of the state. You're not talking about plantations;
you're not talking about large family farms; you're
talking a lot of families who are living a
self-sufficient level in terms of economic terms.
JJDD 1998
That doesn't mean they were self sufficient in social or
emotional or religious terms. They had -- they
formed communities, and so the isolation is the
isolation from the technology, from the knowledge
that is available elsewhere. The change that happens
elsewhere, that doesn't happen in West Virginia in the
same fashion. And so in that respect, women are
affected and when you talk about the industrial
revolution, for example, and you look at how late the
changes are, in coming to West Virginia, for women
it's an example of the kind of thing I'm talking about.
There's isolation from outside; there's isolation of one
part of the state from another before the transportation
revolution, but people are not living isolated lives
from other human beings, and that's important. For
women, that would be very important.
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 5, ROLL 188, SOUND ROLL 58
Q: In all its aspects -- geography, social, culture,
tell me about a holler?
JJDE 0030
FH: I can tell you what I remember living in a holler.
It was when I was the young girl and had originally I
was born and grew up in a coal camp, which occupied
all the valley space. And other than that, the only
place you could live was a holler. It's a narrow road
and you have obviously just one house at a time and
to tell you the truth, I don't remember anyone else on
that road. They couldn't have been that far away in
terms of distance, but I don't remember them. I don't
remember anyone but my family, living on that --
because of the nature of it. If you want to talk
isolation, then I suppose it is isolation. But that didn't
mean there was no sense of community for me; it was
just there was no sense of neighbors.
JJDE 0119
I don't remember neighbors, but I remember
community because we would walk out of that holler
to school every day and to church on Sundays and
there was a community church at the foot of it as I
remember that served both the coal camp, and there
may have been other hollers; I only remember this
one. But that is an interesting aspect; you don't have
neighbors but you can have community even where
you don't have neighbors. This is a child's view; this
is what I remember from being a very small child --
was the sense you have a mountain rising on one side
and on the other. But I never remember feeling
hemmed but I know people who've not grown up with
the mountains probably get claustrophobic from that
sense of the mountains pushing in. I never thought
that.
JJDE 0201
When it rained there was a little creek that ran
through this and when it rained the road was
impassable. And so, we climbed the hill and we just
had a little path along, just not very far up the hill and
that's how we got to school and that's how we got to
church. But I never had a sense -- I never had a sense
of that kind of isolation as a child or of being hemmed
in by the mountains. And I've never had -- I feel
vulnerable and naked if I go where -- in a flat spaces
make me very uncomfortable. I need some of that
sort of comfort hemming me around with those
mountains. I think it's because of that; maybe that's
its holler experience.
Q: ... You certainly never hear about the West
Virginia mountains being protective.
JJDE 0286
FH: No, but maybe that's a clue why people want to
come home. Outsiders do not understand why West
Virginians want to come home. Why they mourn the
loss of the young. So they're moving to North
Carolina, so what? Otherwise you're going to be
provincial. Let them go. But they don't necessarily
want to go and stay, and maybe that helps to explain
why West Virginians want to be here. Maybe it is
that sense of comfort that comes from those tall
mountains that have always surrounded you. And
when you get outside, even when you get into a place
like Huntington, for example, the mountains are
there, but they're so far away, I don't even -- I don't
realize they're there.
JJDE 0373
That's not mountains to me. Mountains are what I
grew up with, and I mean all of my life, even when I
moved out of that community. I just moved into
another community where the mountains were right
around me and I lived in -- as many West Virginians,
the experience of many West Virginians, is you just
live in another bowl and you live in the only flat
space available and then you're just surrounded by the
mountains. That's how you view the world and that's
how -- and when you grow up like that, that's how
you come to see the world is ringed with mountains.
And without them, I think you lose your balance; I
think you lose your perspective.
Q: When you don't have that do you lose a sense
of identity?
JJDE 0442
FH: I'm sure you lose your sense of identity, and
perhaps that's part of what draws people back to the
state, is that sense of identity because I can't think of
another state where the mountains have that strong a
part of the identity. I mean they're the mountain
ranges in the United States, but I don't think anywhere
where the state has been so affected, not just
geographically, but socially, economically, by the
presence of those mountains. They're larger
mountains in the United States for sure, but nothing I
think that has that kind of personal impact.
Q: Tell me what it's like to grow up in the coal
camp?
JJDE 0536
FH: My experiences growing up in a coal camp may
surprise some people, and now that I'm an adult I
might have a different interpretation. But when I was
a small girl growing up in a coal camp, at Otsego,
West Virginia, I had a sense -- I had a very pleasant
experience there. ... My memory of it is very positive
of living in a community where there's such
commonality. There's not a division between people
who mined coal for a living and those who don't.
Everyone does. Everyone shops at the same store.
Everyone goes to the same school. I went to a two
room school, and the principal, we called the principal
'Granny'.
JJDE 0637
This is the kind of school it was. I don't even know
what her name was. It was 'Granny'. She was the
principal and she taught the upper three grades. My
memories is of some wonderfully, attractive young
woman who was my teacher for the first three grades.
And our fathers because this the coal mine was not
that far from the community, so our fathers would
often come to the school if they worked a shift where
they wouldn't get to see us otherwise. They would
come to the school on the way to work and often have
lunch with us. I have visions of my father, these big
men, sitting in our little tiny chairs at the tables where
we had lunch and having either a snack or perhaps a
meal with us on the way to work.
JJDE 0715
And then there's that living in a coal camp, the idea of
seeing the men come out of the mines often didn't
bathe and so that heavy, heavy, black of coal dust.
But I don't have that as a sense of that as something, I
didn't have a sense of that when I was child as
something oppressive. And I look back on that, and I
was very happy there. I think my family was very
happy there. My mother, I know all about women
who lived in coal camps, one of the greatest enemies
they had was dirt. Coal dirt. And so one of the
memories I have of my mother, she was always
cleaning. Everything inside the house had to be kept
clean, and I think it was because she couldn't keep the
outside of the house clean.
JJDE 0805
It was impossible, just an occasional painting. So the
inside of the house, what she could control, had to be
spotless. And after all of her children went to bed at
night, my mother has told me, she would stay up and
polish those floors and polish that woodwork. Every
night, while she waited for my dad to come home
from work. And these are the visions I have. I have
this vision of my father with his face covered with the
black coal dust, and he probably did not do this. I'm
sure he did not come to school straight out of the
mines, but that's how I remember him. When I think
of him coming to school and I see his face, that's what
I see. I see his face with the coal dust on it. And I
have that vision of my mother waging war on coal
dust as she scrubbed those floors and scrubbed that
woodwork every night after she finally got the
children to bed.
TAKE 6, ROLL 188, SOUND 58
Q: Tell me about your father.
JJDE 0903
FH: One of the things I remember about my dad is his
excitement about coal mining as his job. He would
come home at night after working a late shift. He
would come home let's say after midnight and he
would be covered with coal dirt and he would sit
down and get his blueprints all out in front of him and
he would design things for the mines. They never
went anywhere. This was just my father's pride in
what he did for a living; it was not something that was
dreadful to him. He enjoyed it; he liked mining. I
don't mean that it wasn't a dangerous job, and it was;
and there were times that he hated working in low
seam. It wasn't that, but he took pride in what he did;
and I have these really very vivid memories of
watching him with his ninth grade education trying to
improve on the way things were done in the mines
and inventing.
SOUND ROLL 59
WEST VIRGINIA, SOUND ROLL 59
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 7, ROLL 189,
SOUND 59.
Q: Tell me using the case of your father how the
concept of tired, betrodden miners, ? ? also include in
your description the story of your father, the long
term effect? ?
JJDE 1058
FH: People have an impression of coal mining as only
a dangerous, horrible job, and there's no mistaking
that that's true. But to think that coal miners have no
pride in what they do or no enjoyment in what they
do, no sense of fulfillment and no sense of
accomplishment in what they do, is not accurate. I
can well remember my father had, any time he spoke
about his job, great excitement, could just bubble
about his job, and that he was always trying to find
ways to improve production, trying to invent new
technology and so forth -- not because, not for just
purely scholarly reasons for whatever because those
didn't exist for my dad -- but because this was his job,
this is what he did, and this he wanted to do better.
And the tragedy is that he loved what he did and
eventually it helped to kill him.
JJDE 1178
He developed black lung, and it was part of the
medical complication that would first of all, he was
disabled when he was still a young man. And that
happens to a lot of miners. They become disabled
from one disease or an accident or whatever. It's not
uncommon at all in their forties, and that's what
happened to my father. And so he was in many
respects always an old man in that he was disabled at
such a young age that much of my young adult life,
my father was already not working any more. But he
talked about mining all the time; long after he was
disabled as a result of mining, he still talked about it
eagerly and four of five sons followed in his footsteps.
And they talked about it with a great deal of passion,
what they were doing, and my brothers still talk about
coal mining today with a great deal of professional
pride in what they're doing -- even as they recognize
the long term consequences.
Q: Has the change been in one generation of the
long term consequences for your dad was black lung;
now for your brothers, it's not, it's the lack of
employment?
JJDE 1335
FH: My brothers have followed in the footsteps of my
father in a remarkable sense in that two of my
brothers were disabled at a relatively young age; the
other two are still active in coal mining, and even
though they also do face many of the same hazards
my father did as a miner, I think probably they face
the possibility off loss of jobs. I think they would see
that as equally a possibility right now.
Q: And it's happening all across the state,
especially in the southern counties and its meaning
families, individuals, are moving out. What --
JJDE 1437
FH: The loss of those jobs ... The loss of the coal
mining jobs and I'm speaking here the kind of
economic changes that have taken place in the coal
regions in the state. The loss of those jobs has begun
the process of destroying communities. A small thing
... [sound roll 59 ends here, no signal]
WEST VIRGINIA, SOUND ROLL 60
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 8, ROLL 190,
SOUND 60
Q: Let's ? at arms length from this whole thing.
Tell me of your assessment of what happened in the
1950's and coal in West Virginia?
JJDF 0032
FH: I don't think people understood in the 1950's the
long term consequences of technological change.
When it came to the coal fields, it was wonderful,
those continuous miners for example seemed this was
the breakthrough. This would make coal mining
more profitable; it would improve production, and it
took awhile for the reality to intrude. The reality that
you have an initial response is a loss of jobs. The
very technology that did increase production, as a
matter of fact decreased the need for workers, and for
example my own father got caught up in that. It took
awhile for that to happen, but my own father got
caught up in that slump that hit and was unemployed
for maybe over a year and had eleven children to
feed.
JJDF 0138
Exhausted all of his savings, sold the stocks he had
bought in the company and finally reached a point
where he had to relocate, and he moved to another
part of West Virginia, left behind a wife and eleven
children and moved to another part of West Virginia.
And we were grief stricken, absolutely devastated and
he was also. And all of us spent most of our time
writing letters back and forth. My father, he found a
job. He had a job, but he couldn't stand it so he came
back home.
JJDF 0204
Then you have a recovery in the coal industry, and
again people's hopes were this was a temporary
setback; this was an adjustment to technology, but
now it's back and everything's going to be fine. What
we're seeing today is the long term consequences of
that change, and a changing economy, changing
energy needs; the national economy has changed, and
so once again in West Virginia families are being
separated, but this time there's more of a sense that
this is it, that this particular kind of recovery is not
coming back. People vary in terms of how they feel
about that. For young people perhaps there's a sense
of 'well, I'll go elsewhere; I'll relocate,' even if they're
pulled back by ties of family and location.
JJDF 0316
A lot of other people who are not that flexible, who
can't move on, for many of them there is the sense that
'we're not going to recover from this one.' That even
if as we hope even if the economy of West Virginia
does adjust and recovers and adjusts, life will never
be the same again. The life that was centered around
coal won't ever be the same again, so people whose
lives were centered around coal will never be the
same again. In communities the impact this has, it
has an impact at the family level as older people
remain behind, and many young people move
elsewhere.
JJDF 0408
It has as a consequence it has an impact on the
community. As the population decreases, one of the
first places it will be felt will be in the schools and for
many this is not unique to West Virginia. But for
many communities, it's the school that is the social
hub of the community. It's what the little
communities revolve around. I mean when you close
that school, when you have consolidations because of
population loss, and when you lose that school, what
takes it place? We haven't invented anything to take
its place. There isn't anything.
Q: Let's go back a little bit. Tell me when you
dropped? your mother ? ? what was that like for your
mother and other women in the coal camps? What
was their experience?
JJDF 0492
FH: We only lived in the coal camps when I was a
small child. When we moved, we were always in a
coal mining region, but once we moved out of the
coal camp proper, and moved into another
community, ...
Q: ...Why don't you say women in the coal ..
why don't you talk about women in the coal camps,
what they did ? ?
JJDF 0535
FH: Historically, women in the coal camps have
centered their lives around their families, whether it
was in the early days of the buildup in the industry
when many women in the coal camps supplemented
the family income either with a garden; if they had the
space they supplemented the family's livelihood with
a garden and did canning and food preservation.
They took in laundry; they took in borders, or they
spend their lives just providing for the daily needs of
their families. One of the sort of all encompassing
dirt that went with coal mining. If a community was
located near enough to a mine as most of the coal
camps, the early coal camps were to get the dust. It
was a constant struggle just to keep clean; to have
clean laundry. Some women just wore out in the
process of trying to -- that sort of symbolic struggle, I
think -- with the dirt that invaded everything, that
penetrated everything.
JJDF 0672
In many respects women in the coal camps were
fortunate in that they had electricity when it wouldn't
be available to people in other parts of, in more rural
sections of West Virginia. And these were rural
communities that would not have otherwise would
had access to electricity. And maybe some other
amenities. The coal companies, for example, did
bring in, they often built movie houses or they would
have other kinds, they would sponsor other kinds of
activities. But women were also a part of every
struggle that took place. There was no separation in
the family between the needs of the father, as worker,
and the needs of the family. In most households were
the father was the only or the major breadwinner, it
was a family enterprise.
JJDF 0779
Therefore, the involvement of women and children in,
for example, union activities wasn't about politics
necessarily. It was about survival. It was about the
survival of the family unit, so women always had that
part. And it's sort of, the kind of role that's easy to
overlook, although in more recent times women have
become much more visible in for example labor
struggles in the state of West Virginia, very visible
and have assumed leadership roles. Much of that
early history women were not very visible, but were,
filled the same kind of role that women did in some
other industries where they were not themselves the
workers, but where their livelihood was tied up in that
job.
Q: Let's take the next step higher back a little bit
and get back to the sense of how women's lives were
changed with technology starting with the 20's. Tell
me about that.
JJDF 0883
FH: If you think about household technology and for
most women that was how they spent their days and
changes in technology would be the changes that
would be most significant in bringing change in their
lives. In West Virginia because of the rural nature of
the state, you have continuity much longer than you
would find it in urban areas in West Virginia ...
Q: Start with what you said to me before which
was that for two centuries women led basically the
same kind of lives, then technology. ...
JJDF 0957
FH: For let's say a couple of centuries, women's lives
in terms of their household technology hadn't changed
very much -- the scrub board, the hearth, which
perhaps gives way to a wood cooking stove -- that
remains the same generation after generation. Mother
passes this on to daughter. Daughter passes this on to
her daughter. It's a remarkably, a remarkable
continuity in that. Then in the 20th century you have
that change and that is ...
HENSLEY INTERVIEW, TAKE 9, ROLL 191, SOUND 61
Q: Frances, tell me about the transformation of
women's lives.
JJDF 1029
FH: The transformation for women is the
technological change that comes to West Virginia
beginning in the 1920's, and that's household
technology, the change in household technology.
Before that, there's remarkable continuity in terms of
the way women did the things they did -- the scrub
board, those big pails in which you heated the water
and to use the scrub board and you hauled the water
from the well to fill the pail in which you used the
scrub board to do the laundry. Either the open hearth,
that open fireplace or the cook stove, the wood and
the coal cookstove -- those had existed for a long
time. It's when that changed that the quality of
women's lives, and I'm talking now about the masses
of women, not just urban women who would have
had access to those changes.
JJDF 1134
But I'm talking about when it begins to filter down
into rural areas and when electricity comes into
people's homes and when that household technology
changes. It had a significant impact on the lives of
women.
Q: What resulted from that?
JJDF 1161
FH: The result, interestingly enough, the result is that
individual household chores become less labor
intensive, but the irony is that when that happens the
number of chores multiplied. So, it was no savings
for women in terms of the time it takes to do
household chores, but certainly in terms of the nature
of those household chores; the burdensome nature of
those household chores, that did change. It also, as
that become more and more common, I think it gave
women more time to do other kinds of things. For
example, it made it easier for a woman, a married
woman to be employed outside the home and also to
keep up the household responsibilities, labor saving
devices, in terms household technology. One
consequence, I think, is that it does make it easier for
women to do the two jobs that many working women
have.
Q: Historically, things have arrived or been put
into action in West Virginia later than eastern United
States. Did women's consciousness which changed so
much in the 1960's nationally, did that also have a
delayed impact on West Virginia?
JJDF 1302
FH: My sense of when women became conscious of
the women's movement in West Virginia is that it
probably had a time lag of five to ten years, and I'm
talking about really making a splash. Certainly on
college campuses that came earlier, and certainly in
urban areas that came earlier. But the impact for the
women who live in many of the rural parts of West
Virginia, I think the impact came when laws began to
change. And there's no doubt that television has
changed women's lives; it's changed lives for West
Virginians because it does bring the outside world
into an immediate, brings an immediacy to those
outside lives, brings them right into your home, and I
think that also in addition to household
technology,
JJDF 1403
I think that has also had a tremendous impact on the
way West Virginians see themselves and the way they
see the world around them, in the way they see the
outside world. And that means that change comes
quicker now to even the most remote areas if they
have that television. The knowledge of that change
comes quicker than it would have in the early 20th
century or in the 19th century.
Q: When West Virginians starting looking into
the 'little box' in the 60's what did they see? Did they
see themselves?
JJDF 1461
FH: When West Virginians looked at television in the
1950's, they saw an alien land. I remember as a child
watching television and watching especially those
family sitcoms of the 1950's. I did not know people
who looked like that, talked like that, or lived like
that. It was entertaining; it was fun, and it probably
changed me in ways I don't even know, but I certainly
didn't identify with it. These were people who lived --
for example, 'I Love Lucy' they lived in an apartment
in New York. I had never seen an apartment. No one
I knew lived in an apartment. This was a strange and
alien world, and I think it did bring new perspectives,
and it probably changed us in ways as individuals in
ways we don't even comprehend.
Q: What does West Virginia mean to you?
JJDF 1568
FH: For me, West Virginia is home. No matter where
else I go, if I say 'home' I mean here. In mean, I mean
specifically my parents' home when I say home. This
is not unique, I think to West Virginia, but for a
certain small town identification, even though I've
been married 22 years, 'home' is still my parents'
home. And there's that same -- West Virginia is
synonymous then with 'home,' and I would like my
daughter to grow up in West Virginia and remain in
West Virginia. And I think that's extremely unlikely
that she will do that. And there's a real sadness about
that.
JJDF 1654
She, in going back to the community where I grew
up, she really likes it there, and that has pleased me a
great deal that she really likes that, but I also know
that lifestyle that a small town in West Virginia offers
now, as she gets older, it loses its appeal and she
would tell you. She couldn't make a living there, so
it's -- what it has become is a place you visit. It's
where the parents live and that's where you visit.
Even though it's home, you live somewhere else, and I
see that increasingly happening in West Virginia; and
it makes me very sad because my whole identity is
that I am a product of West Virginia. There's no way
I can get away from that part of me, even if I
leave.
JJDF 1760
That will always be a part of me, and it's very sad to
think that something that's that much a part of you, is
not going to be part, is not a part of my daughter's life
in the same way that it was for me because it was a
good part. It was a good growing up, growing up in
the coalfields of the southern part of the state. It was
a good experience; it was a positive experience, and I
can already see times when I wish she had that
experience.
Q: What's going to be here in 20 years? What's
West Virginia going to be like?
JJDF 1823
FH: I have no idea what West Virginia will be like in
20 years. I can look around me and see situations
that make me very pessimistic and sad, but on the
other hand, we may merely in a phase of transition.
We may be, if we're lucky, we'll make that transition
to a new economy, and we will get beyond the
industrial economy that we depended on for so long
and that we'll build something else. We'll create
something else. That's the best possible scenario. I'll
probably still be here 20 years from now and still
wondering about that change. I don't think my child
will be here 20 years from now. Twenty years from
now my husband and I will be the home that
somebody comes to visit from somewhere else.
ROOM TONE FOR HENSELY INTERVIEW,
PRESENCE
JJDF 1942
Hensley Interview
SOUND ROLL 56