Remember...George Austin Garlitz
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Machinist's Mate Second Class George Austin Garlitz was born in Maryland on September 25, 1917, to James Hubert "Hugh" Garlitz and Lula McKenzie Garlitz. According to the 1920 Federal Census, his family then moved to Berlin, Pennsylvania, and, by the 1930 census, finally settled in Barrackville, West Virginia, a small coal mining community in Marion County. The 1940 census shows that George's father worked as a machine operator in a Barrackville mine, and George also did some work as a coal inspector. However, after he graduated from Barrackville High School, muster rolls show that George enlisted in the U.S. Navy in October of 1935. In 1938, Garlitz married Pauline Palmer in Arizona. Their marriage license reveals that both were living in southern California at the time. He had one sister, Iva Standifer, and was very close with her daughter, Judy Lee, who, according to an article in the Fairmont Times written after his death, purchased a $100-dollar war bond in support of her favorite uncle.
Garlitz grew up in a time of turmoil in coal communities in West Virginia. For many residents of the state, the Great Depression had become a reality long before the stock market crash of 1929, which propelled the rest of the nation into an economic depression. As early as the 1920s, the bustle of production during World War I had deteriorated. The coal industry in West Virginia quickly began to suffer from a number of factors, especially overproduction. Miners received diminishing wages and were constantly threatened by a growing unemployment rate, that, in some counties, reached as high as 80 percent. When the Great Depression hit West Virginia with its full force, many coal companies failed, and the already swelling unemployment rate continued to climb. In 1933, the National Industrial Recovery Act of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal program promised relief to many of the hardships faced by West Virginians in the mining industry, like George Garlitz, a coal inspector, and his father, a machine operator. The purpose of the act was to regulate and ease competition in business and labor practices, as well as to foster communication between companies and frustrated workers through a process called collective bargaining. For a short time, many miners were re-employed, and wages increased. However, this victory was short lived, because only a few months later companies reverted to their practices of low wages and poor working conditions. This was due to the fact that companies now faced higher wage costs and growing competition from alternative energy sources.
Sources
"Barrackville Sailor Killed." Fairmont Times, 11 April 1942, pp. 1, 2.
Pope, James G. "National Industrial Recovery Act (1933). Encyclopedia.com, accessed 17 April 2018, https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences-and-law/law/law/national-industrial-recovery-act.
Thomas, Jerry Bruce. "The Great Depression." e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia, 9 August 2012, accessed 17 April 2018, https://www.wvencyclopedia.org/articles/2155.
Article prepared by Julia Battle and Abby Fife, George Washington High School Advanced Placement U.S. History
March 2018
West Virginia Archives and History welcomes any additional information that can be provided about these veterans, including photographs, family names, letters and other relevant personal history.