Henry Holbrook

"Everything in life is about management"

Henry Holbrook celebrates his 104th birthday at the MA Assisted Living Facility in Devine, Texas (August 28, 2009)

Natalia, Texas

September 16, 2009

Sonya A Leal

Palo Alto College

History 1302 - Fall 2009

 

INTRODUCTION
TRANSCRIPTION
ANALYSIS
TIMELINE
BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

INTRODUCTION

Henry Holbrook was born August 28, 1905 his parents were Maude and Curtis Holbrook of
Waelder, Texas. Henry has two brothers' one of whom is still living in Rio Grande Valle, Texas. Around 1914 Henry remembers how he was too young to go to WWI and how it ended in 1918. Henry only went to school till the 9th grade at Waelder High School. He dropped out and worked at a drug store, as a soda fountain server. That job did not last for long. Soon after, he married Pearl Nelson Holbrook on December 9, 1927 and they had a daughter Betty Joyce Holbrook. Betty now resides in Natalia, Texas with three sons of her own. In 1941 he and his family moved to San Antonio, Texas, where Henry got a job with the National Bank of Commerce. On April 6, 1968, Henry retired from the National Bank of Commerce and he recalls the Hemisfair opening the same year. As time passed he got older, he moved in with his daughter who cared for his wife and him. In January of 2008, Pearl died of a stroke. Henry now resides in a nursing home on the outskirts of Natalia, Texas in MA Assisted Living. I came across him in the daily newspaper, in an article of how he was celebrating his 104th birthday.

 

 

TRANSCRIPTION

What was life during WWI, WWII and The Great Depression?
Well, I was either too young or too old to go to WWI and WWII. But some of my uncles had to go and the whole family was upset. I reckon I think I can't say much about WWI, I didn't know anything bout' that I was much too young to say. I was in school. I remember when I was younger during WWI we had to ration our food. Like flour, sugar. We used stamps. My parents said it was the patriotic thing to do without for our army boys. My mom had a little garden full of vegetables and we killed hogs just to have meat.

Tell me about your childhood, school, fun? What you wanted to be when you grew up?
I woke up ate breakfast then went to school, I liked geography. I liked to ride my horse and play basket ball with my brother's and the other kids. My dad never did give me any chores; I reckon he didn't trust me much when I was a kid. I really did like to ride my horse. I always wanted to be a farmer, but my daddy was a banker all his life. My daddy said son you can't be a farmer they don't pay very much to be a farmer. Your gonna have to take care of your family so it'd be best to be a banker like me.

When you had to drop out of school, why did you leave, you left to do what?
I went to Waelder High School till 9th grade; I'm thinking I was only 16 then. My first job before I dropped out of school was a soda jerk for this drug store in town; I can't remember what it was called. After that job about six months later I was married and moved to San Antonio . Waelder was a small town and I wanted to live in a city with many jobs. I knew I wanted to work at a bank so I moved to find a job.

Who, What, Where, When

How did you meet your wife?
I liked to play dominoes at a friend's house, and I was on my way and got stuck in a bad rain storm in her town. I stayed at a local store to wait it out when I seen her. She lived 20 miles apart from me and my daddy bought me my first car, Dodge Roadster just to go see her. I took her to the matinee every weekend by ourselves. There wasn't nothing to do in a small town. It's funny how we were only born five miles apart. I married her right off after 6 months. We only had one baby, guess cause we just couldn't have anymore, God figured. We were married for 65 years, in the beginning hardly anyone got a divorce and we didn't know what a divorce was.

Why did you move to San Antonio?
Opportunities were better, better jobs, I went were the jobs were at. My dad made it clear that working for a bank like he did would be the best way to make a living, and it was. Far as I saw, cause when no one had a job, I had a job. I was sure grateful I never went hungry or poor like some. Everything seemed to fall into its place for me and I was lucky, guess is all.

What was life during WWI, WWII and The Great Depression?
Well, I was either too young or too old to go to WWI and WWII. But some of my uncles had to go and the whole family was upset. I reckon I think I can't say much about WWI, I didn't know anything bout' that I was much too young to say. I was in school. I remember when I was younger during WWI we had to ration our food. Like flour, sugar. We used stamps. My parents said it was the patriotic thing to do without for our army boys. My mom had a little garden full of vegetables and we killed hogs just to have meat.

Tell me more about the Great Depression?
The Depression was when all the factories north closed and all the jobs were in the South. A lot of people had no money or jobs, unless you already had a good job. Everything was cheap. I remember buying a bag of groceries for 1.00, coffee for 20 cents a pound, a slice of pie for 10 or 15 cents a slice. Gas was 18 cents until the 30's it went up to 22 cents. You could get all kinds of food off the sides of the road, there were little shops. We had stores like the Piggly Wiggly, or stores from a person's name, like Jones Grocery. . And JC Penney's to get clothes. My father worked for a bank, and I reckon that's why I did to. The Depression didn't hurt us, cause I had a job with the bank. When I married and had a job at the bank, we never struggled. We had one baby so I didn't have to worry about money. I had a good civilian job

What was it like to work at a bank during The Great Depression, did people trust the Bank?
My dad worked at a bank so he always told me I was too. I worked for National Bank of Commerce off Soledad and Commerce. Work was hectic when the Depression was goin on cause all the young boys went overseas. That's when all the young woman worked at the bank, they were the only ones left after the boys left. Our bank did it's filing system by using file cabinets. One was for checks and deposits was popular then. People trusted our bank it was a good bank, big bank, it stood when others failed. Our people never lost confidence. I think the first bank was organized in 1903' at Pecan & Soledad, then it moved to Commerce & Soledad in 1958. It was a big, good bank..

What role did religion play?
I went to church when I was little every Sunday's and if we went to our kin folks in another town we would go to their church on Sunday's. I was Methodist, pretty much because my parents were.

What would you do if you got sick? How would you get your news?
We didn't have hospitals like ya'll do now. I know I had gotten the mumps, chicken pox and colds. My momma would buy liniments (castor oil) to give us, and the country Doctor would come to our house but people didn't go to the the Doctor much. All our news was by mail. We only got letters from family when someone was either born or someone either died.

What would you use for transportation?
We took a train from Waelder to San Antonio . It would leave at four o clock in the morning. There were no automobiles like now, just buggies. We would stay in San Antonio all day and do the shopping for the months ahead. I always figured it as a mini vacation. I liked the train and seeing the land as it passed places and houses. San Antonio was 60 miles from Waelder. I enjoyed that most when I was a boy, I'd like to say. I remember the first car I ever bought was a 1923 Chevrolet CoupeI was still a boy then, but it was a car, so I was happy.

What inventions do you like the most that you have seen over time?
I like the cell phone. You can call someone from your chair all the way to your family and get it out of your pocket and say hello. I really like that. So small. I do enjoy the television even though I don't watch most of it; I usually fall asleep while I watch it.

Is there anything you would like to add?
Whole thing is management is the key to success. Start early and never put anything off. Everything fell in place for me, being at the right place at the right time. Use your head when the opportunity presents itself grab it. I was always accidentally at the right place at the right time.

What is the secret to living a hundred years?
I don't know, I had a normal job, normal life, I was just brought into the present. Guess I just had a strong amune system. Never took any medicine, but never really got sick.

 

 

Sonya Leal and Mr. Holbrook, Taken November 09, 2009

ANALYSIS

In the process of doing my oral history project I learned to have great compassion for the elderly people of our history. Each person holds a unique story about life, history and their experience. I think the most important point about this interview is that everyone has a place in life and sometimes life has many hardships, with time and patience it can be managed. I didn't know much about my interviewee and it just so happened I met him by luck, I did however learn that he has lived around my area for a good while of his life was really simple. And it's funny how it turns out he used to live a street away from my grandma's house who I visited quite frequently. Many of my views have changed thanks to this particular topic, now through all the economic hardship I am able to follow his word and take every opportunity that is within my grasp. I will take his words into consideration that "Everything in life is about management" and I believe that "Life is short, keep the faith" is what pretty much tell the story about my interview. Mr. Holbrook expresses that he enjoyed his life and has no regret for how his life has played out. He was very nice and respectful towards me and wanted to know my story about my life as well. I enjoyed the time I spent with him and I am planning on visiting him as much as possible. He is one very special man who has experience a century of history and life, I hope I'm just as lucky. Throughout the interview about the Great Depression, I learned a different story about how he didn't struggle as much as others did. That even though the struggles of the Great Depression anyone can overcome different turns of events, as he did. I expect that the answers to the interview were correct and I did some research on the different turn of events like about the ratio stamps and the different car models. I believe the only drawback about doing an interview such as this is that a person like him will be forgotten and I believe I could have captured more of his story if I had the time available. His story is 100 yrs of history and I was very honored to capture it. In my opinion this is a very effective way of learning about the past. I don't really know much about all of our history and I am bad at dates. This is an experience I will remember about what I've learned about the Great Depression and what a person can go through in life. I enjoyed doing this project and only hope that it has helped or educated in some way shape or form about the Great Depression. And I'd like to thank my teacher for giving me this assignment, so that I could carry a piece of history in my heart just by having a very special person in my life now. Thank You Mr. Myers…

 

'Holbrook celebrates 104th Birthday' Front Page of 'The Devine News'  Thursday, September 3, 2009

 

TIMELINE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

List a minimum of FIVE sources. There must be links to each of the sources within the transcription. Consult Citing Web Sources MLA Style for further help. Not sure how to cite a reference, utilize EasyBib: Free Bibliography Maker

. Utilize a minimum of three sources from U.S. History Matters: A Student Guide to U.S. History Online. Here are five examples of annotated sources plus a source for photos/documents.

 

 

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