Jose R Flores

Life of a fire fighter in San Antonio

Jose Flores and family in 2014 for 50th Anniversary

San Antonio, TX

March 30, 2015

Joseph Manuel Flores

Palo Alto College

History 1302 - Spring 2015

 

INTRODUCTION
TRANSCRIPTION
ANALYSIS
TIMELINE

 

INTRODUCTION

Jose R Flores was born on November 30, 1942 in
San Antonio, Texas. In 1961 he graduated from Burbank High School. Although, he was an honor student throughout high school, he was not able to receive any scholarships because of his ethnicity. Shortly after high school, he met my grandmother Hilda. She was fourteen years old while he was seventeen years old. They married in on April 11, 1964. He was twenty one years old at the time. They had their first child (my father Joe) on May 21, 1965, their second child on February 6, 1967, and their third and final child on August 30, 1971. Shortly after high school, he worked for a butterkrust bakery for seven years. He worked there while supporting his first two children. Come 1968, he joined the fire department. In 1971, he held the position of lieutenant. He was a fire fighter for seventeen years. He spent seven years in EMS as a supervisor. He then spent eight years in the fire marshall office. After that, he spent the last two years of his career as a hospital inspector. He retired from the fire department in 1999. He has been married to my grandmother for fifty years now and has nine grandchildren.

 

 

TRANSCRIPTION

What are your earliest childhood memories?
My earliest childhood memories was I was very inquisitive. I was very proud and I am a proud person. I've been that since I was a little boy. I'm 72 years old, I was born back in nineteen throw it away (laughs). My early childhood memories was asking a lot of questions to my mom and dad. Just like any normal child I wanted to learn everything.

What schools did you attend?
Well the first school I went to was in the first grade elementary. It was called
Collins Garden Elementary. I believe it is still around, but then I haven't been there since I left. That's the first school that I went to. I went to Burbank High School and graduated in 1961 a very long time ago (laughs).

What was it like going to school? Did you like it or did you want to focus your time on something else?
The lord always has a plan for everybody, and when I started school I didn't know how to speak English. I had a Spanish and Mexican environment in my house. Both my mother and my father spoke nothing but Spanish so I had a hard time starting to learn English. Again I am a proud person. I am fluent in both English and Spanish and very proud of it. I love to learn because as I always say if life to learn is to earn.

Jose R Flores, In the SAFD Training facility during his years as a fire fighter.

What were your parents like?
My parents were the most beautiful people in the world at that time until they passed on. My father was very lenient and my mother was very loving.

Were there any traditions your family would have?
Respect each other. That is a tradition we always had and still have. Family always respects each other and love each other. Family is one of the most important things in life.

What was the first job you've ever had?
Well growing up I had several jobs. I was ten or twelve years old when I started working. My mother never wanted me to shine shoes, and that was one of the times I did against what my mother told me. My mother didn't want me to shine shoes. I made a little shine box and left it at my friends house so my mother wouldn't know I shined shoes. On Saturday's and Sunday's I would take the first bus that passed by my neighborhood and went downtown. At that time we had Lackland Air Force Base, Kelly Air Force Base, Fort Sam Houston and we had soldiers on Saturday's and Sunday's downtown and I would charge ten cents a shine. I've always wanted to and I always want to have money in my pocket.

When did you get your first car and what was it?
The first car I bought was a 1930 Chevrolet and that was back in 1952 or 1951. I was thirteen years old. I got my driver's license when I was thirteen years old. My father had to sign for me, but at that time they would allow a thirteen year old with a hardship, and my hardship was that I wanted to drive a car. So my dad signed and I bought that car for fifty dollars.

Aside from working, what did you do for fun?
I always watch the news on television. I always want to keep up with what's going on in the world. What's going on in my city, what's going on in my state. I always want to keep up with everything. Around my teenage years I started to lift weights. I found it very fulfilling.

How much was gas compared to now?
Well believe it or not when I started driving back in 1950 or 1949. A gallon of gas costs thirteen cents. You could fill up a car at that time with three to five dollars.

If you could sum up your time in the Fire Department in a few sentences what would you say?
I would describe my time in the fire department as a learning experience and as a gift from God. I joined the Fire Department when I was twenty one years old back in nineteen sixty eight. At that time they just shot Martin Luther King. My first day in training in the Fire Department was a simulation riot, because they were expecting riots in San Antonio and lot of the big cities in the United States. It was quite an experience. I had never been involved in any emergency situations, but believe me I got in it right away and I am blessed.

How did you meet Hilda (my grandmother)?
Your Grandmother is the prettiest woman in the world. I met her when she was fifteen and I was nineteen. I married her when she was seventeen and I was twenty one. So we grew up together and she is the luckiest woman in the world. I tell her that because whatever she wants she gets and then some and I can provide for her.

My grandfathers certificate of appreciation from the San ANtonio Fire Department awarded after his retirement in 1999.

Lastly, why do you think San Antonio is one of the best cities to live in?
Because I live here (laughs). San Antonio is a great city because I grew up here, it's closest to the border, the weather is fine. When it gets cold it doesn't get as cold as up north. When it gets cold you can work in the cold. I love San Antonio because San Antonio has been good to me and I have been good to it.

 

 

Joseph Flores and grandfather Jose R Flores taken on April 11, 2015

ANALYSIS

I have grown up with my grandfather and have heard these stories countless times, but this project allows me to share them with you all. Everyone is unique in their own way, but I feel like my grandfather's attitude helped shape the kind of person I am today. The most important points I always find interesting with my grandfather's stories are his sense of humor and his knowledge. He loves to learn and I can tell in the way he speaks. I know my grandfather has worked hard for what he has today, and he always lets us know how proud he is of us. In have learned from both my father and grandfather that I have to work hard for anything I want. My grandfather loves to share his stories, but one thing I did not know was his story about his first day in the SAFD training. I would think that's a stressful first day in training the day Martin Luther King Jr. was shot. I found that very interesting and a great story to tell. I knew that growing up in San Antonio was not exactly glamorous, but nothing is ever glamorous so I feel like he loves this city because of its ups and downs because this city has everyone he loves in it. This project is a perfect example of how history should be taught. It is about learning about past mistakes and successes that make us what we are today. Interviewing the ones we love and learning their story influences us to dig deeper into the past. I know my grandfather had a great time and is honored to share his story with you all.

 

 

TIMELINE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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