Nancy Hennis (nee Pallo)

Nancy and her husband, Richard Hennis, 1993 Nancy holding her two children, Scott and Melanie Hennis, 1967

Tilden, Texas

April 15, 2003

Tasha Stanley

Palo Alto College

History 1302 - Spring 2003

 

INTRODUCTION
TRANSCRIPTION
ANALYSIS
BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

INTRODUCTION

Nancy Pallo (Hennis) was born in Kansas City, Missouri on April 3, 1941 to John and Catherine Pallo. She is originally from Sugar Creek, Missouri where she is the oldest of eight siblings. She has attended college off and on throughout her life and is working on achieving her goal of a master's degree in history and has already received her teaching degree through the attendance of these colleges: Central Missouri State (working on her teaching degree), UTSA for four years (got her bachelor degree in history), and now currently St. Mary's University (completed her teaching degree & is now working on her master's in history). She has worked as a claims adjustor at Arial Mayflower in San Antonio for eight years, and had also worked as their weigh master. She then was the patient advocate at the Baptist Hospital System and named employee of the year. She worked as a volunteer for ten years at the Atascosa County Jail for Women Only where she helped them earn their GED's, and now she is working at the McMullen County High School, which I graduated from and where I was fortunate enough to have her as one of my teachers, where she teaches all of the history courses. She married Richard Hennis who was in the Air Force as a master sergeant in 1960. Due to his occupation of being a traveling soldier she traveled a great deal overseas and spent two years in France with her husband and two children.

 

TRANSCRIPTION

What was Sugar Creek like?

Well, it was the small immigrant town that I grew up in Sugar Creek, Missouri, and Sugar Creek was a town made up of one ethnic group the Slovaks and the Croats. They were very similar in language and customs, and so forth. My father was Slavish and my mother was Croatian. Both sets of grandparents came from the Austrian-Hungarian Empire around 1910. And so this was a small town. There was only one place there to work, it was the Standard Oil Refinery, and all the immigrant men worked at the refinery. Most everybody spoke Slavish and Croatian. Since I was a second generation I spoke English too because I went to school. And it was a very small town. It wasn't like Tilden in the way that we had to drive a long way away to get groceries and so forth. We had a small grocery store there and it was about 7 miles away in Independence, Missouri. We used to go over there to school and things like that.

In Missouri, were there any laws that were thought of as unjust and were there ever any that were broken because of this reason?

Well, I tell you what the people in this small immigrant community their parents had impressed upon them, they were first generation immigrants. My grandparents made it very clear to me that when they left Europe they left Europe because of war... they left Europe because of the fear of Russia, they left Europe because of famine, that there was nothing to go back to. They embraced their country wholeheartedly, the new country, they embraced it completely. I remember them constantly encouraging me to go to school, to get educated, to speak English. I remember they were so proud when their sons were asked to serve in the American military. I just don't think that you could say anything wrong about the United States to these people. These people were completely and totally dedicated to this nation. It's very interesting, my grandparents were in the agricultural business when they left Europe, although they did manage to get overall papers that said that my grandfather worked for a refinery over there and worked on the steel mills. But they were basically rural people and they had no education hardly, and then their children came along to get high school educations and then their grandchildren came along to get college educations, my daughter has a master's, things like that. It was just very fast. They seemed to be taking the very best of their country and combining it very quickly with the very best of this country. What they really liked here, and they didn't ever tell me, but I could sense it, was the chance for upward social mobility. They were constantly telling me, "Oh you have a chance Nancy" Nancy they called me in Slavish, "to go to school to become something". To them it was so important that I had a chance to have a better life than they did, and they impressed that on me very quickly that I could do that in this country.

What memories do you have about World War II? Anything specific?

Well, I was born in 1941 and right before they bombed Pearl Harbor. And I was a child and I was very small, but even I remember at age 5 and 4 I knew that something was going on and I knew it concerned everybody in town very much. The town was very close and the people there were very proud that the sons of immigrants were serving in the military. Anytime someone was wounded in the community, a son or husband was wounded in the community, or was killed everybody knew about it, knew about it quickly. They really supported each other. And all I knew was there was something really bad going on, and our fathers and our brothers and people's husbands were going off and they were fighting a war somewhere. And that's about what I remember, but I definitely remember an atmosphere in my life for the first six years of war. I just lived with it. I was born with it and I just grew up with it.

Were the men that fought treated kindly once they were back from World War II?

Oh my goodness yes. You have no idea the "ticker tape" parades they had in the large cities here in the United States. In our community there they were welcomed home with open arms. I remembered for years after that on what we now call Memorial Day, but what they used to call Decoration Day, and on the 4th of July the whole town got out for makeshift parades and we all went to the war memorial(in the middle of Sugar Creek) where all the men who had been killed in action their names were listed. ....and everybody had American flags. I remember it was so unusual because here we were I hear so many immigrant languages being spoke. I hear the immigrant language being spoke, the Slav and Croatian, and then you could see the American flags waving. The parade was a big important day and we finished off the day with a big picnic in Slover Park. And after the picnic in Slover Park we did the polkas and we'd play the tamberistas and we did the dances of that part of the world, and the music and we would sing. It was just a sort of combination community and picnic and band as well as a solemn time when we stopped to remember those that were lost during the war. My mother still goes to this event and she is 86 years old. Of course now hardly anybody goes, it's just a thirty minute ceremony down at the war memorial. She still goes down there and she'll ask someone to take her down there, usually my sister, and she'll stand there and she'll actually tell you, look(ing) at the names on the monument, "Awww, I remember him. He was so-and-so's son and he was killed in the south Pacific".

You were talking about commissaries and PX's. What are those?

Ok. Well, those are on military bases, for military dependants. There is a grocery store there, which they call a commissary and they go to a type of Wal-Mart thing I guess except without the groceries, which they call a PX or BX depending on whether you are in the Air Force or the Army. And we had military hospitals. By the way, not that long ago we also had a dress code. Women in the military were not allowed, if they were spouses of military men, to go into the commissary in shorts or rollers in their hair. We all had to go in what the military considered dressed appropriately, in a dress or slacks. I got used to a lot of things like that in the military, some of their rules. I think the thing that still stirs me a lot is when they open up the post in the morning they'll play "Reveille" for everybody to get up and go to work, and then they'll play in the evening they'll play "Retreat" for everybody to quit working. People on the post still to this day anytime they hear they know the flag is going up or coming down they'll stop get out of their cars, stand, face the direction of the flag, and listen very respectfully. So, there were a lot of military courtesies that I learned that probably a lot of people like you would be totally unfamiliar with. And I don't remember them ever being something I didn't want to do. I love my husband very much, I'm still married to the same man, and that was his life and I wanted to be a good military wife and I embraced it.

What were your feelings about the Vietnam War?

Well, my husband had been in quite a while you know. He was there when he went to Vietnam the first time. He went twice. He was there about on-and-off for four years. My husband's job was a soldier, and I got used to him being a soldier. If fact he was in the strategic air command for eight years and then he went into Army Aviation. And Strategic Air Command had a motto. Their motto was "Peace is our Profession" and I always knew that there could be the possibility of a war. That was his job, he was a soldier. So when Vietnam came along his attitude affected me a great deal. He just said, "Well, that's my job. I have to go. That's what I do. I'm a soldier and I'm going to go." He still feels that way. In fact when the Iraqi War started he said, "Well, if the young men don't want to go I'll go, I'll go back." This was his life and he spent twenty years in the military before he started on his second career, and so that was just his life. I wasn't aware of like demonstrations...in the beginning. If fact there weren't any demonstrations when the war began. It was just that he was doing his job, he would go over there for a year and then he would return home and he would go over there for a year. As time progressed and chores progressed I began to realize how much danger he was in. And I began to sense that a lot of the nation did not agree with that war. It was sort of surprising to me. I didn't understand it. I said, "Well, he's just doing his job. Nobody wins in a war I mean everybody loses, but he's just doing his job folks. That's he's job, he's a soldier. He's not doing it to cause trouble." I didn't understand that and I didn't understand why people were so mad at the soldiers because to me they were doing what they were suppose to do. I just didn't understand that. Of course, again, I was a young woman and had children and plenty to do, so, I don't think I really dwelled on it. I just don't think I ever came to grips with what is all of these demonstrations about. No I don't like the war either, I don't like people getting killed. I mean I was afraid my husband would get killed. I dreaded maybe an Air Force or military man walking up the sidewalk some day with that telegram. I got nervous when I didn't get tapes from my husband. We didn't write letters we exchanged tapes, tape recorders. And I loved him very much and so you know I had a lot to lose in that war, but I guess maybe because the way my community was and the way my immigrant parents and grandparents were, I just never thought. Even if I had some personal feelings I would never demonstrate against the United States. I would be like demonstrating against my own husband. So, I knew it was going on and I don't ever think that I'd dislike the people that demonstrated, but I just really didn't understand it.

I know you supported your husband while he went to Vietnam, but did you ever feel when it first started that maybe we shouldn't have gotten involved?

Actually no, absolutely not. However, since my major was history and social studies and since that's what I teach and since I have always loved history with a passion and I read it even when I don't have to read it. Now I know that there were a lot of things there, the Gulf of Tonkin affair and I know there were a lot of things there. I've talked to my husband since that war and he has said that we had to fight that war with one hand behind our back because of the politicians, and we couldn't bomb North Vietnam. So, since after the war we're looking back on it I could see some things that probably I know were mistakes, but then I say, "Well, whose perfect. Governments don't make perfect decisions either." But then I can do that because I didn't lose my husband, he came back. So, there was really no bitterness, but there's a lot more knowledge on my part about what really happened.

 

ANALYSIS

I was able to learn a lot about not only what her life was like and what she went through, but about how the world and people around her viewed and handled the challenges in their lives at that time. I got to learn some very interesting facts, probably what some people would consider very small and unimportant details to history. For example, the fact that the wives of military men had to be in dress code when they went to the commissaries or PXs. I never really knew Mrs. Hennis until now. I always thought of her as just my high school history teacher, but through this interview with her I've learned that her life was never that easy and that she was able to make it despite everything. I hold a much higher respect for her now because of my new knowledge of what her life was like living growing up in a military family, marrying a traveling soldier, and going through those times of war. I can honestly say that I had hoped to learn some fascinating things and maybe a few key points, but the interview with her was more than just facts from books, it was her personal opinions and views that I got. They only thing I can see wrong with the interview process is that your only getting one persons opinion about what took place. Like a crime scene with many witnesses, not all of them are going to describe what took place the same way. Although, I must admit that this way of learning about the past is a lot more fun than having to read it out of a book. Through this format the interviewer, or student, is able to really get involved with the history.

 

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

Standard Oil Refinery. Kansas City Public Library. Kansas City Times, October 9, 1987. http://www.kcpl.lib.mo.us/sc/post/nearbycities/20000688.htm.

Decoration Day. Memorial Day. http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyseneca/memorial.htm.

Slover Park. Truman Memorial Building. http://www.memorial-building.org/history2.htm.

commissary. Commissary, Exchange, & Morale, Welfare & Recreation (MWR) Benefits. http://www.nj.gov/military/familysupport/commissary.html.

Andradé, Dale and Kenneth Conboy. Gulf of Tonkin. The Secret Side of the Tonkin Gulf Incident. Naval History, August 1999.

 

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