Thursday, January 15, 2009

In the current issue of READ, we have excerpted a few Ellis Island interviews. This week we are posting the full text of these interviews. Enjoy. And God Bless America.

ENGLAND

Sally Winston
Born July 18, 1918
Emigrated 1922, Age 3
Passage on the S.S. Cedric

She is the younger sister of Vera, and picks up the story of what became of them once they arrived in America through the eyes of a child. Sally, like Vera, never had children.

I only have one memory of the boat ride. Only one. I remember water, sitting on somebody's lap, and then the bare, bright lights of a lightbulb dangling near the bunk beds. I remember that bulb.

At Ellis Island, I remember this great big hall and people, and I remember somebody holding me and it just seemed like so many people. And I remember being frightened, like I wanted to get away someplace. That was the feeling I always remembered.

Then we got to the house. My mother's brother's house in South Orange, New Jersey. I don't remember how we got there. I just remember our sister Katherine coming to see us. And eating mashed potatoes. I loved mashed potatoes. Katherine would make a hole and put butter in it for me. I remember the sewing machine because to me it was such a big thing the way it was crated, but I don't know whatever happened to it.

The next thing I remember I was at St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Jersey City. I was first put in at St. Joseph’s with my sisters Mary and Margaret. [Margaret was there only temporarily, before becoming a domestic like her mother.] I remember it being a big dormitory, many beds. And I remember being taken care of by a nun named sister Ambrose. She was nice to me, but she was also wicked. I don’t imagine she was bad. She was just tough. She treated everybody tough, that I remember. To me she was like a force of vengeance. I stayed out of her way. I never got in her way because if you were wrong, that was it. I was also one of the youngest children ever there. I was kept away from the older children because I was young. I was about four years old. I remember this damn parrot that used to call me. It had my name down because I guess I used to play with it a lot. I remember being sick in the infirmary by myself. They used to being the parrot to keep me company.

We were taught to read. We were taught arithmetic. We were taught penmanship so we could have good handwriting. We were taught the regular schoolwork and given religious training. I made my first communion at St. Joseph’s. We didn’t wear a uniform, we wore a dress. Nothing fancy. Our hair was short to prevent lice. But if you had it, they put kerosene on your head to kill the damn things. I must have been seven at the time.

I did not see my sisters very much. We were kept separate. I used to run and try to sneak to Margaret, but I used to get pulled back and not allowed to go. My mother worked at the orphanage initially. She worked in the kitchen. I used to sneak in to see her. My mother would have to turn me around and send me back, because I wasn’t allowed to do that. It was very regimented. We got punished when there was something wrong, but I wasn’t beaten.

I was at St. Joseph’s until I was seven, and then I was taken out of there to live with my older sister, Kathleen. She lived on Thirteenth Street and Ninth Avenue in New York City. She was married and had a little girl, my niece, Frances. She had a house full of boarders, and she was the superintendent, her and her husband, Jim. The boarders were mostly her husband’s brothers from Ireland.

I remember vividly my mother’s sister, my aunt Maggie. I never liked her because she wasn’t nice to me. She tried to rule the roost, everything her way. She was kind of rough, but she would visit me when she had the day off. She’d take me on the Fifth Avenue double-decker bus. We’d go up to Grant’s Tomb and back. Every time she came we took the same ride, so I used to hide down in the cellar. My sister’s husband, Jim, used to follow me down to the cellar. He was kind to me. One time, I hid in the coal bin. He wanted to know why I was there. I says, “I don’t want to go on that bus ride again.”

I didn’t realize that I wasn’t born here until I was about twelve years old. And I got mad at the person that told me I wasn’t. He says, “You were born in Liverpool, England.” I said, “I was not! I’m an American.” He says, “You were born in Liverpool, England, Sally.” I said, “No, it can’t be.” So what do you do with a twelve-year-old kid when you tell her she wasn’t born in this country? I thought he was being mean. I had no memory of Liverpool. To me this was my country. This was my home. So I had no conception at that age. But finally I had to accept it, and realized that I wasn’t born here.

My older sisters had their lives. Vera and Margaret had to go their own way because of circumstances. They were eight to ten years older than me. It was circumstances that brought all this about. My mother wasn’t around that much. But to me, she was always a tall woman. She had white hair. Her hair was white as far back as I can remember. But she wasn’t communicative. She was stern in her own way. In later years she became a little more mellow, but I felt sorry for her. As I grew older I felt she was a very unhappy woman, because somewhere along the line her boat didn’t come in. She was not a happy woman.

 


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Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 1/15/2009
6:59 PM
 Wednesday, January 14, 2009

In the current issue of READ, we have excerpted a few Ellis Island interviews. Today through Friday we are posting the full text of these interviews. Enjoy. And God Bless America.

SOUTHERN ITALY

Peter Mossini
Born July 8, 1898
Emigrated 1921, Age 22
Passage on the Pesaro

He came from a large family, dirt poor, in the seaside village of Santa Teresa di Riva, Uneducated, he was forced to labor at a young age. Unskilled, he followed his elder sister to Western Pennsylvania and worked at the coal mines for eighteen dollars a week. He worked the Pennsylvania Railroad, scraped though the Depression, and bought a sanitation business on the cheap in 1943. He sold it and owned and opened a bar and restaurant that he ran until he retired.

In them days, there was two classes of people in Sicily: the rich and the very poor. My family was very poor. I never went to school. I started working from before I was ten years old. My father and mother, they send me to work to make maybe ten cents a day. I was working in a lemon factory. I work from one o'clock in the morning to about two in the afternoon the next day. Eleven, twelve hours. Them days, if you make ten cents a day, that was a lot of money. There was no time to play. For fun, I play boccie or soccer maybe. But we have no ball. So we used a lemon.

My father was also working in the factory and my younger brothers did, too, later on. My mother no work because we had a big family, you know. Eight children. And there was no work for the women. Even if they wanted to work, there was no work. So my sisters stay home. We had only two bedrooms. Today, if you got four children, you got four bedrooms. Them days, if you had four boys, they all had to sleep in the same room or if you had four girls, same thing.

To feed the family in winter, my father would buy a hundred kilogram of dried beans. My mother would soak them the night before and the following day get some macaroni and that’s how we fill the family. And naturally, she baked her own bread. The flour came in fifty, seventy-five pound bags, and she bake maybe seventeen, eighteen loaves of bread each week. The oven was outside the house, a communal oven.

The first few days the bread was pretty good because it was soft, but after a week the bread was like a rock and many times I remember we had to soak the bread with a little water and rub it with garlic and that’s what we were eating. That and fish. Fish was cheap.

The day before Christmas we always had fish and on Christmas day, maybe my father go with the butcher shop and buy a couple pounds of pork, you know, and we mixed sauce and we have a dish of spaghetti. Over here, even my own children or my grandchildren, you buy steak, cost you five dollars a pound and they say, "Who wants that garbage?" Over there, if you had a piece of fat you was lucky, and by, it tasted good, too. There was no gift. There was no money. What gift? You was lucky if you can buy a loaf of bread.

We never miss church. We was all baptized, confirmed. Madonna Mount Carmel. A big church. The church, I would say, was three miles from where we was living. So we walk to church to church because there was no transportation. I’ll be honest with you, my first pair of new shoes I had on my feet, I was sixteen years old. Every time I had a couple penny, I had a place in the wall where I put the money. And there was a shoemaker. He was making a pair of shoes for himself. And when I see the pair of shoes I ask him how much they cost. He says, "Sixteen lira," and I try them on my feet. "I’m going to get the money." I went home, and got the money from the wall. My piggy bank. I went back and I says, "Now you're going to make another pair for me." He says, "A lot of work!" I says, "I'll stay all night with you." We stayed there all night and he work all night to make the shoes.

I wanted to come to the United States because my father did. The first time my father come was in 1901. He went to Pennsylvania and he was working in the coal mines. Every once in a while, he send a few dollars. He was there about five or six years. Then he come back to Sicily. The last trip he made to the United States was in 1912. He stay one year. But there was no work, and he just had enough money to pay his fare and come back to Sicily. By that time, the family started to get a little big. So we no starve, my brothers were working. So we all pulled together.

During the First World War, I was in the army, and I held to my idea about coming to America. Then, in 1919, my sister Josephine came. I was very close to her. She was the oldest in the family and I respected her like a mother, because she was like a mother to me. She came by herself and she got married. She was doing very well over here. And I wanted to build myself a new life, better myself. Eventually, all my brothers and sisters came to the United States.

So I saved my money because my father, he couldn't afford to pay for my trip. I don't remember exactly what I pay. As soon I got out of the army, I apply for the passport. That took about four, five months, because they started closing the immigration.

I took a little suitcase and I had just a few pairs of socks, couple of handkerchief and couple of underwear and a couple of shirts. There was me, my cousin--he was only sixteen years old, I guaranteed for him--and this friend of mine. He was about nineteen. They’re both dead now. And we left from Naples the nineteenth of March 1921.

The boat was Pesaro. A German boat. Italy got it after the First World War and there was no cabin, no first, second, or third. There was just one class in them days. Steerage. One floor. One room. There was bunk beds. And in the morning, you had to get up because the crew had a firehose and they washed the floor.

I remember as soon as we left Naples they gave you a pillowcase. Inside that pillowcase you had your aluminum dish, your fork, knife, spoon, and a metal cup. When it was time to eat, we lined up and got our stuff. We ate twice a day. They gave you a cup of soup, piece of meat, piece of bread, and cup of coffee. Then we had to find a way to sit down because there was no dining room. This was a troop transport boat.

When we reach New York, I thank the good Lord. It was early morning, the Fourth of July. We was on the deck like a bunch of sheep. Everybody had a suitcase, dragging their suitcase, and I remember the first meal they gave us at Ellis Island. They give a sandwich, white bread with a piece of cheese and a piece of ham and it tasted so good. It tasted like a nice piece of cake. That was something new for me. I never seen sandwiches in Sicily. They examined if you had lice in your head. If you did, they shaved your hair. I remember that. There was a lot of bald people. And if you had some kind of disease in your eye, they send you back.

We left that night by train from Pennsylvania Station to New York. We went to Portage Pennsylvania. It’s between Altoona and Johnstown. Western Pennsylvania. My sister Josephine lived there with her husband.

Them days, the train stopped every station for the people who worked in the coal mine and the railroad and the factory, every station. By the time we got to Portage, no one was on the train. Just us--me, my cousin, and my friend. We didn’t know where to go. None of us spoke English, and it was April, kind of cold. We had the Italian clothes on, very light, because Sicily’s warm like Florida. And we see an old man inside the station house. He was making a fire with coal to keep the station warm. He sees us with our suitcases.

"Hey, where you going?" he asks us. We don’t know what the hell he says. "Italiani?" Oh God, my heart went. He spoke Italian! We say, "Si, si!" Then he asked us where we supposed to go and we give the name of my sister and my brother-in-law. He says, "Oh, yeah. I know them." He got in touch, and then my brother-in-law come, thanks to God.

This was the trip.


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Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 1/14/2009
12:28 PM
 Friday, January 09, 2009

Your dad dies suddenly and mysteriously, and his brother starts making the moves on your mom. Before you know it, your charming Uncle Claude has moved in, taken over the family business, and is calling you "son." You are more than a little grumpy about this.

Then one dark and stormy night, you see some sort of apparition in the rain. He ... it ... can't be your father, and yet ... you know it is. Before the night is over, you realize that your dad was murdered. And you know exactly how that snake Claude did it.

Who are you? You could be Prince Hamlet from Shakespeare's tragic play. Or perhaps you are Edgar Sawtelle.

In David Wroblewski's new novel, "The Story of Edgar Sawtelle," 14-year-old Edgar lives on a farm where his parents breed, raise, and train dogs. The time and place are the 1970s in rural Wisconsin, but you'd barely know it. This coming-of-age story has a timelessness and otherworldliness that gives it the quality of a fable, or a fairytale--or a Shakespearean play.

This is "Hamlet" with dogs. You don't need to know Hamlet in order to love this book, but if you do, so much the better! Wroblewski doesn’t hide the Hamlet connection; his characters Claude (Claudius) and Trudie (Gertrude) put it right out there.

However, this book is not a mere Hamlet retread. Whereas Shakespeare’s prince never shuts up, Edgar is silent. Born mute, he cannot speak or even make a vocal sound. To express himself, he uses sign language or writes on paper. But he is particularly skilled at communicating with the dogs his family raises. A fictional breed, the Sawtelle dogs have extraordinary intelligence and intuition. The most beautiful passages in this book are told from the point of view of Almondine, Edgar’s own devoted dog.

Like "Hamlet," this book is rather long. But I found it hard to put down. The writing is gorgeous and the author is a master storyteller. Unlike "Hamlet," this novel is not a masterpiece. There are some unresolved story lines and some plot points just feel wrong. A lot of readers hate the ending, and I can see their point. But all in all, I loved "The Story of Edgar Sawtelle," and I say read it. Then let me know what you think about the ending.


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Debbie    Posted by
Debbie
on 1/9/2009
1:36 PM
 Friday, December 19, 2008

Here in the Northeast, we are being hit with a snowstorm. It's days like this when one longs for sunny climes, palm trees, and clear green seas. Imagine you were floating along and found a bottle bobbing in the water. You open and quickly read it. What does it say? READ asked students this question in a recent issue. Here is a sampling of what we received, via email, not by message in a bottle!

 

By Logan A.

Well, if you have found this bottle you are probably stranded at sea or on a beach somewhere. And is probably your last hope of living or last contact with humanity. This probably won't help you much but I am going to tell you anyway. I am also stranded on an island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

This is a very large island with a volcano in the middle of it. If you see it then you need to do whatever you can to get to it. This island has plenty of fresh water running through it, also it has many fruits and an enormous abundance of wildlife to kill and eat. If you need these things for survival then you need to get here. I have a continuous fire going so if you se smoke then that's the island that I have been stranded on for three years now and it is January 7, 2006. If you are on a beach somewhere then send help. I am ready to come home. I got here after my private aircraft crashed and I was lucky enough to eject myself from the plane. So if you can please help. I have been living of the land for three years and I am sick of it, I need help. Also if you do find me on this island I have found a huge treasure. This treasure is solid gold, copper, silver and bronze. So it is worth quite a bit, I found this treasure in the bottom of a cave on the island. I have collected all of it and have a total of 137 copper coins, 101silver coins, 66 solid gold coins, and 237 bronze coins. Also there is a large silver monument in the shape of a king, which could be 45 feet tall. This is not even counting the 337 bronze bars. They were scattered among the coins  and have been engraved with some form of Aztec writing, which means they are thousands of years old. If you do come and somehow find me and help me back to the United States I will split the profits with you 50-50.

Also I have struck oil in the center of the island, I was digging one day trying to make an animal trap and I stumbled upon oil. I have no idea how much oil costs but I will also split the amount if you find me. To give you an estimation of where I am located, I am approximately 250 miles of the coast of California. I am directly west of Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco according to my compass. If you are stranded I have plenty of food and water for you so don't just float by.

The island can be hard to spot if floating from the north to the island due to the huge boulders which line the northern border of the island. You won't be able to tell there is any island at all until at all until you are almost past it. There are several pelican nests on these boulders. If you see several birds flying around, try to direct yourself right toward them. (You won't crash into them; there is a small beach.) Also beware there are several great white sharks that inhabit the waters. Along with the sharks there are several jagged rocks lining the water which will easily pop and sink a raft. This won't be good because they are stuck right in the middle of the shark infested waters.

Along with half of the profits that I mentioned, I will also give the person who rescues me a five $5,000 cash reward. And I have found a few new species of deer, and a yellow species of turtle which has a soft shell. You will also get credit for finding these animals. I have also discovered a new breed of panther which is purple and I have killed 37 and have saved the fur. This should be worth quite a bit of money to also split with you. When you arrive on the island, I will more than likely be on the north side of the island where the huge boulders are near my fire and the place where I sleep. Beware of the dangerous animals on the island.



By Amanda Curry

Dear hopeful reader,

I've been on this stupid island for quite some time now. I've lived here very alone since the day that the plane crashed. I was on my way to America when out pilot had a severe heart attack, the entire plane filled with hundreds of people came crashing down onto this island. Out of several hundred people I was the one that survived. It's usually always sunny here but when it rains here it pours!

Although it is very beautiful and welcoming here I have no one to make company with me. The island isn't very big I've explored as much as I can. There are no locals--there is no one else here at all. I am stranded on this island working day by day to get through this adventure. My days here are always the same.

I wake up to find fire wood and then I go off to hunt for my meals, which is usually just once a day. Usually for a meal I have fish or maybe a small animal if I am lucky. After hunting I fix my dinner over my fire. Once done with cooking I usually keep adding to the fire just to keep my smoke signals going. For a bed I have burrowed into the sand and laid leaves into it. Intertwining leaves cover me for a pitiful blanket. I really hate it here. I pray every night that I'll just wake up from this horrible dream but I haven't awoken yet. Every day here just makes me feel closer and closer to the end of my life. The nightmare I live is something I never want anyone to ever experience. The only thing that I look forward to each day is going to sleep to dream of my dear family and friends. I hope that my friends and family are praying for me and I hope that no matter what happens they'll make it just fine.

My gorgeous husband will look after my two girls and I know he'll be strong. I try to imagine them living a happy life but it's hard to picture living every minute without them. I miss them so very much. I'm hoping that someday soon I will reunite with them and live my life like I should. My hope is soon to run short and I'm afraid I will go insane. My mind will no longer have control of my every decision and I will have no reason in my mind to attempt to live any longer. So I beg of anyone who reads my pitiful message in a bottle to send me hope and revive my life and bring me home. Life on this island is hell. The only goal I have achieved since lifelessly crashing into this horrid island is that I've pushed myself harder than I ever wanted to, I think of my family everyday to keep myself alive. The terror I suffer through each and every day makes it hard to have faith.

Though I want to live I never know if my family is still alive. They might have died in an accident by now and I never would know but I hope that God keeps his eye on them. When I arrived here my hair was dirty brown and I weighed about 170 pounds, with very pale skin. Since living here I now am getting grey hairs intertwined with my beautiful blonde locks. My skin is now dark and leathery because of the sun beating down on every inch of my body every day for about three months now. I have lost a lot of weight and I believe as of now I'm weighing around 115 pounds. The wrinkles that the sun's vicious rays has caused me makes me seem 10 years older than what I really am.

I am begging my reader to take me away from this place. I will never complain about anything ever again. The experiences I've taken in have taught me so much about who I am and also to be thankful of everything I have in my life. Sometimes I think that I've died and gone to hell for the things I did. I don't believe that hell could be anything worse than this if it's not. I've thought so many things and tried to make myself believe in something else, and the real truth that I know is by far the worst option I've come up with. I don't know how many of these messages I'm going to send. I guess until I run out of paper and bottles. I really anticipate my rescuer to come and save me as soon as you find this. I will praise you forever and there will be a big reward I'm sure for finding me and making sure I make it home safely. Thanks again for opening this up and giving me more hope. I hope to meet you soon.

 


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Alicia    Posted by
Alicia
on 12/19/2008
2:47 PM


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