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<teiheader type="text" date.created="1994/03/15" date.updated="2002/04/05" status="updated" creator="National Digital Library Program, Library of Congress">
<filedesc>
<titlestmt>
<amid type="aggitemid">wpa0-07090406</amid>
<title>[Miss Smith, the lady at the last place]: a machine readable transcription.</title>
<amcol><amcolname>Life Histories from the Folklore Project, WPA Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1940; American Memory, Library of Congress.</amcolname>
<amcolid type="aggid"></amcolid>
</amcol>
<respstmt>
<resp>Selected and converted.</resp>
<name>American Memory, Library of Congress.</name>
</respstmt></titlestmt>
<publicationstmt>
<p>Washington, DC, 1994.</p>
<p>Preceding element provides place and date of transcription only.</p>
<p>For more information about this text and this American Memory collection, refer to accompanying matter.</p>
</publicationstmt>
<sourcedesc>
<lccn></lccn>
<sourcecol>U.S. Work Projects Administration, Federal Writers' Project (Folklore Project, Life Histories, 1936-39); Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.</sourcecol>
<copyright>Copyright status not determined; refer to accompanying matter.</copyright></sourcedesc>
</filedesc>
<encodingdesc>
<projectdesc><p>The National Digital Library Program at the Library of Congress makes digitized historical materials available for education and scholarship.</p></projectdesc>
<editorialdecl><p>This transcription is intended to have an accuracy of 99.95 percent or greater and is not intended to reproduce the appearance of the original work.  The accompanying images provide a facsimile of this work and represent the appearance of the original.</p></editorialdecl>
<encodingdate>1994/03/15</encodingdate>
<revdate>2002/04/05</revdate>
</encodingdesc>
</teiheader>
<text type="manuscript">
<front>
<div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="I07090401">0001</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<handwritten>[?]</handwritten></p>
<p>Accession no.</p>
<p>W 3643</p>
<p>Date received</p>
<p>10/10/40</p>
<p>Consignment no.</p>
<p>1</p>
<p>Shipped from</p>
<p>Wash. Office</p>
<p>Label</p>
<p>Amount</p>
<p>5p</p>
<p>
<handwritten>[?]</handwritten></p>
<p>WPA L. C. PROJECT Writers&apos; UNIT</p>
<p>Folklore Collection (or Type)</p>
<p>Title Employment [Begin]: Miss Smith, the lady at the last place . . .</p>
<p>Place of origin Chicago, Illinois Date 4/26/39</p>
<p>Project worker Grace Outlaw</p>
<p>Project editor</p>
<p>Remarks</p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="I07090402">0002</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<otherid>W36543</otherid></p>
<p>Forms to be Filled out for Each Interview</p>
<p>CHICAGO FOLKSTUFF</p>
<p>FORM A</p>
<p>
<hi rend="underscore">Circumstances of Interview </hi> 
<handwritten>[Employment ?]</handwritten></p>
<p>FOLKLORE</p>
<p>CHICAGO</p>
<p>
<handwritten>430 Words</handwritten></p>
<p>May 18 1939</p>
<p>STATE Illinois</p>
<p>NAME OF WORKER Grace Outlaw</p>
<p>ADDRESS 507 East Oakwood Boulevard</p>
<p>DATE April 26, 1939</p>
<p>SUBJECT Employment</p>
<p>1.  Date and time of interview April 24, 1939</p>
<p>2.  Place of interview - (ISES) Illinois Employment Service</p>
<p>3.  Name and address of informant Overheard in the waiting room of the office by the writer</p>
<p>4.  Name and address of person, if any, who put you in touch with informant.</p>
<p>5.  Name and address of person, if any, accompanying you - None</p>
<p>6.  Description of room, house, surroundings, etc.</p>
<p>The waiting room of the office is in the center of a large airy room around the walls of which are offices used by interviewers. The applicants apply from nine in the morning until three in the afternoon; they discuss everything from personalities to war threats.</p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="I07090403">0003</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>FORM B</p>
<p>
<hi rend="underscore">Personal History of Informant</hi></p>
<p>CHICAGO FOLKSTUFF</p>
<p>FOLKLORE</p>
<p>CHICAGO</p>
<p>STATE Illinois</p>
<p>NAME OF WORKER Grace Outlaw</p>
<p>ADDRESS 507 East Oakwood Boulevard</p>
<p>DATE April 26, 1939</p>
<p>SUBJECT Employment</p>
<p>NAME OF INFORMANT Conversations overheard in the waiting room.</p>
<p>1.  Ancestry - Folk talking were Negroes, obviously of same 
<handwritten>
<hi rend="underscore">ancestry </hi></handwritten>.  
<note>
<handwritten>(?)</handwritten></note></p>
<p>2.  Place and date of birth</p>
<p>3.  Family</p>
<p>4.  Places lived in, with dates</p>
<p>5.  Education, with dates</p>
<p>6.  Occupations and accomplishments, with dates</p>
<p>7.  Special skills and interests</p>
<p>8.  Community and religious activities</p>
<p>9.  Description of informant</p>
<p>10. Other Points gained in interview</p></div></front>
<body>
<div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="I07090404">0004</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>FORM C</p>
<p>
<hi rend="underscore">Text of Interview (Unedited </hi> )</p>
<p>CHICAGO FOLKSTUFF</p>
<p>FOLKLORE</p>
<p>CHICAGO</p>
<p>STATE Illinois</p>
<p>NAME OF WORKER Grace Outlaw</p>
<p>ADDRESS 507 East Oakwood Boulevard</p>
<p>DATE April 26, 1939</p>
<p>SUBJECT Employment</p>
<p>NAME OF INFORMANT</p>
<p>Clerk:  &ldquo;Miss Smith, the lady at the last place we sent you was very dissatisfied with your work.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;How come?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Clerk:  &ldquo;She wrote in and said you worked too slowly and were not very neat with your work.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;Bet she didn&apos;t tell you she didn&apos;t have nothing to eat in the house . . . come tellin me she&apos;s on a diet and caint eat much . . . what&apos;s that got to do with me?  I crawled round over them floors on a empty belly cause I thought she&apos;d least have some coffee in the joint.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Clerk:  &ldquo;She said she&apos;d give you another trial if you promised not to spatter her base-board with the oil mop and leave it dirty.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;Humph!  . . . gimme another trial! . . . what she gonna pay?  . . . never mind, if she didn&apos;t like my work I dont wanta work for her.  She got all she paid for and more.  Aintcha got nothing else?&rdquo;</p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="I07090405">0005</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>FORM D</p>
<p>
<hi rend="underscore">Extra Comment</hi></p>
<p>CHICAGO FOLKSTUFF</p>
<p>FOLKLORE</p>
<p>CHICAGO</p>
<p>STATE Illinois</p>
<p>NAME OF WORKER Grace Outlaw</p>
<p>ADDRESS 507 East Oakwood Boulevard</p>
<p>DATE April 26, 1939</p>
<p>SUBJECT Employment</p>
<p>NAME OF INFORMANT</p>
<p>Clerk:  &ldquo;Not right now, Miss Smith . . . perhaps later today.&rdquo; Miss Smith went back to her seat, grumbling as she went.</p>
<p>Another Incident</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;Hello Mae, . . . d&apos;you hear that?  . . . old woman talking bout I worked too slow.  An chile she didn&apos;t have enough to eat in that house to feed a chinch.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Mae:  &ldquo;You tellin me! . . . I worked for a old hag who give me molded bread, said, &ldquo;Just trim off the mold&rdquo;.</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;The worst that I ever heard was the old hussy who said she didn&apos;t believe in the help eating before they worked cause they got lazy, but I fixed her for that . . . me and the cook stocked up when I left that day.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Mae:  &ldquo;You know something, us colored folks is losing ground every day . . . I been listening to that woman over there in the office and five outa every six calls she answers, wants white only.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;It&apos;s the God&apos;s truth! . . . same way in the papers . . all the adds but a few asking for white only . . . and on jobs where we used to always work too.&rdquo;</p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="I07090406">0006</controlpgno>
<printpgno>3</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>Mae:  &ldquo;Lookit all the hotels . . . aint hardly no colored boys in &apos;em no more and the red caps at the stations . . . aint no such thing as colored folks work no more.&rdquo;</p>
<p> Miss Smith:  &ldquo;I&apos;m gonna get myself a a&apos;phabet job just as soon as I can . . . they just as good and last longer than this private work . . . and you show dont work as hard neither.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Mae:  &ldquo;You got something there, girl . . . my boyfriend&apos;s got one and he aint work but six hours a day and aint never work on Saddiys and Sundays . . . now you know that&apos;s a sender.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  &ldquo;But they aint got no salary much. . . fifty-five dollars a mont.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Mae:  &ldquo;When is you made fifty-five dollars in one mont?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Miss Smith:  Well, come to think of it . . . I show ain&apos;t.&rdquo;</p></div></body></text></tei2>
