http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Today is March 13, 1991, and I’m conducting an interview with J. Homer Pack of Riner, Virginia. Mr. Pack, can you give us a brief sketch of your life? Your birthdate, birthplace, education, and occupation?
Homer Pack: October 10, 1910. I was born here in Riner, Virginia. Raised here. Went to school up here and worked in Roanoke for a while, in Blacksburg for a while, and then I went to the Radford Arsenal.
Keywords: Homer Pack; J. Homer Pack; Radford Army Ammunition Plant; Radford Arsenal; Riner, Virginia; biography; birthdate; birthplace; education; occupation
Subjects: African American history; Radford Army Ammunition Plant (U.S.); Riner, Virginia
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment46
Partial Transcript: Homer Pack: As best put it, I’m a brick man.
Michael Cooke: I see.
Homer Pack: But I had a hard time getting back. Now, I’ve been back for a long time but it took a lot of bussing and grading sand to get, but that’s what I ended up at. And I held that position for several years. And I saw quite a bit of changes in my lifetime.
Michael Cooke: For the good or the worse?
Homer Pack: Oh, better. Couldn’t have gotten-
Michael Cooke: Oh, you’re talking about this in the context of a Black person.
Homer Pack: That’s right. Yeah, because I can remember very vividly when around through here, of course, there was no employment here for negroes. You couldn’t get no job doing anything except at farm seeding time you could work on the farm. But to go out here to Christiansburg or Radford [inaudible 01:47] get a job there.
Michael Cooke: No way.
Homer Pack: No.
Keywords: Christiansburg; Radford; brick layer; brick man; farming; work opportunities
Subjects: African American history; Christiansburg, Virginia; Montgomery County (Va.); Radford, Virginia; Riner, Virginia; Work Opportunities
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment110
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Let me ask you about your family, a little bit about your family. Could you give us a little bit of history about your family?
Homer Pack: Well, now my people all carpenters. My daddy and my uncle, they were carpenters.
Michael Cooke: What was your dad and your uncle’s name?
Homer Pack: My dad was Willy Pack.
Michael Cooke: Willy Pack.
Homer Pack: Yeah, and my uncle was Jim Pack, Ollie Pack and Walter Pack.
Michael Cooke: Okay.
Homer Pack: [inaudible 2:30]. My uncle, they went to work out of West Virginia because he would contract. And they all worked together.
Michael Cooke: So, your father would spend a lot of time away from home?
Homer Pack: No, he stayed [inaudible 2:48], and then he came back and stayed here at home. And he farmed but my uncle-
Michael Cooke: Oh, your uncles were the carpenters?
Homer Pack: And he was too. My dad was too.
Michael Cooke: But he just did it on the side?
Homer Pack: Uh-huh.
Michael Cooke: But did he have a farm?
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: How big was the farm?
Homer Pack: Oh, it was about sixty or seventy acres.
Michael Cooke: Oh that’s a good size farm. Sixty or seventy acres. And how many sons and daughters did—oh you didn’t tell me about your mother.
Homer Pack: Oh my mother was a school teacher.
Michael Cooke: What was her name?
Homer Pack: Bessy Pack. She was Bessy Louise.
Michael Cooke: Oh, Bessy Louise-
Homer Pack: Pack.
Michael Cooke: Pack. And where did she teach school?
Homer Pack: Up here. It was called the Pine Woods School.
Keywords: Bessy Louise Pack; Jim Pack; Ollie Pack; Walter Pack; West Virginia; Willy Pack; carpenters; carpentry; farm; farming; teaching
Subjects: African American history; Carpentry; Family Life; Primary School Teaching; Riner, Virginia
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment206
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: The Pine Woods School. Could you describe that school? The size and the number of people who generally went there?
Homer Pack: Well, when I went there, there was sixty-some students there. This was a big color population through here.
Michael Cooke: Well it’s really reduced-
Homer Pack: Oh, my goodness yes. When they tore it down I think they only had ten to twelve children here.
Michael Cooke: When you went there about sixty?
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: Was it a one room or two room school?
Homer Pack: Two room.
Michael Cooke: Yeah, that’s too many for one room.
Homer Pack: Yeah. That’s all we had was two rooms.
Michael Cooke: Was she the only teacher?
Homer Pack: No [inaudible 03:57] when i went to school.
Michael Cooke: I see.
Homer Pack: But we had two teachers there when I went.
Michael Cooke: Do you remember their names?
Homer Pack: Yeah there was a Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Marsh, and Mrs. Woods, a Professor Hanson, Professor Bouldin.
Keywords: Calfee's Knob Mountain; Christiansburg; East Virginia; Mrs. Brown; Mrs. Marsh; Mrs. Woods; PTA; Pine Woods School; Professor Bouldin; Professor Giles; Professor Hanson; Pulaski; Snowville, Virginia; Tim Evers; teachers' commute; transportation; two room; two room school; walking
Subjects: African American history; Montgomery County Public Schools; Primary Education; Riner, Virginia
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment659
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: When you finally got through with the schooling in Riner, did you have an opportunity, or did other Black people like yourself during this time, have an opportunity to go to high school to get more education?
Homer Pack: If you could pay to go to Christiansburg.
Michael Cooke: You had to pay?
Homer Pack: You had to pay to go to high school.
Michael Cooke: Okay, you had to pay the board or what? Or, did you have to pay for transportation?
Homer Pack: You had to pay for transportation. You had to pay the school over there. Now it wasn’t run by the county. See, the county didn’t have a colored high school.
Michael Cooke: Okay at this time, Christiansburg Institute is not a public school.
Homer Pack: No, it was a-
Michael Cooke: Private school.
Homer Pack: Private school owned by the Quakers from Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. And you had to pay. My first cousin up there paid fifteen dollars a month. At that time, fifteen dollars was a heck of a lot of money.
Michael Cooke: Especially for the people who were not all that well to do.
Homer Pack: That’s what I’m saying.
Michael Cooke: That sounds like a lot of money to me for that time period.
Keywords: Angie Jones; Christiansburg Industrial Institute; Christiansburg Institute; Ollie Junior; Ollie Pack; Petersburg; Quakers; Roanoke; Vicker, Virginia; black high school; bussing; chicken farm; clothes; high school; money; poultry farm; secondary education; transportation; tuition
Subjects: African American history; Montgomery County (Va.); Riner, Virginia; Secondary Education
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment1108
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Well, talk about your jobs that you’ve had. Since your education was cut short because of lack of educational opportunities, what about jobs in this area? What kind of jobs did a young man like yourself could hope to get when he got out of school?
Homer Pack: Nothing but farm work. That’s all I could get. See, there were plants in Radford. There was the extract plant. There was a pipe shop. [inaudible 19:07]. To work there. They didn’t have no boys. You had to be a big old rough man to work there.
Michael Cooke: So, even if you were twenty-one, do you think, if you were twenty-one years of age, could you still have gotten a job here? Or would it have been difficult?
Homer Pack: Been difficult. And then you got what the white man didn’t want. Right up here the family of people that live right up here, and their daddy [inaudible 19:40]. The daddy worked at the pipe shop. He worked there for twenty or thirty years. And they had what they called the dinky which run and haul the stuff [inaudible 19:53] to be melted, and it was something like a train, you know. The dinky-
Michael Cooke: Just like they had in the mines. There are dinkies there, too.
Keywords: Edward McDaniel; Extract Plant; Pipe Shop; Radford, Virginia; Second World War; WWII; World War II; World War Two; dinkies; farm work; hard labor; job opportunities; white man's job; work opportunities
Subjects: Montgomery County (Va.); Radford Army Ammunition Plant; Work Opportunities
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment1356
Partial Transcript: Homer Pack: I used to do chauffeur work at that time.
Michael Cooke: Oh, you were doing chauffeur work. From what area to-
Homer Pack: From Blacksburg. I just did friends and family [22:37].
Michael Cooke: Friends and family. What family was that?
Homer Pack: The Heath family [22:42].
Michael Cooke: Oh, yeah the ones that own the farm? The area is now evolved to Heathwood.
Homer Pack: Yeah, all that down there. They had fourteen hundred acres-
Michael Cooke: Who did you work with?
Homer Pack: [inaudible 23:00]
Michael Cooke: Did you work with a number of other Blacks? Like Rice Dobbins or-
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: Amos Barthom [23:03].
Homer Pack: Barthom, yeah. They worked on the farm.
Michael Cooke: Oh, you didn’t work on the farm. You worked as a chauffeur. So, you saw them and waved at them.
Homer Pack: Yeah, go right where they’re working [inaudible 23:15].
Michael Cooke: How’d you get fortunate to get that job? Because that’s better than being a laborer.
Homer Pack: Yes. I don’t know. [Laughs]. [inaudible 23:30] and stayed there seven years. Then I left and moved to the arsenal.
Michael Cooke: Better pay?
Homer Pack: Better pay. When I went to the arsenal, they offered me and I said, well imma try labor. And I had it for maybe a month. But the supervisor there, he watched me all the time. But I don’t know. I’ve always been just slightly hard headed. I can’t help that. That’s just me. And if anybody don’t like it, they don’t have to put up with me, but that’s me. If you say something I don’t like, I’ll be ready to tell you, I don’t like what you said. [Laughs]. I don’t care if you’re as big as this room. I say, I don’t like it. So, he come to me one day, he said Pack, he said, you different than these other boys I got around here. I said, I know I am. I said, I’m not them other boys. This is Pack. [Laughter]. I’m not them other boys. And he said, well you don’t belong. I said, what do you mean? He said, that’s just what I mean. He said, I think I got something different for you. He said, how would you like to go to the [inaudible 25:00]. He said, they need somebody there to work in the shipping department to get [inaudible 25:02] ready, pack them, and ship them out to some flower [inaudible 25:08] he had. He said, there’d be more money for you. Well I’d been around there for so long, but it was like that pipe shop [inaudible 25:18] that had been a white man’s job. I said, yeah I’ll try that. He said, but you report there in the morning. Said, you don’t belong with these boys.
Keywords: Heath Family; Heathwood; Heth family; Hethwood; Homer Sherman; Radford Arsenal; Raphel Milton; Rice Dobbins; Ted Deathridge; Wake Forest, Virginia; brick laying; chauffeur; pay; salary; union; white labor
Subjects: Radford Army Ammunition Plant (U.S.); Work Opportunities; farm tenancy--Virginia.
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2002
Partial Transcript: Homer Pack: No, see, there was a gap in the work at the arsenal. When the war come down, they just shipped them out there. They just shut down.
Michael Cooke: So, after World War II was over, people lost-
Homer Pack: People lost their job at the arsenal. So I-
Michael Cooke: Or was it the Korean War? For you cause-
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: I guess it was the Korean War?
Homer Pack: Yeah. And it went on down. We went to hauling coal.
Michael Cooke: So you did that after the Korean war?
Homer Pack: Yeah. And then I left there then. Well, I kept the truck and started driving. And when the arsenal opened back up, I went back to the arsenal.
Michael Cooke: So, how many years did you work in the arsenal?
Homer Pack: For twenty-six years and seven months.
Michael Cooke: [Laughs] You knew it exactly.
Homer Pack: Yeah. I was glad to get away.
Keywords: Korean War; Radford Arsenal; Second World War; WWII; World War II
Subjects: Korean War; Radford Army Ammunition Plant (U.S.); Work Opportunities
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2066
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Were these racial incidents for the most part?
Homer Pack: Well, I certainly took it that way because I figured all of them was against me. So if you said [Laughs], I come back at it. And by the way, it still works on down. I got a boy over there now and I got a girl. And they’ll tell them, they say, I know you’re a Pack, they said, by the way you talk. I said, you are [inaudible 35:03]. They said we were different, and we are.
Keywords: Arlie Pack; Bob Smith; Elysia Nadien; Ethanael; Hatfield and McCoy Feud; J. W. Pack; Jim Pack; Joseph William Pack; KKK; Klan; Ku Klux Klan; Wake Forest, Virginia; baseball; racial epithets; racial incidents
Subjects: Baseball; Montgomery County (Va.); Race Relations; Social Life; Wake Forest, Virginia
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2454
Partial Transcript: What kind of crops did people grow around here?
Homer Pack: Oh, corn and wheat. You don’t do nothing but corn. Well, now I haven’t planted the hill. I have planted a little garden. The last tenant I had was a white guy. That white guy used to farm for me when I was working at the plant.
Michael Cooke: I see.
Homer Pack: He would raise corn for me on the share. And when he died, that stopped it with me. It costs too much to...If you’re not going in a big way, if you can’t put out two or three hundred acres, don’t fool with a little bit.
Michael Cooke: Yeah, it just wasn’t worth it.
Homer Pack: And not worth it. So, I grass feed or mow hay and I’d feed my cow.
Michael Cooke: Did people also specialize in cattle raising, dairy cattle raising?
Homer Pack: Oh yeah everybody here-
Michael Cooke: Black and white I guess.
Homer Pack: Dairy farm.
Michael Cooke: Yeah because all I saw was dairy farm after dairy farm after dairy farm coming up this way.
Homer Pack: When my boys were growing up, I kept a bunch of cows up here for milk, and I just come out and say, Now, all the milk you milk, you sell it and you keep the money. I’ll feed the cows. I’ll buy the feed and feed the cows. But you got to do the milking for the money. And those little boys, they weren’t always too happy, but it didn’t cost me anything.
Michael Cooke: Good. They bought their own clothes and-
Homer Pack: Yeah, they could make it.
Michael Cooke: Good.
Homer Pack: And they work today, but they would mostly take care of themselves that way.
Michael Cooke: Well, that was a very good lesson you gave them.
Keywords: Childress, Virginia; W. B. Parmer; corn; dairy cattle; dairy farm; farming technology; milling; technology; tractor; wheat
Subjects: Farm tenancy--Virginia.; Farming; Montgomery County (Va.)
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2749
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Where did people shop when-
Homer Pack: Well, there was a big store down there.
Michael Cooke: In Childress?
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: So that’s where generally people did their shopping?
Homer Pack: Most of them did their shopping. Either do that or go to Christiansburg.
Michael Cooke: Either that or Christiansburg?
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: What could you get in Childress? Everything?
Homer Pack: Anything they had in Christiansburg.
Michael Cooke: Anything you wanted?
Homer Pack: Yes.
Michael Cooke: Drugs? You know, non prescription drugs?
Homer Pack: That’s right.
Michael Cooke: Or pop? Soda pop?
Homer Pack: Oh, yeah. And then-
Michael Cooke: Liquor?
Homer Pack: No.
Keywords: Childress, Virginia; Christiansburg, Virginia; Ulysses Molton; drugs; fountain drinks; grocery store; medicine; pop; shopping; soda; stores
Subjects: Childress, Virginia; Grocery Stores; Riner, Virginia
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2836
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Were there any other Black businesses operating in this area? Did any other people who lived in Pinewood have a convenience store, or cut hair, or did something on the side like that?
Homer Pack: No. No. My daddy and her daddy too, they had a blacksmith shop.
Michael Cooke: So, they had a blacksmith shop?
Homer Pack: Yeah. Yeah, and then, of course, as I told you about the [inaudible 47:40] they was busy, and take the time to [inaudible 47: 43] over to West Virginia. My uncle, he had a contract there, and he built thirty-two houses. He had one contract and built thirty-two houses. That was the biggest contract that I can recall that he had. I remember that.
Michael Cooke: And he lived in this area?
Homer Pack: Yeah. He lived right up there with my dad.
Michael Cooke: What was his name?
Homer Pack: Jim Pack.
Michael Cooke: Jim Pack. So, he was a contractor? Did he have his supplies and everything in this area, building supplies?
Homer Pack: Just his tools.
Michael Cooke: Just his tools? He never had anything like that.
Homer Pack: Well, now you take that church down in Radford, Zion Hill Baptist Church. Now, I was just a boy when I went there. He remodeled that church for them.
Michael Cooke: Was that a white church or Black church?
Homer Pack: It was a Black church.
Michael Cooke: And he remodeled it?
Homer Pack: Um-hm.
Michael Cooke: Is that church still standing?
Homer Pack: It’s still there.
Michael Cooke: Oh. I’m familiar with First Baptist-
Homer Pack: On Virginia Street?
Michael Cooke: Yeah. I didn’t know there was another one, another Black church.
Homer Pack: Yeah, that’s out there on West Rock Road. You go to-
Michael Cooke: On Rock Road, okay.
Homer Pack: You go down and turn back on [inaudible 48:46] street.
Michael Cooke: Yes. No, I don’t go there. I’m familiar with it. I go to another church in Blacksburg, but I’ve been through the area. And my wife, I think, went there one time to a service. I actually haven’t been there, but my wife did.
Homer Pack: Now what church in Blacksburg? Is that on Clay Street?
Michael Cooke: No, the one on Penn Street. St. Paul AME.
Homer Pack: Oh, really?
Michael Cooke: Yeah. Yeah.
Homer Pack: Good.
Keywords: Black businesses; Black church; Blacksburg, Virginia; Clay Street; Jim Pack; Penn Street; Radford, Virginia; St. Paul AME; West Rock Road; Zion Hill Baptist Church; blacksmith shop
Subjects: Black Businesses; Blacksburg, Virginia; Churches; Montgomery County (Va.); Radford Virginia
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment2974
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Well, let's see. Let me ask you a few other things. How would you describe race relations in terms of during the times they had desegregation in the schools? Of [Virginia] Tech and things of that nature. What was it like for people who were Black, the best you recall? Off the tape, you mentioned about Charlie Yates, and that you were familiar with some of the experiences that the first Black students endured. And also, you mentioned off the tape, too, about an unfortunate Black who went on campus and was chased by some of the cadets. A so called offense on his part.
Homer Pack: [Laughs]. That was [inaudible 50:09] that they cut the stripes off his pants.
Michael Cooke: How did he get those pants?
Homer Pack: Some of the cadets gave them to him. They were lenient. From graduating just had [inaudible 50:34] and he’d be nice to them. And they told him they could have them. They cut the stripes out [long pause] Once, I recall when I was in Blacksburg. Have you ever been to Merrimac?
Michael Cooke: I’ve heard about Merrimac, and I’ve never heard one good thing about it. [Laughter]. I’ve never heard one good thing about Merrimac.
Homer Pack: I was out riding one day and I went down there. There used to be a railroad crossing down there, and you turn and go right back up by and come back on to what is [U.S. Route] 460, now. And they had an old country school there. And it was right on the railroad. And I turned up there and there’s a whole bunch of kids out there, and they hollered to the—and said, we’d better get in the house. It’s about to rain and here comes the dark cloud [Laughter]. I mean, I didn’t pay them any mind. They’re little kids like that. I went to Merrimac here this past fall. Got over there....I don’t know. You never was raised in the country?
Michael Cooke: No.
Homer Pack: You don’t know nothing about country either?
Michael Cooke: Not much.
Homer Pack: But I like gingerbread, homemade gingerbread. I love it. But you have to have homemade molasses to make it.
Michael Cooke: Right, that’s true.
Homer Pack: And this guy, he makes molasses. And I knew his son, and I said, when you’re dad going to make that molasses? He said, he’s making them now. He said, in fact he got a bowl to put on today. I said, I’ll walk down there and get me some. So, I went on down to his place down there.
Michael Cooke: Was he a white person?
Homer Pack: Oh yeah. And, of course, this is in the last two or three years. Things have changed in Merrimac.
Keywords: Amos Boffman; Black students; Charlie Yates; Merrimac, Virginia; Radford Army Ammunition Plant; Radford Arsenal; Rice Dobbins; U.S. Route 460; Virginia Tech; cadets; fighting; molasses; moonshine; race relations; tolerance
Subjects: Desegregation; Merrimac, Virginia; Montgomery County (Va.); Race Relations; Radford Army Ammunition Plant; Virginia Polytechnic Institute
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment3432
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Let me ask, I guess, one last question. Two questions. Why did so many Blacks leave this area? Because you mentioned at one time, in the beginning of the interview, that you could have sixty or more students in a two room school building.
Homer Pack: That’s right.
Michael Cooke: And by the end of the time that you were around here, you saw it dwindle to probably a dozen people in a two room school building.
Homer Pack: Well, they cut it back to one room.
Michael Cooke: And they cut it back to one?
Homer Pack: Couldn’t get enough children there.
Michael Cooke: What happened to the community?
Homer Pack: Well, everybody as you...started to leave here to get to high school. They’d have to ride the bus to Christiansburg. When you got out of high school, you’d be back in that same old rut. Where you going?
Michael Cooke: For the lucky few who got employment in the Radford Arsenal, that was great. But what happened to those who didn’t get it?
Homer Pack: Well, see, at Radford Arsenal the fresh start wasn’t there. So we had nothing. So we wanted to get out like one man I knew, you see, he left and went to Washington.
Michael Cooke: And that’s right. He worked there for...he said twenty-five years, I think.
Homer Pack: Yeah.
Michael Cooke: And what about other people in the community?
Homer Pack: They all left. Some went to Washington. Some to New York. Some to West Virginia. Just [inaudible 58:47].
Michael Cooke: There just wasn’t much employment?
Homer Pack: Unh-uh.
Michael Cooke: And I guess farming got tougher for small farmers.
Homer Pack: Well, it did, and you got so...[inaudible 58:56]. One of the big man, too, out here...this guy around here, he got four hundred acres. I think he and his wife. He don’t have nobody. He doesn’t need nobody. You get a machine to do-
Michael Cooke: Get to do what you do.
Keywords: Black population; Copper Hill; James Sanders; New York; Radford Army Ammunition Plant; Radford Arsenal; Randall Sanders; Washington; Willis, Virginia; farming; migration; small Black farmers; small farmers
Subjects: Farming; Migration; Montgomery County, (Va.)
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment3838
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: You started to talk about that one of the problems that Black cattle men had in this area is that they couldn’t get a lot of land?
Homer Pack: No.
Michael Cooke: Why was that?
Homer Pack: Well, now when I was a kid, just before my time here, they owned it all. But then times were real tight, and they could make more money. Most of them would go to West Virginia and work. Now there were lots of people down there. He had two or three hundred acres of land, but then she went to West Virginia. And they let the land grow up. And then when we came back, he cleaned out the land [inaudible 1:04:42] but he went to West Virginia to work.
Michael Cooke: Doing what kind of work?
Homer Pack: In the mines.
Michael Cooke: In the mines.
Homer Pack: Making big money. But he wouldn’t take his kids in the mines. Some of them would drive down in there [inaudible 1:04:53] To go into farming, you had to buy this, had to buy that.
Michael Cooke: Just couldn’t make ends meet?
Homer Pack: That’s right.
Michael Cooke: And be competitive?
Homer Pack: That’s right.
Michael Cooke: Was the other, larger operations, were so commercial and had the resources.
Homer Pack: That’s it.
Michael Cooke: Did people have problems getting loans from the banks and creditors to try to buy more land?
Homer Pack: Well to tell you the truth, it was bad for both White and Black. I’ll be honest about that. I was talking to a guy here the other day, and he was talking about—Well, he asked me how I’d been. I said, all right. And he said, Pack, said, I got to admire you. He said, you stuck with it here. I said, yeah. He said, now when I come here, he’d came here from down below Lynchburg. And he said, you know, I went over to the bank [inaudible 1:05:56-1:06:07]. He finally got his house paid off. And said that, I wanted to borrow twenty-five hundred dollars. And he said, you know, they wouldn't lend me that money to save my life.
Michael Cooke: Did he, in your opinion, really have the resources, the collateral, to really-
Homer Pack: I think he did, but he wasn't one of the favorite sons. If you were in this circle, born in this circle, you could get anything.
Michael Cooke: If you were born in Black or born in White?
Homer Pack: Well, Black people could borrow money. I went to the bank once. I had thirty-five cents in my pocket and I wanted thirty-five hundred dollars. Well, [he said], what you going to put—[I said], I got me. That’s all I got, but I need that thirty-five hundred dollars. He said, well you can get it.
Michael Cooke: And so you got it?
Homer Pack: I got it.
Michael Cooke: And you paid it back?
Homer Pack: Oh, yeah. I got it when the mines opened up, I wanted to buy a new truck. No need to go to business with someone right then. Calm down. Just get ready to do business.
Keywords: Black cattle men; First United Bank Christiansburg; Paul Foster; interest; land; loans; mines; property
Subjects: Farming; coal mines and mining
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment4352
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: What did people do around here for social life? I mean, I know they worked hard. That’s coming across loud and clear. What did you do for entertainment? I mean, what did people when you were growing up as a boy and as a man? What did you do for entertainment? We know you played baseball. What else?
Homer Pack: Played baseball. Well now the church, everybody down here belonged to it. And the church had some kind of [inaudible 1:12:57] always.
Michael Cooke: Always. What was the name of the church?
Homer Pack: Mt. Airy Methodist Church.
Michael Cooke: Mt. Airy Methodist Church. Is it AME or?
Homer Pack: Unh-uh.
Michael Cooke: Just a plain methodist?
Homer Pack: Um-hm. United Methodist.
Michael Cooke: Who was the minister or ministers?
Homer Pack: Oh good Lord.
Michael Cooke: That might take all day to name all of them.
Homer Pack: [Laughs] You right. I can’t even remember. In fact, we had [inaudible 1:13:19] from Alabama [inaudible 1:13:27] two pounds of whiskey came up from Tennessee, you name it.
Michael Cooke: Oh one other thing, did you have dances? What kind of music did people play? Would it be considered hillbilly or soul? What did the people listen to?
Homer Pack: I don’t know. I never was a dancer although after when I bought the school building and we would have a guy from Martinsville come up and he had a whole band and play and people [inaudible 1:14:10] get dances. But that was about it.
Michael Cooke: Okay, what was his name? [long pause] He was from Martinsville. What kind of music did he play? I mean how would you style it?
Homer Pack: Now you know, I’m not a music fan. I just knew I would make extra dollars [Laughs].
Michael Cooke: Oh you were just trying to make-
Homer Pack: [inaudible 1:14:40]
Michael Cooke: What kind of instruments did he-
Homer Pack: Oh, he had a piano player, and he had a saxophone player, banjo, and a guitar, drums.
Michael Cooke: And a banjo? So, it was kind of hillbilly?
Homer Pack: Yeah, kind of. The only [inaudible 1:15:02] coming out through the country.
Michael Cooke: And what was this place?
Homer Pack: Right up here in-
Michael Cooke: This is your place? So you used the old school building?
Homer Pack: Um-hm.
Keywords: Martinsville; Mt. Airy Methodist Church; banjo; baseball; church; dances; entertainment; guitar; hillbilly; music; piano; saxophone; social activities; social life
Subjects: Montgomery County (Va.); Riner, Virginia; Social Life
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment4525
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Okay, let me ask one other question, and it was going back to something I started off early and that was to Tim Mallory and Ray… was it… I’m looking back, Ray Taylor. Could you tell a little bit about those two individuals? Because they seemed to be very active in terms of trying to improve the educational opportunities for people.
Homer Pack: Yeah, Tim brought the first bus over that was running through here for the Christiansburg school. Right through here and into Radford and then back to C.I.I. Tim and I guess Ray [inaudible 1:16:03]
Michael Cooke: Now, Tim was from what area? [telephone rings]
Homer Pack: Christiansburg.
Michael Cooke: Oh, Christiansburg.
Homer Pack: Excuse me.
Michael Cooke: We’ll have to stop.
[Break in recording]
Michael Cooke: We were interrupted. You were talking about Tim Mallory. Where was he from?
Homer Pack: I think Tim was from Alabama or Mississippi. He came here from down south somewhere.
Michael Cooke: He was not a-
Homer Pack: A redneck? No, he’s not a Virginian.
Michael Cooke: He was not a Virginian. What occupation did he have?
Homer Pack: He owned a cleaning shop. Cleaning, pressing shop.
Michael Cooke: In what location?
Homer Pack: Christiansburg.
Michael Cooke: Christiansburg. And he really helped educationally this area in terms of by providing a bus.
Homer Pack: A bus. That’s right. He made a little money here. Each person had to pay a little something to ride the bus.
Michael Cooke: But it was kind of a business, but it was also a service.
Homer Pack: That’s right.
Michael Cooke: It was a good service for-
Homer Pack: It was a good help.
Michael Cooke: Because you didn’t have a way if it wasn’t for-
Homer Pack: That’s right.
Michael Cooke: His idea?
Homer Pack: That’s it.
Michael Cooke: What about Ray Taylor?
Homer Pack: Ray, more or less, operated out of Blacksburg.
Michael Cooke: And what was his line of business?
Homer Pack: He run the cleaning and pressing shop for VPI.
Michael Cooke: And did he live in-
Homer Pack: He lived in Blacksburg.
Michael Cooke: Was he from this area?
Homer Pack: He came from Tazewell, [Virginia].
Michael Cooke: From Tazewell? And he was, from what I could find, he was interested in educational opportunities for Blacks too.
Homer Pack: Yeah, Ray was a fine fellow. Good [inaudible 1:17:35]. He had some [inaudible 1:17:41].
Michael Cooke: Nice homes. What area did he live?
Homer Pack: Up there towards-you know where Piedmont pool is?
Michael Cooke: Yes. Yes.
Homer Pack: Well, he lived up in that area.
Michael Cooke: Oh Nellies Cave?
Homer Pack: No.
Michael Cooke: But I know where Piedmont is.
Homer Pack: Piedmont is where there’s a church. Well he lived back down there near the church up there.
Michael Cooke: Okay. I know where you’re talking about.
Homer Pack: He lived up in there. He had a boy and girl. His wife died and then Ray died. Ray died first and then his wife. [inaudible 1:18:25] a girl, a very pretty girl and I think she left and went up north, maybe. And soon, I found her and her husband split up and I don’t know if she came back to this part of the country. [inaudible 1:18:45]
Segment Synopsis: Tim Mallory and Ray Taylor were members of a civic association called the County-Wide League, which helped achieve educational improvements for Black Appalachians. More information regarding these individuals or the association can be found in Michael Cooke's paper, "Race Relations in Montgomery County, Virginia 1870-1990, which was published in 1991 in the Journal of Appalachian Studies Association.
Keywords: Christiansburg, Virginia; County-Wide League; Nellies Cave; Piedmont Pool; Presser; Pressing shop; Ray Taylor; Tim Mallory; bus; educational opportunities for Blacks
Subjects: County-Wide League; Educational Improvements; Educational Opportunities; Montgomery County Public Schools
http://oralhistory-dev.cloud.lib.vt.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DMs1991-019_JHomerPack.xml#segment4739
Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Okay, well I guess on that note, I think we’ve covered most of the ground and I’d like to thank you for your participation.
Homer Pack: Well I’m glad you came by and talked to me.
Michael Cooke: I’ve learned a lot and enjoyed a lot. Thanks a lot.
Homer Pack: Yes, sir.
[Break in interview]