Some spelling of names of individuals or places mentioned in the interview are approximations. Additionally, sections that are marked with “inaudible” and a timestamp indicate areas where the transcriber could not understand what was said in the audio. Furthermore, Ethel Dobbins enters the conversation around 0:15:25.
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00:00:00 - Introduction

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Today is March the second, 1991. I’m conducting an interview with Rice Dobbins of Blacksburg, Virginia. Mr. Dobbins, would you give us a brief biographical sketch of your life, your date of birth, your birth place, your education and occupation? And, I guess, in this case, where were you raised by the way? Because you weren’t raised here.
Rice Dobbins: No, I was raised in...it’s called Riner. It’s Montgomery County.
Michael Cooke: Was it Piney Wood?
Rice Dobbins: They called it Piney Wood, yes.
Michael Cooke: So in that section of Riner.
Rice Dobbins: Yes, um-hm.

Keywords: Piney Wood; Riner, Virginia; birthdate; birthplace

Subjects: Montgomery County (Va.)

00:00:57 - Primary Education in Riner, Virginia

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Could you tell us about educational opportunities when you were growing up in Riner? Did they have a school for Blacks in that area?
Rice Dobbins: Yes, sir. They had a school for Blacks.
Michael Cooke: Could you talk about the school and some of the teachers if you can recall them? What kind of school was it? One room school, two room school?
Rice Dobbins: We had a one room school first, and then they built it into a two-room school.

Keywords: educational opportunities; one room school; school for Blacks

Subjects: African American history; Primary Education; Riner, Virginia

00:02:16 - Secondary Education Opportunities - Christiansburg Institute

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Can you remember, in addition to educational opportunities—for instance if you wanted to go on let’s say you wanted to go on and get a high school education, where could you go?
Rice Dobbins: Christiansburg, old Christiansburg Institute.
Michael Cooke: And was it difficult for people in Riner to get there?
Rice Dobbins: Yes, sir, it was difficult.
Michael Cooke: Why was it difficult?
Rice Dobbins: Well, they didn’t have no buses and things when it first opened up. Finally, they got buses to go out to there, too.

Keywords: Christiansburg Industrial Institute; Christiansburg Institute; buses; high school education; secondary education

Subjects: Christiansburg Industrial Institute; Riner, Virginia; Secondary Education

00:04:10 - Work Opportunities for Black Appalachians - Farming

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: What kind of work did people do in that area?
Rice Dobbins: They mostly farmed over there. That’s what they mostly made their living out of was farming over there.
Michael Cooke: Okay, what kind of things did they farm?
Rice Dobbins: They put out corn and wheat, stuff like that. Something that they could raise to eat, you know.

Keywords: corn; farming; wheat; work opportunities

Subjects: Farming; Riner, Virginia; Work

00:06:15 - Growing Up in Riner, Virginia and the Great Depression

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: You grew up during the Depression. Could you talk about how life was in Riner during the Depression?
Rice Dobbins: Well, it was pretty rough during the Depression, just barely could make it. Yes, sir, pretty rough, but we made it.
Michael Cooke: Before the Depression, was there a real problem area in terms of economy before the Depression or was it something that you just kind of weathered the storm?
Rice Dobbins: You just kind of weathered the storm.

Keywords: Depression; Great Depression; farm; farming; labor; storm; tough

Subjects: African American history; Great Depression; Riner, Virginia

00:07:33 - Work Opportunities - Foundry in Radford, Virginia

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Partial Transcript: Rice Dobbins: Several people used to work—there was a place called Extract in Radford, come over there, put them people—the woman I worked with there—at Extract in Radford.
Michael Cooke: Extra?
Rice Dobbins: Extract!
Michael Cooke: Extract?
Rice Dobbins: Yes, sir. Where they drug that wood through and made extract out of them.
Michael Cooke: Oh, I see.

Keywords: Extract; Radford; foundry

Subjects: Iron foundries--Virginia; Radford, Virginia

00:08:33 - Lack of Work Opportunities and Migration

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Riner, is it still about the same size in terms of the population or have a lot of people kind of over the years left the area?
Rice Dobbins: Lord, they done left her dead. It’s a funeral over there now. Only ones I know now is the Packs and Walton, my cousin, and one of Jonah’s boys is all I know over there right now.
Michael Cooke: So, what happened to the community? I mean, what happened to the young people of the Packs and the various other families you mentioned?
Rice Dobbins: They left. See, there wasn’t much there for young people to do to make their money. They all left and went to the cities, just like my boys.

Keywords: Packs; Walton; left; population

Subjects: Migration; Riner, Virginia

00:10:23 - Dobbins' Work Experience - Farming

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Oh. When did you come to Blacksburg?
Rice Dobbins: I came in 1934, but I didn’t get married until 1937. I got married in 1937 the second day of October.
Michael Cooke: When you first came to Blacksburg, what did you do then?
Rice Dobbins: I worked on a farm down in Heths Road, down on Heth’s farm. Mr. Shelton, a white fellow.
Michael Cooke: Oh, that’s what they call Hethwood?
Rice Dobbins: Yes, sir.

Keywords: Dr. F. K. Ford Lucas; Heth farms; Roanoke Street; fox ridge; foxridge; heath farms; heathwood; hethwood

Subjects: African American history; Blacksburg, Virginia; Farming

00:14:36 - Growing up in Riner, Virginia

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: How would you describe when you were growing up in Riner? Were there any whites living in the area or was it just primarily-
Rice Dobbins: There was whites living in our area, sure.
Michael Cooke: Well, how many Blacks lived in the Piney Woods section? I mean, just give an estimate of all the families when it was in its heyday before you left.
Rice Dobbins: Fifty [inaudible 14:47].
Michael Cooke: Fifty, a hundred, a hundred-fifty?
Rice Dobbins: There was seventy-five or one hundred, at least.
Michael Cooke: At least. So seventy-five to a hundred, at least?
Rice Dobbins: Yes, sir. There were a big bunch of them over there until they got older and died out and the young ones left, you know. There was a big bunch.

Keywords: Piney Woods; Riner; Riner, Virginia; families; migration; population

Subjects: African American history; Population; Riner, Virginia

00:16:45 - Ethel Dobbins Introduction

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: You didn’t grow up in that area? You grew up in the Lynchburg area. Why don’t you introduce yourself officially?
Ethel Dobbins: No.
Michael Cooke: Cause you’re on the tape and someone is going to say, who is this lady on the tape?
Ethel Dobbins: Oh, no. I don’t-
Michael Cooke: Go ahead. Is it Ethel?
Ethel Dobbins: Um-hm.
Michael Cooke: Ethel Dobbins. And you are originally from, what?
Ethel Dobbins: Bedford.
Michael Cooke: Bedford?
Ethel Dobbins: Virginia.
Michael Cooke: Virginia. And you married your husband in, what? 1937?
Ethel Dobbins: Uh-huh.

Segment Synopsis: In this part of the interview, Rice Dobbins' wife, Ethel Dobbins, joins the conversation. Ethel was born October 27, 1913, and she was from Bedford, Virginia. Dobbins discussed living in Riner, Virginia, race relations in the area, access to grocery stores, and Black owned businesses in the area.

Keywords: 1937; Bedford; Ethel; convenience stores; grocery stores; race relations; white relations

Subjects: Bedford, Virginia; Grocery Stores; Race Relations; Riner, Virgina

00:18:21 - Race Relations in Montgomery County

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Well, how did people get along with the whites living in the Riner area, outside the Riner area?
Ethel Dobbins: They got along real good-
Michael Cooke: There was no major problems?
Rice Dobbins: No, sir.

Keywords: Childress, Virginia; Ku Klux Klan; Piney Woods; race relations; shopping; stores

Subjects: Childress, Virginia; Ku Klux Klan (1915- ); Riner, Virginia

00:20:57 - Social Life - Baseball

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: What kind of activities did Black people take part in socially? Did they have their own clubs? Especially in Riner, how did people socialize? Did they play baseball or basketball?
Rice Dobbins: They played baseball, I guess. That’s about all they had.
Michael Cooke: Did they have clubs and stuff?
Rice Dobbins: No, sir.

Keywords: baseball

Subjects: African American history; Baseball; Black Social Life; Riner, Virginia

00:21:56 - Dobbins' Children and Their Educational Opportunities

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: Why don’t you talk about your kids? You said they all left. Could you talk about their education and where they went? And why they, perhaps, left this area?
Rice Dobbins: [inaudible 22:03]
Michael Cooke: Oh, you can talk about each one of them.

Keywords: Air Force; Army; C.I.; Christiansburg Institute; Howard Univeristy; education

Subjects: African American history; Christiansburg Industrial Institute.; Secondary Education

00:23:58 - Conclusion

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Partial Transcript: Michael Cooke: That’s good. Okay, now I think we have completed the interview. We’ll try again, unless something else comes up. Okay, we’ll stop on this note.