Interview no. 849 - DigitalCommons@UTEP
Transcription
Interview no. 849 - DigitalCommons@UTEP
University of Texas at El Paso DigitalCommons@UTEP Combined Interviews Institute of Oral History 7-4-1994 Interview no. 849 Jane H. Bright Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.utep.edu/interviews Part of the Oral History Commons, and the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Interview with Jane H. Bright by John R. Moore, 1994, "Interview no. 849," Institute of Oral History, University of Texas at El Paso. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Institute of Oral History at DigitalCommons@UTEP. It has been accepted for inclusion in Combined Interviews by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UTEP. For more information, please contact lweber@utep.edu. I'NIVERSTTY OF TEXAS AT EL PASO ORAL HISTORY INSTITUTE BrG BEND NATIONAL PARK ORAL HISTORY PROJECT, Lgg4. TNTERVTEFEE/ADDRES8s Jane H. Bright, Tx. 79925. IIilIERVIEB DAIE: JuIy 3309 Boshan Dr., El paso, BY: John R. Moore 4, 1994 LENGTE OF INTERVIEf,: t hour, 10 minutes/English SuuuARy: Jane Henderson Bright was born and raised in the Maravillas creek area, north of what is now Big Bend National Park. She is related to the Roy and Hallie stitlwell family. resided in the Big Bend/Black cap area from 1918 until world II. She War Bright offers perspective on famity rife and hardships in the Big Bend area. Her farnily once owned 14 sections of rlnch Iand and controlled an additional L4 sections of Texas school land in the Maravillas creek and Black Gap area. Her father was a victirn of the spanish influenza epidemic Lnat kilred many Americans in L9L9-2o. She relates her knowledge of her motherts struggler ds a widow, to raise seven chirdren and maintain the fanily ranching operation. Bright provides a chitdfs perspective on growing up in the area, particularly during the diffilurt economic tin6s or tne Great Depression. she discusses riving in Marathon and Alpine. she recarrs her motherrs recolrectioni of rife in the Big Bend during the Mexican Revolution, and she laments the depreJsion-era purchase and sraughter, by the u.s. government, of hel familyrs few remaining cattle Bright.acknowledges a social segregat,ion between the arears Anglo and Hispanic communities. she describes in detail her raml]y home and.her parentsr earrier cow-camp residence in the Rosillos Mountains. fe male to ear n an air cr aft pilotr s . B r i g h t w a s th e fi rst certification at sur Ross state college. she enlistedl in tn" early stages of l{orld War II, in the WornentsAir service project (wAsPs), washed out, and transferred to the wornenArmy corps. she has been a widow since teacher. Lgsz. she is a retired Er paso schoor NOTE: Brightts interview contains sensitive comments concerning her farniry and its lcinship with the stirlwerl family. she suspects brands on her flrniryrs cattle were changed to the Stillwel1 brand, and she -lleges noy stilrwell took advantage of her motherrs poverty iir tne purchase of eight sections of Henderson farnily tand. Sh e a l so g u e sti o n s the ver acity of HaII Stillwell' s pubrished crairns to having honesteaded the area around today's stilrwell store. aright says the stillwelr store is rocated on a portion of the Henderson farniryrs former ranch property. Despite her criticisms, relations with the StilIweII Bright still family. maintains crose Big Bend National Park Oral History Project .fane H. Bright By ,John R. Moore July M: lThis is al Big Bend oral ,Jane Bright 4, L994 History project interview with Mrs. of El Paso, Texas by,John Moore [on] ,Ju1y 4, 1,994. Mrs. Brightr |ou're you to begin by telling'us and about your a native family of the Big Bend area. T, d ]ike about where you were born and when and your recollections of growing up in the Big Bend area. B: Wel1, my family fourteen lived sections. guess in all The land Iand. fourteen sections, which my mother and father. He was the only M: His name was? B: ,fohn sanf ord grandfather of sections was twenty-eight like My fat.her's the country, and we managed sections, the ranching siscers. his business. that. his and the partner, and then married about people were from Tennessee. And when he came t.o west he wanted to ]earn had a partner a good bit son of a merchant and he had three Henderson. r school l_and or you a rittre to tel-I not want to take up the sLore business His father part that we owned fourteen But., anyway, r'd decided that in and we had [Creek] over Texas, is checkerboarded with railroad spread. on Lhe Maravillas widow. father r think, r Lhink rexas he He did was in. murd.ered my that,s the way it worked, but, anyway, became a cowboy and then managing or being ranches down in the Papa came to a job he got foreman of staunch church-goer, her was her name. That's Camellia's girls. is also a sister children, on the train B: My mother. M: He and Granny second husband. L:-zz:-e Stillwell Now, Llzzie was nine. and Mr. She was the Lo send Camellia to them. We11, A1ice, Stillwe11, have any ehildren who one of the at that. time, so And they sent her vour mother? They sent her on Lhe train from visiting Stil1well's stole Somebody had Henderson, who had several horse to take a horse the ranches, rap said to the penitentiary stealinq to W.T. up Christian a home near a penitentiary. in brothers So he was sent on a stretcher Aunt Al-ice had taken country. Did this He was a real W.T. Henderson and his wife, Henderson and Aunt Alice. rap. mot.her. And I on a stretcher. And Camel-1ia is Roy Henderson,s And my mother had tubercul-osis. they didn't M: Science Henderson Beevill-e. was in. of Roy St.i11we11, Alice they asked LLzzie in sister. when my mother when she got a divorce older W.T. He was my grandmother's was Roy Stillwell's a divorce lived fat.her My grandmother el-dest of three W.T. but he was also a playboy. daughters. Boyce got Texas and he the Rosill-os. know what business had three with one of Now, my mother and her family don't west occur in and skipped for it, he would for One of so W.T. take the two years. the Biq Bend area? the B Big M In B I Bend area. Marathon or... know exactly don't quite young when Al-ice went to penitentiary, the wit.h lv. rvo ra + i r .n. nr + ir rnvn Alice Aunt took wenL out mother would M This B I would in so it so then they Antonio to was the Excuse me. B Yes, vaIley, As weII. what B: in Big is Mrs. Incarnate Word. Mr. them of now on the in hostess got was a ft religion. That. the noticed Foundation. Science. was And was so before my WeI1... Bright/ what. years? approximately 1885 because my mot.her was born 1885 and 1895. and they sent her Right. to Okay, school in San And she met Papa when she was home town Rosillo for some business. He Ranch. ranch And one of And then or ,.i.rr.u Henderson's was. the Aunt and atmosphere out Society come to he'd W.T. the found and be between Mother was in them was he had a farm Rosillos? the in the up here in Fort the Paso valley. Of course, now Big Bend. she t-. ,' h. 'r i s t i a n raised EI and wit.h them. live would Mountains. Davis house Christian I guess of one a boarding j-t was before foreman M was Science been, say that 1885, up when he at t lra anyway, But, I was while hostess nf to have on vacation. M: the details. Henderson loveliness the knew the this. told st.ayed never f W.T. t.he Christian member of t ho was visit and acquainted i n I she harmony where. Yes, the Rosillos Bend Nationalthat,'s right. are in the northern part of Park. Quite a ways by wagon to the rail-road. M: At Marathon? B: At Marathon. f And, of But, anyway, house course, Rosillos their in roads had to be cattle She was I think. with on And he They had to in Wil-son's was he her days. 1zou know. Jim and took An arbor five trail-sr about in down the on a camp fire cook poles i-s four stalks TechuguiTTa the took married some TechuguiTTa Lop of it seventeen was an arbor. shelter some debris were Mother Alpine. older, ground the me like a cow camp. to only seems to and Papa years twelve the in there it mean, st.uck across Laid and was her That stalks. and home. Well, Mother with rode about chil-dbirth, birth first. pregnancy ended in get she had to And so, Papa decided stay in What year B: Stop the were thing a horse the best in and have she had four seven but they field while miscarriage. this and more miscarriages for thing the her her t.o do would be and married? I'11 have to They were married again) had Johnny, that me that and so she told out anything cow camp. M: they of know She didn't a miscarriage that after then started control, down off I guess, Papa. she living changed next. girl and then the and then Tom Henderson figure. in children: her 1902. Jean, name to,Jean, was Camellia was born in (taping Camellia who was and John, christened was born and she was born 1908, and Jim and stopped in in l-904, 1905, was born in 1-911, and then Dol1y, M: Let me clarify. your raised your father's M: No relation? B: No relati-on, wel-l, And one was for there. living That M: How long did B: f M: Quite very Henderson, and his who wife. good friends in And and papa in or havin- nnt rr a home? dog run between and the the f irst arbor obtain and eating was t.heir live the rooms and the was built they in eventually cooking So that don't about had two rock sleeping. W.T. Henderson? were very, your parents they about f r o m W .T . talking arbor...did 1,916, and .Tane, 1919. a number of years, buL they l-earned a 1ot B: talking name was also A coincidence. You were We're mother for B: M: I9L4, and Stanley, other Rosil]os them. one was for and it,s still home. the Rosilfos? know. a while? a Quite And while the Buttrill-s' were their closesL neighbors. M The Buttrills' B Lucius M Who'd B of But.tril-1 be the Tom camellia think then would and Margaret grandparents Leary. And eventual-ly a ranch sold But.tril_1. of then was my mother. Papa bought they be... Tom Leary papa after After they up near it to of Alpine and moved today? camell-ia away from movedthere r Twenty-Mi1e twindl mil-l- and Combs and then papa moved down t.o the Maravillas. M: where you were born? And that's Yes. And, I think, Do11y, Stanley, M: Tel1 your Papa died moved the three orphanage and Grandmother, Your oldest B Yeah. M Did your B No. the the four die to within of San Antonio older of nat.ural and it ship kids your home and and put us in scattered. the black an Ltzzy, One got a job and one just sheep of ran the sick driving on the t.rail Chambers Hotel family causes or accidental? was during prescribe Papa was sick And we had a Mexican family and t.he ranch a couple of days. while But there one parenL - i-nfluenza him Worthington aspirin. So and they took that. took care she was gone and he died during that touched everybody in Marathon; the town with Spanish And Doctor except Mother that the a herd of cattle, and somebody carried in Marathon. know how to do anything influenza of to a herd of cattle, He got her to town. the t.here: brother? somebody came and told of born he was in his. . . Marathon didn't. were months o1d and Mother He was considered father epidemic. was eighteen l-itt.l-e klds He was taking into kids recol-lections took two of them. while M to earliest when I guess. I family three was locat.ed on the Maravil-Ias. where it wild, last the and I. me about Well, He bought a ranch from George Mi1ler. it t.ime the left Spanish the majority M: That would have been durinq p,. Yes. M You were born B It M 1918, 19... B WelI, in what year, after was right I was eighteen Yes, that Bright? so it months oId, in Right Is that there were a lot So there time? must have been in 1-920 riqht? would be correct. Or ll9l2t. M: Mrs. that World War I. or between 1,919 and 1920. M: World War I at of someplace. deaths in from the Aunt Hal-Iie Marathon Spanish influenza? B: yes. Yes, Roy was even sick. And Uncle Unc1e Roy t.o the Buttrills'. ranch is Leary's M: Marathon, she took uh-huh. Roy, Sr. t.o health. miles I t.hink south of Marathon. she had one child to the Buttril-Is' Aunt Hal1ie Uncle Roy that tell-s and they me that. they miles the to f ive or ranched and store stopped Maravillas, miles in the Black ranched right Roy, and nursed him back even tefl- didn't our headquarters Where Hallie was four s headquarters . Gap area and in Dove Mountain around there. before ranch when Papa moved the f rom Roy Stil-lwell-' was our land. just then, Papa had died. Now when we moved to the Maravillas, family up where Tom now. about fifteen That's They were living took area and we has her trailer That was our horse pasture. you go through He park And it Dog Canyon and t.hen twenty- eight north sections and east. go back to W.T. for Let's San Antonio the in a minute. for orphanage a couple moved back to Marathon and we lived year and then give me to o1d, we would and then rented. always Being at heaven. the with kids never that It healed. with us, lived a stranger never And only dol-l-s, ride would visit older the in three stick sad horses, It. was three they was It. was And the in our family. between the four would stay during t.hey never anyway, kids, four There was o1der and us and we didn't older go skinny with the Stillwell- knit. him, than on. t.he ranch so he was there To this But, went They would come and visit, s j-tuation. are gone. And we And that but ones They resented one of the four t.he ranch September. family. ever, visiting was penetrated Alright, I must have been summer at at the ranch, t.he three was a The other us. you, in the t.hree younger kids. why. our ranch. owned a home. tell the school we would move to town to Mother And you asked summer. of us again as a family. was like a wall six- people Jim would live with it or I'11 only summer, but Iived five years town during Stanl"ey and Do1ly and f were so closely us. the of I can remember is- move back ranch, the during recollection We never we were the oldest ranch recollection years about six but the my earliest the earliest Iike at in we stayed in After day kids is it. dipping, ride living. play paper horses, and t.hey would visit good meal-s of beans a day. was never st.ill- we would know (chuckl-es) w€ with we didn't know the difference. carried the our water, We didn't And we could our house. see a trail of rrMamma! Yonder comes a car!rr That was great that we would Iived entertainment So we did because would except Stanley did, I as dirt. rea11y bad. mean, the sdy, rrNo. You can't always, "We' 11 resourceful, Stanley eventually, Civil-ian of M: the and made us Conservation fndian Now Stanley Lodge is feel dropped Corps. at an older didn't I of which high He was in Fort Davis. or younger and we got school and know we were poor heard Came]lia afford Very secure, out high 1932 and I was high never We can't see. 'l and who the Depression reaIIy didn't. have that. wai-t I was in until went. to We stilI kids was greaL. in roomers and boarders. And, eventually, IaIso] . came on really, f and say, Green, so we moved to Alpine college and kids. a rooming house so Mother coul-d take to house be so seldom Charlie from Marathon in ready to go inLo high school, And Do11y went it rub had our and we would And that going back and forth had graduated Dolly school. a the hill across road and the Stillwell this We all- (chuckles) people, see other up Lhe road, l-ook out coming down the dust and we fed We had a salt chores and we woul-d have l-ots of company. behind And we and washed on was hard work. that think outhouse, eggs, the was good. that and we had an outdoor and gathered chickens, board. We thought it. " It optimistic, was good. school- and joined the brother? very ground was very Wel}, the work B: stanley is After between Dol1y the emergency graduated from I right think, sixteen- was high she or school, summer and winter, a job so r got my lunch l-it.t]e for cl-erk the college boys Copeland,s Marat.hon, Probably. B: Honey, f rom cal-I honey. and pay I malnutrition. christian science f was ci-tat.ions the f rom the high a day and three working one of f ice. And a us: going to as a file bedroom And we get of in schoor- now and and Dol1y,s rent an t.o three a hundred-pound papa Borl-and gave us a great big in can of- Twentw-f irre crallenJ got his waffles Dol]y society second of the high myself . " cents house, ro wasn't Mot.her put. us And f'm Post Master, stanley on wpA fifty was go ,,1,11 support Bar, r I either And it and and, And r had gone to out rent. the developed and our this? lived And can wel-l, a job. house. who was the do you M: t.hat f l-our of Do1ly a bar, court school- for rent st.anley's have high years. Alpine. and r. in from three a month she doesn't at in doll-ar Do1ly, college. what Ed Neville one point |ou baby. came back us at " working the left so I said, as a waitress a job he has for second. to stanley Janer yourseLf. of my life, fift.een Stanrey, sack you can support period Mother 'Now, said, the we]1, graduated f college enjoyable He's over, school. after and and me. at and honey. and r were in Alpine. reader. textbook meafs Do1ly, the readers she was the we would and the copeland's Bibl-e. take first turns And Dollrz Bar I and guess, of the read.er reading started while fainting over place her in (chuckles) would keep Uncle W.T. the ladies reading her part Henderson, That Dolly helped B We were able perking to congregation but So, obviously, That's At B Yes. job there her f l-oor. and I to Uncle Bi11y, was a need, Don Adam's Mercantile just st.opped about asked have so he for us. read for And Do11y st.arted faint.ing ten us and they your waffles. in on us our read; to could t.hree association during the congregation. the rest of I the have done a much better years. with Christian Science Aunt Alice? through And I'm Mother. still a Christian Wel-l-, Uncle Bi1ly So Do11y graduated that. I was in a no-win situation. realized M We1l, I t.ry to abide by the basics. Scientist. from and they from your right, t.he on food. We had we must originat.ed IJ buy was adults job, mine. that at buy more than why know out step a lot. service. don't and account be woul-d be bringing realized (chuckles) up church to able would she just And r would service. Some of a charge You were having and established M M we were college. Sul Ross? And she in Ysl-eta- sent with her meager, she sent. Stanley to meager she got salary- Durham Business Coll-ege a in San Antonio. M And she was teaching B At Ysleta. And at St.anley Ysleta? was 11 working at a job and going to business col-lege, collegeput and me in school, business for tr. It M: Downtown? B: Uh-huh, on Oregon, College for was in the off College six of for scoop of ice cream. my boyfriend Ault I year sending to for and I a Dr. AuIt Ault it ,' I was for of of the every f She seem like I2 took 1ived t.he Business Hilton Hotel a month, and a ride and a nicke1 everyday. save for for a And then I worked eighty for dollars. cal_]ed him at the end of and he said, "No, Jane. a raise." And I said, my 1andlady, and I,m working I was a nickel night. abl-e to Business and dollars it milk a raise tonight Because didn't cents: was my lunch down by Blanche, train in twenty-five a glass you the room and my breakfast my keys on the School Co1lege. she had sold a raise. him for Business her to go t.o school. Dr. a job t.o dinner for give to fifteen for and asked paso El What a title! stenographer that me out Ault Business in Davenport,s f went afford getting Mrs. paso. And that a year for asked Dr. can't I'm took a roomingr house And after the El cosL dog and a nickel the of I paid Paso. a hot And I got I owner My lunch Durham Paso? downLown. my salary, downtown. Dr. EI Rim Road in El was (laughs) and she was a pubric in it Buildinq. months the of downtown half in l-ocated National with me in Stenographers. Where was t.hat right. bel-ieve put M: room r and uncl-e Billy Experience a Durham- for a win in going f if ty the back dollars situation 'rThen I,m morning. t.o Alpine a month either, so I cal-led Uncle BiIIy F^ LU ^^ Fn gu and I told him I was coming back to Alpine ^n]'l u u ] r e g. e . LU at the ranch and kept t.he payroll I lived that. summer and went Lo summer school-. Su1 Ross and I l-ived room, up on the third up in floor rrNow, I want you to rr a semester. bill worked out. T oof dif f erent in Lawrence WeI1, I graduated Course was offered l-ot the boyfriends Mr. girls Casparis took this was the M: Can you spel1 B: C-A-S-P-A-R-I-S, his in that rtNo. the I want one the way it for took And Seven in sewing seamstress now. and t.hen my life The Civilian You way. office I'rR an expert tuition co11ege. and I got a privat.e pilot's Ground School pass the test, Casparis- for and that's office from college the college, started Pilot's Training in Sul Ross at t.hat. time and I was the only at Sul- Ross that of do it a job Hal-l the and a pilot. as a secretary girl in there t.he corner a semester man sent. me through Incidently, in dormitory. in He told checks . " got I dear a month working dollars there And that. -ioh t.here J"* a time and aII. And so t19l 39. three years summer and winter. "Oh, but we don't three That was in same room, send me one biII and room and board." have to make out the for That was my home vacation Unc1e Billy put me in Lawrence HaIl And then in the fal-1 Uncl-e Bi1ly at for is but none of the highlight flight name? I think. of Do you recall? 13 help them took instructor. That'11 to license do. there. their stupid flying. my college A stay- And Mr. M: That' s cl-ose enough. B: John Casparis. He didn't women and he resented my being he could think of to discourage rrJane, you'11 never He did me. Every flight make a pilot. And my response was always, about it . I Just I well, thing- soloed he thought because before would it scare morning flight, which meant I was picked By the got I time And my flight checked it would take my f light. May I interrupt? out, with through boys would job of take-off work. the plane, I'ITI thinking nine me and I didn't drop woul-d be t.he same the so t.hat serviced as well I' l-l- l-et you know and then any of a perfecL But f sol-oed and f did we made was, 'rMr. Casparis, nexL l-esson it And the for that everything You might one more lesson decide. " was any place field there. out.rr what M: the think soloed- drop out. and landing, was always t.he early daylight, up before and then I took my flight. that it and I was daylight. Wel-l. . . Was this during years of World War the early II? Yes. We1l, M: So it woul-d have been in B: It M: Early B: Uh-huh. was was in I believe. the class lA9l4t, for 1,939 or World War If. [19]40... la9) 41,. And semesters Casparis when it preparation B: I when tal-ked don't f to even had deci-ded, me he want been "Okay, said, you out going I on will rrNow, 'Jane. here. If ." for about And There you've three when are got Mr. times a cold women's equilibrium or the flu off or anything your during is period equilibrium. like that don't come out students wouldn't. us. just. there Iet WeIl, to here us even touch Let me change sides B Okav. because if a cold If of it's shaky (chuckl-es) one of We would go beer and t.hen we would Mr. a plane anyway, one- you're M Wel1, and drink aggravate got come out here. and I would go out there. over to the Tolt.ec beer-ioint out don't 'rOkay, Mr. Casparis. " " the mal-e pilot go And 1f you've anyway. Casparis he because he coul-d smel-I beer on about to change? the t.ape. of End of Tape Side Beginning of One A Tape One Side B M We'll- continue B One of having the now. mornings an unusually and we wenL through checking it had about strong our two hours of wind. routine of solo and landings he said, Casparis spring out. and everything mostly take-offs one morning when Mr. picked And we went out there gassing and he said, time at me up we were t.his and climbing the plane and 'rNow, Jane. . . " time turns. and it I was Wel1, this ".Tane, f want you to go up and I want you 15 to do your climbing spin to the left and 1evel and make a landing. field, off off my 7-20 spiral let-down throttle other And it wasn' t were helpless, instruments were absolutely the stick I used the pedals and forth closer I took my feet hands off the pedal, off of and put my hands yours. " And the plane wj-res. t.hat was a out there and Mr. Casparis. trouble with one ^- my fap lifted its sit.uation. and the next and t -l - r a n h n n o turn. The The pedals and And aft.er stick back was getting I And so I and I took my throttle said, full- student call_ I'm "God, the mechanic, was was st.anding out there Casparis the the Now, a landing. saw that. I was in and put his head down on his to with nose up and cleared Kasner, And when Mr. he ran to the office hand in t.he And I came around and did touchy standing pushed I my the wing one wi-ng Iow. of the rudders, and forward, telephone coul-dn' L worked and that off stick, the the wind took and used the to the ground with and closer did idling. is Nothing worked. useless. wou1d I But I mean, useless. nothing over the turns plane the I as much as I could saw that right And you do that words, turning. and come and I came in to do spins Wel-l, when I got the bank of the plane down. and do a 1,000, point. over the field. In back. at and do off, at 2,000, let-down that and I did my one-turn turns and level Well , lney, climbing " enough at have been an assignment climbing and level and do a 7-20 power-off over the field the to 3,000 feet spin to the right a one-turn one-turn turns fire department desk and an ambul-ance. And t.hen he heard me land. motor off the airpl-ane he was there he grabbed me and said, (chuckles) M As a pilot, could turn it and was a good recovery.rl "Henderson, that have you flown I at the door opening was the highlight So that Before of my college career. over the Big Bend area a lot since 1,94r? B No. It became too expensive and I pursued...my assignment was in was there. plane for extent Marathon in f flew with my flying. him a litt1e washed out of that WeII, changed my thinking Of course, t h e W A S P sw e r e . . B Women's Air Force Service M You used to feruy F,. They towed targets, You aim, the was the WASPs. And I That sort and secondary. of and... Pilots. too. motto was rtl aim to please. Their And that was in But W.T. Henderson was the nearest And while a father. between us And that a Avenger Fie1d in Texas. Sweetwater, of and t.hen I ferried join did Hardis alrcraft? please." too, f about flying M bit [New Mexico] . primary after teaching 1,945 and 1946 and Bill him once from Hobbs, of first I always there felt. like was not if r that a lot ever I've of ever known communication needed him he was there. M: Bend National B: in the Rosillos, His ranch being No, he sold did Mr. Henderson sell- to Big Park? that ranch wdy, way before...I t1 guess, when Papa moved maybe he sold it then. I don't know. Let's talk about Roy Sti1lwell. M Hallie Stillwell' B HaIlie Stillwell's Hal-Iie Stillwell the two wife. M E_S-P-Y? B T T l - , _ l - , r , 1€\ r n * 1957. And the And that's other Fort r That's v! Davis. u uqv Lp. BelI, And Uncle Bi1ly is Lrr!o Aunt BeIl and Aunt BeII when I was about miles nine ullvI9 help or ten. you?" after long (demonstrates passed on. going And even thouqh to the our dimensions) And ever, "Came11ia, is there and j-t's anything a 4L caff." got was remember the range and saying, is a piece of iron ranch ranch Now, ffiy mother used t.o tel-I is someLhing that second D that. Camel-Iia, I saw another Cross L cow nursing iron DLLLI when Aunt. Alice married about Papa coming in from riding a running third She was Aunt. Alice's from Uncle Roy's ranch I can never, can do to B . il ' l w ' s Unr:le rp Black. Uncle Roy coming over and saying, f is between W.T. Henderson's BuL, you know, we must have stopped five This Henderson W.T. is this nrlu Science practitioner Christian lady photograph) to an Espv. !!vrrr / (points husband. in ladies. She's wife. s husband? us kids "WeIl, Now, about this a curve on one can rope a calf on the end, so. . . M About B Right. twel-ve or eighteen So anyone's that's rangfe, bui1d a fire, he wants to make. inches real long? gifted and brand that That's sucker with why Papa would say, 1B any brand that rrI saw a Cross L cow nursing a 4L calf. M And Cross L was your B Was my daddy's know, that.'s Mettie father's brand. I went to the court had Lhe Cross L. house and l-ooked this That's when Papa started stay in sold some cattle country t.hat time ranching very to didn't long, Roy's don't a running whiskey but The Big Bend area crossing area/ B Anan v}/vrl M How would / nhah vt/urr you rancher bachelor. but a 4 , and a know you know. I is what I found in the court now any cowboy could said He carrj-ed one. he never carried a a running makes you wonder. and the Maravi11as was a very wild characterize and others- Well-, you see, our brand, Now, I don't Papa never carried Camellia the area, Creek, the Sti11wel-l few people... . Sti1lwell-s, B iron. didn't she must have Papa started, you know, I thi-nk, you know, it But, iron. M flask, But, 1897 about the brand was a sIash, 4L. in Mettie so apparently know, but, anyway, this house in Alpine. carry himself. But the same year he registered rrYou I found out that Papa and Papa registered Uncle brand. I thought, keep...that's for how Iong he'd been using 4L before just up. real- strange. " We1I, Mettie time slash. became Roy's one of Uncl-e Roy's sister-in-laws, Stillwel1, during brand? And 4L eventually strange. that " I didn't to the And during those people- your very independent., very have an opportunity north our was Charlie growing 19 family, the strong-wiIled? to know Papa, but He was a he was l-ike a Green. up years father He didn't to us. Uncle Tom Green, then passed he his have any children brother, on. Iived or any relatives. with him for (point.s fncidently, to shelf) glasses up here were Uncle Tom Green's glasses. spend a lot spending about men in taking he that the cattl-e only stayed apparently... us kids Green. that market. Mr. wouLd take true of to t.he Papa that ranchers my mother, to surname and he expected t.hen, was it Roy Stil1wel1 your was taking B: It M: Based on the registrat B: Of the father game. the not And he he their could wj-ves, so Papa always called them to do the hired their same hands in Spanish. and mother's advantage of woul-d that And he always t.alked to his Hispanic Apparently, turns would be on a train Spani-sh and he wanted them t.o speak to him in M: But I used to or get. in a gambling one these Papa was one of when they to and And f would ask him I know Camellia said that men by their him. that prostitutes was of And he said country of with remember that with three Uncle Charlie Papa. load a associate said time...all time with questions only of awhile belief cattle. t.hat .. would appear that. way. taxes brands. on our j-on of . . . Now, eventually, ranch. During Camellia RoosevelL's pay the couldn't first term when the Depression was so bad he would send people out to the ranches like which was dry. get money for ours, we couldn't sick and dying. We were having feed and the a drought cattl-e t.hen and were poor So these government men woul-d go out 20 and to the and shoot them and burn them and ranch and round up the cattle give corpse, you know, on your withouc stock lost of house, it were sections bought But in looking wasn't the rest. for only for taken And so, eventually, taxes. taxes and then Bought that B: From my mother. but a couple a year dol-Iars I've mot.her? Now, that heard Aunt doesn't Hal-lie homesteaded all know who they bought the add up t.o very much money, say in husband and I of one of this her Dove Mountain Ranch from, one, two, three, seven, Came1lia. forty eight aces times eight got. control school this sections And $265 for is my mother's understand that it. to come about in sections to uncfe that.'s an uncle would do that she got us kids in eioht five, six, hundred Plus, so it a niece. and they've were Now, seems sort I don't this was going 1939- and I think he bought sections? 27 to don't they in between that doing this, Now, when Mother realized these Now, six "My but ten years would be $2,560. 1940- she got us to deed our part In addition four, is a good piece of 1and. of the checkerboard lands. strange from speeches, Wel-l-, I l-and." bought (counting on fingers) it in Roy and Hall-ie two hundred and sixty-five from your M: of we over the records Apparently, it. ten years. for M: any grass on it. wasn't a was income /' no one wanLed t.o lease the ranch from taxes. the court So we had a ranch that hands. and no way of because there than having a head, which was better us seven dollars that of the ranch t.o her. B: These are the sections. M. Okay, incl-uding B: Yeah. or So the kids you know, I wish the Depression, The times, had to took do desperate advantage perhaps. I we signed after I had been older t.he deed. and more aware t.he situation. of B: rrYea" come out and say anything, couldn't f mean, w€ had no right "Nay." So, I just, M: those. of right things, guess, would agree. I mot.ivate someone to do that they knew Camellia happened. can't. looking even your was from the time as far was going that Did these eight didn't. were Combs...f So your sure the to nf mother's heresay this they back loto T'm cnlite No, it they, records woul-d what to t.heir own refatives, especially she was born until you know, ,John, f can't But, know raises Yes- than understand say that happened because I was too young and too But. in and people survj-ve to who were more desperate others people World War If, Would you agree? certainly since I before this unaware to and knowing n,racl-icns about motivations this is what know. you do what and, maybe, thinking. a lot as of f'm that was her concerned. influence I didn't because know any ir of on. sections include Those eighty surrounded by don'L know if mother ret.ained the Double acres were off Wells. . . to themselves and Pope and Green and those people. Combshad any land there. ownership of the Double Wells? B: of the Double wel-ls. daughters and a son, construction M: Sold that R. Uh-huh. M: So today B: No property eighty your acres with family First that And this road t,hen f ive as we could, house stood. adobe wall-s, the wells? r've r started acres, down t.he Maravillas, taken my trailer out with "No. " and then we wal-ked over and then two rooms built one was a kitchen 'No, please Lhen ren ,fane, [o. " we rode a jeep and up the Maravillas our ranch house consisted was a big 'rDatie, But. Son and I, across the ffat, gone and I've one section, and then one acre. to where our of a front as ranch porch, two on the back of the adobe and one was a bedroom and then behind adobe room. M: What type of roof? B: I believe it was corrugated M: Flat B: No, peaked. M: Is B: No. And we carled that the sart House. tin. or peaked? that house still Love owns that outside now. three black-topping numerous times and r would say, The answer was always, that were down to owns no property? down there. sell- me. . . rr wall-s; they got family company wanted to lease water or buy and we sol_d. down to Datie's far well, the of road from Marathon to persimmon Gap. stretch acres, And after of st.anding? property now. Persimmon Gap towards And he had all Ben Love that Marathon of the structures z5 ranches right owns that property taken down, except for Lhe pen. What remains of Are they B: No, wooden pens. feet M: Is B: Yes, which is dry, supplied I but it's believe M: But that's ol-der...did only thing. across. And a trough cement tank eight- And that's still standing. by a windmill? know if don't the windmill's working. I don't in operation. summers you The the and then we had a big deep and fifteen-feet that standing. rock pens? M: there, the pens are stil_l spent your and there you ever go down in visits to what is as you grew now Big Bend Park much? B: Oh, yes. M: Tel1 me about. some of your early recollections the Chisos of Basin or Castolon or Boquillas. B: We would throw or three a couple bed roll-s go down in would in Hot Springs (Ieaves the baths. beaut.iful? interview the pot and t.wo off and we take many summers we would go and Mother would take the baths area t.o retrieve memorabilj-a) We would go down there four to wear white older kids. starched Aren't. clothes and they down at ranch. M: So you B: Well, that and we would (points) There are the They got and a coffee And then These are my canisters. take skillets t.he car there. down to Langford's down t.here. of camped a 1ot we didn't was like at Hot Springs? We rented camp there. camping. 24 one of those rooms and M: Right. B: (points take photograph) to the That's my mother. She obviously B I think she went down there This Papa and Mother on horseback. M the believed and post store office B Langford M What do you recall B He was entertaining. wife think youngest of M An albino B Uh-huh. there to get away from the house. (points t.o photograph) was Maggie Smith running still there? gentleman and his l,angford? And the the two young boys, youngest one. was an albino Leroy and- Leroy was next child after oh, to Leroy. I the And toget.her. child? very white out of the sun. This is Prince Iaughing. And that's crying another picture Do you recal} at were curative? or was l,angford He was very, Here's springs He was an educated I'm on old there just about Mr. and then there we would play M the hot was there. was }ovely. can't stay that time you went to Hot Springs, At the would baths. M is And my mother time B Oh, yeah. M Were they l5 Yes, mostly It Papa (points eyes and had to to photograph) and the horse is neighing the only picture of and and Papa's I have of me with Papa. Papa and Mother. at Hot Springs. the and had pink .were there a number of people t.hat vou visited? was always ful}. mostly loca] people 1ocal...Alpine or travelers? and Marathon people. 25 Wel-l-, mostly Alpine. M: come down and spend days? would And they The twenty-one days. M: Twenty-one days. B: That was the course. the tub, fiII you would (chuckles) that roII up And aII this They liked water. I don't system. and you'd was a cement tub, it and you would stay water then And you would go in t.here and you would in the water in a wool X number of minut.es and and sweat. army blanket you were supposed to time I guess it t.hat . know what it the tub with fill cl-eaned out (laughter) did. drinking their It. made them sweac, anyway. M: Did people B: Oh, yes. food social-ize We would have fish and sit always a 1ot there out out the of under at Hot Springs? frys arbor the way playing and, yes, we would were The kids and taIk. and fishing share and swimming. rt. was fun. M: Anrr B: Oh, yes...Chata ror.nl I cr.f go down there summer. i nnq nf Rorrrr i and eat Yes, she did. One of her gir1s.. children and raised prepare the food for ts-.*^ Lyljs Tr ce :r lrs a q? v ^.tr v! t.hem. Not fOOd? zo oft.en, maybe once to see Mother. f think A n d one us. ' We would go in the car just And Chata was always glad tr. vrrraL / sometimes. She ran a sma1I restaurant? r.1l--^F aq and Juan Saba. M: M: 'l 'l of she adopted her dauqhters a lot of would food. B: Mexican M: What, B: Enchiladas and beans M: They were exceptionally B ohvLt ves- t r "- The real . have any kind was Juan wel-l, that.. food? play we coul-dn't the dance there. player piano entertainment. This B Uh-huh. M S-A-L-A-D-A? B 'Juan Sada. M S-A-D-A, B Sada. rrDrtis lpronounced] house down there and then and Chata you Salada and Chata Sada, said? S-A-D-A. okay. the Daniels' would like Sometimes we would flavor. of and things good M Juan remember? and tacos died, And after.Juan or do you specifically, as trth.rr And Camel Barker Lhe .Iohnsons' and the Greens' lived were near at Dugout, come down and we would visit. had a there. And so the Greens' Sometimes we would have a dance at Dugout. Do you reca1I M: Dugout.. B: Yes, there lived there there were structures And Pap and Mollj-e Green was a school house there. and they had lots Ruby and Willie and Lilly there? of children: and Aaron and ,Jack and Wayne and (chuckles) I don't know how many others. M: Most of the people, excepL the Sadas' that you ment.ioned, are your Ang1o. What was your relation, people's relations the Mexican-American with Mexi-cans from south of the river? 2'7 ot family, or other community or t.he B: We11, we were certainl-y far as house M: in to them taking while town racial communication with talking sel-dom went Woul-d there, that be really fair just segregation...you often or most people didn't? Well, Mother recall, and Chata were very, one of a real bad hard time with stayed at our house for M: In Marathon or Alpine? B: In Marathon. that So that help her about their they in relation to the the Mexican communities very good friends. pregnancy As I and she was having and, I think, she a while. Now, that's Mother did them was pregnant t.he daughters like have much connectj-on. didn't go to our was no inter* many tel-1 me that assessment didn't or as time. asking and at something There or Castolon, so they a from help stay them leLting on aL that ot.hers of BoquiIlas recoflections ot segregated. going who needed anyone recuperated certainly we were But help to a doctor they that. In willing was always My mother my mother. Chata accepted segregated. a vague recol-Iection, but I know one of her daughters. may have been a litt.le bit atypical, not a normal situation? B Uh-huh. M Did you ever go up into t.he focal- point the Chisos Basin of Bio Bend Park? No. There was no access there until area, now, what is B Whitie T. Burnam, I think, owned that. owned wade canyon and the country he bought sister vF, it from Bob Serner, and r went down there And Uncle Charlie around wade Canyon. r think Uncl-e Charlie and spent Green. christmas And mrz holidays one T M At the Greens'? B At. the Greens - M At. Dugout? B No, no. Charlie No, this Green, is a different who lived family of Greens' up the Maravil_las. owned Wade Canyon Ranch. Thi_s was For a while And we went down there and spent he the Christmas vacation. M You were talking brands. B earl-ier One person told me that cattle it and running Mexicans and leave their property because they were suspected of I was not aware of that, his t.hat. country army drove a1l- the cattle rest drive of the their think, cattle think father back. they Camellia have been Revolution? Yes. 29 and ranchers co were caught on went on. around t.he Maravillas and And Papa and the over was way before had only But, rustling. rustling and went back Now, this she had us yet. would if back across. a posse men formed because I think I don't Your them laying buL I do know that raided irons was commonfor shoot And Pancho Villa M about the four t.here to my time, older I kids. anyway... there durinq the Mexican M And the Glen Springs B Yes. M ...perhaps q^ FL B F1^^ urre Raid was in the most famous of the raids f.i u ilTle pqrlrs and that know. I don't and he said, "Camellia, up all long. don't night go to So one night he didn't If sleep at "It's But, anyway, he gave her this gun don't night. clop, up with c1op, clop, was pretty Penrod'r- or "Don't sleep clop of horse's that. t.hree times. Let me change tapes, can'L Tape Side B And by that think of Henderson! One It's t.he name of And so Camellia out when you did." Mrs. Bright. End of And so then he heard her pul1 the shoot Mrs. Henderson!" you caIled hooves on I'Who's there?" rrDon't shoot Mrs. I but day do it, the gun across her 1ap She said, close, whatever, a good thing all You sit you hear anything...shoot." If She said answer. I think go to sleep at night. you have to hammer back and he said, rancher- was where the house was. time the rider Mr. it Mother was sitting and she heard this the hill of Boquillas . But Papa tol-d Camel-Iia...he gave her a 30-30. aWinchesLer, M: 1915. . . the said, Beginning of Tape Side M: Mrs. the neighbor time \/nrrr of mnl- relating riding You talked t.hat time that women of the about your and apparently dark that il-lustrates strong-wi11ed, about other mother and during the to me that person independent women in the Big Bend area in you knew or that. you had been tol-d about.. era unique? =nn1g3ches *_Y_v, Yes, I believe Did they in Ordef life tO t.hey were, buL I think most outstanding women that mot.her is. their the very r herself. thinks in experience Revolution, was a hor A this up Mexican the rli €€aranf B: in Bright, finro have to tO undertake some SUfviVe? my mother was one of the f've...of And it.'s Were course, so rewarding every child to me and it's such a compl-ement to me when I go in t.he Marathon-Alpine area and I meet people that They remind me or me how much I always that teI1 I haven't such a complement to f They'11 course, going sdy, "Oh, you are exactly have the she didn't j-t' s nice Did she reside character [19]57, ranch back to property in Alnine? the things t.hat place. mother.r' she musL have had. she was seventy-two. so she's been dead quite to tell- time. And that's one of l-ike your that pass away until f or people your about a long Camellia. me and that's forward passed away in She sold favor look coul-d just to seen in a while. If I Of She But me t.hat . in 1-940 and she died in 1957. B: No, she lived in california with my oldest my husband and I went out to California California and I had the two Iittle my husband worked bought while his I in a jewelry own and I taught taught Cul-ver City school and visit my older get away from the kids, in 1,957. there It Mother said stay with my other and died. anyway, she died husband died two Tel-l time me about graduated did B: for WAC. After discharged with us go to My husband got family, threes to sick And his family, family started his and fours t.o come back tickets two or and a half at to a tj-me and El paso and boys she said and reservations t.hree and she or something but, days. weeks later. And then my That. was a very f survived. husband, you mentioned how you met. Ross with a teaching certificate. he where husband? marry him until in tived he So we packed her bags and she went to I washed out of was enlisted and then and take my two littl_e within your you meet your We11, I didn't I in that and the weekend just for I guess she had a stroke me, but from sur awhile case of cancer. cit.y and had the plane got sick trying sister We went to on weekends she would she was going that [19] 55. And Mother sister our house by the the dust cleared. culver M: was a terminal at for I guess, and us. were twel-ve siblings coming in until- school-. And then pre-schoolers, boysr store and then in sister. after the war. the WASPs I went into the Womens'Army Corps. from the army during 32 f was also a the WAC and And after the emergency of world I was war rr I went to from Marathon I I went my husband met Carolj-na And his name? B: Charlie Bright, Luke Bright I B: Oh, don't of not going date. People He was say, sLore And from North Fabens. in rrAre you related rrf wish. " say, there. to (chuckles) Brioht. pioneer richest the the give to Bright. you . ." thanks to me in this time, t.hat I'Here think, pioneer t.hank you, Presidio in stop f an old a ticket rrokay, a warning families patrolmen highway a member of (chuckles) way with school a jewelry And I I'I know you're He has a daughter So you're a blind 'rNow, Mrs. sdy, down. " my merry Marfa?" And whenever they and I'm slow in one County. comes. rr on there And then career. and taught B-R-f -G-H-T. know Luke he's area Tornillo to and he had established M: M: my teaching and started Marathon family it here please but And I go on sir.I' Luke Bright's children. named .Tanie. sometj-mes confused as. So Mr. Briqht died in L 9 5 7? B: Uh-huh. But Mr. Bright did a very wicked thing. marrj-ed me when he was already married in the insane asylum in San Antonio. f was pregnant with When I found that sons by myself and, care of the situation suit. for divorce.rr and he had put his So when I found that my youngest son...seven out I knew that I guess, I was going nature or wife out months pregnant. to raise something because one day I told And three Mr. Bright. him, just my two took I'I'm filing months l-ater he was gone, so it worked out. me j-n a very He left sad si-tuation Like, he gave me a $1,500 insurance policy worth of of debts, never did but returned to El Paso when their shipping us orphanage, off not ffie, two years to for rike eventuarly. husbands die. san adversary and I ol-d. time make drastic sticking us as a holding in the tank, and want to do that. to my kids, r was going to my head was on straight And by the and just but I didn,t widows And r remember my mother Antonio adoption, made up my mind that l-eave. that to El Paso? decisions felt overcame all and about $30,000 remarry. And you returned r f financially. stay right. and r could r had my equiribrium t.here until think r straight. my boys didn, t Now, we had a house in Fabens that so I want to was clear. r mean, r had a home to go, but they did not want to leave california, so r sLayed there f went through those during I said, the people family, stand trailer t.rying teenage thaL's that down there times with years. And then those kids, when .Tohn turned I' m going back to EI paso.,, in my acquaintance by each other expressed in very was eighteen. r want. to say about. t.he stilrwelrs. a more closely forg'otten, the "Adios. But one thing of the youngest some v€rlr two boys, eighteen until united regardless all forgiven, famiry. r do not, know a more loving family, of 34 than what they they are. do. That.,s all and you see nothing And it,s and to be in of al-l- that a joy for me to at.mosphere. They but love take my M: B: Describing your mother, seems like it Yes, there in is, own life there,s except come out pretty... r t.hink machine that just I Mother woul-dn't M: you think loaded for for what r have and r something and cook them in use I that bread ,,What think, like this when she a Dutch oven on a camp this. the Was it hardships? gamily the Sti11wel1 I don't of contribution to my character genes. my father and r think person. lett.ing my mother And her difference whose father in myself attribute that f he to of your mother and that that.. I think and life, had stamina att.itude only and that r-he time. t.hat had a lot but I think must, have been a very, in us know, whether that,s Now, the the Big Bend is the environment. you do in general? know whether it's I think and yourse]f, Of course, Can your own character developing weIl, the Sti1]we11s,, t.he Big Bend had... conditions, poor. grateful up and connected have given l,ve but what I have is And whenever your mother, the purpose of B: and everything And " In describing of debts have a lot, very often. had to make biscuit.s fire. our I don't Mother of your of para]lels. a lot for And f am very, of have and that my mother never owned her own home. my managj-ng and paying mine c]ear. you just that indication enough for raising that t.he very good man more than us three good orbad, it,s that kids one and not we were dirt r know t.hat. there was a and my cl-assmates was Frances Morelock, was the president 35 of sut Ross, tried rear hard to develop a friendship I never knew why then. with know, you know, that me and Mother dj_scouraged it. But, outside we weren't of that she never And let us the same and I admire her for tsl^^F LttdL. M Mrs. Bright, about No, can't thorough M you that I Thank is you there care think hour very anything say to of a before thing. I that I haven't we wrap up think iL's this asked you interview? been a pretty (chuckles) and a half. much. else And I'll turn point. Okav. End of Interview off the tape at this