The following transcript of Leo Desilets` interview on
Transcription
The following transcript of Leo Desilets` interview on
The following transcript of Leo Desilets’ interview on Memories and Music (broadcast February 17, 1974) was created by the Sudbury Public Library as part of a Summer Canada Project in 1982. <, " ••• 1 D "MEMORIES & MUSIC" INCO LTD. CIGM FM SUDBURY PUBLIC LIBRARY ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM INTERVIEiiEE: DATE: INTERVEEEER: Bonnie Savage · Leo Desilets TNIjIRB~EH.ER: Don MacMillan DATE OF TRANS: July 1982 SUMNER CANADA PROJECT 076 TAPE NUMBER: BOSITION~ . THEIVIE: D.M. Friends and neighbours we have 'a most interesting guest with us today, Mr. Leo Desilets. Leo retired in Septeme er , 1971, when he was, well what yere you aoing when you retired here Leo? L.D. I was in supervision in the civic building at · the Copper Refinery. D.M. How L.D. Thirty-eight years. m~ years have you been with Inco Leo? D.M.Alright Leo to start ' at the beginning. from? Where ' s your home t~Wn? Where are you_ L.D. Capreol, Ontario is D.M. You grew up and went to school in Capreol? L~D. That ' s right. D.M. What would the population of Capreol be about tha t time when 'you were growing . up there? L.D. Between eighteen, nineteen hundred and that .was back in 1918. D.. Golly it ' s bigger than that now eh? L.D. Oh yes, about fifty, between five thousand and fifty five I:undred I would say . . D.M. Right . Well now before the broadcast, you mentioned that you had a fifteen, or excuse me, fiftieth annniversary reunion of a-fi:i:~fi the high school.. there? Now was that so? L.D. Yes, in early September they had a fiftieth anniversary of the opening of ~he high school in Capreol. D.M. Was there anybody there that , ·that anybody would know. £:-._. '0 rv I.\.L." i .~ ~ I ~y home town. aro~d here •••• 2 0 67· DESILETS Any .names ~t al l that would mean anything he~ e? L. n. Yes. What comes to mind is' two Horrick boys. Pete Horrick and his brother, I cant' think of his first name now, and two Nabb boys, Bud and Alan. We all got t ogether and they came as far as California for thms reunion. . D.M. Well I 'll be darned. vfuat 's Pete doing now? L.D. Pete's a salesman in Sudbury now and so is his brobher. D.M. Now I didn't ask you Le o, about your own background or your father. What did your father ao in Capreol? L. D. He ' was a railroader , or a brakeman on .the, ramlroad . D. M. Right . Where was he from originally? whereabouts? Erom Capr eol or I . ~~w ~ L.D. No , he originally ' camefrom Verner , Ontario just from Sudbury here . D.M. Right , now what about brothers and sisters Leo? L.D. I have four . brothers and a sister. D. M. Well who are they , and what are they doing now? brother I believe is named RolaIiJi. L. D. Yeah , I have a brother Roland in South Africa , I have another brother in Sudbury, a brother in Renfrew and a sister living in Hanmer , Ontario. D.M. Now you ' re going a little bit too fast for us . I 'd like t o knOvl more about this brother Roland in South Africa . How 'd he get down there? What 's he doing? L. D. \'lell belivv8 it or not , he 'went down there in 193f} t o play hockey . He went down there with an Austrian team on tour . He had been playing on the ( ) at the time and he stayed. He liked it s o much , and he ' s been living there every since. down ~ fl One l' D.M . And I believe h~~ ~ his own business going down there. Is that right? . L . D. Yes he h~s , and that's really something. He 's in the bubblegum business down there. D.M. If .we ' dknown , we should have had s ome bubblegum on the program. L.D . Yeah , that 's right . , m:SILETS D. M. And Romeo now . He ' s , what ' s he doing in Kerland Bay, L. D. He's a salesman. D. M. mmhh , and Bill? L. D. Bill is living in Sudbt~y here, and he ' s an insurance salesman with Mutual Life . He ' s witJ;1 Domin'i on Brev/eries . D. M. , And now I think that ' s interesting , and- I think a very n nice story about Jaff another of your brothers . L.D'. Vlell Jarf , he's living 'in R.l!.nfrew' .a His wife is sherrif in Renfrew and he ' s here assistant down there . D. M. He just gets _to , be half a star does he? L. D. That ' s right . D.M . He played aome hockey I think back in the ' 30 ' s . right? L. D. That ' s right . He actually played with Montreal Canadians . He played in the Stanley Cup Playof~s in 1936 and in 1938 he was traded to the Chicago Baack Hawks . D. M. Who were s ome of his teammaues on that Canadian 'team? L.~. Trembley , the two M6mfas , Wilf Kid, Roy Wilshell , oh that's s ome of them. D. r'I . That ' ll do . L. D. Yeah. D.M. They in their prime , would do alright in our mew league in the World Hockey Associatmon . . L. D. Oh definitely , definitely, yes . D.M. Maybe they still would. L.D. I think so . D. M. lV lajllbe we ' re being a little unkind. L. D. Yeah . D'. M. Now the juiiet , the sister? L. D. She ' s liging D.M. Alright , now after you ' d finished hockey in Capreol , . what ' d you do then? p~ WI ~vr ~ -Is~~ Is that / tn , married and living in Hanmer , Ontario • . ~~~~? . DESILETS ••• 4 193 L. D. WM~ r left Capreol in 1928. I went dw\'ID to Toronto to work £ or the Bell Telephone and play hockey for them . Thi s is how I got on with the Bell Telephone . D. f<1 . I think there "s another name , was it Vern or Tuffling or ' somebo~ here was down there about that, time . ' L. D. Taat ' s right . Vern was playing in tfie McIntyreLeague . They had two leagues . One , t he r1cIntyre in West TIJDonto , and we were playing in Varsity Stadium . It was called a major commercial league then • .D.M. Right , and you got on with Bell as soon you were hockey playing the bill right? L. D. That is right . D. M. \fuat did , you play Leo? ~ L. D. , I played right wing for the Bell . We had a couple of real godd e~ hockey players playing on there , with me on the line . Percy Allan and Davey Horne . Percy Allan was one of the slickest stickhandlers that ever ~layed , without turning pro . ·D. M. ·R ight . Well now, O. K., so ' 28 , working for Bell and playing hockey , but that came to an end . I think the depression had sometming to do with that eh?, L. D. That is right , ' in 19 , in the spring of 1933 , after the st ock markets crashed , well • • •• ' D. M. Well wait a IDlimute , before we get to ' 33 , you had an interesting story to tell us before the broadcast about 1931 I belieye . Playing in the first unofficial hockey game mn Maple ,Leaf Ga~dent, is that right ? L. D. That is right . I was playing with siniors at the time and the unofficial opening at Maple Leaf Gardent ~ and we played the Leafs in the afternoDnT=and the omly way you could get int o the Gardens was the pe ople bringing clothing or food , canned foods and things like this . And we played four , ftheLeafs fifteen minute period ~. ( . ) we played them fifteen minutes , the Varsity Seniors played them fifteen minutes , Niagra -Falls team played them fifteen minutes , and National Seafleas played them fifteen minutes . D. M. Oh it s uunds interesting . Who ~lere some of the Leafs? Do .; you remember the Lea:fs on that club? L. D. ,D.M . - Oh yes . An~ Blair , Ron Shabow , Franky Finnigan •••• Would BushY Jackson be on that club or d-id he come later? DESILETS • •• 5 268 L.D. No, thi s came h D.M. Oh yes. L.D. Well no , no , ~xcuse me . time . Right away. D. M. I L.D . Yeah, that ' s r ight. They ( ( ) ) Street Arena. D.M. O.K., that takes care then of -hhe first unofficial hock ey L. D. That is right . I come up here then in -the fall of '33 and hired on at Inco· at the Copper Refinery to play hockey, or hockey helped me to get the job. D. M. A good thing to have , right. Wh_o were some of the {lockey players with you on- the Inco tepms at that tim~? ~e~~R- after. . / No , t hey weBe theFe at the thought they were about that time . . ) the old game at Maple Le af Gardens and t hat brings us up to 1933 and depression era, and things sort of backed in at the Bell. I s that r ight? Well s ome that come to mind, Red Porter for one . He ' s just rec~ntly ~e~~~e retired. Doctor Jack McInnes in Sudbury n ow, and Mac Forsyth has re~ently retired also . and making . hi s home in Florida now. Alright . 'Well then Leo , you , things packed in at the Bell . You came up to Copper Cliff . You got working for Inco _partially through your hockey ability and largely through that , but what type of work Ylere you dolimg~ L. D. When I was first hired on, I was in the plate shop . I became a plate worke-r through , starting as a helper and up to a plate worker and this is layout work . I was there for about ten ;yeass . _ D. M. Well now, ~-w you wouldh't have for this Leo? L. D. No,' I learned on the job . D. M. vfuich is maybe as good a way to lwarri as apy eh? L-. D. Well it ' s , you get a thorough training , and that ' s one thing -Inco always gives their men • . A good training . D.M. vfuat sort .of work did you have to do Leo? L. D. It was mostly D. M. You say layout . ~ayout work y~u ~ know? Laying out what? any special training . ( DESILETS ( ••• 6 328 L. D. Well if you ' re m~ing an elbolJ or a cone or a ninety degree or anything , I , you had t o lay it out on paper and then on steel and then fabricate i~ . D. M. Right . So , at ten years at this and then you moved from ther~ t o another j ob I gather . L. D. Yes I went down , I transferred t o the ( ) as a production clerk and I was on that about roughly ten or . eleven months , and t hen Mr . -Coat who was superintendant or the tank house department at that time , asked me if I would l ike t o go on supervision which I did , and stayed there . O. K., that ' s , that ' s a success st ory I think . There ' s no qv.estion about that . Now, what sort of work , what were y ou supervising and what \vere you doing in this new job? L. D. Well the process of processing special metals , came from t he tank house in a sludge f orm and we started- to separate i t and process it and bring it down t o gold arid silver t o metal and ( ) t o a conce ntra~e . D. M. And here were you without a degree in engineering or whatever supervising this type of thing right? L. D. This is right . Well Leo I think that you are ·to be congratulated. However , sir we ' re on into the later ' 30 ' s now and I think that s omething , of some importance happened around about 1938 . Is that true? In October or thereabouts? L. D. That I S right . I ~ married , I shouldn ' t say I married we married , I got married to a Miss Loise Joduin . I Yes . L. D. In October 12 , 1938 . Well now I know that you had nothing ' but nice things to say about t-1rs . Desilets or Lolilise . Where and how did y ou meet? L. D. We met ~ skkting at the old Pal ace Rink in 19 , the fall of 1936 , and we courted until we were married and we used to go skating at the ol d Palace Rink there •••• D. M. Right . L. D. '. •••• and also I was her next dowr neighbour . I lived at the Idy( ) Club On Elm. Street , where the Canad ian Tire is t oday,; DESILETS ••• 7 407 , D. M. ,Ji... Now, that I t hi nk w a s run by a pair of/l wonderf ul old l adi e s who were well-known and fondl y r emembered by people here . Is that right ? L. D. That ' s right . D. M.. Right . Are there any of t he poeple who lived with you at thms ( . ) Cl ub who are -still around or with I nc o? L. D. Well , two t hat come to mi nd, are sti ll i n Sudbury . One i s Li onel Roy who recent ly ret i red and I think he ' s down in Mal a sia now i n the Lenolea se pr oject and Art Roy who i s still working ~it h Inco. D. M· Right • . We ll now incident ly ladies and gentleman we ' r e having a l itt l e chat t oday with Mr . Leo Desilets . Leo ha s been with Inco , or has r etired ~om Inco . He retired in 1971 after thirty- eight years with the c ompany . He is n ow what I think we coihld call sixty- ywo years ' young . He played a lot hockey . G ot his j ob wit h Inco in the . first place through his hockey ability but I think it ' s f air t o say that it went on through much greater thi ngs entirely on his own . Now Leo , what about family and so on? _ What , have you got any family? L. D. Yes . L. D. Oh , what are their names and where are they now? . . _ t.o..~~ ~\ <-o.r ~uv. Denise is living in tH5!~I!iti(), Missouri . That ' s roughly about a hundred and twenty- f i v e miles south- east of St • . Louis . . vV ft Two t>i neand Irish l adi es . I have t wo daughters . Both married . Well vlould a daughter of your get dovffi t o Mi ssouri? L. D . .. They -met in Sudbury here , and she ' s married to a chap ..,-..rho 'a, bytbe name of Pat Cushing . His father recent l y ret i red from Inco here t 09, and he got a job \'lit h Proct or and Gamble , and they were living in .Shaborgan l Hiehigan and then he w~s t r apsferred t o ~ 8 ~e~ido Cape uirandeau . D. M. I think Shaborgan is where , . i s t hat vlher e Jack Benny claims t o have come -from as you recall or am I thi nki ng of s omebody else? L~ D . No . T ere ' s another name wfl.:t:efl. where Jack Benny came from ' that ' s s omewhat like Shaborgan but it liisnt t Shaborgan . I can ' t think of the name right n o\v either. - \ . Maybe s om~b ody liatening to the show wi l l look y ou up and t ell you . There ' s s omet hing familian about Shaborgan f or s ome reas on r at her . . ••• 8 DESILETS 475 L. D. That ' s right , =it could be . D.tlJ . And the other daughter is living where? L.D • . In Toront o . D.M . . L.D . Oh yes . And she ' s married to a chap by the name of Dan McLean • Right . L. D. Yes . Three grandchildren from my oldest daughter that 5 living in Cape Girardeau . D. r'1 And what are their names good grandchildren? L. D. Oh they were very good this past Christmas. The oldest one ' s name is Keri , she ' s· twelve years old , and Teddy is ni~e , and Erika. seven. D. M- Right . Well now , apart from your work , .to which you devoted a great deal of time , . I gather that you have , turned to curling and to golf. I think you had a good year of curling in 1966. Is that i ightLeo? L. D. Well I was one of the highlights of curling . I ' ve won bonspiels, but this particular one , we won the Copper Cliff post season and Wes Hart was the skip , I was vice , Roy Johnson \'las second ,amd Rich Kelverson was lead . D. M. Any of the ~ en on the rink , . still around maybe list·ening to thesho\v. ~~, Yes , ~oy Johnston and WES Hart are st ill in ~ \ ,L. D. Right . Now have you any grandChildren~ D. M. ., and ages and are they. pretty 1 ·Are they pretty ,good curlers . L. D. Yes they are , very good . D. M. Well you were the skip of that rink were you? L. D. Wws Hart was the skip , I was vice . D. M. Right . L. D. No, I haven~t curled in the l ast f our years because the las t t\'lO years I worked I didn ' t feel l ike curling and the last two years I ' ve been retired . I spent my winter in Florida. D. M. Oh yes , yes . I was going t o come t o that . "Now what about go14? You ' ve played quite a big of ~olf ? ~ You ' re n ot curl ing as much no\'l though eh? ••• 9 DESILETS L.D . 529 Yes . Every day if I can in the SUIlllIlBr time and then the past winter I played pretty near e¥ery day also. :i:~ D.M. · This is down in Florida eh? L.D . mmhh. D. M. Well now , one of your golfing partners is L. D. ¥ee-e:i:~y-That ' s right: D. M. • ••• and I warned you that I was going to ask you the better golfer, you or Vern? L. D. Well we're pretyY close together . ,Money-wise at a · nickel a hole , I would say I ' m, about fifteen or sixte en holes up ' on him in ' the summer . I didn't make a fortunate and he didn ' t lose too mijch either. D. f-1 . Too, bad we've already had Vern on ·tne program or otherwise he wouldn ' t have a chance to answer . Do you think you got sneaky and practiced dOvm in Florid~ might have something to do with it? LD. v/ell it doesn ' t hurt . shape . D. M. Nol,v tell me about Florida. I mean, have you ever thought of retiring permanently to Florida . I don ' t , I think that you ' d , really not in 'favour of that . L.D . No , I like to go down therereally three months . January February and March . I l ike t o get back here in April and you can ' t beat this country in the summer time . D. M. I think , that ' s what you were saying earlier , that Sudb~y is. home as far as you're concerned . . L. D. Yes definitely . Oh no~ we like it here . h~ have a ,lot of friepds here . We have some , I have brothers and sisters here . My wife xx;x has family here too , s o between families and friends I \flOuldn ' t leave here . D.M . So a c ouple of months in the winter in the sout h land and Sudbury looks pretty good eh? L. D. That ' s the \flay I like it anyway . D. M. .n L.D. . Vetil ~ . Tuffling •••• \f/ho ' s You knol,v , it keeps your game in , ight • Nol,v I gather also Leo , that you've gone into a little business on your own? ' Is that right? Yes . I ' m a part- time salesman and this is more or less a hobby I would say . Some people have bobbies . I don ' t have a hobby r eally. But this is what ,I enjoy doing . DEE1LETS ••• 10 578 I like meeting. people , and the product we're selling is wi th the Ontario Hotor League which is CAM and MAAA which gives wonderful emergency road services . I like doing it and I think that -anyone that signs up is •••• D.M. Making a good move eh? L~D. • ••• making a good move and I wouldn ' t recommend it to anyone if it wasn ' t , if I didn ' t believe in it, an~ expecially when you get older . You know, of you ~ have a ~lat tire , you just call us , and we ' ll ch~e it for yo~l£ your car won ' t start , call us and we 11 start it for you . Let me get a little bit wi~e , it ' s ' handy and it ' s not expensive. D.M . We ' re not even going to 'cbarge you for this commercial . This f s free on the house . . L.D . Thank you jfer:! much . I _ But you better w~ vp,r I del~~ . L. D. Oh \ve do ~ D. M. Alright . NOvl let me be semi- serious f or a moment. The chatting befor e the broadcast , you made what I thought was a very , you said a very nice thing . You said that you cons idered in this lifetime th~t a marriage parbner IDS very important . Wpuld you like to. elaborate a little on ,that? L.D . Ohdefinitely . This is the most importann thing there ~s . More , even more so now because you ' re getting older and you have someone there to look aftere you . Of course it works both ways you kllo\'l. We look after one anot her ~ but , I don ' t know , I HI have a wonderfu~ wmfe. She ' s a real good cook if -I may say so , and it ' s just 'great. guarantee it . ~w I think Le0 1 have you got a favourite dinner or something you would l~ke to have, comked, ·1 think after that EEMmmRRX commercial , that probably -you might get it cookeci for you sometime . L.D. Well I tell you , we had lamb for dinner last night and it was -just terrific. ' D.M. Leo , you grew up threugh:l; the depression . You got jobs ' through .hockey. ~ ou made something 9ut of your job when you did get it / You have seen tough times , depression times . What advice would you have to a young fellow now? L.D. Well the first thing I v/ould say , is to , if possible , get your education . Get your degree if you can get it , and once you get it, get established and really work at it. As far as promotion is concerned, work is the main thing . <) DESILETS D . ~1 . ••• 11 641 Well Leo thank you very much . Ladies and gent~i.men , o'lir guest today on Memories and Music has been Leo Desilets who retired on September the first , 1971 at age sixtytwo after thirty- eight years with Inco . Leo , we thank you very much f or having been our guest today . /