Saturday, December 21, 2024

Recollections from generations past (Marah Stevenson Finney- 1)

 


Marah Stevenson Finney (1913 - 2006)

TRANSCRIPT EXCERPTS FROM 1982 INTERVIEW

MARAH: When I first moved here, it was after my father died. We had lived in

 Baltimore.


INTERVIEWER: Mhmm.

MARAH: And we moved here December of 1925. 


INTERVIEWER: Okay. What was your father’s job?

MARAH: My father was Secretary-Treasurer of Maryland Biscuit Company in

 Baltimore.


INTERVIEWER: And down here …

MARAH: Down here, my father and my mother were both reared in Pocomoke.

 But he left here as a young man, went to work for the Mulliber Biscuit

 Company in Boston and then went to Baltimore.


INTERVIEWER: Okay. Did you have any jobs when you were a teenager?

MARAH: My first job was at Lloyd and Lane’s Drugstore. And it is where—it

 was where—about where the Citizens’ Eastern Shore National Bank is now.


INTERVIEWER: How about refrigeration?

MARAH: We had an icebox until I was out of high school. And every day, the

 man would come and put ice in, or every other day.


INTERVIEWER: Uh-huh.

MARAH: And that was a chore. Had an ice brick, you had to empty the pan, saline …


INTERVIEWER: Uh-huh. I never quite understood that (laughs).

MARAH: We didn't have freezers. That day, it was just refrigeration, complete

 refrigeration. And consequently, we didn’t keep as much in our icebox as you

 do a refrigerator today.


INTERVIEWER: Mhmm. How about social events in your childhood?

MARAH: Most of the social events were events they had at church,

 particularly before we moved down here. Then, when I was a teenager, we

 had beach parties in the summertime and bonfires, and we went to dances at

 Public Landing. We had a big pavilion, and the church EYCU had parties for

 the young people. Once in a while, there was an event at the armory. After the

 armory was built, they had beauty contests.


INTERVIEWER: Really?

MARAH: And they had long, elevated platforms out into the armory, so the

 girls walked down the platform, just like they do at Miss America. And the

 garden clubs had flower shows. And they had antique shows. But as far as

 the young people getting together, like you do now, we didn’t. My particular

 group when I was in high school, there were about two years, when I was a

 junior and senior. There were about 12 of us, six girls and six boys. And we

 didn’t go out during the week at night. We stayed home and studied. But

 Friday nights, we took turns and went to each other’s house. Well, mostly the

 girl’s house, though sometimes the boy’s. And we danced, and kissed,

 refreshments, and just generally had a good time.


INTERVIEWER: Those beauty contests, were you in one?

MARAH: No.


INTERVIEWER: No?

MARAH: No.


INTERVIEWER: What were they, like, Miss Pocomoke or …

MARAH: Well, except, as I remember, they didn’t have as much of a talent

 show as they do in Miss Pocomoke. But they had bathing suit competitions

 …

INTERVIEWER: (Laughs)

MARAH: And evening gown competitions. And that made more of an

 impression on me than anything else. (Chuckles.) They might have had

 questions which they were asked, but I don’t remember too much.


Continues next Saturday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.




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