Saturday, December 28, 2024

Recollections from generations past (Marah Stevenson Finney- 2)

 

Marah Stevenson Finney (1913 - 2006)

TRANSCRIPT EXCERPTS FROM 1982 INTERVIEW

(Continued from last week)

INTERVIEWER: How ‘bout school?

MARAH: From the time I was little?


INTERVIEWER: Yeah, yeah, Pocomoke High School as a student.

MARAH: Okay. When I went to high school, it was in an old building which

 was where the Mac Center is now.


INTERVIEWER: Where it burnt down …

MARAH: Where it burned, mhmm. And in fact, the oldest building that was

 built in about 1905.


INTERVIEWER: Right …

MARAH: They had about two stories.


INTERVIEWER: I know what you mean.

MARAH: And I came to the school from a brand new junior high school in

 Baltimore.


INTERVIEWER: Oh.

MARAH: And my impression was that the halls were so dark, and the floors

 were oil, in order to keep them clean. Now, I don’t know what the procedure

 was, but it definitely gave the impression of being very dark and dungeon-

like.


INTERVIEWER: Oh, right.

MARAH: When I first went, we had Latin classes in the hallway between the

 main rooms,


INTERVIEWER: (Laughs.)

INTERVIEWER: Oh, right.

MARAH: But it was fun.


INTERVIEWER: What year did that burn down? Do you remember?

MARAH: I don’t know what year. The building I went to high school in burned

 … I don’t remember. I don’t think … I might’ve been away at school ... I’m not

 sure.


INTERVIEWER: So that was the …

MARAH: I started teaching in ’30 … ’33.


INTERVIEWER: Here?

MARAH: Mhmm.


INTERVIEWER: At the high school?

MARAH: No, the elementary school, primary school.


INTERVIEWER: Mhmm.

MARAH: But this building was gone at that point.


INTERVIEWER: But then after that building burnt down, they built the one on

 Market Street that burnt down.

MARAH: Yes.


INTERVIEWER: Okay, Now I understand. I forgot about that one.

MARAH: Yeah, the building that I went to high school in, the building next to

 it, where I had home economics in the basement. The building where I had

 home economics was the one that burned when I was teaching. Probably in

 the late 30’s or 40’s.


INTERVIEWER: Okay. You graduated from Pocomoke.

MARAH: I graduated from Pocomoke, and the graduation ceremony was in

 the Mar-Va Theater.


INTERVIEWER: (Laughs) In the Mar-Va?

MARAH: In the Mar-Va Theater.


INTERVIEWER: Why didn’t they have a …

MARAH: Because they did not have an auditorium.


INTERVIEWER: Okay.

MARAH: And, of course, our class was not as large. Maybe 46, 48 in the class.


INTERVIEWER: Bigger than the others, I think.

MARAH: Mhmm.


INTERVIEWER: Let’s see. How about discipline. In school.

MARAH: In school … I don’t remember any problems with discipline, really.


INTERVIEWER: I know you didn’t have any problems, did you?

MARAH: I don’t know. (Both laugh.)


INTERVIEWER: Were the teachers, do you think, more strict than they are

 now?

MARAH: I think they were probably respected more.


INTERVIEWER: Mmm.

MARAH: And of course there were problems, I’m sure, but not, not problems

 that you have today.


INTERVIEWER: What …

MARAH: No drug problems.


INTERVIEWER: Mhmm.

MARAH: No smoking. Very few really, like one big happy family.


INTERVIEWER: What subjects did you take in high school?

MARAH: French, algebra, geometry. Latin, English, history ... civics ... And

 some way or other, I ... escaped high school by not having chemistry or

 physics. And I had biology.


INTERVIEWER: What about trig?

MARAH: No.


INTERVIEWER: No trig.

MARAH: Nothing beyond geometry.


INTERVIEWER: Okay, you went to college right after high school?

MARAH: I went to Maryland State Normal School, which is now at Towson

 Teachers College.


INTERVIEWER: Ah.

MARAH: It was just a two-year course.


INTERVIEWER: And you could teach after?

MARAH: I could teach.


INTERVIEWER: After two years?

MARAH: In the primary school. In the elementary school.


INTERVIEWER: Oh. How about sports, did they have any girls’ sports in your

 high school?

MARAH: Volleyball. We had an event every year called relay. It was

 competitive in the county. All the high schools met on this one particular day.

 And we had relay races, volleyball, basketball. I well remember one

 basketball relay I was in, that I’m sure my teammates could cheerfully drown

 me.

(Both laugh.)

MARAH: I had some difficulty making a basket.

(Phone rings.)


INTERVIEWER: (Laughs) Okay, we’ll pause.

INTERVIEWER: Boys. Dating.

MARAH: In high school.


INTERVIEWER: Mhmm.

MARAH: In high school, as I said before, we did not go out of the house

 during the week. We had dates on Friday night. And a movie date. And,

 except in the summertime, we had beach parties and dances. There really

 wasn’t … well, we did have bowling. We did go bowling, we enjoyed that. We

 went bowling in Ocean City.


INTERVIEWER: All the way to Ocean City?

MARAH: All the way to Ocean City.

(Both laugh.)


Continues next Saturday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.

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