1.3 Teacher's guide: Grandmother
Introductory script
This excerpt is about Stan Hyatt’s grandmother and how she earned a living.
The recording
Play the Grandmother oral history excerpt. Running time: 1 minute 8 seconds.
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Transcript
- Rob Amberg
- Was there farming in your background at all?
- Stan Hyatt
- My grandmother had farmland and leased it out, and I helped with the tobacco chores and gardening and growing corn, things like that — feeding the pigs and feeding the chickens, milking the cows — when I was growing up with her.
- Rob Amberg
- So you had all of those things. And would you classify your grandma as somewhat self-sufficient on the farm?
- Stan Hyatt
- She was extremely self-sufficient. She lived after she raised six kids of her own. I lived with her a while, and she would have me go out to the woods and get roots and things out of the ground that she made medicines out of. I hunted. I would bring squirrels and fish back, and rabbits. My grandmother could fix anything. When her husband was still alive she cooked for a sawmill up there in Dillingham area. She was the most self-sufficient woman that I ever knew.
Follow-up questions
- What do we learn about Mr. Hyatt’s grandmother? What kinds of animals did Mr. Hyatt bring for her to cook?
- What kinds of things show that his grandmother is self-sufficient?
- According to the excerpt, what happened in Dillingham?
- What are the two or three ways that people in Mr. Hyatt’s family earned money, according to what you’ve heard so far?



