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The impact of the Great Depression
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In this oral history interview excerpt, Stan Hyatt comments on how his grandmother raised six children on her own during the Great Depression and reminisces about growing up poor.
Transcript
- Rob Amberg
- So she made her own medicines, then.
- Stan Hyatt
- Some of them. I’m not saying she made everything, but she had an understanding, having been raised in the mountains back in the Depression era days and before, of self-reliance. She lost all that she had in the Depression. She and her husband had accumulated five or six thousand dollars, which was a lot of money in those days, and she lost it all. One day it was in the bank; the next day she went to Asheville and it was gone.
- Rob Amberg
- So that must have really tested her in terms of her self-sufficiency and self-reliance.
- Stan Hyatt
- It did. And about that same time her husband died, and so she had to raise six kids as a widow woman with no real income except off of the farm.
- Rob Amberg
- For you growing up, then, as a child and before you all moved to Cleveland, did you have a sense that this was in a way the perfect childhood? Or was it something that you felt you wanted to get away from?
- Stan Hyatt
- No, I never wanted to get away from western North Carolina. We were poor, and I realized we were poor, but it didn’t bother me at all. I had the woods and the creeks, and the mountains to climb. I was the happiest kid in the world growing up, and had nothing [laughter] that people — I mean, material things — that people would consider something today.





