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Alice P. Evitt oral history excerpt (labor unions)
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Alice P. Evitt was born in 1898 and began working at the cotton mills near Charlotte, North Carolina in 1910 when she was 12 years old. She worked 12 hours a day, every day except Sunday, and earned 25 cents a day for her work. Here, Ms. Evitt describes her part in the general textile strike of 1934, during which mill workers all over the South participated in walk-outs to improve working conditions. She describes the strike at her mill as having a festive atmosphere — the workers gathered outside to talk and eat hot dogs while union organizers negotiated with management.
Transcript
- Jim Leloudis
- Do you ever remember any attempts at this mill or any others you worked at to organize a union?
- Alice P. Evitt
- Yeah, I was on a strike out here.
- Jim Leloudis
- Oh, were you? Out here? When was that?
- Alice P. Evitt
- That was back in the 30’s.
- Jim Leloudis
- Was that 1934? The general textile strike? Uh huh.
- Alice P. Evitt
- We didn’t stay out long. We went back to work — didn’t have no trouble or nothin’.
- Jim Leloudis
- Tell me about that strike. That sounds interesting.
- Alice P. Evitt
- Well, they struck. They said if anybody come to work, they was goin’ to throw them out, but nobody didn’t go. They’d go out there everyday. Just hang around and walk around and talk’s all we done. Nobody didn’t try to come in. Go to a meetin’ up here, and they’d serve hot dogs and things at the meetin’. Just had a good time. They finally, though, went back to work. They didn’t have any trouble back then. They went back to work. They’d go down at the church, they’d give us somethin’ to eat. Give out stuff — the union did — put potaters, beans, stuff like that that you use to cook. We got some groceries down there.
- Jim Leloudis
- How did you get involved with the union?
- Alice P. Evitt
- I was workin’ in there. When they all struck, I come out too. I didn’t want to be throwed out [laughter].
- Jim Leloudis
- Did the organizers ever come around and talk to you?
- Alice P. Evitt
- I belonged to the union.
- Jim Leloudis
- Oh, you did?
- Alice P. Evitt
- Yeah.
- Jim Leloudis
- What made you decide to join?
- Alice P. Evitt
- Well, everybody else did out here and I did too. So I joined. I didn’t have much to do with the strike. I didn’t hang around out there much.
- Jim Leloudis
- You didn’t go on the picket line?
- Alice P. Evitt
- I’d go out there some and walk around and talk to them and come back home. I didn’t stay out there like they did. I didn’t know if there’d be any trouble or not, and I didn’t want to be in it if there was.
- Jim Leloudis
- Why did the strike end?
- Alice P. Evitt
- They all decided to go back to work, and they went back to work. Just like young’uns [laughter].
- Jim Leloudis
- What were they upset about? Why did they walk out?
- Alice P. Evitt
- They wanted a raise.
- Jim Leloudis
- Did they get it?
- Alice P. Evitt
- But they went back to work.
- Jim Leloudis
- Why didn’t they hold out till they got it?
- Alice P. Evitt
- I don’t know. I guess they all just got tired of it and went back to work. The union wasn’t too strong back then, so they went back to work.



