101-Year-Old Grandmother: Life in the Great Depression

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 577

  • @decoy8645
    @decoy8645 2 роки тому +399

    She is a national treasure as are all of her generation, sadly few remain. I could listen to our elders for hours on end.

    • @casualobserver2380
      @casualobserver2380 Рік тому +5

      Every single one of them? Not a bad apple in the bunch?

    • @smason3541
      @smason3541 Рік тому +11

      My Grandparents are 93. My Great Uncle 91. The stories! Get them all on video!

    • @sl4983
      @sl4983 Рік тому +4

      She's still alive?

    • @arreola891
      @arreola891 Рік тому +8

      It would be a good idea to volunteer to spend time with seniors in nursing homes. They're usually very lonely and are full of great stories. I've been thinking about this lately.

    • @RockyTop85
      @RockyTop85 Рік тому +5

      @@casualobserver2380 i see the bad apple on UA-cam

  • @grettalemabouchou6779
    @grettalemabouchou6779 2 роки тому +20

    Thankyou. Mother told us that country folk fared much better than city folk. This lady is a sweetheart 🌺 Mother made dresses out of sheets!

  • @vanru2176
    @vanru2176 Рік тому +2

    She is a treasure, thank you for sharing.

  • @ginaven1
    @ginaven1 Рік тому

    I am visiting my son in Jefferson today she is precious

  • @minou2232
    @minou2232 3 роки тому +10

    Thank you so much for this upload! Thank Grandna, you are amazing ❤️

  • @davidmarcodavis4497
    @davidmarcodavis4497 Рік тому +1

    Thank you. God Bless. I have learned a lot from listening to our elders's experiences. I am very thankful for you to share her stories.

  • @wanda520
    @wanda520 4 роки тому +214

    She is amazing and lived an amazing life! Family was so important. Notice she talks about her very capable parents. They were a team that provided what they needed. Many children today don’t have that security.

    • @almagivler567
      @almagivler567 Рік тому +15

      She is remarkable l 'am in my 80's &remember all she is saying .she speaks so well ❤

  • @blackbeautytv1668
    @blackbeautytv1668 5 років тому +205

    Her story is great but her memory is amazing!!! 💜💜💜💜

    • @trishkosky7966
      @trishkosky7966 Рік тому +2

      It SURE IS EXTREMELY REMARK ABLE!!!!!!! So good to listen to an older person and how they lived so long ago!!!! Not like spoiled brats today!!!!🎉❤😅

  • @barsoom43
    @barsoom43 3 роки тому +178

    Today's people should listen up to these old folks.. Bad times are going to come again and we can learn a lot from them.

    • @ravenmckinnon5526
      @ravenmckinnon5526 Рік тому +12

      They are here now

    • @barsoom43
      @barsoom43 Рік тому +12

      @@ravenmckinnon5526 Yeah.. but as the saying goes, "You ain't seen nuthin' yet.." The debt just crossed $31.7T- ought to be $32T by summer and $33T at year's end.. It is so large now that it has a life of its own and there's nothing anyone, in government or the Fed, can do about it.. It will reach a point where it will destroy everything we have known..

    • @Wolfietherrat
      @Wolfietherrat Рік тому +2

      Yes, we have to learn and be ready.

    • @seanbrennan5192
      @seanbrennan5192 Рік тому +4

      @@ravenmckinnon5526 The next crash will be worse than the Great Depression. We are still in “good times” right now so I’m pretty concerned with what is to come. We have never seen the dollar not be the reserve currency, we probably will within 10 years…

    • @mamarages
      @mamarages Рік тому

      Prepare for a depression, the food system has been intentionally destroyed over the last few years.

  • @fouada8656
    @fouada8656 2 роки тому +71

    This lady was eating better during the Great Depression than I am eating today.

  • @Mikesorrento3344
    @Mikesorrento3344 4 роки тому +566

    Listening to her reminds me how far off the rails this country has come. She represents the best of America. She has self determination. This is what made America great. Today, we have become a bunch of selfish wimps. Makes me sad for America.

    • @Geezerelli
      @Geezerelli 2 роки тому +15

      Entitled according to Thomas Sowell.

    • @randomvintagefilm273
      @randomvintagefilm273 2 роки тому +5

      @@Geezerelli entitled 😆😆😆

    • @barrett7893
      @barrett7893 2 роки тому +21

      Amen to that.. 💯 You got that right!! People are so selfish nowadays they only look out for themselves. They don’t think about anyone else. As a Christian we’re supposed to help our neighbor and love our neighbor… ❤️ ❤️ ❤️

    • @Thomas-yr9ln
      @Thomas-yr9ln Рік тому +2

      Is that her son.?

    • @silverjedi3529
      @silverjedi3529 Рік тому +1

      There's a large group of brainwashed sheeple ruining the world. They vote the same every election. They watch the mainstream media. They're on the opposing side of everything Tucker says.

  • @efleishermedia
    @efleishermedia 3 роки тому +231

    The older I get the more I understand how important it is to hear our elders tell their stories.
    When I was a kid I loved listening to my older neighbors discuss their younger lives.
    My grandfather was a great man who grew up in the depression era and he was a master storyteller. Truly one of the greats, and a humble hardworking man-a trait I've realized was part of that generation.
    He passed away a couple weeks ago and its honestly so difficult to know I will never hear any more of his tales.
    We desperately need to regain our relationship with the wisdom of our elders, and beyond that, we need a revival of oral storytelling as a culture. I can feel the void in society these days, how little the youth understand the world from which they came.

    • @carmenortiz5294
      @carmenortiz5294 3 роки тому +16

      I remember my grandfather's story. My favorite were how my grandmother was so pretty and that I looked like her. (My mother disliked me from birth, so for me that was the most wonderful thing he could tell me.) He also taught me to make cheese when I was so small I had to stand on a stool. Lucky I was never scalded. He lived in town and had a cow that my uncles (one only a year older) would take to a town pasture and back to town at night. Now I'm not allowed a chicken, in a rural area.

    • @tamararoberts9307
      @tamararoberts9307 Рік тому +2

      Amen!

    • @tess-a.9875
      @tess-a.9875 Рік тому +1

      😢 sad but so true

    • @EmilyGloeggler7984
      @EmilyGloeggler7984 6 місяців тому

      Unless you have evil family members. Even God warned that there would be division among one’s own family and He didn’t lie.

  • @solobushman
    @solobushman Рік тому +275

    This is the lady that should be teaching the spoiled brats of today what respect and appreciation is.

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Рік тому +2

      Yes

    • @monicahocking1507
      @monicahocking1507 Рік тому +16

      I think it's too late to teach the spoilt brats anything today.

    • @brendareed5050
      @brendareed5050 Рік тому +14

      Im sure she already did teach her kids. Its your and my job to practice her ways and to pass it to our children.

    • @householdsix1307
      @householdsix1307 Рік тому +5

      They can't sit, be quiet and listen

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 Рік тому +1

      @@householdsix1307 adderall or Ritalin will fix that hyperactivity right quick

  • @patriciamontgomery3651
    @patriciamontgomery3651 2 роки тому +124

    I really enjoyed listening to this lady’s stories. I’ve heard similar stories from my parents who lived thru the Depression. They never stopped being frugal. This lady is a treasure. Didn’t want the video to end. Thank you.

  • @kellymitchell3138
    @kellymitchell3138 Рік тому +34

    I love hearing seniors tell their stories, always have. They had hard times, but they also had character and inner strength. Made of tougher stuff back then...

  • @robinyarborough4727
    @robinyarborough4727 5 років тому +316

    You can’t get this in a book. Her information is extremely valuable

    • @mikuculus3720
      @mikuculus3720 4 роки тому +5

      Unless she write it in a book

    • @mithridatesii6925
      @mithridatesii6925 3 роки тому +3

      45% of Irans population died,Nobody talks about that,Compared to their suffering this is nothing

    • @mitziflanery1491
      @mitziflanery1491 2 роки тому +1

      It’s wonderful yes.

    • @ralphl8055
      @ralphl8055 2 роки тому +2

      @@mithridatesii6925 your comparison is off this is apple s and orange s,there are many bad things that happened in this world ,but she is telling what we can expect in the near future.our economy is a joke,we will never pay our debt.Get ready it's coming soon.

    • @grettalemabouchou6779
      @grettalemabouchou6779 2 роки тому

      @@mithridatesii6925 you are a foolish person.👀

  • @sasz2107
    @sasz2107 Рік тому +28

    This woman reminds me of my grandmother, who was born around the same time as this woman was, but is long gone. My grandmother's biggest problem with modern people was how wasteful they are, and how much they complain about things. She told us not to be wasteful and not to complain. The issues we have in modern society are manufactured. They are things people thought up because they don't have any real problems anymore. It was about survival then. I remember my grandmother never wasted soap. Even small scraps of soap she would save and make a larger piece of soap. She said you should always be clean (i.e. bathed). She said no matter how poor you are, you can always afford soap. The woman in this video was lucky. My grandmother and her friends didn't go to high school because they went out and worked as soon as they could - which meant they quit school. She only attended up to the 6th grade, and then got a job in a silk mill sweeping the scraps off the floor. They had to bring money in to share with the family - so the sooner they could go out and work, the better. They went through tough stuff. The men worked in mines and a lot of them died in mining accidents. People did not have good medical care, and people's babies died. Such sad stuff. I really respected my grandparents. My grandfather knew how to fix almost anything. They lived in a house without heat or hot water until the 1950s. I'm amazed they did that. They thought family and church was important. The one thing I knew for sure is that they loved us.

  • @shirleylake7738
    @shirleylake7738 4 роки тому +118

    This lady has a sharp recollection of
    her past. My grandmother had acquired a softball size of string from worn out clothing.She would save string from the hems of clothing.she also saved tin foil.She would wash and then dry it with a dish towel.She created a tin foil ball to store it for later use. I recalled her darning my dad's sock. She had a marble egg shape that she would put inside the sock and then she would sew the whole closed with string.My grandmother had a window box on the shadey side of the kitchen.The window box was insulated with tar paper on the outside and tin foil on the inside to keep things cool .Three was a door on the inside so you closed it to keep the butter and milk from spoiling.She hung a full length curtin between the kitchen and the living room to keep the heat in the living room where the floor register
    was.

    • @daniburke9452
      @daniburke9452 2 роки тому +14

      My grandmother was the same way. She went thre the dust bowl as well as the great depression. When she died we found bag of sugar and all kinds of stuff she had hoarded.

    • @rosaliamartinez8956
      @rosaliamartinez8956 2 роки тому +7

      My mother would save a used light ball and used that to put inside my Dads Sox and mend hos Sox that way . Of course the light bulb was a round one .

    • @imaginarycanary9956
      @imaginarycanary9956 2 роки тому +10

      My grandfather saved tin foil to the day he died after living through the Great Depression.

  • @diadora9292
    @diadora9292 Рік тому +37

    My Grandpa lived to 102. He passed in 2006. Endured the depression and missed all the wars. Loved listening to your stories. God Bless.

  • @dodgerblue7381
    @dodgerblue7381 Рік тому +29

    Bless her. She has seen more hardship than any of us can imagine with no complaints. Good to hear these stories.

  • @johnaboardviolet237
    @johnaboardviolet237 Рік тому +31

    As a 73 year old Australian man. Hopefully I too will live to to this wonderful lady's age and be as lucid as she is in this interview.

  • @stevenartascos2918
    @stevenartascos2918 Рік тому +14

    Thanks grandma for sharing your story, America has seen her share of trouble, but today , we have never had filthy moral decay like we're experiencing today, and a obtuse government determined to bring this nation into the pit of hell!!! My opinion is ,that everyone better get down on their knee's and pray and ask for help to see us through this mess... Please do your part today!!!

  • @nickthelegend2303
    @nickthelegend2303 4 роки тому +105

    She looks so young for 101

  • @nasanction
    @nasanction 5 років тому +126

    People were moral and helpful in those days. If the same thing happened today, things would be very different.

    • @momentsformoms9467
      @momentsformoms9467 5 років тому +5

      nasanction Most people I think but there were also quite a few murders on the streets as people travelled looking for work or gathering dropped coal from the tracks in order to take what they had/rob them.

    • @Mikesorrento3344
      @Mikesorrento3344 4 роки тому +5

      Yes very different. I’ve been preparing for several years now.

    • @c-b.s.7624
      @c-b.s.7624 4 роки тому +8

      no they were not. people never change. there are as much good people today as there were 100 or 1000 years ago.

    • @nasanction
      @nasanction 4 роки тому +22

      @@c-b.s.7624 You can't dispute the moral decay of the last 60 years.

    • @edenhazard3965
      @edenhazard3965 3 роки тому +4

      @@tibby_tabby it will happen soon

  • @daddio7249
    @daddio7249 Рік тому +9

    My dad will be 93 in July, he and mom (89) still live independently and drive 40 miles every two weeks to get groceries. My dad remembers the Great Depression as the good old days. My grandfather was the foreman for a big farmer and share cropped. In the late Thirty's he had two good years and made enough money to buy 300 acres of farm land. He decided that was too much land and just bought a 120 acre farm that had a small orange grove and a house and barn.

  • @alishabellavia-ep7po
    @alishabellavia-ep7po Рік тому +24

    She is so sweet.I could listen to her for hours. What an amazing woman!!!!!!

  • @davidleaver3570
    @davidleaver3570 5 років тому +148

    Sadly, an even greater depression is heading our way and we as a society, are not as resourceful, determined and charitable as our predecessors were in the last depression. I really enjoyed this wonderful ladies story. Thanks for sharing.

    • @carmenortiz5294
      @carmenortiz5294 3 роки тому +1

      Some people are, you could join us intead of whining.

    • @Icriedtoday
      @Icriedtoday 2 роки тому +4

      @@carmenortiz5294 He wasn’t whining. He was pointing out a fact. But you are both hyper-sensitive and ugly.

    • @grettalemabouchou6779
      @grettalemabouchou6779 2 роки тому +12

      You are correct....2022 and headed for hyperinflation.

    • @maryrobinson4572
      @maryrobinson4572 2 роки тому +11

      @@grettalemabouchou6779 what’s crazy is…he made that comment two years ago, not knowing just how true it was about to become.

    • @americanpatriot1618
      @americanpatriot1618 2 роки тому +10

      The greater depression is about here, but we still have modern technology and infrastructure they didn't have in 1929. There will be tons of poor people... especially the ones who have their retirement in a 401K.

  • @allthingspropheticministry
    @allthingspropheticministry Рік тому +18

    Humanity needs more people like her. Honor of our elders has disappeared. Thank you 🙏

  • @davidcawrowl3865
    @davidcawrowl3865 4 роки тому +36

    " ...and we shared the surplus with those that didn't have."

  • @emmanuelvacakis4463
    @emmanuelvacakis4463 Рік тому +10

    I’m sure she ate organically grown food and was breast fed. Now all the young people eat at McDonald’s and drink Coca Cola as well as other ultra processed foods. That’s why we have a pandemic and that’s why the depression that will hit soon will have severe consequences much worse than that one.

  • @countrygirl23
    @countrygirl23 Рік тому +17

    My grandparents went through a deep depression! Never threw things away! Always found a way to reduce, reuse, recycle! Used half the sugar in kool-aid, best homemade biscuits, bread, etc. Us kids helped with the butchering process. Big gardens were the thing growing up. Kept many traditions to this day! Thankful, grateful, and blessed for them grandfolks and my parents teaching, guidance, and setting the examples! Thank you Patera for sharing great ideas and showing your concern for others!

  • @buffalopatriot
    @buffalopatriot Рік тому +27

    I could listen to this wonderful lady all day long. What a gem and what great practical knowledge she has. Listen up America.

    • @Bradleehage
      @Bradleehage Рік тому

      shes a smart woman but saying listen up America really how about your country most country went the hell now a day's.

  • @kameragerhart5955
    @kameragerhart5955 2 роки тому +46

    Loved hearing this sweet lady tell her story. Priceless!!!

  • @ja1505
    @ja1505 Рік тому +7

    The elderly have lived so much history. If only people today recognized their value.

  • @nallavebaptist
    @nallavebaptist 4 роки тому +61

    Very interesting. My Grandpa Crawford's grandfather was from Knoxville. James, son of Andrew, son of Samuel the soldier of 1776. Your mother's story is very much like the stories I grew up with. Remnants of that life still existed in the 1950s when I was a boy. We grew our own food, raised our own cattle, had a smokehouse. We were still very self sufficient in those days. We only went to town once a month or so to get staples like sugar, salt, and pepper. In some ways I think those days were better than today

    • @loisjkindel180
      @loisjkindel180 Рік тому +6

      They were much better. People appreciated what they had and respected each other.

  • @Gio_Vanni6143
    @Gio_Vanni6143 3 роки тому +55

    She is a blessing at 105. Stay safe and have a Merry Christmas and a happy and healthy New Year.

  • @markthornhill519
    @markthornhill519 2 роки тому +34

    Listening to her reminds me of my mom. She was 3 during the depression. Dad was 7. Same stories, people don't know what hard times are. But I think they are gonna soon learn. I'm self sufficient..but most people are gonna starve.

    • @maryrobinson4572
      @maryrobinson4572 2 роки тому +4

      You are so right

    • @TwinSister1957
      @TwinSister1957 Рік тому +3

      Its either swim or sink: The half that chooses to swim (prepare)and the half that sink (unprepared)

  • @cydneypfeiffer1573
    @cydneypfeiffer1573 Рік тому +11

    Being frugal and making do with what you have is something that this generation has no idea how to do ....

  • @MyTube4Utoo
    @MyTube4Utoo Рік тому +7

    My grandma, that passed away in 2005, was born in 1918, and if I closed my eyes, and turned the volume up to about 140, I'd think I was listening to her. She was a bit loud. *lol*
    Seriously though, one of the greatest regrets of my life was not listening more intently to my grandma's stories. I heard many times how poor they were, but I wish I had listened more closely to *how* they did different things. My grandma was a wealth of knowledge. She could roof a house, hang wallpaper, hunt, fish, cook, can, garden, you name it, and she could probably do it. If she couldn't, just give her a little bit and she would have figured it out.
    When you have very little you get very 'creative.' You learn skills, or at least you'd better. I know they grew, hunted, caught and raised nearly all of their food, but there's many things that somewhat get lost through the ages.
    Today is May 5, 2023. Things are obviously looking very bad right now. Far worse than they've ever been in my lifetime (in the US), and I'm about to turn 63. If people aren't already, I highly suggest they start doing everything possible to survive without some modern conveniences, at least intermittently, and maybe even through some food shortages. The worst that could happen is that you'll learn a few things, and maybe have a good supply of......whatever.
    *IndependenceIsFreedom* Learn to be as self-sufficient as possible.
    Also, if you lose Internet access, you don't suddenly die. It'll just feel like it. *lol* I didn't even have Internet until I was 29, the same year I got my first cellphone, and that was years before most people had even heard of the Internet. Even years before HTML (the "Web") was developed. I lived perfectly fine the first 28 years.
    Sadly, many people would now be lost if they couldn't get a signal on their cell. phone. *OMG* No DoorDash?! How will I eat?! *lol* Many younger people only know food-like _substance_ that's picked up at a drive-thru window, or gets delivered to their door.
    People shouldn't be so disconnected from nature. Yet here we are.
    In case you haven't noticed, there's a relatively tiny cabal of very evil people that have _plans_ for us all, and for the world.
    Believe it.

  • @johnward6699
    @johnward6699 2 роки тому +12

    Ppl back then were real.. they had imaginination and could survive on common sense

  • @williamkimmer6221
    @williamkimmer6221 4 роки тому +32

    What a memory. I can't even remember what I done Yesterday.

  • @carmenortiz5294
    @carmenortiz5294 3 роки тому +23

    I live in a rural area, around us it's all farmland. Problem we are not allowed to have even one chicken, or a rabbit or bee hives. "Our" mayor thinks we are too good for that. I have a wildlife habitat/food forest/vegetable gardens because 16 years ago the mayor had a brain and gave me permission. Only two other properties in town are similar. A new IMBECILE neighbor wanted me to cut down every thing because it "affected" his home value. Childhood bully, thought 73 year old, 5 foot woman would be "scarded" by him. Told him he could move.

    • @fletcherhamilton3177
      @fletcherhamilton3177 Рік тому

      Where do you live that it’s legally possible for city officials to forbid farming / animal raising . . ?

    • @florastewart7957
      @florastewart7957 Рік тому

      The Mayor changed the zoning to redevelop the property. Value the rural life while you can.

    • @carmenortiz5294
      @carmenortiz5294 Рік тому +1

      @@florastewart7957 I'm in the middle of the town, so no issue with me. As to the mayor he underestimated me and I got him fired from his other job (that paid more than mayor) and got to attend his "retirement" party, which I requested. Sat right in fron of him. I now have another little secret which he is keeping, with witnesses. LOL We are not friends.

    • @carmenortiz5294
      @carmenortiz5294 Рік тому

      @@fletcherhamilton3177 The question is, where do YOU, most cities in the USA do not allow chicken or other animals. Or farming (you have to call it gardening), I asked permission for a wildlife habitat two days after the Christmas I moved here and the major and assistant were into that, so they said yes, when idiot current major came into office, I already had permission to grow fruits and vegetables for the "wildlife" (and me). I'm a retired attorney, I know beat the rules.

    • @fletcherhamilton3177
      @fletcherhamilton3177 Рік тому

      @@carmenortiz5294 - you claim you live in a rural (a.k.a., countryside), area (hence why my curiosity was piqued); now you say you’re in a city as you try to flex your cute little ‘lawyer muscles’ at me. Yeah, newsflash Better Call Saul - animal husbandry in city limits is obviously going to be subject to some fairly if not very stringent bylaws. What, you think that Manhattan’s 42nd Street needs apiculture beehives on every street corner like they’re fire hydrants?? 🤣

  • @swissmiss1212
    @swissmiss1212 2 роки тому +25

    My grandfather and grandmother were born in 1902 and 1906. I remember the stories they used to tell. Going to their house was always a treat. They both died in the 1980s. I wish I could hear their voices again.

  • @mattk8708
    @mattk8708 4 роки тому +22

    Who in the world is disliking this this video

  • @heyokaempath5802
    @heyokaempath5802 5 років тому +54

    She is absolutely lovely

  • @gracerules2423
    @gracerules2423 Рік тому +15

    She’s sweet. She sounds so much like my late Grandmother. Fascinating listening to her stories. Thank you for sharing.

  • @sharonsmith2480
    @sharonsmith2480 Рік тому +12

    A wonderful interview. This lady has an amazing recall of her time during the Great Depression. Thank you for sharing.

  • @robinblack3865
    @robinblack3865 Рік тому +4

    Boy were they self-sufficient, fixing their own shoes!!

  • @janolson4579
    @janolson4579 Рік тому +7

    She's very articulate for her age. Nice listening to her😊

  • @davidsnyder2000
    @davidsnyder2000 Рік тому +2

    Now being in 2023, we are heading for the worse Great Depression ever. Together with Martial Law. We are well into the times the Bible speaks of. Things that are getting bad are not bouncing back like it use to. My grandparents went through the depression and had lots of money over these years because they saved. They saved these years because of what they went through when they were in the Great Depression. My grandparents were worth well over a million dollars. They wouldn’t spend any money unless it was absolutely necessary. I was spoiled and I don’t save. I live paycheck to paycheck. You would think I’d know better. But I haven’t. I’m just like the other 85% of Americans spending each paycheck to exist. Things are so expensive now days and are going to continue to grow.

  • @albertod4161
    @albertod4161 2 роки тому +22

    My high-school teacher and friend now use to tell me stories about the great depression. Sadly she's no longer with us but I still remember listening to her experiences in those times

  • @daveforeman6931
    @daveforeman6931 Рік тому +8

    Her mind is as sharp as a tack. God has blessed her. Thank you, God !

  • @joelaichner3025
    @joelaichner3025 2 роки тому +21

    My grandma is 97 and still tickin

  • @BornAgainCarnivore
    @BornAgainCarnivore 2 роки тому +22

    She seems real sharp and I like listening to her.

  • @bonniewatson178
    @bonniewatson178 Рік тому +13

    These are the stories my grandparents told us kids, they were resilient people god bless their souls.❤

  • @marcchavez6245
    @marcchavez6245 5 років тому +26

    She is so sweet makes me think of my sweet grandma who lived thru the Great Depression. Miss her so much love you God bless you Ma’am , we had the same conversation just before she passed 😢 helped me choose a career in the automotive industry 😉 she told me you are always tinkering with that old truck get you a job tinkering LOL

  • @Wolfietherrat
    @Wolfietherrat Рік тому +10

    She is what grew us up. Let us appreciate her. We need to know her ways.

  • @cecilbyronbrown3768
    @cecilbyronbrown3768 Рік тому +9

    The old people back then saved everything they didn't waste anything they lived a simple life and they stuck together good times and bad I learned a lot listening to grandparents and older people I thank God everyday for them

    • @markbouldin6513
      @markbouldin6513 Рік тому +2

      You Sir are exactly right..... Didn't waste time either, my experience even when resting they thought you should be stringing beans, shelling pecons are any task available for the day...... I'm middle of the road with that when someone told me we are human beings, not human doings...... I do feel God gave us the best antipressant ever, that being "sweat"...... Best Regards......

  • @honestlyme4247
    @honestlyme4247 2 роки тому +27

    We can learn a lot from those who lived through such hard times. Thank you for sharing 💕

  • @cravey44
    @cravey44 2 роки тому +12

    cant tell you how much i enjoyed hearing this woman speak. not just about the subject matter...it calmed me right down, very nice
    super happy she remembered prices... i was googling back and forth while she talked with todays money equivalent

  • @annmarie1569
    @annmarie1569 Рік тому +9

    What a beautiful lady. God Bless her. ❤❤❤ It's hard to believe that we should be learning from her about how to survive a Depression.

  • @cherylcooper1885
    @cherylcooper1885 5 років тому +27

    Some of us remember growing up with relatives from this era and parents who were groomed by it. Great interview! Will share it!! :-)

  • @chandlerhembree9607
    @chandlerhembree9607 Рік тому +3

    If something bad happened today The great depression would be a picnic Because today very few people garden ect. People would take what YOU had if you had anything .....May GOD have mercy on us all....

  • @debrawashington5222
    @debrawashington5222 Рік тому +4

    My Great Grandmother used a light bulb to darn our Sox! I miss her immensely😢

    • @ralphdavis1431
      @ralphdavis1431  Рік тому +2

      The burned out light bulb was always in the sewing kit

  • @dotconnector76
    @dotconnector76 4 роки тому +12

    Now the bread lines are digital, and 50 million people are on it.

  • @Trava56
    @Trava56 Рік тому +9

    What a lovely lady! I love to listen to stories about the old times told by the great generation! My grandmother was born in 1892 and to hear her tell the stories about her life before 1900 was heartbreaking, but inspiring at the same time. We sure are spoiled nowadays! Thank you for the video❤Greetings from Sweden

  • @D-FIANT415
    @D-FIANT415 2 роки тому +10

    Most of America isn't ready❗

  • @pattiupton1499
    @pattiupton1499 2 роки тому +20

    She is so precious!!

  • @TheEverCuriousJen
    @TheEverCuriousJen Рік тому +7

    It warmed my heart hearing her talk about how her mamma fed those hungry men who jumped off the trains when they slowed down enough looking for food.

  • @voiceofraisin241
    @voiceofraisin241 3 роки тому +19

    Electric lights and air conditioning took away our porches. Two major contributors to the isolation of the American people.

    • @TheCrazyTexan
      @TheCrazyTexan 2 роки тому +2

      You are so right! Thats how I met my next door neighbor years ago

    • @TheCrazyTexan
      @TheCrazyTexan 2 роки тому +1

      When the power went out

    • @EmilyGloeggler7984
      @EmilyGloeggler7984 Рік тому

      @@TheCrazyTexan We had a porch and I was still isolated. It depends on the individual.

  • @pegatheetoo1437
    @pegatheetoo1437 Рік тому +4

    My dear friend will be 105 this month! She talks about the depression, the dust bowl, the Spanish Flu and all sorts of amazing details of when she was growing up. I love to listen to her. She is totally shocked and angry about what America is becoming, and how quickly it's happening.

  • @marymarysmarket3508
    @marymarysmarket3508 2 роки тому +11

    💥 We can only wonder if she is still alive...March 15, 2022. A true treasure.

    • @ralphdavis1431
      @ralphdavis1431  2 роки тому +41

      Thank you for your kind words. Sadly, she is no longer with us in this world. Grannie passed away in 2020, but she remains in our hearts.

    • @jmc8577
      @jmc8577 Рік тому

      ​@@ralphdavis1431 thanks for the share this is beautiful knowledge

  • @nonyabeezwax8693
    @nonyabeezwax8693 Рік тому +7

    My grandmother and daddy's family in Tennessee were share croppers. Everyone grew fields of foods that was useful, and come harvesting time they traded goods. Raised hogs and chickens. Thank God, they made it through them times. My dad came to Indiana, when the mills and Ford automotive were hiring. He applied to all of them and took a job at Ford. Bought a acre of land for $3000 and built our home mostly himself. They lived in a 40 foot trailer til it was near completion, I was the first child born into the new house. Thank goodness for old ways. Best days of my life. Even, after drinking abuse and foster care. Shame on government, but I made it. Best wishes to all. Learn the ways of the old

  • @jlynnc9559
    @jlynnc9559 Рік тому +4

    I did not have grandparents to talk too. I would have loved it. I never lived close to family growing up. Such a blessing.

  • @SirenaSpades
    @SirenaSpades 5 років тому +21

    Very, very interesting. Really enjoyed this! Thank you.

  • @FLCracker92
    @FLCracker92 Рік тому +7

    What a priceless video. This sweet lady’s voice reminds me so much of my Granny who passed at the age of 91. Her family situation and stories of living in the depression were very similar. Those hard times created our greatest generation, I don’t think our current generation (myself included) has even an ounce of the resourcefulness and determination of that era. So glad that I stumbled upon this video, it was a real treat.

  • @thonatim5321
    @thonatim5321 Рік тому +4

    My father grew up on a farm in rural Michigan in the 1930s. He always said he had no idea the country was in a depression. He got up every day, did his chores and went to school. He always had food on the table and would often sneak some of Granpa's shine on the weekend with the local kids.
    He never realized how lucky he was until WW2. He was still a teenager in 1941 but he did get drafted for Korea.

  • @arianekometa48
    @arianekometa48 5 років тому +29

    Wow.Her memory is amazing

  • @done611
    @done611 Рік тому +6

    What a gem! Unfortunately, American families have played around, indulging in affluence and complacency so long that we've failed to teach several generations the core knowledge of simplicity.

  • @j.dunlop8295
    @j.dunlop8295 3 роки тому +13

    You can get these survival tips in a book, called Fox Fire, college students collected stories and details of what old farmers and woodsman did to survive, like making soap, candles and salting meat, smoking it too. They used the Sears catalog, for toilet paper, Sears published it, on thin paper. They knew!

    • @j.dunlop8295
      @j.dunlop8295 3 роки тому +2

      Eliot Wigginton and Foxfire Fund, Inc. Since the first volume published in 1972, the Foxfire books have brought the philosophy and wisdom of the mountains 👍 Life survival tips and stories.

    • @ralphl8055
      @ralphl8055 2 роки тому +2

      Just don't use the Christmas catalog,I'm still looking through it.

    • @LH-kc2zs
      @LH-kc2zs 2 роки тому +5

      "Sears published it on thin paper. They knew!" Reminds me of a story from our local museum - flour came in cloth bags and people would re-use the cloth to make clothing, so the flour companies started using a variety of colours and prints to make their bags.

    • @vickiegveg
      @vickiegveg 2 роки тому +2

      rather hear it from the source.

    • @mitchdegrace2040
      @mitchdegrace2040 Рік тому +1

      I’m 66 and I remember when I was 7 years old we used sears catalog in out outhouse

  • @elizabethfclark03
    @elizabethfclark03 5 років тому +30

    Aww, I could listen to her talk all day! What a special lady. I live a few hours from Knoxville, TN!

  • @Damselfly54315
    @Damselfly54315 Рік тому +2

    What great wisdom she contains,thankful for her life! She's so accurate, my grandparents told me if how bad it was, my great grandfather was wealthy THEN the market crashed...he turned mean and drank and became abusive, the home was my great grandmothers so the home was not lost...but that woman could make ANYTHING stretch so far...we may need that kind of wisdom if this administration keeps up as it is...sorry state of the union, SHAME ON THESE DEMONRATS!!!

  • @utpharmboy2006
    @utpharmboy2006 Рік тому +2

    i filled a few of her prescriptions when i was a pharmacist in jefferson city. sweet lady. probably healthier then me at over 2x my age

  • @leeshepherd8486
    @leeshepherd8486 Рік тому +4

    God blessed her to have a long life.

  • @Wewillbeokay8
    @Wewillbeokay8 Рік тому +6

    I’m so saddened at the state of our world now. She’s a treasure!

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver Рік тому +2

    Americans today could not possibly endure the conditions of the Great Depression in the 30's. First, many people used to live in large family farms growing their own healthy food, which made survival much easier. Second, they were used to being happy with much less, which is no longer the case today. Third, they didn't have credit cards or "easy credit" in those days, which is severely affecting everyone with suffocating debt. And fourth, people today are much more used to resorting to EXTREME VIOLENCE to deal with their problems, so if and when another depression happens, look to see record violence of all kinds occurring in the coming years.

  • @sandramoore8903
    @sandramoore8903 2 роки тому +11

    God bless her soul.

  • @LucidAmerican
    @LucidAmerican Рік тому +5

    Sweet lady, we truly have lost touch of how much our grand and great grandparents suffered and struggled.

  • @angelabardo8820
    @angelabardo8820 Рік тому +4

    Have you accepted jesus into your heart as your savior and lord yet

  • @ladyhannahs3245
    @ladyhannahs3245 Рік тому +2

    This was a wonderful sharing experience. Thank you.
    UNFORTUNATELY, We as a Nation are heading in the same direction again, but much worse than 1929, Mainly because the population has increased exponentially. The only saving grace will be a relationship with Jesus Christ. Read your Bible daily, REPENT, and MOST IMPORTANTLY FORGIVE YOURSELF AND OTHERS!

  • @marilyngrass416
    @marilyngrass416 4 роки тому +11

    Shoes for us that had hole in sole, we used a soap box cut to fit.

    • @dimpletoadfoot8631
      @dimpletoadfoot8631 2 роки тому +1

      Maybe our modern plastic can be a way to fix shoes for the coming years. IMO, someone needs to learn to make shoes from old tires and old jeans

    • @asafaust8869
      @asafaust8869 2 роки тому +2

      Or went with barefeet until it got cold.

  • @ExtravagantFragrances
    @ExtravagantFragrances Рік тому +2

    This lady was rich

  • @tammyhollandsworth6783
    @tammyhollandsworth6783 Рік тому +3

    In the 60’s me and my sister always shared our clothes. When I had children they learned what hand me downs were. That includes their shoes. Left overs were always eaten and nothing was ever wasted. What a sweet lady. This generation of kids to listen to her and realize how precious life is and how hard our grandparents and parents worked to make it. 😊

  • @caroljones677
    @caroljones677 Рік тому +3

    I remember my grandma telling us that every time she baked a pie she made 2 and hobos off the train always came to our house!!!

  • @sharonklinger912
    @sharonklinger912 Рік тому +3

    Yes during a Depression you are blessed if living on a farm. God bless the work of their hands!

  • @tomlehr861
    @tomlehr861 4 роки тому +10

    We need to get back to that

  • @leanordials8008
    @leanordials8008 2 роки тому +10

    Thank You for your wisdom.

  • @cuppiecake007
    @cuppiecake007 4 роки тому +16

    I really enjoyed this,what a great memory she has!

  • @chucksinger1916
    @chucksinger1916 Рік тому +3

    Glad I learned a lot from this generation! We may be heading for another depression! Stock up

    • @deb4735
      @deb4735 Рік тому

      Stock up runs out. These people who had already had land and livestock were living that way already. They knew how to live that way. Most of the population now is city people. Not saying you shouldn't stock up.
      The difference now is what's going on and will be.... is done on purpose, designed, planned totally evil.
      Eph 6:12

  • @bluebellrose8
    @bluebellrose8 Рік тому +3

    It's amazing she can remember the price of tobacco back then! I hope I will be like her one day, 105 and full of memories! Awesome lady:)