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Narratives from the Georgetown's Yesteryears Book
A special thanks to The Georgetown Heritage
Society and Martha Mitten Allen
for letting the Museum post these wonderful first person stories.
see Foreword and
Preface
"Growing up
at Rocky Hollow Texas"
EsteLee Green Hausenfluke - Interviewer: John Luce
The wives worked right along beside the husbands, in the
farming area [near Andice]. Cotton was the main crop; they raised cotton and
corn. And they had a garden. That was the way they got their food. And they had
wild berries, wild plums, in the woods. The garden things—they had to dry their
beans, but they did use jars to put up the wild berries, the plums and the green
grapes, the little wild grapes, mustang grapes. Green grapes made the best amber
colored jelly. And they also made grape juice when the grapes got ripe.
They had their own meat, in that they killed their hogs and cured it. They cured
the hams and bacons, and they ground their sausage and cooked off their hog
lard. And the cracklins from the hog lard, they made into lye soap. In a big old
wash pot, my mother made
lye soap, even after I was a child. And I
made lye soap when I first married, and it certainly did smell good when you
washed your clothes and let sunshine do the drying; clean, fresh smell.
They had out back of my father and mother's home, what we called the smoke
house. It was a little room, and in that they smoked their meat, if they smoked
any meat. My parents never smoked any meat, they just cured it and hung it. And
in that smoke house often times it was a dirt floor because it [the meat]
dripped as it aged. But the hams were hung and the bacons, slabs of bacon, were
hung. My mother, I don't remember what she did, she may have sewed bags made out
of old sheets or something, and stuffed the sausage in those and hung them up in
bags to dry. And that was their meat. Some fancy people who had a lot of money,
they had a rock center in there where they put their fire, and they used oak or
pecan wood to give it a flavor.
There was no electricity, they used kerosene lamps. They used wood stoves to
heat and cook on. They had no refrigeration. We had what we called a water
cooler. It had a pan on the top which was of galvanized tin and it had about
three or four shelves with legs on the sides and a tray at the bottom up off the
floor on a little leg. And to keep things cool, they put cold water from the
well in the top and they took material which was like an old sheet and put it in
the water and brought it down around those legs and fed it into the bottom. It
acted as sort of a wick to keep the water flowing, and that kept their milk
fresh for at least a couple of days, and the butter was kept pretty firm. Other
wise in the summer it would have just melted away.
for
more info
click on
Rock
Hollow, Texas by The Handbook of Texas Online
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