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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
RURAL
ELECTRIFICATION
J. D. Logan: Terry Ebner, Interviewer
We hadn't ever had electricity in the country 'til, well, I'd say middle of 1939
or 1940. Everybody got electricity all over the country. The high lines began to
be built out here. We did away with the old ice boxes and bought us some
refrigerators and things sure looked up after that. I think I lived on ice
cream.
ELECTRICITY MADE THE DIFFERENCE
Velma Ray Davis: Robert Young, Interviewer
I don't believe there was any electricity out in the country until nineteen and
thirty-eight or forty, somewhere in there. The idea that you could get an iron
and plug it in the wall and iron whew! I have a couple of what they call sad
irons, and when my granddaughter was little, she found them and she said,
"Nanny, what in the world is this?" And I said, "Well, honey, that's an iron."
"Well, where did you plug it in?" I said, "They didn't heat by electricity." She
said, "What heated it, then?" I tried to tell her that we had wood cook-stoves,
and when we wanted to iron, we just built a fire in the cook-stove and heated
them on top of the stove.
The thing that makes me feel the richest, let's put it that way, is to be able
to fill the washing machine with your clothes and start it, and turn on the
dishwasher and start it, and sit down and read. That really makes you feel like
you are getting somewhere.
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THE POWER PLANT
L. G. Glover: Joey Gimenez, Interviewer
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click on thumbnail image for an
enlarged view of Mr Glover |
THE POWER
PLANT
L. G. Glover: Joey Gimenez, Interviewer
Then I came to the power plant as fireman for the boilers. We
had three 250 horse [power] boilers and three engines and one Skinner 500 horse
engine and we had two newer engines that were 100 horsepower. I worked in the
power plant, then for six months as a fireman, and then I went to the engine
room. Then about 19 and 40 somethin', why, we put in two more diesels, 260
horsepower, six cylinders. Then we got overloaded, and we put in a 750
horsepower, five cylinder diesel. Then in the 40's somewhere, our load got too
heavy . . . The town was growing every year, you see.
I worked down here at the power plant then, about four-teen years. I worked
twelve o'clock midnight till eight next morning. Six years of that time, we
didn't have a vacation. We just swapped work and got off a day or so. And then,
a little later, the chief engineer died and Mr. Boyd, who was assistant engineer
then, took over as chief engineer. And then he passed away; I was assistant
then. I went to work daytime, eight till four.
And in '42, our load got so heavy—so many washing machines, so many ice
boxes—load just kept building up. And when we closed the plant down, our peak
load was 900 kilowatt hours. That's all we could pull, and the load was getting
too heavy.
So, the city manager, who was B. H. Cruz at that time, he and I got together and
figured that we could buy engines and make our own electricity for seven mils a
kilowatt, but it would cost us around a half a million dollars to buy the
engines, build the building to put it in. And about the time we'd get that one
paid for, why, we'd have to buy another one. The town was still growing, you
see. Mr. Cruz and I got to dickering around with a company, the LCRA, to be
exact. Mr. Cruz and I got to figuring that we could buy at the same price, seven
mil, from LCRA, and we would still retain our distribution system, with the
transformers over here west of town, on the Liberty Hill road.
We're tied into the Possum Kingdom circuit and the LCRA circuit. If something
goes wrong in Austin, we can throw the switch the other way and get it from
Mineral Wells.
Williamson County
Historical Museum
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- 512-943-1670
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