We later learned that despite the
fulminations of that old white man each time he came for the rent, the thought
of a mother and her five children being put out into the street was so
disturbing to him that he had paid the $25 per month rent out of his own pocket
for most of that last year we were there.
He knew Mother could not pay it, but where were we to go? The new owners were very nice people, but
they did not buy a house for their family to have to share it with a woman and
her five children that they did not even know! We had to move! Within a month, we had to be out.
Mother trudged up and down Welch
looking for housing, some kind of place for us to live. Welch was a difficult place to get around in
because there was no public transportation on our side of the railroad
tracks. The entire area consisted of
hills, under hills, under more hills, with chasms, ravines, gulches and
hollows. Though it was arduous, Mother continued walking and looking because
the month was swiftly coming to a close.
Finally, someone told her about an empty room in an old house on the
hill next to the Methodist church that they thought might be available.
There were four rooms in that
house. Two on the first floor were
separated by a hall, and the two on the second floor were also separated by a
hall. Three of them were occupied. On
the first floor across from our room lived Miss Ella, an elderly woman who was
kind to us and who sometimes shared with us kids something special that she had
cooked. On the second floor directly
above us was a woman with two boys who went to the same school that we did. We
were not really allowed to play or associate with them because Mother said that
they "were not up to proper standard." They and their mother were loud and used profanity in almost
every conversation. They were not
required to read nor were there any educational expectations made of them. Across from them lived a single woman who
was said to be a prostitute. We hardly
ever saw her, but we did see men regularly going up to her room at night. Sometimes my brother Joe, and some of his
friends would creep up the stairs when she had company and try to peek through
the keyhole to see what they could see. Their snickering outside that door one
night almost got them caught! Then, one
time I opened our door to the hall and saw the father of one of the girls in my
class going out the front door after being up there. At nine years old, with no notions yet of the ways of the world,
I wondered why in heaven's name he was so far away from where he lived, which
was a few hills away!
All six of us lived in our one
room, which had a tiny alcove attached to it that served as a make-do
closet. In that room were two 3/4 beds,
Mother's wedding cedar chest, a wooden crate to hold plates, knives, forks and
pots. There was also a coal stove that
was used for both heating and cooking.
Making a fire meant collecting kindling from the woods behind the house
and buying (on rare occasions) or picking up several lumps of coal from the
railroad tracks two street levels below where we lived. Mother sent us children down to the tracks
to collect the lumps of coal that fell from the coal trains as they hurtled
around the curves. This was a chore
that had to be done before we went to school.
Needless to say, everything was done in that room. The house had neither electricity nor
water. There was no toilet facility
either. Everyday we had to drag pails
of water up the 30 or so rickety wooden steps between the house of our landlady
directly across the street to our house.
Her house had three levels.
There were three steps up from the street leading up to a porch and one
large room on the first level; two rooms used as bedrooms and a bathroom on the
level below that; and on the third level, another room where a roomer
lived. The water we were able to use
was available from a spigot on that third level.
For the people in the house where
we lived, there was an outhouse much further up the hill, behind and above the
house. To get to it, it was necessary
to walk outside and around to the back of the house, then climb some more
rickety, wooden steps which led to a rickety wooden platform the size of a
door, that spanned a ditch about 3 feet deep.
Every morning before going to school, Joe and I had to take turns
emptying the pail that we used as a toilet, traversing the treacherous route to
the outhouse. During the winter with
snow and ice everywhere, we often slipped and slid trying to get up to that
outhouse with the contents of that pail, which often spilled over onto the
ground and sometimes on us as well.
At one point, Mother began to
cough and to complain of pains in her chest, probably the result of her having
to go out poorly clothed in the cold, harsh West Virginia winters to either
seek work or go to work. There was one
Black doctor in town who agreed to see her in exchange for helping his wife in
the house. He examined her and sent her
for an x-ray which indicated that she had tuberculosis. She was told that she could get treatment in
a sanitarium in another area of the state, but that she would have to sign us
over for care to an orphanage many miles away. She adamantly refused to consent to this. We would watch her stand in the open doorway
of that room and breathe cold, fresh air deeply into her lungs, affirming all
the while, the verse from the Unity School of Christianity's prayer of faith:
"God is my health; I can’t be sick.
God is my strength unfailing quick.
God is my all I know no fear,
since God and love and truth are here."
Several months later, the doctor who had diagnosed her with tuberculosis
was absolutely astonished that her current lung x-ray showed no sign of
tuberculosis whatsoever! Many years
would pass before I would recognize this close up demonstration of determination
and faith for what it really was, and begin to appl