54. Hattie Harris
Transcript
David Dollar: Good morning. This is David Dollar on Memories. Today we're going to visit with Mrs. Hattie Harris of Natchitoches and we'll be right back to begin our Memories program right after this message from our sponsor, People's Bank and Trust Company.
Hello again. In case you just joined us, this is David Dollar on Memories. We're going to visit this morning with Mrs. Hattie Harris. Ms. Harris, we'd like to start off our program by getting a little family background. Why don't you tell us a little bit about your family here in Natchitoches, growing up around the area and, I guess, life in general about getting you to where you are right now in life at 92 years old? Why don't you tell us a little bit about yourself?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: When I knowed myself, we was living at St. Norris, but it was in Natchitoches. My daddy was then a ferryman and he would ferry and he was farming.
David Dollar: Where did he ferry folks?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Oh, he ferried over in St. Norris across the river at the time. One time back there during his ferrying, they had a man, two men get drowned.
David Dollar: Oh goodness. That's the Red River?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah, Red River.
David Dollar: Over in St. Norris.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yes, in St. Norris.
David Dollar: Okay.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: It was the mayor rider and one of the drummers. Them two that was driving Surrey. Double-hack, he called it then. And then a single hack, the mayor rider was driving a single. And it come when they got out there. My daddy taking another man with him, on that day, the wind was so high, by the name of Bob Brigg. And through that the wind got so high he asked the people to get out of there and stand ahead of the horses. They said, "No." Said they been crossing and said they wasn't going to do nothing. Well, they had a pole in front and one behind and he wanted them to stand in front of the horses to count them. 'Cause they was getting flustered already.
David Dollar: Right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: So through that they didn't and all at once the hack was come in first. I'm going to say the drummer, the double-hack, come in first and the hack, the mayor rider was behind. Single-horse. Little half of something. And the double team backed back on the mayor rider. They went in backwards.
David Dollar: My goodness.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Man, horse and everything he had. And at that time, well the man went in too. He had these up in there. The next was the horse, double hack. They went in. There's two of them. They went in right behind that. The wind was so high and the horses act like they was seeing something in the wind, the way they was acting. My daddy said. I wasn't there.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: But anyway, everybody was looking on because the wind was high and everybody in St. Morris and all the stores looking. Looking on, standing on the bank. But through that, let's see, two started out, he couldn't make it. One come out and two drowned.
David Dollar: My goodness.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And it was well-harnessed up. Just the nicest and the best of.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: So through that, when we know anything, my daddy come to his house on this side, head down. My mother met him. What's the matter? Knelt said, trouble, trouble, trouble. He come after bridles of his own to take these horses back to Natchitoches. He come all the way around on this side, crossed over, crossed them back over. When they come out, they didn't have on nothing. They kicked out everything.
David Dollar: My goodness. Horses got out.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah, the horses got out. Really did. They got out. And two men got drowned. One come out. And he the one told the other one started and tried to bring some of his drummer packages, but he couldn't make it.
David Dollar: Well, I'll be.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And so that is it.
David Dollar: How old were you when this happened? Do you remember?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Oh, well I must be six years old. Because you didn't go to school then early as they do.
David Dollar: Right. Right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: No. You had to be six or seven.
David Dollar: You did go to school though, right around the area here.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah. In Natchitoches.
David Dollar: What do you remember about going to school in Natchitoches when you were a young girl? Was it hard or did you have a good time or learn things that you didn't want to learn?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: No, no, no. I always wanted to learn.
David Dollar: Oh, really?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Always wanted to learn. And now Mr. Thomas Bullock was the first teacher I come to know. But my brother from St. Morris was coming up on the Lou Ellis here to this school.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: To Lou Ellis. But I wasn't old enough and my uncle stayed up to here and my mother... That's my mother's brother. And she would visit and that caused us to be where... He boated with my uncle, this Thomas Bullock. And he was a finished teacher. He was real good. And the best exhibition ever was given to Lou Ellis, from my remembrance, it was him. And they had some other good ones, but not as good as his.
David Dollar: What was your favorite subject in school? Did you like to learn, oh, like about history or adding up columns or figures or what did you like about school? Or just everything?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Everything. Anything. I didn't reject nothing and all. I never has got a lick about my lesson. I always kept my lesson one lesson ahead of the other.
David Dollar: Oh, that's good.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: I know this today and I know my lesson for tomorrow.
David Dollar: For tomorrow too.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's the way.
David Dollar: Oh, I tell you that. The way to do it.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah. Well that's the way. Now, at that time I wasn't in no grammar. I stopped school. I had to stop in third grade.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Which was so grievous to me and with me, but I had to do it. My mother died when I was 12 and she left twins.
David Dollar: Oh, goodness.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And she called me to the bedside and told me to come to the bed and I went. She said, "If I should die, I want you to be the mother of my two children." My mother's sister, she over there living there. Just us two. So I had to stay with the children.
David Dollar: Sure did.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: She went to school. She went to every teacher in the world until they got where they say they couldn't teach her. They'd have to send up to-
David Dollar: [inaudible 00:06:40] or something?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: High school.
David Dollar: High school.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Gibsland.
David Dollar: Gibsland?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Gibsland. That's where you sent the children.
David Dollar: I see.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And seventh grade was high as they went here-
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: ... at that time.
David Dollar: What time was this? Do you remember about what year it was? See if you were about 12 that'll make it about the 1880s, somewhere in there? 18 maybe 90?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: My mother died in '97. 1897.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, that's when I had to quit.
David Dollar: That's right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's when it was.
David Dollar: Right about then. Okay.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And I was born 1884.
David Dollar: I see. Okay. Tell you what, let me interrupt you just a second.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: All right. Go ahead.
David Dollar: We're going to take a little commercial. We'll be right back with Ms. Hattie Harris right after this message from the folks at People's Bank. This is David Dollar again. We're visiting on Memories this morning with Mrs. Hattie Harris of Natchitoches. Learning some things that I sure didn't know. Ms. Harris, it's just a few days before Christmas. Do you have any Christmas memories you'd like to share with us or things that you remember or maybe some things you'd like to try to forget about Christmas?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, with my father, Christmas was always good. They always tried to do what they could.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: We were satisfied at anything they did. And I'm married now. 1902.
David Dollar: How old were you then?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, I married in my 17, but a few days over, in February, I was 18.
David Dollar: You were 18. Almost 18. Well that's about right. Folks are getting married these days at then. Go ahead.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah. And through that, my husband was pretty rough. But he kept it hidden quite a bit before I come to know, lived with him. He acted like he's all right until you got over with... You know how that is.
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: So he was pretty rough. He didn't never fight. He didn't fight.
David Dollar: Well that's good.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: No. Now, he'd hit a lick.
David Dollar: Oh, goodness.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: But now he'd have to hit another if he was going to hit because I [inaudible 00:08:52] you. I was going to tell him what I had to say. I was going to tell him.
David Dollar: That's what I've heard about you. You need to say what's on your mind all the time.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: I'm going to say.
David Dollar: That's good.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Knock me down. I'm going to say. It's nothing but right. Or what I think right. What I knows right. And it's true.
David Dollar: That's your opinion and what you think is right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's right.
David Dollar: That's what you need.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's right.
David Dollar: I want to ask you something else before we get too much further in the show. I know when we were riding over here, you were kind of concerned over those things in the news. We've been hearing about some of these cows getting killed and showing up. What do you think about that? We were talking about it might be UFOs. What do you think that there might be anything to that? What do you think about folks coming from outer space?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, the outer space, under space one, it's not us here. It's not of us. I don't believe it. I don't believe we that dirty or would do such as that. I called... I told them this morning, that's somebody from out round yonder, unknown to any of us because I just can't understand it. I, naturally... And another thing somebody else must be thinking because they don't seem like the media holding it close enough.
David Dollar: Think they might be scared of what they might find, huh?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah, yeah. And it is such thing. You can see strange thing. And then we have different monsters to come out. You know?
David Dollar: Oh yeah.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: We have that. And now it takes the Lord to tell which he is telling you. These things going to be. The half ain't told.
David Dollar: That's right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: This is the beginning of sorrow.
David Dollar: Could be.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And it is. It's just the beginning of sorrow. Care what come up. It's just the beginning and, the way I see it, it's unnatural to us. And I noticed on the TV. Now, I haven't been over there. The people over there, it appear to me that they're different to us.
David Dollar: What? People in other countries?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah. They're real different. You can't hardly understand 'em. And what you do understand, they're different. Their ways is different and their belief is different.
David Dollar: That's right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: I can't see. I don't know. And another thing, I feel like we got some enemies over there.
David Dollar: Oh, yeah.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: They don't get us in America over here.
David Dollar: That could surely be true.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: They don't. They don't.
David Dollar: From the news we've been seeing lately, I think everybody would agree with you like that.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, we got some enemies and ain't just not had it, but they're coming up a little stronger and stronger.
David Dollar: That's right. We don't know who our friends are anymore.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: No, no. Uh-uh.
David Dollar: It's getting pretty...
Mrs. Hattie Harris: No. We really don't know.
David Dollar: We're going to need to try to bring our program to some kind of end here. We like to close our show with a closing memory every time. And if you've got one and you could share with us now, we'd sure like to hear it.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, we have plenty of sickness and so much cancer. And it just stay with me, staying. Man, I've been wanting a chance to tell it to a congregation. Not in this way because-
David Dollar: Yes, ma'am. Well, you'll reach a pretty good audience here.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah. This is all right since I'm here now.
David Dollar: Good.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: It's a good reason why we're having cancer so much today.
David Dollar: Why is that?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Well, the beginning, within my mind, and that's what stays, everything we eat is fertilized. Everything we eat. Don't care what it is. Rice, bread [inaudible 00:12:29].
David Dollar: That's right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: All your vegetables rushing to the market. Some of the vegetables so green when you cook it, the water, you have to pour it all and the greens is too green. But through this, that's fertilizer. They used to do it. Grind up anything, bones of any sort, sick or well. They grind that up and rush it and put it in the ground, but the suction of it coming up in the vegetable. Well, humans can't stand what beasts can. That's what it takes. And another thing about the cancer: The water, I got a zinc bucket that got every color but the right color. It was a brand new and God knows every which way this water turn here, that's the way the bucket, the mop. And you can't wash it out.
David Dollar: So you're saying kind of we need to get back to eating natural food?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yes.
David Dollar: And drinking real water. Not all this chemical businesses that folks are putting in it.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's right. So long as we was using the mother dust of the Earth, it wasn't no such back there.
David Dollar: But we've been messing with it, haven't we?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's all you do now.
David Dollar: Putting that stuff in it and putting stuff in water.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: That's all you're doing. And then the next thing, the women's don't nurse the babies no more. They do not. Put them on a bottle. Well, where'd that milk go? What become of it?
David Dollar: Don't know.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: If you didn't eat a mouthful for two days, when your baby born of your natural self, your milk coming down, that's made up out of you from the suction of you.
David Dollar: That's right.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: And since you are eating everything and anything you want and you ain't nursing your baby, this milk come up. This going to give you a little feel, natural, until that milk finish up on you. Well then here, you're going to rub it down. Do this and do that and turn it back. Well that milk is clotting. You got kernels already in your breast. That milk is not going out of you.
David Dollar: It's not going to be good for it.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: No. It's not good.
David Dollar: I tell you what, Ms. Harris, we thank you for being with our show this morning, and we just might have you back on a special medical show one day telling us some things we might need to do to keep us all a little healthier. Okay? You think you could come back and do that for us?
Mrs. Hattie Harris: I can come back if I'm living. I can come back.
David Dollar: Well, we're going to hope for it. We'll be looking forward to your 92nd birthday come February the 12th. We'll have to send you a birthday card or something or say hello.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: Yeah. Yeah.
David Dollar: We thank you for being with us this morning and we thank you folks at home for joining with us this morning on Memories. Ms. Hattie Harris was with us. If you enjoyed the program, why don't you call the folks down at People's Bank and let them know it because they're bringing the show to us and they'd be glad to hear from you. If you are over 60 and would like to get involved in the community, we would invite you to call the Retired Senior Volunteer Program. Their office number is 352-8647. We'd like to wish you a Merry Christmas. I know I would. Ms. Harris would and all the folks here at [inaudible 00:15:51] and People's Bank. And we thank you for joining us today on Memories. Good day.
Mrs. Hattie Harris: All right [inaudible 00:15:56]. Yeah.
David Dollar interviews Hattie Harris, 92, about growing up in Natchitoches, her father’s work as a ferryman on the Red River, attending school in the area and her love of learning, the death of her mother, Christmas memories, UFOs, and her thoughts on the rise in cancer.