57. Idella Piere
Transcript
Jim Colley: Good morning. This is Jim Colley and this is The Memories Program. We're going to visit with a lady who's a hundred years old this morning on The Memories Show. We'll be back and talking with Idella Piere up here in just a few minutes after this word from Peoples Bank and Trust.
In case you've just joined us in our bicentennial year, 1976, we're going to talk with a lady who was born in 1876. Idella Piere, we're glad you're here. Welcome to the show. Say hello.
Idella Piere: Huh?
Speaker 3: Say hello.
Idella Piere: Hello.
Jim Colley: Okay. You've lived in Natchitoches and Natchitoches Parish for a long time. Have you lived here all your life?
Idella Piere: All of my life, yes, in Natchitoches Parish.
Jim Colley: Where did you grow up?
Idella Piere: I grew up on the Crossgo Place.
Jim Colley: Where is that?
Idella Piere: That's way down Cane River.
Jim Colley: All the way down towards Rapides Parish?
Idella Piere: No, I never went that far.
Jim Colley: Never went that far?
Idella Piere: Uh-uh.
Jim Colley: Where have you traveled outside of the parish? Did you ever leave Natchitoches?
Idella Piere: Well, I went to Houston, awhile, visiting. That's all. I never did live there.
Jim Colley: What did you think of Houston?
Idella Piere: What I think of it? I just don't like it.
Jim Colley: You don't like it. Too big?
Idella Piere: Uh-uh. Too lively.
Jim Colley: You like it quieter?
Idella Piere: Yeah. I likes a good nice quiet place.
Jim Colley: When you were growing up and still a small child, what do you remember about those times?
Idella Piere: When I was small child? Let me see, can I remember? Yes, I remember when I was small, playing in the dirt, ashes, roast potatoes.
Jim Colley: Is that what you did for fun? When you were playing, what did you do for fun?
Idella Piere: Oh, when I was playing? Build dirt houses in the river bank. You know, just dig all along the bank and make dirt houses, thick stick and let the smoke come out to the top.
Jim Colley: That was pretty good fun.
Idella Piere: Yeah, that was nice.
Jim Colley: I bet that was something else. What did your mother do?
Idella Piere: Mama, she always farmed. She didn't have no husband.
Jim Colley: And so she was the one who supported the family.
Idella Piere: That's right.
Jim Colley: What did she do?
Idella Piere: She farmed for one bale of cotton.
Jim Colley: One bale of cotton a year?
Idella Piere: Yeah.
Jim Colley: And that was it?
Idella Piere: And that's all we got.
Jim Colley: Boy, that was pretty hard.
Idella Piere: It was tight.
Jim Colley: After you grew up, where did you go?
Idella Piere: After I grew up, I married.
Jim Colley: And then what did you do together? You and your husband?
Idella Piere: We farmed.
Jim Colley: Was that down south of here?
Idella Piere: Yeah, that down south.
Jim Colley: At the same place.
Idella Piere: Same place, on an old Chapman place.
Jim Colley: What was it like picking cotton down there? Did you pick cotton?
Idella Piere: Yeah, I picked cotton. I made crop.
Jim Colley: What kind of crop did you raise up?
Idella Piere: Well, we raised cotton and corn, sweet potatoes, different thing.
Jim Colley: Where did you sell it? Did you bring it to town to sell?
Idella Piere: Oh no. The boss man had it. I don't know what he done with it.
Jim Colley: He came by and picked it up.
Idella Piere: Uh-huh. We don't know what he done with it.
Jim Colley: Did you keep part of it to live on?
Idella Piere: No. My husband worked on hay. The boss man took one half and gave him the other half.
Jim Colley: It was kind of sharecropping?
Idella Piere: Uh-huh. That's right.
Jim Colley: I see, I see. As you and your husband were living down there on the farm, what did you do? Did you go to church frequently? Was that the kind of place where you went to see people?
Idella Piere: Go to church? Uh-huh. Yes, sir.
Jim Colley: What kind of church was it?
Idella Piere: A Baptist church.
Jim Colley: Was it a big one?
Idella Piere: Pretty good size.
Jim Colley: Pretty good size. You met on Sundays?
Idella Piere: Yeah.
Jim Colley: Wednesdays?
Idella Piere: Wednesday night for council.
Jim Colley: How long were you there on Sunday?
Idella Piere: Huh?
Jim Colley: What time did you go to worship on Sunday?
Idella Piere: Well, about nine o'clock.
Jim Colley: What time did you get home?
Idella Piere: About four.
Jim Colley: All day?
Idella Piere: Yeah. They used to keep a church all day.
Jim Colley: You did?
Idella Piere: Uh-huh.
Jim Colley: What did you do all day?
Idella Piere: Well, we were just preaching.
Jim Colley: And singing?
Idella Piere: Having school.
Jim Colley: What kind of school was it?
Idella Piere: Sunday school.
Jim Colley: Then you had picnic out on the lawn?
Idella Piere: My house in the yard and the grass.
Jim Colley: Then you go back to church afterwards?
Idella Piere: Mm-hmm.
Jim Colley: So that was all day on Sunday?
Idella Piere: Yeah, we did stay church all day.
Jim Colley: You worked six days a week and went to church on the seventh day?
Idella Piere: Sure did.
Jim Colley: Boy, that kept you honest, didn't it?
Idella Piere: Yeah, we done it. I had to do it.
Jim Colley: When you're living out in the country like that, you don't have much chance for doctors. You all had to-
Idella Piere: Didn't have no doctor.
Jim Colley: Had to take care of yourselves.
Idella Piere: Yeah, we grass tea, tea.
Jim Colley: What kind of tea did you make?
Idella Piere: Mint tea, bam tea, and horse mint tea.
Jim Colley: What were they good for?
Idella Piere: Good for fever. Good for chill. Mm-hmm.
Jim Colley: So you learned to make the medicines that you needed right there?
Idella Piere: That's right. We just had to go out on the riverbank, put up that horse grain, horse mint, wash it and boil it and drink it. That cut the fever.
Jim Colley: What did it taste like?
Idella Piere: Bitter.
Jim Colley: Bitter. But you took it anyway.
Idella Piere: You had to take it. That's helped the fever and chill. We didn't know nothing about no doctor.
Jim Colley: You never saw one.
Idella Piere: Uh-uh.
Jim Colley: When was the first time you saw a doctor, do you remember?
Idella Piere: I called him Dr. Gagnon.
Jim Colley: Where was he from?
Idella Piere: He was in Natchitoches.
Jim Colley: And so if somebody was bad sick?
Idella Piere: Uh-huh. He come to the old folks. He didn't visit the children. We all talk to Dr. Gagnon, but we didn't know it.
Jim Colley: I see. Raising up children was quite an experience when everybody had to work, you had to have children around to help you out. What was it like during childbirth? Was there a midwife who came and helped you?
Idella Piere: Midwife, that's all. No doctor. Midwife.
Jim Colley: And she had come stay with you for a day or so?
Idella Piere: Nine days.
Jim Colley: Nine days.
Idella Piere: She stayed there.
Jim Colley: How would you pay her?
Idella Piere: Sometime we pay her with corn, meal.
Jim Colley: But that was just the kind of work she did?
Idella Piere: That's what we just was able to give her. We didn't have no money.
Jim Colley: Okay. We are enjoying visiting with you. We're going to take a commercial break right now for Peoples Bank and Trust, and we'll come back and talk with you in just a minute.
If you've just joined The Memories Program. We're visiting with Idella Piere. She's a hundred years old and we're having a good time visiting with her.
We were talking about when you and your husband were farming. How many children did you all have?
Idella Piere: When we was farming, I had eight, eight here, I believe.
Jim Colley: That's quite a few. Did you put them to work?
Idella Piere: Well, not when they were small. I put one to stay home to nurse and I went in the field.
Jim Colley: What kind of chores did you have them do?
Idella Piere: Chores what I had them to do? Well, when they was small. Oh, we talking about working? They went in the field with me when ... learn them how to work, send corn, chop out cotton, and pick cotton, get them some clothes. I wasn't able to get none.
Jim Colley: I see you sent them into the field. We were talking just a few minutes ago, you would send them into the field on Friday?
Idella Piere: That's right.
Jim Colley: And they'd picked cotton.
Idella Piere: Until Saturday 12 o'clock.
Jim Colley: And that was so they could do what? Get the church dues?
Idella Piere: Yeah. Get the church dues. That's right.
Jim Colley: Have to get them some clothes and send them to church.
Idella Piere: That's correct.
Jim Colley: They earned their own money to do that?
Idella Piere: No, they had their own money then. And I stayed on in the field, let my children went out to work, because I wasn't even getting it.
Jim Colley: Your husband used to go into town. How did he get to town?
Idella Piere: In a wagon.
Jim Colley: On a wagon.
Idella Piere: Uh-huh.
Jim Colley: So you had a horse and a wagon that you used?
Idella Piere: Well, I used the boss man wagon and his mule.
Jim Colley: Who was the boss man then. Do you remember his name?
Idella Piere: Yeah.
Jim Colley: Who was that?
Idella Piere: Boyle Cloutier.
Jim Colley: And so you used to go, or your husband used to go into town on the wagon?
Idella Piere: Yes, sir.
Jim Colley: When would he come back?
Idella Piere: Oh, he come back the same day.
Jim Colley: Same day. But it was quite a ... He had to go into which town?
Idella Piere: Natchitoches.
Jim Colley: Natchitoches.
Idella Piere: Sure, Natchitoches, yeah.
Jim Colley: Okay. Well you've lived a long life around here. What's your favorite memory about growing up in Natchitoches Parish?
Idella Piere: My favorite memory in growing up? What I remember in Natchitoches Parish? I remember growing up a girl. I remember I married without a father. I didn't have no mother. I remember this show was Christmas Day, my mother took her stuff for Christmas and saved it for my wedding. She wouldn't pass, she wouldn't give nobody nothing out of it. She just saved it for my wedding because she didn't have no husband. And if I had ate up my Christmas stuff, I wouldn't have had nothing for the wedding.
Jim Colley: So you saved the Christmas food for the wedding then?
Idella Piere: For the wedding, that's right.
Jim Colley: That's quite something.
Idella Piere: I done it. My mother didn't have no husband.
Jim Colley: And she was looking forward to having a son-in-law.
Idella Piere: That's right.
Jim Colley: So she got one.
Idella Piere: Yeah, she got one.
Jim Colley: And that wedding was a pretty special event, wasn't it?
Idella Piere: It was.
Jim Colley: Tell me about the wedding.
Idella Piere: The wedding?
Jim Colley: Uh-huh.
Idella Piere: Well, my husband had a waiter to wait on him and I had one to wait on me when I married.
Jim Colley: Where'd you get married?
Idella Piere: I got married on the Boyle Cloutier place.
Jim Colley: Was there a little Baptist church there?
Idella Piere: Yeah, but they're down the lane.
Jim Colley: So you got married. Who did the wedding?
Idella Piere: Old man Robert Holmes.
Jim Colley: Now who was he?
Idella Piere: Well, he was an old pastor for the church, Baptist Church. He was an old pastor. He married me off.
Jim Colley: Did you have quite a party afterwards?
Idella Piere: A partner?
Jim Colley: Party.
Idella Piere: No, I was scared. My mama didn't have no husband. I was scared they’d raise a fuss round the house. We just had a nice wedding.
Jim Colley: It's better not to?
Idella Piere: That's right.
Jim Colley: Okay. It was good talking with you. And we've enjoyed visiting with you on The Memories Program.
Idella Piere: Yes, sir.
Jim Colley: And we're glad you're around in 1976.
Idella Piere: Yes, sir.
Jim Colley: Thank you, ma'am.
Idella Piere: You [inaudible 00:11:16].
Jim Colley interviews Idella Piere, 100, about growing up in the area, playing outside, sharecropping, attending church all day, homemade remedies, and wedding memories.