Strange Family Folklore

Family-Grown Tobacco

Teresa Roberson

In this episode, I interview my Cousin Thel Strange and his daughter, Angie Wade. Cousin Thel is the 10th child of Jessie Strange, who is the 2nd child of my Great Grandfather Jesse Strange.

My great grandfather, Jesse Strange, was born a slave and freed in his 20s. His 12 children were born free, and referred to as "The First Freeborn Generation." In this podcast series, I interview Jessee Strange's descendants in order to document our stories. This is Strange Family Folklore.

 

In this episode, I interview my Cousin Thel Strange and his daughter, Angie Wade. Cousin Thel is the 10th child of Jessie Strange, who is the 2nd child of my Great Grandfather Jesse Strange.

 

Teresa Roberson 

You grew up in Cascade, Virginia, right? 

 

Thel  

I growed up in the woods. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Where in the woods? 

 

Thel  

Down below Brosville. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Brosville High School?

 

Thel  

That's right. 

 

Teresa Roberson  

 And that's where you graduated?

 

Thel  

I didn't finish school. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

 How far did you go in school? 

 

Thel  

Sixth grade. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

 What did you do then? 

 

Thel  

I had everything and they took it from me. 

 

Teresa Roberson  

Who took what from you, Cousin Thel? 

 

Thel  

The Lord.

 

Teresa Roberson 

The law? 

 

Thel     

It was The Lord took it.  

 

Teresa Roberson   

After sixth grade, what did you do? 

 

Thel     

Oh, farm all my life.  

 

Teresa Roberson     

Which crops?

 

Thel  

Everything you can grow.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Well, Cousin Thel, I'm a suburbanite, so I don't know what grows when. You'd have to give me a clue. 

 

Thel  

Tobacco, corn, wheat, snaps, tomatoes. Everything. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

So, you were a farmer all your life?

 

Thel  

All my life. Still is now. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Oh, what do you grow now? 

 

Thel  

Everything. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Is it all year round or certain seasons?

 

Thel  

No, ma'am. You grow them in summertime. Winter come, it cuts off.

 

Teresa Roberson 

And what do you do then? 

 

Thel  

Sleep. Watch snow.

 

Teresa Roberson 

But I'd like to know about Cascade when you were a child. What were things like back then compared to now? 

 

Thel     

The same as it is now. 

 

Teresa Roberson     

I don't believe that.

 

Thel   

Well, it just wasn't many grown people then. It won't but a few grown people. Your mom and grandaddy and two or three more and that was all. Way back. When I was 12 and 14. 

 

Angie  

Basically, we had get up four o'clock in the morning. Get ready for the tobacco fields and there weren't no ifs ands or buts about it. We get out there. Of course, I was driving a tractor. Everybody else had to get them a row.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Okay, about how many people were there working the tobacco field?

 

Thel  

 Eight-10.

 

Angie  

Between eight and 10. It depends on how many you had out there. Then get there. Everybody get a row and pull it to the end and lunchtime around 12. You got a Coke and a pack of nabs and back at it again.

 

Teresa Roberson  

Now nabs are those crackers with peanut butter inside, right?

 

Angie  

Right. Yeah, that's what you got. A Coke and a pack of nabs. Maybe oatmeal cookie, if you wanted oatmeal cookie. And then back in the field again until everything is over. At the end, you know, we'd take it back to the barn and house it. String it up and house it and then after all that then suppertime come in after you get done. So, that's how it went every day.

 

Teresa Roberson 

But that was just during the summer months, right?

 

Thel  

Yes. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

So, was it just your family or other relatives? 

 

Angie  

All of us.

 

Thel  

Everybody. 

 

Angie  

Uncle Percy's kids and everybody that wanted to help. Well had to help. They put them in the tobacco field. 

 

Percy was Cousin Thel’s older brother, the 4th child of Jessie Strange.

 

Thel  

We won't the onliest ones, anybody was doing it.

 

Teresa Roberson 

And about how big was the plot of land?

 

Thel  

Three hundred acres, but we didn't have a 10, 12,14 acres.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Again, I'm a suburbanite. So, I don't even know how tobacco is processed. I just have a general idea. So, you guys would grow it, pick it, dry it out.

 

Angie  

You plant it? Well, you know, how you get to field, right? 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Right.

 

Angie  

We have to go plant it. That means one person or two people plant the tobacco in the field. 

 

Thel  

Three, four of them, five of them. 

 

Angie  

Okay, well, it was about five because some people had to walk too just to catch the bad and put them back in the ground. So, you know, that's the process you start from when you planting it. 

 

Angie 

It was very interesting. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

So, a machine would plant it, but if it didn't take or didn't go into the ground than the person who was walking behind the machine...

 

Thel  

That's right. 

 

Angie  

Yes. Basically, what it was, it's like a little feeder you holding your hand and when it come around, you slap it in, you put it in there. Then the next person put theirs in there. Sometimes, because it depends on how fast the tractor is moving. If it goes around and miss, then see you done missed that spot. You don't want to open spot between tobacco plants. So, you have to go back, if it missed a spot, you have to put it in that hole so it won't leave so much space between it. The rows was really long.

 

Teresa Roberson 

You teaching me something. I have no idea.

 

Angie  

It's a life-learning experience. It was interesting and fun, but I don't know if that was the worst part or, the part when pulling it was the worst. I don't know. But the only part that I enjoyed was the top pullers. You can go through there, skin it off, and keep on going.

 

Teresa Roberson 

OK, I don't even know what you just said.

 

Angie  

Once the tobacco has growed, and got all the way up to its pullings, and it's time for you to pull it, and I'm talking about when you're on the last, the top pullings, is where you don't have to bend as much. You just up top you skin this stalk. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Oh, so you’re riding on the tractor.

 

Angie  

Yeah, well when we plant it, we're riding on the tractor. We're riding on the back end of the caboose. But after you plant it all and it starts to grow, and you getting ready to pull it, the best part is the end part. When it's all said and done and just about tobacco season is over. And you just go skin and stock off. That's the best part because you know it's about to be over with

 

Teresa Roberson 

So, how long does it take tobacco to grow from the time you plant it to the time you're harvesting it? 

 

Thel  

Three months. 

 

Angie  

Yeah, about three months. 

 

Teresa Roberson  

Okay. So, right about now is the time it would be planted? 

 

Angie  

Yep. They actually planting now. May the 15th when they start planting.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Okay, so around August is when it's harvested?

 

Angie  

Last of July. 

 

Teresa Roberson  

But Angie, you talk like that's in the past tense. You guys don't do that anymore? 

 

Thel  

No, ma'am, we don't. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Now, since that was only for three months, I just want to know the growing season. So, we started with summer. What would be planted after that?

 

Angie  

After tobacco? 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Yes. 

 

Thel  

Sow wheat after that. Get ready to sow wheat.  Get the corn in. And then when it starts snowing, you sit by the fire and look at snow.

 

Teresa Roberson 

But you'd have to harvest the wheat and the corn before that. 

 

Thel  

You harvest the wheat and corn before that. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Okay, because nothing's growing in the winter, right? That was always my impression. 

 

Angie  

No. 

Teresa Roberson 

 What's the earliest crops after winter like late winter, early spring that could be planted?

 

Angie  

Salad and corn, right?

 

Thel  

Salad and corn. 

 

Angie  

Turnip greens and corn. 

 

Thel  

Corn and turnip greens.  

 

Teresa Roberson 

No collard greens? 

 

Thel  

Yes, ma'am. 

 

Angie  

All that type of stuff. Corn, collards, salad. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

 When you guys say "salad," you're talking about different varieties of leafy greens, right? 

 

Angie  

Turnip greens, collard greens. Yeah.

 

Thel  

Yeah, all of that. 

 

Teresa Roberson  

 The Californians, I think, like kale, but I didn't have kale until I was an adult.

 

Thel  

California, you can plant it anytime. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Yeah, their weather is...

 

Thel  18:26  

Different from this down here. 

 

Angie

So, they can plan all year probably. 

 

Thel

Yup, all the year. 

 

Angie  

They can plant their stuff all year, but we can't. That's the difference between Cali and here.

 

Teresa Roberson 

In the winter time, what did you guys do? Because farmers have to have another activity or don't they? I'm just thinking economically.

 

Thel  

Sit back down. Sit by the fire. Hunt.

 

Angie  

Hunt deer, rabbits, squirrel. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Is there a market for that?

 

Angie  

Kill pigs. Get you some sausage and fat back and all that kind of stuff.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Oh, that's right. So, in addition to growing crops, you guys were raising livestock. 

 

Angie  

Raising pigs, raising hogs, whatever you want to call it. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

And that was a year-round thing though. 

 

Angie  

Yeah.

 

Thel  

Yes, ma'am. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Now, did you guys ever have like a side business where you're making sausage and you would sell that or is that meat just for the family? 

 

Angie  

Yeah. sausage. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

I know my grandmother, Mama Bea, used to have that country, well I called it "country sausage," it was like I say, I was a suburbanite. 

 

Angie  

Yeah, that's what they called it, "country sausage." It was raised in the country; so, they called it "country sausage." 

 

Teresa Roberson  

Okay, and because I'm always thinking economics, can you walk me through so after the tobacco is processed, did it have to be auctioned off? 

 

Angie  

After you done planted it, picked it, and housed it meaning you housing it in the tobacco barn. You have to let it basically cook. You have to light the barn and let it cook to where it get where you want it. When you get to a certain extent, to where it's kind of... it's green when you picking it and housing it. Then, when you put it in the barn, and you light the barn, it's going to be, when you get ready for it to come, it's going to be fresh. 

 

Thel  

You to let it…you got to yellow it. 

 

Angie  

Yeah, it's got to be yellow. I was going to say "brown." It's got to be yellow. It's got to be a certain sticky in order for people to buy it. 

 

Teresa Roberson  

Is that hanging it up so it can dry out? 

 

Thel  

That's right. Hanging it up in the barn and let it get limber.

 

Angie  

That's what "housing" means. You hanging it. "Housing" means you hanging it in the barn.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Well see, you guys are the experts. I'm basically going by what I've seen in the movies or something. I don't know. 

 

Angie  

Yeah, you housing it in the barn. And you know, of course, it taking manpower to do that. Somebody has to be up on top of the barn to hang the tobacco.

 

Thel  

That's when we had all wood barn. Now we got buck barns. You know what a buck barn is? 

 

Teresa Roberson 

No, sir.

 

Thel  

I figured. A buck barn is... they done made it, and when you pull your tobacco, and put it in racks. When you get the racks pulled, you carry it in and then you light it. Don't take long with a buck barn. 

 

Angie  

Right, easier.

 

Teresa Roberson 

What 's a buck barn made out of? 

 

Thel  

Tin.

 

Teresa Roberson 

That's better than the wooden barns? 

 

Angie  

Oh, yes. 

 

Thel  

It's better than a wood barn. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

I guess so 'cause that metal will heat up. 

 

Thel  

That's right. All the heat.

 

Teresa Roberson 

 Would the buyers come to the barn? 

 

Thel  23:27  

No, no, no. It's heating it like you cooking on your cook stove, baking bread.

 

Angie  

That's another process. After the tobacco has been heated through the buck barn. Then we have to sack it. You sack it yourself. And you have to sack it around, sack it, step on it, to get it in place. And to get it in the bag, you have to tie the bag up. And once you do that, and then you have to put it on the truck or the trailer to take it off to the auction site. And that's when they buy it at the auction site. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Okay.

 

Angie  

That's when they buy it. You take it down and then they'll throw it out the truck and lay it on the ground. Put it in sacks. Put it on the floor. And they'll just lay it out, open it up and go in flip it over and look at it and inspect it and do all that kind of stuff. Then they put a tag on it. You'll never know what that tag is and unless you know what they doing. Once they tag it that price is your tobacco. Somebody will buy it. They goes to the highest bidder. And they'll tag it. Then, they'll give your little ticket. You go take it to the cashier and she'll write you a check. That's how it works. Simple.

 

Teresa Roberson 

So, tobacco of course is a cash crop. That's more profitable than corn, salad. 

 

Angie  

Tobacco is a leading...

 

Thel  

It's what you smoke.

 

Angie  

You get your cigarettes. That's how they make their cigarettes out of the tobacco that you grow.

 

Teresa Roberson 

That much I knew. Never been a smoker, but that much I knew. 

 

Angie  

Okay. Yeah. That's how tobacco is. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

 That's really a cash crop. I'm just trying to get the general picture here. Three months to grow. What was the time to yellow it in the buck barn?

 

Thel  

All you do is hang it up in the barn and turn it on and let it swing there. When you open that door and look at it if it's all real yellow.

 

Teresa Roberson 

But is that a matter of hours or days? 

 

Thel  

Take about a week when you got a barn full.

 

Angie  

'Cause it's only on 130 degrees. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

That still sounds hot. 

 

Angie

Yes, it sounds hot. You have to check it to see how you want it. The yellow that you want it is for the people to buy it. That's basically what you're doing.

 

Teresa Roberson 

See, the only reason I said 130 sounds hot, is that I take hot yoga, which is 105 at 45 % humidity. 

 

Thel  

A hundred thirty and it's ready to go. That’s the way you got to heat it. About 130. Get to 130, get good and warm and then it'll get limber. Then it'll start yellowing. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

So, is there a percent of humidity that it has to be as well? 

 

Thel  

Let it get up to 105 and then it'll start drying. And then you go up a little more higher. And then you see how the leaves get to curling up on them and balling up. You just let it stay there. It'll all get balled up good. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

Well, this has been very educational, especially for those of us who did not grow up to be farmers. 

 

Angie  

Right. 

 

Thel  

Right.

 

Teresa Roberson 

Angie, how old were you when you stopped farming? Or did you really stop? 

 

Thel  

I ain't never stopped.

 

Angie  

He ain't stopped, but I stopped because I went to school and got my education. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

I think you're a few years younger than me because I'm 50. 

 

Angie  

Yeah, I am. I'm behind you a couple of years. I went to school. I'm going to school. I ain't out in no tobacco fields. No, no, no, no, I'm gonna get my education. I'm going to school. So, that's what I did. But I did help in the evenings. You know, I had to get off the bus at the farm. I would help string tobacco because after they finished pulling it, they bring it back to the barn. I would help string it after I'd get out of school. Come from school. Change your clothes. Put on your work clothes and get up behind the stringer. And you help string the tobacco up until we finished at the end of the day. Probably got done by maybe about six or seven. Something like that. That's what we did every day. Then weekend come, you may work on Saturdays too. It just depends if we had anything to do on Saturday at the farm. We may have had a Saturday off, but more than likely we didn't. 

 

Angie  

So that was working Monday through Saturday on the farm. But yes, I went to school and I stayed in school. A lot of them didn't. I did though.

 

Teresa Roberson 

And what did you study? 

 

Angie  

Oh, just the general studies. After graduation, I went to work. I was going to the Air Force, but when 9/11 hit that changed my mind. So, I went straight to work. 

 

Teresa Roberson 

I do appreciate you guys telling me about tobacco farming because I had no clue whatsoever. I have a new appreciation now. And Thank you so much. 

 

Thel  36:45  

You're welcome, sugar.

 

Transcribed by https://otter.ai