“When we were old enough, my father would pull us out [of school] to work.”
“We all worked, everybody worked in the Bourne Mill.”
“When we were in the Bourne Mills Block, we didn’t even have electricity. It was … kerosene.”
“You could see it from my house. All the smoke and that.”
“We lived right on the state line. Here is Fall River right on this side, and the other sidewalk was Tiverton, Rhode Island.”
“My mother, I used to adore my mother.”
“…my father didn’t understand English. So we always had to talk Portuguese. When we used to talk English, my father would say, ‘Hey, speak Portuguese so I know what you are talking about.’ But after, he learned.”
“…he joined the National Guard [in 1940] so he could have a little bit of money for himself.”
“My mother was like me … a go-getter…. She knew what to do.”
“My mother [said] I shouldn’t get married while [he was] in the service because [he] might die.”
“’Honey,’ he used to call me Honey all the time.”
“I worked all over Firestone.”
A Firestone “big boss” in conversation with Hortencia:
“You seem like you like your job.”
“No, I don’t…. I have to do it, so I am doing it. It isn’t because I like it.”
“I put them together - they used to sew them - I put them together …”
“Lyn Sportswear, that’s one of the first shops I worked in.”