Great Depression Survivor Reflects On Hard Times
Current Financial Crisis Worries Some Americans
Posted: 8:33 am EDT October 9, 2008Updated: 10:55 am EDT October 9, 2008
BURLINGTON, N.C. -- Emma Lineberger said she lost everything during the Great Depression -- even though she was only in grade school."Through our school, we put money in the bank every week. Mother would give me money, and when this happened, I lost my fortune -- $9.75 -- and I lost my fortune," she said.
So far, government officials have not called the current financial crisis a recession or a depression, but many Americans have wondered what would happen if conditions worsened to Great Depression-era times.
Lineberger said she didn't really understand it all at the time: "My mother just told me something terrible had happened to the bank and I never had my money."Without newspapers and TV, Lineberger didn't know anybody lived any differently than her family. A brand new park served as entertainment."My mother would take us to the park a lot of times. We would walk through the water," she said.Having beef, chicken, pork or really any meat was almost unheard of -- oatmeal was a staple at their table."I had that a lot but it was mainly that and toast, and maybe twice a week, we'd have an egg. Now, I wonder how on Earth she did it," Lineberger said of her mother.Her mother was a single parent with her three girls and a boy. She worked as a seamstress, but never let on to her children just how dire the financial circumstances were."The only way I would ever know she was having problems was at night. She'd cry and I couldn't figure what was wrong," Lineberger said.Lineberger said her family always shared whatever they had with strangers and neighbors. They didn't know any difference."Everybody was that way. It wasn't just a few people there, as I'm afraid it's going to be now," Lineberger said.
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