Naomi Trammel explains how she learned to weave from her husband at Poe Mill.
Naomi Trammel interviewed by Allen Tullos, Greenville, South Carolina, March 25, 1980. Interview # H-258 in the Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007), Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Audio File:
Duration:
1:06
Transcript:
Audio Transcript
- Allen Tullos
- Well, when you-all came here, and you finally did go back to work in the Poe Mill, what did you do there?
- Naomi Sizemore Trammel
- Well, I worked in the weave room. Percy—I didn’t know too much about weaving, so he run my looms and his looms, too, till I learned. He would. He’d run the whole thing.
- Allen Tullos
- So he was teaching you.
- Naomi Sizemore Trammel
- Yeah, he was teaching me how to weave.
- Allen Tullos
- What kind of looms were those, do you remember?
- Naomi Sizemore Trammel
- Well, that was just a plain old loom Poe Mill, but now, at Judson, they got fancy looms up there.
- Allen Tullos
- The Poe Mill ones were like a Draper looms running plain goods, plain cloth, or sheets—?
- Naomi Sizemore Trammel
- Yeah, Draper. They’re Drapers, yeah. Just plain cloth. Was easy, wasn’t but two harness. Well, now, at Judson, they got lots of harness, you know.
- Allen Tullos
- And how many looms were you and your husband running?
- Naomi Sizemore Trammel
- He’d have about ten, I’d have about eight. But he’d run ‘em, till I learned. Wasn’t hard.
- Allen Tullos
- How were you being paid back then, by the—?
- Naomi Sizemore Trammel
- Well, you’d get pretty good pay then. They’d just get you a check. We’d get ‘em in a week there.
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