1927- One amazing season in American life.
The summer of 1927 began with one of the signature events of the twentieth century: on May 21, 1927, Charles Lindbergh became the first man to cross the Atlantic by plane nonstop, and when he landed in Le Bourget airfield nearParis ,
he ignited an explosion of worldwide rapture and instantly became the most
famous person on the planet.
The summer of 1927 began with one of the signature events of the twentieth century: on May 21, 1927, Charles Lindbergh became the first man to cross the Atlantic by plane nonstop, and when he landed in Le Bourget airfield near
Meanwhile, the talented Babe Ruth was beginning his assault
on the home run record, which would culminate on September 30 with his sixtieth
blast, one of the most resonant and durable records in sports history.
In between those dates
a Queens housewife named Ruth Snyder and her
corset-salesman lover garroted her husband, leading to a murder trial that
became a huge tabloid sensation.
The American South was
clobbered by unprecedented rain and by flooding of the Mississippi basin, a great human disaster,
the relief efforts for which were guided by the uncannily able and insufferably
pompous Herbert Hoover.
Calvin Coolidge
interrupted an already leisurely presidency for an even more relaxing
three-month vacation in the Black Hills of South Dakota.
The gangster Al Capone
tightened his grip on the illegal booze business through a gaudy and murderous
reign of terror and municipal corruption.
The first true
“talking picture,” Al Jolson’s The
Jazz Singer, was filmed and forever changed the motion picture industry.
The four most powerful
central bankers on earth met in secret session on a Long
Island estate and made a fateful decision that virtually
guaranteed a future crash and depression.
All this and much, much more transpired in that epochal summer of 1927. On June 26, The Cyclone roller coaster opens on
It was told to me that Papa had taken some friends to an
‘ALL-DAY SINGING, BUT Grandpa Fowler, who with Grandma lived nearby, went for
Dr. Martin, who officiated about 7:00 P.M.at my birth; who immediately saw my
extra finger on the left hand and posthaste removed it. I was told that someone put it in a matchbox,
and buried it in the garden. Otherwise I
was deemed a normal, and as usual, beautiful, Tankersley girl child.
I was the tenth child of Judge and Virgie, with Gladys,
Harold, Sarah, Billie, Evelyn, Jack, Ned, Grace and Gordon Lee preceding me.
Fortunately at that point in their lives my family was
prosperous for a farm family, and children were a blessing. Although they cooked on a Home Comfort
wood-burning range, there were lights furnished by a carbide plant, which also
powered a pump that gave water right into the kitchen sink! I believe there was also an iron heated by the
current from the carbide plant. There
was a telephone which hung on the wall with a crank for calling ‘central’, which
would connect you to your desired party.
Judge drove a new Ford about every other year…..and the addition of
another child, albeit number ten, was not considered a hardship. Professor Judge Tankersley was a teacher,
respected and admired. He was also a
farmer, with a flock of children to help in the growing of cotton, corn,
potatoes, strawberries, and a garden full of vegetables, an orchard with fruit
trees, and cattle and other livestock.
The family, while not really affluent, were probably better off than
most of their neighbors.
One year and nine months later, March 27, 1929, John Paul was
born. He was a roly-poly, always happy
child who loved everyone, and was in turn adored. When Papa took us swimming at ‘ole Desser’
swimming hole, Johnny rode on his back. Then someone thought to bring along a
box which floated, and Johnny rode in the box.
For some reason Uncle Ellis’s kids called Johnny “Petey”, and then
“Petey in a box”. Johnny figured in
another of my earliest memories. He and I were playing in the yard. He climbed
upon a hay rake, fell and split his head.
I followed Mama as she picked him up and hurried to the strawberry patch
where everyone else was working, and got Papa to take him for stitches. It would not be the last time Johnny required
stitches. His early life was filled with such mishaps, and lots of stitches.. His good nature and willingness to get along
pretty much stayed with him the rest of his life.
In October, 1929, on “Black Friday”, the stock market
crashed. Ours was not a stock-owning
family, so thedepresion didn’t really hit our family for a couple of years.
I pretty much lived for birthday parties in my early years,
and invited everyone to come to my next party throughout the year. I especially liked Gladys’s boyfriends, such
as Otis Hall, and invited him, and other swains. For my fourth or fifth birthday Mam made me a
demity dress, sleeveless, for my birthday.
It was white with blue flowers embroidered on it. Johnny cried because he wanted, “A little red
dress with ruffles on it”. (I think Papa
put him up to that one).
We had a cat named Topsy which Papa would pick up , turning
its head and tail inward and say, “Look, I made a muff out of Topsy”, to set
Johnny and me to whimpering until he turned the cat around. Papa Judge was always a great tease.
About that time West
Point School
had a school Fair, which included a Tom Thumb Wedding. The principals were Frank Camp and me. I just remember being put on the stage beside
a little boy about my age, and Little Bud Williamson standing in front of
us. The fair also had a movie on the
dangers of Hookworms, and it was the only movie I remember seeing until I was
ten.
We regularly got Typhoid Fever inoculations when the county
nurse came to the school in the summertime.
Both Judge and Virgie had suffered through Typhoid as adolescents,
probably with a narrow escape of death, because it was a serious disease at
that time, caused usually by drinking contaminated water.
Our old Home
Place was mortgaged for planting money after
Harold died, in the spring of 1931 and before harvest time the price of cotton
dropped to five cents a pound. That was
our cash crop. There was no money to pay
the mortgage, no money to plant a crop, and the Federal Land Bank foreclosed.
We had to move sometime during 1932, and Mama was expecting her twelfth child,
who would arrive on March 1,1933. Esther
Jo was named for Papa’s youngest sister, but she was always to be “Jo Baby”.
(until she became Mama Jo).
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