Source: WV History Film Project
WEST VIRGINIA HISTORY, ROLL 42, MIKE
HORNICK INTERVIEW
HORNICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 1, CAMERA 170,
SOUND 42
Q: Mike, tell me about where your parents came
from, why they came to the United States?
JJCF 0040
MH: My father came from Czechoslovakia; well, of
course my mother came from Czechoslovakia also,
but they apparently didn't know each other when they
were in Czechoslovakia. My mother was probably
about five years old when her parents brought her
here. My father was about -- I'd say close to 17 years
old when he came here, but he just felt there was a
whole lot better life for him here in the United States
than what it was in their country because his family
were farmers and they didn't have really enough
ground there really to support a large family on what
ground they did have. Then, farm land if they worked
it it was generally overworked. They didn't have your
fertilizers and things like that you have nowadays so
they just couldn't support a family like that. So, he
came from a place called Habutha? in
Czechoslovakia. He had two sisters; he left two
sisters in the old country. There was another sister
who came to Baerwick, Pennsylvania. When she
came there, I don't know, but she did come to --
Q: Where did he come to and what did he
find?
JJCF 0169
MH: He came here to Elkhorn. Apparently some of
the friends from Elkhorn had written back to the old
country and told him this would be a good place to
live and a good place to work, a whole lot better than
what he was used to there. So I think that's where the
decision came in that he come to this country. Just
from what friends had told him.
Q: Tell me how he came to work in coal
mining.
JJCF 0216
MH: That was probably about the only thing that was
left for them to do once they got here is coal mining.
The coal operators were looking for coal miners, and
they were looking for immigrant miners. They were
good workers, hard workers, they worked at a lower
wage than what the native born people here would
work for, and they just liked the country here. Then I
guess a lot of them were encouraged to come to this
country by people that came and worked awhile and
then went back to Europe to bring some of their
family over here. They could depend on that person
giving them the truth more so than what they could a
labor agent that was sent to the old country to recruit
the people. So, which one he was recruited by, I don't
know but anyway he did wind up here in McDowell
County.
Q: Did he find a better life here?
JJCF 0310
MH: I think he did, yes. I think it was altogether
different from what he had in the old country. I know
that he would send clothes and stuff like that back to
some of his family in the old country after he was
here. He would send clothes and whatever other
items that he could pick up and mail back to them.
He would go ahead and do that. Seeing what they
needed and what they could use.
Q: Tell me about the community of eastern
Europeans, Czechoslovakians and Russians that were
here?
JJCF 0356
MH: Generally, here in Gary we had communities
where the people, say the Czechoslovakians lived in
one section of the community. Maybe another
community down the road here you would have
Italians living there. Then another place you'd have
Spanish people. Then up at Thorpe, up in that area
you had quite a number of Hungarian people. They
lived in these communities where language wouldn't
be a barrier. In other words, they can speak to each
other. They would also, as they got letters from
home, from the old country, they would share the
letters with each other as to what was going on back
in their countries there. They would write back to the
people there and communication was just a little bit
better you know where they lived in the community
together like that with the people speaking their
language there.
JJCF 0446
The Polish people lived in one area and maybe the
Czechoslovakians lived in another area, or the
Yugoslavs or the Croatians, they would live in
another area. But the language that was generally
spoken around the coal fields was a mixture of Polish,
Russian, Yugoslavian, Czechoslovakian, and the
Slavic languages. It was just a mixture of that. Of
course Italian and Hungarian language and the
Spanish it was a little bit different.
Q: Tell me how all these Europeans and the
native whites related and worked with the blacks who
were also ??
JJCF 0509
MH: Really, as far as getting along with the people
here, all of them when you went underground and
worked together underground, all of you were the
same. In other words, you get in the dark coal mine,
black is black for everybody. Once you got that coal
dust on your face, you were black just like anybody
else. But it was quite a bit more difficult when it
came to language between the native born people and
the immigrants. It was a whole lot easier for the
native born to learn the immigrants' language than
what it was for the immigrant to learn the English
language because you can use a sentence in English I
mean a word in a sentence in English. In one
sentence that word will mean one thing; you can put
that same word in another sentence and it would be
exactly opposite.
JJCF 0603
So, I know that up where we lived we'd have the
blacks passing right by the house and the blacks
would stop and talk to my grandmother in
Czechoslovakian, not fluently but enough to make
themselves understood because they had learned
enough Czechoslovakian that they could carry on
language with a man they worked with. The
immigrant miner now would get in quite a bit of
trouble around the coal mines though because the
young, English speaking miners they would teach the
immigrant curse words, instead of words that they
were supposed to learn and then the boss would come
around and he would talk to the immigrant there and
the immigrant would start lashing in at the boss with a
bunch of curse words. He didn't know what he was
saying. So it would get him in a lot of trouble, but
these young English speaking miners they got a kick
of that.
Q: Were opportunities as open for immigrant
miners as for other?
JJCF 0693
MH: I would say that they were, yes. Now, for
awhile some of the immigrants felt like they were
discriminated against, but that really wasn't true down
here in the coal fields as I know it. The opportunities
were there. Some of the better foremen that we had
around the coal mines was the old immigrant miner.
He made a good foreman. He was real safety
conscious. He believed in production and whenever
he talked to his people they would work for them.
Probably worked a whole lot better for the immigrant
foreman than what they would for an English
speaking or a native foreman. He was able to get
along with these people a whole lot better, so the
production was up with him working.
Q: Let's go back to your parents a little bit. Tell
me the story about your parents' wedding in
1917.
JJCF 0789
MH: I'll tell you her wedding -- of course I wasn't
there. From what they told me, my mother was 15
years when she got married. She really didn't want to
get married, but it was a thing that was arranged by
the family. So usually before the wedding now the
groom and the best man would always come to the
house and they would ask the father of the house for
the bride's hand in marriage, you know. But the best
man and the groom would always come there. And
then once they decided on the marriage, or were
engaged, the groom would wear a flower on his hat
that the bride would give him and he would wear that
until the day he got married. But he'd carry that
flower in his hat and wear that.
JJCF 0878
When they got married now the groom bought the
bride a pair of white boots, and the bride wore those
boots during her marriage and then she would
generally put those boots away. They was supposed
to have been saved and kept until she passed away
and then she was supposed to be buried with those
boots. A lot of the brides say they were supposed to
wear the boots to church, but they didn't want to wear
them out so they would just bring them to church with
them to show the people that they did have a pair of
white boots that they got for their wedding, you
know.
Q: There's a photograph of their wedding. What
does that show about your parents?
JJCF 0945
MH: You could look at the photograph and you could
tell that my mother wasn't too happy on it, but there
was one fellow on the side of the photograph who
looked pretty happy because he was holding the
bottle. The picture was taken. There wasn't enough
room around the house there to take a picture so they
took the picture down in front of the mine office. Had
the wedding party down in front of the mine office,
and if you can look real close at that picture, you can
see a mine car in the background. Now that's
something you wouldn't find at one of these studios
now that you would go with wedding pictures. But
then the wedding generally it lasted for two or three
days, the dancing, the eating and all of that. It lasted
for three or four days until everybody got tired of this
and they gave up, and all the food was eaten, you
know. Then they'd go home then.
HORNICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 2, CAMERA ROLL 171, SOUND 43
Q: Mike, tell me how it came to be that your
father's name was changed?
JJCF 1032
MH: ... My father's name originally was Vazily
Hornyak. This is the same thing happened so many
of the immigrant miners around. The payroll clerk
could not pronounce the name, so he changed the
name then, the last name instead of Hornyak, he
changed to Hornick, H-O-R-N-I-C-K. And his first
name which was Vazily, he changed it to Wash,
W-A-S-H. So that's the name he went under from
then on as far as the coal company records were
concerned. Now the church records, they still carry it
as Vizaly Hornyak, but the company records they
were all Wash Hornick.
Q: There were enough Russians and
Czechoslovakian miners to sustain a church,
Orthodox church? Tell me about the church.
JJCF 1120
MH: Yes. I really didn't attend the church that much,
the Orthodox Church because we moved over here to
Gary. We did have a church here at Gary, Orthodox
church at Gary also. My father and parents they did
attend that church, grandparents and all. But they
would have different programs, like Christmas time
they'd have a traveling narrative. My father usually
traveled then with the priest and they'd have the
youngsters, they would carry kind of a crib and go to
house to house on Christmas Eve and of course they
celebrate Christmas Eve on January 6th. They kept
the Orthodox Christmas.
Q: Let me ask you about Gary then. ... I guess
that's kind of an unfair question. Tell me what your
remembrances were of what life in Gary was like?
Was it a dark, dirty place? Was it a town like we ...
Tell me about Gary.
JJCF 1214
MH: Gary at one time, it was one of the finest coal
camps in the coal mining area, and we did have our
schools here, schools for the blacks, and schools for
the whites. We had theater building with movies, a
pool room and bowling alleys. We had a dance hall.
We had our company store here, barber shops and
restaurants and everything right down in the
community building down there. It was a good place
to live. I mean the company store you can go to the
company and they had just about any item that you
would need; they would have it there. They had the
best materials there. I mean, best suits. They'd have
a tailor come in. He'd measure you up for a suit and
they'd go ahead and you'd get your suit there and they
had dresses for the ladies.
JJCF 1307
They had the best shoes that you could buy, hats and
all of that. They often told about, said these old
immigrant miners, they would come down and they
would order their burial suit, so they'd have a suit to
be buried in. They'd order with two pairs of pants. I
don't know why they needed two pairs of pants for a
burial suit. But that's the way they would order their
suits, you know. But they had a good line of clothes
and good line of meats and groceries and all of that
that the store would have there.
Q: Now when you were in high school you
worked for the store. Tell me about that.
JJCF 1358
MH: I worked for the store; I did not work for the
company store. I worked for a private store, which
was in the community. What we would do is we
would go deliver groceries to that house each day and
would bring it in on a truck, carry the groceries into
the house, set down at the table, write the order down
in the book, whatever the lady had ordered. We'd
write it down in our grocery book of what we
delivered to her. Then we would sit there and she
would give us a order for the next. She'd order her
bread, meat, groceries, whatever she needed and we'd
write that down. Then we'd bring that the next day
and go through the same procedure.
JJCF 1423
The company store, you didn't have to go to the
company store if you didn't want to because we had a
company store in each community and the clerk that
the company store would go from house to house each
morning and take the order. Then that evening they
would fill that order and they would send it, let the
truck driver bring the order to your house. And they
would charge those groceries to you at that -- I mean
charge it to your account; then that was deducted
from your pay statement. You'd pay for your
groceries.
Q: Mike, what was it like to live in a town where
every part of life practically was part of the
company?
JJCF 1492
MH: I couldn't see where it made any difference. I
mean, the company owned the houses and I didn't
have to worry about, if my steps had rotted off the
house out there. I didn't have to worry about going
down to the lumber yard and getting some lumber and
fixing those steps because all I did was call the, or
talk to the superintendent and he would have the
carpenters come up there and they'd put you in a new
pair of steps. Or if you had a water line that was
broken to your house, they'd send a plumber up there
and he'd replace the water line for you. And if the
roof was leaking, he'd patch the roof to keep it from
leaking.
JJCF 1546
So they took care of you; they also took care of
painting your house for you. About every five years
they'd come around, they'd put a coat of paint on that
house for you. Scrape the paint; scrape the house and
put paint on it. And they did that just about every
five years, so your house was always painted and kept
in good repair.
Q: But did you ever have the sense that your life
was controlled, that you weren't free, since this was
the land of the free?
JJCF 1585
MH: I guess in a kind of a sense you would have,
sense of the word, you would have some of that, that
the company actually dominated the worker himself,
but really you had a lot of freedom in the coal camps.
They didn't want to see the union come in cause
actually here at Gary we had our own independent
union.
HORNICK INTERVIEW TAKE 3 CAMERA ROLL 171, SOUND 43
Q: Mike tell me what in your view were some of
the good things about living in a company town?
JJCF 1652
MH: Well, the good things about living in a company
town was we did have good schools; we did have the
grocery stores so we could get quality merchandise at
and the prices insofar as the company store and
compared to private stores there was very little
difference in the prices that you'd pay at the company
store and the private store. A lot of the stories that
you get is that the company store would gouge you on
your prices to make up for loss at the mine, but I can't
say that I've ever seen that here.
JJCF 1717
At Christmas time at the company store, when you
went in and bought your groceries, you got a ticket
for a purchase there and then on Christmas Eve they
had a drawing at the company store for baskets of
groceries. They had some kind of special toys, maybe
a bicycle or special wagon or something like that.
They would draw so that some kid in the community
would win that wagon or bicycle. Then on Christmas
morning, about 9 o'clock in the morning, you went
down to the company store and everybody was lined
up out in front of the company store and you went in
and they had Santa Claus there and you would get
your Christmas treats. You'd get a bag of hard candy
and an apple and orange and popcorn ball.
JJCF 1793
Then the old man who'd went down with you,
someone out of the family went with you, if it was
your father, they always gave him a cigar and a
calendar to use for the next year. But all during the
Christmas season you had Santa Claus that walked
around that company store there all the time you
know. Of course, you had somebody dressed up like
Santa Claus there, and I know one time a little ol' kid
in there said, 'Mom, I don't know what's wrong with
that Santa Claus, but', he said, 'he smells just like
Grandpa does when he drinks his whiskey.' Of course
Santa Claus always had a bottle of whiskey back in
the ware room and he'd always slip back there and get
him a drink while he was in the store all day long,
you know.
Q: Let me ask you another question about blacks
and whites. Tell me about how in the morning you
would go to your separate schools and --
JJCF 1872
MH: We had separate schools for the blacks and the
whites. And we'd pass each other on the sidewalks.
The blacks would be going in one direction going to
the school, and the whites would be coming in another
direction going there. But then that evening, after
school was over, all of us would meet down on the
playground down there. We'd have our ball games or
play whatever we wanted to. We all played together
down there and we got along real good with each
other; all of us did.
Q: Why do you think blacks and whites got
together better at the company stores than they did in
so many other places apparently, company
towns?
JJCF 1925
MH: Company towns? The reason they got along a
whole lot better. The people worked together. We
lived together. I mean, up where I lived where my
grandmother and mother lived now we lived in the
first house on that hill. Then from there on out where
maybe the next twenty hours, we had blacks living.
Then at the other end, we had whites living there. We
were passing by each other all the time. They would
look after us and we'd look after them. .. A lot of my
friends where I worked with them, I mean where I
played with them there, I'd go to their house. I'd sit
down at their table with them and sit right there and
eat with them just like I would if I was eating at the
house. They'd do the same thing when they came to
our house.
JJCF 1994
Then they would have the blacks usually raised a
whole lot of sugar cane up on the mountain. They'd
make molasses. This was a thing that usually would
go way up into nights, and we'd go up there and the
old horse would be drawing the cane mill. He'd be
pulling a cane meal around while they were squeezing
the juice out of the cane. Then we'd go ahead and --
they'd go ahead and put it in their pans and they'd
cook it all night long there and keep it skimmed off.
We'd sit there and a kid would sit there and chew on
that sugar cane. Then when that molasses was done,
man that molasses made good taffy candy. We'd have
some taffy pulls and stuff like that. This was just
some of the things that they did there.
JJCF 2063
If we got ready to kill hogs. Course everybody raised
their own meat and had their cows and everything in
the community. Get ready to kill hogs now. Blacks
and whites would all get together and they'd do their
butchering there while they had all their equipment
set up. Their scalding barrels and have their platform
for scrapping their hogs and their pole for raising a
hog up and all that. If they were doing some hog
killing, all of them would just get together there and
they'd go ahead and kill their hogs. Then cut up their
meat, salt it down and preserve it you know. It was
just a community thing, and everybody worked
together on it.
ROOM TONE FOR MIKE HORNICK
JJCF 2134
Hornick Interview