Oral history interview with Herman Newton Truitt, December 5
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Oral history interview with Herman Newton Truitt, December 5, 1978

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2007

About This Book

Herman Newton Truitt ran a grocery store in Burlington, NC, in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s (exact dates are difficult to find). In this interview, he recalls his rural childhood and store ownership in a mill town. This interview is an excellent source of information on southern food traditions: Truitt details what mill workers ate when they broke for lunch at his store, when they gathered on his father's porch to swap stories on Saturdays, or when they celebrated Christmas. The food traditions of the impoverished South were well established by the 1930s: mill workers ate beans and fatback, canned meats, and pigs' feet, sweet potatoes, and cornbread. In addition to describing his customers' shopping habits, Truitt briefly reflects on changes in the grocery industry and the mill business at mid-century, and the economic status of mill workers. Truitt recalls mill workers in Burlington in relative financial comfort, a recollection that may complicate contemporary views on the health of mill towns. The interviewer appears to spend much of the interview looking at photographs and a store ledger with Truitt. This portion of the interview might be of use to researchers, but it did not merit excerption.

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