More on Riding the Rails
"At the height of the Great Depression, more than 250,000 teenagers were living on the road in America"
"At the height of the Great Depression, more than 250,000 teenagers were living on the road in America"
Posted by mister anchovy at 5:23 p.m.
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1 comment:
it is amazing the impact that "riding the rails" had on my parents generation. Almost everyone who came of age in the thirties had a friend or family member who had been a hobo for at least a time.
When I was fifteen, I tried to run away from home by jumping a Grand Trunk freight I thought was headed to Chicago. I made it from the Pontiac plant on the north side of Pontiac, to the GMC Truck and Coach plant on the southside, where the train stopped, and I was promptly greeted by the Pontiac police. The first thing my dad asked was, "weren't you afraid of the the railroad detectives?" Now, this was 1967, and I doubt if there had been rail dicks in existance for 20 years at that point, but my dad was still amazed I wasn't scared, because of the brutality the dicks had a reputation for.
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