Difference between revisions of "Eddins, Carl M 1968-06-08"
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− | + | Carl Eddins relates incidents from his life as a cowboy, incidents and data about World War I, and early living conditions in California. | |
==General Interview Information== | ==General Interview Information== | ||
− | '''Interviewee Name:''' | + | '''Interviewee Name:''' Carl M. Eddins |
'''Additional Parties Recorded:''' | '''Additional Parties Recorded:''' | ||
− | '''Date:''' | + | '''Date:''' June 8, 1968 |
− | '''Location:''' | + | '''Location:''' Pecos, Texas |
− | '''Interviewer:''' | + | '''Interviewer:''' Paul Patterson |
− | '''Length:''' | + | '''Length:''' 1 hour, 30 minutes |
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
'''Tape 1, Side 1:''' | '''Tape 1, Side 1:''' | ||
− | + | Autobiographical material, | |
+ | Bucking horse, | ||
+ | Dummy training, | ||
+ | Pecos River crossing, | ||
+ | Banks, | ||
+ | Fresh water, | ||
+ | Dams, | ||
+ | Salt grass, | ||
+ | Schools - Pecos and Welcome, | ||
+ | Teachers, | ||
+ | Cost of land, | ||
+ | Fish fries, | ||
+ | Biographical material, | ||
+ | Carnival roping, | ||
+ | Bronc riding incident, | ||
+ | Ranch wages, | ||
+ | Horse jumping incident, | ||
+ | Cattle buyers, | ||
+ | Cattle prices, | ||
+ | Last large drive, | ||
+ | Source of cattle, | ||
+ | Extra mounts | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
'''Tape 1, Side 2:''' | '''Tape 1, Side 2:''' | ||
− | + | Last cattle drive (continued), | |
+ | Listing of cowboys, cooks, wagon boss, | ||
+ | Watering incidents, | ||
+ | Stampede, | ||
+ | Watering places, | ||
+ | Dry spell and freeze - 1916, | ||
+ | World War I, | ||
+ | Stateside bases, | ||
+ | Flu, | ||
+ | Morgue, | ||
+ | Flu incident, | ||
+ | Trip to Europe, | ||
+ | European stops, | ||
+ | Following the Germans, | ||
+ | Donut incident, | ||
+ | Pie incident, | ||
+ | Flu prevention, | ||
+ | California - 1909, | ||
+ | Biographical material, | ||
+ | Runaway wagon, | ||
+ | Haybaling, | ||
+ | Wages, | ||
+ | Hours, | ||
+ | Opium incident, | ||
+ | Sleeping guard incident - World War I | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
− | '''Range Dates:''' | + | '''Range Dates:''' 1909-1968 |
− | '''Bulk Dates:''' | + | '''Bulk Dates:''' 1909-1968 |
Revision as of 18:19, 30 September 2014
Carl Eddins relates incidents from his life as a cowboy, incidents and data about World War I, and early living conditions in California.
General Interview Information
Interviewee Name: Carl M. Eddins
Additional Parties Recorded:
Date: June 8, 1968
Location: Pecos, Texas
Interviewer: Paul Patterson
Length: 1 hour, 30 minutes
Abstract
Tape 1, Side 1:
Autobiographical material,
Bucking horse,
Dummy training,
Pecos River crossing,
Banks,
Fresh water,
Dams,
Salt grass,
Schools - Pecos and Welcome,
Teachers,
Cost of land,
Fish fries,
Biographical material,
Carnival roping,
Bronc riding incident,
Ranch wages,
Horse jumping incident,
Cattle buyers,
Cattle prices,
Last large drive,
Source of cattle,
Extra mounts
Tape 1, Side 2:
Last cattle drive (continued),
Listing of cowboys, cooks, wagon boss,
Watering incidents,
Stampede,
Watering places,
Dry spell and freeze - 1916,
World War I,
Stateside bases,
Flu,
Morgue,
Flu incident,
Trip to Europe,
European stops,
Following the Germans,
Donut incident,
Pie incident,
Flu prevention,
California - 1909,
Biographical material,
Runaway wagon,
Haybaling,
Wages,
Hours,
Opium incident,
Sleeping guard incident - World War I
Range Dates: 1909-1968
Bulk Dates: 1909-1968
Access Information
Original Recording Format:
Recording Format Notes:
Transcript:
Thank you for your interest in this oral history interview. Our oral history collection is available to patrons in the Southwest Collection's Reading Room, located on the campus of Texas Tech University. For reading room hours, visit our website. Please contact Reference Staff at least one week prior to your visit to ensure the oral history you are interested in will be available. Due to copyright issues, duplications of our oral histories can only be made for family members. If an oral history transcript has been made available online, the link will be provided on this page. More information on accessing our oral histories is located here. Preferred citation style can be found here.