***The
Roots Is The Toots- The Music That Got Them Through The Great Depression And
World War II…
…
he had not been back a year, most of that year spent sullenly, quietly in a
rage, in a rage that having served, served well, had done his duty, had done
his job, from what his discharge papers said, he was unable to find work, real
work. Found that he in heading north, north for her met at a USO dance in Portland,
headed north to share his fate with her like he promised if he made it back, had
avoided no traps, there was no need for coal-miners or a cold-miner’s son, in
the Olde Saco labor market. Damn, and those recurring nightmares, that feeling
that he would always be unclean after what he did (and seen done by his fellows)
overseas, over in that island-hopping Marine splash didn’t help either.
But
he stayed silent (and would like many in his generation remain silent, silent
unto the grave, keep his hurts to himself, about went on over there), took the
first low-rent job that came along, floor-sweeper in the MacAdams Mills just
down the street from their house. Well not really their house, their home such
as it was, in the quickly built Olde Saco Veterans Housing Project, built to
ease the housing crunch with all the boys coming back. Took that job, well,
because with the baby, and another on the way, he could not do otherwise. And
he thought just at that moment, that moment as he swept up the leavings from
the mill floor that things had to get better, hadn’t they …
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