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Interview Summary

Born in Elkhorn City in 1900, Florence Ramey was the daughter of Hattie McCown and Orville Cure. Her father, a renowned carpenter, built several of the early tipples for the coal companies, as well as the Elswick Store in Elkhorn City and many of the homes in the area. Ramey's mother, who died in 1914, kept boarders to supplement the family's income. As a result, Florence Ramey owned boarding houses at several coal camps in the Marrowbone and eastern Kentucky area. She recalls that sometimes she would have as many as 35 miners boarding in her seven-room house. The miners would "double-shift," meaning that one group of miners would sleep while the other shift worked. The Henry Clay mine, for example, operated three shifts, 24 hours a day. Ramey also ran a boarding house at the Edgewater camp in conjunction with the coal company, Semet-Solvay, on Marrowbone Creek. Her sister operated the clubhouse where the office workers and company employees lived. Ramey made use of a "hired girl" to help her run the boarding house. When Henry Clay miners tried to organize the UMWA in the mid to late 1930s, a violent strike ensued. Ramey recalls the gun battles and states that she kept a gun at her boarding house where the company guards ate frequently. She resented the intimidation tactics of the striking miners. In her view, the outsiders brought in to fight for the union were "pretty bad." She avoided taking sides, however, because, "I didn't have no say. I was taking care of my children."

Interview Accession

1987oh190_app113

Interviewee Name

Florence Ramey

Interviewer Name

Nyoka Hawkins

Interview Date

1987-06-12

Interview Rights

All rights to the interviews, including but not restricted to legal title, copyrights and literary property rights, have been transferred to the University of Kentucky Libraries.

Interview Usage

Interviews may be reproduced with permission from Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, Special Collections, University of Kentucky Libraries.

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Interviews may be reproduced with permission from Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, Special Collections, University of Kentucky Libraries.

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Ramey, Florence Interview by Nyoka Hawkins. 12 Jun. 1987. Lexington, KY: Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, University of Kentucky Libraries.

Ramey, F. (1987, June 12). Interview by N. Hawkins. Appalachia: Social History and Cultural Change in the Elkhorn Coal Fields Oral History Project. Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, University of Kentucky Libraries, Lexington.

Ramey, Florence, interview by Nyoka Hawkins. June 12, 1987, Appalachia: Social History and Cultural Change in the Elkhorn Coal Fields Oral History Project, Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, University of Kentucky Libraries.





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