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Riding the Rails: Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression (1999)

par Errol Lincoln Uys

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"There is no feeling in the world like sitting in a side-door Pullman and watching the world go by, listening to the clickety-clack of the wheels, hearing that old steam whistle blowing for crossings and towns." -George Phillips in Riding the Rails At the height of the Great Depression, 250,000 teenage hoboes were riding the rails and roaming America. Some left home out of desperation and went looking for work and a better life, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles on the rumor of a job waiting farther down the line. Others left out of boredom; still others with a wanderlustand romantic idea of life on the road. The restless youth of these boxcar boys and girls, many who went from "middle-class gentility to scrabble-ass poor" overnight, is recaptured in Riding the Rails. Based on the award-winning documentary, this book dispels the myths of a hobo existence and reveals the hard stories of a daring generation of American teenagers-forgotten heroes-who survived some of the hardest times in our nations' history. Whether you're a "gaycat" (novice rider) or a "dingbat" (seasoned hobo), Riding the Railsis entertaining and inspiring, recapturing a time when the country was "dying by inches."… (plus d'informations)
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Very interesting compilation of first hand accounts of young adults and children hopping trains to travel during the Great Depression. Although the subtitle mentions "teenagers", the material covers young adults to about age 26, perhaps because that is the age range used by statistics at the time. The source of information was responses to a 1990's notice publicized in a journal targeted to senior citizens. In addition, newspaper articles and sociological studies or government statistics were used to present these experiences in the historical and social context.
The book is broken into some major sections (reasons for travel, problems encountered, learning to ask for food or shelter, reasons they stopped)with some commentary which attempted to draw generalizations while still presenting the diversity. The commentary was filled with short quotes from the many contributions and followed by several memoirs based on in-depth interviews of some respondents.
From beatings from railroad bulls and cops, and bosses who changed the agreement after the youth did the work, to whores who would give a meal and (unaccompanied) warm place to sleep, this book both matched and challenged some preconceived ideas of this part of our nation's history. ( )
  juniperSun | Mar 20, 2014 |
Riding the Rails is a riveting document of hope and hardship during one of this nation's bleakest eras. For all that has been written about the Depression, the travails of those under the age of 18 have been sorely underrepresented. Gripping and well-researched, the reader can all but hear the cadence of the trains and lonesome wail at every whistle-stop.-- Boston Globe

"Riding the Rails sets out to tell about the 250,000 teenagers who hopped freights and lived the hobo life in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash...Uys paints a brisk, colorful, fast-paced portrait of lean times and high hopes." -- Tulsa World

"With more than 500 interviews and stunning archival photographs, Uys thoroughly recreates the wretched conditions the boxcar boys and girls endured." -- Chicago Tribune

"One of the most poignant memories of the wandering youth of the Great Depression." -- Sacramento Bee

"As gripping as it is well-researched." -- Denver Post

"A remarkable story" -- Kansas City Star

"An elegantly presented and quietly moving collection of firsthand reminiscences, capturing a unique moment in American history. Enthusiastically recommended for all public libraries." -- Library Journal

"Whether you're a "gaycat" (novice rider) or a "dingbat" (seasoned hobo), Riding the Rails is entertaining and inspiring, recapturing a time when the country was "dying by inches." -- Sunny Delaney, History Editor, 10 Best History Books of 1999 Amazon.com ( )
  Segge | Jul 31, 2007 |
2 sur 2
Riding the Rails is a riveting document of hope and hardship during one of this nation's bleakest eras. For all that has been written about the Depression, the travails of those under the age of 18 have been sorely underrepresented. Gripping and well-researched, the reader can all but hear the cadence of the trains and lonesome wail at every whistle-stop.
ajouté par juniperSun | modifierBoston Globe
 
An elegantly presented and quietly moving collection of firsthand reminiscences, capturing a unique moment in American history. Enthusiastically recommended for all public libraries.
ajouté par juniperSun | modifierLibrary Journal
 
"Riding the Rails sets out to tell about the 250,000 teenagers who hopped freights and lived the hobo life in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash...Uys paints a brisk, colorful, fast-paced portrait of lean times and high hopes.
ajouté par juniperSun | modifierTulsa World
 
With more than 500 interviews and stunning archival photographs, Uys thoroughly recreates the wretched conditions the boxcar boys and girls endured.
ajouté par juniperSun | modifierChicago Tribune
 
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To my grandsons Jeremy Lovell Uys, Alexander Porter Uys
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Leaving home was often the most wrenching decision the boxcar boys and girls faced in their young lives.
[Introduction] At the height of the Great Depression, 250,000 teenage hoboes were roaming America.
[Preface] The story of the 250,000 boxcar boys and girls of the Great Depression is one of the vital sagas of America in the 1930s.
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"There is no feeling in the world like sitting in a side-door Pullman and watching the world go by, listening to the clickety-clack of the wheels, hearing that old steam whistle blowing for crossings and towns." -George Phillips in Riding the Rails At the height of the Great Depression, 250,000 teenage hoboes were riding the rails and roaming America. Some left home out of desperation and went looking for work and a better life, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles on the rumor of a job waiting farther down the line. Others left out of boredom; still others with a wanderlustand romantic idea of life on the road. The restless youth of these boxcar boys and girls, many who went from "middle-class gentility to scrabble-ass poor" overnight, is recaptured in Riding the Rails. Based on the award-winning documentary, this book dispels the myths of a hobo existence and reveals the hard stories of a daring generation of American teenagers-forgotten heroes-who survived some of the hardest times in our nations' history. Whether you're a "gaycat" (novice rider) or a "dingbat" (seasoned hobo), Riding the Railsis entertaining and inspiring, recapturing a time when the country was "dying by inches."

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