My Grandfather in Roanoke Shops, circa 1880s
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Sat Jan 8 18:05:50 EST 2005
Recently I had to put together a little piece on my great-grandfather, who
worked at the Roanoke Machine Works (later "East End Shops") from the early
1880s to the 1930s. Some of you on the List might enjoy reading it. And it might
make you thankful for how well-off you are in life.
-- abram burnett
>>
Johann Gustavus Sjogren (pronounced "Schwo-gren") was my father's mother's
father. He emigrated from Goteborg, Sweden, about 1880, having learned his
machinist's trade on the Old Country. Apparently he worked briefly for the Erie,
as we have a photo of him taken in Susquehanna, Pa, and there wasn't anything
in Susquehanna, Pa except the Erie ! Somehow he ended up in newly created
Roanoke around 1882, when the N&W opened its shops there. Worked there until he
retired in 1932. He lived for another four years. (He had little respect for
American machinists, by the way... especially "railroad machinists" ! )
He was my dad's hero. When my dad started working extra yardmaster (early
1950s,) he pulled some tours as yardmaster at East End Shops, and got some of
the old timers to show him where his grandfather's work bench had been. This was
a thrill to him and he mentioned it more than once.
"Gus" always loved farming. When he married my great-grandmother Cora
(1890,) he bought (rented, probably) a farm at Boones Mill, Va, 17 miles south of
Roanoke. He worked six days a week in the Shops at Roanoke, and after work on
Saturday, he would walk 17 miles to Boones Mill (as the Roanoke & Southern RR
had not yet been completed.) Before he would eat his dinner, he would go
around and feed all the animals so much food that they would get sick ! On
Sundays, he walked back to Roanoke.
Gus was a real worker. When he finally moved from Boones Mill to Roanoke
(around 1900, as I recall,) he lived in a big wooden house up on a hill, at the
corner of Elm Avenue and 8th Street. SE, with Cora and his six children. It
was "only" a one mile walk from the shops. He hand-excavated a huge amount of
dirt away from the hillside and hand mixed all the concrete for his own
sidewalks and two huge concrete retaining walls to keep the hill from sliding away.
He bent his own pipe for handrails and ... turned brass ornamental balls as
"dressing" to go in the ends of the pipework! He also built his own grape
arbors and a fine out building for his shop and coal house. Then, when automobiles
came around, he excavated even more dirt, formed up and poured a divided
concrete garage with a concrete roof, so that he could rent it out for extra
money. We have a number of pokers that he made for tending fires (all with brass
handles,) a spiffy brass match holder for holding wooden matches, and two of
the ornamental ball endpieces that he made for the handrailings.
His one nemesis in life was McPeake, the Irishman who lived next door. He
and McPeake didn't get along at all, for some reason which no one seems to
remember. Their houses were very close together (as builders were wont to
construct houses back in the days before building codes.) I never got the whole story
on the event, but there was one episode where either McPeake or "Gust" (as
McPeake called him) was using a ladder to paint his house, and the "other party"
alleged that the base of said ladder was resting on > HIS < property and
so kicked the ladder down, with the painter still high up on it ! Of course
there was a huge fistfight between these two old guys, and the wives and
children of both households were duly instructed "never to speak to" the housewife
and children of the adjoining house. Whew !
Gus was also a great prankster. He played pranks on his co-workers at the
Shops, and on the newly emingrated Swedes (all of whom hung together.) One poor
dumb Swede was named Herm Salander, and Gus told him an ideal treatment for a
terrible headcold would be to go to the drugstore and ask for a "box of
bastards." Herm did as his buddy Gus had advised. The girl at the counter
shreaked. The police were called, and as they were ready to throw poor Herm in the
paddy wagon, he blurted out something like "Gus told me to do it !" "Gus?
Gus? Gus who?" asked the gendarmes. "Gus Sjogren," said Herm. "Oh, we know
Gus," said the cops, "And this is just another one of his tricks!" And they
let poor Herm go free.
A tradition of the shop workers was to save one biscuit from their lunch each
day, and put it on the top shelf of their locker. On pay day (once a month,
back then) they would get out the hard busciuts and have biscuit battles in
the locker room.
One St Paddy's Day, the Irish shop workers painted Gus's boots (the ones he
walked to work in, before changing into his work shoes) with green paint. A
week later, the Irishmen came back to the locker room, after 12 hours in the
Shop, to find their shoes had all been nailed to the floor with horse shoe nails.
Wonder who... ?
In his retirement, Gus would walk from his home in southeast Roanoke to the
home of his daughter (my grandmother) in Villa Heights to mix concrete and pour
sidewalks, and do other work. That was probably six or seven miles each way.
During Prohibition, he also made his own wine and beer. The Lutheran
minister, a German by the name of Sieber, paid many visits to the Sjogren household
during this time and, as the story goes, usually had to be assisted down all
the concrete stairwork that Gus had built !
Gus had married a Methodist girl from Botetourt County. But he never missed
church at "his" church, St. Mark's Lutheran, which was on the southeast corner
of Campbell Avenue and 3rd Street, SW. As a child, I was taken one time to
"Papa's Church"... the day they were holding their last service before moving
to a new building.
On his deathbed, his last words (spoken to my grandmother) were: "Oh,
daughter, I see the Land, and it is so beautiful."
I wish I knew more about him, but I missed him by ten years. He definitely
sounds like my kind of guy. No wonder my father was so fascinated by him.
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