
Georgia, 1909
Photograph by Lewis W Hine
Carry myself with pride, as my mama taught me. My name is Elizabeth but everyone calls me Betsy. I am sixteen, pretty and full of life. This is day one of my very first paying job β working in the cotton mills. Iβm lucky and oh so grateful.
Mama is home doing chores and caring for my seven little brothers and sisters. Daddy left one day and never came back.
In my lunch sack is bread, an orange and a chunck of cheese; a plain lunch but it keeps me going. During my break Iβll sit by the banks of the Conasauga River and splash my scorched face. Life is good.
Carry myself with stooped shoulders. Iβve been in the mill for eight months. Itβs hotter inside than the blazing Georgia sun. Humid, too, to keep the thread from breaking. Boiled potatoes, cabbage and river water for lunch. Iβm sixteen. Maybe Iβll meet a husband here.
Carry myself on leaden feet. I work six days a week, twelve hours a day. I earn $1.00 each week. The air is thick with cotton dust. Nobody talks anymore; we keep our mouths covered but that doesnβt stop the coughing. I have no time or energy for anything else. Iβm sixteen and feel like Iβm sixty.
Carry myself with doom. Iβm coughing up blood now and see nothing in my future except dying in the mill. I think Iβll just walk into the river and never come out.
Carry my dead body to the graveyard. I was only sixteen and my name was Betsy.
NAR Β© 2021