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(Continued, Part 2)
Why did you want to go to Vienna?
Because I was thinking right away to go to
Weren’t you going home?
No, I didn’t want to go home.
Why not?
Because, you know if a young man comes home from the Army, they want to give you right away shothunen [Yiddish - "matchmaker"] and they want you to get married and I didn’t want that.
So you didn’t see anybody at all? You didn’t see your family?
No.
You went straight to
To
And then?.....
In
From
Sure--
The
To
Did it stop anyplace?
No.
You didn’t go to
No...to
The
About eight days.
Eight days...
Eight days to come to
What kind of trip did you have? Were you in first class, second class....
First class.
First class? You were rich! The fellow with all the money!
You know when I came here, nobody came with me, I came myself, I didn’t have any addresses and I found my uncle [garbled].
That’s where you went first--to your uncle? What was your uncle’s name?
Lieb Bier.
In (
All right--and what did you do--did you move in with him?
The first time I came to my uncle, it was on a Friday, so he took me after the first supper I had, he took me to a room and he said, "come here my child, I want to tell you a nice story." So I went to the room and it was him and me in the room. He said he was going to tell me a little story but that I was to remember it all my life. In
How much money did you have when you came here?
I had in American money about $175 in my pocket. I had over a thousand dollars in Austrian money. I had it in the bank and I took it out when I left from Tarnów to
What did you do here in the United States?
So, I paid him the board and I said "don’t worry about it." And he said (my uncle), "now we got to think what to do--what are you going to do?" And I told him not to worry, I would do something. So he told me that he wanted me to be all right. So he said, "do you want to be a tailor?" So, I said that I would be a tailor as long as I could make money. He told me that I could make a whole lot of money. On a Sunday morning, he would leave the house maybe 5, maybe 6 o’clock and he came running by and said [garbled], "Kind, I’ve got a job for you." So we went to a big shop, the machines were working like anything and he said, "you see, there is a big boss and you’re going to pay him $10 and he’ll learn you for a whole month and you’ll be an apprentice and you’ll make a whole lot of money. That’s the best trade there ever is now." So, I said all right--I was a good boy and I took everything that somebody told me.
So I said, "all right--I’ve got to learn something." So, the boss told me, " you have to pay me $10 and you have to work four weeks and when you come out from my place, you’re going to get money." So, I sat down right away at a machine and by the end of the second day, I knew more than the people who had been working a year there. I took everything up so quick so the apprentice saw that I could make pockets, I could make collars--I could turn the collars out--and then they gave me sleeves to put together and then they gave me linings to put together and everything I saw, I did. So I was working two weeks and I came home and said to my uncle, "why should I work for that man? I gave him the $10 and I’m going to look for a job. And, I’ll get a job." So he said, "well, you said 4 weeks...." And I said, "what is the difference--so he got my $10."
So, Friday, I come and I see him and I said when we stopped work--we didn’t work Saturday--we worked Friday and I said, "Mr. Wolf, I won’t come to work on Sunday." He said, "why?" And I said, "why I should I work for you for nothing. I gave you the $10 and I don’t want to work anymore. I’ll get myself a job." He said, "why do you want a job somewhere else--get a job from me. Take a job from me and the third week, I’ll give you $2.
Two dollars for the whole week?
For the whole week--give me two dollars. So, I told him OK that I would take the $2 but first I want you to give me the money, right away, because I told him "I know if I work it, you won’t give me the money." He said, "I’ll give it." So, I told him all right and that I would take his word. On Friday, he gave me an envelope with $2 and I said, "now I quit." He said, " why do you want to quit now? I’ll give you $3." And I said, "$5." So, he talked to one of his partners and the partner told him to give me $5. And I told him I wanted the $5 first and he gave me the $5. So, I got $7 back again and it cost me $3 and I worked 4 weeks.
What was his name?
Wolf. So, after the 4th week, I left. I told him that I was going that I didn’t want to work anymore there and I went to
When did you come to the United States?
I came on a Friday, 1888.
What month?
It was March. March, it must about the 8th or 9th.
What happened after that?
After we had a big blizzard.
That was the big blizzard of...
1888.
Three days before Purim.
Three days before Purim in ‘88.
That’s right.
How old were you then?
I was going on 19.
You weren’t 19 yet, you were 18 ½. In March of 1888 you were 18 ½ years old.
That’s right. And I was here for three years...........TAPE ENDS!
![]() Naturalization certificate |
![]() Wedding day with Sarah |
![]() Julius standing on left |
![]() Julius seated with wife and children in front of store he ran - my dad pouting with arms folded. About 1909. |
![]() Taken in US about 1912 - my father is the larger of the two boys. |
![]() As an older man |
This booklet is dedicated to the memory of my grandfather, Julius Bier, with gratitude for the hardships he endured as a young man in an effort to seek a better life for himself in getting to this country. I am also grateful for the foresight my cousin, Gerald Frolow, had in sitting down and making this tape with Grandpa back in 1956 when it wasn’t fashionable to do so. Our family will be long indebted to him for not allowing a large and significant portion of our family’s history to pass into eternity unnoticed.
October, 1997
Mary Bier Wilson
Fellsmere, Florida
This article was published on PolishOrigins.com by permission of Mary Bier Wilson. It was originally published on http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/ website.
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