Difference between revisions of "Category:Tramps and Hobos"

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''For those presentations receiving support from the Vermont Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities, any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in those programs do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the Vermont Humanities Council.''
 
''For those presentations receiving support from the Vermont Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities, any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in those programs do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the Vermont Humanities Council.''
  
==Artifacts from the Museum Collection Associated with Tramps or Hobos==
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==Everyone Has a Hobo Story; What's Yours?==
*A Tramp's Food
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Everyone Has a Hobo Story
**[[Tomato Can with Improvised Handle]]
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Will you share yours with us too?
 +
 
 +
*I'm scared of hobos. They'll jump ya. —Local, White River Junction, youth
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 +
*My grandfather rode the railroads as a hobo. He said they wouldn't let you on the trains without luggage, so he'd find a suitcase at the junkyard and fill it up with bricks. In Arizona he became engaged to an Indian princess, as the story goes. He telegraphed his parents that he was going to marry her and the reply was "no you're not – you're coming back to Brooklyn and your wife has been picked out for you." —Corey Unger, Chelsea and White River Junction, Vt.
  
*Evidence of Tramp Drug and Alcohol Use
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*I lived in Fairlee, Vt., and I saw a few beer cans come flying out of freight trains. Our garage opened on the tracks and sometimes we'd find people sleeping in it. My father would go out and say, "You can't stay here two nights." —Mark Marsh, White River Junction, Vt.
  
*Images of Tramps and Hobos
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*Down below Richardson's Corner in Woodstock is a place near the old railroad station called "The Jungle." Now I know why. My mother gave a sandwich to a hobo once, and after that, it seemed like every one of them stopped at our back door. —Woodstock resident
  
*The Tramp in Popular Song
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*I tried it once. We just got on a train, an empty boxcar in Providence. We thought it was going to Chicago, but it went to New Haven. We said "this bites it" and we got off. —[[Bunny Harvey]], Bethel
  
*Tramp Headgear
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 +
==Artifacts from the Museum Collection Associated with Tramps or Hobos==
 +
*[[A Tramp's Food]]
 +
**[[Tomato Can with Improvised Handle]]
 +
**[[Corned Beef Hash Can]]
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**[[Hobo's "Gunboat"; Large Can for Cooking Jungle Stew]] (reproduction)
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**[[Can with "Spagetti Rings" Label]]. Poor condition.
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**[[Flattened Sardine Can]]
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*[[Evidence of Tramp Drug and Alcohol Use]]
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**[[Package of "Munimaker" Cigars]] In "zip-loc" plastic packaging.
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**[[Can for "Pabst Blue Ribbon" Beer]]
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**[[Bottle for Mickey's "Big Mouth" Malt Liquor]] from Dallas Texas.
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**[[Bottle for "Cossack" Brand Vodka]]
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**[[Plastic Bottle for "Vicks Formula 44]]
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**[[Crack Vials]], New York City, late 1980s
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*[[Images of Tramps and Hobos]]
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*[[The Tramp in Popular Song]]
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*[[Chasing a Living; A Trajectory of Headgear]]
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*[[Living Outdoors; You Carry Everything with You]]
  
 
[[Image:Wortman2cars30.jpg|thumb|200px|Tramps and their Cars. Denys Wortman 1930. From the collection of the Center for Cartoon Studies.]]
 
[[Image:Wortman2cars30.jpg|thumb|200px|Tramps and their Cars. Denys Wortman 1930. From the collection of the Center for Cartoon Studies.]]
 +
 +
===[[The Law of the Road]]===
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Violence. Economic Upheaval. [[Mishaps and Accidents on the Rails]]. [[The Tramp Terror]].
  
 
===[[A Gallery of Hobo Images]]===
 
===[[A Gallery of Hobo Images]]===
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From the [[Harvey-Muhly Postcard and Ephemera Compendium]].
 
From the [[Harvey-Muhly Postcard and Ephemera Compendium]].
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 +
===[[Formulae Relating to Tramps and Hobos|Formulae]]===
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Tramp + Freight Train + Work = "Hobo"
  
 
===[[The Tramp in 19th Century Popular Song]]===
 
===[[The Tramp in 19th Century Popular Song]]===
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"Such persons, brought before a committing magistrate, are sentanced to the work-house for twenty days. At the end of that time a certificate of discharge is given them, and this exempts them from arrests for vagrancy for a period of five days thereafter...That the railroads are useful in spreading the tramp nuisance is shown by the faithfulness with which these peripatetic vagabonds' stick to the railroad lines. A map of the tramp movement, projected on some such plan as Prof. Riley's chart of the locust movement, would be an exact reproduction of the railroad system of the country. Tramps do not move in large bodies.  
 
"Such persons, brought before a committing magistrate, are sentanced to the work-house for twenty days. At the end of that time a certificate of discharge is given them, and this exempts them from arrests for vagrancy for a period of five days thereafter...That the railroads are useful in spreading the tramp nuisance is shown by the faithfulness with which these peripatetic vagabonds' stick to the railroad lines. A map of the tramp movement, projected on some such plan as Prof. Riley's chart of the locust movement, would be an exact reproduction of the railroad system of the country. Tramps do not move in large bodies.  
New York Times, 11 July, 1879.  
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''New York Times,'' 11 July, 1879.
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 +
==Tramps in Vermont==
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[[Hazen Savage and Ralph Stetson Reminiscences]] Oral History from West Hartford, and Pomfret, Vermont residents collected by Cameron Clifford.  
  
 
===Vermont History Expo, 2007. Tunbridge, Vermont===
 
===Vermont History Expo, 2007. Tunbridge, Vermont===

Latest revision as of 06:29, 12 June 2009

Brandonhobochick09.jpg

Exhibitions of Tramp or Hobo Related Artifacts Sponsored by the Main Street Museum

Our Publicity

Tramps, Hobos, and Transients at the Edge
Special Events and Special Exhibits At The Main Street Museum
May through July, 2009

Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road, healthy, free, the world before me


Henceforth I ask not good-fortune, I myself am good-fortune
Here a great personal deed has room ... The road is before us! —Whitman


I'm a man of means, by no means - King of the Road —Miller

What is a hobo? We're all familiar with the ragged figure with a bundle on a stick, traveling by freight train. But a more interesting question might be, "who is a hobo, and why?"

The tramp, the hobo, the wanderer - the unemployed, uprooted American, or simply anyone who can't rest easy without knowing what's around the next bend in the road - have a social pedigree that runs from the wilderness and Walt Whitman's "Open Road," right through to the songs of Bruce Springsteen, and today's news headlines about migrant workers, homelessness and economic upheaval.

In a groundbreaking series of special events and special exhibits this May through July, the Main Street Museum will investigate and celebrate the American wanderer with readings, movies, concerts, cookouts, lectures and more.

We are located in White River Junction, Vermont, a gritty and historic railroad town that is easily reached by Amtrak and is just minutes from Interstates I-89 and I-91.

A full schedule of special events is attached and is also available on our website. Our special exhibits will be on display May 1 through July 31, 2009. You can learn more about our programs at www.mainstreetmuseum.org/wiki, or call us at 802-356-2776.

Supported in part by the Vermont Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the Vermont Humanities Council.

The Curious Case of the Haitain Hobo of White River Junciton, Vermont, by James Sturm. 2009.

Tramp and Hobo Symposium was presented by the Museum May—August, 2009 For those presentations receiving support from the Vermont Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities, any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in those programs do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the Vermont Humanities Council.

Everyone Has a Hobo Story; What's Yours?

Everyone Has a Hobo Story Will you share yours with us too?

  • I'm scared of hobos. They'll jump ya. —Local, White River Junction, youth
  • My grandfather rode the railroads as a hobo. He said they wouldn't let you on the trains without luggage, so he'd find a suitcase at the junkyard and fill it up with bricks. In Arizona he became engaged to an Indian princess, as the story goes. He telegraphed his parents that he was going to marry her and the reply was "no you're not – you're coming back to Brooklyn and your wife has been picked out for you." —Corey Unger, Chelsea and White River Junction, Vt.
  • I lived in Fairlee, Vt., and I saw a few beer cans come flying out of freight trains. Our garage opened on the tracks and sometimes we'd find people sleeping in it. My father would go out and say, "You can't stay here two nights." —Mark Marsh, White River Junction, Vt.
  • Down below Richardson's Corner in Woodstock is a place near the old railroad station called "The Jungle." Now I know why. My mother gave a sandwich to a hobo once, and after that, it seemed like every one of them stopped at our back door. —Woodstock resident
  • I tried it once. We just got on a train, an empty boxcar in Providence. We thought it was going to Chicago, but it went to New Haven. We said "this bites it" and we got off. —Bunny Harvey, Bethel


Artifacts from the Museum Collection Associated with Tramps or Hobos

Tramps and their Cars. Denys Wortman 1930. From the collection of the Center for Cartoon Studies.

The Law of the Road

Violence. Economic Upheaval. Mishaps and Accidents on the Rails. The Tramp Terror.

A Gallery of Hobo Images

Some of the images of the Tramp we have assembled over the course of a year or so. Some are real tramps, or documentary photos. Others are images from the popular media, and so represent our changing ideas of the tramp and the nostalgia of the hobo. Enjoy.

Images of the Tramp from the 19th Century Media

Harper's Weekly and Century Magazine all described the Tramp Scare of the 1870s—in lurid detail! See glimpses of it here.

Images from the pen and pencil of Denys Wortman

With thanks to our colleagues at the Center for Cartoon Studies, White River Junction, Vermont.

Tramps and Hobos in Postcards and Ephemera, 1900–1912

From the Harvey-Muhly Postcard and Ephemera Compendium.

Formulae

Tramp + Freight Train + Work = "Hobo"

The Tramp in 19th Century Popular Song

The Tramp as seen by Dorothea Lange in the 1930s.

Historic Background

"Such persons, brought before a committing magistrate, are sentanced to the work-house for twenty days. At the end of that time a certificate of discharge is given them, and this exempts them from arrests for vagrancy for a period of five days thereafter...That the railroads are useful in spreading the tramp nuisance is shown by the faithfulness with which these peripatetic vagabonds' stick to the railroad lines. A map of the tramp movement, projected on some such plan as Prof. Riley's chart of the locust movement, would be an exact reproduction of the railroad system of the country. Tramps do not move in large bodies. New York Times, 11 July, 1879.

Tramps in Vermont

Hazen Savage and Ralph Stetson Reminiscences Oral History from West Hartford, and Pomfret, Vermont residents collected by Cameron Clifford.

Vermont History Expo, 2007. Tunbridge, Vermont

World Tours, Hobos and Gypsies; Artifacts from Transmigratory Cultures in Focus The Main Street Museum, White River Junction, Vermont, 2007

The Evolution of the Hobo; Images of a Non-threatening Wag

Tramps or Hobos; you decide...


Haitianhobo09.jpg

Tramp Themes at the Museum

World Tours, Hobos and Gypsies; Artifacts from Transmigratory Cultures in Focus The Main Street Museum, White River Junction, Vermont, 2007

The Main Street Museum offers for your education and contemplation, an exhibit of transient objects and souvenirs of trips from our permanent collection — things brought back from abroad by Vermonters. World Tours were undertaken by middle and upper class Victorians for education, health, and in a more limited sense, cultural exchange. These same goals are often associated with Hobo life and the life of gypsie encampments to the present day. Just as there is a long history of Hobo life along the state of Vermont’s railroads, this culture continues today especially in our home town of White River Jct.

The Museum is a Tramp

Founded in 1992, the Main Street Museum has been located in four different locations in the town of Hartford. Therefore the museum itself can be seen as a kind of gypsie. We have been in motion but are now entering into a state of rest. Well, not rest really, but at least we can say that we are more composed now than we used to be.

History of Trampdom in the Area of White River Junction

Jack London as a tramp in White River Jct. rail yards.