Editing Hop Farming

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E: Do you remember the hops yard and did you ever work in them?
E: Do you remember the hops yard and did you ever work in them?
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'''[[Fogle, Crystal Bryan|Crystal Fogle]]''': Yes I do - and we mentioned the streetcar a few minutes ago - between '''[[Eugene]]''' and '''[[Springfield]]''' there were hop fields. There were also hop drying buildings - and the street car was up on trestles - and we'd come quite close to the building where they would dry the hops as we went to Eugene. I mentioned that I went picking hops once and I did quite well the first day and then the second day I got lazy and didn't pick as much and when my parents came over to help me when I was sitting down and my father told me if I were going to do something to work at it, to not stop, so I didn't get to go back the third day. But in years later I kept books for one or two summers in the hop fields. The hops were grown and trained on wires and people would pick the hops and they would have a certain container fastened to their bodies and they would strip the hops off of the vines trying to get as few leaves as they could. Then they would empty these containers into large sacks, tie up the sacks. Then weighers would come along with a tripod and scales and they would hang the sacks up on these scales and weigh them and they were paid one cent a pound. Then in later years, if a hop picker stayed the whole season, they would be paid a bonus. Some people would camp at the hop fields and some people would drive each day.
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[[Fogle, Crystal Bryan|Crystal Fogle]]: Yes I do - and we mentioned the streetcar a few minutes ago - between [[Eugene]] and [[Springfield]] there were hop fields. There were also hop drying buildings - and the street car was up on trestles - and we'd come quite close to the building where they would dry the hops as we went to Eugene. I mentioned that I went picking hops once and I did quite well the first day and then the second day I got lazy and didn't pick as much and when my parents came over to help me when I was sitting down and my father told me if I were going to do something to work at it, to not stop, so I didn't get to go back the third day. But in years later I kept books for one or two summers in the hop fields. The hops were grown and trained on wires and people would pick the hops and they would have a certain container fastened to their bodies and they would strip the hops off of the vines trying to get as few leaves as they could. Then they would empty these containers into large sacks, tie up the sacks. Then weighers would come along with a tripod and scales and they would hang the sacks up on these scales and weigh them and they were paid one cent a pound. Then in later years, if a hop picker stayed the whole season, they would be paid a bonus. Some people would camp at the hop fields and some people would drive each day.
E: What was it like to camp in the hop fields?
E: What was it like to camp in the hop fields?
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E: Where were the fields and how big were they and who owned them?
E: Where were the fields and how big were they and who owned them?
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Crystal Fogle: North of '''[[Springfield]]''' across the '''[[McKenzie River]]''' was the Seavey hop yards. And west of Springfield on the way to Eugene - the name escapes me now - but there was a hop field not far from the street car trestle. And then south of Springfield there was another Seavey hop yard.
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Crystal Fogle: North of [[Springfield]] across the [[McKenzie River]] was the Seavey hop yards. And west of Springfield on the way to Eugene - the name escapes me now - but there was a hop field not far from the street car trestle. And then south of Springfield there was another Seavey hop yard.
E: The Seavey's were good friends of your family?
E: The Seavey's were good friends of your family?
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Crystal Fogle: Yes, '''[[Seavey, Jess A.|Jess]]''' and Molly Seavey.  And then there was John Seavey who had a hop field south of Springfield, not too far from '''[[Goshen]]'''.
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Crystal Fogle: Yes, Jess and Molly Seavey.  And then there was John Seavey who had a hop field south of Springfield, not too far from [[Goshen]].
E: And did the people who owned the fields, like the Seaveys, did they produce the beer or what happened?
E: And did the people who owned the fields, like the Seaveys, did they produce the beer or what happened?

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