Walther Fidler

Location of Interview
Collection Name

Steamboat Era Museum Oral History Project

Description

These interviews were recorded with residents of the Northern Neck and Middle Peninsula of Virginia during 2003 who knew much about the history of steamboating in the region. Included were many now no longer living, who worked on the boats and wharves, those who rode them as passengers and crew, and those who shipped produce and manufactured items or ordered goods for delivery. At the time, copies of the recordings were provided to the Steamboat Era Museum in Irvington, Virginia for use in various educational programs.

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Interviewer
Date of Interview
12-05-2003
Transcribers

National Capital Contracting

Audio
Abstract

Walther Fidler (1923-2013). Remembering his early boyhood, Walther Fidler spoke of bicycles flung asunder on the wharf, sneaking onto and all around the steamboat as it stopped in his home community of Sharps. Legislator Fidler speaks in vivid imagery of muscular Black stevedores entertaining the masses while loading recalcitrant calves aboard the tall, white vessels. He spoke of the vast disparity between Black and white households in the community and marveled at the positive spirit displayed by neighboring African-Americans. On recalling the sounds, odors and swaying of the mighty steamers he lamented that growing up in the midst of this lively culture, he had been unaware that he was experiencing the end of an era.


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