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West
Side Detroit Polish American Historical Society
Interview with Veronica (Vera) Bozek (“VB”)
Of the Former Bozek’s Funeral Home – Martin Avenue, Detroit,
MI 48210
(Formerly Konkol and Lappo Funeral Homes)
With Gabriel Solano (“GS”), Neighbor
January 15, 2005
VB:
Oh, I wish my mother-in-law was over here . . . . How you
would love that woman. Oh, my god. I learned all the
business from her. She had two daughters but her two
daughters were nothing inclined with in the business until I
came into the picture when I married my husband. She—that
woman just loved me, you know. Oh, my god.
INTERVIEWER: You
were blessed. Let me start out by just putting on tape that
we are here at the former funeral home, Bożek Funeral Home.
VB:
No, this was Konkol, formerly.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay, originally it was Konkol.
VB:
Then it was Lappo.
INTERVIEWER: How
do you spell it? How do you spell Konkol?
VB:
K-O-N—wait. K-O-N—Konkol. K-O-N-K-O-L.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay, and then it became—
VB:
Then it was Lappo, L-A-P-P-O.
INTERVIEWER: Are
those both Polish?
VB:
Ah, wait a minute. Sort of, but no, I don’t think so. I
think this Konkol was German, and Lappo, he was sort of
mixed, gentleman, when he married Mrs.—Miss Konkol, because
she came from home, Konkol, and she married Mr. Lappo. Then
her family put him through school and he became a funeral
director.
INTERVIEWER: I
understand.
VB:
And then they were running this place.
INTERVIEWER: I
see. And when did you purchase it?
VB:
And then we, my husband and I, we bought it in 1948, Honey.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay. And what is the address here?
VB:
Where?
INTERVIEWER: This
address.
VB:
Over here?
INTERVIEWER:
Um-hum.
VB:
Oh, that’s 4016 Martin.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay. And we are here, this is an interview with Veronica.
VB:
Yes.
INTERVIEWER:
Bozek.
VB:
Bozek, right.
INTERVIEWER: And
it’s January 15, 2005, Saturday, and we have Gabriel Solano
with us, who was wonderful enough to introduce me to you and
to let me know about this wonderful history here. And we
are recording this history for the West Side Detroit Dom
Polski Historical Society. And the intent and the goal of
our society is to preserve the beautiful history of this
Polish-American neighborhood so that others going forward,
future generations will know about it.
VB:
I would give anything if this neighborhood was the same. I
would give anything in the world. Ah, it was so beautiful
to live here. It was so beautiful. I loved all the
people. How I loved my people! Oh, I can’t even talk to
anybody now. We’ve got such funny people.
INTERVIEWER: Tell
me your husband’s name.
VB:
Walter.
INTERVIEWER: And
when did you marry Walter?
VB:
Nineteen-forty. We were married at St. Hedwig’s Church.
That’s where I went to school over there. He did, too.
INTERVIEWER: What
year was your husband born?
VB:
Ah, wait a minute, wait a minute. Nineteen—1912.
INTERVIEWER: And
when did he pass away?
VB:
Pardon?
INTERVIEWER: When
did he pass away?
VB:
Oh, let’s see, nineteen—I forgot everything already. Wait a
minute, wait a minute. When did he—it was about—he passed
away in 1968.
INTERVIEWER: And
you don’t have to tell me this if you don’t want to, but
would you mind telling me when you were born?
VB:
[Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: You
don’t have to. [Laughter]
VB:
[Laughter] Maybe it would be better if I didn’t.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay.
GS:
Go for it, Veronica.
VB:
It’s not going to sound so bad.
GS:
It’s so important.
VB:
Because I’m a real old lady, you know?
INTERVIEWER: You
are not.
GS:
So go for it. I’ll walk over here and let the ladies—
VB:
No, no, that’s okay. That’s all right. Come on back over
here. Come on.
INTERVIEWER: It’s
a state of mind. It’s a state of mind, anyway.
VB:
Pardon?
INTERVIEWER: Age
is a state of mind.
VB:
I don’t know, I don’t know, Honey, but—oh, I don’t know.
INTERVIEWER: Now,
where did you grow up? What street did you live on?
VB:
Ah, I am formerly here from the west side, from St. Andrew’s
parish on Larkins.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay. What’s the address on Larkins?
VB:
Fifty-eight-seventy-one, 5873. It’s a two-family house.
It’s a big house, right behind St. Andrew’s Church.
INTERVIEWER: And
where did your husband live growing up?
VB:
On Junction, across the street from St. Hedwig’s Church.
That’s where he was brought up.
INTERVIEWER: What
school did you go to, St. Hedwig?
VB:
He went also St. Hedwig, yeah.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay. How did you meet your husband, at school?
VB:
I met my husband, I’ll tell you how. We had a bridal shower
at one of those homes on Junction. I forget the name of
that hall now. And at that bridal shower, that’s where I
met my husband.
INTERVIEWER: Did
you fall in love with him right away?
VB:
Yeah. Oh, yeah. [Laughter] Well, if I tell you, you know
what he did? Oh, my god. You know, he must have forgot my
address or my telephone number when I gave it to him, and
this was on one Sunday. He was going from Michigan on
Larkins Street, looking for me, way from Michigan, way down
to McGraw, from house to house, looking for me.
INTERVIEWER: How
romantic.
VB:
Can you believe that? So when he come to the house where I
lived, my brother answered. And my brother says, “Say,
Vera, ah, there’s a gentleman over here by the name of
Walter Bozek.” “Oh,” I says, “Oh!” [Laughter] I says, “I
know who it is!” I says, “Yeah, I met that fella’,” I says,
“at the shower.” So then, I says, “Bring him in, bring him
in.” So my brother says, “Come on in, come on in, Wally.”
So he came in, and this is how it all started.
INTERVIEWER:
That’s a beautiful love story. [Laughter]
VB:
[Laughter] And to think he walked from house to house, that
whole, Honey, that—and, oh, my god, that was about three
blocks.
INTERVIEWER:
Wow. He was determined.
VB:
He sure was, you know? He must have been.
INTERVIEWER: I’m
going to back up just for a minute. What were your parents’
names?
VB:
Bochenek.
INTERVIEWER: How
do you spell that?
VB:
B-O-C-H-E-N-E-K.
INTERVIEWER:
Those were your parents’ names?
VB:
Yes, that was Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Bochenek.
INTERVIEWER:
Adolf?
VB:
Adolf.
INTERVIEWER:
A-D-O-L-F?
VB:
Yes.
INTERVIEWER: That
was your father?
VB:
That was my father, and my mother’s name was Rose.
INTERVIEWER:
Okay. And do you know—well, what were Walter’s parents’
names?
VB:
Walter’s parents’ names, his mother’s name was Anna Bozek,
and his father’s was Clements.
INTERVIEWER:
C-L-E-M—
VB:
C-L-E-M-E-N-T-S, Clements Bozek.
INTERVIEWER: Is
Bozek B-O-Z-E-K?
VB:
Yes.
INTERVIEWER:
That’s what I thought. And you got married and you had your
reception at the Dom Polski?
VB:
At the Dom Polski. I had 1,000 people over there at the
wedding.
INTERVIEWER: Did
you have a breakfast after your church ceremony?
VB:
I had a big wedding. I had breakfast and supper later on in
the evening reception, too.
INTERVIEWER: Did
you have the breakfast at the Dom Polski?
VB:
Everything at the Dom Polski hall. You see that Dom Polski
hall? That’s the one. We had that whole hall, downstairs
and upstairs. That’s how many people I had. Oh, my god, I
had such a big shindig.
INTERVIEWER: I
have to see those photos from your wedding one of these
days.
VB:
I’ll show them to you. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: So
then you got married, and then you—were you—where were you
living after you got married?
VB:
We stayed for a while at my mother’s house, and then—until
we bought the place here.
INTERVIEWER: And
when you bought this place, you bought it with the intent of
running it as a funeral home?
VB:
Oh, of course, yeah, oh, yeah. Oh, this home was nothing
like this. You’d be surprised, if you ever saw this place
when we bought it, I can’t believe it that I was able to do
all of this and fix it the way it is, you know? Because it
was like a real ordinary home. I don’t know how they were
running the funerals. Well, a long time ago, you know, they
did not have in the chapel, people laid out. Only I used to
go with my husband to the home and deliver the bodies. And
then we had to go every day, check on them, and see if
everything was fine until the day of the funeral, until we
buried the body. Get it?
INTERVIEWER:
Yes. Do you—
VB:
It was so different, like it is now.
INTERVIEWER: Do
you remember the funeral processions that they would have
with their music.
VB:
Oh, yeah. That was Adamus—what’s his name? Oh, wait a
minute.
INTERVIEWER: You
remember Stanley Adamus.
VB:
We had the musicians, the hall, and we used to walk to
church, great big funeral, oh, god. We had always 500 to
1,000 people, every time I had a funeral. I don’t know
where all those people come from. Honestly. And we would
be walking to the church. We used to have Father Czubaj,
pastor at that time. He was a wonderful, beautiful pastor.
INTERVIEWER: How
do you spell that?
VB:
He should be remembered. Father Czubaj, C-Z-U—wait, B-A-J.
Yeah, Czubaj, yeah, Paul Czubaj, his name was Father Paul,
Paul Czubaj, yeah.
INTERVIEWER: Now,
did you have brothers and sisters?
VB:
Oh, yeah. I had two brothers, but they passed away.
INTERVIEWER: What
were their names?
VB:
Michael and Joseph Bochenek.
INTERVIEWER: And
sisters?
VB:
And my sister, Maryusz [sp?], and me, that’s it. And me,
that’s all.
INTERVIEWER: Did
Walter come from a big family?
VB:
Walter, yeah, he came from five of them. They had five
children and in my family we had four. Wait, his oldest
sister was Verna, then was my husband Walter, then was Marie
Clements, then was Frank Bozek, that was his brother, then
was wait a minute, who was the last one? Oh, yeah,
Clements, then was Clements Bozek. He was the youngest one.
INTERVIEWER: What
do you remember about the Dom Polski? Did you go to a lot
of dances there?
VB:
Oh, god, yeah. Oh, every week. Sometimes I used to have a
policeman walk me home, way out on Larkins from Dom Polski.
Walking, you know? But that wasn’t that far. I used to
walk from here to downtown. I used to walk, that’s how
strong I used to be. Would you believe that?
INTERVIEWER:
You’re still strong.
VB:
To walk so far?
INTERVIEWER:
You’re still strong.
VB:
Oh, god. Ah!
INTERVIEWER: And
where else did you go to dances in the neighborhood? St.
Stephen’s?
VB:
Hey, we used to have—St. Stephen’s, St. Andrew’s, on Gilbert
here, Gilbert Hall, wait a minute.
GS:
That’s on the corner of Gilbert and Clayton.
VB:
Yeah, yeah, you’re right, Honey. All around the
neighborhood, we used to have dances going. Oh, Our Lady
Queen of Angels, here, too . . . . Well, that was my church
after I moved here. But I come more from St. Hedwig, St.
Andrew’s, St. Stephen’s, and then when I moved here, then I
got into here yet, okay? But I’m from the neighborhood from
here, the whole neighborhood.
INTERVIEWER: So
you—after your husband passed away, you ran this business
yourself.
VB:
Myself. I got another fellow with me. I had my shingle, he
had a shingle on the wall, and I was running the funeral
home, for all these years by myself, Honey. I don’t know, I
think of it now, I says, how did I do it?
INTERVIEWER:
Yes. Do you remember the other women in the neighborhood
who were business owners, like do you remember Mrs. G.
Meisner, the glassware and bar supplies lady?
VB:
I’ve heard of them, yeah, I’ve heard.
INTERVIEWER: Do
you remember the Central Creamery?
VB:
Yeah, I remember that, yeah.
INTERVIEWER: That
was—
VB:
That’s a long time ago.
INTERVIEWER: That
was Gorczyca.
VB:
Oh, there was Michno’s over there, that business bar, across
the street from St. Stephen’s Church.
INTERVIEWER: How
do you spell that?
VB:
Michno, M-I-C-H-N-O.
INTERVIEWER:
Michno’s Bar?
VB:
Michno’s Bar, it used to be, yeah. Now, it is still a bar
but it’s a different name.
INTERVIEWER: Do
you remember the Grzesik brothers and the Grzesik family?
VB:
Oh, Grzesiks, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
INTERVIEWER:
Grocery store?
VB:
Oh, yeah, my god . . . .
INTERVIEWER: To
what do you attribute your strength and your ability to run
this business? Is it because of your Polish heritage that
made you strong, your faith, or—
VB:
I tell you, all the Polish people around here just loved
me. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: I
believe it. You’re a lovable lady. [Laughter]
VB:
Oh, boy, I could write you a story. [Laughter] There was
one lady, lived on—wait a minute, what was the name of that
street? Let’s see now, Lumley, over here. There wasn’t a
day she wouldn’t call me. She used to call me every single
day. But I think she died. And I says to this worker of
mine, Danny, I have a little fellow here that helps me out,
I says, Mrs. Kulik is not calling no more? And he says, no,
I don’t hear nothing no more.
INTERVIEWER: What
was her first name?
VB:
Ah, wait a minute. Mary.
INTERVIEWER: Mary
Kulik?
VB:
Yeah, Mary Kulik.
INTERVIEWER:
K-U-L-I-K?
VB:
Yeah.
INTERVIEWER: The
name sounds familiar.
VB:
She lived by herself, Honey.
INTERVIEWER: She
was on Lumley?
VB:
Yeah, yep.
INTERVIEWER: And
what are your children’s names?
VB:
I didn’t have any.
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
no children? Okay.
VB:
That’s what made it difficult on me.
INTERVIEWER:
Sure, very difficult.
VB:
That’s why I had this fellow that I was running the place
with, was a young fellow, but see I needed somebody younger,
and him and I, so he would help me out, which he did. You
know, so he worked for me all these years. Of course, I had
others work for a little while, but—
INTERVIEWER: What
was his name?
VB:
John Burkhwat.
INTERVIEWER:
Burkwhat?
VB:
Yeah. He’s not Polish, though, Honey.
INTERVIEWER:
B-U-R-Q-U—
VB:
B-U-R-K-W-H-A-T, just like Burk, and that What.
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
Burkwhat.
VB:
Yeah, John, first name.
INTERVIEWER: Is
he still around?
VB:
Well, yeah, he is but he’s way out in Marine City. He’s
taking care of his mother. His mother is bedridden and
there’s nobody else to take care of her and he’s living with
her now, and since I closed the place, he says, well, he
says that’s it. But he calls me all the time. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER:
That’s nice.
VB:
Because he always tells me, he says, you raised me from when
I got out of school and you hired me here. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: You
took him under your wing.
VB:
Yeah, yeah. But he’ll tell anybody, he says, she raised
me. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER:
That’s a book right there.
VB:
Yeah, oh, yeah. And he really loves that. He’s so grateful
that I did raise him, and he just—well, he was like my son,
you know what I mean? He was helping me out and
everything. Then I had another fellow helping me out. Now,
I don’t know what happened to him, either. He disappeared.
Wait a minute. Donny, Donny Lutomski. He was a very good
helper to me, too. I don’t know now what happened to him.
I’ve got to call and find out what’s happening to him
INTERVIEWER: Now,
did you ever take any dance classes at the Dom Polski or did
you know anything about the ballet studio that’s in there?
VB:
No, no, that I didn’t know, Honey, no.
INTERVIEWER: And
do you remember—
VB:
But I used to belong there to all those clubs, now, oh, my
god.
INTERVIEWER: The
Falcons—
VB:
I better look up all my old policies and look them up again.
INTERVIEWER: The
Falcons? Did you belong to the Falcons? The Polish
Falcons?
VB:
Yes, long time ago. Yes, I did. On Junction. I wonder if
it’s still there. Is it still there?
INTERVIEWER: I
think the building might be there, but the Falcons is gone.
VB:
And we used to hold good dances there, too, and dinners.
Oh, god, oh! There’s another one, I had, Skrzyniarz. But
he’s not there. They knocked his house down.
INTERVIEWER:
Skrzyniarz?
VB:
Skrzyniarz.
INTERVIEWER:
S-K-R-Z-Y-N-I-A-R-Z
VB:
Yep . . . . I was very close with him.
INTERVIEWER: He
lived on Junction?
VB:
No, he lived right here on—wait a minute, St. John and
Waldo, Honey. They knocked his house down, so his daughter
bought a house in Dearborn, took him over there, and now he
passed away, now they’re all gone. But now his daughter’s
still living now, you know.
INTERVIEWER: What
was his first name?
VB:
Wait a minute. What was his first name? Mr. Skrzyniarz.
I’ll tell you the truth, I don’t know because I would always
say, “Mr. Skrzyniarz, Mrs. Skrzyniarz,” that’s all. I don’t
know his first name, I forgot.
INTERVIEWER: Do
you remember the backdrops that they had on the stage at the
Dom Polski? There’s one, it’s like a street scene and it’s
got all the business names on the walls of the—on the brick
walls. It’s painted.
VB:
Is it still there?
INTERVIEWER:
Yeah.
VB:
Is it?
INTERVIEWER: It’s
beautiful.
VB:
You mean it’s still open?
INTERVIEWER: In
the Dom Polski. It’s not open. There’s a sandwich shop.
VB:
No, no, no. Wait. Not Dom Polski. Are you talking
Falcons, or—
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
no, no, not Falcons, not Falcons. Dom Polski.
VB:
Oh, at Dom—well, I’ll tell you, I haven’t been there for a
long, long time. I used to belong to all the clubs that
they had over there, but now—
INTERVIEWER: Do
you know if there was a company in this neighborhood that
painted those backdrops for the stages?
VB:
Wait, now, I forget now. The guy that I bought that eagle
from, I forget his name, too, now. Wait a minute. What was
his name, now? I seen him at the dances yet, and at the
festivals, you know, he used to dance like a son of a gun.
Oh, boy, we used— [Laughter] I used to love to dance.
God, did I like to dance. And I don’t—I saw him yet, when I
was the last time at the festival. The guy that was selling
that yet to me, I forgot his name, too, now, already. Oh,
my god.
INTERVIEWER: Do
you remember the Mateja Religious Supply?
VB:
Yeah, Mateja, yeah. Oh, yeah, I used to buy holy picture
cards from them. Oh, yeah.
INTERVIEWER: What
were their names, do you remember?
VB:
No. All I knew is Mateja, Mateja. I knew the girls over
there. But I just didn’t know their names. I’d just say
Mateja, Mateja. [Laughter] That was an easier way, you
know? [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: You
have quite a history.
VB:
Oh, I sure do. Oh, Honey, if I went through all of it. Oh,
god, and I still repeat, I wish I had my mother-in-law
here. That beautiful lady. Oh, god. I cherish that
beautiful lady. Oh, my god. That was my mother-in-law.
Did you ever hear anybody praise their mother-in-law the way
I do?
INTERVIEWER: Not
like you are . . . .
VB:
Oh, I loved that woman. She was—she was something else,
honestly. That poor woman was left, also, when my husband’s
father died, he was only 49. And so did my husband die,
same way, only 49. He died exactly same as his father did.
Now how do you like them apples?
INTERVIEWER: What
did he die of?
VB:
Heart attack. Was not sick or nothing, Honey. And his
father was similar to him, they were telling me, something
that they were telling me he had an attack of appendix or
something, but then that he had a heart attack. So there it
was, you know, same way. You know.
GS:
What kind of work did his father do? Your husband’s father?
VB:
He was running the funeral home on Junction.
INTERVIEWER: Oh
he was on Junction?
VB:
Oh, yeah, his father.
INTERVIEWER: What
was the name of the funeral home?
VB:
Bozek Funeral Home.
INTERVIEWER: Was
it right across from St. Hedwig.
VB:
Right across from—they just took that sign out of there
because everything—they closed, and they had to take—they
tore the whole place apart. Yep.
INTERVIEWER: Dave
over at the Dom Polski was just telling me about that
funeral home today.
VB:
Yeah.
INTERVIEWER: He
said he knew a lady who went in there not too long ago and
it was beautiful, but he said now he thinks that they’ve
torn it all apart.
VB:
Yeah, yeah. Yep. That’s what it was. And then she was
left with her five children. That’s my mother-in-law I’m
talking about.
INTERVIEWER: Did
they live right there above the funeral home?
VB:
Yeah, upstairs, like I do, live upstairs, and they had the
business downstairs, Honey . . . . I don’t—I don’t know
what they did on Junction, now, with everything. Everything
is dissolved, and I don’t know who did what because
after—when my husband died, my husband was sort of in
partnership with his brother, then we had difficulties and
then we had to separate, and then I had to put the name,
instead of Bożek Brothers, I had to make it W. Bożek, my
husband’s name so I could run it as a wife, you know, and
then I took over, and it’s a little bit complicated but I
straightened it out, you know, more or less. And I—now,
this lady that I’m talking on. Oh, wait a minute. She
didn’t live on Lumley. She lived on Elmer, next street
over, on Elmer instead of Lumley.
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
okay.
VB:
Okay? The one that was always calling me here
continuously. Oh, boy, I wish she was still alive. She was
sort of an inspiration to me, too. I don’t know. All my
people are gone, everybody’s gone. I feel lost.
GS:
This is the idea of her taking that information so it’s not
lost . . . . We feel that you have a lot to give.
INTERVIEWER: Yes,
you do.
GS:
And, I mean, verbally, historically, and—and then
record-wise, picture-wise.
INTERVIEWER:
Photos.
GS:
To share, and to save it. Look, I want to share this
because I want our history to be what it was: beautiful.
INTERVIEWER: And,
also, there are also other Polish people like me who came
from this neighborhood who want to know about their parents
and their grandparents and their great-grandparents, and the
records you have here might tell them something.
VB:
Oh!
INTERVIEWER: They
want to connect with their past.
VB:
They do, hey?
INTERVIEWER: For
example, I got a call from a man named Joseph Gwizdowski and
his grandfather was the architect of the Dom Polski.
VB:
Is that right? Oh, my, you’re going way down.
INTERVIEWER:
Yes. And he’s researching his grandfather’s life, so he
wants to know everything he can about his grandfather and
about the Dom Polski. That’s why stories like yours and
other people in the community are very important . . . . I
think we’ve just about come to the end of the interview. Is
there anything else that you would like to say on tape?
What message would you like to leave to the next
generations? What would you like to tell them?
VB:
Well, Honey, the only thing I can say, I would wish and hope
it would repeat the way I had in my generation because it
was a beautiful generation. And everything was beautiful.
The people were beautiful. The people were beautiful. And
now I can’t stand it. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: We
all need beauty in our lives, don’t we?
VB:
Oh, the people and everybody. And now there’s nobody,
Honey. There is nobody. There’s nobody now.
GS:
Did your father work in a factory?
VB:
Oh, no, my father—oh, he did very good work. My father was
running a place, they called it Acme Foundry. He was
running that place.
INTERVIEWER: He
was running a foundry?
VB:
Yeah.
INTERVIEWER:
Where was it located?
VB:
My father was very smart.
INTERVIEWER:
Where was it located?
VB:
Wait a minute. Do you know I forgot, Honey.
INTERVIEWER: In
this neighborhood?
VB:
He had to take a streetcar at that time, he had to take them
busses later on. Oh, my dad, oh, man, he was a little
fellow, but man, he had really brains here. Oh, I don’t
know how I’m going to tell you, Sweetie. I don’t know.
GS:
Your mom was a homemaker? Your mom—
VB:
Yeah.
GS:
Stayed at home and took care of the children?
VB:
Yeah, yeah. My mother was a homemaker, yeah. No, she used
to work a little bit, you know, help out. Do you remember
Rosenberg’s, they used to have on 31st and
Michigan, that gray, big store? Maybe you don’t remember,
that’s going way back.
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
Rosenberg’s. I’ve heard of it.
VB:
Did you hear about it? My mother used to work for them, in
that store over there. Oh, you know, help out, you know,
when you’re first starting out. My father came from Europe,
my mother came here, you know, so they had to look for work,
to look for something to get started.
INTERVIEWER: I
can’t imagine the number of people who passed through these
doors over the years.
VB:
Oh, yeah. Oh, my god, yeah, yeah. You’re right, Honey.
The number of people passed through this door over here.
You are right, Sweetheart. Yeah.
INTERVIEWER:
Would you give us a tour?
GS:
As you had your business going on, most of your clients were
Polish, right?
VB:
Yes.
GS:
This was the announcement as they came in.
INTERVIEWER: Yes,
I want to take a picture of that.
VB:
Oh, this was the last person, right there.
INTERVIEWER: That
was the last person?
VB:
Yeah, yeah, Thomas Muir, yeah.
INTERVIEWER: I
have to get a picture of that.
VB:
Oh, yeah, that was the one, and then that’s when it stopped,
yeah. I mean, I called it quits, okay?
INTERVIEWER: Who
was the athlete? Your husband?
VB:
No. Well, yeah, he used to love bowling, yes, he did. I
used to—look at all the trophies I have. Oh, and I’ve got
loads of them. I’ve got them put away in the basement.
They used to bring every year for me—they used to bring
every year for me, bowling, baseball, from this church over
here, Honey, St. Stephen, St. Andrew’s.
GS:
The Polish businesses sponsored a lot of the baseball teams.
VB:
Yeah, yeah.
GS:
In the ‘60s and ‘70s.
VB:
And that’s why I used to get all those—if you want one of
those you can help yourself.
INTERVIEWER: No,
thank you.
VB:
Because I don’t know what to do with them now. You know, I
have so many of them, Honey. I don’t know what to do with
them anymore. I want to give them away.
I have my beautiful Jesus over here, Honey.
INTERVIEWER: Yes,
I took a picture.
GS:
Now, how did you—you prepared the bodies downstairs?
VB:
Yes, in the basement.
GS:
How did you bring them up?
VB:
Well, through the back, on the side. There’s a door, if you
notice, there’s a fence and then there’s a gate going right
down to the basement. I had a ramp.
GS:
Oh, okay, a ramp.
VB:
Yeah. I’d go right down in the basement. I had an
embalming room downstairs over there. But now it’s all, you
know, mish-mash.
INTERVIEWER:
How—how did you—you learned the trade from your husband,
then?
VB:
Oh, yeah.
INTERVIEWER: You
were like an apprentice at first?
VB:
Oh, yeah, oh, yeah. I took over like a champ. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER: And
you obviously owned some hearses, or a hearse.
VB:
No.
INTERVIEWER: You
didn’t need one?
VB:
I’ll tell you what. Well, long time ago, yeah, they started
off with it. But, right away it was disqualified. The
companies started coming out with their hearses, their
limousines, and they wanted us to deal with them. You know,
you rent them, and that’s what we did. And then everybody’s
doing that now. See, it started off in my days like that.
They didn’t have that, but it did. We started it all that
way. And now, they all are renting. Nobody’s buying
hearses or limos.
INTERVIEWER:
Sure, it doesn’t make sense.
VB:
Yeah.
INTERVIEWER:
Economically.
VB:
They change new models, and the companies are in it, and you
deal with them, you know, you hire them, you need them you
just call them, and you use them, and you pay them, and
that’s it. And I think that was a good way.
INTERVIEWER:
Sure.
VB:
And it still is this way.
GS:
I found that interesting as we were conversing how you had
said that you would go to the homes when they would lay the
bodies out in the home.
VB:
Yeah, at the—
GS:
And do all the preparatory work, right?
VB:
At the, at their—yeah, at the people’s house. Oh, yeah,
that’s a—
GS:
And you would take your fixtures to the house?
VB:
Yes. You should see how I used to pack everything in boxes,
right in that back room there, and I would call our D.U.S.,
we called them, that company, I says, “Come on, boys,
everything’s ready.” I had everything ready for them. They
had to take all this equipment. They had to put it
together, then they had to take it apart, then they had to
deliver it, they had to make the layout at the house. Oh,
it was so hard, Honey.
INTERVIEWER: Hard
work. I know it was.
VB:
Oh, my, my. It was very hard.
INTERVIEWER: And
then you had to go to the house and check on the body
periodically?
VB:
Every day until the burial.
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
my gosh.
VB:
Yes, ma’am. Oh, yeah. Oh, it was so hard. I don’t
know—you know, I—when I think back, I says, “How did we do
it?” I don’t know.
INTERVIEWER:
Because you would have several funerals going on at the same
time, right?
VB:
No.
INTERVIEWER: Not
usually?
VB:
Because we tried to stretch for every day. You know what I
mean, so there won’t be two together.
INTERVIEWER: I
see.
VB:
But sometimes it came out, then I had to hire another fellow
to direct, take care of the other funeral so I can go with
one. You can’t do it, you know what I mean?
INTERVIEWER:
Right, right.
VB:
Couldn’t do it, only one at a time. So, we always tried to
do it from every day and not to have two in one day.
INTERVIEWER: I
understand.
VB:
But sometimes we had two of them in one day.
GS:
Okay, can we see the smoking room? That’s the lounge down
there, right?
VB:
Yeah, but—I’ll let you glance at it here, but that’s about
it. Well, see, we had the restrooms here.
GS:
And this is where they would come to smoke.
VB:
The smoking is over here, they had, yeah, they had the
smoking room over here.
GS:
Oh, this is how you get down here. So it’s a pinewood
paneling, and—
VS: Yeah.
GS:
This is where they would lounge.
VS: They were always going for this pinewood
paneling. My husband’s uncle did this for us.
INTERVIEWER: Did
he really?
VS: Yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah, Honey. Like I
said, you would never know that this is the same place when
we bought it, it was nothing like this. And I made the
place look re-presentable.
INTERVIEWER: Do
you have pictures from back then of the inside?
VB:
No, I don’t, Honey. That’s one thing, I made a big mistake
that I don’t have, you know.
INTERVIEWER:
That’s okay. You have the memories.
VB:
Never was taking pictures, you know.
GS:
But you do have records of the funerals and of your wedding?
VB:
Oh, yeah, that I have.
GS:
And as you grew up?
VB:
Ah, not too many pictures, no, a few of them, yeah.
GS:
Right.
INTERVIEWER: I
would like to spend some time with you again really soon and
look through your photos, if I could, especially your photos
of your wedding.
VB:
Oh, now, that was something. [Laughter] That was big.
Believe me, it was big . . . .
GS:
And you started in the business what year, 19—
VB:
Wait, I started over here, we moved here 1958.
GS:
And you were married in 1940?
VB:
Yeah, yeah. But we were running the place on Junction
already before we bought this place, with my husband. Then
he put his brother in there and we came over here.
INTERVIEWER: Oh,
that’s how it went.
VB:
See, that’s how it all happened.
INTERVIEWER: And
you don’t know what’s going on at that other funeral home
now?
VB:
No, nothing at all, Honey.
INTERVIEWER: So,
who owns it?
VB:
Nobody now, I understand. I don’t know.
INTERVIEWER: It’s
closed down.
VB:
I don’t know what they done with the place over there.
Later on when my husband died—but then when his mother died,
everything went down the drain.
GS:
So you were married in 1940. How old were you when you got
married, about 20, 21?
VB:
Yeah, I was young.
GS:
Okay.
VB:
But, well, that’s the way we all were getting married. Some
of them were getting married in teens even.
GS:
Is that right?
VB:
Yeah, at that time.
INTERVIEWER:
Um-hum.
GS:
But was it customary with Polish girls?
VB:
Real young, they were getting married, but I didn’t want to
get married that young, not in 16 or 17.
GS:
Okay.
VB:
You know, I waited a little longer, you know.
INTERVIEWER: You
had to dance for a few years, all those Polish bands, right?
VB:
I got news for you, Honey. Hey, we just had yet in our
parish in Dearborn here, I go all over to festivals and
dance my head off. An old lady. [Laughter]
INTERVIEWER:
Where’s your parish now?
VB:
Over here.
GS:
Our Lady Queen?
VB:
Our Lady Queen of Angels.
INTERVIEWER:
Still Queen of Angels?
VB:
And the old lady needs a new pair of teeth again.
[Laughter]
INTERVIEWER:
[Laughter]
GS:
[Laughter]
VB:
I got time for everything, but I got no time for this, hey?
GS:
Oh, you’re an angel.
INTERVIEWER: You
sure are. You’re beautiful.
VB:
If my mother lived, she’d say, “What are you doing?” And
she’d say, “Oh, my god!” Oh, I’m telling you, Honey.
INTERVIEWER: I
thank you so much for this historical tour. This is a
treasure. Your life story is a treasure.
VB:
Really?
INTERVIEWER: Yes.
VB:
Oh, I’ll tell you, yeah—I give credit, a lot of credit to my
mother-in-law. That beautiful lady.
GS:
And she’s passed away, hey?
VB:
And when I got married to my husband, I never knew his
father. He was already gone. He was already, you know, out
of the picture and my husband was running the place over
there. And then we were running it over there before we
bought this place. Then we put his brother over there and
we came in over here. You know how it is, you know, we
tried to expand and tried to build up and—
INTERVIEWER: And
you can’t believe it when you look back and—
VB:
No, I can’t believe it.
INTERVIEWER:
Think about what you’ve done.
VB:
That everybody is gone and what I’ve done, and all this, and
all this—oh, I just can’t get over. I can’t get over,
Honey. Really and truly . . . . Oh, did you know Helen
Krzystov [sp?]? She had a bridal shop right here on the
corner of Michigan and Martin.
INTERVIEWER: No,
no.
VB:
Oh, my.
GS:
Is she still alive?
VB:
Beautiful lady, oh, god.
INTERVIEWER: Is
she still around?
VB:
Oh, no, no, she’s passed away, and her husband passed away.
They lived in Farmington. They built another house, but I
see now, they had one boy, he came back over here.
INTERVIEWER:
Really?
VB:
And he sold out everything out there, and they both died.
Helen died and Leonard, her husband, died. I thought maybe
you’ve heard of her. Oh, she’ll just look at you and she’ll
know how to make a nice dress for you. She was a smart
one. Oh, boy, was she smart! She was little like me. Oh,
bless that little Helen. Oh, my god. Oh, I’m telling you.
How I—how I wish those people are all back.
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