Well said Margaret, you would think you lived ther.

I did until I was 18, and your words describe the conditions to a t.

Many thanks.

Hermano


Date: Thu, 22 Jul 2010 10:19:22 -0400
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Interesting Life Story
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Hi, 


Some times articles don't quite do justice to its intended settings and I feel 
I should speak up for the islands that gave birth to so many of us and also as 
to inform and assist the reader about the "real" life of an Açoreano.  It may 
have been poor and without commodities but it was full of life, singing and 
dancing to this day.  


The Azores islands should share in the glory of this story but sadly the 
article reads: "Life in the Azores was not easy. There was political strife and 
there were physical hardships — no indoor plumbing, no electricity, and no 
telephone, only poverty".


 "only poverty". Wasn't the whole world poor during the depression? and 
hardship?  What does one call the work under extreme conditions in factories, 
lumber yards, railroads, ship yards etc?


The Azores and Portugal as poor a country as it was and is, saw an influx of 
American returnees from the USA flood the islands during the depression.


These American immigrants knew they would be able to survive in the Azores for 
3 basic reasons.  Moderate climate, fertile land and the sea where anyone was 
able to draw freely from.  The Azores were the land of milk and honey during 
the depression.  Some of them returned to the US after the depression but many 
also stayed home.


Money was always scarce before and after the depression and people survived by 
bartering and exchanging their goods for equal value goods as a way of life not 
because or due to poverty.


Sincerely,


Margaret.


On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 6:45 AM, Jesse Pacheco <[email protected]> 
wrote:


Here is the original article:

http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100718/NEWS/7180339


On 7/22/2010 4:57 AM, [email protected] wrote: 
A second cousin of mine sent me this nice little story with no source 
information but I thought I would post it as it gives some insight in the life 
and times of this woman who lived in Sao Migues during the Depression era..
Susan Vargas Murphy






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