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Rumors that their wedding was of the shotgun variety were proven baseless when their first son didn’t see daylight until November 22nd of 1929. The roaring twenties were in full swing, even in rural De Leon, and the good times rolled until Black Friday, October 25th, 1929 — and the arrival of Charles Elvin. He did not cause the Great Depression, nor did the Great Depression cause him. Times got tough and Hugh and Thel were blessed with yet another son on March 15th, 1933, as they moved from one rundown shelter to another, usually when the rent was due. The last of the litter, Benny Wayne, was born December 18th, 1939, and Hugh and Thel wisely ceased production. Hugh haunted the corner on Texas Street where day labor was chancy and often non-existent. He watched as the Houston and Texas Central freight train rolled through town and envied the hobos who adorned the empty cars and went on down the tracks looking for the Promised Land. To his credit he resisted the urge to climb aboard and leave his troubles behind. Despite the hard times and the gloomy forecast for the future, the little family managed to stay together when it would have been easier to quit. As a matter of fact, Hugh and Thel shared their shelter and food with Nancy Brownlee, Thel’s widowed mother. Tom Brokaw’s “Greatest Generation” was hanging tough in the eye of the hurricane. “When the going gets tough, the tough get going” is one version of an old adage and the Chupp family managed to weather the storm. Grit and good humor was a major contributor to their will to hang on, and when good times crept across America in the early days of 1942, they had managed to move up a rung on the ladder of success. A stroke of good fortune elevated the Chupps from day labor to tenant farming. The story is an eyewitness account—recounted for your amusement and edification by the eldest son of Hugh and Thel. And the story may sound familiar—you may have lived it too. |
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Published: May 2008 ISBN: 978-1-4363-3165-4 |
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