Person:Naomi Reichard (2)

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Naomi Laverne Reichard
m. 23 Apr 1904
  1. Zulieme Reichard1905 - 1978
  2. Kenneth J. Reichard1907 - 2001
  3. Keith Charles Reichard1908 - 1978
  4. Naomi Laverne Reichard1913 - 2002
  5. Donna Eileen Reichard1920 - 2006
  6. Duane Cooper Reichard1927 - 2008
m. 4 Nov 1934
Facts and Events
Name[1] Naomi Laverne Reichard
Gender Female
Birth[1] 15 Jan 1913 Mellott, Fountain, Indiana
Census[2] 1920 Union Township, Crawfordsville, Montgomery, Indiana
Census[3] 1930 Union Township, Crawfordsville, Montgomery, Indiana
Marriage 4 Nov 1934 Crawfordsville, Montgomery, Indianato Wallace Peebles
Residence[8] 1978 Darlington, Montgomery, Indiana, United States
Death? 19 Dec 2002 Crawfordsville, Montgomery, Indiana
Burial? 23 Dec 2002 Darlington, Montgomery, Indiana

NAOMI LAVERNE REICHARD was born on 15 Jan 1913 at Mellott, Fountain County, Indiana. She appeared on the census of 1920 at Union Township, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, Indiana. She appeared on the census of 1930 at Union Township, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, Indiana. She married WALLACE PEEBLES, son of LEROY PEEBLES and HAZEL LAFOLLETTE, on 4 Nov 1934 at Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, Indiana, at the age of 21. She died on 19 Dec 2002 at Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, Indiana, at age 89. She was buried on 23 Dec 2002 at Darlington, Montgomery County, Indiana, at the age of 89.

Naomi discusses her life in Journal Review Article

Lets begin with the end of the First World War late in the fall of 1918. My family, meaning my father, mother and four children, lived in Mellott. I remember being carried on my father's shoulders, in the middle of the night, to the train depot to see a troop train bringing soldiers home from Europe.

We moved to Crawfordsville the next year and I started school. So the 1920s had just arrived on the scene. The age of the "Flappers" and on into the 1930s and the age of the "Great Depression".

The 1920s were the years of the Charleston, short skirts, and bare back tops. There was a comic strip called "Boots and her Buddies"). Boots had a very short, cute hair cut and you had better believe the "Boots" haircut became very popular -- even I wore one. The stock market crash of 1929 brought on terrible hardships, especially for the working class and the middle class blue collar workers. Wages went down and working hours increased. I worked for Montgomery Ward -- 2 hours a week at 23 cents an hour -- $11.96 was a week's wage.

After the crash Hoover had taken a battleship and gone fishing! Roosevelt was elected in 1932 (my first year to vote in the national election). FDR gave us the NRA (National Recovery Act). Of course I loved him. 40 hours a week and a $1 per hour! I thought I had died and gone to heaven!

The WPA (Works Progress Administration) program by government put laid off workers back to work rebuilding roads, putting in dams, cleaning roadways, mowing and picking up trash. Also building outside sanitary toilets for use in public parks. Anything to "prime the pump" to get America back to work.

Also, Social Security came in under Roosevelt. This was not ever to be touched by any later administration and never was until President Nixon came to office. That is exactly why Social Security is in trouble as of today.

I liked Roosevelt enough to vote for him four times. Of course the war, gradually building in the 1930s and finally hitting us in the 1940s, helped the economy because of the war equipment necessary and the enlistment of additional troops needed.

My sister, Donna Reichard, enlisted and took her training in Des Moines, Iowa. Upon graduation, she had the privilege of going to Officers Candidate School or going overseas with her platoon.

She chose to go overseas and served in Africa, Italy, and France. Donna served in several different areas, but most of the time she was a writer on the "Stars and Stripes" newspaper.

Lester Peebles served in the Seabees. Being a Quaker, he did not want to bear arms, so he enlisted in that branch of the service. That division was stationed in England was kept busy repairing equipment damaged in the war -- everything from land artillery to battle ships.

Rationing of gas, sugar, tires, etc. became the order of the day for all Americans. Being farmers, we had a little more attainable gas than city folks, but we surely did not waste any. I remember being very careful to conserve our sugar allotment each month. Flour was always in short supply also.

War is always very devastating, but the years after the "crash" evolving to the actual start of World War II became the time of economic recovery to the demand for fighter planes, tanks, guns, and ammunition.

This part of the country had a great recovery with Stewart Wagner in Lebanon (Indiana) making ammunition and Allison's building plane engines.

America had a very difficult burden to bear with the combining of Pearl Harbor in the Pacific and then entering into the war in Europe. Long were the years and hard to bear. How much terrible if our cities and countryside had been bombed over and over as in Europe? I'm sure all of America is thankful we were spared from the terror and destruction those countries went through.

Having been a teenager in the 1920s and seeing the hardships the working class went through just to make a living -- long hours and low wages -- and the benefits that came with the Roosevelt Administration made a Democrat out of me.

I have voted for some Republicans, but I think I have always lived better under the Democrats than under ultra-conservative Republicans. However, to each his own. That's the American way!

Memories from sister Donna

Naomi’s family is mostly responsible for keeping the county’s Quaker church (oldest in the city) open.

Image Gallery
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Nancy Reichard. Reichard Family History. (Family History, ca 1980).
  2. United States. Bureau of the Census. 14th census, 1920. Indiana, 1920 federal census : soundex and population schedules. (Washington [District of Columbia]: The National Archives, 193-?)
    1920.

    Year: 1920;Census Place: Crawfordville Ward 2, Montgomery, Indiana;
    Roll: T625_457; Page: 5A; Enumeration District: 178; Image: 350.
    Jack Reichard Entry

  3. United States. Bureau of the Census. 15th census, 1930. Indiana, 1930 federal census: population schedules ; NARA microfilm publication T626. (Washington, District of Columbia: Bureau of the Census Micro-Film Laboratory, 199-?)
    1930.

    Year: 1930; Census Place: Crawfordsville, Montgomery, Indiana;
    Roll: 620; Page: 7B; Enumeration District: 20; Image: 302.0.
    Jack Reichard Entry

  4.   Journal Review Article
    Nov 30, 1999.

    See full text below

  5.   Naomi Reichard Peebles. Interview with Naomi Reichard Peebles. (Scott Black, 2001)
    2002.
  6.   Reichard 4; Effie Cooper Obituary. (Obituary).

    She is listed as "Mrs. Wallace Peebles"

  7.   Donna Reichard Ferguson. Donna Reichard Ferguson Memories.

    Naomi’s family is mostly responsible for keeping the county’s Quaker church (oldest in the city) open.

  8. Keith Reichard Obituary. (Obituary)
    1978.

    "Naomi Peebles" of Darlington