GOLDBERG, Herman
EI-892
AGE AT TIME OF INTERVIEW: 88
RUNNING TIME: 15:19
INTERVIEWER: PAUL SIGRIST
RECORDING ENGINEER: PAUL SIGRIST
INTERVIEW LOCATION: WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED BY: TAPESCRIBE
TRANSCRIPT REVIEWED BY:
SHIP: COSTANZA [PH]
PORT:
RESIDENCES:
Okay. This is Paul Sigrist for the National Park Service. Today is Tuesday, May 27 th , 1997.
GOLDBERG:Right.
SIGRIST:I'm at the Hebrew Home in West Hartford and I'm here with Mr. Goldberg. What's your first name?
GOLDBERG:Herman.
SIGRIST:Herman. Herman Goldberg. We just interviewed Mr. Goldberg's wife, Myrna Goldberg, a minute ago. Mr. Gol — Goldberg, what country did you come from?
GOLDBERG:Russia.
SIGRIST:You came from Russia. And how old were you when you came?
GOLDBERG:I came — they wanted a special quota, like I was an orphan. That's why I made a — an exc — exception and they let me in. I came as a 14, 15-year-old —
SIGRIST:Around 15 years old?
GOLDBERG:That's it, yeah.
SIGRIST:And do you remember what your birth date is?
GOLDBERG:Birth date?
SIGRIST:Yes.
GOLDBERG:June 8 th — oh, the birthday —
SIGRIST:What's your birth date?
GOLDBERG:1908.
SIGRIST:1908. June 8 th ?
GOLDBERG:Well, we used to joke about it, Pearl Harbor Day.
SIGRIST:Labor Day?
GOLDBERG:Pearl Harbor Day.
SIGRIST:Pearl Harbor Day. So that's December.
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:December the 7 th , 1908.
GOLDBERG:Right, right.
SIGRIST:Do you remember the year that you came? To the United States, remember what year it was?
GOLDBERG:Well, it was 1908.
SIGRIST:That was the year you were born.
GOLDBERG:Y — oh, yeah.
SIGRIST:And what year did you come to the United States?
GOLDBERG:I don't remember exactly.
SIGRIST:Okay. But you were around 15, you think?
GOLDBERG:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Around 15. Great. What do you remember about growing up in Russia?
GOLDBERG:Not too much.
SIGRIST:Tell me what you do remember about being a little boy in Russia.
GOLDBERG:Just — just how to follow the crowd and take things that they tell you to, those days and we took it from there.
SIGRIST:You said that you were an orphan. Did you live in an orphanage?
GOLDBERG:No, but a — according to them, used to — t — there was a quota. You couldn't go into this country. But they let me in as an orphan, 15, 16 years old. They made an exception.
SIGRIST:I see. Do you know what your father's name was?
GOLDBERG:Itzach [PH].
SIGRIST:Itzach.
GOLDBERG:Itzach, yes.
SIGRIST:And what did he do for a living?
GOLDBERG:He didn't do much. He just — what comes natural.
SIGRIST:How did he make money?
GOLDBERG:He didn't have to make money.
SIGRIST:He didn't make money. Who made the money in your family?
GOLDBERG:He didn't make no money. He lived [unclear] and they got by that with the style of living those days.
SIGRIST:What did you eat when you were a boy?
GOLDBERG:[coughs] Excuse me. I got a cold.
SIGRIST:That's okay.
GOLDBERG:We ate whatever it —
SIGRIST:Whatever.
GOLDBERG:— it — you didn't make much issue of it.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what your mother's name was?
GOLDBERG:Bruha [PH].
SIGRIST:Bruha?
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:And do you remember what her maiden name was before she —
GOLDBERG:Kramerman [PH].
SIGRIST:Kramerman.
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. And do you have any memories of your mother?
GOLDBERG:Well, she — she was a mother, a Yiddishe [PH] mama.
SIGRIST:A Yiddish mama. Did you have brothers and sisters?
GOLDBERG:Yes. I was one of five in the family. I was the youngest.
SIGRIST:You were the youngest. Do you —
GOLDBERG:[unclear] —
SIGRIST:Go ahead.
GOLDBERG:And I remember that. I was the youngest in the family.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what you did for fun back then? What did you do for fun when you were a little boy?
GOLDBERG:Not lot to speak of. You just — it's — it's hard to figure out what I did.
SIGRIST:It was a long time ago.
GOLDBERG:It was a long time ago is right.
SIGRIST:[chuckles]
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:Do you remember, d — did your parents die?
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:They did? H — do you remember how old you were when that happened?
GOLDBERG:I was — in the — in the 40s, I think.
SIGRIST:And — and why did you want to come to the United States?
GOLDBERG:That's the only solution, those days, which [unclear] you could come the live in a — in a — in a world, in a peaceful world with — that everybody's not afraid. And we made a — the rounds.
SIGRIST:Do you remember being on the ship to coming — to come to America?
GOLDBERG:Some of it I do remember, yes.
SIGRIST:What do you remember about that?
GOLDBERG:The same as she said.
SIGRIST:Well, say [unclear] again, please.
GOLDBERG:She mentioned — yes. I came and I was in the hull of the ship because I came the special. And — and I remember I was watching people eat and I was — envied them because I didn't have anything to eat. And this is the way we — we came by.
SIGRIST:Do you remember the name of the ship?
GOLDBERG:Costanza.
SIGRIST:Costanza?
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. And do you remember how long it took to get to America?
GOLDBERG:Took too long to suit me.
SIGRIST:[chuckles] Did you get s —
GOLDBERG:Three weeks.
SIGRIST:Three weeks.
GOLDBERG:Yes.
SIGRIST:Where did you leave from? Do you remember what — what port you left from?
GOLDBERG:Costanza.
SIGRIST:You left from Costanza. That's where you got the ship.
GOLDBERG:Right.
SIGRIST:Right. And do you remember being on the deck of the ship?
GOLDBERG:Yes, I —
SIGRIST:What did you see when you were on the deck?
GOLDBERG:[chuckles] Not too much. All you heard is the — the rumbling of the waves. You know, you were way in the hull of the ship —
SIGRIST:How did — how did that make you feel to be deep in the boat?
GOLDBERG:It didn't make me feel too good. I was counting the days. Three weeks on a ship like this, it's enough to — but we made it. That's all.
SIGRIST:Do you remember when the ship came to America? When you got to America?
GOLDBERG:Not too much.
SIGRIST:What — where did you go to live once the ship — once you got to America?
GOLDBERG:I — we — we finally got there and I remember — I remember a man came over, a Jewish man. "[unclear] America? Where you come from?" And I told him. "Okay. Come with me." And he took me and he bought me dinner and a — you know, this — and he — he start living. And he took me down and he explained to me the situation. And there's plenty world went by since then. I remember a lot of things. But we made it. That's the main thing. We made it.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what town you lived in? When you first got to America, what town or city did you live in? Did you live in New York?
GOLDBERG:Uh-hmm.
SIGRIST:Mrs. Goldberg says New York.
GOLDBERG:Yeah, we came to New York.
SIGRIST:You lived in New York.
GOLDBERG:Yeah.
SIGRIST:What — can you tell me how you learned English in New York?
GOLDBERG:After a while, you learn. And we managed.
SIGRIST:Did you get a job when you came to America?
GOLDBERG:I got a job after a while and I can remember — it's one thing that I pride myself, those days, that — about the greenhorn business. The — a guy came over to me and he asked me, "You got to make a living. How you gonna make a living?" So I told him, "If you pay me $3 a — I'm not going to be able to make a living."
SIGRIST:So what kind of a job did you get?
GOLDBERG:I got [coughs] —
SIGRIST:That's okay. Take your —
GOLDBERG:Ironing.
SIGRIST:Ironing.
GOLDBERG:Ironing, shirt ironer. Was a friend of mine, he taught me how to shirt — to iron shirts. And the — to iron shirts for piecework and all that stuff, he went through the — the mill. But we made it. That's all.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what you liked about America?
GOLDBERG:Well, those days, I liked everything. I liked everything.
SIGRIST:Did you become a citizen?
GOLDBERG:Oh, yeah. Became — became a citizen.
SIGRIST:Do you remember how old you were when you became a citizen?
GOLDBERG:[unclear] 1915, I guess.
SIGRIST:1950? Is that — is that what he said, 1950? 19 — well, did you ever go back to Europe?
GOLDBERG:No, no.
SIGRIST:Did you —
MRS. GOLDBERG:He did.
SIGRIST:[laughs] That's okay. Mrs. Goldberg says you did go back to Europe.
MRS. GOLDBERG:[unclear] to go to Russia.
GOLDBERG:Oh, we went visiting. Yeah.
SIGRIST:Went visiting. I — yeah.
GOLDBERG:Yeah.
SIGRIST:How did it make you feel to be back in Russia?
GOLDBERG:It didn't make much difference to me, those days.
SIGRIST:How do — how do you — how do you — do you think of yourself as being American or Russian? How do you think of yourself?
GOLDBERG:There's so many things that I went through since then, good and bad. I — I went through a lot of things in my life there.
SIGRIST:Do — I — is there any story you'd like to tell me about something that happened to you during your life? What do you think the most important thing you've ever done was?
GOLDBERG:To meet her.
SIGRIST:To meet Mrs. Goldberg?
GOLDBERG:Huh?
SIGRIST:Mrs. Goldberg is saying you're a cantor.
GOLDBERG:Well, this is — this is one of the better things already.
SIGRIST:Can you — can you talk about that a little bit? How did you become a cantor?
GOLDBERG:Because I had a good wife and I — and I was singing.
SIGRIST:Can you —
GOLDBERG:And people liked — people liked me for that.
SIGRIST:Can you sing something for me right now, like a —
GOLDBERG:[chuckles]
SIGRIST:— like a — a Hebrew prayer? Can you sing for me? Go ahead.
GOLDBERG:[singing in Hebrew]. I'm nervous.
SIGRIST:That's great. That's wonderful. Thank you.
GOLDBERG:[chuckles]
SIGRIST:What were you singing about?
GOLDBERG:[unclear] —
SIGRIST:But what — what are you saying?
GOLDBERG:That's a Jewish — Jewish motif, you know. Davening, mostly davening.
SIGRIST:How does it make you feel when you sing?
GOLDBERG:How does it make — makes me feel very good.
SIGRIST:Well, Mr. Goldberg, thank you very much for letting me ask you these questions. You did a good job.
GOLDBERG:You're welcome. Thank you.
SIGRIST:Happy to —
GOLDBERG:Thank you —
SIGRIST:I'm happy to get the singing on tape. This is Paul Sigrist signing off with Herman Goldberg on Tuesday, May 27 th , 1997 at the Hebrew Home in West Hartford with Mrs. Goldberg in attendance. Thank you both very much.
GOLDBERG:You're welcome. [END OF INTERVIEW]
Cite this interview
Herman Goldberg, 5/27/1997, interviewer Paul E. Sigrist, Ellis Island Oral History Collection, Statue of Liberty National Monument, U.S. National Park Service, EI-892.