BURST, Bertha Arnold
EI-961
Also known as: ARNOLD
AGE AT TIME OF INTERVIEW: 91
RUNNING TIME: 17:12
INTERVIEWER: PAUL E. SIGRIST, JR.
RECORDING ENGINEER: PAUL E. SIGRIST, JR.
INTERVIEW LOCATION:
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED BY: TAPESCRIBE
TRANSCRIPT REVIEWED BY:
SHIP:
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RESIDENCES:
Good afternoon.
BURST:Good afternoon.
SIGRIST:I'm Paul Sigrist.
BURST:Sigrits.
SIGRIST:Sigrist.
BURST:Right.
SIGRIST:And I work for the Ellis Island Museum.
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:The National Park Service.
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Today is Tuesday, September 30 th , 1997 and I'm at the Kateri Residence — K-A-T-E-R-I. And we're in New York City.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:And I'm here with Bertha Burst.
BURST:That's right.
SIGRIST:Yes.
BURST:That's right.
SIGRIST:And Mrs. Burst came from Germany.
BURST:Yes.
SIGRIST:Yes. What year did you come?
BURST:Well, I don't quite remember but I think it was in 1925. I'm not sure.
SIGRIST:But maybe 1925.
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Yeah. I'm going to just fix your microphone here.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:She thinks she came in 1925 and I also want to say for the sake of the tape that volunteer, Roger Herz, is here, and recreation person here at the Kateri, Jody Persowuth.
PARSOWITH:Parsowith [PH]. [chuckles]
SIGRIST:Parsowith. Can you spell that? And — and speak loud.
PARSOWITH:P-A-R-S-O-W-I-T-H.
SIGRIST:Thank you. I'll be asking that every time we report.
PARSOWITH:[laughs]
SIGRIST:We're in Mrs. Burst's room and we may hear one of the other residents through the wall, who sounds kind of unhappy. [laughter] Mrs. Burst, what was your maiden name?
BURST:Bertha Arnold.
SIGRIST:How do you spell Arnold?
BURST:Arnold, A-R-N-O-L-D.
SIGRIST:And where in Germany were you born?
BURST:Where? It was a little town. It's a little city now.
SIGRIST:What's the name?
BURST:Lauda.
SIGRIST:Lauda.
BURST:Lauda.
SIGRIST:Do you know how to spell Lauda?
BURST:L-A-U-D-A.
SIGRIST:Lauda.
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Oh, thank you. Do you know where in Germany that little town is? What part of Germany?
BURST:Baden [PH].
SIGRIST:It's in Baden.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Baden's kind of —
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:— down, I think, isn't it?
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
PARSOWITH:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Yeah. Do you know what your birthday is?
BURST:Yes. The 31 st of December.
SIGRIST:What year?
BURST:Was 1906.
SIGRIST:1906. December 31 st —
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:— 1906.
BURST:Right. That's right.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. What was your father's name?
BURST:I think it was Anton. Anton.
SIGRIST:Anton.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Anton. And what did he do for a living in Lauda?
BURST:I don't know that. You see, it's been so long. I can't remember that anymore.
SIGRIST:Do you remember your mother?
BURST:Yes.
SIGRIST:What was her name?
BURST:Johanna. [PH]
SIGRIST:Johanna.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what her maiden name was?
BURST:Schwartz.
SIGRIST:Schwartz?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:S — S-C-H —
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:— W —
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:— A-R-T —
BURST:T.
SIGRIST:— Z.
BURST:That's right.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. What are some of the memories you have of your mother when you were a child?
BURST:Well, I don't remember too much. You know, it's so long. I can't remember that.
SIGRIST:Well, what — what do you remember about when you were a little girl in Germany?
BURST:Well, I don't remember much.
SIGRIST:Do you remember the house that you lived in?
BURST:Yeah. I have it right there.
SIGRIST:Can you describe for me what it looked like?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:Go ahead.
BURST:It had a living room and a dining room and two other rooms.
SIGRIST:And did you have animals when you were growing up?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:What kind of animals?
BURST:Well, we had chickens and, I don't know. Did we have sheep or not? But we wanted to have them but I don't know if he got them or not.
SIGRIST:Did you have a special job in the house when you were a kid? A chore that was yours?
BURST:No, no, no.
SIGRIST:No?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:Did you have brothers and sisters?
BURST:Yes, I have four sisters.
SIGRIST:Do you remember their names?
BURST:Yes, yes. One was Jo — one was Joanne, Jo. I have to think. [chuckles]
SIGRIST:That's okay. Take your time. Joanne was one.
BURST:Yeah, yeah. Yeah, and — [unclear] I forgot.
SIGRIST:Well, maybe as we're talking, you'll remember.
BURST:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. Do you remember — you — you — you remember the house.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what the town looked like?
BURST:Oh, yes. Yeah.
SIGRIST:What — what — what things stick out in your mind about the town?
BURST:Well, it was a cute town. You know, it wasn't very large but they called it a city and it wasn't a city.
SIGRIST:Was there an industry in that town?
BURST:That I don't remember.
SIGRIST:A factory that you remember —
BURST:No, I don't remember that. It could be but I don't remember that.
SIGRIST:Did you go to school in Germany?
BURST:No —
SIGRIST:Didn't go to school.
BURST:[unclear] Germany.
SIGRIST:You didn't go to school in Germany?
BURST:Oh, yeah.
SIGRIST:You did?
BURST:Yeah. [unclear].
SIGRIST:Do you remember anything about going to school?
BURST:Oh, yes. Yes.
SIGRIST:What kinds of things do you remember about going to school?
BURST:Well, I couldn't tell you that. No. But it was a cute town.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh, yeah. Did you go to church when you —
BURST:Oh, yeah.
SIGRIST:Yes?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:What — what religion were you?
BURST:Catholic.
SIGRIST:Catholics.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Was there a Catholic church?
BURST:Well, there was more than one.
SIGRIST:More than one.
BURST:Yeah. Yeah.
SIGRIST:Who was the most religious person in your family?
BURST:Well, my mother, I guess.
SIGRIST:Did your m —
BURST:And she brought us up that way.
SIGRIST:How did you practice your religion at home?
BURST:At home?
SIGRIST:Yes. What did you do at home —
BURST:Oh —
SIGRIST:— for —
BURST:We said our — do you know — prayer. And when it was finished, we said it again. Yeah.
SIGRIST:Do you remember that prayer?
BURST:Oh, yeah.
SIGRIST:Can you say it for me in German?
BURST:I think I — I think I could.
SIGRIST:Try.
BURST:Yeah. Ah, let me see. No, I —
SIGRIST:Okay. [chuckles] Well, again, it might come to you as we're talking.
BURST:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:When — when — when you lived in Germany, what kinds of things did you enjoy doing?
BURST:Well, most anything.
SIGRIST:Was there a special activity that you particularly enjoyed?
BURST:Oh, no.
SIGRIST:No?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:What were you like as a kid?
BURST:Well, I [unclear] like anything.
SIGRIST:Yeah. When you were growing up, what did you know about America?
BURST:I didn't know anything about America till I came here.
SIGRIST:You sa — you told me that you thought you came in 1925.
BURST:I think so.
SIGRIST:Yes.
BURST:But I'm not sure.
SIGRIST:Not exactly sure.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:But maybe 1925.
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Yeah. Do you remember World War I?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:Yes. What did — what do you remember about the First World War?
BURST:Well, that — I don't know what — what — see, I was too young.
SIGRIST:Yeah?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Did it affect your family in any way?
BURST:Oh, no.
SIGRIST:No.
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:Did you have a — a brother or a relative —
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:— who had to serve?
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:No.
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:Okay. Well, tell me why you came to America.
BURST:I came here because everybody went to America that time.
SIGRIST:Did you know someone who had gone to America?
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:No? Did any relative —
BURST:Oh, my aunt was here.
SIGRIST:Where did she live?
BURST:In New York.
SIGRIST:And whose — is that your father's sister or your mother's sister?
BURST:My mother's sister.
SIGRIST:Your mother's sister. Did she write to you?
BURST:Oh, yeah.
SIGRIST:Yes? Did — did you have any expectations about America before you came?
BURST:No, no. Nothing at all.
SIGRIST:When you came to America, did you come alone?
BURST:Oh, yes. Yes.
SIGRIST:Was anyone traveling with you?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No? Tell me what you had to do before you left Germany. What did you have to do to get ready to leave?
BURST:I forgot that.
SIGRIST:Okay. Do you remember what you packed to take to America?
BURST:No, I don't remember anything.
SIGRIST:Do you remember saying goodbye to your family?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No? Okay. [chuckles] Do you remember being on the ship, the boat that brought you to America?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Yes?
BURST:I remember that.
SIGRIST:Yes. Do you remember the name of the boat?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No.
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:Do you remember where you had to go to get on the boat?
BURST:I know where it was.
SIGRIST:Yes?
BURST:But I couldn't tell you.
SIGRIST:Okay. [chuckles]
BURST:[laughs]
SIGRIST:That's fine. D — do you have any memories of being on the ship itself, the boat?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:What do you remember?
BURST:Yes, yes.
SIGRIST:What did you do on the boat?
BURST:I don't remember that anymore.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh.
BURST:Yeah. But I remember I was on the boat.
SIGRIST:Do you remember how long the trip took to get to America?
BURST:That I don't know. See, I think it was about 10 days, maybe more, maybe less.
SIGRIST:Did you get seasick?
BURST:I think so, what — what I remember.
SIGRIST:Do you — do you remember seeing the Statue of Liberty when the ship —
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:Do you remember being at Ellis Island —
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:— when the ship came in?
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:No. Who met you in America?
BURST:My aunt.
SIGRIST:Your aunt. And di — where did she take you?
BURST:I — that I don't know.
SIGRIST:Did you go to her house?
BURST:I guess so.
SIGRIST:Yeah, and she lived in New York, you say.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Did you get any work when you first came to America?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:You didn't get a job.
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No. What did you do when you first got —
BURST:I did housework.
SIGRIST:You did housework. Well, that's a job.
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:[laughs]
BURST:Big job.
SIGRIST:Yes. [chuckles]
BURST:[laughs]
SIGRIST:Can you tell me what it was like to learn how to be a — a maid in somebody's house?
BURST:Well, I couldn't say that anymore. I forgot that. You know, there's a lot of things I forgot.
SIGRIST:Well, you're doing all right.
BURST:[chuckles]
SIGRIST:[chuckles] Tell me — tell me what — when — when you went to work in the house doing housework, what were some of the things that you had to do?
BURST:Well, we — I finished the — the homes. You know, we had to finish the home, [unclear] the house.
SIGRIST:Did you have to do any cooking when you worked?
BURST:Oh, no. After [unclear], I did.
SIGRIST:After — afterwards. How did you learn English?
BURST:I — I picked that up quick. [chuckles]
SIGRIST:Do you remember a time where you made a mistake when you were trying to speak English?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No.
BURST:I don't remember.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. But you picked up English very quickly.
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. And when you first came to America, what — where did you live? Did you stay with your aunt?
BURST:I came to my aunt. But where she lived, I couldn't tell you.
SIGRIST:Do you remember how long you lived with your aunt?
BURST:No, I couldn't.
SIGRIST:No. Did any of your other family come over to America?
BURST:Yes, one y — one sister. She was two years older than I.
SIGRIST:And what did she do when she got here?
BURST:She did the same thing I did.
SIGRIST:She got housework?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. Did you miss your family when you were in America?
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:No.
BURST:Well, see, I lost my family very young.
SIGRIST:Oh.
BURST:Yeah, right.
SIGRIST:How old were you? Do you remember?
BURST:Oh, I don't know but I don't think much more than 10 or 12 years old.
SIGRIST:How did your father die?
BURST:A heart attack.
SIGRIST:Had a heart attack.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:And what about your mother?
BURST:Well, she didn't have a heart attack but I don't know what she had.
SIGRIST:But she died too.
BURST:Oh, she died after many years.
SIGRIST:Oh, I see. Was your mother still living when you came to America?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:Oh, she was? Okay.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Did your mother ever want to come over to America?
BURST:Well, I don't know. She never said it.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh.
BURST:I don't think she did.
SIGRIST:But your sister came over.
BURST:Yeah, yeah.
SIGRIST:Did your sister live with you when she came?
BURST:She did.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh.
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Did you become an American citizen?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:Yes?
BURST:After five years.
SIGRIST:Yes? How did you feel when it — when you became a citizen?
BURST:Oh, I was very proud. [laughs]
SIGRIST:Did —
BURST:I felt I was a real American. [chuckles]
SIGRIST:Did you get married in America?
BURST:Oh, yes.
SIGRIST:Yes?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:What was the name of the man that you married?
BURST:[chuckles] I forgot.
PARSOWITH:Mr. Burst.
BURST:Yeah. [laughter]
SIGRIST:Right, Mr. Burst. [chuckles] Was he — where — where was Mr. Burst born?
BURST:Mr. Burst was born in Lauda.
SIGRIST:In Lauda?
BURST:Yeah.
SIGRIST:Did you know Mr. Burst when you lived in Lauda?
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:No? How did you meet Mr. Burst?
BURST:Oh, I met him many years after that.
SIGRIST:Do — and tell me, how did you meet him?
BURST:I — I don't know — remember that anymore.
SIGRIST:Do you remember what year you got married?
BURST:I think it was in 1925. I'm not sure.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh, uh-huh. Right. Did you have any children?
BURST:Yes, I had one daughter.
SIGRIST:What was her name?
BURST:Joan.
SIGRIST:Joan. Did Joan learn how to speak English — I mean, speak German? Did you —
BURST:Very little.
SIGRIST:Little.
BURST:Very little.
SIGRIST:Little bit.
BURST:She understood when we talked to her. But otherwise, she wouldn't understand.
SIGRIST:Could Mr. Burst speak English?
BURST:No.
SIGRIST:No? He spoke German.
BURST:German.
SIGRIST:Uh-huh. Did you ever want to go back to Germany?
BURST:No, no.
SIGRIST:No? Why not?
BURST:Because I have no one there. See? I [several words unclear] that I could go to.
SIGRIST:How do you feel about America?
BURST:I love America.
SIGRIST:Great. Well, that's a good place for — for us to end. Mrs. Burst, thank you very much.
BURST:You're very welcome.
SIGRIST:And this is Paul Sigrist signing off with Bertha Burst on September 30 th , 1997 at the Kateri Residence. Thank you.
BURST:Yeah. [unclear]. [END OF INTERVIEW]
Cite this interview
Bertha Arnold Burst, 9/30/1997, interviewer Paul E. Sigrist, Ellis Island Oral History Collection, Statue of Liberty National Monument, U.S. National Park Service, EI-961.