All My Born Days
Stories by a Sharecropper's Son
by
Book Details
About the Book
In All My Born Days-Stories by a Sharecropper's Son, a historical autobiography, Kenneth R. Shipe looks back on his early life in the poverty-stricken hills of West Virginia, and recalls how his parents struggled during the Depression to scratch a living from the soil for a family of ten. He tells how a New Deal farm loan made it possible for his father to work as a sharecropper in Maryland and describes the primitive processes the Shipe family used for growing and harvesting crops, butchering animals and preserving meat.
The Shipes were ruled by the forces of nature: bitter cold winters; a flood that washed over their West Virginia home; and a forest fire that surrounded their house in Maryland and had Ken and his family flat on their bellies, gasping for breath. Ken remembers humorous incidents from his days in a country schoolhouse, and how he almost lost his life when his new bicycle ran off a mountain road. And he writes about World War II, which snatched up his brothers and critical farm helpers, leading to failure of the Shipes' sharecropping venture and subsequently his own call to duty as a Marine in the Korean War.
About the Author
Kenneth R. Shipe, former Marine and Korean War veteran, was born in Springfield, WV. A member of space launch vehicle teams at Cape Canaveral for 25 years, he retired in 1992 from Lockheed Martin Aerospace as a departmental director. He and his wife, Dottie, are avid volunteers with Habitat for Humanity.