Earl’s father, Samuel Crockett Dingus, (10/29/07 – 10/31/1954) passed away at 47 years old. He had a third grade education and was an excellent carpenter but later became a coal miner. This was in the country about nine miles from Appalachia, in Virginia and during the time of the depression.
After the depression, Samuel got a job in a coal mine. They moved to Jenkins, KY. The time was spring, probably around April or May. Every year, they would call a strike. John L. Lewis, (he hated that name) called it. Strike could last 2-3 months. During that time his family received sometimes as much as $3 a week but usually $1 per week of "script," which was put out by Consolidated Coal Company to be used only in the coal town area. This would buy necessities for the family of six at the time.
Once a month he bought a 25 pound bag of flour. Out of that bag of flour, mother would sometimes make biscuits and gravy every day and sometimes that’s all they had to eat for the week. This was their diet in the winter time. In the spring it would change a bit. In spring, they could go out in the yard and find different plants that Mom knew, and so she would cook these and they would eat from the local plants.