Savoring Pie Town
Sixty-five years after Russell Lee photographed New Mexico homesteaders coping with the Depression, a Lee admirer visits the town for a fresh slice of life
- By Paul Hendrickson
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Were Lee’s photographs propagandistic, serving the aims of an administration back in Washington bent on getting New Deal relief legislation through Congress and accepted by the American people? Of course. That was part and parcel of the mission of the FSA/OWI documentary project in the first place. (OWI stands for Office of War Information: by the early ’40s, the focus of the work had shifted from a recovering rural America to an entire nation girding for war.) But with good reason, many of the project’s images, like the names of some of those who produced them—Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, Arthur Rothstein, Ben Shahn, Marion Post Wolcott, John Vachon, Gordon Parks, Russell Lee—have entered American cultural myth. The results of their collaborative work—approximately 164,000 FSA/OWI prints and negatives—are there in drawer after drawer of file cabinets at the Library of Congress in a room I have visited many times. (Most of the pictures are now also on-line at http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/fsowhome.html.) Taken together, those images have helped define who we are as a people, or who we’d like to think we are; they amount to a kind of Movietone newsreel looping through our heads.
Lee took plenty of pictures in PieTown of the deprived living conditions; he showed how hard it all was. His pictures weren’t telling lies. And yet his pictures of people like the Caudills almost made you forget the deprived living conditions, forgive them, because the sense of the other—the shared food and good times at all-day community church sings—was so powerfully rendered. In front of Lee’s camera, the Caudills’ lives seemed to narrate the received American story of pluck and determination.
Never mind that I now also knew—in the so-called more rational and objective part of my brain—that the Thoreauvian ideal of self-reliance had foundered badly in this family. For Doris and Faro Caudill (and their daughter, Josie, who was about 8 when Lee took his pictures), the PieTown dream became closer to a nightmare. Faro got sick, got lung trouble, the family moved away (just two years after the pictures were taken). Faro sought work in the city, Faro ran around. An acrimonious divorce ensued. Doris ended up married to another man for 39 years. She even went to Alaska to try the American homesteading dream all over again. There is a beautiful book published several years ago about the Caudills and their saga, but especially about Doris: Pie Town Woman, by Joan Myers, a New Mexico author.
In 1942, when Faro Caudill hitched the gate at his PieTown homestead for the last time, he scrawled on the wood: “Farewell, old homestead. I bid you adieu. I may go to hell but I’ll never come back to you.”
And yet what you also get from Myers’ book about Doris in her very old age, not long from her death, is a deep longing to be there again, to have that life again. She told the author she’d like to have hot and cold running water, though. “As old as I am, I like to take a bath now and then. We would take a bath on Saturday night. We had a number three bathtub. I’d get the water all hot and then I’d bathe Josie and then I’d take a bath and then Faro would take a bath. . . . You kind of wore the water out.”
What happened in this dot of civilization, to go on with PieTown’s history, is that the agricultural dream dried up—quite literally. The good growing years lasted not even a generation. It was the water once more, a grapes of wrath anew, the old Western saga of boom to bust. Somehow, by the ’50s, the climate had seemed mysteriously to shift, just as it had in the places abandoned earlier by those Okies and West Texans and Kansans. The winters became balmier. The snows wouldn’t fall, not like they once did; the earth refused to hold its moisture for the spring planting. The corn and pinto bean fields, which two decades before had yielded rich harvests, as long as its tillers were willing to give to them the sunup-to-sundown work that they demanded, withered. And so, many of those once-exiled families found themselves exiled again. Some of them had already long moved on to cities, to jobs in defense plants and airplane factories. They’d gone to Albuquerque, to California, where the life was said to be easier, the paychecks regular.
But the town never died out entirely. Those who’d stayed behind made a living by any means they could: drilling wells, grazing cows, running mom and pop businesses, opening cafés called the Pie-O-Neer, recently reopened, or the Break 21. And new homesteaders always seemed to arrive, willing to try out the PieTown dream.
The highway had already taken me through and around the parched mountains and mesas and across a vast moonlike tract from the Pleistocene age called the Plains of San Agustin. The land had begun to rise again, almost imperceptibly at first, and then rather dramatically. It was still desert, but the land looked more fertile now. That was mostly illusion.
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Comments (30)
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All of Russell Lee's Pie Town photographs can be view online at the web site of the Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Give your self a treat. Go to http://www.loc.gov/pictures/collection/fsa/ and type "Pie Town" in the search box.
Posted by James C. Anderson on January 30,2013 | 11:18 PM
I was born in Hagerman MN, 20 miles of Roswell.I had never heard of Pie Town, till someone sent me those pic"s from 1939- 1943.I live in Ore, gonna try and come vist and stay awhile. I know about the gentle brezze, think it blows all over NM.
Posted by mitchell on February 4,2012 | 01:57 PM
We plan on a road trip to Pie Town to try the Apple pie with green chile that we saw on The Best Thing... I would like to know where I can get the hours. We will be driving from a small town on the border of Texas and New Mexico, only a 4-5 hour drive, but I want to make the best of it and make sure I get some of that pie!!!!!
Posted by Dot on June 29,2011 | 12:13 AM
Some really nice Pie Town pics can be found here, including the Caudill & Whinery family dugouts. There's a good one of The Whinery's nice garden & the Pie Town Fair:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1388179/Rare-Library-Congress-colour-photographs-Great-Depression.html
Thanks for the lovely background on Mr. Lee & the beauty of the Pie Town area & its people.
Posted by KatalinX on May 18,2011 | 05:28 PM
I'm a truck driver and was traveling along US60 from Socorro, NM headed to Snowflake, AZ. I got up to just before Pie Town at night and saw the most amount of elk that I have ever seen before in my life. Not wanting to risk the chance of hitting one of them I found a big open dirt parking lot off to the side of the road and called it a night. Have never heard of the town before, so decided to look it up on my phone and found your article. Gave a whole new meaning to the town and was also fortunate enough to be there at night and to watch the stars for awhile, have never seen them as clear as I did last night and they seemed so close! Was awesome! Then woke up this morning and walked around whats left of the town for a little while and took some pictures. Was disappointed to find the Daily Pie Cafe closed for at least another 2 weeks which is what one of the locals told me who had said he has lived here for 72 years. Seemed like a very nice guy although I never caught his name. Can't wait until I can come back through again and get a slice of that famous pie! This town reminds me a lot of the town that Cars, Inc was based on.
Posted by Jason Kowalski on April 13,2011 | 12:25 AM
I was born and brought in the US south. I am Cherokee. I was transferred with my job to New Mexico. Though apprehensive at first, I soon came to appreciate the beauty and peacefullest of NM. I have put Pie Town on my travel list because of this site.
Posted by Paloma on March 4,2011 | 09:20 PM
After reading the "Pie Town Woman" years ago, I was wondering what happened to the Caudills. Am now relocating to that area. Sad to hear about Doris's and Josie's passing. Merry Christmas to the spirit of the Caudill and other homesteading families>!
Posted by Susan on December 25,2010 | 02:07 PM
Faro did divorce Doris and the whole "Running around" comment, especially from the "pie town" book is annoying. Faro was my grandfather. He married my grandmother after he was divorced- yes ONE woman and he had two daughters with her. My mother and my aunt. He died of lung cancer when my mother was about 20. I never met him but it is interesting to see all these pictures of him, but what is most interesting is finding all the old homestead items out in our shed in the backyard and to have my mom tell stories about how he had a HUGE garden in the backyard where he implemented all his homesteading tricks. Josie and my mom were good friends and talked often. You have to remember that the Pie Town WOMAN book is definitely from the woman's point of view.
Posted by Christina Nunez on September 16,2010 | 02:44 AM
Back around 1967, my mom, dad, and I were traveling from Phoenix to Albuquerque, to visit friends. We stopped in Pie Town and, of course, I enjoyed a slice of pie - chocolate creme, if I recall correctly, (I was about 12 years old). I did not return until I passed through on my motorcycle over the Labor Day weekend in 2009. After reading this article, I wish I had stopped at the time. I will be sure to go there again soon, to appreciate the place in light of what I now know.
Posted by Paul Dietzel on August 2,2010 | 04:08 PM
I was born in Anthony New Mexico Back in 1959. I lived In Las Cruce Until I was 16 Years old. I was always told that my father was native american. My mother is hispanic. I live in Dallas Texas and have lived here since then. I miss the peacefulness of new mexico.MY husband and I were planing to retire to that area. I would like to know about the schools in that area, because i have three children that we have custody of and They are my nices and nephew we are planning on buying land in or around Pie town. I want the children to know how it is to live in a small town .
Posted by Eva on July 3,2010 | 02:33 AM
I knew Russell Lee at the University of Texas at Austin in 1965-1971. He taught photography in the art department and I was a student there. I also knew him through The University Co-Op, the student store where I worked in the photography department and he would come in and buy supplies and chat. He was a very passionate but gentle man who influenced those around him
It is also interesting that the area around Pie Town is becoming a haven for amateur astronomy, one of my other passions due to its remoteness and very dark skies. I have yet to observe and image from there but it is on my to do list.
Nice article on Russell Lee.
Posted by Kent Kirkley on April 30,2010 | 11:46 PM
As a kid my parents would load up the car in Detroit, MI and travel to visit my grandparents in Chula Vista, CA. In the mid 60's my younger brother and I got to see the American west firsthand through the bug splattered windows of Dad's Ford station wagon.
About every other year we came trough Pie Town and this was a big hit for my brother and me as we knew it meant a slice of pie. My parents were very frugal, never eating out on the 5 day trip but we always got a slice of pie in Pie Town.
My only real vivid image of the town (other than the pie) was my mother getting into an argument with the owner of a small grocery store about some dented cans of soup my mom wanted and thought the price was too high.
I've longed to come back there on a motorcycle trip, at least to see the roads we used to travel on.
Someday I hope.
Posted by Rick Griffith on February 18,2010 | 02:29 PM
Wayne Orle Macrander and wife Floy Elizabeth Farnsworth Macrander appear in several Russell Lee photographs which illustrate a broad spectrum of their community involvement in the Pie Town and nearby Mountainview Community School affairs. Their names do not appear in captions beneath their images, in keeping with their unassuming personalities. Wayne was an industrious stock farmer on his selected homestead about five miles NNW of Omega on Hwy. 60. Floy was a homemaker, part time shepherd of their band of comestic sheep, gardener and chef extaordinare. She became the WPA Federal Music Program instructor in Mountainview School twice a week, alternating with tree days in the Quemado School. The full time school teacher at Mountainview shared half the building for music instruction as needed. Wayne had helped in the final construction of the log school and the installation of the corrugated roof. Wayne was immortalized in pictures of the Pie Town Singing Convention as President for the even and is seen handing the victory banner to the winning team. Floy was in at least two pictures as the piano accompanist. She is the shorter of the two pianist present that day. Wayne was captured also in the process of standing in line at the food tables set up to hold the many offerings brought by families attending the sing. Lee next came to the Macrander farm and photographed them in their newly completed adobe home, log out buildings and a magnificient open loft shed barn set at the back into the hillside of Mariano Mesa. The farm is on present day U.S. Geological Survey maps as Adobe Well, which referes to the fine adobe house and the well dug by Wayne with a second hand well rig he eventually purchased. Their chicken house had began its' existence as their firs cabin shelter with large heavily starched cotton sheet for interior lighting in day time and oil lamps at night, to guide the occasional visitor who might arrive past sunset.
Posted by Jim D. Macrander on November 11,2009 | 05:44 PM
I smiled, then blinked back a tear or two as I read this article. I found it as I worked on another project. Pie Town has been part of my life -- all of it. Three of my four grandparents -- Sam (called Jim in captions) and Ellie Norris and Lou Blanton -- are in Lee's pictures. My dad has a prominent place in at least one, along with my Aunt Betty in at least one. We still hold an annual family reunion on the Norris homestead.
My parents met and were married in Pie Town. I am a pastor and I performed my first wedding there, for one of my cousins.
I haven't seen Pop McKee since I was a kid -- at least that I can remember. But I can "see" him in my memory. And when I think of Pop's dad Roy, I remember a bit of a sparkle in his eyes. Maudie Bell was one of the kindest ladies I remember from childhood.
The story of Roy's passing sounded so much like the spirit of Pie Town. Hard work, rugged men and women, and a truckload of determination carved out that little community.
Posted by Sam Norris on September 15,2009 | 07:37 PM
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