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Renneburg, John, 1978 November 25

 File
Identifier: OH 8297.035

Abstract

The Renneburg interview is a source of information about the rise of business and industry (waterfront shipbuilding, tobacco and fishing), including changes like overseas expansion and economic hardship in Baltimore during the 1900s. He discusses the family business, which found work during World War I in the food processing industry, marine work, repairing boilers, and other areas related to the war industry. During the Great Depression, they had work overseas. During World War II, they went to Iceland to build a fish-meal plant (which had to be government sanctioned; they had to get help from the British, who needed fish oil for munitions). Over the years they’ve worked for the Army, Navy, Coast Guard, and Martin Marietta. He feels that Baltimore’s “industrial climate” is good. He also discusses the problems of the proposed East-West Highway (sympathy and empathy for neighbors; the route kept changing). There is a good anecdote about Renneburg befriending Richard Nixon in the Navy.

Dates

  • 1978 November 25

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research use.

Biographical Note

John Renneburg was born in Baltimore to Presbyterian parents. He went to college during the Great Depression in 1929. He was in the Navy for 2 years before working for the family business, The Renneburg Company, which was a metal-working shop.

Extent

70 Minutes

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Existence and Location of Originals

Original format: 2 compact cassettes

Physical Description

Biography form, interview notes, tape index, 13 page transcript.

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Baltimore Neighborhood Heritage Project Oral History Collection contains paper records and audiocassette recordings from 1978 through 1980. The paper records are composed of the files kept on each narrator (the person being interviewed) and the administrative needs of the project. Narrator records contain biography forms, interview notes, and tape indexes for approximately 212 narrators. The interview notes briefly describe the circumstance surrounding the interview(s) session. The tape index includes the name of the narrator, the name of interviewer, the number of tapes, the tape(s) length, and the primary subjects covered. Seventy-nine of the records include transcripts. Transcript length ranges from 8 to 65 pages. Some are single-spaced; others are doubled-spaced. The interviews range from twenty-five minutes to three hours in length. One file, #183, and its accompanying cassette(s) were removed from the collection.

Thirty-two interviewers participated in the project. Typically, the interviews were one-on-one sessions between interviewer and narrator; however, single interviewer and double-narrator situations occurred, as did three group “nostalgia” sessions. Most interviews were prefaced by unrecorded, pre-interview sessions that occurred days before the recorded interview.

Each narrator abstract includes the following information when available: the BNHP interview number; the name of the interviewer; the date of the interview; the place of the interview; the length of the interview; the number of tapes used; the length of the transcript; and the file contents, such as subject index, interview notes, and biography form. The abstracts follow the numerical order of the interview number. However, interview numbers are not consecutive, but site specific. That is to say, any omitted number within a site can be found in another site.

When controversial or outdated terms, especially those referring to race and ethnicity, are mentioned in the abstract, the politically-correct term is used and the term or terms used by the narrator has been placed in parenthetical (“ ”) quotation marks. Specific terms from the interviews and textual uncertainties are often placed in parentheses alone ( ). Maiden names of female narrators are placed in brackets [ ].

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750