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Albert
Lees Jr.
Interviewed by Mary Giles
August 14, 1975
Have you lived
here all your life?
Yes.
You have done many
types of work, how did you happen to arrive at this business of the supermarket?
I had a hardware business,
and when the mill outlets came into being, the hardware business took
quite a decline, and I thought it over and thought, 'Why don't I stimulate
some business and bring people in by putting in some groceries?' That
seemed to be an active type business, so we put in some groceries, mixed
in with the hardware, made it more than a general store, and as time went
along, the tail wagged the dog and we became a grocery store, and the
hardware went into the background until now, we only have impulse items
in the way of traditional hardware.
Back in 1950, it was
a general store without the groceries.
You've done a lot
for the town that people don't know about. What are some of the things
you have done for the town that people don't know about?
Well, that's a hard
question to answer. I really try to stay in the background. I've always
thought that a person, who gave something and wanted all kinds of recognition
for it, was giving to try and receive something back. I have never used
my business or anything like that for self-centered interests so to speak.
I like to stay in the background.
Tell me something
of your life as a child in Westport, what kind of games you played, and
what school was like, other kinds of recreation. Let's start with the
kinds of fun you had.
Well, of course, we
did the traditional things in the winter - such as skating.
And where did you
skate?
Well, we skated on
the ponds in the woods right back of here (the home I live in now). Of
course, in those days, the 1930s, it was a major trip to go from here
to Fall River or New Bedford. It was about an hour's drive over the old
roads and it would be quite a treat to go in annually to buy a new pair
of shoes, what they called the 'high cuts' in those days. They came laced
up almost to your knee and they had a jack knife pocket on the side. You
never did have the jack knife, but you had the pocket.
Without realizing
it, a lot of our play was work oriented. It was work with the horses and
bringing in the hay, and we didn't think of it as work. It was pleasurable
to work, so to speak.
We probably went to
the city, I would say, oh, probably about once a month. It was also a
treat to go in and get restaurant fish and chips. We used to go to a place
in Fall River called Tattersalls; they've been out of business for about
thirty years or better, but that was THE place to go, and you could smell
the fish cooking, and for a country boy to go to the city was quite an
accomplishment.
Quite frankly, I didn't
enjoy school. The same teacher, Charlotte Medeiros, taught me and later
my children, at the Point School.
In those days, Dr.
Burt used to come down and give the inoculations. As I think back, it
was quite a thing because he used to give the inoculations in front of
the schoolroom. You'd be sitting there at your desk and he'd call up one
child at a time, and you'd go up and it was almost like going to the guillotine
or something, sitting there watching the children scream and holler. Fortunately,
my last name began with an 'L,' so I got mine over with relatively fast.
Someone named Wood, or something with a 'W' had a problem. He had to sit
there and watch all the kids crying.
I went to the Booth
Corner School, which is just north of the Village Garage, that used to
be a schoolhouse with no indoor plumbing at all, and then I went from
there to the Factory School, and then to the High School, which is now
the Milton Earle School.
Actually, I wasn't
a good student. In those days they would think it was lack of attention.
Today, they would think there wasn't enough challenge, and I'm not sure
but what, I never went on to college, but I must have a certain amount
of intelligence or I couldn't have accomplished what I have.
In music, we were
placed in categories. There were the bluebirds, etc., and then there were
myself and Tom Earle and Bob Wood who ended up in the 'crows.' We were
in the back row.
There was a lady down
at the Point by the name of Minnie Robbins, who was really a nice, nice
person. She had a radio program in New Bedford, and there were five of
us who were all poor singers who went over and sang on her radio program.
That was back in the days when radio was still a novelty. We sang 'America
the Beautiful' - I can still remember it.
Getting back to what
was pleasurable, this was play, this sort of thing. We didn't seem to
need the amusement, parties and the sort of things they need today.
Did you work after
school?
I worked after school,
worked before school and actually, because my father went into business
after we left the farm here, at Westport Point. Backing that up, he was
in business in Westport Point and then things got very, very bad, and
he went into farming, having the business in the summers, and then when
things got a little better, after the depression and getting on towards
World War II, he went back into business full time and we used to open
(the store) at 5:00 in the morning and close at 11:00 at night.
Where was this
business?
This was right on
the wharf, at the fish market. He bought it in 1929 originally; it's been
in the family since 1929.
I went into the supermarket
business, well it basically just happened. The challenge was there, the
opportunities were there, and I really just took advantage, so to speak,
of the opportunities.
How do you think
it became as large as it is?
Well, I would be less
than honest if I didn't say that I studied it in great depth and most
of the changes I've made, and the enlargements I've made, have been after
a lot of research. I did a lot of it myself, of course, knowing the town;
I got into my automobile and drove up and down the roads and projected
the population increase. We've had sort of a population explosion in the
last five or eight years, but I had projected that prior to this. Maybe
it was due to intuition or native intelligence or whatever, but fortunately,
I was able to put the pieces together and say, 'Well now, next year the
town can support a business of such and such a size,' so I would build
prior to the town's building in anticipation of what was going to happen,
and that even happened in relation to this last addition. My business
has mushroomed, and it almost appears as though it happened overnight,
but it didn't, for years I've built towards it. It happened to fall into
place, but it's something that I had preplanned.
When you think
of retirement, what does that mean to you?
Well, I've put a lot
of thought into retirement. I don't think I'm the kind of person who can
work as hard as I've worked all these years and then sit down in a chair
and do nothing, and I love to fish, and if you're talking retirement at
age 65 or something like that, I don't think I would have the physical
stamina. I don't think my legs would take it. So retirement to me at this
point in time, if I have my wish, would be to do something different.
So, my projected plan, my children will be educated, my mortgage will
be paid off on my home, but I should not like to do just nothing, not
just stop work, but I'd like to go into something, some other completely
unrelated type of work. I don't know how to describe it, but I would like
to do some good. I'd like to be able to go out and help other people,
because I've been very, very fortunate in my lifetime, much more so than
many other people. Whether this means helping other people in business,
such as the SCORE program, I don't know. It hasn't been worked out, and
I don't think I would try to work at it, I thought I would just let it
happen.
As you think of
this, do you think of your business carrying on without you, or do you
think of turning it over to someone else?
Right now, I've been
having discussions with my son, who's going to be a senior in college,
and he is being placed in a difficult position. I don't want him to think
that I'm pressuring him to come into the business, but I don't want him
to think that I'm pushing him out either. We've been sort of fencing back
and forth, and speaking of my son in particular, I think he has enough
ambition and enough drive, that he doesn't want to have something handed
to him, so that someone ten or fifteen years from now could say, 'Well,
you couldn't have made it on your own, your father gave it to you.'
In answer to what
I would do with it, I would only sell it to the type of individual whom
I thought would be good to Westport. I've prided myself on that I've tried
to be fair. You can't please all of the people all of the time, but when
someone comes in, and they buy a pound of hamburger; there's 16 ounces
in that pound. We can make errors, everybody's human, but I've never tried
to take the attitude that I was going to try to get all that I could out
of everybody.
Do you have plans
for travel?
I love to travel.
My business has mushroomed to such a point that now I don't have time.
Of course, I've been to Europe; I've been to England and Scotland. I'm
of Scotch heritage and I have visited with many of my relatives up there.
They're a good people. The people make a country. The only other place
that I really enjoyed as much as Scotland, well, I'm very American, I
think the United States is the best country in the world - is Holland.
I think the Dutch people are beautiful people.
We've talked a
little bit about this next point; I want to talk with you about. You do
have two children. Do you think that they feel that Westport was a good
place to grow up in?
They do think that
Westport is a good place to grow up in, and as they grow older, they resist
the idea of moving to any other part of the country. For their birthday,
I gave each one of them a building lot on Horseneck Road in Westport;
and I think that meant more to them than anything else I could have done,
so they are very much Westport oriented. There's no question that their
growing up was very different from mine. Now my son is 21 and he doesn't
ever remember not having a television, so he grew up from a tiny baby,
and my daughter also, knowing the world news and they are more sophisticated
than I was, that's for sure. They've been water skiing, camping and had
Little League. They were not as work-oriented as my generation was.
It doesn't bother
me. I don't feel as though I was denied anything by not having all these
other pleasures, it was just the conditions of the time. My children never
grew up on a farm and what we considered fun on a farm, they would consider
hard work.
I grew up on a farm
about a mile from here, and it used to be a real treat to take a hike
down through the woods and come to this home here, and visit with Mabel
and watch her goats. She even gave us a goat one time, 'Daisy Mae' we
called her, lived in the house with us, just as they lived with her. Yes!
T o walk back would take up perhaps half a day and it was a very pleasurable
time, and I think that some of the kids growing up today are not aware
that simple pleasures are just as great as going to the movies today,
because I'd rather go down to Horseneck Beach and sit on a sand dune and
look at the ocean, you know.
I don't think the
young would really want the experiences we had. It's a whole new world
to them. They are so sophisticated from watching television, that they
don't even watch those rockets that take off and fly around in outer space.
I'm still amazed by them, but to my children, it's such a normal, every
day thing.
But then, I think
they're having fun in their own way.
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