Name
Stick (Interviewee)
Joseph, Herman, 1931- (Interviewer)
Title
Oral history interview with Stick, 1981
Other Titles
Reminiscences of Stick, 1981; Oral history of Stick, 1981
Abstract
In this interview, Stick discusses his life in New York City, with special attention towards his drug use and trafficking. Stick describes his experience serving in the army during World War II, highlighting the racial conflicts that erupted between the segregated troops. He also describes how he first became involved with drugs through receiving morphine from a doctor after he was injured during the war. He comments on his various jobs, as well as difficulties he encountered securing employment after being incarcerated. He describes the conditions of various jails he spent time in. Facilities included: Rikers Island, Green Haven Correctional Facility, Eastern State Penitentiary, and State Correctional Institution in Graterford, Pennsylvania. He discusses how he began using heroin at twenty-seven years old, and his job transporting heroin on Manhattan's Lower East Side. He also mentions his decision to transition to methadone in the early 1970s in order to quit using heroin, and his resulting struggle with alcohol addiction. He compares his perception of addicts in the 1980s with his perception of addicts in his early years of drug use in the late 1940s
Collection Name
Addicts Who Survived oral history collection
Subjects
Drug addicts--United States; Drug dealers--United States; Imprisonment--United States; Drug abuse--History--20th century.--United States; Heroin abuse--History--20th century.--United States; Drug addicts--Rehabilitation--United States; African American soldiers--History--20th century; Discrimination in the military--History--20th century.--United States; Stick
Format
oral histories
Genre
Interviews
Date
1981
Physical Description
145 pages
Note (Biographical)
Stick was born on December 17, 1922 in New York City. Though he was born in Hell's Kitchen, his family moved shortly after, and he lived nearly his entire life in East Harlem. He and his twin brother were the youngest of thirteen siblings. Stick's for mal education ended when he quit high school in the ninth grade after his father passed away, but he later earned his high school equivalency while incarcerated. He was drafted into World War II in 1943. He had his first encounter with drugs when he was given morphine by a doctor after suffering a punctured lung. While enlisted, he also experimented with chewing opium. After being discharged, he got married, though he and his wife separated after seven months of marriage. When Stick was twenty-seven, he began working as a drug runner in the Lower East Side, delivering heroin. It was around this time that Stick began to use heroin as well. He estimates he was arrested roughly fifteen times between the age of twenty-seven and forty-seven and spent about fourteen years in jail during this period. In the early 1970s, after Stick's final stint in jail, he transitioned to methadone in order to quit using heroin, and experienced an increase in his cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption. Stick was interviewed for the project that led to the book Addicts Who Survived. The name is likely a pseudonym for the project
Note
Interviewed by Herman Joseph on March 27, 1981
Note (Provenance)
David Courtwright, Herman Joseph, and Don Des Jarlais, Gift, 1988
Language
English
Library Location
Columbia Center for Oral History, Columbia University
Browse Location’s Digital Content
Catalog Record
11875099
Also In
Oral History Archives at Columbia
Time-Based Media
Time-Based Media
Persistent URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8-6s7y-7253
Related URLs
Available digital content for this interview.