For the first time in the history of our country we have a woman candidate of a major party running for President of the United States. This is a personal look back in history.
“You want me to do what?”
By
Gerry Niskern
Back in the l950’s, the women in the Installment Loan Department at the Valley National Bank had to take part in a little tradition on payday. When the vice-president in charge of that busy office came around with the pay checks, he demanded a kiss on the cheek before he handed you your hard-earned money.
The first thought that ran thru my mind when I saw the payday ritual going on was ‘no way!’ When the old boy came up to me at my station, I really can’t give you a description of the expression on my face, but I can tell you he took one look and he meekly handed over my check. That particular vice-president was the brother-in-law of the owner of the bank so he had a little clout. I guess I was too naive to consider the possible consequences.
I worked in the Security Building on the corner of Central Ave and Van Buren. Our loan department had a filing system called Soundex and I was hired specifically to learn the system. You took the first letter of the name and quickly translated it into numbers and located the small card in waist level bins.
The bank was just starting to build branches around the state. The managers called in from the branches to check on the credit of a person who had applied for a loan and we would translate the name into “Soundex” language and give it to them instantly. That was our “computer” system. I have to laugh when I remember that we worked in heels all day scurrying among those files. And we ran all over downtown shopping on our hour long lunch hour in those heels too!
Another young woman, a little older than me, was hired to learn the system the same day that I was. She was married, with a child, and her husband was in Korea. While on our coffee break one day I learned to my dismay that she was being paid more than I was. The first chance I got I marched over to the personnel office and asked why the difference in our wages. They calmly replied that she her husband was overseas, she had a child and she needed more money.
The bank was generous in many ways. They had an employee’s cafeteria that was inexpensive and had delicious food. They also gave each employee a week’s paid vacation after one year. And they added another week’s vacation for each year you worked. Everyone received a Christmas bonus of a week’s salary and again, another week’s salary was added to the bonus for each year. I started a week before Christmas, but I received my bonus like all the other girls. They also had a very elegant Christmas Tea in December and the wife of the bank’s owner “served” from her beautiful silver tea service. The room was beautiful and the food was delicious. The same old vice-president went around handing out the Christmas bonus checks and demanding the usual gesture in return.
We delivered the requested credit records for the Phoenix department to one particular lady’s office. Her office door was at the end of a line of vice-presidents offices, and I was curious as to why her door didn’t say vice-president since she seemed to be doing all the work. When I inquired about that I was told by my lady boss, “Oh, she can’t be a vice-president. She’s a woman.”
During Rodeo Days the Phoenix Jaycees held a Kangaroo Court downtown to try anyone who was out on the street and not wearing something Western. They would drag the lawbreaker over to the court, have a trial, and fine them, much to the amusement of the crowd. When one of the “cowboy deputies” spotted one of the girls from the bank not dress western, they would come after them; right up the elevator and into the women’s restroom and pulled them out!
I worked there until I was expecting our first baby and even allowed to stay on in another department for a while longer than normal because I was working downstairs where I wasn’t seen by the public. Otherwise, I would have had to quit because you couldn’t work after you started to show. And, of course, the employees insurance, which the bank provided, by the way, covered the wives of the men employees for childbirth, but not the women employees.
I was very lucky to have that job. The pay was more than average and the atmosphere was relaxed, friendly and flexible in many ways. When I look back I realize that although some things have changed, some haven’t.