(From the Belgian Review, Percheron Notes
and general news sources of that period)
There had been a short drought where Percheron
publications were concerned. That breed had gone from annual
Reviews starting in 1919 to a newspaper format in the late
1930s, followed by the slick Percheron News, a good quarterly
that lasted from about 1938 to 1950. The paper was losing money
and so was the association, so they dropped the paper. But
by late 1951, being without any kind of publication was hurting,
too. So they voted to produce a very modest publication twice
a year (Spring and Fall) called Percheron Notes. Printed on
newsprint rather than enamel or slick paper, black and white,
pay as you go, nothing fancy. It was designed to provide a
medium in which to advertise horses for sale, keep members
posted on the business of the association, and stay in touch
with one another.
That first issue in Spring 1952 was only eight pages and fully
75% breeder advertising. It was a format that would adequately
serve their needs for a good many years. Now the Percheron
News is again quarterly and bigger than it was in its heyday.
So, maybe this is its heyday. Do you suppose we are living
in “the good old days?” Wouldn’t it be awful
to live right through the good old days and not realize it?
It would be sort of like dying of low cholesterol. But I ask
you (or your physician) now, whoever said that you only got
one heyday per lifetime? Same goes for good old days. I know
of no one-per-customer limit.
|
| Karlo, the
herd sire at Guy S. Bowman’s, Albion, Nebraska.
He was the “least famous” of several
stallions pictured in that first Percheron Notes,
but I kind of liked him the best of the lot. |
That initial issue of the Notes carried a report of the National
P.M.U. Producers Association’s meeting held on March
13, 1952. It was held at the Fair Grounds Hotel, Indiana State
Fairgrounds. That tells me it was the same time as the Indiana
Spring Stallion Show and Breeders Sale. If the draft horse
business had a Mecca and a holy week 50 years ago, Indianapolis
was the place and mid-March was the time. It was there that
heavy horse people would gather, renew their friendships (as
well as their vows), talk horses, maybe bid on each other’s
horses and then talk some more horses.
It had elements of a pep rally. Charley House, that eternal
optimist and head coach, was quoted in that first Percheron
Notes as follows: “The draft horse business has never
looked better. I think it will go up in leaps and leaps.” Knute
Rockne couldn’t have said it better.
This event drew an estimated crowd of 1,000 or more people,
year after year–right through that whole era when the
draft horse business looked like nothing quite so much as
the tomcat who had challenged the milk truck and lost.
As for that sale 50 years ago this spring, the fifty-six
purebreds (both breeds) averaged $237.50 and the thirty-one
grades averaged $181. Not bad when you factor in the price
of other things at that time. Not great either–but
a good deal better than the condition of that roadkill that
challenged the milk truck. That event was truly a great annual
affirmation by a determined bunch of people. It is almost
impossible to overestimate the importance of the role played
by this Indiana Breeder’s Sale in Indianapolis through
the late ‘40s, ‘50s and early ‘60s.
So that was obviously the place and time for the P.M.U.
producers to meet. They would all be there anyway. The board
consisted of the two breed secretaries, Blanche Schmalzried
and Anne Brown, and five P.M.U. producers–all of them
very prominent and successful purebred breeders. Bob Jones,
Farmer City, Illinois; Sherm Read, Richland, Michigan; Ralph
Humes, Delaware, Ohio; Roy Curtis, Princeton, Iowa; and John
Taft, Mechanicsville, Illinois.
In due time, but not for a long time, I would meet every
one of these men and I’m convinced that they were in
the urine business primarily because (1) it was a means of
getting the feed bill underwritten on their brood mares;
(2) it was more profitable to sell draft horses by the gallon
than by the head; and (3) it gave them a respectable financial
reason for hanging on a bit longer and even make a few bucks
while they were doing so. But for those particular guys,
I think it was as much a last resort as it was opportunity–very
unlike the urine business of today.
So, O.K., wise guy–how do you know all this stuff?
Were you in Indianapolis interviewing or eavesdropping on
those guys? No, I wasn’t. I’m guessing. I wasn’t
even close to Indianapolis, nor was I spending any time thinking
about the future of the draft horse–in the event they
had one. I was more likely speculating on my own future–in
the event I had one. In brief, I had other fish to fry. 1951
was no keeper–and ‘52 didn’t look a whole
lot different. But actually, it was. But I didn’t know
that either–50 years ago this January 2nd. You just
never know how things are going to turn out.
With that we will put the still shrinking but heroic draft
horse business aside and take a more general look at 1952.
First off, Illinois whipped Stanford 40 to 7 in the Rose
Bowl. It was actually played on New Year’s Day, in
the afternoon, right after the parade. Like every other Rose
Bowl since Genesis. Like the Lord intended for post season
football. And Illinois and Stanford were both champions,
or at least designated representatives of their two conferences–the
Big Ten and the Pac Ten. The contract between the two conferences
was in its sixth year and would last for the rest of the
century. There was a certain orderliness to it. It excluded
the east–”too effete;” the south–”too
cantankerous;”and the High Plains and Rocky Mountain
states–”too aw shucks cowboyish.”
Now it is late in the afternoon of January 4, 2002. Last
night (after dark!) Miami University (from Florida) whipped
Nebraska 37 to 14 in a football game and they called it the “Rose
Bowl.” It was all very upsetting, sort of like Easter
in late May without the bunny. And it showed. That first
half was a sorry spectacle. Proof that it is dangerous to
mess around with Mother Nature.
Nebraska’s only previous Rose Bowl appearance was
in either 1940 or ‘41. I think they played Duke but
am not sure. I don’t know who won. I could look all
those things up but I’m not going to because I don’t
care. What I think I remember, and really want to tell you,
is that every single starter on that Nebraska team was a
graduate of and had played his prep football in a Nebraska
high school. This was before platoon football, so when you
say the eleven starters it was on either offense or defense.
That is what I find truly remarkable–that Nebraska’s
team was from Nebraska. And I would guess (not going to look
this up either) the scholarships were modest and the graduation
percentage high.
Old fashioned colonialism was sputtering to an end everywhere.
Libya, a former Italian colony in northern Africa became
the first country organized under the auspices of the United
Nations. In terms of vegetation, Libya is one of the most
barren patches of ground in the world. It had, in 1952 anyway,
about the lowest per capita income in the world. Except for
oil, their prospects weren’t any too rosy. I suppose
you could say this new nation was the UN’s Christmas
gift to the world. Thus far, I’d say it has about lived
down to expectations.
The old warhorse, Churchill, back in office after a six
year hiatus, wasted little time in getting over to Washington
to confer with President Truman. Churchill, whose mother
was an American, managed to hit it off pretty well with all
three of our presidents during his time in the sun; FDR,
Truman and Eisenhower.
Just a few weeks after Winston’s visit with Harry,
there was a week or more of bloody riots in the streets of
Cairo, Egypt, and the mob seized control of the British Embassy.
King Farouk declared martial law with a shoot-on-sight feature
that calmed things down. This was nothing sudden–it
was an old rift.
And clear on the other side of the world, in a place called
Vietnam, colonialism was also in retreat. Most of us had
never heard of Vietnam (or French Indo-China) and certainly
did not expect it to become an important part of our lives.
The communist guerrillas were having wonderful success against
the French forces in January of 1952. The timing was almost
symbolic. The communists greatest successes were coming at
the very time France was burying one of its WWII heroes,
General Jean de Lattre deTassigny. He was the most successful
post war commander of the French forces in that part of the
world, but he had to leave Vietnam because of his cancer–which
killed him. From that point on it was downhill for the French
in that country. Would his continued good health have made
any difference? For the short haul, maybe. For the long haul,
I doubt it. France’s empire was fading–and it
is very hard to postpone (or reverse) a sunset.
Given this state of affairs, one might wonder just why anyone
would wish to be president of the United States? There are
always volunteers for high office and in January of 1952,
General Eisenhower let it be known that he was willing to
be courted. As for a political party–he declared himself
to be a Republican. Supreme Commander of N.A.T.O. at that
time, he also said he would not seek the nomination. Nonetheless,
about three months later, he requested that he be placed
on inactive military status as of June 1. Truman could scarcely
deny the request. So, the battle was on in earnest between
the old “Dewey” forces versus the “Taft” forces
led by Senator Bob Taft from Ohio.
Experts (what would we do without them?) said that the Leaning
Tower of Pisa in Italy should bite the dust in 2151–so
they only had about a hundred years in which to get it fixed.
Not fixed, as in straight up and down. Who would bother to
look at that? The world is full of water towers and fence
posts. No, fixed to keep right on leaning at about the same
angle forever. That is where the tourist money is. I am pleased
to report that the Leaning Tower of Pisa has been fixed.
It should be an architectural marvel and steady money maker
forever.
Now with all this “colonialism is in retreat” talk
you might think that monarchy was also washed up. But that
was not true. On February 15, 1952, George VI, a man who
never wanted to be king, died; and England mourned–truly
mourned. George VI was thrust into kingship when his brother,
Edward VIII resigned his commission you might say, to marry
an American woman named Wallis Simpson. So starting in 1936,
George did the best he could, which was plenty good enough.
During the darkest days of the London Blitz, he and his queen
stayed in residence and did what kings and queens are supposed
to do–stay put, show up for work and inspire their
countrymen and women. The funeral evoked both passion and
pageantry to such an extent that the casual onlooker would
probably not have guessed that the empire was in serious
decline.
His successor would be his eldest daughter, Elizabeth, who
was 25 years old, and married to Philip, a Prince of Greece
and Denmark. So, the King is dead–long live the Queen.
Elizabeth and her consort, Philip, were in Kenya when word
reached her that her father had died. They were staying at
a place called the Treetops Hotel, which was built in the
branches of a giant fig tree. Isn’t that something?
To be notified that you are now queen–while in the
branches of a giant fig tree.
I missed one very significant death in this column last
time. Will Kellogg, who developed the first flake-type breakfast
food (and other vegetarian foods) at his brother’s
sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan, died at the age of
91. He credited his long life to his diet, based on (I’ll
bet you can guess) Kellogg’s Corn Flakes.
I think his longevity had as much or more to do with his
unflappable good nature and his generous spirit than his
diet. When a fire engulfed one of his factories he calmly
said, “The fire is of no consequence. You can’t
burn down what we have registered in the mind of the American
woman.” The man gave millions to charity. I would guess
he slept soundly, loved much, harbored few grudges and ate
at least two bowls of Corn Flakes most every day.