
75 Years Ago
Late Late Winter/Early Spring 1928
by Maurice Telleen
published in The Draft Horse Journal, Spring 2003
(From the Breeders Gazette and general news
sources of the period.)
Early 1928 was filled with remarkable events, as befits
a new year in what was called the “roaring ‘20s.” Several
of them bear resemblance to the high flying ‘90s of
our own time–such as new technology.
On the 4th day of this brand new year the National Broadcasting
Company lived up to its name by hooking up all 48 states
(that is all there were in 1928) to produce a radio hour
featuring top entertainers from shore to shore. It enthralled
an audience of millions. The show started with humorist Will
Rogers from his home in Beverly Hills, California, who told
some jokes before introducing Al Jolson down in New Orleans,
Louisiana, who sang a few songs, before he handed the mike
off to Paul Whiteman and his famous orchestra in New York.
Then it was back to Chicago where a couple of fine singers
sang a duet before scooting it on to Detroit where the sponsors
of this latest marvel, the Dodge Brothers (you know, the
ones with a garage) where their company president described
their new Victory Six automobile and thanked Mother Nature
for the clear skies that made for crisp transmission of the
message. Dodge was entitled to some time…they paid
for the whole thing.
It had only been about three months since talking films
had made their public debu t– but you had to go to
a theatre to see and hear them. With national radio you could
sit in your easy chair at home…actually millions of
homes. The age of endless entertainment and nonstop product
promotion was upon us.
Now that was 75 years ago and was every bit as big a deal
as today’s internet. It was getting harder and harder
to escape the cutting edge. It also spawned whole new industries
and transformed old ones which tended to make a giddy stock
market even more giddy.
Speaking of swinging new businesses, a man named William
Fox bought controlling interest in 250 movie theatres that
seated 350,000 people. Most of them were in the West. It
was a hundred million dollar deal. Picture shows, folks.
That’s where the action is going to be in the future.
And radio. And they were correct. For decades small town
theatres were good properties. Small radio stations too.
The older, slower mode of communication wasn’t about
to disappear but it would sure be impacted by its brash young
cousins, talking films and radio.
Over in England, Thomas Hardy, one of the great practitioners
of print, died at the age of 87. He died in his home just
three miles from the thatched cottage where he was born.
That man knew his own neck of the woods and his own people
about as well as any one that ever lived. He produced 27
novels and I’ve read several of them. There is a sheep
dog in his “Far From the Madding Crowd” that
was so undistinguished (and witless) that he was simply known
as “George’s Son.” Apparently his sire
was George… but the dog didn’t even merit having
his own name. I’ll probably tell you more about George’s
Son some day because I’ve never gotten him out of my
head. But some other time, I can’t be bothered by that
dog right now. I have an appointment to keep… namely “finish
this column.”
The Ku Klux Klan was pretty brazen 75 years ago. It even
announced in February 1928 that they had plans to establish
their national headquarters near a Catholic Church in Washington,
D.C. Probably right close to the Lincoln Memorial, too. I
don’t know if anything ever came of it.
But it wasn’t all movie shows and radio…not
by a long shot. Isolationist and self absorbed as the country
wished to be, it was impossible to ignore earthshaking events
elsewhere.
Over in Russia the Bolsheviks (later called Communists)
were about ten years into their successful revolution which
had turned the Czars out. Victors they might have been but
they were a quarrelsome bunch within themselves. In early
1928, Joseph Stalin figured he was holding enough of the
good cards so that he could banish, exile, imprison or murder
his political enemies. So he purged and then kept right on
with periodic purges as only a psychopath can.
His chief political enemy, Leon Trotsky, was exiled to remote
Kazakstan in the East. Trotsky probably had too many supporters.
He was too dangerous to just up and kill. Trotsky later tried
Turkey for political asylum and that didn’t work. France
gave him political asylum in 1933…the very same year
Adolf Hitler felt secure enough to outlaw all political parties
on his side of the Rhine. Three years later Trotsky shows
up in Norway but apparently didn’t have the makings
of a good Viking either so he went to Mexico in 1937. He
was murdered in his home there on April 21, 1940. He had
been bludgeoned to death with an ax. The presumption was
that Joseph Stalin in far-off Moscow had something to do
with it.
It wouldn’t be long at all before events would conspire
to make us Stalin’s allies in the face of another psychopath
named Adolf Hitler. History (and politics) makes some very
strange bedfellows.
Back to 1928. Some young lady was running around this country
passing herself off as Anastasia, the youngest daughter of
the late Czar in Russia. Her story was that one of the soldiers
in the assassination detail (their job…kill them all)
had somehow run away with her and they were later married
in Romania. There was no mention of him. I suppose he had
been conveniently ditched…if he existed, which is doubtful.
It was said that she had been entertained in a couple of
palaces and some palatial homes. Was she a fraud? I reckon
she was. I’d say she was making out in fair fashion.
Today, she would be on TV talk shows, radio talk shows and
on the cover of all those really awful tabloids they sell
at the checkout counters of grocery stores.
Calvin Coolidge was in the last year of his presidency and
probably hoping to coast out with as little fuss as possible–but
some things you just can’t ignore. Such as an ambush
in Nicaragua where five of our marines were killed. The ambushers
were guerrillas led by General Sandino, known as the “Pancho
Villa of Nicaragua” who, in his eyes and mind, was
the liberator of his country. Coolidge saw it differently
and ordered another 1,000 marines sent to that country. That
was in January. In March he had to send 1,000 more. This
was not the sort of coast-out he had in mind.
There was one of those periodic Pan American Conferences
in session during this time. It was held in Havana and Charles
Evans Hughes (former Supreme Court Justice and defeated Republican
candidate for president in 1916) was chairing the thing.
He rebuked some of those Latin American delegates when they
wanted some sort of proviso on the “right to revolt.” Some
of them pointed out that we had staged a fairly successful
revolution ourselves against the British. Then, to make himself
even more popular with some of those people, he later blocked
a resolution barring intervention in the internal affairs
of Latin American states. Ain’t that something? It
was okay for us to revolt, but not you. And, by the way,
we do reserve the right to intervene if you folks can’t
quite get the hang of it. Such as Nicaragua right now. That
is too cut and dried, maybe the conference accomplished a
good bit in other areas…but it scarcely sounds like
it was worth having.
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The advertising
in the GAZETTE was a far cry from previous decades.
Then, the majority
of it was
for livestock. But the ‘20s saw farmers buying
water systems, trucks and automobiles, radios and telephones
about as fast as they could come up with the money. |
It wasn’t
a one day bust…and it wasn’t a boom. There were
big losers and big winners. Mostly it was hyperactive. Not
a good sign. Nervous people are panic prone. Somehow I suspect
Calvin Coolidge, who wasn’t noticeably nervous, was
counting the days till his “discharge.” Vermont
was never like this.
For those who read this column regularly you might recall
that the ownership of that great old paper, The Breeders
Gazette, had passed from Alvin Sanders to his hand picked
successors, Sam Guard and Charles Burlingham in mid-1927.
It must have been a pretty smooth transition and by the
first three issues of 1928 the new regime had hit its stride
with more color, more liveliness, and it appeared to be more
open and readable. The new editors were as filled with evangelism
for the cause as their predecessors had been, but of a slightly
different sort. Like their predecessor, they were first rate
at speaking their minds and “giving ‘em hell” when
they were of a mind to. Had Sam Guard been a tent preacher,
he could have held his own with Billy Sunday. Or Billy Graham.
But Sam did it with a little more of a smile on his face
than either Sanders or those preachers.
They had even moved the office from downtown Chicago out
to the Union Stock Yards, taking some rooms on the second
floor of the Purebred Live Stock Record Building. So they
worked right at the gateway to the largest stock yards in
the world, and the home of the International. It was the
Animal Husbandry capital of America–at least for the
meat animal breeds.
Mr. Sanders stayed down in his old quarters to finish his
book on the Aberdeen Angus in America, thus completing his
trilogy of beef breeds in America. Now there appear to be
about fifteen. So why had we overlooked all the continental
breeds in the early days? The English Channel isn’t
that wide. It certainly didn’t slow down the horse
importers who proceeded on to France and Belgium and made
the Percheron and Belgian the first and second choice of
American farmers.
I suspect the main reason was that when that great movement
into the upper Midwest and the high plains took place in
the mid-1800s there were tremendous amounts of British money
invested in American ranches and cattle–and it wasn’t
limited to the ranches. John Clay, from the great commission
house at the Chicago Stock Yards, was a native Scot. Strange
to see ourselves in this light but we were an “undeveloped
country” and Great Britain was probably the venture
money capital of the world. So we had Angus, Herefords, and
Shorthorns for about the first hundred years–and spoke
English.
Market editor Jim Poole’s monthly analysis of the
livestock markets were pure jewels. Like the Gazette, he
had his office right out at the yards and probably even got
his boots a little dirty now and then. He was good at taking
a very complicated situation and making some sense out of
it. His language was down to earth understandable.
Seventy-five years ago he said hogs were in trouble and
destined to stay that way for a while. Virtually all the
European nations and Canada had increased their swine populations
considerably…especially Germany, whose hog slaughter
in 1927 was a hefty 34% over 1925. They had been excellent
customers…now self sufficient. In February, Poole said “just
when the swine trade will wriggle out of the rut in which
it has been travelling for several months is anyone’s
guess.” Top hogs were selling for around $8 cwt or
some $3 less than a year before. Cattle supplies on the other
hand were in short supply and the price of good steers was
$15.40 against $10.21 from the year before.
As for the woolies he said, “live mutton trade is
an invalid branch of the industry. Lamb feeders congratulate
themselves when they can cash in without a loss.” Too
many big overfinished lambs had created a huge problem to
a market that had been fairly good. “Wool, on the other
hand, was working higher, and is in an unquestionably strong
position.” Plain talk…that was Poole.
Today you are lucky if you can find a wool buyer and will
take whatever pittance is offered…8 to 10 cents-a-pound
has been the going rate on this farm the last year or so.
Great for warmth and durability but it seems most people
live inside anymore…from heated houses to heated cars.
Then there is Gore-Tex.
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Nash automobiles,
Atwater-Kent radios, and Graham trucks. Bet most of
you hadn’t heard of any of them. But 75 years
ago they were mainline brands. Chances are none of
the above died…they were simply gobbled up by
bigger fish. Now carriage and wagon companies, that
may be a different matter. Several of them tried to
make the transition from carriage to car. The only
one that succeeded (that I know of) was Studebaker.
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All the by-products were doing okay in early 1928; hides,
wool, and bones. Of course, as with the wool clothing, a
lot of today’s
shoes aren’t made out of leather and the harness trade
isn’t exactly using hides up in shipload lots either.
As for bone meal…with one Mad Cow type scare after
another, that may have become more of a problem than a sales
opportunity
too.
Their January number carried a beautiful 16 page midsection
on sort of a peach colored paper that was devoted entirely
to the recent International Livestock Show. It contained
a lot of livestock ads. It appeared that their new office
location was coming in handy, in more ways than one. The
January issue wouldn’t hold it all. February was also
filled with articles concerning the recent International.
This pair (Guard and Burlingham) were selling ads that had
never appeared in the Gazette before. Full page ads for automobiles,
life insurance, radios, washing machines for mom, and on
and on. Those early 1928 GAZETTES were pitching to both mom
and dad out on that farm.
In the farm machinery business it was a time of mergers
as mechanization inched ahead. The Rock IslandPlowCompany
would become a part of J.I. Case Company in 1937. The surviving
giants such as John Deere, International Harvester, Case
and Minneapolis-Moline were all the result of acquisitions
and mergers. C.H. Wendel’s book, ENCYCLOPEDIA OF AMERICAN
FARM IMPLEMENTS & ANTIQUES (available through Mischka
Books) is well worth the price. The author is the son of
the well known and highly regarded Belgian breeder, the late
Harry Wendel from Atkins, Iowa.
Telephones were the internet of the day. Ma Bell was also
putting her family together. Local phone companies were stringing
wire into farm homes everywhere.TheBREEDER’S GAZETTE
even used the fact that you could get up-to-the-minute market
news by radio as one of the reasons (or excuses) for dropping
back to monthly. |