
25 Years Ago
Late Autumn/Early Winter 1978
by Maurice Telleen
published in The Draft Horse Journal, Winter 2002 - 2003
(From the Draft Horse Journal, the Belgian
Review and general news sources of that period.)
Just to take a different path for a change I’m going
to do the horses first. The world news was a lot less inspiring – and
much bloodier. It can pull up the rear in this case.
The Belgian Review for that year was very upbeat and had every
right to be. They had recorded 2,133 horses in fiscal 1977,
issued 2,484 transfers and en-rolled 242 new members. Increases
respectively of 376, 230 and 73 over 1976.
That is an amazing 25 years since that rock bottom year of
1952 when 171 horses were registered and new memberships totaled
18. It puts you in mind of the biblical story of Lazarus – raised
from the dead. So far as Lazarus is concerned, two of the five
draft horse associations in our country did, for all practical
purposes, die during that period. The Shire and Suffolk associations
literally ceased to function for awhile in the late ‘50s
and early ‘60s.
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| Here is the photo of Herbert Schneckloth that appeared
in the Review of 25 years ago. This marked his retirement
from 37 years service on the Belgian board, the last 20
as president. That framed photo on the wall is an aerial
of his farm, home of Sunny Lane Belgians since 1928, and
the home of an Iowa Master Farmer. |
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| This one shows Ralph House,
who succeeded Herb as breed president, presenting Contilda
at Waterloo that fall. She
was grand champion and Best of Breed at Waterloo and
had been senior and grand at Ohio earlier in the year.
She
was one of the great show mares of that era. But it was
the legacy of Ralph House and his father, C. O. or Charley
House, that was important – not Contilda. Charley
carried that Belgian standard as proudly in Indiana as
Herb did in Iowa. And so did Don and Ralph, in their
turn. |
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|
| And here is Darrel Eberspacher,
current president of the Belgian Corporation, as he appeared
in the ad for Elmer & Darrel
Eberspacher, Seward, Nebraska. The filly in the photo had
been orphaned at two weeks. As a yearling (in this photo)
she had won her class at the National in Davenport and
been junior and grand champion mare at Missouri and Nebraska.
Darrel’s father, Elmer, was of the same vintage as
Herb and Charley House. All three of them started breeding
registered Belgians in the 1920s–blood tells–in
people as well as horses. |
The Belgians, outnumbering the combined four other breeds,
set the pace in this amazing recovery. Herbert Schneckloth,
long
time Belgian breeder from Davenport, Iowa, chose this occasion
to retire after serving as president of the corporation for
seventeen years–which had been preceded by twenty additional
years on the board. This ended 37 years of unselfish and continuous
service to the breed. He had bought his first registered Belgians
in 1928.
His public service extended much farther than the draft horse
business. He was a community leader and was honored by Wallace’s
Farmer magazine with their highest award: Iowa Master Farmer.
He was a great citizen.
His son, Donald, was elected to the board and Ralph House,
another son of an equally unselfish and dedicated man, Charley
House from Indiana, was elevated to Herb’s old spot as
president. In due course, Don would also serve as president. There
are many similar situations in the breed such as the McGrews
in Illinois, the Eberspachers in Nebraska, the Ellers and
Whismans in Indiana, Sparrows and Curtises in Iowa, Doc Allen
and his father in Ohio, the Orndorffs in Pennsylvania and
on and on. The list wasn’t intended to be inclusive – just
a few who came to mind.
And there, in a nutshell, is what brought the great draft
breeds through their “thirty years – or whatever – in
the desert.” It wasn’t a case of following a
heavenly ball of fire or some artful public relations campaign.
It was a small band of determined men and women – and
in a lot of cases their sons and daughters – that brought
the nucleus of breeding horses through the desert. Abandoned
for dead they simply said, “No – the draft horse
is not dead. Not on my place or on my watch.”
I’m going to run a handful of pictures from that particular
Belgian Review to put faces with the facts.
Our winter issue was, then as now, called the Stallion Issue.
The cover was a photo from Hardware Ranch in the Cache Valley
of northern Utah. It is a winter elk feeding scene at the
ranch, owned and operated by the Utah division of Wildlife
Resources primarily as a big game refuge. The sleigh ride
end of it has since been privatized. We included a feature
article on it in our Winter 2001 - 2002 issue.
So far as stallions are concerned we had two long features.
One was written by an old friend of my dad’s who bred
Shire horses in our community in the ‘20s and ‘30s.
His name was Albert McCracken and while Albert had left farming
behind years ago, he never left the horses behind. He remained
vitally interested in them until his death and enjoyed being
a spectator to their remarkable comeback.
His subject was a Clydesdale stallion from here in Iowa
named Prince Cedric 3rd. Purchased by the Stringham family
from down around Des Moines as a 3 year old, he lived out
his long life as “their horse.”
Prince Cedric 3rd was a fantastic horse. But he would not
likely be a major factor on today’s Clydesdale scene.
I doubt that his name appears in many of today’s extended
pedigrees. A lot of useful bloodlines in all the draft breeds
simply vanished during the ‘40s and ‘50s. When
breeding and recording cease, and they really did in the
majority of cases, bloodlines die. It is that simple. Gene
pools are about more than just numbers.
Prince Cedric 3rd was a perfect fit for his times–the
1930s. In the cities the battle with the trucks was basically
over. They were no longer crying for thousands of big, sturdy
geldings on the docks, railroad stations and on the streets.
Often overlooked is that the origin of the modern draft horse
breeds owes as much, maybe even more, to the city demands
to move huge loads as it does to the farms and fields where
such animals were reared. It was the top of the market for
commercial horses–and the cities grew and grew.
On America’s farms just about everybody was broke
or, at least, hard up. Gasoline costs money. Grain was cheap.
Labor was abundant. That was the dirty ‘30s. So the
drafters made a substantial comeback on our farms. While
the mechanization of agriculture was well underway, the machinery
was still of modest proportion. Corn was still planted two
rows at a time in relatively small fields. And every farmer
and his sons knew how to put a harness on a horse. But very
few saw much sense in pushing it up on an 18 or 19 hand horse
weighing about a ton when a smaller model would do just fine
for the farm work. The future for the draft horse appeared
to be strictly agricultural so there was a deliberate attempt
to downsize the draft breeds here in the U.S. The professors,
who were doing much of the judging, started judging them
with that in mind. Not all of them, but most of them. It
was a lively debate.
This is the period that Prince Cedric 3rd was born into.
He was not a big horse, but had superlative underpinning.
He had very little feather. For a Clyde, he was on the thick
side – also often called “easy keepers.” His
neck was long enough to reach the grass and wear a collar.
That was considered long enough. His disposition was out
of this world. Ralph Stringham needed nothing more than a
halter on Cedric when breeding mares. And he was durable,
the even tempered kind that rarely had a sick day. He was
exactly right for his times. Take a look at his photo from
the 1933 International when Prof. C. F. Curtis from Iowa
State made him grand champion.
There was a female line in that Stringham stable that was
equally outstanding, coming down directly from Ben Stringham’s
foundation mare, who was a “grading up” mare.
She had been graded up to make it into the stud book, but
three of her descendants were good enough to wear the purple
at Chicago.
So what happened to those Stringham horses that were so
right for their times when the big melt down of drafters
came in the ‘40s and ‘50s? Well, a few of them
were sold to the Boyt Harness Company at Des Moines for their
Red Rock Ranch. Post WWll, that ranch became the bottom of
a reservoir behind Red Rock Dam and Boyt forgot about making
harness and turned to leather sporting goods. Also moved
to Iowa Falls. You gotta do what you gotta do. Others went
west to Utah and Wyoming–and mostly disappeared. Oh
yes, and a few of them succumbed to Encephalitis or Sleeping
Sickness during a major outbreak of that equine disease in
1937-38. And thus, the tribe of Prince Cedric 3rd sort of
vanished.
I found the other stallion feature from that 25 year old
magazine equally interesting in an altogether different way–a
different horse for a different era. But like Cedric 3rd
he, too, was in the right place at the right time. And like
Cedric, he was “one man’s horse” throughout
his whole breeding career.
Both stallions started out with a bit of a handicap. Prince
Cedric 3rd was an orphan foal. The Belgian, Marquette du
Marais, was a fall born foal–not likely to attract
a lot of attention as a yearling against colts six to eight
months older. But his breeder, Elroy Brass from Elkhart Lake,
Wisconsin, saw something in this autumn accident and recorded
him.
How Elroy came to breed this horse is interesting in itself.
He bought the mare from a killer buyer when she was eleven
years old and had never foaled. It was in 1961 when Elroy
got the word that a killer buyer had a bob tailed (i.e. docked)
mare that might be of interest to him. So he and Dick Sparrow,
who happened to be with him, went to take a look. And that
is where and how Brass found the dam of Marquette. She had
placed 2nd as a yearling and 2 year old at the Wisconsin
State Fair for Hubert Kipp, North Prairie, Wisconsin, but
that was in 1950 and ‘51. Tough times for draft horses.
Horses were almost impossible to sell and difficult to give
away but he found a buyer and bid her good-bye. She was a
good looker and the guy thought he might get her in foal.
He didn’t but she did manage to run off on the mower,
giving him two reasons for sending her to the kill.
Then along came Elroy Brass who gave her a new lease on
life and got the fall foal born out of her. A few years later,
thinking she was bred back, he took her to the Cedar Rapids
Sale, but she checked empty. Harold Clark bought her and
did manage to get two fillies out of her by Conquest. Ultimately
Harold sold her and her two fillies to a Michigan buyer.
So much for Marquette’s dam–she was, as they
say, a high-spirited horse. Her name was Victoria Farceur.
In the fall of 1964 the draft horse business was again stirring.
Elroy took the fall born colt to the Waverly Fall Sale. And
I’ll be darned if it wasn’t Dick Sparrow (who
was with Elroy when he bought Victoria) and his dad, Ross,
who bought him. So Dick must have seen something about Victoria
that tripped his trigger too.
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| Here is a photo from the Schneckloth
ad in that review. It shows Don and daughter Lori,
on the box seat. The
horses are Ben and Bud and they had been 1st in the
team class at that year’s Wisconsin State Fair. Don
also served a long stretch on the Belgian board and president
during part of that time. These four photos can almost
remind you of that stirring old hymn that goes, “Faith
of our Fathers, living still, in spite of etc., etc.,” doesn’t
it? It did take faith as well as determination, to
provide that necessary continuity that great enterprises
demand.
The big new sale barn in Waverly
was completed and Bill Dean’s full page ad
welcomed the faithful back to the Spring Sale. The
Fall Sale had been cancelled
due to construction. This was also when the ownership
passed from Arnold Hexom to Bill Dean. |
The following March along comes
Jack Wood, Aurora, Ontario, another sharp horseman, who bought
him. And there he stayed, literally. As John Lester, who
wrote the article stated, “Marquette stayed home a
lot.” So there are no good pictures or even poor ones,
of the horse at places like the International or the Royal
Winter Fair. Jack bought him to be a breeding horse and he
shared him generously with this fellow Canadians. During
the 1970s, Harold Cline and I were generally in attendance
at the Royal taking pictures in the ring. The offspring of
Marquette were so dominant in that ring–shown by so
many different people–that one had to be blind, deaf
and dumb not to notice. They blazed a trail of purple ribbons
at that great show year after year.
By that time I was getting a little weary of celebrating
dead stallions in our Stallion issue so John Lester, Listowel,
Ontario, and I started corresponding and digging around in
the Marquette tale. John was keen on Belgian pedigrees and
located right in the heart of Marquette country – so
he nailed it together. Did a good job too. We were both pleased
to be presenting a living sire for a change. Less than a
week after John posted the completed version to me, Jack
Wood found Marquette dead in his stall. The great 15 year
old stallion was dead. His bedding was undisturbed indicating
that he had not thrashed around at all. We were right back
to featuring dead stallions. I hope John and I were not responsible.
The Royal Winter Fair and the new (second year) Michigan
Great Lakes International Show, then held in Detroit rather
than East Lansing, were the capsheaf shows of that era–replacing
Chicago. There were a lot of fall sales by that time and
the draft horse market was brisk. It had reached the point
where it took a $2,000 sale to get your serious attention
with the camera.
That is probably about enough verbiage from our Stallion
issue of 25 years ago so I’ll close out the horse end
with a number of pictures from that issue.
NOT ALL OUR SALE REPORTS WERE BIG CONSIGNMENT SALES – THERE
WAS FOR EXAMPLE THAT “SALE IN THE BLIZZARD” AT
THE SPARROW FARM NEAR ZEARING, IOWA.
The weather was terrible. Bill Sassmann picked me up and
off we went into the blowing snow. We left two wives and
eight children at home between us. Bill’s father-in-law,
Everett Steege, was also on board. It was really stupid to
be out on the road, but we got there and so did a lot of
other people.
And one “filler joke” that I think bears repeating.
I’ll insert it here.
NOT LONG DISTANCE
A Texas cattle feeder, visiting in Pittsburgh, made a phone
call and screamed his head off when the operator told him
the charge was 60 cents.
“Wow,” he roared. “Back in Texas I could
talk to hell and back for 60 cents.”
“Maybe so,” replied the operator politely, “but
from Texas that would be considered a local call.”
So much for “Draft Horses - 1977” on to the
world news.
Terrorism was alive and well, as I suspect it has been for
thousands of years. This time frame 25 years ago had its
share. While airplanes heavily loaded with aviation fuel
and passengers had not been used as missiles guided into
buildings by suicidal fanatics–they were being hijacked
and used for extortion with regularity. Either ante up or
accede to our demands or we will slay the passengers was
the method. The political agenda bears some similarity to
9/11.
On October 18, the government of West Germany had finally
had enough. Four terrorists had seized a Lufthansa 737 jet
on a flight from Majorca to Frankfurt. The demands of the
hijackers called for the release of eleven members of the
Baader-Meinhof gang imprisoned in Germany and two Palestinians
held in Turkey–or else–they would blow up the
plane, and its 86 passengers.
West Germany’s record with these situations was nothing
to brag about up to that point. That changed when the Germans
sent a unit of their commandoes to Mogadisho on the shores
of the Indian Ocean where the jet liner was refueling. They
stormed the jet, killing all four hijackers. None of the
86 passengers (hostages) were harmed. Helmut Schmidt, the
German Chancellor, said “The government had no real
choice. Releasing these terrorists would have only led to
new crimes. We weighed the risks as thoroughly as we could.”
The government in Bonn had reason to feel better about themselves.
In February of 1972, they paid five million dollars to Arab
Terrorists for the release of passengers on another jumbo
jet. Then in September of that same year, with Germany hosting
the Olympic Games, the same group that had extorted five
million out of them gained entrance to the Olympic Compound
where 10,000 of the world’s athletes and their coaches
were staying. Two Israeli coaches were shot to death and
nine athletes taken hostage. By the next morning the compound
was surrounded by 12,000 police officers and several sharpshooters.
The demand was for the release of 200 Palestinians from Israeli
jails and safe passage out of West Germany.
Shortly before midnight the terrorists (also called guerrillas)
and their hostages were flown by helicopter to Munich where
a plane was waiting to fly them to Cairo. When two of the
terrorists emerged on the tarmac German sharpshooters opened
fire. All nine hostages were killed, along with one German
police officer, and four of the seven guerrillas/terrorists.
Now that series of events, while not nearly as dramatic or
destructive as the Twin Towers, was also a fair way of turning
the world inside out. The Olympic Games are something of
an icon too.
At the same time (1977) if there was a better or braver
man anywhere on this globe at that time than Egypt’s
President Anwar el-Sadat, I don’t know who it might
have been. In November of that year he made a precedent breaking
visit to Israel and addressed their parliament in the interest
of peace. He was pushing for a peace conference but his willingness
to “talk instead of terrorize” caused a furor
in that region. Hard liners in the Arab states hated him.
Four years later the hot heads got him. He was slain on the
streets of his own city during a military parade. If blessed
are the peacemakers is true, then no one–in any nation,
had better claim to it in 1977 than the then president of
Egypt.
I suppose I should mention some deaths that weren’t
murders. Guy Lombardo, “the sweetest music this side
of heaven” died at 75 years of age. But we still listen
to him on public television every now and then.
Bing Crosby, with the mellow voice that was so perfect for “White
Christmas” that he just about owned that song, died
at 73 years of age. Not a bad actor either, although he made
it look totally effortless. He was especially good at playing
a priest and golf. As a matter of fact that is where he died – on
the golf course.
For some reason his music hasn’t lasted as well as
some of his noisier comtemporaries.
The New York Yankees beat the Los Angeles Dodgers in four
out of six to take the World Series. Fifty years ago they
had also beaten the Dodgers but they didn’t have to
go clear across the country to do it. Then they were the
Brooklyn Dodgers.
American farmers were unhappy with grain prices so they
took to the roads with their tractors and trucks–in
Washington, D.C., and several (about thirty) state capitals.
It was an unusual way to display poverty, but they were angry.
A severe drought didn’t help. Drought and low commodity
prices are supposed to be natural enemies. President Carter
was catching a lot of hell about everything, even the weather.
As “golden ages” go I don’t think it qualified.
But I kind of wonder if many of them do.
At least he signed legislation ratcheting the minimum wage
from $2.30 an hour up to $3.35 by 1981. That will give you
some idea of wages a quarter century ago. $2,000 was a lot
for a horse. Definitely worth taking his picture at a sale. |