
50 Years Ago
Late Autumn/Early Winter 1953
by Maurice Telleen
published in The Draft Horse Journal, Winter 2002 - 2003
(From the Belgian Review and Percheron Review
of that period, as well as general news sources.)
In retrospect, that time frame from 50 years ago is very interesting.
There was a bumper crop of straws in the wind and coming events
casting their shadows before them. Of course, they always cast
their shadows before them but it is a whole lot easier to figure
out what they are saying after the fact.
The presidential campaign took a decisive turn on October
24 when the Republican candidate told a cheering crowd that
if elected he would “go to Korea.” He stated that
the American people would not settle for a policy of “wait–and
wait–and wait” for peace to be restored on that
unhappy peninsula. He felt that only by going there could he
best assess how to bring an honorable end to that war. It was
a great political move and some folks think that pledge to “go
to Korea” insured his election.
One famous news picture of that time showed the candidate,
General Eisenhower, standing in front of a microphone, shoulder
to shoulder with General Douglas MacArthur, who President Truman
had fired as our commander in the Far East.
Eisenhower had suggested that the Korean War had been neither
inevitable nor inescapable. The public was sick of the police
action that had turned into a war and then into a stalemate.
I’m sure that particular pledge made a big difference
but my guess is that he would have been elected with or without
it. For one thing there had been a Democrat in the White House
for twenty consecutive years. That is a lot of baggage. He
and Truman, by that time, had come to dislike each other and
Truman’s protege, Governor Adlai Stevenson of Illinois,
was no pit bull as a campaigner. Certainly not as aggressive
as Truman or FDR. As for Truman and MacArthur, dislike is much
too mild a word. They simply hated each other’s guts.
So I suppose you could say that the campaign of 1952 ended,
not with the balloting in November, but with the “I will
go to Korea” speech. On the other hand, the tide was
moving in Ike’s direction and I doubt there was a Democrat
alive who could have beaten him in 1952. The country wanted
a change.
As for straws in the wind–here is a sample of late autumn/early
winter 1952.
The British held their first atomic bomb tests off the coast
of Australia (rather than off the White Cliffs of Dover). The
nuclear club was growing. Science does not generally recognize
political borders.
Iran broke off relations with Great Britain over an oil dispute.
If that doesn’t sound familiar you simply haven’t
been paying any attention to the fifty years since then.
The French, clinging to the last vestiges of empire, launched
another big drive against the communists in what was then called
French Indo-China, I believe. We know it by Vietnam. It was,
at the time, said to be “succeeding.”
The U.S.S.R. kicked out our ambassador, George Kennen. We
had no choice but to recall him.
And the British sent some elite troops to their East African
colony of Kenya to put down “terrorism”–that
is what it was called, and no doubt what it was. We have to
stop this nonsense in its tracks. Those people down there actually
want us to leave.
And Trygvie Lie (I think he was a Norwegian) who had been
elected as the first Secretary General of the United Nations
in 1946 decided to call it quits and resigned. He had been
instrumental in getting the resolution through sharply condemning
the North Korean invasion of the South and calling for their
withdrawal. He was accused of being too willing to do America’s
bidding. Trouble, trouble everywhere–maybe Trygvie was
just sick of it.
The U.N. General Assembly had also turned down the application
of Communist China as a member. Third time in three years.
But this wasn’t baseball–they would keep applying
and we would keep on insisting that Formosa was the legitimate
government of China.
Speaking of baseball, the Yankees took their third World Series
in a row beating one of their next door neighbors, the Brooklyn
Dodgers, in 4-2 games.
Getting back to the election on November 5, it was a landslide
victory for Eisenhower and the Republican party with a big
voter turnout. I find one word in Stevenson’s concession
speech very interesting–”My fellow citizens have
made their choice and I gladly accept it.” Gladly is
a strange choice of word to insert in that sentence. Of course
you have to accept it–but graciously will do, you don’t
have to be glad about it. In Stevenson’s case, I believe
it meant exactly that–gladly. I don’t think he
even wanted the office but, like any draftee, was willing to
serve. And that ain’t all bad. Truman hadn’t wanted
the office either–it was thrust on him.
One of the surprising counter-currents in that 1952 sweep
was the amazing upset of that old Republican war horse, Henry
Cabot Lodge. He had been considered a shoe-in–sort of
an institution in the senate. But he was beaten by a young
congressman named John F. Kennedy. It was probably the major
upset of that election.
With all the saber rattling of 1952 it was kind of nice to
note that Albert Schweitzer was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
A very promising musician, he had opted for medicine–and
not in some great metropolitan hospital. In 1913 he had gone
to Africa and established a hospital where he served those
inhabitants throughout a long life. He was honored for setting
a living example of “reverence for life.” Good
choice. There wasn’t a lot of that going around in 1952–or
any other year, come to think of it.
We covered the 1952 fall shows in the Belgian and Percheron
breeds in the last issue. In years past that left only the
two big early winter shows as gathering places for the clans.
They were the International in Chicago and the Royal Winter
Fair in Toronto.
By 1952 you could pretty well write the International off.
At Chicago there was a total of seventeen Belgians led out
for Byron Good, the judge from Michigan State, to evaluate.
The seventeen that were there were led out by C. O. House,
Arcadia, Indiana; Meadow Brook Farms, Rochester, Michigan;
Dr. Reed Shank, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Warren Brothers, Bancroft,
Michigan. With exhibitors of that calibre you can be sure the
horses were great. But just seventeen head–at the great
International? That isn’t merely pathetic–that
is miserable.
The Percherons had maybe twice that many. But Dave Haxton,
their judge, wasn’t exactly overworked either, and like
the Belgians they were magnificent animals. When your exhibitors
are Penn State College; Lynnwood Farms, Carmel, Indiana; Bob
Jones, Farmer City, Illinois; Sherm Read & Daughter, Richland,
Michigan; and George Dix, Delaware, Ohio, you can be reasonably
sure they include some of the best of the breed. But it scarcely
deserves the title of International.
I have no record of the Clyde show at Chicago but I’m
sure that would fall safely into the pathetic category, too.
The Percherons held their annual meeting in Chicago. It was
probably held in a fairly small room. There is no mention made
of registration and transfer numbers in the Percheron Notes.
Registration fees were hiked up a bit. I’m sure their
income was suffering. George Dix was elected president, Sherm
Read, vice president, and Mrs. Anne Brown was re-elected secretary-treasurer.
But hope springs eternal in the heart of a draft horseman.
So the Belgian and Percheron associations jointly put on a
dinner during the show welcoming draft horse folks of any persuasion.
And by golly, eighty people showed up at the fabled old Stock
Yard Inn to break bread together. But the founding father of
this all breed gathering was really Billy Lynch, former Shire
breeder and secretary of that association for many years. He
was an Illinois farmer.
Charley House was the toastmaster and I’m sure did a
bang up job. Where drafters were concerned, he was the eternal
optimist. Kind of like the kid who found a couple smallish
horse turds on the porch on Christmas morning and kept searching
all day for that pony who “just had to be around here
somewhere.” It sounds like they had a right good time.
The speaker for the evening was the director of publicity
for the Indiana Farm Bureau. He suggested that more emphasis
be placed on determining methods and avenues for the profitable
sale of draft horses. Really. I’ll bet if he saw someone
drowning on the beach he would have shouted, “You really
should have worn a life jacket or learned how to swim.” But
Charley House, and some others, already had that great sale
in Indianapolis in mind. That became the rallying point and,
ultimately, it worked.
You really have to admire the grit and determination of that
sturdy band of breeders who, in the face of massive indifference,
ridicule, and occasional outright contempt, just refused to
abandon their faith in the draft horse. They simply said, “No!” to
quietly become footnotes in the book of American agriculture.
It is not surprising that at the end of the evening they voted
to do this again next year in Chicago.
As for the Belgians, they also had their meeting in Chicago
and elected Mr. Cliff Eller, Arcadia, Indiana, to the board.
He was a good choice. He and his neighbor, Charley House, would
work miracles with that Indiana Sale. And like the Percherons,
they had a wonderful woman as their secretary–Blanche
Schmalzried.
The Belgian publication was more forthcoming with their numbers.
They reported 171 registrations, 340 transfers and 18 memberships
during the year ending October 31, 1952. That compares with
239 registrations, 361 transfers and 25 memberships in fiscal
1952. That 171 registrations would prove to be the absolute
low point in the fortunes of the Belgian breed in this country.
Transfers would continue to fall for one more year reaching
their all time low with 317 in fiscal 1953. There was absolutely
nothing to indicate that this toboggan ride to oblivion was
anything but that.
But just ten years later in fiscal 1962, registrations had
clawed back to 446 animals, transfers to 569 and new memberships
to 55. By 1974, registrations had made it to the four figures
with 1,210 registrations, with 1,640 transfers and 156 new
members. It took only three more years for Belgian registrations
to top 2,000. And I think most of you know the “rest
of the story”– to date anyhow.
It turns out that the little boy looking frantically for the
pony in his life wasn’t a nut case after all. Or maybe
it was that speech by a director of publicity. But mostly–it
was people like those mentioned in this column. If Tom Brokaw
knew anything about draft horses (I doubt that he does) he
would probably write a book about that sturdy band that stuck
with their horses through that post World War II period from
the ‘40s and clear through the ‘50s. He would likely
call it “The Greatest Generation.” May God bless
all of them–and Tiny Tim, too. And the pony. |