Prohibition in Wyoming

January 16th, 2012 was the 92nd anniversary of the passage of the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which transformed Prohibition into federal law.

Much of our understanding of Prohibition is framed by its urban impacts and consequences–bootlegging and organized crime, car chases though downtown areas, speak-easies on city blocks, police raids on drinking establishments, and bathtub gin manufactured in apartments.  But how did it affect rural areas?  The most frequently documented rural areas are in Appalachia, where the moonshiners ran their stills.  What about Wyoming?

Well, with the Otto Plaga Photograph Collection, you can witness how Prohibition would have affected Wyomingites.

Here are a few sample images from the collection, or click the link above to browse more images.

Bates Hole, Wyo. Red Creek. Seized by O.W. Plaga, Federal Agent and S.R. Owens, Federal Agent with Bill Irving. Otto Plaga photographs, Box 1, Fol 1.

Billy Hunter, Al Morton, Chris Jessen with still equipment in Green River, WY. Note the young “helper” on the left side of the photograph. Otto Plaga Photographs, Box 1, Fol. 1.

Stills seized by Plaga, Peyton, and Everhart near Douglas, WY Otto Plaga photographs, Box 1, Fol 1.

Stills after a raid in Wyoming. Otto Plaga Photographs, Accession Number 10397, Box 1, Folder 1.

For a general introduction to Prohibition history, Ken Burns’ documentary, Prohibition, originally released in October of 2011, is a good starting point. While Wyoming doesn’t feature prominently in Ken Burns’ work, viewers will have the opportunity to learn how Prohibition affected the U.S. as a whole, including some lesser-known unintended consequences

On December 5, 1933, the 21st Amendment to the Constitution overturned Prohibition.  Since then, whether your choice was an occasional beer or to forswear alcoholic beverages, it was once again a personal choice rather than a matter of Constitutional importance.

Cheers!

Posted in Photographic collections, Prohibition, Wyoming history | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Legal Eagles of Competition: Profiles in Anti-Trust Law

The Oxford English Dictionary defines anti-trust as “Opposed to trusts or similar monopolistic combinations.” Anti-trust law is also known as competition law and refers to law that promotes or maintains market competition by regulating anti-competitive conduct by companies (Wikipedia). At any rate, the 20th century saw a flurry of anti-trust legislation and other measures to prevent the growth of monopolies by corporations. These lawyers’ papers reflect such efforts.

Philo Clarke Calhoun, undated. Philo C. Calhoun Papers, Box 2.

Hugh Baker Cox (1905-1973) was one such lawyer. Cox worked in the anti-trust division of the U.S. Department of Justice during the 1930s and early 1940s. He also served on the Board of Economic Warfare in London, concentrating on economic intelligence activities. Perhaps most notably, Cox worked on federal policy formulation regarding a dispute between Montgomery Ward and the National War Labor Board which resulted in the seizure of the company under presidential executive order.

Paul H. LaRue was an anti-trust lawyer who worked with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in Washington, D.C. first as a trial lawyer and later as attorney-adviser to the FTC commissioner in the early 1950s. After, he moved to Chicago and joined the firm Chadwell, Keck, Kayser, & Ruggles in 1958. There, he was a public member of the Illinois Conflict of Interest Laws Commission. LaRue authored many works on anti-trust publications.  Earl W. Kintner (1912-1991) also worked as a trial lawyer with the FTC and went on to become chairman from 1959 to1961. Kintner was a proponent of industry self-regulation while simultaneously enforcing anti-trust measures. He also published and lectured on antitrust law, trade practices, and administrative law.

Young Philo Calhoun on a road trip with friends, undated. Other photographs in the collection show the group fishing and enjoying an outdoor meal with china teacups. Philo C. Calhoun Papers, Box 12.

Philo Clarke Calhoun (1889-1964) was an anti-trust lawyer who often partnered with another anti-trust notable, Judge Thurman Arnold. Together, the two are remembered as some of the New Deal’s most iconoclastic “trust-busters.” However, Calhoun had another, decidedly less aggressive hobby – Dickens scholarship. Calhoun was an expert on rare editions of Charles Dickens’s works, and also enjoyed hymnology.

Louis B. Smith in his office, undated. Louis B. Smith papers, Coll. No. 8272. Box 23, Folder 1.

Finally, Louis B. Schwartz was an attorney and lawyer known for his work on anti-trust laws and penal code reform. A legal scholar, Schwartz taught at a number of institutions, including Pennsylvania State University, the University of California’s Hastings College of Law, Harvard, Cambridge, and others. Schwartz served as a member of the Attorney General’s National Committee to Study the Anti-trust Laws from 1954-1955 and director of the National Commission on Reform of Federal Criminal Law from 1968-1971.

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Reflections on the Evolution of Air Travel

Are you a nervous flier?  Perhaps it will make you feel better to see that back in the day, it could have been a lot worse to fly.  We’ve used our collections to illustrate just several of the reasons that it’s much, much safer to fly in this modern age.

  1. Covered jetways to the aircraft.  No risk of slipping and falling on an icy tarmac.

Passengers on the first transcontinental flight from Los Angeles to the East Coast, July 8, 1929. AHC Collections, Charles A. Lindbergh Photo File.

2.  Runways and tarmacs that are clearly defined, easy to navigate, and paved.  No need to worry about the plane’s tire’s slipping and skidding in mud.

Secure your seatbelt for takeoff and landing. Just look at that packed-dirt runway! Richard Leferink Scrapbook, Box 14.

3.  Protection from the elements, especially welcome at cruising altitudes of 30,000 feet.

Lieutenant Commander Ellsion and Glen H. Curtiss in plane, North Island, San Diago, California, 1910, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center. Photo File: Planes–Old Timers .

4.  Small pets can still travel in the cabin, but must be restrained in a mesh carrying case.  This is safer for everyone since it reduces the risk of animals biting other passengers, but also lessens the chances that a pet might tumble out of the cockpit.

Early aviator Roscoe Turner with pet lion cub Gilmore.  Roscoe Turner Papers, Box 113, Folder 7.

Early aviator Roscoe Turner with pet lion cub Gilmore. Roscoe Turner Papers, Box 113, Folder 7.

However, now that air travel is such a routine part of our lives, there is one drawback.  There are no crowds of attractive young people to see us off and welcome us back once we’ve touched down on the ground again.

Photo of Roscoe Turner and women in bathing suits with the “Flying Cigar Store.” Roscoe Turner Papers, Box 82, Folder 18.

But I think that most of us would agree that arriving safely at our destination far outstrips any departure or arrival fanfare!  Safe travels, all!

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The Oregon Trail

View of the Oregon Trail near Split Rock in Natrona County, Wyoming. Grace Raymond Hebard papers, AHC.

You might remember this game; it was a classic facet in many an elementary school classroom.  Its release in Wii format in 2011 brought the joy of cholera and “fording the river” to a whole new generation.  While this was exciting indeed, there is much to be said for reading up on what it was really like to travel the Oregon Trail.

The American Heritage Center has got you covered!  We have diaries, maps, personal histories, and photographs that reveal what life on the trail was really like.  May we suggest the W.W. Morrison papers, a passenger agent of the Union Pacific Railroad who was also a historian of emigrant trails and pioneer graves.  His collection contains all sorts of goodies for someone interested in the authenticity of the trail, including photographs of several of the Donner party’s graves.  Or, perhaps the Oregon-California Trail Association records, which contain many diaries from travelers on the Oregon and California trails.  Or take a sampler approach, and see what we have available in digital form.  Try searching with terms like “Overland Trail” or “Oregon Trail” to get a feel for the nitty, gritty side of life on the trail.

Oregon Trail Route through Wyoming, Reproduction of information sheet, 1976, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center, Paul and Helen Henderson Oregon Trail Collection, Accession Number 10188.

So, while you can now simulate the experience of the Oregon trail with the Wii, you can also take a step or two back in time and relive the journey with photographs and diaries of those who actually traveled the trail.  Happy travels!

W.H. Jackson drawing of Oregon Trail, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center, Photo File: Trail – Oregon.
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The Art of Silent Film: Al Christie’s Contribution to Early Hollywood

Long before modern blockbusters filled theater screens with explosive sound and color, silent films captivated audiences through pure visual storytelling. This lost art form, which flourished from 1894-1929, experienced a revival when The Artist won major awards in 2011 for its faithful recreation of silent cinema’s magic. The American Heritage Center preserves important records from this foundational period in film history, including the Al Christie papers.

In the United States, the major center for film-making was in the New York-New Jersey area, until Nestor Film Company sent Al Christie to Hollywood to open a West Coast studio in 1911. Christie later started his own production company, Christie Film Company, which specialized in comedy.

Silent film acting was a different art form. Silent films contained no audible dialog, and the music was normally provided by an organist or pianist in the theater where the film was shown.  Silent film actors learned to convey emotions with facial expressions rather than with broad stage gestures. The film acting style was considered more naturalistic than theater acting.

The Nervous Wreck, Christie Film Company, 1926, Al Christie papers

When advances in technology allowed for sound, silent films fell rapidly out of favor. Yet two decades of work had produced many films that deserve not to be forgotten. The Christie studio had produced hundreds of comedy “shorts” (about 20 minutes) and some full length features. Among the latter was The Nervous Wreck (1926), a comedy about a hypochondriac who learns to take action and win the girl in the Arizona desert. The process involves holding up a car full of tourists with a monkey wrench.

The Al Christie papers at the American Heritage Center contain many scripts, synopses, and outlines for silent films. Not all of these films have survived. The production files from the Christie studio offer insight into what it took to make and market silent films. To see examples of these production materials, including publicity stills from The Nervous Wreck, visit our Virmuze exhibit “Collection Spotlight: The Al Christie Papers.”

Posted in Hollywood history, motion picture history, popular culture, resources | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Online Finding Aid Available for the Karl C. “Sunny” Allan Papers

The Allan Papers document 20th century- outdoor recreation.

Karl C. “Sunny” Allan (1886-1978) was born in Ogden, Utah. He worked as a telephone lineman in the early 1900s, and was part of the Bureau of Reclamation crew that built a telephone line from Ashton, Idaho to Moran, Wyoming. In 1913, he joined the U.S. Forest Service and worked in the Targhee National Forest building telephone lines to fire lookouts. In 1918, he became a district ranger at Camas Meadows, Idaho. He worked at the Black Rock ranger station in Wyoming from 1930-1938, and the Jackson Lake ranger station in Wyoming from 1938-1942. From 1944-1956, Allan worked as a ranger in Grand Teton National Park (Wyo.) and managed the Rockefeller Wildlife Range. He and his wife, Esther, lived in the Jackson Hole area for more than 40 years.

The Allan Papers also document wildlife management in the national parks. This image is from Yellowstone.

The Karl C. Allan Papers contains correspondence, much of it connected with the U.S. Forest Service, biographical information, government documents and other printed material mainly regarding the Jackson Hole and Yellowstone areas of Wyoming, manuscripts, notebooks, and maps. A large portion of the collection consists of photographs of the Allan family and many other Jackson Hole residents and visitors, work and life of park rangers, wildlife, and scenery in Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks, as well as Targhee National Forest, Wyoming.  You may view the collection inventory here.

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Exploring the A.C. Ivy Papers: Insights into Cancer Research and Medical History

Andrew Conway Ivy (1893-1978) was born in Farmington, Missouri.  In 1913, at age 20, he received the Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Pedology degrees from Missouri State Normal School.  The research studies for his master’s degree (M.S., 1917) and doctorate (Ph.D., 1918) were in gastric physiology.  While completing the work toward his M.D. degree (Rush Medical School, 1922) he was instructor in physiology at the University of Chicago (1917-1919) and Associate Professor of Physiology at Loyola University of Medicine (1919-1923).

He returned to the University of Chicago as Associate Professor of Physiology, 1923-1925, and then was called to the chair of Physiology and Pharmacology at Northwestern University as the Nathan Smith Davis Professor where he remained until 1946.  From 1946 to 1953 he was Vice President of the University of Illinois in charge of the Chicago professional colleges.  In 1953, amid the much publicized controversy over his work on krebiozen, he resigned the Vice Presidency and continued as Distinguished Professor of Physiology and Head of the Department of Clinical Science at the University of Illinois.  From 1961-1966 he was Research Professor of Biochemistry at Roosevelt University and then worked at the Ivy Cancer Research Foundation.  From 1962-1976 his research was devoted exclusively to the body’s defense mechanisms against cancer.

Dr. Ivy also served as a consultant and advisor to the U.S. government and private organizations.  He was the Scientific Director at the Naval Medical Research Institute, 1942-1951.  He was a Special Consultant to the Secretary of War regarding war crimes of a medical nature at the Nuremberg trials, 1946-1947.  He also worked for the U.S. Army in the 1940s as a consultant in the Planning Division, the Research and Development Branch, and the Office of the Surgeon General, Nutrition Laboratory.

He was Executive Director of the National Advisory Cancer Council, 1947-1951 and held several committee positions for the National Research Council, 1940-1947.  While President of the American Gastroenterological Association in 1940 he engineered the founding of the AGA Journal and was its editor from 1942-1952.  He was active for the International Commission for the Prevention of Alcoholism and a co-founder and President of the National Conference of Educators to Eliminate Discrimination in Higher Education.

Dr. Ivy’s medical research covered almost every aspect of gastrointestinal physiology.  Some contributions came to be regarded as classics.  Examples include the introduction of subcutaneously transplanted organs to prove the existence of humoral mechanisms for gastric and pancreatic secretion, the discovery of the hormone cholecystokinin, the discovery of urgogastrone, and the elucidation of the effects of total gastrectomy in animals.  These and other discoveries clarified and simplified the understanding of how the stomach, pancreas, liver, and intestine secrete digestive enzymes.  Dr. Ivy wrote over 1500 scientific articles, mostly in the field of gastroenterology.  In addition to his articles he wrote two books, Peptic Ulcer in 1950 and Observations on Krebiozen in the Management of Cancer in 1956.

The A. C. Ivy papers, 1799-1984, contain extensive subject and legal files regarding the controversial drug krebiozen.  The public furor over the distribution of the drug is fully documented by correspondence, newspaper clippings, and legal documents.  The patient and physician records contain useful information about the use of krebiozen in treating patients with a prognosis of terminal cancer.  The papers regarding the Ivy Cancer Research Foundation document support for a test (by the Food and Drug Administration) of krebiozen.  There are also files that show A. C. Ivy’s long career in medical research concerning the gastrointestinal tract, his campaign to prevent abuse of alcohol, and his research for the Armed Services during World War II.

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Hell on Wheels

Work progresses on the UPR at Green River, WY.
Work progresses on the UPR at Green River, WY.

The AHC houses several collections related to the  construction of the transcontinental railroad, westward migration, and even “hell on wheels,” which is the term used to describe the transient collection of unsavory businesses (gambling houses, saloons, brothels) and people that followed the construction of the railroad west.

Jack Casement walking alongside work train
Jack Casement walking alongside work train

The John and Frances Casement Papers represent one of the AHC’s more notable collections on the topic. Jack Casement was a Civil War soldier who went to work on the Union Pacific’s transcontinental line from 1866-1869, which took him from Omaha to Promontory Point in Utah. The collection is composed mostly of correspondence between Casement and his wife during these years. Casement writes frankly of his difficulties in obtaining supplies and gives his opinion of business associates. Most of the collection, including all of the correspondence, has been digitized and made available online.

Laying the rails of the UPR.
Laying the rails of the UPR.

Other AHC collections that feature material related to “hell on wheels” and/or the contstruction of the UPR include: the T. A. Larson Papers, the Samuel Chittenden Papers, the W. O. Owen Papers, and the Morton E. Post Family Papers.

To learn more, please visit some of our online resources about the transcontinental railroad and westward migration, including:

The Golden Spike Ceremony celebrating the joining of the Central Pacific and the Union Pacific railways at Promontory Summit, Utah, May 10, 1869.
The Golden Spike Ceremony celebrating the joining of the Central Pacific and the Union Pacific railways at Promontory Summit, Utah, May 10, 1869.
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Old Faithful Speaks

Old Faithful Speaks is a 35 millimeter nitrate film created between 1933 and 1935 to promote Wyoming tourism. Yellowstone National Park was then (and is now) a world-renowned tourist attraction. The film features what may be the first audio recording of Old Faithful put on film.  It also appears to be exceedingly rare, with only two much-shortened versions known to exist at two other archives.

The American Heritage Center is committed to making audio-visual materials accessible to users of all kinds.  Click here to view other digitized items from the AHC’s collections.

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Your American Heritage Center FAQs Answered

October is Archives Month, and as part of its recognition of the auspicious occasion, the Smithsonian’s institutional archives has posted a blog titled The Smithsonian’s Top 6 Archives Myths.  So far as I know, here at the American Heritage Center we don’t have any archives myths (with the partial exception of the belief, by some, that founder Grace Raymond Hebard haunts our building), which, for Archives Month purposes, is too bad. However, we do have a set of “Most Frequently Asked Questions,” and perhaps those will do for the purpose.

1) How much “stuff” do you have? Roughly speaking, 90,000 cubic feet (a cubic foot is approximately the size of a carton of printer paper) of manuscripts and archives and 60,000 rare books. A cubic foot (actually 1.2 cubic feet, to be precise) storage box is 15 inches long; laid end to end our boxes would stretch 17.5 miles.  We’re also often asked how many “items” we hold. A storage box holds about 2,500 pieces of paper.  So 2,500 x 75,400 boxes = 188,500,000 pieces of paper.  Plus the 60,000 rare books, for a grand total of 188 million, five hundred and sixty thousand items (give or take a few).

AHC stacks; despite their appearance, we have plenty of room.

2) Are you full?  No, not even very close. We have approximately 100,000 cubic feet of storage space in our current shelving configuration. Were we to be able to raise the funds necessary to install compact (aka “mobile”) shelving into all our storage rooms we would increase our capacity by 25%. With compact shelving instead of having an aisle between every two rows of shelves there is essentially only one aisle for an entire room full of shelves—it’s just that this aisle moves to permit access to any given row of shelves. Not having so many aisles means more capacity for boxes and books. Unfortunately, it is difficult to interest philanthropists in supporting something as mundane (and essentially invisible) as additional shelving, so we can’t anticipate the additional space any time in the near future. Fortunately, based on our average acquisition rate, our current empty shelf space will last a couple of decades or so.

3) Do you take everything offered to you?   If we did, we would have filled up our shelves quite some time ago. Our archivists are skilled in making difficult decisions about both which collections we wish to acquire and which parts of a collection are perhaps not significant enough to warrant long-term preservation. In government archives the longstanding rule of thumb is that only about 5% of the records created are retained by the archives. For us, the percentage of material offered to us that we accept is much higher, but an important reason is that we are often offered material that we have ourselves requested be preserved here.

Our archivists spend time researching individuals and organizations whose contributions to our region or to one of the topical areas we collect is significant and substantial enough for us to solicit their papers. Even then, we typically don’t take everything offered to us; many records of modern life are simply not likely to be of great assistance to future historians, sociologists, and other researchers—a typical example would be utility bills or bank statements.

4) How do you decide what to take?  While the process of making such decisions remains a matter of professional debate, at the AHC we primarily approach such decisions using a combination of “macro appraisal” (a concept that originated in Canadian archives) and good old-fashioned American pragmatism. Macro appraisal posits that the first decision should be which creators of records (whether individuals or organizations) a repository considers relevant and significant enough to wish to document.

Only after identifying the records creators, according to macro appraisal, does an archives select among the records produced by a given individual or organization.  For that level of selection, AHC archivists are informed a good deal by the types of materials that have been, over time, most helpful to researchers. This is where our inclination to normally select diaries and emails but not acquire utility bills and all 150 phone-camera images of someone’s birthday party comes in. As you can readily see, archival decisions about what to keep are not based on an exact science.  However, we believe that we ought to be able to explain how and why we came to a given decision, rather than using something as inexplicable as intuition.

5) When will everything be digitized?  The short answer is “never.” The easiest explanation is that we have 188 million-plus items in our collections, and even at what, for the archival profession, has been our rapid pace of 75,000 scans in the past two years it would take 5,000 YEARS to digitize our existing holdings—and that doesn’t include all the material we would acquire in the meantime.  It also doesn’t account for the fact that copyright laws prohibit us from placing large portions of our holdings online.  Nevertheless, we will continue to work toward being at the front of the pack in terms of how quickly we do scan our collections.

The papers of Stan Lee, above, are exemplary of our popular culture collections.

6) Why doesn’t the AHC collect only Wyoming history?  The Center does hold one of the most significant and substantial collections of Wyoming and Western history, particularly for the 20th century, in the nation. But we also hold internationally recognized manuscript collections for: U.S. aviation and aerospace, U.S. environmentalism, world economic geology, U.S. popular entertainment, U.S. journalism, U.S. military history, U.S. ranching, post-war U.S. conservatism, and “Asia through American eyes”; our rare book library documents (among many other things) the world’s religions, the global evolution of printing, and world-wide travel and exploration. Why do we have so much material that is not restricted to Wyoming or the Western U.S.?

The answer is that traditionally America’s land grant universities have believed their repositories—as well as the university itself—should give students and citizens the chance to learn broadly (thus virtually every land grant university has primary source collections that extend far beyond the state’s borders). The students and citizens of Wyoming, no less than those in any other state, deserve to have access to historical sources of relevance to some of the school’s broad areas of study. Moreover, events in Wyoming have to be understood in the context of national events, and events in Wyoming have repercussions in the rest of the nation.

Posted in Accessing historical documents, American Archives Month, Archival preservation, Archival work, Digital collections, Historical Preservation, popular culture, resources | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment