Wednesday, February 16, 2011

What one building says about the march of history.





This is the Ewing T. Kerr Federal Courthouse in Casper, Wyoming. I recently posted these photographs of it on my courthouse blog.

In doing this, it occurred to me that this building, in many ways, symbolizes how many changes have come about in the last 80 years.

This building was built under appropriations set out in 1926, but actual construction did not start until 1931. It was completed in 1932. The building, therefore, came early in the Great Depression.

The ceremony for the corner stone included a Masonic Ceremony. That's an amazing fact in and of itself. A Masonic Ceremony would be regarded as unthinkable now for a Federal event, and it probably generated some concern amongst the Catholic lawyers in town at the time. The Masons, however, were quite powerful in Casper in this era, and of course fraternal organizations of all type were much more common then as opposed to now.

The building itself was not built with just the judiciary in mind. Indeed, there was no sitting Federal judge for it at all. At the time, there was one Federal judge who sat in Cheyenne. He was, however, a bit of a circuit rider, and Federal courthouses existed in Cheyenne, Casper, Green River, Lander and Yellowstone National Park. The courtroom was on the second floor of the courthouse, and the main floor and part of the basement housed the Post Office. Service recruiters were also located here, along with other Federal officers. The building was built with this in mind, and it served in this fashion up until about 1970 when a new much larger Federal office building was constructed. This itself shows how much smaller the Federal government actually was, as there is no way this building could serve in this fashion today. Even as late as the early 80s, however, the building still housed various Federal offices, including the United States Geological Survey, for which I briefly worked. It's odd to think that the dingy basement USGS office was once located in what is now a very nice courthouse. Even odder yet is to recall the beautiful Depression Era murals that were once on the main floor, with the mail boxes. The murals depicted scenes of Western migration, and were removed to the new post office (which is now the old post office) when the post office went to the new Federal Building in 1970.

What this courthouse did not see by that time was very much use as a court. By the 1950s at least the Federal Court made little use of this courthouse, and the ones in Green River and Lander had fallen into near complete disuse. In part, this may simply have been due to advances in transportation and technology. The addition of additional Federal judges, however, meant that the court needed to once again use this courthouse, and it was remodeled in the late 1980s and now has a sitting Federal judge.

Even the name of the building illustrates a change. This building was simply called "the Post Office" by most people here when I was young. Later, it was called "the old Post Office". When it acquired a sitting Federal judge most people started calling it The Federal Courthouse. The official name, the Ewing T. Kerr Federal Courthouse, came about in honor of long time Wyoming Federal judge, Ewing T. Kerr. Judge Kerr is notable, amongst other reasons, for being the last Wyoming Federal judge to lack a law degree. He had never attended law school, and actually started off as a teacher. He "read the law" and passed the bar.

By the way, just behind the courthouse is the old First National Bank building. It hasn't been used in that fashion during my lifetime, I think, but was a major office building up until the 1970s. It then fell into disuse, and was abandoned for many years. Very recently, it was remodeled into appointments, and where the bank lobby once was a grocery store now is.

Also, this view is considerably more open than at any time prior to the present time. A small building neighboring the courthouse was recently removed so that room could be made for parking. They heavy iron fence serves a security purpose. Up until recently this also did not exist, showing, I suppose, how things have changed in another fashion.

Thursday, February 16, 1911. A resolution to annex Canada voted down.

U.S. Representative William Stiles Bennet (R-New York), a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced a resolution proposing that the United States annex Canada, after unsuccessfully opposing the reciprocal trade agreement with the country.

He was a sore loser.

The proposal had no chance of passage but rightfully angered Canadians, who had kicked American a** twice in prior armed attempts to annex it.

The resolution failed 9 to 1. Today Republicans would show dronish servitude to King Donny the Mad and vote to approve it.

Life magazine issued its "Socialist Number"


The illustration was by William Balfour Ker, and quite striking.  The choice was intentional as Ker, who generally did illustrations, including for Life, was a dedicated Socialist, and one who lived an unconventional lifestyle as was common for radicals of the period.

Last edition:

Wednesday, February 15, 1911. Bogosity then and now and "Viva Diaz!"

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

365 Days With A Model A.

Here's a blog that takes an interesting look at the early automobile era.

The author notes that this is because he doesn't feel that everything should have a computerized element to it. I couldn't agree more.

Wednesday, February 15, 1911. Bogosity then and now and "Viva Diaz!"

NAVARRO IN JUAREZ; REBELS GO SOUTH; Mexican General with 1,000 Men Greeted with Cries of "Viva Diaz!" -- Met No Insurrectos.

Headline in the New York Times.


Compulsory domestic service? Crud, most women had that then, and still do today.

A completely ineffective medicine that purported to be a remedy for the treatment of tuberculosis made up of  olive oil, squill root, almonds, nettle and red poppy petals was granted U.S. Patent 1,368,974.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is probably ready to back it as we speak or read, assuming he's not recounting his glory days of sniffing coke off of toilet seats.

Ah. . . the best and the brightest. . . 

"13 anniversary, destruction of the U.S.S. Maine, Havana Harbor, Feb. 15, 1911"

Last edition:

Tuesday, February 14, 1911. Madero reenters Mexico, John Browning patents the 1911.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Tuesday, February 14, 1911. Madero reenters Mexico, John Browning patents the 1911.

Madero crossed back into Mexico from Texas to assume command of Mexican revolutionaries, and to evade a U.S. warrant for his arrest.

John Browning was issued a patent:






The House of Representatives approved a controversial reciprocal trade agreement between the United States and Canada, by a 221-92 margin.

Niobrara County, Wyoming, was established.

Last edition:

Monday, February 13, 1911. Taking Durango.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Monday, February 13, 1911. Taking Durango.

The Acting Secretary of State to the Governor of Texas.

Department of State,

Washington, February 13, 1911.

Your telegram of the 10th instant. Department informed by Embassy at Mexico City that Mexican Government does not just now desire to ask for permission to move troops over United States territory.

Huntington Wilson

Troops under Jose Luis Moya took Durango.  55 years old, and therefore into advanced years by the standards of the day, he was an unusual example of a wealthy man who joined the revolution.  He'd lose his life in its service in May, 1911.

Today In Wyoming's History: February 13: 1911  Campbell County created.

A coal and hydrocarbons producing county, the population of the county has grown by a factor of nearly ten since my birth, and doubled since I graduated from high school.  I vividly recall going there for swim meets in the late 70s and early 80s at which time it was an incredibly rough county.

Nicaragua's President Juan José Estrada declared martial law after an explosion in Managua destroyed a large quantity of arms and ammunition.

Last edition:

Sunday, February 12, 1911.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Thursday, February 9, 1911. Establishing the size of the House of Representatives.

The House of Representatives approved the Permanent Apportionment Act of 1929, increasing the number of U.S. Representatives, beginning in 1913, from 391 to 435, the number that it has had ever since. 

This has created unequal representation and something really needs to be done to change it.

Voters in the Arizona Territory approved the proposed state Constitution.

Writer Jack London, who was a Socialist, came out in support of Socialist revolutionaries in Mexico.

The Army intended to deploy lighter than air craft near El Paso in an attempt to figure out what was going on in the revolution near there.

Indentured servitude for Chinese workers in British Malaya was abolished, effective June 30, 1914.

Last edition:

Wednesday, February 8, 1911. Revolutions.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Wednesday, February 8, 1911. Revolutions.

Fighting raged on in Mexico, notably by Juarez.

The civil war in Honduras ended with an agreement to free elections supervised by the United States.

Perhaps Honduras can return the favor and watch the 2026 elections which Trump might be planning to steal.

Nasir al-Mulk assumed power as the new Regent for the 12-year-old Shah of Persia.

A dedication was made in Tampa to the traitorous rebels of the 1860 to 1865 period.

S.S. Hamburg departing from Havana Harbor, February 8, 1911.

Last edition:

Tuesday, February 7, 1911. Mexican Revolutions.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Tuesday, February 7, 1911. Mexican Revolutions.

Lucio Moreno.

Gabriel Tepepa and Lucio Moreno started their rebellion. Their uprising was not coordinated with other Mexican revolutionaries, and most importantly not with Emiliano Zapata who was awaiting the return of Torres Burgos from his mission to Madero.

What this helps demonstrate is that the revolution that Madero sparked was never completely unified, and indeed, there were Mexican Revolutions, not a Mexican Revolution.

Orozco was fighting near Juarez in the Battle of Smelter View.

Last edition:

Monday, February 6, 1911. Ronald Reagan born.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Monday, February 6, 1911. Ronald Reagan born.

Ronald Wilson Reagan was born in an apartment in Tampico, Illinois to Nelle Clyde Reagan (nee Wilson) and Jack Reagan.  

Reagan family, Ronald Reagan is the youngest.

His mother was a devout member of the Disciples of Christ while his father was a Catholic and they were married in the Catholic Church.  The couple's older son, Neil, was baptized as a Catholic, but raised as a youth in the Disciples of Christ before switching over to being a practicing Catholic.  Ronald was baptized in he Disciples of Christ Church.  This sort of compromise wasn't uncommon in American families of mixed religious background, but it would have been problematic for Jack.  I note all of this as Reagan himself made some life and political compromises that perhaps somewhat reflect having grown up in a household of problematic compromise, although that is speculating a lot.

His entry into media came initially as being a sports broadcaster.  By 1937 he was acting.  He was an Army Reserve cavalryman starting in 1937, and would serve in the Army during the Second World War in the branch that made films and did pubic relations work.

Like his father, Reagan was initially a Democrat and switched to the GOP in the 1950s.  By the time he ran for office in California he was solidly a Buckleyite conservative and has the status of the last real conservative to hold the Oval Office. While a hero to conservatives, it was his Southern Strategy that would ultimately destroy the GOP.

At the time of his first election to the Presidency, there were real questions on whether Americans would vote for a divorced man, showing how much higher standards were at the time.

Reagan was leagues superior to the current illegitimate occupant of the White House, and as a real conservative he had real merit from the perspective of conservatives, including myself . The hero worship of Reagan is, however, unwarranted.  By his second term the signs of Alzheimer's was appearing, although nothing to the degree which dementia has best the current putative chief executive.

Last edition:

Friday, February 4, 2011

Saturday, February 4, 1911. Deadlocks.


A Berryman cartoon for this day in 1911.

Persia's Minister of Finance, Sani al-Dowleh, was killed in Tehran by two Armenian assassins who were Russian subjects, and whose legation provided them with sanctuary.

Francisco Madero, who was still in Texas at the time, offered Dr. Ira J. Bush a commission as the chief surgeon with the rank of colonel, which he accepted.


Former Boer General Piet Cronjé and advocate of attrition warfare, died at age 74.  Because of his tactical viewpoints, he was shunned by the surviving Boer officers.  And, indeed, that was not a wise strategy, particularly for the Boers whose numbers and nature favored mobility.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Friday, February 3, 1911. Dangers of nature.

253 ice fishermen, who had set up a "fishing village" on an ice floe in the Bjorko Sound in Finland, were killed when a gale swept the settlement out into the Baltic Sea.  On the same day, George Grey, brother of British Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey, was killed by a lion while hunting in Africa.

Mexican revolutionary Abraham Gonzalez moved his office to the Caples building in El Paso, Texas.

California adopted the bear flag as its state flag.


California's flag is frankly weird.  The state was only a republic very briefly, and grizzly bears were driven out of the state long, long ago.

Last edition:

Thursday, February 2, 1911. Fighting in Mexico.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Thursday, February 2, 1911. Fighting in Mexico.


The revolution in Mexico was seeing a lot of action.

The crews of the two competing expeditions to the South Pole confronted each other at the Bay of Whales.

That must have been awkward.

Revolution broke out on the northern coast of Haiti.

Puerto Cortez, Honduras was turned over to the control of American and British soldiers..

Last edition:

Sunday, January 29, 1911. Revolution at Mexicali.