Friday, April 7, 2017

The Cheyenne State Leader for April 7, 1917: Wyoming can furnish finest cavalry horses obtainable anywhere



As the US plunged into war, the Leader was proclaiming that Wyoming could furnish the finest cavalry horses obtainable anywhere.

Actually, it already was.

Wyoming, in addition to experiencing a petroleum boom, was also experiencing a horse boom as horse ranchers, quite a few of them with English connections, had been been supplying the British, as well as the French, with horses for the war for years.  Starting with the Punitive Expedition, it'd started doing the same for the United States.  Not all of these horses were "finished" by any means, indeed most of them were not, something that came as a shock to their European users who were surprised by how green these horses were.

Added to his, of course, Wyoming had a major Remount station in Sheridan Wyoming, right in the heart of Wyoming's horse country, which would continue on through World War Two.

In that other boom, the oil boom, that had become so significant that the Leader was quoting the prices from the Casper exchange now on a daily basis.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Update

Just a couple of days ago my Iphone updated.

It took it a really long time to do it.

After that, the battery on the Iphone 6, which I've only had for a couple of months, started running down in a day.  It had really lasted a long time before that.  I was actually thinking that I wondered if they'd update it again soon, to fix whatever they'd done.

Well, today it updated again.

I don't know that they're related.

I do know that I really wish Apple would be more content to just let these things exist in a steady state without monkeying with them all the time.

The United State Declares War on Germany, 1917

The United States declared war on this day against Germany. War commenced at 1:18 pm.

WHEREAS, The Imperial German Government has committed repeated acts of war against the Government and the people of the United States of America; therefore, be it
Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the state of war between the United States and the Imperial German Government, which has thus been thrust upon the United States, is hereby formally declared; and
That the President be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to employ the entire naval and military forces of the United States and the resources of the Government to carry on war against the Imperial German Government; and to bring the conflict to a successful termination all the resources of the country are hereby pledged by the Congress of the United States.

California Naval Militia Mobilized

On this date, in 1917, the California Naval Militia was mobilized.  Sailors of the California Naval Militia were assigned to the USS Oregon, USS San Diego and the USS Huntington.  While moblized, they were not actually Federalized until May 3, 1917, reflecting some of the practices and legal oddities of the time.


More BC News

Yesterday we ran this historical item:
Lex Anteinternet: Women become eligible to vote in Provincial electi...: On this date the results of a referendum held in September, 1916, came into effect and women in British Columbia became legally able to vot...
Here's a current one, from the CBC.  Mixed good and bad news at best:
Allergy sufferers in B.C. will need to brace themselves for tree pollens like oak, birch and pine to start peaking in the next week, according to a Canadian laboratory that tracks airborne allergens by the day.
The province's unusually cold winter and spring have delayed the start of allergy season by more than six weeks, but it is coming. It stands in stark contrast to 2016, when the mild winter led to the allergy season beginning a month early.

The Cheyenne State Leader for April 6, 1917: Duels of Nations and Duels of Indiviuals



The news was all about duels.

The United States had entered the duel with Germany.

Villa was moving in his duel with Carranza.

And a farmer died in a duel with a cowboy near Sheridan.

And the Wyoming National Guard's Second Battalion had been called fully back into service.

The Laramie Boomerang for April 6, 1917: Wilson Signs Measure


Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Evidence that maybe somebody at your local paper isn't too familiar with some aspects of history . . .


Hmmm. . . . if that photo is right Sgt. Bellamy was in the Wehrmacht during World War Two. . . .

Uber comes to Wyoming. . . . and I don't like it.

I started this post a couple of weeks ago.  True to form, it's taken me awhile to get back around to it.  Today the same story hit the cover of the Casper Star Tribune. That story made me all the more miffed about Uber, frankly.

 Cab driver, New York, 1942.

I don't like Uber.

The concept that is.  I have no personal experience with it myself at all.

Uber drivers are, to my way of thinking, up until recently, Gypsy Cabs.

Now, gypsy cabs aren't cabs driven by gypsies, they were illegally operated cabs.

Uber bills itself as a ride facilitating outfit and by and large the concept has been accepted.  It's nonsense.  It's a cab company in which the cabs are owned by the cabbies, who are independent contractors.

Being a cab driver is one of the worst, and most dangerous, jobs in the US. At least at one time being a cab driver in Washington D.C., for example, was the most dangerous job in the United States . . . more dangerous than being an Alaskan commercial fisherman. .. and that's dangerous.

And no wonder.  You pick up people you don't know and take them to a place you didn't know you were going just a few minutes prior.

Think Uber drivers must all be safe dudes and dudettes?  Google the topic "Uber driver murdered" or something like that, and you'll pull up some scary stories.  You'll also pull up at least one website simply listing crimes and accidents of Uber drivers.  And you'll find the tragic stories of Uber drivers who are murdered.

Cab drivers commit crimes and have crimes committed against them as well.  But cabs came to be regulated and controlled everywhere for a reason.  Ride sharing is bunk.  Ubers are simply unregulated cabs.

But, in the "the market must be free" and "technology is always good" atmosphere we live in, Uber and like services are going to keep on keeping on.  To the detriment of cabbies.

And that should give us pause at that.

In some places cab drivers are members of unions. . . and for good reasons. Everywhere they are employees subject to their states workers compensation laws.  In other words, they have benefits in addition to their pay, which isn't large, for their dangerous work.

Uber drivers have their own cars and that's about it, in so far as I'm aware.

Well over a century of progress in labor reversed.

No wonder the blue collar workers in this country feel left out.

But at least its regulated. The drivers have to be licensed as cabbies, the companies have to complay with the law for operating cabs. There are some protections, for the cabbies and the customers.

Now, I suppose with Uber the price may be controlled, as set by Uber, but otherwise it's really a loose sort of deal.  

Well, I'll look forward to the cry "Uber drivers of the world unite. . . you have nothing to loose, not even your tire chains".

Wyoming's most prolific inventor


This is a semi automatic rifle designed by John Pedersen, Wyoming's most prolific inventor.  This rifle competed with others early on for the replacement for the M1903 Springfield. That ultimately went to John Garand's design.

More patents are held by Pedersen than any other Wyomingite.  Born in Grand Island Nebraska, the family moved to Jackson Hole when he was a child and he designed most of his designs from there.  Pedersen continued to use the family ranch as his home base for most of his life, although he traveled extensively and did live in other localities from time to time.  At the time of his death he was living in Massachusetts, near Springfield Armory, and perhaps because he was working for the United States government.

His most famous design, although not his most successful one by any means in terms of manufacture and use, was the Pedersen Device, a device which allowed for the 1903 Springfield to host what was basically a semi automatic action.  Manufactured in numbers during World War One, they were never actually issued and were discarded after the war.  His design for a pump action shotgun, however, lives on today ironically as the Browning BPS.  His Model 51 pistol was manufactured commercially by Remington and was recommended for purchase by the Navy prior to World War One, although it was not officially adopted.  The cartridge design he created following World War One for military trials, the .276 Pedersen, turned out to be far ahead of its time, although the wise intervention of Douglas MacArthur, given budget constrains during the Depression, kept it from being adopted.

While a very successful arms designer, with many important patents to his name, a great deal of his personal story is lost.  He was married and had two children, one of whom was a Marine Corps lieutenant during the Korean War who purchased the famous racehorse Reckless for use in hauling ammunition.  His wife was a published author who wrote on widely varying topics.  The divorced at some point, but it is not known when.  He later remarried late in life to a woman 32 year his junior.

Pedersen would be famous today but for the fact that he was a contemporary of John Browning, the most famous of all American firearms designers.  Browning, for his part, called Pedersen the "greatest firearms designer in the world."

Award Authorization Date for the Purple Heart


April 15, 1917 is the first date for which a serviceman can be awarded the Purple Heart for "Being wounded or killed in any action against an enemy of the United States or as a result of an act of any such enemy or opposing armed forces".

An earlier award of a similar name, and which inspired this medal, was designed and authorized by Washington during the Revolution as the Badge of Military Merit.  It passed into disuse following the Revolution.  Following World War One, however, the medal was revived in 1932, after several years of consideration, and awardable to men who had received the Meritorious Service Citation Certificate, Army Wound Ribbon, or were authorized to wear Wound Chevrons subsequent to April 5, 1917, thereby catching every serviceman who qualified who had served in World War One but sadly omitting men who had been wounded during the Punitive Expedition that had immediately proceeded it.  320,518 medals were awarded for service during World War One.

Douglas MacArthur was the first U.S. serviceman to receive the modern award.

Women become eligible to vote in Provincial elections in British Columbia

 Little Yoho Valley near Field, British Columbia, 1902.  Yes, this photograph has nothing to do with this story, other than that its in British Columbia in the early 20th Century.

On this date the results of a referendum held in September, 1916, came into effect and women in British Columbia became legally able to vote in provincial elections.

In this British Columbia followed the Canadian prairie provinces, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta all of which had already extended the franchise to women the prior year.  It was the fourth Canadian province to take this step.

The extension of voting rights did not extend to all.  First Nations men and women remained ineligible to vote. This mirrored the situation in the United States to some degree, where some Native Americans could vote and others could not, depending upon whether they were regarded as citizens or not. Full citizenship was not extended to all American Indians until 1924.  The full franchise came to First Nations members mid 20th Century.


Suffragettes parading, April 5, 1917


The Douglas Budget for April 5, 1917: Company F In Active Service


The United States was on the eve of war with Germany and Company F was back in Federal service.

The Wyoming Tribune for April 5, 1917: War By Way Mexico

Even this late the impact of the Zimmerman Note was sufficient to create a concern that the Germans could have enticed Mexico into war with the US.


Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Blog Mirror: Brookings Institute: The History of the Filibuster

Interesting reading:
Testimony

The History of the Filibuster

Chairman Schumer, Ranking Member Bennett, and members of the Committee. My name is Sarah Binder. I am a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a professor of political science at George Washington University. I appreciate the opportunity to testify today about the history of the filibuster.
I want to offer three arguments today about that history.
It goes on from there.

On being sick. . . a century (or half century) ago

 
The progress of the 1918 Influenza in chart form.

As those who stop in here know, I've been cross posting some of the daily entries on the 100 Years Ago Today Subreddit.  Because of that some of those entries have a much wider audience than most entries here do and that's been interesting when they generated comments.  Likewise, as starting with the 1916 raid on Columbus New Mexico I've been tracking daily events quite a bit (which is about to end, with the onset of World War One for the US), I've run across items that have sparked ideas for topics, a few of which, in the context of this blog, are actually topical.

Here's one.  What was it like to be sick?

It was serious.

The introduction of penicillin during World War Two, followed by later drugs like amoxicillin, have nearly completely changed our experience of being sick.  This really came home to me in two ways here recently, one being the entry on Loretta Perfectus Walsh and the other being the Cheyenne newspapers on closing public places.

Lets start with Chief Yeoman Walsh.

I noted in my entry on her the following:
A Reddit poster asked, if she died in 1925 of tuberculosis how could she have been a victim of the 1918 Influenza Epidemic.

The state of medicine provides the explanation, and this wasn't uncommon.  Indeed, the same is true for an aunt of my mothers after whom she was named.  She died several years after having the 1918 flu.

Now, if you have the flu, in can be serious.  But a century ago, it was serious.  And this was true for darned near any virus, let alone a virulent one.  There were no antibiotics that were available.  Indeed, there was really no treatment at all.  You simply stayed home in bed while some designated member of the family tried to ease your suffering.  If things were bad enough, you might end up in a hospital, but they had to be very bad indeed, and the treatment you'd receive there would differ but little.


For illnesses, at that time, nearly all treatment was limited to simply trying to lessen your discomfort.  What treatments there were often related to this, or were sometimes helpful and sometimes dangerous folk remedies.  Starving a cold and feeding a fever, for example (or is it the other way around) is nonsense.

Suffering through colds surely isn't uncommon now, some readers might be noting. That's true, but suffering through things that stand a good chance of killing you.  And if they didn't kill you, and usually of course they did not, they often put a strain on your body that set you up for some other sickness later.

 
This was very well known at the time, but it seems almost incredible now.  How could having the flu, or rheumatic fever, kill you from some other ailment, or cause a heart attack a few years later, or the like?
 
Well, it can. And for thousands before World War Two recovery from a serious virus often meant living in a permanently weakened state. And that weakened state, for some, meant an early death.
 
And for some who didn't die young, there were other long lasting impacts in some cases.  High fevers in adults sometimes resulted in permanent mental impairment.  Small Pox meant lifelong scars.  Indeed, to such an extent that you can often view photos of people from a century ago or more and the captions will debate if their face had small pox scars or not, or whether pot marked skin was  their natural complexion.  Noting a condition that was common at that time was apparently just not done, leaving us to wonder.  Measles in adult men sometimes caused sterility.
 
Now, also keep in mind that there were no vaccines for these diseases either.  For minor viruses, like the chicken pox, the approach often taken by parents was to expose children to another child who had it while they were young. Getting it over with was the approach.  For others serious diseases the approach was to desperately try to save the public from exposure.


Scarlet Fever, an extremely serious virus, took the front page along with the onset of World War One in this issue of the Laramie Boomerang.

Its for this reason that we see the extraordinary stories of Mayors closing public places; schools, theaters, and even churches, to avoid spreading serious diseases.  I can't recall this ever occurring in the US during my lifetime and I suspect if a mayor tried that now there'd be serious questions about his authority. But it was very routine at the time.  People reading the early 1917 newspapers that have been posted here can find numerous examples of this occurring in Cheyenne and Laramie, as mayors tried to battle scarlet fever.

And of course then were were social diseases.
 

Ragtime great Scott Joplin who died at age 49, after first being committed due to insanity of syphilis. Insanity and death was the natural, and inevitable, course of the disease.
 
We just read of the tragic example of Scott Joplin.  His is certainly not an isolated example.  Social diseases prior to penicillin were very dangerous.  Not everyone died, but a lot did, and the progression of the diseases was grim in the extreme.  Indeed, for women who fell into prostitution the chances of dying in this grim way were better than not.

In modern times there's likely only disease that fits the pre World War Two pattern, and that disease is AIDS.  A social disease itself, there's been enormous progress in combating it, even though it cannot be, as of yet, cured.  For those old enough to remember when it hit the news some decades ago it was a shocking thing to read of.  In a lot of ways, however, as horrific as it was, it sort of fit a pattern that many diseases prior to World War Two fit into. We don't think of it that way as those prior generations were so acclimated to death by disease.  Being sick before mid 20th Century was, to say the least, a completely different thing that it is now.

Nebraska Senator George W. Norris's speech to the Senate, April 4, 1917.



There are a great many American citizens who feel that we owe it as a duty to humanity to take part in this war. Many instances of cruelty and inhumanity can be found on both sides. Men are often biased in their judgment on account of their sympathy and their interests. To my mind, what we ought to have maintained from the beginning was the strictest neutrality. If we had done this I do not believe we would have been on the verge of war at the present time. We had a right as a nation, if we desired, to cease at any time to be neutral. We had a technical right to respect the English war zone and to disregard the German war zone, but we could not do that and be neutral. I have no quarrel to find with the man who does not desire our country to remain neutral. While many such people are moved by selfish motives and hopes of gain, I have no doubt but that in a great many instances, through what I believe to be a misunderstanding of the real condition, there are many honest, patriotic citizens who think we ought to engage in this war and who are behind the President in his demand that we should declare war against Germany. I think such people err in judgment and to a great extent have been misled as to the real history and the true facts by the almost unanimous demand of the great combination of wealth that has a direct financial interest in our participation in the war. We have loaned many hundreds of millions of dollars to the allies in this controversy. While such action was legal and countenanced by international law, there is no doubt in my mind but the enormous amount of money loaned to the allies in this country has been instrumental in bringing about a public sentiment in favor of our country taking a course that would make every bond worth a hundred cents on the dollar and making the payment of every debt certain and sure. Through this instrumentality and also through the instrumentality of others who have not only made millions out of the war in the manufacture of munitions, etc., and who would expect to make millions more if our country can be drawn into the catastrophe, a large number of the great newspapers and news agencies of the country have been controlled and enlisted in the greatest propaganda that the world has ever known, to manufacture sentiment in favor of war. It is now demanded that the American citizens shall be used as insurance policies to guarantee the safe delivery of munitions of war to belligerent nations. The enormous profits of munition manufacturers, stockbrokers, and bond dealers must be still further increased by our entrance into the war. This has brought us to the present moment, when Congress, urged by the President and backed by the artificial sentiment, is about to declare war and engulf our country in the greatest holocaust that the world has ever known… 

To whom does the war bring prosperity? Not to the soldier who for the munificent compensation of $16 per month shoulders his musket and goes into the trench, there to shed his blood and to die if necessary; not to the broken-hearted widow who waits for the return of the mangled body of her husband; not to the mother who weeps at the death of her brave boy; not to the little children who shiver with cold; not to the babe who suffers from hunger; nor to the millions of mothers and daughters who carry broken hearts to their graves. War brings no prosperity to the great mass of common and patriotic citizens. It increases the cost of living of those who toil and those who already must strain every effort to keep soul and body together. War brings prosperity to the stock gambler on Wall street—to those who are already in possession of more wealth than can be realized or enjoyed. [A Wall Street broker] says if we can not get war, “it is nevertheless good opinion that the preparedness program will compensate in good measure for the loss of the stimulus of actual war.” That is, if we can not get war, let us go as far in that direction as possible. If we can not get war, let us cry for additional ships, additional guns, additional munitions, and everything else that will have a tendency to bring us as near as possible to the verge of war. And if war comes do such men as these shoulder the musket and go into the trenches? 

Their object in having war and in preparing for war is to make money. Human suffering and the sacrifice of human life are necessary, but Wall Street considers only the dollars and cents. The men who do the fighting, the people who make the sacrifices, are the ones who will not be counted in the measure of this great prosperity he depicts. The stock brokers would not, of course, go to war, because the very object they have in bringing on the war is profit, and therefore they must remain in their Wall Street offices in order to share in that great prosperity which they say war will bring. The volunteer officer, even the drafting officer, will not find them. They will be concealed in their palatial offices on Wall Street, sitting behind mahogany desks, covered up with clipped coupons—coupons soiled with the sweat of honest toil, coupons stained with mothers' tears, coupons dyed in the lifeblood of their fellow men. 

We are taking a step today that is fraught with untold danger. We are going into war upon the command of gold. We are going to run the risk of sacrificing millions of our countrymen's lives in order that other countrymen may coin their lifeblood into money. And even if we do not cross the Atlantic and go into the trenches, we are going to pile up a debt that the toiling masses that shall come many generations after us will have to pay. Unborn millions will bend their backs in toil in order to pay for the terrible step we are now about to take. We are about to do the bidding of wealth's terrible mandate. By our act we will make millions of our countrymen suffer, and the consequences of it may well be that millions of our brethren must shed their lifeblood, millions of broken-hearted women must weep, millions of children must suffer with cold, and millions of babes must die from hunger, and all because we want to preserve the commercial right of American citizens to deliver munitions of war to belligerent nations.

Warren G. Harding's April 4, 1917 speech to the Senate.

 Ohio Senator Warren G. Harding's speech to the Senate.

My countrymen, the surpassing war of all times has involved us, and found us utterly unprepared in either a mental or military sense. The Republic must awaken. The people must understand. Our safety lies in full realization the fate of the nation and the safety of the world will be decided on the western battlefront of Europe.

Primarily the American Republic has entered the war in defense of its national rights. If we did not defend we could not hope to endure. Other big issues are involved but the maintained rights and defended honor of a righteous nation includes them all. Cherishing the national rights the fathers fought to establish, and loving freedom and civilization, we should have violated every tradition and sacrificed every inheritance if we had longer held aloof from the armed conflict which is to make the world safe for civilization. More, we are committed to sacrifice in battle in order to make America safe for Americans and establish their security on every lawful mission on the high seas or under the shining sun.

We are testing popular government's capacity for self-defense. We are resolved to liberate the soul of American life and prove ourselves an American people in fact, spirit, and purpose, and consecrate ourselves anew and everlastingly to human freedom and humanity's justice. Realizing our new relationship with the world, we want to make it fit to live in, and with might and fright and ruthlessness and barbarity crushed by the conscience of a real civilization. Ours is a small concern about the kind of government any people may choose, but we do mean to outlaw the nation which violates the sacred compacts of international relationships.

The decision is to be final. If the Russian failure should become the tragic impotency of nations--if Italy should yield to the pressure of military might--if heroic France should be martyred on her flaming altars of liberty and justice and only the soul of heroism remain--if England should starve and her sacrifices and resolute warfare should prove in vain--if all these improbable disasters should attend, even then we should fight on and on, making the world's cause our cause.
A republic worth living in is worth fighting for, and sacrificing for, and dying for. In the fires of this conflict we shall wipe out the disloyalty of those who wear American garb without the faith, and establish a new concord of citizenship and a new devotion, so that we should have made a safe America the home and hope of a people who are truly American in heart and soul.

U.S. Capitol at night, April 4, 1917