Thursday, March 4, 2021

March 4, 1921. Warren G. Harding inaugurated and the World War One Era ends.


On this day in 1921, Warren G. Harding Was inaugurated as President of the United States.

Today In Wyoming's History: March 4:1921  Warren G. Harding inaugurated as President.


Harding inauguration.

He'd serve until August 2, 1923, dying in office, leaving Calvin Coolidge, his Vice President, the President, and arguably a much better one in every way than Harding.  That would be the judgement of history, however.  On this day in 1921 people were looking forward to Harding's presidency and at the time of his death in 1923 he remained a very popular President, proof that popularity during life for politicians doesn't necessary follow them endlessly into history.  Indeed, Harding was so popular at the time of his inauguration that on this day a new county that was formed in New Mexico was named for him.



Unlike most of Woodrow Wilson's term in office we won't be following this one nearly every day, day by day.  Indeed, back in November, 2020, we started wondering when to stop the nearly daily centennial retrospectives.  We were going to do that on January 1, but in thinking about it, it seemed like Harding's nomination was a better cutoff date.  When Harding replaced Woodrow Wilson in the Oval Office an era really was coming to an end.



Indeed, it was decidedly coming to an end.  Harding had campaigned on the promise to return the country to "normalcy", where as Cox intended to continue the late platform of Woodrow Wilson.  The election in November 1920 offered a choice between the World War One internationalism and idealism that Wilson espoused after the United States entered the Great War in April 1917 and turning back into ourselves, and the business of ourselves,.  The nation had tired of the big stage role thrust upon it by the war and opted to turn its back on all of that.  The 1920s were not yet roaring in the sense that they soon would be, but the focus on ourselves, and on the business of the nation being business, in every sense, was very much in being.


Harding, whose normalcy speech propelled him into the position of front runner in the GOP race in 1920, on this occasion, delivered the following address:
My Countrymen: 
When one surveys the world about him after the great storm, noting the marks of destruction and yet rejoicing in the ruggedness of the things which withstood it, if he is an American he breathes the clarified atmosphere with a strange mingling of regret and new hope. We have seen a world passion spend its fury, but we contemplate our Republic unshaken, and hold our civilization secure. Liberty--liberty within the law--and civilization are inseparable, and though both were threatened we find them now secure; and there comes to Americans the profound assurance that our representative government is the highest expression and surest guaranty of both. 
Standing in this presence, mindful of the solemnity of this occasion, feeling the emotions which no one may know until he senses the great weight of responsibility for himself, I must utter my belief in the divine inspiration of the founding fathers. Surely there must have been God's intent in the making of this new-world Republic. Ours is an organic law which had but one ambiguity, and we saw that effaced in a baptism of sacrifice and blood, with union maintained, the Nation supreme, and its concord inspiring. We have seen the world rivet its hopeful gaze on the great truths on which the founders wrought. We have seen civil, human, and religious liberty verified and glorified. In the beginning the Old World scoffed at our experiment; today our foundations of political and social belief stand unshaken, a precious inheritance to ourselves, an inspiring example of freedom and civilization to all mankind. Let us express renewed and strengthened devotion, in grateful reverence for the immortal beginning, and utter our confidence in the supreme fulfillment. 
The recorded progress of our Republic, materially and spiritually, in itself proves the wisdom of the inherited policy of noninvolvement in Old World affairs. Confident of our ability to work out our own destiny, and jealously guarding our right to do so, we seek no part in directing the destinies of the Old World. We do not mean to be entangled. We will accept no responsibility except as our own conscience and judgment, in each instance, may determine.  
Our eyes never will be blind to a developing menace, our ears never deaf to the call of civilization. We recognize the new order in the world, with the closer contacts which progress has wrought. We sense the call of the human heart for fellowship, fraternity, and cooperation. We crave friendship and harbor no hate. But America, our America, the America builded on the foundation laid by the inspired fathers, can be a party to no permanent military alliance. It can enter into no political commitments, nor assume any economic obligations which will subject our decisions to any other than our own authority. 
I am sure our own people will not misunderstand, nor will the world misconstrue. We have no thought to impede the paths to closer relationship. We wish to promote understanding. We want to do our part in making offensive warfare so hateful that Governments and peoples who resort to it must prove the righteousness of their cause or stand as outlaws before the bar of civilization.  
We are ready to associate ourselves with the nations of the world, great and small, for conference, for counsel; to seek the expressed views of world opinion; to recommend a way to approximate disarmament and relieve the crushing burdens of military and naval establishments. We elect to participate in suggesting plans for mediation, conciliation, and arbitration, and would gladly join in that expressed conscience of progress, which seeks to clarify and write the laws of international relationship, and establish a world court for the disposition of such justiciable questions as nations are agreed to submit thereto. In expressing aspirations, in seeking practical plans, in translating humanity's new concept of righteousness and justice and its hatred of war into recommended action we are ready most heartily to unite, but every commitment must be made in the exercise of our national sovereignty. Since freedom impelled, and independence inspired, and nationality exalted, a world super government is contrary to everything we cherish and can have no sanction by our Republic. This is not selfishness, it is sanctity. It is not aloofness, it is security. It is not suspicion of others, it is patriotic adherence to the things which made us what we are. 
Today, better than ever before, we know the aspirations of humankind, and share them. We have come to a new realization of our place in the world and a new appraisal of our Nation by the world. The unselfishness of these United States is a thing proven; our devotion to peace for ourselves and for the world is well established; our concern for preserved civilization has had its impassioned and heroic expression. There was no American failure to resist the attempted reversion of civilization; there will be no failure today or tomorrow. 
The success of our popular government rests wholly upon the correct interpretation of the deliberate, intelligent, dependable popular will of America. In a deliberate questioning of a suggested change of national policy, where internationality was to supersede nationality, we turned to a referendum, to the American people. There was ample discussion, and there is a public mandate in manifest understanding. 
America is ready to encourage, eager to initiate, anxious to participate in any seemly program likely to lessen the probability of war, and promote that brotherhood of mankind which must be God's highest conception of human relationship. Because we cherish ideals of justice and peace, because we appraise international comity and helpful relationship no less highly than any people of the world, we aspire to a high place in the moral leadership of civilization, and we hold a maintained America, the proven Republic, the unshaken temple of representative democracy, to be not only an inspiration and example, but the highest agency of strengthening good will and promoting accord on both continents. 
Mankind needs a world-wide benediction of understanding. It is needed among individuals, among peoples, among governments, and it will inaugurate an era of good feeling to make the birth of a new order. In such understanding men will strive confidently for the promotion of their better relationships and nations will promote the comities so essential to peace.  
We must understand that ties of trade bind nations in closest intimacy, and none may receive except as he gives. We have not strengthened ours in accordance with our resources or our genius, notably on our own continent, where a galaxy of Republics reflects the glory of new-world democracy, but in the new order of finance and trade we mean to promote enlarged activities and seek expanded confidence.  
Perhaps we can make no more helpful contribution by example than prove a Republic's capacity to emerge from the wreckage of war. While the world's embittered travail did not leave us devastated lands nor desolated cities, left no gaping wounds, no breast with hate, it did involve us in the delirium of expenditure, in expanded currency and credits, in unbalanced industry, in unspeakable waste, and disturbed relationships. While it uncovered our portion of hateful selfishness at home, it also revealed the heart of America as sound and fearless, and beating in confidence unfailing.  
Amid it all we have riveted the gaze of all civilization to the unselfishness and the righteousness of representative democracy, where our freedom never has made offensive warfare, never has sought territorial aggrandizement through force, never has turned to the arbitrament of arms until reason has been exhausted. When the Governments of the earth shall have established a freedom like our own and shall have sanctioned the pursuit of peace as we have practiced it, I believe the last sorrow and the final sacrifice of international warfare will have been written. 
Let me speak to the maimed and wounded soldiers who are present today, and through them convey to their comrades the gratitude of the Republic for their sacrifices in its defense. A generous country will never forget the services you rendered, and you may hope for a policy under Government that will relieve any maimed successors from taking your places on another such occasion as this.  
Our supreme task is the resumption of our onward, normal way. Reconstruction, readjustment, restoration all these must follow. I would like to hasten them. If it will lighten the spirit and add to the resolution with which we take up the task, let me repeat for our Nation, we shall give no people just cause to make war upon us; we hold no national prejudices; we entertain no spirit of revenge; we do not hate; we do not covet; we dream of no conquest, nor boast of armed prowess. 
If, despite this attitude, war is again forced upon us, I earnestly hope a way may be found which will unify our individual and collective strength and consecrate all America, materially and spiritually, body and soul, to national defense. I can vision the ideal republic, where everyman and woman is called under the flag for assignment to duty for whatever service, military or civic, the individual is best fitted; where we may call to universal service every plant, agency, or facility, all in the sublime sacrifice for country, and not one penny of war profit shall inure to the benefit of private individual, corporation, or combination, but all above the normal shall flow into the defense chest of the Nation. There is something inherently wrong, something out of accord with the ideals of representative democracy, when one portion of our citizenship turns its activities to private gain amid defensive war while another is fighting, sacrificing, or dying for national preservation.  
Out of such universal service will come a new unity of spirit and purpose, a new confidence and consecration, which would make our defense impregnable, our triumph assured. Then we should have little or no disorganization of our economic, industrial, and commercial systems at home, no staggering war debts, no swollen fortunes to flout the sacrifices of our soldiers, no excuse for sedition, no pitiable slackerism, no outrage of treason. Envy and jealousy would have no soil for their menacing development, and revolution would be without the passion which engenders it. 
A regret for the mistakes of yesterday must not, however, blind us to the tasks of today. War never left such an aftermath. There has been staggering loss of life and measureless wastage of materials. Nations are still groping for return to stable ways. Discouraging indebtedness confronts us like all the war-torn nations, and these obligations must be provided for. No civilization can survive repudiation.  
We can reduce the abnormal expenditures, and we will. We can strike at war taxation, and we must. We must face the grim necessity, with full knowledge that the task is to be solved, and we must proceed with a full realization that no statute enacted by man can repeal the inexorable laws of nature. Our most dangerous tendency is to expect too much of government, and at the same time do for it too little. We contemplate the immediate ask of putting our public household in order. We need a rigid and yet sane economy, combined with fiscal justice, and it must be attended by individual prudence and thrift, which are so essential to this trying hour and reassuring for the future.  
The business world reflects the disturbance of war's reaction. Herein flows the lifeblood of material existence. The economic mechanism is intricate and its parts interdependent, and has suffered the shocks and jars incident to abnormal demands, credit inflations, and price upheavals. The normal balances have been impaired, the channels of distribution have been clogged, the relations of labor and management have been strained. We must seek the readjustment with care and courage. Our people must give and take. Prices must reflect the receding fever of war activities. Perhaps we never shall know the old levels of wages again, because war invariably readjusts compensations, and the necessaries of life will show their inseparable relationship, but we must strive for normalcy to reach stability. All the penalties will not be light, nor evenly distributed. There is no way of making them so. There is no instant step from disorder to order. We must face a condition of grim reality, charge off our losses and start afresh. It is the oldest lesson of civilization. I would like government to do all it can to mitigate; then, in understanding, in mutuality of interest, in concern for the common good, our tasks will be solved. No altered system will work a miracle. Any wild experiment will only add to the confusion. Our best assurance lies in efficient administration of our proven system.  
The forward course of the business cycle is unmistakable. Peoples are turning from destruction to production. Industry has sensed the changed order and our own people are turning to resume their normal, onward way. The call is for productive America to go on. I know that Congress and the Administration will favor every wise Government policy to aid the resumption and encourage continued progress.  
I speak for administrative efficiency, for lightened tax burdens, for sound commercial practices, for adequate credit facilities, for sympathetic concern for all agricultural problems, for the omission of unnecessary interference of Government with business, for an end to Government's experiment in business, and for more efficient business in Government administration. With all of this must attend a mindfulness of the human side of all activities, so that social, industrial, and economic justice will be squared with the purposes of a righteous people.  
With the nation-wide induction of womanhood into our political life, we may count upon her intuitions, her refinements, her intelligence, and her influence to exalt the social order. We count upon her exercise of the full privileges and the performance of the duties of citizenship to speed the attainment of the highest state.  
I wish for an America no less alert in guarding against dangers from within than it is watchful against enemies from without. Our fundamental law recognizes no class, no group, no section; there must be none in legislation or administration. The supreme inspiration is the common weal. Humanity hungers for international peace, and we crave it with all mankind. My most reverent prayer for America is for industrial peace, with its rewards, widely and generally distributed, amid the inspirations of equal opportunity. No one justly may deny the equality of opportunity which made us what we are. We have mistaken unpreparedness to embrace it to be a challenge of the reality, and due concern for making all citizens fit for participation will give added strength of citizenship and magnify our achievement. 
If revolution insists upon overturning established order, let other peoples make the tragic experiment. There is no place for it in America. When World War threatened civilization we pledged our resources and our lives to its preservation, and when revolution threatens we unfurl the flag of law and order and renew our consecration. Ours is a constitutional freedom where the popular will is the law supreme and minorities are sacredly protected. Our revisions, reformations, and evolutions reflect a deliberate judgment and an orderly progress, and we mean to cure our ills, but never destroy or permit destruction by force. 
I had rather submit our industrial controversies to the conference table in advance than to a settlement table after conflict and suffering. The earth is thirsting for the cup of good will, understanding is its fountain source. I would like to acclaim an era of good feeling amid dependable prosperity and all the blessings which attend.  
It has been proved again and again that we cannot, while throwing our markets open to the world, maintain American standards of living and opportunity, and hold our industrial eminence in such unequal competition. There is a luring fallacy in the theory of banished barriers of trade, but preserved American standards require our higher production costs to be reflected in our tariffs on imports. Today, as never before, when peoples are seeking trade restoration and expansion, we must adjust our tariffs to the new order. We seek participation in the world's exchanges, because therein lies our way to widened influence and the triumphs of peace. We know full well we cannot sell where we do not buy, and we cannot sell successfully where we do not carry. Opportunity is calling not alone for the restoration, but for a new era in production, transportation and trade. We shall answer it best by meeting the demand of a surpassing home market, by promoting self- reliance in production, and by bidding enterprise, genius, and efficiency to carry our cargoes in American bottoms to the marts of the world.  
We would not have an America living within and for herself alone, but we would have her self-reliant, independent, and ever nobler, stronger, and richer. Believing in our higher standards, reared through constitutional liberty and maintained opportunity, we invite the world to the same heights. But pride in things wrought is no reflex of a completed task. Common welfare is the goal of our national endeavor. Wealth is not inimical to welfare; it ought to be its friendliest agency. There never can be equality of rewards or possessions so long as the human plan contains varied talents and differing degrees of industry and thrift, but ours ought to be a country free from the great blotches of distressed poverty. We ought to find a way to guard against the perils and penalties of unemployment. We want an America of homes, illumined with hope and happiness, where mothers, freed from the necessity for long hours of toil beyond their own doors, may preside as befits the hearthstone of American citizenship. We want the cradle of American childhood rocked under conditions so wholesome and so hopeful that no blight may touch it in its development, and we want to provide that no selfish interest, no material necessity, no lack of opportunity shall prevent the gaining of that education so essential to best citizenship. 
There is no short cut to the making of these ideals into glad realities. The world has witnessed again and again the futility and the mischief of ill-considered remedies for social and economic disorders. But we are mindful today as never before of the friction of modern industrialism, and we must learn its causes and reduce its evil consequences by sober and tested methods. Where genius has made for great possibilities, justice and happiness must be reflected in a greater common welfare.  
Service is the supreme commitment of life. I would rejoice to acclaim the era of the Golden Rule and crown it with the autocracy of service. I pledge an administration wherein all the agencies of Government are called to serve, and ever promote an understanding of Government purely as an expression of the popular will.  
One cannot stand in this presence and be unmindful of the tremendous responsibility. The world upheaval has added heavily to our tasks. But with the realization comes the surge of high resolve, and there is reassurance in belief in the God-given destiny of our Republic. If I felt that there is to be sole responsibility in the Executive for the America of tomorrow I should shrink from the burden. But here are a hundred millions, with common concern and shared responsibility, answerable to God and country. The Republic summons them to their duty, and I invite co-operation.  
I accept my part with single-mindedness of purpose and humility of spirit, and implore the favor and guidance of God in His Heaven. With these I am unafraid, and confidently face the future.  
I have taken the solemn oath of office on that passage of Holy Writ wherein it is asked: "What doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" This I plight to God and country. 
As can be seen, while it was a lengthy address, Harding was turning his back on the concerns that had lead the country into World War One as the nation itself turned its back on the recent tremendous sacrifice to the extent that sacrificing further was being called on to preserve the unsteady peach the war had brought about.   Thick with references to the Devine, the real message was that we'd just stick to ourselves.  A latter day reader of the address, knowing what came later, can't help gut feel that this was the cementing of the path that would lead, in part, to World War Two and, moreover, the irony of a man citing religious references to strongly who would soon be boinking a  young woman in a White House closet can't be missed.

Some lessons for today remain a century later ago which we'd be remiss in not pointing out.  Woodrow Wilson was a man with deep personal faults.  He was, for example, a racist.  Be that as it may, however, for historical purposes his deepest fault may have been that he mistook words for action.  Harding didn't have that fault, but it cannot be claimed that he achieved much.  His singular claim to fame may have been in causing the United States to turn its back on the world while he turned his front to his second mistress.

A century later, Barack Obama, who lacked Wilson's personal faults, shared his fault of mistaking words for action.  He can't, however, otherwise be compared too much with Wilson, other than that they were both some species of Democratic Progressive.  Obama was followed by Donald Trump whose shared some of Harding's private and personal interest pretty distinctly, and politically to some extent there exists a resemblance as well. Having said that, Harding would not have played the autocrat the way that Trump did.  Still, Harding was old in the context of his times and didn't last long in office.  There may be a lesson there for a nation that keeps running elderly candidates for office.

The focus of this blog changed from what it originally was, and we've very much strayed from it in general, and no doubt will continue to.  The about information of this blog declares:
This blog has been around since 2009. In the very first post, we asked the question: "What the heck is this blog about?"

Our answer to the question was: "The intent of this blog is to try to explore and learn a few things about the practice of law prior to the current era. That is, prior to the internet, prior to easy roads, and the like. How did it work, how regional was it, how did lawyers perceive their roles, and how were they perceived?"

We also noted: "Part of the reason for this, quite frankly, has something to do with minor research for a very slow moving book."

All of this is still true, but the focus of the blog has changed somewhat. It now focuses on the era from 1890 to 1920 in general, rather than on the law and lawyers specifically, although that may be far from obvious. It's also become the location where we comment on anything we feel moved to comment on.

As noted, this blog has been around since 2009 and it started off as a research platform for a still unwritten novel.  Another project, Today In Wyoming's History, became a book due to the invitation of a publisher. That book is still in print and I'm a bit proud to say that it's been picked up as a required text in a community college in the state.  I was actually contractually obligated to write a second book for the same company, but the day to day pressures of work and life kept me from getting too far on that work, and I'm still very far off on the novel, although I have written on it.  Sadly, some of it was lost in the fall of 2020 due to a major computer melt down.


What I've learned in all of that is that I'm not very good at imposing deadlines on myself.  I could have finished the novel by now, I simply haven't. And I could have finished the other work of history, but simply haven't.  I've written, however, what would be full length essays on other things here on a weekly basis.  I'm a really fast writer and typist and I love writing.  Indeed, while doing this I've written an innumerable number of legal briefs and writings in one of my two occupations.  But getting to the novel and the historical work have proven very tough for me for some reason.  Chances are better than not that I'll finish neither.

Which doesn't mean that I won't keep them in site.  

Indeed, one thing this blog has served to do, given the numerous side trips it has taken, and no doubt will continue to do, has been to serve as a writing outlet.  At the time this will go up I'll be in eyesight of 58  years of age and I have found that I have indeed become afflicted with the old professional's ailment that I now have a hard time not imagining ever doing something other than what I'm doing, and I have a hard time not doing it. At the moment that I started typing this out, November 28, 2020, I was on the Saturday of a four day Thanksgiving weekend and have actually found, in my old age, that I'm a bit lost without my work.  I normally work six days out of seven and I'm not so used to it that I miss it, in spite of myself.  I've become what I promised I'd never be, one of those old lawyers who is at the stage where they're likely to keep practicing law as they've become what their occupation.

This blog, however, has helped me from becoming fully that.  And that is in fact not a good thing to fully become.   Indeed, as I'd probably have to retire in order to finish the books that I hope to write, that may mean that I'll do it at some point in the distant future. . . well not so distant as at my age I'll turn around and suddenly be 67 rather than my current 57.

Anyhow, I don't want this blog to simply become the "100 Years Ago Today" blog.  There's a reddit for that, and while it doesn't explore that in depth, somebody else can. And indeed, there's some blogs that do just that, including the acerbic Whatever It Is I'm Against It blog.

The focus here, therefore, will remain on what stated above.  1890 to 1920. And we're taking the position that 1920 ended on March 4, 1921, as odd as that may seem.  

But it did.

We'll explain why in a moment, but before we do, what's that mean for this blog? Well it means that you won't normally find a date entry above with photographs and newspapers from a century ago.  If we kept doing that, we'd be straying from our focus.

We started doing that with with our day by day. . .and even hour by hour, centennial observances of Poncho Villa's raid on Columbus, New Mexico.  Before the centennial of that event we never had any concept of routinely marking events of a century ago. But as this blog was an intentional effort to research events, people, times and daily living for a novel which is centered on the Punitive Expedition, doing that made sense.  

It also made sense, after that, to follow the entire Punitive Expedition on the same basis,  We were learning a lot.  And one thing we learned is that the Border War Era very much flowed into the Great War.

Indeed, in retrospective what we wished we would have done was to commence the day by say entries with the June 28, 1914 assassination of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, although that would have given a deceptive focus to our entries.  Be that as it may, it didn't make sense to stop with the withdrawal of American troops from Mexico in February 1917, as the American entry into World War One was just weeks away and well in progress at the time.  So we kept on and went through the entire war . . sort of.  One thing that became evident in doing that is that the war itself didn't really end in November 1918, like so often portrayed.  It just spilled over into other regions and fights.

It was partly for that reason that once the war ended our daily entries didn't. There was the effort at the peace, the shaky German situation, the civil war in Russia, the outbreak of the Anglo Irish War.  It just couldn't really be conveniently broken off.

At least not until this date.

Of course, all history simply flows into itself, one day into another, and there really isn't a wall that is suddenly hit and new era begun.  But there are certain moments and dates that are defining.

When Woodrow Wilson became the second . . or maybe third, "progressive" President of the United States, the US was still very much in a different era than it was eight years later in 1920.  1920 was the ending year of an era, and 1920 ended in 1921.  At that point, the nation quit looking back, really, at the Great War, and quit looking back to the Progressive Era. The new focus was to be on a return to normalcy and by that a focus on business.  

The Roaring Twenties had just begun.

Other things, of course, happened on this day other than Harding's inauguration.  

Congress approved the creation of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.  

Troops from Coast Rica took a Panamanian town in a border dispute that had grown into a war between the two Central American nations.

March 4, 1971. La tempête du siècle

 A blizzard of epic proportions struck eastern Canada, leaving over a  1.5 feet of snow in some locations.


More on the storm:


A D21 drone attempting to spy on Chinese nuclear test sights crashed, the third such failure for the D21

Lockheed D21.

Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau married Margaret Sinclair.  He was 51 years old, she was thirty years younger.

March 4, 1941. Lighting the fish oil. Operation Claymore

On this day in 1941, the British raided the Norwegian Lofoten Islands in a uniformly successful operation, taking over 200 German prisoners, suffering only one (self inflicted accidental) casualty, and destroying stocks of fish oil, which is actually more important for a variety of reasons than might be imagined.

British commandos watching fish oil burning, which is probably horribly stenchy.

Canada ordered the registration of Japanese Canadians who had obtained age 16.

More on both of these items can be found here.




Wyoming Music. Johnny Cash - Wanted Man - Live at San Quentin


Johnny Cash's Wanted Man, which has also been effectively covered by Bob Dylan, mentions Cheyenne in the lyrics, so we're doing a second Cheyenne reference song in two days.

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

March 3, 1921. Evolutions and Changes


As France was mustering on its border with Weimar's Ruhr, the United States took a further step towards "normalcy" by repealing almost all wartime statutory measures, including the now infamous sedition act of the period.  The US Congress had made it clear that it had no intention of participating with the Allies to try to enforce the economic, and other, provisions of the Versailles Treaty and the reparations provisions were rapidly reaching a crisis stage.

First load of Harding furniture arrives at the White House.

Harding arriving at station.

The SS Hong Moh sank with the loss of 900 passengers.

Poland and Romania entered into a mutual defense treaty aimed at the USSR.  It had a term of five  years, but would be followed by successor treaties.  Of course, when war ultimately came less than twenty years later, Romania would end up siding with Germany, but not initially.  Poland declined Romanian assistance, which would have been problematic as Poland was attacked by both Germany and the USSR, but did expect to receive aid through Romania from the British.  As the war quickly went back retreating Polish units did cross into Romania to be interred.

Crown Prince Hirohito left aboard a Japanese navy vessel to visit Europe, the first member of the Japanese royal family to leave to visit foreign nations in sixteen centuries.  At the time he was also technically a serving officer in both the Japanese Army and Navy.

Departing President Wilson announced that he and Bainbridge Colby, his former Secretary of State, would open a law practice together, following Wilson's departure from office.

At the time there were no pensions for former Presidents. They were on their own economically. This had proven a problem to the following Presidents in the past, particularly in the case of U. S. Grant and Theodore Roosevelt, both of whom were still relatively young when they left office and both of whom retained significant followings as former Presidents.  It was also a problem, of course, as they needed to make a living.

Wilson's thought of reentering the practice of law after having quit it 35 years prior as he didn't like doing it, was really poorly thought out.  He didn't like it any more the second time and didn't last long as a practicing lawyer.  Colby, however, would practice until his death in 1950.

Bainbridge Colby.

March 3, 1941. Deepenings

The Germans started sealing off Krakow to establish a Jewish concentrated ghetto there.

More on the evil of Germany in Poland can be read about here:

Today in World War II History—March 3, 1941

Mars Candy received the patent for M&Ms on this day in 1941.  They were based on a British candy called Smarties which Frank C. Mars, the owner of the company, had observed soldiers eating during the  Spanish Civil War.  The first customer was the U.S. government which purchased them for servicemen serving overseas as they wouldn't melt.

On the same day, Winston Churchill urged FDR to ignore the growing caloric crisis in France.

Churchill – ‘Don’t feed the French’

Turkey had second thoughts about its non aggression pack with Bulgaria and cancelled it after only one week of existence.  The U.S. froze Bulgarian assets in the country.

Guardsmen from Pine City, Minnesota, departed for Federalized service.

Other events in World War Two from this day:

Day 550 March 3, 1941

Wyoming Music and Mid Week At Work: Lights of Cheyenne


This song is, to put it bluntly, grim, but it captures a real slice of Wyoming.  It's nearly the flipside of Crossland's Bosler.

The characters in this song are so familiar to me from legal work that it isn't funny.  It's accordingly hard to believe that McMurtry, the son of the famous novelist, isn't a Wyomingite.  The central placement of the Interstate Highway (Cheyenne is at the junction of two of them), the truck stop as a place of employment, the line about antelope, are all right on.  Even the the surprising line at the end that reveals the protagonists feelings about Cheyenne are something that you'd expect from a native.

I recently sent a link to this performance to a friend from back East who was somewhat mystified by the lyrics, including the one "She's got a cowboy problem".  This again, shows how accurate this song is, as that lyric makes perfect sense to a local.

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Gov. Mark Gordon's State of the State Address, Chief Justice Justice Michael K. Davis State of Judiciary.

So, circling back to our focus, timewise, in 1916, when troops were being called up and deployed for the Punitive Expedition (was Lex Anteinternet: The Military and Alcohol. U.S. Army Beer 1943-1946). . .

what was the situation?
The law of the Officer's Club at Ft. Meyer, VA, being mowed by a mule drawn lawn mower.  This photo dates from early in the 20th Century at which time Congress had technically made the sale of alcohol illegal on Army bases, but at which point the Army chose to define beer and wine as not being excluded.

This follows from this post here:
Lex Anteinternet: The Military and Alcohol. U.S. Army Beer 1943-1946: Patrons of a bar and grill in Washington D.C. in 1943.  The man on the left is drinking a glass of beer, and it appears the woman is as well...
Let me explain.

In 1982 when I was stationed as a recruit at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma, there came a time when us boots could go to the 1-2-3 Club, a sort of combination cheap fast food/beer/high school hangout, type club.  It wasn't great, but if you had nowhere else to go, and we had nowhere else to go, it was okay*.  

The 1-2-3 Club had 3.2% beer, which I guess actually no longer is brewed by anyone, save perhaps by Guinness, as draft Guinness is only 3%.  Nobody brews it in the context of its earlier days, in which it was brewed in order to comply with certain laws. It's history goes back to 1933 as Prohibition was being repealed.  Prohibition never completely dried up the supply of legal alcohol, contrary to what people imagine it did.  Alcohol remained legal for "medicinal" purposes and extremely low alcohol beer, i.e., "Near Beer" was legal.  In 1933, prior to Prohibition being officially repealed, the legal alcohol limit for beer was increased up to 3.2%.  

Following the end of Prohibition, some states restricted beer sales based on the 3.2% amount, and Oklahoma was one of them.  Generally, if you were below a certain age you could buy 3.2%.  You couldn't buy beer with a higher alcohol content than that.  This was, of course before "Light Beer", which generally has around 4% ABV.  Coors, which is pretty light to start with, introduced Light Beer prior to World War Two, far earlier than many people might suppose, and relaunched it in 1978.  Millers Lite actually came out in 1967, prior to the Coors relaunch, but as Gablingers Diet Beer, a market name doomed to failure. The recipe was later sold to Millers.

I never really did grasp why Coors would market light beer.  Coors is pretty light to start with and there were already all those 3.2% beers around.  Oh well, my view obviously isn't the clever marketing one, as light beers became a pretty big deal.

Anyhow, in 1982 you could buy 3.2% beer at the 1-2-3 Club on Ft. Sill, or 3.2% beer downtown in Lawton, Oklahoma.  Obviously, Ft. Sill also had a NCO Club, or clubs, and an Officer's Club, or clubs.

Camp Guernsey had a NCO Club and an Officers Club as well.  Camp Humphreys, Korea had them as well and I had a nice bulgogi there for lunch while there.

I guess this is somewhat of a thing of the past now, to my surprise.  The Army has completely done away with Officers Clubs and now there are unitized clubs.  Privates can go to the same club that officers can, although 1-2-3 Clubs remain.  Without knowing for sure, I suspect that not only is the culture of such clubs now radically different, but probably a lot of more senior officers and NCOs rarely show up at the club.  This is part of the current culture in which we do not wish to recognize any differences at all in the social status of anyone, but frankly, I think this likely a mistake, although one reflecting the current military culture.   The current military is small compared to the giant Cold War Army that followed the giant World War Two Army, and its much more selective than its been at any prior point in history.  There are certainly problems in the current U.S. military, to be sure, but one current feature of it is that the up and out and selective nature of it means that the guys were sort of fit the definition of a "working man" that were sung about by Tennessee Ernie Ford aren't really in the service anymore.  That may have some negative aspects to it as well, but its a fact.  Anyhow, given the current make up of the currently fairly small army, the traditional separation in all things between enlisted men and officers has been much reduced and the clubs are gone.

So what was the situation in 1916?

Starting in 1890, about the time that the temperance movement was really gaining cultural steam, the Army banned the sale of hard alcohol at military posts that were located in areas that had Prohibition. So, for example, if you were stationed in a county that was dry, the Army post was as well, sort of.  The Army barred the sale only of hard alcohol, so beer and wine was still sold and you could still consume them at the post canteen.

In 1901, however, Congress entered the picture with the Canteen Act of 1901 which prohibited the sale of any intoxicating beverage including beer and wine.  This was pretty clearly intended to make all alcoholic beverages a thing of the past on post, but in practice the Army simply chose to define "intoxicating" beverages to mean those having a pretty stout alcohol content.  So, once again, no Kentucky bourbon on post, but beer was probably okay.  

This continued to be the practice up  until May 18, 1917, when the Selective Service Act stretched the military prohibition beyond the base to include a five mile alcohol exclusion zone and, moreover, it was made a crime to sell alcohol to a uniformed soldier anywhere.  Congress, recalling the end run the Army did with the 1901 act, defined "intoxicating" to be anything containing 1.4% alcohol or more, a very low threshold.

To complete the story, when Prohibition ended the 1901 statute remained in effect and the Army, at this point, continued to enforce the 1.4% limit.  Halfway through the Second World War, however, the Army changed this allowed 3.2%, the figure that had been created earlier when Prohibition was lifted.  This standard remained in place until 1953 when a legal ruling determined that the entire Canteen Act of 1901 had been repealed by the 1951 amendments to the Universal Military Training and Selective Service Act.

So, going back to our query about 1916, in 1916 a soldier stationed almost anywhere in the U.S. was probably able to buy beer at the post canteen.  Beyond the post fence, there would have undoubtedly been saloons catering to soldiers that sold everything.  The scene of a night of leave in 1941 Honolulu depicted in From Here To Eternity in that regard was likely pretty accurate on occasion.  And at that point, in some of the US, the "saloon trade" was unrestricted.  Having said that, in some locations Prohibition had already come in.

Footnotes

*There were other places to go, to be sure. Ft. Sill had a swimming pool open to privates, but I never went there.  The one time I had on base free time when we could have gone, I had a horrible case of progressing pneumonia and no interest in going to a pool.

I did once go to the library, as odd as that may seem, simply because I was sort of tired of the intellectual quality of my stay at Ft. Sill and because I hoped it to be quiet.  It was quiet, and very nice.  I looked like a fish out of water there, however, and I simultaneously froze and fell asleep there.  The freezing due to my having acclimated to the 100F+ Oklahoma summers and the sleep due to simply being exhausted. 

March 2, 1941. Fateful decisions.

German troops reached the Greek border.


Germany and Greece were not yet at war but their purpose was of course plain to all who might be observing them, although because of how they got there, it was less plain than might be supposed.  Also less plain was that the Germans had now diverted troops for a second time to bail Italy out of a failed military campaign.

In order to reach this point, the Germans had to cross Bulgaria, which effectively meant that Bulgaria was entering the war as an Axis belligerent. The calculation of such a decision on Bulgaria's part has to be wondered about.  Bulgaria had already enacted legislation reminiscent of Nazi Germany's regarding its Jewish population, so it was already somewhat in the Nazi sphere.  A large concern, however, was that Germany would invade Bulgaria, which it likely would have, had it not determined to throw in with Germany.

This is also noted here:

Today in World War II History—March 2, 1941

Free French troops in Kufra took an oath to keep fighting until their country was completely liberated.

On the same day, Turkey closed the Dardanelles.  Chile held election and saw the Radical Party, an anti clerical radical party with strong connections to Freemasonry take the most seats.  Once a strong party, it merged with the Chilean Social Democratic Party, which became the Social Democratic Radical Party, in 1994. 

March 2, 1921. Doomed rebellions and protomonarchies.

Anti Bolshevik sailors took the Kronstandt fortress, on an island, but accessible from the mainland in February due to frozen ice.

Striking miners in the Italian occupied Croatian city of Labin declared a communist republic for the town.  The rebellion is regarded as the first anti fascist rebellion in the world, but the reason for it being so regarded really isn't clear.  The city was under Italian governance at the time, but while fascism was rising in Italy, it had not yet come into control of the Italian monarchy.  The rebellion would last until April 8 when the Italian government put it down.


Abdullah I bin Al-Hussein relocated to Amman in anticipation of ruling the Emirate of Transjordan

Wyoming Music: Jalan Crossland - Bosler


Jalan Crossland is a local artist whom a lot of people follow.  Bosler is a small town north of Laramie, or at least it was.

When I was an undergraduate at the University of Wyoming a few people still lived there, and a second hand appliance store did a pretty good business with students.  By law school that was already changing, although somebody had taken up residence in the old, probably 1920s vintage, school that was there, having converted it pretty clear to coal fired heat. 

Now it's really past even that state of decline.  I'm not sure if anyone lives there any longer, although my guess is that the answer is probably yes.  

Bosler once figured fairly significantly as an Albany County town. In the early 20th Century it was a going concern, and also nearly lawless.

Crossland, in this song, works in multiple layers of satire.  The town is satirized, but so is the person who dreams of it as a refuge.  Urbanites dreaming of Wyoming that way are not uncommon, and indeed land just outside of the windswept Bosler was marketed to out of states at one time who no doubt didn't realize that its 7,000 feet in elevation, exposed to the wind, and cold in the winter.