Tag Archives: Great Depression

A “New Deal” Driving Tour

Sometimes as you travel around you like to have a theme to guide, or at least punctuate, your wandering. Churches – town halls – parks. How many can you spot? What can you learn about them?
“New Deal” construction, designed to put the unemployed to work during the Great Depression, was vital not just to turning the tide in the 1930s, but to boosting the economic boom of the 1950s. You may pass some of these every day, but not realize that they ARE from the New Deal. So here’s a little local cheat sheet.
School construction boomed in those years. We are still using New Deal schools in Avoca, Arkport, Dryden, Ovid, Interlaken, Canisteo, and Troupsburg, not to mention the Cuba, Jasper and Prattsburgh schools, which all got major expansions or renovations. Cohocton school has an octagonal tower, hinting at Cohocton’s Orson Squire Fowler, who popularized the octagon house. These schools are now almost 90 years old, so it’s both amazing and delightful that they’re still plugging away, doing their jobs! Bear in mind, though, that all of these schools have been expanded and altered since the 1930s – we’re not seeing them now as they were when new.
Howard school (now used for business) is in private hands, and so is Curtiss Memorial School, with its stunning Art Deco front, in Hammondsport.
Modern bridges seem to have been a New Deal priority – we weren’t in horse and buggy days any more! Clinton Street Bridge in Binghamton has an Art Deco design. Corning’s Chemung River Bridge (on Bridge Street) was the biggest New Deal project in the city. Bath V.A. got a sorely-needed new bridge too, plus a hospital and a nursing facility, all of them replacing predecessors from back as far as the 1870s, and all of them still in use.
Bath proper also got a new wing to join separate buildings at the old Bath Memorial Hospital (now Pro Action) on Steuben Street. (Republican U.S. Representative Sterling Cole made sure his district got good projects from the Democratic president!)
Like the V.A., post offices were federal facilities, so post office projects could be arranged pretty quickly. Remember how much of the nation’s business used to be carried on by mail? Modern post offices sped things up, and they appeared in Painted Post, Honeoye Falls, Waverly, and Watkins Glen. Geneva, Newark, Canandaigua and Cortland* post offices all got significant additions. The 1939 Horseheads post office is now home for Community Foundation of Elmira-Corning and the Finger Lakes.
Folks who thought that the government should not be spending money on such projects got REALLY riled up about paying for artwork! But artists had to eat too, so several of these post offices got murals. Painted Post has “Recording the Victory,” in which Native Americans celebrate having captured Revolutionary War soldiers. This painting was damaged in the 1972 flood, and afterward restored. Honeoye Falls has a more peaceful agricultural scene, “The Life of the Seneca.” Waverly’s mural is about the early days of White inhabitation. Geneva’s post office has a mural inside, and a set of five bas reliefs outside! Cortland has a striking and unusual wooden relief artwork, “The Valley of the Seven Hills.”
If you like the art side of things, you MUST visit the world’s largest collection of New Deal art, at Livingston County New Deal Gallery in Mount Morris. About 10% of the collection is on exhibit at any time.
There’s plenty more stuff around, as you can see by www.livingnewdeal.org. Much of the work was in tree planting, storm sewers, guard rails, and such, but what we’ve listed here are all easily findable, and visually interesting.
Two words of warning! First, folks get understandably antsy when they see people hanging around the school. Take a look, check it off on your list, and move on – if you want to take photos, go on Sunday.
Second, as far as I can tell it’s not permitted to photograph the post office murals. This is supposed to be a “homeland security” thing, which I suppose is actually not about the murals, but about photographing the interiors of federal buildings. If you want a picture ask, but be prepared to be turned down. Apart from those caveats, hit the road! And have a good time! “Happy days are here again!”

What We Owe to the C.C.C.

Two weeks ago in this space we looked at the C.C.C., or Civilian Conservation Corps, and what it did locally during the New Deal of 1933 to 1942. C.C.C. was a one-year employment program for young men (or in some cases, Great War veterans), focusing on outdoor work. Watkins Glen, Allegany, Stony Brook, Buttermilk, Taughannock, and Robert Treman State Parks all owe a great deal of their infrastructure to the C.C.C., and they did some of the earliest work to create Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge.
Besides that, they were called into service after the catastrophic 1935 flood killed 44 people. That flood flowed in part from poor land use practices – a problem the state geologist had warned about well before the Civil War. The U.S. Soil Service made the upper Conhocton River, especially the Avoca area, a showcase soil conservation project. Part of this included reforestation, and C.C.C. lads created many tree plantations, including one in the shape of a giant “A” that overlooked Avoca for many years. (It was partly removed when the Southern Tier Expressway came in.) A drainage ditch in Howard, near Buena Vista, is probably C.C.C. Work.
The C.C.C. men put in roads, drainage, and stone buildings for Chenango Valley State Park… not to mention a nine-hole golf course. C.C.C. crews working in Green Lakes State Park in Fayetteville included a company of veterans from the SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR!
Since much of the New Deal was created “on the run,” the C.C.C. was put under charge of the only government agency used to dealing with large numbers of young men – the army.
But these were VERY LARGE numbers in the Triple-Cees. Military men like Omar Bradley and Dwight Eisenhower learned how to work with that – a skill that would be vital in the World War II years of 1940-45.
They also learned to work with men who expected to be treated as citizens, rather than as recruits to be abused and screamed at.
The generation that grew up in the Depression largely missed out on medical care, dental care, and proper diet. In the Triple-Cees they ate well, some for the first time in their lives. They got their teeth fixed. They got their vaccinations. They got care for treatable conditions. Over a fifth of World War II recruits washed out medically. Without C.C.C., it would have been far higher.
Young men learned skills (such as construction) that made them employable in the civilian world AND vital in the military. Those who didn’t have diplomas were given courses, and finished high school. Those who were illiterate (a startling percentage) were taught to read – all of which would strengthen the World War II army, and our postwar civilian economy.
President Roosevelt fiercely decreed that the program would have no hint of militarization, and wouldn’t even offer R.O.T.C. – he didn’t want anything even vaguely like the Hitler Youth.
Even so, participants experienced some very basic military features – uniforms, camps, barracks, K.P. When they went into the service in our huge buildup, these men already had a speaking acquaintance with the military way of doing things. It eased their transition, AND the army called on them as leaders for the younger rookies.
Actors Raymond Burr, Robert Mitchum, and Walter Matthau were C.C.C “graduates.” So was Archie Moore, future Light Heavyweight Boxing World Champion. Baseball great Stan Musial was in the C.C.C. Chuck Yeager, World War II fighter ace and first man to break the sound barrier, did his term in the C.C.C. So all in all, we owe a great debt of thanks to the Civilian Conservation Corps.

Signs of the Great Depression

Most of us can’t really “get” the Great Depression – and that’s good! Unless we’ve been in a poverty-stricken foreign country, we can only dimly imagine what it’s like to have much of the economy crashing down with no social safety net. No Social Security. No unemployment compensation. Very few unions. No pension plans. A low level of home ownership (only 40% of homes were owner-occupied).
Even if you had put money away for a rainy day, your bank(s) might pull the rug out from under you. J. B. Sturdevant Bank of Avoca failed in 1929, and the following year Mr. Sturdevant paid depositors 10 cents on every dollar they’d entrusted him with. Savona National Bank closed in late April, 1931, and Painted Post National Bank in December.
Hornell had three banks as 1932 dawned, but First National went down on Valentine’s Day. Just over two months later, perhaps unnerved by First National’s fate, depositors started a run on the remaining banks. Steuben Trust survived, and indeed just merged with Community in 2020. But Citizens National, which went back over 80 years, was broken on April 30.
Atlanta National Bank failed in April, 1933, but reorganized and reopened a few weeks later; depositors got 85 cents on the dollar, though shareholders lost everything.
And as we think about all that annihilated money, remember that it wasn’t just families and individuals – businesses, churches, and municipalities lost their money too. So did insurance companies and pension plans, so if you were counting on THEM, you might well be out of luck.
The Great Depression devastated much of the world, at levels high and low, and had ongoing effects that were often hard to spot. In World War II, with the military voraciously frantic for personnel, almost a fourth of recruits or inductees washed out medically — they had grown up with proper food, medical care, or dental care. Poverty is bad for national security.
What was going on locally in 1929-1941?
*By 1932, Corning Glass Works revenue had fallen 50% from 1929, and employment by a third (about 900 people). Those who still had jobs got 10% pay cuts.
*Corning City employees got a 10% pay cut, plus layoffs. The city exhausted its entire 1931 “relief” budget before August. Annual revenue for St. Mary’s church fell from $25,000 in 1929 to $17,000 in 1935.
*Mercury Aircraft in Hammondsport was down to one employee.
*Bath teachers were “asked” to kick back part of their salaries. “Suggested” percentages were “recommended” with a sliding scale based on salary.
*In 1934, transient bureaus (essentially for homeless) served 1280 people in Bath and 1548 in Hornell, besides 268 residing at a transient camp in Stony Brook Park. (We don’t have numbers for the Corning office.)
*Local government starved as real estate values collapsed. Cohocton town workers got a 10% pay cut. Avoca town roads put men on three-day work weeks. One Avoca man, an immigrant who by hard work had done very well in his new home, hanged himself when it all came crashing down.
*Potatoes got 15 cents a bushel in early 1933, half the cost of producing them. Almost a hundred parcels of land were sold for taxes in Cohocton, and Cohocton teachers got a 10% pay cut. Near Kanona and Harrisburg Hollow, many owners walked away and abandoned their farms.
*An old man once told me of driving with his father from Elmira to Rochester during the Great Depression. In Watkins Glen, Geneva, and every other town along the way, a line of men stretched way down the sidewalk, slowly shuffling forward to get a doughnut and a cup of coffee.
There ARE those who downplay the Depression, and insist that it wasn’t actually all that bad. They are wrong. And they insult those who suffered through it.

The Farming Story Part 4: Prohibition, Depression, Floods, and War

As in the Civil War, so in World War I. The young farm hands went into uniform even as agricultural demand boomed. (We were helping feed France and Britain, as well as ourselves.) There was local agitation to create a Farm Bureau, which as we know was effective, and the Farm Bureau quickly set up tractor workshops. Farms mechanized, BUT the war ended unexpectedly in 1918. Farm prices crashed, and many farmers were now left struggling with time payments on their equipment.

*Then, at the same time, Prohibition came in! This closed the wineries and ruined the grape growers. We think of the Great Depression as starting in 1929. But for many farm families it started ten years earlier, in 1919. With widespread use of the motorcar, community and economic life began to dry up in the hamlets. They had had their own stores, schools, doctors, churches, undertakers. But who needed the little store in Coss Corners or Harrisburg Hollow when you could drive to Bath… or from Perkinsville to Wayland, Bloomerville to Avoca, Hornby to Corning? The rich man of Risingville now ran a shabby little shop in the sticks, with an outhouse in the back, and a kerosene lamp on the counter.

*This is the period in which thousands of Steuben people joined the Ku Klux Klan, which then as now exploited fear and turned it into hate by telling lies about people who are Not Like Us, and blaming THEM for all the trouble.

*When the Great Depression truly set in, one bright star locally (besides the evaporation of the Klan) was the repeal of Prohibition in 1933. Charles Fournier came from France to revive Gold Seal with up-to-date practices. Taylor, which had eked its way through the dry years, expanded its operation, and new wineries opened. Every Labor Day growers and buyers met in Penn Yan to hammer out “the grape deal,” establishing prices that would be paid that year.

*This is also the period in which County Agent Bill Stempfle took the lead in reviving and modernizing potato production in the mucklands, bringing in growers from Maine and Long Island who were grateful to find lower land prices, and whose intensive farming practices could offset worn-out land. And, of course, there were New Deal programs to help the farmer.

*BUT this is the period in which the bill came due for almost 150 years of short-sighted land use practices… especially when catastrophic floods struck in 1935, 1936, and 1946. The ’35 flood, which killed 44 people regionwide, was in many ways far worse than the ’72 flood. One Avoca sharecropper in 1935 received as his share for the year one calf. Avoca became a pilot program for New Deal soil conservation practices. From this period we get diking and re-routing of the Conhocton and Canisteo Rivers, the Almond Dam, the Alfred Dam, tree plantations, drainage ditches… much of the work carried out by Civilian Conservation Corps lads from their main camp in Kanona.

*When the New Deal started, 10% of American farms had electricity. When it ended eight years later with the advent of World War II, 10% of farms did NOT. However, that 10% included Steuben County. R.E.A. got about 50 miles of wire strung before the needs for another world war cut off their materials. But demand for farm producrs, once again, went up… even as, once again, the prime workers were siphoned away.

Three Ordinary Lifetimes: High Schools, Unions, Bibles… and the Ku Klux Klan

Last week we looked at the fact that three lifetimes… just ordinary lifetimes of 75 years each – would take us back to 1790 and George Washington’s first full year as President. And we looked at what a person born on that day would have experienced, as he or she lived from the beginning of Washington’s first term to the end of Lincoln’s.
Now imagine with us a second child, born on this day in 1865, on the 75th birthday of the one we looked at first.
On this day in 1865 people were feeling the wondering realization that the end of the Civil War was in sight. Local men with Grant were, as they had been for months, hammering away at Petersburg, the key to Richmond and Lee’s dwindling army. Local men with Sherman, having already marched from Atlanta to the sea and captured Savannah at the end of it, were kicking off for a northward drive into the Carolina’s, chasing Johnston’s also-dwindling army.
In March Lincoln was re-inaugurated, promising malice toward none, and charity to all. Listening in the crowd was an infuriated John Wilkes Booth, who was in love with malice but a stranger to charity.
In April Grant broke through the defenses of Petersburg, sending Davis’s government and Lee’s both army on the run. Grant cornered Lee a week later, and captured his entire army. Lincoln remarked in an impromptu speech that maybe “some” of the black soldiers should be allowed to vote. Booth, again lurking nearby, gave in completely to rage. Just days later he finally took up arms for the Confederacy, shooting a middle-aged man from behind in the dark. With telegraph lines limited, many local towns didn’t get the news for days.
Over the next couple of months the remaining Confederate armies tossed in the towel, and the boys came marching home. Released soldiers in Bath got drunk and embarked on a race riot, attacking black people on the perverse “logic” that they had been “responsible” for the war.
Two years later, after lengthy debate, Bath integrated its schools.
The year after that, Brooklyn Flint Glass Works moved to Corning. Good rail connections let them move product out, but a one-track shortline, moving coal, wood, and sand up from Pennsylvania, sealed the deal.
Out along the lakes, grape and wine production grew feverishly.
Laws and Congressional amendments established African Americans as citizens and protected their rights, but most northern whites turned their backs and allowed white southerners to mount what boiled down to a race war.
As we hit our nation’s centennial in 1876, both the nation and the region were becoming more industrial. Our local cities of Corning, Hornell, Geneva, Canandaigua, and Ithaca were incorporated during this period. Ithaca, of course, also boomed with the new land-grant college system.
Local farm families formed Granges for mutual support and encouragement. Built-up areas started providing themselves with water, phone, and electric systems, though electricity was often part-time. Electric trolleys appeared, but would be gone within fifty years or so.
When George Armstrong Custer led his men into annihilation at the Little Big Horn, Bath men named their Union veterans post in his honor.
In 1879 New York opened its State Soldiers and Sailors Home in Bath, “to care for him who shall have borne the battle,” in Lincoln’s words. A great many local communities formed public libraries.
In 1872, most Corning businesses gave their employees the day off for Christmas. But for many workers, December 25th and the 4th of July were work days well into the new century. In 1890, firings at Corning Glass Works led to 200 men and boys walking out, and the start of a long unionization struggle.
Christian Science appeared during this period, along with the Jehovah’s Witness and Pentecostal movements. The first new English Bible appeared since 1611.
Niagara Falls became America’s first state park. Watkins Glen followed some years later.
Even small towns across the region opened high schools, or paid to send their kids to school.
In 1876 AND in 1888, our ridiculous electoral college system torpedoed us again. In both cases the voters chose a president… and the electors seated the guy who lost.
Two presidents — Garfield and McKinley — were assassinated.
In 1894 New York voters approved the Constitutional provision that state forest lands ‘be forever kept as wild.” In 1901 President Theodore Roosevelt established he first National Wildlife Refuge.
We had a war to free Cuba, during which we grabbed Hawaii, Wake, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines, besides setting up our own puppet government in Havana.
As the new century dawned, internal combustion became a force in the land. Nowhere locally was this more evident than in Hammondsport, where factories for motorcycles, blimps, and even airplanes – not to mention the engines themselves – sprang up. The spark plug for all this combustion was of course Glenn Curtiss, who made millions on the First World War.
That war left more empty seats around the table, meanwhile vaulting America into world prominence. The Spanish Influenza rushed in as the war neared its end, killing millions. Hundreds died locally.
The “Great Migration” was in full swing, as African Americans freed themselves from the south much as Jews would soon flee Germany.
Prohibition clobbered the economy of the Finger Lakes, which tried to make it up by paving the roads and promoting tourism. The Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance came to be.
As Catholic city-dweller Al Smith rose to prominence, hysterical rural folks formed Ku Klux Klan chapters. State headquarters were in Binghamton, and Yates County Fairground was a favored site for rallies. African Americans from Bath took the lead in fighting the Klan, which dwindled considerably (but did not vcanish) by the 1930s.
Franklin D. Roosevelt contracted polio in 1921. In 1928 he ran for governor, barnstorming every county by auto caravan, proclaiming his progressive record and asking delighted crowds, “Do I look sick to you?”
Across the country what looked like a boom proved to be a bubble, and the world plunged into a Depression that some economists compared to the Dark Ages. Hammondsport was one of many communities that helped sweep Roosevelt into the White House. He’d promised to end Prohibition, and did, and they immediately went back to voting Republican.
In one year of Depression Steuben County aided something like 5000 homeless people in transient camps and bureaus, and 3000 in the poorhouse. Public works from Washington and Albany helped. These included Glenn Curtiss Memorial School, Dansville High School, Painted Post post office, Stony Brook State Park, and Watkins Glen State Park. Civilian Conservation Corps worked on the parks and on soil conservation. After the catastrophic 1935 flood, which killed far more people than the 1972 flood, work got under way on Almond and Arkport dams.
As his second term neared its end in 1940, F.D.R. was desperate to retire and concentrate on his physical therapy, which bode fair to vastly improve his mobility. But Hitler had invaded Poland just months earlier, while Japan had been savaging China for a decade. With war at the door and depression still snapping at our heels, a soft-spoken sentiment grew slowly but steadily louder – we want Roosevelt again.