Gratiot County in Depression and War, April 1940: “Peace and Isolation”

From top to bottom, life in April 1940: A new neon sign appears in county newspapers. The sign at the corner of Washington and Mill Streets is considered one of the nicest in mid-Michigan; a WPA mural done by Joe Cox, entitled “Harvest,” is hung on the north wall of the Alma Post Office; a group of English women prepare for anticipated air raids in London.

The long winter leaves Gratiot County, and the spring thaw takes place.

In Europe, it meant the resumption of Hitler’s war. “The Phony War” was over as the Nazis invaded Scandanavia, Denmark and prepared to invade Western Europe.

Farmers got ready to work their fields, and people carried on their lives in an isolated area of mid-Michigan. How many quiet springs would be left?

It was April 1940 in Gratiot County.

Winter War Becomes the Spring War

As winter ended in Europe, the “phony war” ended. Nazi Germany now started to make its anticipated aggressive moves toward the West – on land and sea. Gratiot County saw and read about these events through articles and photographs published in county newspapers.

British citizens in London anticipated air raids, as did French ground crews who believed invasion was imminent. French soldiers passed their time in places like the Maginot Line, waiting for the Germans to attack. Australian troops (Anzacs) in Palestine believed that they too faced a Nazi invasion of the Middle East. The Italian navy moved toward the Dardenelles to help the Nazis.

Hitler ordered his troops to occupy Denmark, and the Danes barely resisted. The situation in Poland was far worse as Warsaw lay in ruins and Jews were forced to wear the yellow triangle and walk in the gutters instead of on the street. The Nazis had also attacked Norway and moved to occupy the city of Trondheim on the east coast. The naval war between Germany and England began when Hitler proclaimed he was there to protect them.

In Brooklyn, New York, a group of seventeen men known as the Brooklyn Boys went on trial for plotting to overthrow the government. The United States Army tested new tanks at Camp Ord, California. In St. Louis, Michigan, Vojta Benes, brother of the former President of Czechoslovakia, spoke to groups about how he escaped his country before the Nazis occupied it. Ottakar Podrabsky, a Czech college student who escaped and enrolled at Alma College, explained what life was like with blackouts and preparations for a Nazi occupation. Both speakers asked Gratiot County residents for moral support during the European crisis.

Depression Life May 1940

The issue of a lack of money and social issues in Gratiot County continued in the news.

 One of the growing responses to the problems of the elderly remained the popularity of Townsend Clubs. The Townsend Plan was another proposed way of providing pensions for the elderly, and these programs attracted large numbers of interested people. Over in Elwell, a meeting at the Odd Fellows Hall drew sixty people who gathered to see a movie about the Townsend Plan. An even bigger group of 300 interested people appeared at the St. Louis Park Hotel to hear state spokesman Ira Brinker. Dr. Townsend also had regular newspaper columns, such as the Alma Record.

The cost and care of indigent residents in Gratiot County continued to concern those on the board of supervisors. Part of this concern centered upon a potentially growing financial deficit for the cost of care now that Gratiot County had taken over responsibilities from the state. The county received $223.79 a month for total care of all indigents and already had a deficiency of $788.96, and this was only a few months into the county’s role of managing these costs. Much discussion occurred about the need for sworn written statements from county doctors when a child or adult indigent needed to be sent to a place like the University of Michigan Hospital for treatment. An auditor told the commission that if the current rate of debt continued, the county faced a $78,400 bill in October 1941.

Over in St. Louis, the Community Council led the discussion of creating a community chest that could be used in part to help care for needy families. One way to do this was to create a card system for disadvantaged families and places where donations like clothes and shoes could be stored, such as the city hall and the Gratiot County bank building. The bank building was presented as a site where women repaired clothes. The greatest need in St. Louis was shoes for the needy.

All of the discussion about the needs of people across the county occurred during what the Gratiot County Herald labeled “New Deal Defeatism” – or disenchantment with the deficits created by the New Deal. In 1932, the Herald cited the nation’s unemployment at ten million people – the same number a WPA administrator claimed was the rate in 1940. With so many out of work, looking for jobs, and the nation’s deficit growing, how could the New Deal programs be worth supporting?

Places like St. Louis faced financial issues tied to a New Deal program. Residents of St. Louis voted down two bond issues, one of which involved paving sidewalks with additional money from the WPA. That bond would cost taxpayers $32,000, the city $12,000, and the WPA $76,000.  There was still interest in the sidewalk proposal, but voters needed more details. The other bond issue, which involved buying the Gratiot County Bank building for a new city hall, went down overwhelmingly.

However, people could still see New Deal programs at work in Gratiot County. NYA workers trimmed trees in Wright Park and faced problems with removing stumps. In 1938, the city removed trees under a state forestry expert’s direction to increase sunlight in the park. Now, the city had to deal with how to get the stumps out of the ground, which required stump-pulling equipment.  Without the equipment, it was impossible to remove all of the unsightly, decaying stumps. The NYA also planned to help Alma by working to enlarge the city’s summer programs for youth. Alma High School coach Floyd Lear was contacted to oversee the summer program. WPA workers in Alma continued to work on terracing and seeding streets south of Superior Street on Gratiot Avenue and toward Gratiot. The city also planned to work with the WPA to complete curbing on several streets.

The most beautiful work done by a New Deal program in 1940 was done by Joseph H. Cox of Indianapolis, Indiana. Cox, a University of Iowa instructor, completed a large mural mounted inside the north wall of the Alma post office lobby. Many people turned out to watch as the mural, entitled “Harvest,” depicting harvesters stopping from their work to drink water from a long-handled dipper,  was placed on the wall. Another part of the mural showed a one-horse wagon loaded with grain, with farm buildings in the background. Cox came to Alma to supervise the hanging of his mural.

Farming, Outdoors

Unseasonably cold weather in April meant spring planting lagged as farmers waited for spring to arrive. Some called this time in Gratiot “backward spring,” as the only thing being planted so far had been oats. The Gratiot County farm agent commented that more farmers intended to grow more beans than sugar beets. However, many farmers believed that an overproduction of beans would occur and reconsidered their sugar beet acreage.

A group of 1,096 farmers in Gratiot County signed up for farm plans under the AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Administration). The number of sign-ups represented 52 percent of all farms in the county. By signing up with AAA, these farm plans monitored soil depletion, acreage allotments, goals for soil building, and the maximum payment every farmer could receive in 1940.

Farmers who planned to use sugar beet labor were required to pay the same rates as they did in 1939. Those beet growers who wanted benefit payments from the Sugar Act of 1937 had to comply with these wages. In anticipation of the upcoming farm season, Mexican sugar beet workers in Texas faced physical examinations to receive health certificates before they came to Michigan to work in the fields. Michigan doctors who traveled to Texas to examine potential workers looked for tuberculosis and venereal diseases. In 1939, 126 laborers were denied work due to health issues. Of that group, 86 had tuberculosis. The total cost of the examinations was $2,500. Michigan beet growers were supposed to have sanitary living conditions, quarters, and return transportation to Texas.

Problems with rabies and dogs occurred on and off farms as spring began. Clifford McKellar and Dr. D.J. Shepherd of Breckenridge brought charges against Bethany Township tenant farmer Floyd Ludwig. Ludwig shot an English setter belonging to McKellar and Shepherd after he claimed the dog wandered onto his property and lunged at him. However, after getting his gun, Ludwig shot the dog on an adjacent property belonging to someone else. Ludwig was jailed for defaulting on a $500 bond and awaiting an examination. The dog was valued at $200.   Miss Martha Carlson of St. Louis experienced sadness when her beloved collie dog, Laddie, was ordered to be put to sleep for his aggressive behavior. Laddie had been in court a year before due to his attacks on other neighbors. In one case, Laddie attacked a man who was plowing on nearby property by tearing off the man’s shoe. While the trial was held in Justice J.L. Smith’s court in St.Louis, the dog’s owner was in Detroit and could not attend the hearing, petitioning the court for leniency through her sister—a sad case for all those involved.

That spring, a bigger issue with animals and Michigan was rabies. 47 counties south of Town Line 21 now faced immediate compliance with quarantining all dogs starting April 1 due to a rabies outbreak. All dogs in Alma had to be confined; if on the street, they had to be on a leash. All stray dogs would be picked up and impounded. Newspapers like the Gratiot County Herald supported the quarantine and believed it was the only way to end the scourge of rabies. Howard Evitts, the county dog warden, also announced that he planned to place dog traps in areas where farmers notified him about the loss of sheep. Dogs caught in these traps would be disposed of upon notification.

The topic of banning Sunday hunting remained a hot issue. Two of three newly formed hunting clubs in the county supported banning Sunday hunting, partly to control the number of hunters invading the county on weekends. Clubs in New Haven and North Shade supported the ban; one in the Seville Township area did not.

There were other things related to farming and farming during April. A new freezer locker storage plant will open in Ithaca – the first in Gratiot County. This locker is expected to open in the old Nelson Produce Company, which Mrs. Gertrude Brown owned. A total of 300 lockers would be available. Interested people could view 700 exhibits by Gratiot County winter 4-H clubs at Alma High School’s gymnasium. Of the approximate 990 girls and boys who worked on projects, 875 finished them. This exhibit, the largest ever assembled in the county, featured girls’ clothing, handicrafts, electrical work, hot lunch, and food preparation.

The C. R. Ranch Rodeo Company agreed to perform at the 1940 Gratiot County Fair. Suckers were running up the Pine River, you could buy live ones at George Gates’ vegetable and fruit stand in Alma on State Street north of the post office. Michigan Mutual Windstorm Insurance Company offered insurance for high winds and tornadoes. Buy chick mash for baby chicks at the Middleton Farmers Elevator Company in Middleton. It only costs $2.35 for 100 pounds of mash.

Health in Gratiot County

Smith Memorial Hospital in Alma received good news when the State Supreme Court upheld its tax exemption. Before this, the city claimed the hospital owed almost $2,000 in realty taxes. Because it argued that the Smith was a charitable, non-profit institution, it was exempt from those taxes. The high court affirmed the decision made in Judge Kelly Searl’s court in 1938 that the hospital did not have to pay those taxes.

A variety of health issues continued to plague the county. The Michigan Tuberculosis Association offered a chest X-ray clinic starting in Ithaca at the Methodist Church to deal with tuberculosis. Those who had a positive tuberculin test after attending clinics in Ithaca and Crystal were encouraged to participate in the clinic. Metal signs went up in public places across the state as well as in the county, warning about the dangers of syphilis. Made by prison industries in southern Michigan and numbering 26,000, the signs appeared in public places such as washrooms and warned of the symptoms of venereal disease. A group of citizens met with the Children’s Fund of Michigan representatives to offer another summer dental clinic. The clinic mirrored the one provided in 1937, in which indigent children who could not afford it received free dental care. The Gratiot County Board of Supervisors appropriated $200 for the clinic.

In sad news, Samuel Mills of Emerson Township, age 58, took his own life after battling nervous depression and despondency for almost fifteen years. Mills had been under doctors’ care for some time. Mills, his brother, and their wives farmed 80 acres of their own and worked the Thomas farm of 240 acres adjacent to theirs. Samuel Mills was found early one morning by his sister-in-law in the cellar. A shotgun had been used as the instrument. Mills left behind a wife, two children, and his brother’s family.

The Long Arm of the Law, April 1940

Crimes and law-breaking of all kinds and levels appeared in the spring of 1940. During March, Prosecuting Attorney Robert H. Baker announced that 58 convictions were reached in court. 41 cases involved traffic violations, while 17 others involved other various offenses. Still, the court received $308.65 in fines and costs.

What were some of the offenses? Six of the cases dealt with breaking, and one with vagrancy. The notorious “Trailer Thief” Ross Smith, father of Michigan’s first trailer baby born in a stolen trailer from Redman Trailer in Alma, was released from jail three years ago. Smith failed to pay $200 in restitution, and then he disappeared. When he turned himself in to the authorities in Traverse City, Smith was sent back to Gratiot County, where Judge Searl gave him six months to five years in Jackson Prison. A jury convicted Leo Rawlings of North Star of stealing nearly 1,000 pounds of aluminum and scrap metal from Lobdell-Emery in Alma. It took the jury only 35 minutes to find Rawlings guilty.

Sixteen couples found themselves in court for chancery cases, in other news involving the law. The Dewey Glinke embezzlement case continued as the county sought to determine how much money Glinke stole from the county in late 1939. County supervisors have now announced that $3,078 in stolen funds is certain. The county would probably owe another $500 for paying two clerks who assisted the auditor general’s office with the case research. During the winter, a few taxpayers outside the county still needed to be contacted to determine if Glinke had stolen their payments. The Glinke case continued for several years in an attempt to find him and bring him to justice.

In other news, the Wheeler Township Board denied two beer license renewals by Orville Wilk and Steve Brenz, both outside Breckenridge. The FBI moved into Michigan—or so it was announced. FBI investigator Chief O. John Rogge said he planned to investigate corruption in high places. One Frank McKay profited from selling over $90,000 in bonds to finance the Blue Water Bridge at Port Huron.

And what else stirred up the Gratiot people in April 1940? It had to be the national census. Many residents spoke out about consenting to being interviewed for the national census of 1940. A list of 25 census enumerators appeared in newspapers to inform readers who would be knocking on their doors. Some, like Ethel Dunn of Elwell, sought out people in Seville Township. Mabel Lippert toiled in Alma’s second ward. Urban enumerators received 40 cents per name, while those in the country got up to 30 cents for each farm they recorded. Individuals like W.G. Davis and H.O. Butler of Ithaca protested being asked to contribute information to the census and being paid to interview them. Butler went so far as to organize the Gratiot County Vigilance Committee and hold a meeting at the Ithaca Circuit Courtroom. A total of 200 people showed up to oppose participating in the census, who did not want President Roosevelt or Uncle Sam to know about their status in 1940.

And So We Do Not Forget

A welcome sign was placed at Conservation League Park outside of Alma. The sign encouraged public use of the park and explained future planned improvements…John G. Young, Riverdale postmaster, died after being ill for two weeks. Young had been postmaster since 1910…the J.J. Newberry Store in Alma planned to open after completing a false front, new trimming, and a new stairway.  The fountain bar, a public favorite, remained untouched and ready to continue its service for eager customers. The store planned to rent the upstairs rooms…Area schools prepared for the county achievement tests for two days in early May. Seventh and eighth grade students would take their tests on May 2; the rest had the day off. On May 3, all fifth and sixth-grade students were tested while the rest had a free day. Make sure and bring two well-sharpened pencils and a lunch…Since May 1, 1939, the St. Louis Fire Department answered 61 calls for fires, including 4 in just one week in early April. The department responded to 40 fires in 1939, an increase of 21 fires…Buy your baseball equipment at the Varsity Shop in Alma. Baseball shoes cost only $2.15; gloves and mitts started at 69c, and bats ranged from 25c to $1.75…St Louis put up a large neon sign at the Washington and Mill Streets intersection. It measured 15 feet long and 5 feet high. Newspapers stated that St. Louis was the only city in mid-Michigan with such an attractive sign.

Eight students graduated from the St. Louis Business Institute in the previous three months. Four of the graduates already had jobs. Some graduates included Phyllis Alward, Bette Comstock, and Geraldine Humm from St. Louis…Resident V.K. Beshgetoor described a horrifying incident he witnessed on his way home to Alma. Beshgetoor motored through Shepherd when he saw a young boy inching near passing cars on a bike in northbound traffic. The boy took a tumble off his bike and missed being run over by a truck by only inches. Beshgetoor commented that after being scared for his life, he wondered how parents would allow their children to ride bicycles in such heavy traffic…The Porter-Yost field in Midland Township had 341 wells running and made a daily run of 4,754…The Ford Motor Company provided a Mercury 8 1940 test car for the Rademacher Motor Sales in Alma. Its average mileage is 22.3 miles per gallon.

Go to McIntyre’s Drug Company in St. Louis and order a treat. On April 28, customers could enjoy a free tree from the New Arctic Soda Bar…St Louis Schools expected its teaching staff to return for the 1940-41 school year. The only one not returning was kindergarten teacher Miss Ellen Strom…Mr and Mrs. M.D. Fisher opened their home to host the Gratiot County Rural Letter Carriers’ Association and Auxiliary. The group enjoyed a meal of chop-suey…Jackie Cooper and Betty Field starred in “Seventeen” at the Strand Theatre. Tickets cost 10c and 20c. A local newsreel ran every Wednesday and Thursday nights…The St. Louis Park Hotel offered regular duck dinners for 75c. Frankenmuth style cost $1.00. “Why eat at home when you can dine with us at these prices?”… Sixteen-year-old Richard Hetzman pf
Alma was chosen to represent the George W. Myers American Legion as a delegate at Wolverine Boys’ State in East Lansing in late June…The Sawkins Music House sold the 1940 Norge Steri-Seal Washer and a vacuum cleaner for $69.95. Buyers could also pay $1 a week. Interested customers could see for themselves at the Builders Show in the Alma High School gymnasium April 25-27…The Alma Oddfellows Hall hosted thirteen boxing matches for the Alma Athletic Club before a large crowd. Four of the bouts ended in knockouts…Alma High School returned five lettermen for the upcoming track season. Four of the five were seniors…County school children again sold Easter Seals for the benefit of handicapped children. This year, the thirty schools sold a combined $498.45 in seals…Most St. Louis Trade Association members wanted to close their businesses on Wednesday nights and offer entertainment programs on Saturday evenings…

Resident Theodore Bloss made the news for his friendship with neighboring fox squirrels. Bloss had been friendly with several of them for the past four years and had them visiting Bloss on his back porch and eating out of his hand…Burlingame & Son of St. Louis offered the new 1940 Chevrolet Master 85 Business Coupe for $659. Phone 282 to contact the business..Alma Girl Scouts launched their annual cookie sale. Crisp, crunchy butter cookies with chocolate and vanilla flavor appeared like the Girl Scout trefoil. Only 25 cents a box…St Louis Michigan Chemical Corporation displayed its new custom-built salt machine, which could produce one per minute. The blocks were sold to feed cattle…The Alma Builders Shows started on Thursday, April 25, and ran the rest of the week at the Alma High School gymnasium. Sawkins Music House showed moving pictures in the smaller gymnasium each evening…Monroe’s Drug Store in St. Louis sold vitamins, antiseptine, nose drops, and Tread Easy Foot Powder, see the advertisement in the St. Louis Leader-Breckenridge American….An article in the Alma Record told how a migration of Amish settlers left Canada and the United States for Mexico in the 1920s. Now, some of the followers established communities in Maryland…Fleming Shoe Company in St. Louis sold  nurses’ Oxfords for $1.98 a pair…Engineers in Montcalm County studied plans to increase the water level in Rock Lake. Plans called for transferring water from Marl Lake, a quarter of a mile away…Alma High School prepared to show 400 feet of film entitled “Land of the Free,” movies taken of students while they were in the building. The school recently purchased movie equipment to show a four-reel movie…

Bert Hicks &  Son continued remodeling their grocery store on the corner of Woodworth and Superior Streets in Alma. C.A. Hicks (“Bert”) had been in the grocery business for 37 years, 10 of those for himself. For the upcoming grand opening, Hicks planned to have a SunshinebBiscuit and Maxwell House coffee demonstration for all of those in attendance…James Merodeas joined James Stamas and Steve John as Alma State Sweet Shop partners. Merodeas came to the business with an excellent record as a cook…The Triangle Coal & Oil Company in Alma displayed a new thermometer on their building. In this way, motorists who stopped for gas or oil could easily read the temperature and realize the need to buy more coal for heating during cold weather…Mrs. Inez Brainard of St. Louis established the “Willard J. Brainard Loan Fund” to assist any St. Louis High School students who sought to further their education. Mrs. Brainard established the fund as a way of honoring her son, who died from fatal burns in an incident in 1939…Buy linseed oil, turpentine, and Moore’s House Paint at the Davis-Wolansky Hardware Company in North Star…A total of $498.45 was raised during the Seventh Annual Crippled Children’s Seal drive. Over 30 schools in Gratiot County participated in the program…66 schools renewed their Junior Red Cross subscriptions, which resulted in $100.63 to the Gratiot County Red Cross…Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray starred in “Remember the Night” at the Ideal Theatre in Ithaca.  Admission was 15 and 10 cents…

The thawing of heavy snow in Middleton left much of the village with high water in vacant lots, on streets, and on main roads. School buses could not travel some main routes to pick up students on a Friday. Still, robins and turtledoves could be heard and seen in Middleton…The Ithaca High School Junior Class presented “The Eyes of Tlaloc,” a mystery play, in the high school gymnasium…Mr. Harwood’s St. Louis High School English class polled students about their favorite radio program. Kate Smith’s program and “The Hit Parade” came in at the top of the most listened to on the radio…Bobby Erskin was lucky to have parents and grandparents who wintered in Dunedin, Florida. Bobby loved the Detroit Tigers, saw the Tigers in spring training, and served as one of two Tigers batboys. Ersikine brought home cracked bats used by Rudy York and Roy Cullinbine…Buy a new 6.2 cubic foot 1940 Westinghouse refrigerator for $112.75 at Walker’s Electric Shop in Alma.

And that was war and Depression life in Gratiot County during April 1940.

Copyright 2025 James M. Goodspeed

Gratiot County in Depression and War, February 1940, “The Long Winter”

From the top: The Joe Porubsky auction took place eleven miles southeast of Ithaca and drew a record crowd, lining both sides of the road and filling up a twenty-acre field; baseball was on the minds of Gratiot readers, with messages about a war going on in Europe; Electrified Farm Week, along with new tractor models, came to the county in mid-February 1940.

The long winter of 1940 continued. Get out the ice skates. Read about the war in northern Europe. Farmer, think about the upcoming 1940 season.

It was February 1940 in Gratiot County.

The World at War – “The Winter War” Continues

Most war news in Gratiot County dealt with the Winter War and Russia’s invasion of Finland. Photographs of dead, frozen Russian soldiers appeared in the newspapers, the results of the clashes between the Finns and Russians near the area of Petsamo, Finland. A hint of Nazi Germany’s intention to start an offensive in the West began as the French slowly retreated from a quiet German advance. The world knew that spring fighting was not that far off.

The St. Louis Service Club met at the Park Hotel and watched talking pictures of the United States Navy and March of Time films. People continued to monitor world events. In all this talk and awareness of a potentially expanding world war, one group expected to benefit from the war centered around news for farmers. Economists foresaw a billion-dollar boom for farmers as competition for food supplies, changes in shipping routes, and sea conflicts meant Britain would have to deal with more goods from the United States. Although the United States was not in its position in 1914 when the world had an endless need for food and goods, many believed a growing need for goods would happen again starting in 1940 with the war’s expansion.

Gratiot County Life Late in the New Deal Great Depression

During the winter months, if one wanted to see New Deal social programs in the county, one looked at ice skating. The WPA (Works Progress Administration) continued to maintain and invite the public to use skating rinks. Over in St. Louis, Lester Fillhard supervised the Community Council skating rink east of Wheeler Field, which sponsored a St. Louis Community Ice Meet. The meet had six types of skating events, from boys and girls under twelve to men and women of any age. The community council stated that there was a “crying need” for someone to donate a public address system and phonograph to play music. Some St. Louis residents used the rink for birthdays, such as when one student invited forty fellow eighth graders to skate and have lunch together. Hockey teams from both St. Louis and Alma battled each other in city competitions. St. Louis held its first Skate Carnival, and Robert Wilson served as contest judge. Sled events opened to both boys and girls. However, soft ice postponed the events for a week. Soon afterward, the ice improved, and the St. Lois recreational hockey team met and defeated the Alma East End bunch by 10-5.

Alma had a skating rink on South State Street, and city commissioners agreed to provide music for its skaters. Above the dam, many ventured out to enjoy the new ice that was created in only a few nights of cold weather. The city lowered the water to construct an overflow drain and raised it to its natural level. Two WPA recreation leaders, Frances Lott, and Chester Johnson, oversaw the Alma rinks. They promoted a city-wide meet and planned to lay out an oval shape on the rink for the races. One of the problems with operating the rinks centered around people who got on the ice when it was not in skating condition. Some of the older boys tended to get on the ice before it was ready, which resulted in numerous ruts and holes and made skating impossible.

There were other New Deal programs at work in the county. The Alma Salvation Army allowed the NYA (New Youth Administration) a place for thirty boys and young men to work on woodworking projects. The NYA also offered a sewing project for girls and young women ages 18 to 25 and provided sewing machines to recondition used clothing. One special need concerned the making of layettes for newborn children. In February, the government programs employed fifty NYA workers on different projects in Gratiot County. The WPA offered the city of St. Louis financial help to construct pavements and sidewalks. However, the project was estimated at over $108,000, with over $76,000 provided by the WPA. Still, this meant St. Louis would have to issue bonds to borrow money, and the common (city) council hesitated as the public would have to vote on the matter. Another issue involved buying the Gratiot County Bank building and turning it into a city hall.

Even in February, WPA workers continued on labor projects, such as retaining walls and the river bank near Walnut Street and North Court Avenue. The city also wanted the dangerous curve at that location worked on in the upcoming year, and many Alma property owners petitioned for extensions to sidewalk work that started in 1939. The city also hoped to widen Downie Street and Pine Avenue entirely through WPA labor and funds.

Several leaders like A.D. Smedberg of Alma met at Alma High School for a radio broadcast over WBCM of Bay City to continue promoting the benefits of New Deal programs such as the WPA. The men explained how WPA programs helped the city and why Alma remained a good place to live and have a business.

For a community celebration, the St. Louis Park Hotel hosted the annual President’s Birthday Ball. The ball benefited those affected by infantile paralysis and the Gratiot County chapter of the March of Dimes. Half of the money raised from the ball went directly to those in Gratiot County who had infantile paralysis. Those who attended the ball were awed by the beautiful red, white, and blue decorations provided by the Consumers Power Company of Alma and the music and dancing led by the Don Hoffman Orchestra of Lansing. In the center of the ballroom hung a large picture of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The issue of public health was very real in 1940, as the Michigan Tuberculosis Association continued to offer T.B. clinics in response to eight people who died from the disease in Gratiot County in 1937. Tuberculin tests and at least one X-ray clinic occurred in the county in March 1940.

Some news in the county relating to the effects of the Depression was not so happy. Ralph Olmstead of Elwell led a case against the First State Bank of Alma, arguing that the Alma bank was the parent bank responsible for the loss of assets in his former bank in Elwell. Olmstead and other former depositors sought compensation for the closing of the Elwell Bank in 1933. Judge Kelly Searl granted an injunction to consider whether all suits could be combined.

The county also had a “scavenger sale” on delinquent properties. County treasurer William Federspiel offered over 500 property descriptions with a total value of $153,077 to the public in anticipation of the sale. However, the county only succeeded in selling 203 descriptions for a total of just under $25,000. While Alma and St. Louis led the sales, Hamilton Township sold nearly $4,000 of land to fervent bidders and speculators. Seldom did any original owners bid on any of their property.

Finally, opponents across the county for those concerned about President Roosevelt’s Social Security plan continued attending Townsend Club meetings. Alma, Ithaca, St. Louis, and Wheeler clubs participated in these potluck meetings to discuss their support for the Townsend Plan.

On the Farm, In the Gratiot Countryside

Although it was winter, Gratiot County farmers, dealers, and businesses planned for the upcoming farm season. The Michigan Sugar Company of  Alma and Lake Shore Sugar Company of St. Louis issued contracts for the 1940 season. However, the companies issued contracts with a slight change. Farmers would be paid for their first beet payment by December 1, 1940, but would not receive the balance until October 1941. This proposed second payment would be one month later than the year before. The St. Louis Co-Operative Creamery announced plans to build a bigger creamery during its 25th annual meeting at the St. Louis High School auditorium on February 2. A significant reason for creating a new creamery came from the June 1, 1939 fire, which caused $9000 in damage. The dairy also promoted Milkmaker, a mix with alfalfa or clover hay, and sold a superior dairy ration.

Alma Production Credit Association held its annual meeting and elected officers. Howard McMacken of Shepherd was re-elected president, and Harry Glenzen of Alma as secretary and treasurer. Over 700 members in Gratiot County belonged to APCA, had been operating since February 1934, and issued more than 1.3 million dollars in loans. Amazingly, the association had lost only $137 since that time.

Did you need a new tractor? Johnson’s Farm Equipment in Ithaca offered the 1940 Model 60 Family Harvest for $545. Bill Harper’s Hardware, northwest of Ithaca, sold the John Deere Model “DA” disk, billed as operating “Faster, Easier, Better.” About 150 farmers visited Rademacher Motor Sales in Alma on February 21 to see a demonstration of the New Ford tractor, which had a Furgeson system. Albin Rademacher showed a film entitled “Building for Future Farmers,” with entertainment provided by the Mercury Rangers. A highlight of the day was the presence of William Ford, brother of Henry Ford, a general distributor for Ford tractors. Eleven miles southeast of Ithaca, a record crowd attended the Joe Porubusky auction. Cars lined the roads for over a half mile up and down the road, filling a twenty-acre field for the auction.

Other events surrounding county farmers proved sobering. Leon Cratsenberg of Hamilton Township lost his home to a fire early in February. The Cratsenbergs, who had attended the county teacher’s institute in St. Louis, were on their way home through Ithaca and heard of the fire from a passing motorist. When they arrived home, the family found that only part of the contents could be saved due to the fire’s severity. Cattle thieves stole eleven cattle from the Eugene Ensign farm east of Ashley. Police arrested two brothers who rustled in Saginaw and Genesee counties and returned five of them after being discovered on a Huron County farm. Law officers arrested the Desanders brothers on robbery and possible murder charges. Because the brothers sold some of the Ensign cattle and other stolen livestock to farmers, getting the cattle back to the rightful owners proved challenging as other farmers had innocently purchased stolen stock. George Stoneman, Jr., of Ithaca, had a team of valuable draft horses hit by a Cheboygan man’s car. The horses, which won several horse-pulling awards, suffered severe cuts. Still, a veterinarian called to the scene believed the team would survive the wounds. Stoneman pulled onto US-27 when the Cheboygan car hit the team, destroying the vehicle’s front end.

Gratiot County received $3,526.17 for claims made from dogs that killed livestock in 1939 and ranked ninth in the state for losses. Authorities stressed that mongrels and strays running in packs, as opposed to bird and hunting dogs, were most responsible for losing sheep and other livestock in the county. The state urged the continued enforcement of quarantine and local dog laws as measures to reduce losses. Another dog story appeared in the news when Fred Cornell of St. Louis helped boys playing near the Pine River after the boys ran to the Michigan Chemical Corporation yelling for help. It turned out that the boys could not help an Irish Setter who had fallen through the ice and gone under several times. After more calls for help, Leverne Hill and Burdett Yats also arrived at the scene. Hall strapped a rope around his waist and gently crawled out on the ice to the struggling dog. Cornell and Yats then carefully pulled Hall and the exhausted dog back to safety. After returning to the river bank, the men and boys witnessed that the dog could no longer stand due to exhaustion. They then returned with the canine to the Michigan Chemical plant to dry off and warm up. In a short time, the once-drowning Irish Setter recovered and was up and around. A St. Louis dog owner undoubtedly owed thanks to this group of boys and a trio of men who saved this pet.

 Central Michigan Turkey growers met at the Court House in Ithaca to listen to speakers from Michigan State College explain new methods and answer questions about turkey management. Parks Allen, a Gratiot County naturalist, sought to save the life of an injured doe found east of Elwell. The deer appeared to have a broken leg, and a Pere Marquette Train brakeman reported that he thought a train hit it. Allen soon arrived and deduced that the doe had a dislocated shoulder but no broken bones. Allen took the deer home and provided a quiet location in a box stall, and the deer slowly improved. Allen also believed the injury occurred when the deer tried to jump a high fence near the railroad tracks in Elwell.

What else could farmers do in the winter? Ice fishing on Houghton Lake called many people north, where fishermen had daily limits of 15 perch or 25 combined pan fish. Fishing licenses cost one dollar and included one’s spouse! Although the trapping season ended, Gratiot trappers had until the end of February to report how many animals they trapped during the 1939-1940 trapping season. Barely half of those licensed to trap had reported their winter kills.

Finally,  strange things happened in southern Wheeler and northern Lafayette Townships in early February. The commotion became so intense involving “Finnish soldiers” that the county sheriff and his deputies were called for help. Township residents hid in their cellars, locked their doors, and turned off the lights. One caller telephoned the sheriff, urging, “Come to the Powell farm two miles south of Wheeler in a hurry!” Area farmers were so excited that several turned out with shotguns because “peculiar objects” had been seen a mile down the road. Deputy Nestle led a posse into the area and saw four strange things that appeared against the white snow. Nestle called out, “What are you doing?” The response came back, “Just hunting crows.” It turned out that Carl Lanshaw and Dr. C.O. Shaffer of Wheeler, along with Glenn and Grant Marr of Lafayette, all wore white aprons to blend in with the snow, covering all except their head and shoulders. The four men went out on a crow hunt wearing white camouflage but riled up the entire neighborhood. After determining that the complaints and phone call did not involve “Finnish soldiers,” Nestle reminded the men as he departed, “You better go to Finland if you want to use those methods (to kill crows). Carl Lanshaw later told the local newspaper that his group killed over 150 crows, thought it was a good sport, and even took their wives along while hunting the black pests.

The Long Arm of the Law in February 1940

If someone wants to learn about some of Gratiot County’s problems, they must look no further than the local courts and the county jail. That month, Fifty-eight people were convicted of crimes and contributed $387.78 to the county coffers. At the end of February, the county jail had 19 prisoners. Forty of the convictions dealt with traffic violations, and the rest of the crimes covered a variety of offenses. William Partello, age 27, and Grace Schaffer, 23, both of Lafayette, were hauled into court on the crime of lascivious cohabitation (living together without a marriage license). This crime had a long history in Gratiot County, and the consequences varied. In Partello’s case, he was sentenced to sixty days in jail, while Schaffer was sentenced to a strict one-year probation. In another case, Armond Bongard, 36, and Goldie Lewis, 17, ended up in jail on the same charge of “L and L” crimes. They waved examination and said they would appear before Judge Searl for sentencing. The bigger question remained: how did the sheriff and judge discover the  “L and L” crimes? Someone reported the couples, but the question remained: who?

Two other crimes involved embezzlement, one for vagrancy, and two for illegally trapping muskrats (one offender received ten days in county jail; the other got a $10 fine and $8.85 in costs). Other court cases involved selling chattel mortgage property and issuing checks without funds. Howard Phillips of Crystal pleaded guilty to embezzling $19 worth of property from Peterson Hardware Company, paid $33.85 in fines and costs, and pledged to repay the stolen money. The sheriff’s deputy went all the way to Flint to arrest Philips. Harry Conklin of St. Louis said he was not guilty of misappropriating the sum of $41.35 and twenty bushels of oats. His trial was yet to come. Roscoe Daymon, who lived west of Ithaca, was brought before the court for deserting his wife and three children. Daymon furnished a $500 bond and was released until his hearing.

Ralph Fisher of Elwell experienced the law’s long arm when Conservation Officer C.B. Smith pinched Fisher for spearing fish in protected waters. Fisher paid $8.85 in costs rather than spend ten days in jail. Over in Breckenridge, the conduct of a Porter Oil Field worker made the news when Lester McAlister caused an automobile accident in town due to drunk driving. McAlister was arraigned for drunk and disorderly conduct but spent sixty days in jail as he could not pay his fine and costs of $31.11.Oil wells continued to be installed in parts of one of the Porter oil fields, even though newspapers reported that drillers did not expect to find more oil. The Pure Oil Company, however, did put in its 28th well in Porter Township at the Mina Narmore lease.

Another pair of crimes in Alma upset residents. On a dare from his peer, one young man damaged newly constructed items at Gratiot County Conservation Park. In another case, thieves broke into the new log cabin at the park. They then stole $125 worth of aluminum cooking ware that the Lobdell-Emery manufacturing plant had just donated. The thieves used a wrecking bar to pry off the locks and entered the cabin to do their dirty work. The next night, another group of thieves broke into the Lobdell plant and stole 1,000 pounds of scrap valued at $125.

The Jesse Perez murder case reappeared in the courts after three years. Perez shot and killed a fellow Mexican beet laborer on a farm in Seville Township on July 7, 1936. Perez argued that Judge Searl failed to accurately hear and pass on the confession that Perez made about the murder and, therefore, Perez somehow witnessed against himself. Perez’s attorney also argued that his client did not understand the charges brought against him and that witnesses to the murder no longer resided in the United States. Perez’s appeal was denied, and he continued serving his 15-30-year sentence in Marquette.

Finally, the Women’s Christian Temperance Union requested printing an article in the Gratiot County Herald about a “Warning About Marihuana.” In 1938, there had been over 1,000 violations of the Marihuana Tax Act. Because over 8,770 pounds of bulk marihuana had been seized that year, parents and educators needed to be more aware of the possibility of the drug entering local schools. According to the WCTU, education continued to be the best defense against the drug.

Life in the Underside of Gratiot County: Race

What did being Mexican or Black in Gratiot County in 1940?

As more Mexican beet workers came to the county to work in the fields each summer and fall, the Gratiot County Council of Churches and Sunday Schools sponsored a religious project for children and adults. The program ran from June 15 to  September 1 in Alma and St. Louis with two Spanish-speaking teachers and a Mexican minister. Helen White served as superintendent of migrant work for the Council of Church Women of the Board of Home Missions.

A historically uncomfortable but then acceptable event in Gratiot County dealt with the performance of a minstrel show by the Alma Rotary Club. On February 20, the Rotary Club used forty men in a two-hour show and charged forty cents for admission. The sold-out performance hosted 500-600 people. Before the program started, Father John Mulvey gave a short talk about why minstrel shows appeared in history and the beliefs and history of the Alma Rotary Club. Aside from Father Mulvey, only one performer did not appear in “Blackface” during the performance. The Alma Record wrote about the show’s conclusion, “The grand finale was all that the term implies, with nothing lacking to revive the glory of the old-time minstrelsy and the spirit of Auld lang Syne.” Minstrel shows as community or organizational fundraisers and entertainment could be found in Gratiot County well into the 1960s.

County Clerk Charles L. Hicks announced that an examiner from the Detroit Federal Naturalization Office planned to be in the county on February 21 to conduct a naturalization hearing. Approximately a dozen people who petitioned for their citizenship planned on attending. The examiner also said he would be present in the afternoon to help petitioners with questions and problems about becoming a United States citizen.

Finally, Reverend V.K. Beshgetoor, born in Armenia and well-known and respected in the Alma area for decades, officiated at his daughter’s wedding in Highland Park, Michigan. Throughout his life, Reverend Beshgetoor had been a proponent of remembering and telling the story of Armenia’s sufferings and hardships.

And So We Do Not Forget

Miss Maurine Stovall announced that she installed a new lighting system at her studio in Alma. The new system gave the subject a daylight effect without heat and glare. She also had new photo enlargers and remodeled her darkroom…A.D. Smedberg of the Triangle Coal and Oil Company at 904 E. Superior in Alma advertised a new, higher quality coal stoker with a lower price…a St. Louis product, Crystal Fo Iodized Salt, appeared at the M.S.C. dinner in Lansing. The event hosted 150 Michigan publishers and their wives. Each received a complimentary box of salt…Corky’s Standard Service at the stop light in St. Louis gave away free autographed photos of actress Dorothy Lamour from her new movie, “Typhoon.” Drivers could also purchase Winter Iso-Vis Motor Oil…Gratiot County prepared to honor the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. Both former presidents appeared on the front page of the Alma and St. Louis Leader newspapers…Alma Public Schools notified parents of students who wished to enroll outside the Alma district. The cost for enrollment would be $11.20 per child…Alma JC Penney Store announced it had increased the size of its “Baby Shop.” The area next to the ladies’ ready-to-wear section featured the newest items for the baby or nursery…The Gratiot County Crippled Children’s Society met and decided to hold its annual Easter Seal campaign during the Week of March 11, 1940. Four area Rotary Clubs planned to promote the campaign. In 1939, the county raised $436.99 in penny Seals…Simi’s Restaurant and Billiard Hall planned to open in the Gaffney Building beginning March 1. Hubert Croton, Ray Helman, and Silvio Simi invited the public to come and see the new location.

The Danceland Ballroom, located above JC Penney Company in Alma, planned to host the annual Fireman’s Ball. Reed’s Sing Band provided the music….want the “Soundest Investment I Ever Made”? Buy a Pontiac at Pung Motor Sales at 315-317 East Superior Street in  Alma or Whitney Auto Sales in Ithaca…the quickest knockout ever seen in amateur boxing took place at the Alma Athletic Club when featherweight Don Anderson of Ithaca knocked out Al Brown of Stanton – in all of seven seconds. Anderson took out Brown with a sharp right jab that took Brown out for the count…the Detroit Tigers announced that they planned to move Hank Greenberg from first base to the outfield. The move enabled Rudy York to play at first base…a high school Mardi Gras took place at Alma High School. Eighteen students appeared in a photo in the Alma Record and Alma Journal…the Jean Bessac Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution held a colonial tea and exhibit at the Gleaner Home in Alma. The Jean Torrence Chapter of the Ithaca D.A.R. provided historical exhibits, and members of the Alma chapter appeared in colonial dress. This meeting was the first significant function of the Alma D.A.R. since its formation a few months earlier. A crowd estimated at 125-150 people attended…a group of an executive committee met in  Alma to continue exploring establishing a community center in Alma. A.D. Smedberg chaired the committee. A group of twenty-five delegates from various Alma organizations encouraged the creation of the executive committee …the I.O.O.F. Hall in Elwell hosted a dance every Saturday night. Both round and square dances took place, and it only cost thirty-five cents per couple…Edward G. Robinson starred in “Blackmail” at the Ideal Theatre in Ithaca. Admission was fifteen cents…the Ithaca Post Office received approval to move to the old Ithaca National Bank Building. The area would be enlarged to 1800 feet of floor space. The old post office had been in operation for over forty years and was owned by the Barstow estate.

Drivers in Ithaca could now turn on red at Center and Pine Streets. A flashing red arrow now came on with a red stop light for traffic coming from the east…famous artist J. Franklin Caveny entertained a large crowd at St. Louis High School using works done in crayon and clay. As he talked to crowds, Caveny quickly transformed drawings like the Atlantic Ocean, then used a few strokes to make it into the Hudson River. What appeared to be a lump of clay promptly became a bust of William Shakespeare or Abraham Lincoln. The crowd responded with prolonged applause for several of his works…over at St. Louis, excavators working on Maple Street at the Ray Boivin home found flakes of gold at a depth of seen teen feet. Samples of the gold quickly went to laboratories for testing….Laurel and Hardy starred in “Flying Deuces” for two nights at the Alma Theatre…Mrs. R.B. Smith of Alma returned home with her daughter, Miriam, from visiting her son, Lieutenant Reynolds C. Smith, in New Haven, Connecticut. No one knew it in 1940. Still, Reynolds C. Smith would be the first Gratiot County serviceman to die in World War II…Professor Roy Hamilton of Alma College addressed the Alma Rotary Club. He issued a “terse and forceful plea” to the audience about the lack of moral and spiritual poise during this time of world and individual affairs….American League umpire George Moriarty spoke to a very excited crowd of listeners at Ithaca High School. Moriarty told stories about professional baseball and how, by living by “clean rules,” America could fight “the anti-Christ influence” coming from Europe’s dictators. Moriarity signed a baseball for Marie Plank, and the photo appeared in the Gratiot County Herald…Leslie Reeves of Ithaca stated that he would display the new Case Flambeau Red Tractor during Electrified Farm Week…” Elmer and His Singing Farmers” traveled to South Bend, Indiana, for a one-night performance at the Mid-West Creamery Banquet. The group included Kenneth McComber, Linden Wright, Wendel Wright, and George “Elmer” Schleder.

And that was February 1940 in “Gratiot County During Depression and War.”

Copyright 2025 James M. Goodspeed

We Remember January 1920 and Launching the S.S. City of Alma

Above: An actual photo of the S.S. City of Alma taken in the 1920s; this postcard, supposedly of the ship, was issued with the ship’s name painted on the hull; Esther Rhodes, the daughter of a prominent Alma businessman, christened the ship at a ceremony in 1920.

Sixteen-year-old Esther Rhodes of Alma stepped up on the platform adjoining the ship’s top. Freshly painted battleship grey, the vessel was draped in many flags and streamers. Miss Rhodes then broke a bottle on the ship’s hull and pronounced, “I christen thee City of Alma.” Amid the cheering of the small crowd, the boat slowly slid into the water. With the christening, the group celebrated the culmination of a successful post-World War I war bond drive in Alma.

During the Fourth Liberty Loan Drive in late 1918, Alma earned recognition as one of Michigan’s largest purchasers of Liberty Bonds. Over eighty percent of the people in Alma bought a bond – a record for cities buying $10,000 or less in bonds. By raising over $403,000, Alma led Gratiot County in its effort to raise over $1,000,000 for the war effort that fall. Most of the time, Michigan towns and cities with successful bond drives had tanks named in their honor. After the war ended, the government turned to naming ships in honor of places for their work with bond sales.

On January 20, 1920, at 9:15 AM, nine people went down to the Bristol, Pennsylvania pier. Charles G. Rhodes, his wife, and daughter accompanied Alma’s Mayor Murphy and his wife. Rhodes was a prominent Alma businessman and was vice president and spokesman for the Republic Truck Factory. Two men who helped lead Alma’s successful Liberty Loan Drive, Lieutenant T.A. Robinson and Lieutenant D. Sullivan, also attended. Three people from United States Emergency Fleet Corporation offices also went along. 

The ceremony to launch a ship took place at the Merchant Shipbuilding Corporation. Ten boats, in different stages of construction, could all be seen—one of them, the S.S. City of Alma was 417 feet long and 54 feet wide and belonged in the 9000-tonnage class. Onboard, it had “palatial quarters” for its ship’s crew and officers. A fabricated type of ship, it had rolled plates in the hull. These plates had holes punched into them at steel mills hundreds of miles away, a result of a type of production that sped up the building of ships during the war. This ship also had 3000 horsepower and burned oil on three boilers, but it could be converted to coal if necessary.

 Still,  during the Alma visit, the new vessel was unfinished and would not be ready for several weeks. Despite the delay, the Alma group received a tour aboard a similar ship in the naval yard, and a set of the S.S City of Alma’s blueprints and official ceremony photos went to Alma City Hall for display. When it became seaworthy, the new ship was assigned to the United States Shipping Board and then to the American Steamship Line. The vessel eventually belonged to the Waterman Steamship Company in Mobile, Alabama, during World War II, even though the United States Maritime Commission controlled the boat through a charter.

However, the story of the ship had a tragic ending. On June 3, 1942, while carrying 7400 tons of manganese ore and 400 miles northeast of Puerto Rico, a German submarine, U-172, sank it with one torpedo. The ship sank within three minutes, and 29 out of 39 men aboard died. The ten remaining crew members floated in a lifeboat for four days before being rescued.

Sadly, after 22 years of service, the S.S. City of Alma went to the bottom of the Caribbean.

Copyright 2024 James M. Goodspeed