Thursday, May 12, 2016

Sepia Saturday #330: Uncle Lorne at the Winnipeg Free Press


Our theme image this week shows a typesetter at work. It comes from the collection of the Netherlands National Archives and is part of their Flickr stream.


Uncle Lorne McLeod

My Uncle Lorne worked for the Winnipeg Free Press as a linotype operator. Until this week's Sepia Saturday prompt which features type setting, I knew nothing about Linotyping.  Here's how a Linotype keyboard looks:
And here's how a Linotype operator works:



I can imagine my Uncle at this machine in the place of the pictured Eldon Meeks. When there was "breaking news" or some big event, I remember that Lorne would have to work; sometimes it might be on Saturday or Sunday or late at night. He didn't talk about the demands of work too often; I wish I'd asked him more questions about his job.

I do remember a very cold New Year's Day and I mean bitterly cold, probably about -25 F. when Lorne got called to work. Crystal clear out, the sun was blinding, bouncing off the snow. Lorne had to leave our house in the middle of the day's celebrations and get to the Free Press building downtown. He took a cab which is probably why I remember the event. When we opened the front door to let him out, the shockingly cold air rolled into the warm house, sank to the floor and swirled around our ankles like smoke. Lorne wrapped his scarf around his face and breathed through the fabric to warm the air a bit before it hit his lungs. We watched him walk rapidly down our front sidewalk, feet squeaking in the permanently frozen footprints created months earlier when the temperature rose above freezing, jump over the ridge of snow dividing the sidewalk from the boulevard, jump again over the high, dirty heaps of snow created by the snowplows lining the main street and finally climb into the cab. Off he went to get the paper out. And that's the way it went. And why didn't I ask more questions?



The Winnipeg Free Press played a large part in all of our lives when I was growing up. The paper was delivered around 4:00 p.m. and my mother would sit in our living room, wearing a dress and high heels, reading. Most families looked forward to the paper arriving and everyone in our neighborhood read it. Mother would look over the front page, the obituaries and do the crossword puzzle while waiting for my father to get home from work. When I was six, I had a crossword vocabulary consisting of such words as "etui"- small needlework purse and "unco" - strange or unknown, which I learned from my mother as she did the puzzle. To this day, I get a shiver of pleasure when I'm doing a crossword and get the "needlework case" clue; floods of memories of my mother in our living room wash over me. Other than the puzzling with mother, as a child I read only the comics in the paper; gradually I took in more of the editorial content as I grew older.

Getting your name in the paper was a big deal. I can remember mother commenting, "Oh, so and so has their name in the paper today." When mother's dear friend Axel died, she was mentioned in his obituary and she told me over the phone, "At last, I got my name in the paper." She must have forgotten when she appeared with my sister, my niece and grand niece and her mother in a five-generation photo. Now, the littlest one in this photo is a grandmother, my niece Kim is a great grandmother and I'm a great, great grand aunt. Triple G. I have the original photo but in keeping with today's theme I'm posting the yellowed and poorly reproduced photo from the "paper".

Circa 1912, my father was a paperboy for the Winnipeg Free Press. This is one of my favorite pictures of him with his fellow paperboys on a winter day: I love the snow, the poses, the dogs, the sleds. As the photo is in a frame, sealed across the back, I had to take a photo of it. It's very poor but I hope you can get the feel of the boys. Dad always loved the company of men. A scant four years later he was in the Canadian army in France.
My Dad is the face at the top, cropped out of the larger photo below.

Full frame photo of WFP paperboys circa 1912
Dad a few years later....


I've often wondered why my family moved from their farm in Ontario to Winnipeg in 1910 instead of to Ottawa or Toronto. I'm starting to understand the attraction. The city was an exciting place at that time - full of opportunity. Reading about the history of the Free Press, I recalled that thousands of people were pouring in to the prairies from all over the world. Eastern Canadians were flowing west to start anew amid a robust and bustling economy.
www.curme.co.uk

www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca

www.readriedread.wordpress.com

www.westposters.ca

The city was called "Breadbasket of the Empire" at that time. The population was 42,000 in 1901, 136,00 in 1911 and 160,000 in 1916. Visionary entrepreneurs were moving in and amazingly, real estate on Main Street was selling for the same amount per square foot as on Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

My Uncle Clem brought the draft horses from the farm when they moved, figuring he could rent them or use them himself in the construction boom. Besides, the horses were members of the family too and they couldn't leave them behind. Clem began making deliveries with his team as soon as he arrived in Winnipeg and as he was an irrepressible entrepreneur he did well in the wide-open city. He was a serial businessman, unafraid to try various money making schemes. He ended up with a glass and insulation company, but along the way was an entertainer, and operated a skating rink on the river. Everybody in the family found work quickly in the city and a kind of prosperity (compared to farming) was enjoyed. 

There were 19 millionaires in the city in 1910. Charlie Chaplin played at the Empress Theatre; W.C. Fields at the Orpheum Theatre and Madame Butterfly was at the Walker Theatre. The darker side of the culture embraced dozens of saloons and plenty of whorehouses in Point Douglas, home to Madame Minnie Woods, Queen of Brothels.

Says Dr. Frank Albo, an art historian and author. "It was a city of tremendous bustle. Real bare-knuckle capitalism. It was a cross-civilization of nations and real, real building."
From www.winnipegfreepress.com/city beautiful: "In 1911, a newly formed Winnipeg Planning Commission anticipated the population of Winnipeg would reach 4.5 million by 1984. How Orwellian of them. More immediately, a group calling itself the Million for Manitoba League wanted a population of one million by 1922.

"You can't even fathom how much we believed we were 'it'," said Murray Peterson, a provincial historical buildings officer. "We were so at the top of everything. There wasn't a facet of the economy we didn't have a hand in. And not just locally."

After all, not one piece of goods, not one rail car, not one petticoat or bottle of baldness remedy came west without being carried on one of the 24 rail lines into Winnipeg. And not one bushel of wheat, piece of lumber or barrel of oil went further west without Winnipeg getting a taste. Bank clearings in 1913 were $1.5 billion. In 1909, Winnipeg handled 88 million bushels of wheat; more than Minneapolis (81 million) or Montreal (30 million) or Chicago (26 million) or New York (23 million)."

Well, things didn't turn out quite as planned. Do they ever? Winnipeg today has a population of about 750,000 people. Nobody in 1910 could have possibly imagined that in 2016, 11% of the population would be Filipino or that 72,335 citizens would be aboriginal. They wouldn't have dreamed of the brain drain of the 60's or the lure from other provinces or the collapses in farming. Most of my family on the paternal side left the province in the 60's and 70's and settled in the U.S. or in British Columbia. My mother and the French Canadians remained in the province. The "Millions for Manitobans" bunch had to wait until 1975 for the province to reach a million souls. I doubt that many of the forecasters from 1911 lived to see it happen. The good news is, that after losing population for many years, the city is growing again, in large part due to foreign immigration. The influx of youth and population diversity (brains and ambition) are fueling the economy.

To end on an optimistic note, I've included a piece of YouTube video which shows the Golden Boy statue on top of the legislative buildings in Winnipeg. It's a bit grandiose and the music, while original, is a bit annoying. It does, however, show off Winnipeg as the neat and tidy, nicely-sized city it has become.

But wait....just as I was going to press, aka pressing the "publish" button, I realized I have a press clipping of my own from last week I can include! Our Fallbrook Gardening Club hosted a flower show and I attended a demonstration. The local paper, The Village News (my husband, being somewhat cruel about the press, calls our paper "The Village Idiot") attended and took photos: you can tell we live in a throbbing hub of commerce and drama if the paper will send a reporter to a succulent demonstration. My husband made some scathing remarks about the collective age of the front row in the photo, but regardless I'm bravely soldiering forward, shedding his barbs like so many drops of dew. See! There I barely am, almost last in the row, hardly visible in the deep shadow, nevertheless my mother would say, "Helen got her picture in the paper today!"






21 comments:

  1. The image of your mother dressed like June Cleaver reading the paper conjures up lots of newspaper memories for me. We had subscriptions to both the morning and evening newspaper - now I wonder why and what the difference was in the 2. I remember our newspaper boy with his change holder on his belt. When he came to collect, he would stand on his toes and peek through the window of our front door before ringing the bell - just a little creepy. I always looked forward to the colorful Funnies that came in the Sunday paper.

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    1. Your paperboy sounds a bit strange. My husband was Liberace's paperboy - how is that for an obscure claim to fame. But wait, there's more! He pumped Johnny Cash's gas too.

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  2. I, too, was taken with your description of your Mom reading the newspaper a la June Cleaver (thanks Wendy for that perfect image) in a dress & high heels. I remember my Mom getting nicely dressed up with her "face" on to walk over to the local fountain with all us kids tagging along to meet my Dad, who was getting off the bus from work, to have a cup of coffee with him. (and we got ice cream cones!)

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    1. Your Dad must have loved having you all there to greet him. Boy, weren't those different times!!!

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  3. I don’t know June Cleaver but I too loved that description of your Mom; it could have been mine (minus the heels). Until recently she still looked forward to the ‘Post’ and doing the crossword. I enjoyed all your anecdotes, musings and pictures.

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  4. How lucky to have the right people in your family. Understandably that nothing could stop you to tell the stories. I remember in Switzerland I loved the Tages Anzeiger in the 60s and in Australia I was fond to read the local rag, the Daily Examiner; those were the times!

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  5. What a wonderful post! And my mother, too, would read the evening paper while waiting for my father to breeze in...crosswords galore -- I remember "etui" clearly; also "alb" and "obi" for two more favorites! Cleaver, indeed!

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    1. Thanks for reminding me about good old "alb" and "obi". So useful.

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  6. Interesting story. And you got your name in the paper (laughing about the snaggy remarks about age).

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  7. Well I have thoroughly enjoyed reading this post because only the other day I found out that my great-uncle got married in Winnipeg. http://familytreefrog.blogspot.com.au/2016/05/a-wedding-and-will-before-breakfast.html So there! I've ordered the marriage certificate and wait with bated breath.

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    1. Thanks...I've gotten lots of ideas from the link you provided.

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  8. An enjoyable post from Uncle Lome, your mom and you puzzling, through the Manitobian years.but most of all seeing the words, "She got her picture in the paper today." Those must have been the by words of our mothers -- certainly, of my mother. Great post.

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    1. Yes, the photo in the paper was the pinnacle of success.

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  9. I always loved sitting on my dad's lap reading the funnies. That was a highlight of the day whenever it happened. Yup, we have tons of information these days but because so few corporations own the media we have very little news. And we have far more typos than we ever had from the old linotype machines!

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    1. That must have been a great bonding experience for you and your father. We have a niece who learned football as a child, only so she could discuss the sports page with her father.

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  10. I remember the funnies, the newspaper boy and the evening paper, but my mother didn't do the crosswords and she taught school so she kicked off those heels when she got in and would read the paper later in her comfortable at home clothes and slippers. Love the description of your uncle going to work in the freezing sunshine and the cold around your ankles.

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    1. My mom had the luxury of being a stay at home mom and she was scrupulous about being presentable when dad came home - he always had someone in tow and she was ready to play bartender and hostess. I used to come home and ditch the shoes too first thing. Freezing sunshine is a good description of the winter weather in Winnipeg

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  11. Great stories and I love the linotype video. Watching and listening I see a virtuoso musician at his instrument. I'd like to see how the Golden Boy of Winnipeg manages the winters.

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    1. The Golden Boy has frozen buns for at least 8 months of the year. The minute he starts to thaw out, the mosquitos attack him.

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    2. They mentioned that foundry that made the Golden Boy on the Antiques Road Show last night. How in the world did I remember that name???
      Barbara

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  12. Wonderful memories and wonderful writing. It sure reminded me of my old type "specing" days in the Ad Biz. You had to tell the typesetter what typeface, column size, spacing, etc. that you wanted. He sent it back to you on paper, then the paste-up artist (me) pasted it down in position on the layout. I think this was different than how they did it at the newspaper. Barbara

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