Saturday, February 22, 2014

Civil Defense in Vermont - Preparing for Nuclear Attack


Forrest Aikens was born in 1895 to Seth and Alice Aikens of Barnard, Vermont. He went to school in the Village School in Barnard for his primary grades, and then went to Whitcomb High School in Bethel. He served in the army in World War I but did not go overseas. Forrest was a traveling salesman, and was the executive secretary of the Vermont Grocer's Association for 15 years during the 1950's and 60's, thus it is probably safe to assume that he was a grocery salesman. He was also the Food Consultant for the Vermont Civil Defense during the 1950's.

Although the 1950's has the reputation of being an era of innocence, in many ways it was an era of anxiety and fear. The United States ended World War II by dropping atomic bombs on the cities of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, Japan. The Americans knew that the atomic bomb was the most powerful weapon the world had ever known, capable of creating mass destruction and casualties, but the reality of suffering and wreakage unleashed by these weapons was more terrible than the theoretical damage the American military knew these bombs were capable of. America was well aware of how destructive and deadly an atom bomb was. When, in 1949, four years after we used the atomic bombs on Japan, Russia detonated an atomic bomb of its own, Americans became sure that the Russians would use the bomb to attack our country.

Although Russia was our ally against the Germans and Japanese in World War II, ideological differences between their Communist government and our Democratic government created economic, cultural and military tension between the United States and the Soviet Union. Every so often, these tensions threatened to boil over into military attacks. Historians call this era of international tension “The Cold War”, to indicate a supposed lack of real military engagement. I have never understood the theory behind the term “Cold War”. Although the United States didn't get into a direct military conflict with Russia, we did get involved in two conflicts with Communist governments in Korea and Vietnam.

Fear of nuclear attack led the American government to promote Civil Defense Leagues throughout the nation. President Harry Truman created the Federal Civil Defense Administration in December of 1950. The main purpose of this agency was to publish and distribute educational material to Civil Defense Leagues at the state and local levels. The Civil Defense Administration was clear that if the Soviet Union did attack, the American military would be too busy fighting the enemy to come to the aid of the ordinary citizen. The idea was that if Americans were prepared and knew what to do to keep themselves safe in case of a nuclear attack, everyone would get through it better than the Japanese, who didn't know what was coming.

During World War II, many women had worked outside the home to fill roles in businesses and industry vacated by the men who fought the war. When the men came home from the war and returned to their jobs, the women were encouraged to return to their domestic duties as wives and mothers. The Cold War Museum's website tells us that,



“In order for civil defense to succeed on the national level, millions of Americans

would have to take the lead in organizing local operations. Women, viewed by many

as homemakers with free time to spare, soon became the target of a massive civil

defense recruiting campaign by the federal government.faced with widespread

apathy and doubt about the practicality of civil defense (both in the general public

and by many politicians), the FCDA hoped women’s 'inherent' abilities of persuasion

would help convince the public of the necessity of the program. Utilizing traditional

gender stereotypes that portrayed women as mothers and nurturers, the federal

government implored women to join civil defense not only to save the country,

but their families as well. In short, civil defense became a family affair.




Even in Vermont, people took the looming nuclear attack seriously. The FCDA had a map listing primary and secondary possible targets, and Montpelier was listed as a secondary target, the only one in Vermont. With my healthy 2014 skepticism, I view that as an attempt on the part of Washington to include Vermont in what was happening nationally, and, for lack of any other sensible targets, identifying the capital makes sense. Really, the Soviet Union was about to attack Montpelier?

Regardless, people in Montpelier began to plan for possible nuclear attack, and true to what the Cold War Museum tells us, the women were the most actively involved. The Vermont Historical Society in Barre has three full file folders full of Civil Defense documents, donated by the family of Jean Balham. Mrs. Balham was a Civil Defense leader in Montpelier, In charge of holding meetings and instructing the ladies of the city how to prepare for nuclear disaster. She gave presentations at church women's groups and civic organizations throughout the Montpelier.

Mrs Baham's Civil Defense Leader curriculum explains that Civil Defense is a way of saving lives and property in case of atomic, biological or chemical attack. The curriculum outlines how to set up an air raid shelter, which could be your basement. Women were instructed to turn off all heaters and furnaces, which could be a fire hazard in case of explosions, and all fans and blowers, which could move contaminated air into the shelter. Closing all doors and covering windows would prevent radiation from entering the shelter from the outside. There was information on how to locate and rescue family members who may be trapped under a demolished building, and how to move them safely. The packets gave instructions on setting up a first aid kit. Various pamphlets in the folders suggested having three days worth of food and water, other pamphlets suggested the necessity of having seven days food and water, yet others suggested a full three weeks worth of provisions.

The packets explained what fallout is. I have spent my whole life hearing about fallout, without really knowing what it is. When a nuclear bomb is dropped, the energy from the blast pulverizes anything underneath it. Hot air rises, and the air around the detonated bomb is so incredibly hot it rises super fast, causing immense suction that pulls all this pulverized matter up with it, creating what we know
as “The Mushroom Cloud”. What goes up must come down, and when the air containing the pulverized stuff, now contaminated with radiation from the bomb's fuel, cools off, the stuff falls back to the ground in the form of dust – fallout. The closer you are to the center of the bomb site, the more dangerous and toxic the fallout is. Pre 9/11, I was familiar with the center of the bomb being referred to as “Ground Zero”, but the Civil Defense material doesn't use this term.

The material explains that the main characteristics of an atomic bomb are the initial blast, and then intense heat. It stated that if you were present at the center of where the bomb was dropped, you would not survive. I found it strangely comforting that the government didn't try to tell people that they could survive being directly hit by a nuclear bomb. The farther you are from the center of the blast, the more likely you are to survive, with that likelihood increases if you are in a bomb shelter that is underground and built with concrete walls. In your bomb shelter, you should be sure that you have a battery-powered radio, tuned to AM 640 or 1240, the CONELRAD frequencies. CONELRAD was short for CONtrol of ELectromagnetic RADiation, and that was the name of the government broadcasting system that would inform the public in case of nuclear attack. As concerns about an attack lessened in the late 60's, CONELRAD became the Emergency Broadcast System, which we still have today.

There was no information about radiation sickness, which is what happens to you when you are directly exposed to the radiation of a nuclear bomb. However, there was a note in the folder,  which I assume was typed by Mrs Balham, outlining the affects of radiation poisoning.



“Radiation destroys white blood cells, destroying the body's ability to combat bacteria.

Vomiting starts within a few hours up to one day. You may have a feeling of lassitude,

and long bleeding from trivial cuts or from your gums. You can also lose your hair.

Of course, nerves could cause some of these symptoms. Radiation

sickness can be helped with blood plasma, complete rest, antibiotics and ordinary

sanitary measures.”



I found it amusing that she thought that the symptoms of radiation poisoning, after a nuclear attack, could be just nerves. Throughout my whole childhood, any time I was sick, that was my mother's favorite line. I could have had a 104ยบ fever accompanied by projectile vomiting and convulsions, and my mother would have told me it was “just nerves”.

Much of the rest of the information in Mrs. Ballard's files addressed food safety. This is where Forrest Aikens would have been involved. Each state had a Civil Defense Food Consultant to the State Department of Agriculture, to tell state officials what to do to keep the state's food supply safe in the even of a nuclear attack. The Civil Defense leaders also knew all about what food and drink was safe and unsafe as well.

Any food or water that was covered was safe. Water from wells was safe, although water from ponds or other open bodies would be contaminated. Presumably this assumes that you were a distance from the center of the bomb, because I cannot imagine that the water near the bomb site would be safe, even if it was from a well underground. The material said that you should wipe all containers free of dust, then bury the cloths because they will be “hot” or contaminated. Get rid of anything that is open.

There was a pamphlet in the folder called “Defense Against Radioactive Fallout on the Farm”. This would be another area of concern for Forrest. The pamphlet said that radiation lasts a long time in the soil, without giving specifics, because, the government didn't really know just how long that radiation did last. If a farm was near the center of the bombsite, it would have to be abandoned indefinitely.

Fallout would be the concern of farmers who were somewhat removed from the bombsite. Again, there were no firm distances given because no one really knew for sure what was a safe distance from the blast. Livestock that was in the barn was fairly safe from contamination, but the meat from livestock that was outside could not be eaten because it would be contaminated with radiation, and the eggs or milk from contaminated chickens or cows could not be consumed. Feed that was covered, like silage in a silo, was safe to feed livestock, but feed left outside was not. Forage from contaminated soil would be unsafe. Eggs that had been laid by chickens that weren't contaminated would be safe to eat, if they were washed off first, because the egg's shell would protect the inside of the egg from contamination.

For fruits and vegetables, tubers like carrots and potatoes come into contact with the top of the soil when they are pulled up and should be washed carefully before they are eaten. Thick skinned fruit is okay, but you should wash it before you eat it. The pamphlets repeatedly stressed the necessity of wearing rubber gloves when handling any of these fruits or vegetables. Peas or shell beans could be eaten because their outer coverings protected the insides, but string beans would be contaminated. Corn would be okay because the shucks would protect the cobs, but it should be washed anyway as a preventative measure.

I spent a fair amount of time at the Vermont Historical Society reading all of this material. It brought home to me how seriously people took the threat of a nuclear attack. One of the presentations in the curriculum, from the 1959 Civil Defense Leader's Handbook, involved a skit featuring a mother, a grandmother, a father and two kids. This skit was supposed to show how to conduct a family meeting featuring a discussion of how to set up a fallout shelter and conduct family disaster drills. The skit starts with the mother sending a little tyke to bed, calling Grandma to the table, and telling the son to tell his father it's time for family meeting. It was news to me that families had family meetings in the 50's. Anyway, Dad says to the son, “Tell your mother I'm watching TV.” Mom answers by saying, “No, no, this is really important, our lives could depend on being prepared.” The more things change the more they stay the same.

Another famous feature of the Civil Defense material was the “Grandma' s Pantry” concept. The idea was that “Grandma's pantry” was well stocked, and could have provided sufficient provisions for a family hunkered down in the bomb shelter. The “modern woman” of the 1950's would be prepared for a possible nuclear attack if she kept her cupboards well-stocked with necessities. You can hear a radio advertisement for "Grandma's Pantry" here: http://www.authentichistory.com/1946-1960/4-cwhomefront/3-civildefense/1-educating/Civil_Defense_Spot_Take_the_Step-Grandmas_Pantry.html

Included in the files is a letter, dated March 27, 1959 to Jean Balham from one of the heads of the Vermont Civil Defense Commission, a woman. The letter mentions that the United Methodist Church and the Seventh Day Adventist church had requested information about food safety in a nuclear attack. This tells us that average people were thinking about these issues. It also includes the price list for dosimeters that Mrs. Balham had requested. Dosimeters measured an individual's exposure to radiation. The letter was signed “Yours for Civil Defense”.
 
left: dosimeter and charger

It seems unreal to me that people in Vermont were actually convinced that Russia was going to attack here. Equally ridiculous – the thought that if it did happen, washing your fruit and vegetables would make everything all better. In 2014, I sometimes think about a terrorist attack on the power grid and am glad for my wood heat, the water that comes from our spring, and the fact that my husband can hunt for food.

If you are interested in looking at one of the Civil Defense Leader's Manuals, here is a link:

http://www.orau.org/ptp/Library/cdv/Basic%20Course%20for%20Civil%20Defense.pdf . Mrs Balham had this manual, but she had other manuals as well, and I couldn't find the one with the skit in it on line. The script of the conversation between the family members was funny.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Windsor County Court January 21


Heather Impey, DOB 5/10/84, pleaded not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Hartford on January 15



Joseph Cobb, DOB 4/8/78, pleaded not guilty to a charge of cocaine and heroin possession on November 10 in Hartford. Cobb also pleaded not guilty to charges of possession of heroin, possession of cocaine, and reckless endangerment, in Hartford on January 2 You can read about these charges here: http://vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/RH/20140106/NEWS02/701069930



Erikka Hull, DOB 5/21/94, pleaded not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Springfield on January 7



Ryan Janes, DOB 1-4-87 pleaded guilty to a charge of reckless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Ludlow on January 11



Daniel McChesney, DOB 8/27/90, pleaded guilty to a charge of careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle, in Cavendish on November 12



Makenzie Baker, DOB 6/11/94, pleaded not guilty to a charge of careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Weathersfield on November 27


Windsor County Court January 14


Corin Hensel-Browning, DOB 11/12/87, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Cavendish on January 5



Natasha Morse, DOB 9/24/90, pled not guilty to a charge of heroin possession in Windsor on December 2 You can read more here: http://www.thevermontstandard.com/2014/01/police-windsor-woman-arrested-after-heroin-found-in-her-motel/



Erica Lopez, DOB 8/11/89, pleaded not guilty to a charge of resisting arrest in Hartford on November 23



Andrea Perkins, DOB 11/18/93, pleaded not guilty to a charge of embezzlement of less than 100 dollars, in Weathersfield on November 11



Kim Macinnes, DOB 5/20/56, pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct noise on January 13 i Hartford


The following are links regarding other Windsor County Court Cases, pending since November



Travis Barton, age 32, in Weathersfield:




Kyle Quirion, age 27, in Windsor:




Emma Harley, age 20 of Reading:



Windsor County Court January 7


The following individuals pleaded not guilty to their first DUI charge:

Gerald Murray, DOB 4/24/64, , in Chester on December 19th

Katrina Crowley, DOB 6/30/70, in Hartford on January 3,

Chris Cain, DOB 2/26/82, in Ludlow, on December 14

Tatiana Atkins-Aleeva, DOB 6/2/87,  in Windsor on December 31

Brandon Ducharme, DOB 6/27/88, , in Windsor on December 29

Matthew Candelora, DOB 10/2/85,  in Ludlow on December 29

Deborah Crosby, DOB 8/16/60, in Hartford on January 1

Daniel Michaud, DOB 2/11/86,  in Bethel on December 20
 
James Napier, DOB 12/29/67, , in Royalton on December 3

Eric Eckler, DOB 7/12/84 pleaded not guilty to his second DUI charge, in Windsor on December 14



Russell Comstock, DOB 4/15/67, pleaded not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/language in Hartland on October 24



Bridget Hughes, DOB 5/3/85, pleaded not guilty to a charge of failing to return a leased or rented vehicle, in Hartford on October 10



David Monoco, DOB 12/25/67 pleaded not guilty to a charge of his second DUI, and driving with a suspended license in Hartford on December 28



Patrick Keeley, DOB 4/18/94, pleaded not guilty to a charge of reckless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle on November 9 in Springfield



Mohamed Hamdi, DOB 7/8/91, pleaded not guilty to a charge of violating an abuse prevention order in Hartford on January 6 You can read more about Hamdi's arrest here: http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20140109/THISJUSTIN/701099906






Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Windsor County Court December 17 2013


Individuals Charged with Welfare Fraud



Richard Weldon – DOB 10/9/45 – 5 charges of Welfare fraud

Kammy McDonald -DOB 11/07/70 – 3 charges of Welfare fraud

Tasha Gaudette – DOB 9/25/86 – 1 charge of Welfare fraud/7

Brooke Scott – DOB 2/2/89 – 2 charges of Welfare fraud

Ellie- Mae Morse – DOB 3/27/73 4 charges of Welfare fraud

Patrick Morse – DOB 10/7/52 5 charges of Welfare fraud

Denise Wildasin – DOB 7/7/89 2 charges of Welfare fraud






DUI Charges:



Peter Beebe, DOB 9/8/84 pleaded not guilty to two counts of his 4th or subsequent DUI's in Brattleboro on October 29



Caroline Dickey, DOB 1/26/88 pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving while under the influence of alcohol, drugs or both in Springfield on September 29



Randy Portteman, DOB 10/54/51, pleaded guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Hartford on October 31



Kimberly Costello, DOB 8/5/68 pleaded not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Springfield on December 9



The following were charged with driving with a suspended license:



Jesse Hohmer DOB 3/14/80 in Woodstock on November 23



Christopher Wood, DOB 6/27/ 65 in Bridgewater on August 26



Alexander Annunziata, DOB 2/11/91, in Hartford on November 9



Jeffrey McCrillis, DO 5/4/66, in Bethel on October 22



In addition:



Joshua Wilson, DOB 5/1/94, was charged with petit larceny and giving false information to a police officer in Windsor on November 3. These charges involved the theft of a Samsung Tablet.



Christopher Heath, DOB 7/26/91, pleaded not guilty to a charge of simple assault/mutual affray, in Windsor on November 8



Nicholas Tessier, DOB 10/28/90, pleaded not guilty to a charge of simple assault/mutual affray, in Windsor on November 8


Mackenzie Delaney, DOB 6/12/96 pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight in Windsor on November 3

Ryan Pero, DOB 7/24/93, pleaded not guilty to four counts of forgery in Hartford on November 8 These charges involve forged checks. He was also charged with negligent or careless operation of a motor vehicle in Hartford on May 27



Lydia Hunter, DOB 11/4/80 pleaded not guilty to charges of financial exploitation of vulnerable adults, credit card fraud and identity theft, in Norwich from April -September You can read more about these charges here: http://www.vnews.com/news/10019489-95/caregiver-charged-with-identity-theft



Joshua Martell, DOB 1/24/96 pleaded not guilty to a charge of engaging in prohibited acts, in Hartford on October 8



Theresa Woodward, DOB 10/28/68 pleaded not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/noise in Windsor on November 12



Jennifer Copp, DOB 5/14/83, pleaded not guilty to a charge of petit larceny in Hartford on November 11



James Lumbra, DOB 12/11/85 pleaded guilty to a charge of taking game by illegal means in Bethel on November 18



Alexander Delaney, DOB 10/5/94 was charged with hindering arrest in Windsor on November 3. He was also charged with retail theft in Windsor on November 18 and petit larceny on November 2



Arthur Deslisle, DOB 4/30/54, pleaded guilty to a charge of cultivating marijuana in Bethel on October 11





In a case that is still pending from December of 2012, Kyle Doyle, DOB 3/28/94, pleaded not guilty to charges of obstructing justice, assault with a deadly weapon, and giving false information to a police officer in Hartford on November 2, 2012


Follow these links for information on other crimes committed in November in Windsor County:









Jacob Forcier, age 18, from Randolph




Henry Taboada, age 52, of Brooklyn New York http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20131104/THISJUSTIN/711049961













Forrest “Tink” Aikens, son of Seth Aikens and grandson of Charles Aikens, worked in the grocery business from the 1940's to at least 1960. During that time, the grocery industry went through serious changes. In many ways the grocery stores of the '60's hardly resembled the grocery stores of the '30's. In my last post I talked about how milk marketing changed over time. That wasn't the only change in the grocery business.

When I think about milk, the next thing I think about is orange juice, for whatever reason. Up until World War II, houswives served their families fresh squeezed orange juice for breakfast, not to be fancy, but because that's all they had. I've always wondered why juice glasses are so small. I like juice and serve juice at my house in full 8 ounce glasses. I realized doing the research for this blog that it's because you couldn't get that much juice by squeezing oranges. Everyone got a little juice glass full and they were satisfied with that much. If you wanted a lot to drink, you drank milk or water.

This all changed after World War II. At the end of the war, food scientists and engineers developed a way to concentrate juice and freeze it, to ship overseas to the troops. Immediately after the war, it was shipped to war-torn Europe to feed mothers and children in countries that had no food due to the devastation of the war. Frozen juice concentrate was a new product companies were eager to market to consumers at large. Frozen display cases were already being used for meat, and frozen orange quickly caught on among housewives who were happy to give up the daily chore of squeezing orange juice.


From 1940-1970, orange production increased 450% as a result of the popularity of frozen orange juice. Canned juice had been available for several decades, but consumers didn't like the taste of juice in cans. In 1960, the Tropicana Company started freezing juice in its original form, without concentrating it, marketing as “fresh, never frozen or concentrated”. People bought it because they
thought it tasted better, but it was more expensive that frozen concentrate because it cost more to
store it in liquid form – it took up more space. For a long while, Tropicana had the market for fresh orange juice cornered, but now several other companies also market fresh orange juice. Growing up, my family always drank Tropicana, which is surprising since I lived on a farm and my mother didn't have much money. She was ahead of her time as far as healthy food was concerned, though, and she was probably willing to spend the extra to have something as natural as you could get, at that time. Much of the orange juice sold in little bottles, though, that you buy in convenience stores, is frozen and reconstituted.

 
These are the Tropicana bottles I remember. I lived on a dairy farm
and my father brought milk in from the bulk tank in these bottles.


At the same time frozen orange juice was being developed, Clarence Birdseye developed frozen vegetables. Clarence Birdseye was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1886. He went to Amherst College to learn to become a biologist but never finished school because he couldn't afford the tuition. He got a job as a government field naturalist and made money on the side through trading furs. On a fur trading expedition in Labrador, he saw the Eskimos preserve meat by flash-freezing it. He realized that if you flash-froze vegetables it would work just as well.

Birdseye invented a flash-freeze machine and in 1924 started a frozen-food company, the General Seafood Corporation, which focused mostly on frozen fish. In 1929 the Postum Company bought General Seafood and the combined company was renamed General Foods. General Foods retained Clarence Birdseye as the head of their frozen food department, and called their frozen food line Birds Eye. Frozen food didn't really catch on until after World War II, when self service freezer cases became more common in grocery stores. By the time Clarence Birdseye died in 1954, frozen food had become a multi-billion dollar industry.

Even the transaction to buy food changed after World War II. Before the war, a housewife went to the General Store, gave the grocer an order, and he would “put up” your order, in a combination of packaging that he supplied and containers the housewife brought from home. The paper bag was invented in the late 1800's, but the advent of self-service grocery stores brought something new – the shopping cart.

The first self-service grocery store was the Piggly Wiggly of Memphis, Tennessee. The first Piggly Wiggly opened in 1916, and became the first chain supermarket as Piggly Wiggly stores opened throughout the South. Sylvan Goldman owned several Piggly Wiggly stores in Oklahoma during the Depression. Sales were down due to hard economic times, and Goldman spent a fair amount of time trying to think of ways to get customers to spend more money in his stores. One day, he realized that consumers could only buy as much food as they could carry. He immediately ordered baskets for customers to fill and carry up to the checkout counter. Customers used the baskets right away and sales skyrocketed.

The next question was “How can I design a bigger basket that shoppers will fill with more groceries? Maybe a basket on wheels.” The problem was that larger baskets on wheels would take up too much expensive floor space. Looking at the folding chairs in his office, Goldman got the idea of double decker baskets mounted on a folding frame. Customers could take a basket from the stack, unfold it, wheel it around the store, fill it with groceries, take it to the checkout counter and return it to the stack, wheel it out to their vehicle, and return it to the stack when they were done shopping. He designed these baskets, contacted a manufacturer, and had some made and delivered to his store. He called them grocery carts.

Great idea! Unfortunately, shoppers didn't take to the grocery carts as quickly as they did to the small baskets. Women thought they were too much like baby carriages, and men, who hadn't objected to the small baskets, thought a basket on wheels made them out to be weaklings who couldn't carry their own groceries.

Goldman was convinced that the grocery cart would increase sales. He hired good looking young women and tough athletic looking men to walk around the store and “shop”, put items into well-filled grocery carts and bring them through the checkout. Use of grocery carts increased with this clever
marketing technique and sales took another huge leap. Soon, grocery carts became common throughout the country.

Although I'm fascinated with the evolution of the grocery industry after World War II, probably because I've spent more time than I wish in grocery stores while I raised six children, I should probably leave this subject and pick it up another time. Just one more thing......

In 2014, the Upper Valley has a fairly local connection to the Piggly Wiggly. I have always associated the Piggly Wiggly with the South. Piggly Wiggly supermarkets still exist today and their national headquarters is in Keene, New Hampshire. Piggly Wiggly is a subsidiary of C & S Grocers of Keene. C & S was ranked by Forbes magazine as the 10th largest privately held company in the country. Rick Cohen, president of C & S groceries, lives in Keene and is the 2nd richest man in New England.