Big Sky Kodachrome Government Photographers Captured Images from the Great Depression Through World War II in Full Color and Real Life
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IMAGES OF THE WEST BILL BILVERSTONE Big Sky Kodachrome Government photographers captured images from the Great Depression through World War II in full color and real life IT DEFIES COMMON SENSE, but many people think of the Great Depression and the early years of World War II in black and white. To some degree that’s because no convenient, stable and accurate color film existed until 1939. Mostly, however, it’s because Americans have been exposed repeatedly to the 170,000 monochrome photographs shot between 1936 and 1943 (think Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother and Arthur Rothstein’s Dustbowl images) to win support for Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and World War II. Despite that flawed monochrome assumption, Roosevelt administration photographers shot approximately 1,600 color images and a handful of those Kodachrome photographs spotlight Montana. HS DIVISION P ONGRESS, PRINTS & PHOTOGRA C COURTESY LIBRARY OF 58 doors and coated people’s throats. Grass- hoppers and Mormon crickets arrived in vast creeping swarms to scarf up already stunted crops. Thousands of Montanans urgently needed assistance, but President Her- bert Hoover believed that relief was the responsibility of state and local govern- ments, augmented by private charities. Organizations like the American Red Cross, however, lacked resources of the necessary scale. The state of Montana, dependent as it was on taxes for revenue, HS DIVISION had little to offer as the Depression rap- P idly shrank property values. While the 1920s had seen better than 50,000 Montanans withdraw from the land, the decade of the 1930s witnessed a flight compounded by economic stag- ONGRESS, PRINTS & PHOTOGRA C nation in the towns as well as the coun- tryside. Thousands tearfully packed their bags and joined the bedraggled migra- tion of Dokies (North and South Dako- COURTESY LIBRARY OF tans) piloting overloaded jalopies to the cities of the coast. Destitute and disheart- The Great Depression that staggered America in 1929 was Shepherd with ened, many Montanans found solace in horse and dog, just one more sucker punch to the people of Montana. A dozen Gravelly Range, their Bibles. Given the state’s pistol-pack- years earlier, drought had skulked into the eastern two-thirds Madison County. ing history, it’s a wonder Big Sky Country of the state. Lured by the outrageous claims of unscrupulous Photographer: never bred a Depression-era outlaw equal Russell Lee, railroads, thousands of homesteaders had weathered wind, August 1942 to John Dillinger or Bonnie and Clyde. cold, hail and wildfire since the turn of the century, often from On the other side of the country, Frank- the sketchy shelter of a sod house or tarpaper shack. lin Roosevelt was elected president in 1932. At the same time, The First World War’s elevated grain prices bottomed out Eastman Kodak scientists Leopold Godowsky Jr. and Leopold by 1921, and farmers who had invested in land and machin- Mannes struggled to invent the color transparency (or slide) ery found themselves deeply in debt. Montana’s overextended banks failed at an unprecedented rate and surviving banks were often reluctant or unable to grant extensions on exist- HS DIVISION P ing loans. Thousands of farms went under and bank failures swallowed up family savings. Commerce in lumber and met- als, cattle and sheep, foundered too, with the end of the war. The late 1920s brought increased rainfall and higher com- modity prices, but 1929 and ‘30 ushered in both the Depression ONGRESS, PRINTS & PHOTOGRA and a fresh round of drought. Like perverse thunderheads, C topsoil boiled thousands of feet into the air, hissed beneath LEFT: Cattle in corrals, Beaverhead County. Photographer: Russell Lee, September 1942 RIGHT: Drought refugees from Glendive leaving for Washington. Photographer: Arthur Rothstein, July 1936 COURTESY LIBRARY OF BIG SKY JOURNAL 59 HS DIVISION P ONGRESS, PRINTS & PHOTOGRA C COURTESY LIBRARY OF film that the world would know as Kodachrome. Godowsky Tugwell recognized that the agency’s innovative relief and Mannes, a chemist and a physicist, began experimenting policies, which included loans and the “resettling” of des- with color photography in high school after viewing the 1917 titute farmers on desirable land, would benefit from popu- movie “Our Navy,” a disappointing early attempt at color film. lar support. Consequently, he created the Historical Section, Roosevelt came to power promising a “New Deal” of the Resettlement Administration’s public information office, greater opportunity for a nation where tens of thousands of and chose one of his former students, Colorado native Roy businesses had failed, the unemployment rate had reached Stryker, to run it. Stryker’s job was to employ the untested 25 percent and the homeless numbered in the hundreds of medium of documentary photography, publicizing the des- thousands. He intended to use the spending powers of the perate condition of the nation’s farms, and highlighting the federal government to put people back to work (which stuck agency’s achievements. in the craw of both conservative economists and the congressional majority). Roosevelt appointed Columbia University economics professor Rexford G. Tugwell assis- tant secretary of agriculture. Charged with bringing the New Deal to struggling farmers, Tugwell fathered the Resettlement Administra- tion, an agency established in part to rectify the HS DIVISION oversights of an earlier policy that paid farmers P to let land lie fallow. That practice had benefited large, well-established farms, but for the many tenant farmers already losing ground to mecha- nization, crop reduction often resulted in expul- ONGRESS, PRINTS & PHOTOGRA sion from the land. C RIGHT: Scrap and salvage depot, Butte. Photographer: Russell Lee, October 1942 ABOVE: Street corner, Dillon, trading center for a prosperous cattle and sheep country. Photographer: Russell Lee, August 1942 COURTESY LIBRARY OF 60 Raised on a Colorado ranch, Stryker served in World War I and labored at hard rock mining before studying economics at Columbia University. There, Tugwell invited QUALITY RANCH, RECREATIONAL his exceptional student to co-author a textbook, American & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES Economic Life. Collaborating with Fortune Magazine pho- tographer Margaret Bourke White and child labor docu- mentarian Lewis Hine, Stryker discovered a passion for photographs that would shape the rest of his life. By early 1936 — just as Eastman Kodak began market- ing Kodachrome — Stryker had the Historical Section’s darkroom functioning and was hiring photographers. Stryker’s efforts met with a good deal more success than Eastman Kodak’s. While Kodachrome’s three-dye con- trolled diffusion process frequently was defacing slides with a red tint or yellow stain, Stryker was setting in motion the largest and most meaningful documentary project in history, launching the careers of many of the most import- ant photographers of a generation. The likes of Dorothea Lange, Arthur Rothstein, Walker Evans, Ben Shawn, Rus- sell Lee, John Vachon and Marion Post Wolcott rib-rattled their way down America’s generally unpaved roads on behalf of the Roosevelt administration. Stryker initially hired John Vachon to caption photo- graphs, but the would-be writer soon took up a camera. In addition to his images, which stand out for their pow- erful sense of social justice, Vachon’s tenure at the His- torical Section is notable for its length (seven years, 1936 to 1943), and for a memo he wrote to Stryker calling for “the honest preservation of the American scene,” and the “typical” rather than the “unique.” Vachon’s letters to his wife Penny have provided historians with a perceptive, achingly human and occasionally humorous look at the photographer’s life on the road. From Butte, Montana, in March 1942 he wrote of “regretting a very abject and cowardly performance about 3:00 this afternoon.” Vachon is reproaching himself for fearing to drive the road from Wise River to Wisdom, which is “one lane bumpy full of puddles holes heavy TRACY RAICH snow and cliff hanging.” It really rankles when the atten- Broker | Owner dant at the Wise River gas station tells him, “The mail stage makes it every day.” 406.223.8418 WWW.TRACYRAICH.COM Just as the photographers would necessarily grow in LIVINGSTON, MT 59047 their work, so would the sphere of the Historical Section. Absorbed by the Farm Security Administration in 1937 (which scuttled the divisive “resettlement” appellation) and the Office of War Information in 1942, the Historical Section would expand its compass to include midsized cities along with small towns as the nexus of rural life and an America mobilizing for war. Montanans would inevitably find themselves in the Exceptional Service for Buyers & Sellers viewfinders of the government photographers. BIG SKY JOURNAL 61 Arthur Rothstein, Russell Lee and Marion Post Wol- cott shot black and white between 1936 and 1941. They immortalized miners and resettlement farms, the destitute and dude ranches, Crow Fair and cattle drives, railroads, sawmills and gin mills. They shot in Montana’s major cit- ies and most of its counties. According to Mary Murphy’s excellent Hope in Hard Times, “All of them were struck by the beauty of the country. All of them struggled with how to photograph its grandeur and subtlety.” By 1939, Eastman Kodak adopted selective re-exposure, an accurate and reliable processing method that, under optimal conditions, resulted in slides capable of retaining their color for 100 years. The familiar 2-by-2 inch cardboard “ready mount” hit the market in April of that same year, but color didn’t come cheap. An 18-exposure slide cartridge for a 35mm camera cost a whopping $3.50, about $45 in today’s coin. Kodachrome nevertheless soon outsold East- man Kodak’s black and white film and drove to virtual extinction its inconvenient and inaccurate competitors. The wounds of Pearl Harbor were raw and the Depres- sion was losing ground to the business of war in 1942 when John Vachon and Russell Lee came to Montana and shot color.