Sunday, July 9, 2017

Building a Book on Alabama Pro Wrestling History (Part 3)


     A few bits of good news came out of the past week.  First and foremost, when my first two reels of the 1934 Birmingham News arrived at the Huntsville-Madison County Public Library, I was only assessed a fee of $2.  The HMCPL only charges $1 per microfilm reel for processing Inter-Library Loan requests, and apparently they were able to find the microfilm somewhere other than the state archives.  And apparently that other library didn't charge anything for loaning out their films.  YAY!  I also found that the HMCPL allows up to 5 concurrent ILL requests, so I went ahead and requested the next 5 months of 1934.  If all goes well, I hope to be mid way through 1935 by the end of July.

     I made the long trek to Montgomery yesterday to get started on the Montgomery Advertiser.  While I was fortunate to catch them on a weekend they were open (2nd weekend of every month, just like the Archives in Birmingham), they were also holding a genealogy seminar that morning.  On the positive side, it meant for the first 4 hours I was there, things were quiet in the Research Room and there was no waiting for one of the two (TWO! Seriously, just two?  The Tennessee State Archives has about ten!) microfilm scanners, but once the seminar let out, it started to get busy, so I packed it in for the long drive home.
     While there, I managed to knock out 15 months worth of the Advertiser, from November 1931-January 1933.  Another positive discovery was that the Montgomery Advertiser was a much smaller paper than I had anticipated, to the point where they could fit two and sometimes three months on a single reel.  So my original estimate of 120 reels to cover 1931-1940 for Montgomery has been revised down to 55-60 reels.  The combination of fewer reels to borrow, and the dramatically reduced fees greatly reduce my projected expenses for this project, which is a very good thing.


     A couple of quick notes on what I found in the films I got through: Sam Siegel, heavyweight promoter in Birmingham, was announced in November 1931 as the new matchmaker for Montgomery Post No. 2, replacing Roy B. Strickland, who had requested to be relived of the duty due to being too busy with his own business.  Naturally, big things were promised with Siegel coming in, but in the fifteen months I scanned through, he only ran a handful of shows at the end of 1931 into early 1932.  Though I didn't find any big announcement, in June, arrangements had been made for Chris Jordan to begin running weekly shows at the Cramton Bowl, kicking things off in style with a main event between former world heavyweight champ Gus Sonnenberg against Jim Hesslyn (repeatedly misspelled as Kesslyn in the Advertiser) on June 8th.  An estimated 1,000 fans turned out for the show.

     Since I was there, I also asked them to pull their hard copy of the 1938 Huntsville Times to try to fill in more details for a show that was advertised for Wednesday, 20 April 1938.  The microfilm at the HMCPL was missing that issue, and so was GenealogyBank.com.  As it turns out, the Archives were also missing that issue.  Tuesday the 19th jumped straight to Thursday the 21st, with no mention of no paper having been printed for the 20th.  So I have to assume, they just failed to acquire that issue, and that the microfilms were probably taken from the hard copies at the Archives.  As no mention was made of the show in the 21 April issue, and it was the last show announced in 1938, I'm leaning toward it having been cancelled due to poor turnout.  A few days later an announcement was made that wrestling and boxing shows would be suspended "until the present political campaign is finished."  Must have been a long campaign as shows were not resumed until July of 1939.

     As a progress report, last week I had noticed that I'd apparently not abstracted the cards and results from the Tuscaloosa News, even though I had all the clippings collected already, so I knocked that out (thanks to the mid-week holiday), and have updated the grid on the first of these posts.  While 1932 was a very busy year, with a lot of small towns being run, I suspect once Jordan expanded to Dothan, Montgomery and Mobile, that towns like Tarrant City, Bessemer and Homewood were largely abandoned.  There was only so much talent to go around, so it would only have made sense for Jordan to have concentrated his efforts in the larger towns where he could stand to make a lot more money.

Sunday, July 2, 2017

Building a Book on Alabama Pro Wrestling History (Part 2)

Source: WBRC.com

     I finished gathering clippings from Gadsden this weekend, so I now have 1933-40 to cover Gadsden, and the shows from neighboring Attalla in 1939-40.  Joe Gunther started running shows in Gadsden again with a special Independence Day show, but either he only ran sporadically after that, or the newspaper just stopped giving the shows regular coverage.  Possibly due to a frequent postponements due to weather, because shows were being run mainly in the Amphitheater, Jordan, and later Gunther, just put Gadsden on a lower priority.  A lot of shows were rained out over 1938-39, even some shows scheduled for the City Auditorium.  Possibly that is why they began running shows in Attalla.

     Unfortunately, I was wrong about the library at Samford.  I paid them a visit a couple of months ago and found that, while their catalog system still lists a lot of the newspapers I need (for Birmingham, Montgomery & Mobile), their actual microfilm holdings had suffered a really bad case of vinegar syndrome, and they lost a large percentage of what I needed.  When speaking with a librarian at the Birmingham Archives, they said hey'd had the same problem a few years ago, but that Birmingham had replaced everything they lost.  Apparently Samford lacked the budget to do the same.
Birmingham Archives

     As a result, I will have to keep making trips to Birmingham, and possibly to Montgomery.  I'm working out the relative costs of utilizing the inter-library loan system to just have the reels I need sent up to Huntsville and/or Decatur.  The issue there is the Alabama Department of Archives & History charges $15 per reel, with a limit of only two reels per loan.  So $30 a pop (plus probably a couple of dollars to the local library) for two reels, which for B'ham and Montgomery means roughly two months of newspaper.  And so far, that process seems to be slow.  I put my application in for the first two months of the 1934 Birmingham News a week ago and haven't heard anything yet.

     So, doing some basic math, I need roughly 10 years of newspapers from three major Alabama cities.  If each reel is only a month, that's something like 360 reels of microfilm.  At $15 a pop, that would run me $5,400, not including any local fees the library will charge for their effort.   Now I can get through anywhere from 8-12 reels of microfilm in a day, if I'm at the library all day.  Maybe more, I've only had one complete day so far.  Each trip to Birmingham costs me around $50, (estimating $30 for gas & $20 for food). And since I've already got 1932-33 covered, that leaves me with another 8 years to cover, which means roughly $400.
   
     I really don't think I can work any faster there because Birmingham uses the the ST ViewScan III, which is decent enough hardware, but the ViewScan software is buggy as hell and crashes constantly.  That issue, combined with the annoying library patron kiosk software intended to keep users locked into a restricted sandbox, for security purposes.  However, none of the librarians seem to know how it works!  If they had the admin password, they could at least launch the Task Manager and kill the ViewScan software so it could be relaunched without having to terminate and re-start my session, over and over.  Every other library I've visited (that has a microfilm scanner) has the e-Image Data ScanPro series of machine, which works so much better, doesn't crash (except maybe once per day), and doesn't have the annoying security software locking down their machines.  On those, I can get a lot more work done, a lot more quickly.

Alabama Department of Archives & History
    For Montgomery, I've got an extra 2 hours, round-trip, so call it $60 per trip to accommodate the extra gas.  Having not used their scanners before, I don' t know what models they have.  I need to email them and ask.  If they have the ViewScans, I'm screwed.  But if, by some miracle, they have the ScanPros (like the Tennessee State Archives have), I can probably get through 12-14 reels in a day.  Also, Montgomery has the entire newspaper archive for the state of Alabama, so I can knock out Montgomery, Mobile and Dothan, all at the same place.  The Dothan Eagle was only a weekly paper, so probably not more than 3-4 reels per year, so upwards of 48 reels (probably less), plus the estimated 120 for Mobile and 120 for Montgomery, and that's 288 reels to get through.  At 14 reels per trip, that's roughly 20 trips, at $60 each for $1,200 expenses.  So actually going there saves me roughly $3,800 over the inter-library loan route, though it does add a lot of wear & tear on my car with all that driving.

    Now I understand, so clearly, why Scott Teal says there's not really any money in publishing books on wrestling history.