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Re: The Midas Sack of Flour   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #551 of 719 |
Re: [SAMM] Re: The Midas Sack of Flour

Reuel Gridley may have living descendants.  See:


For what it's worth this story was dramatized on the TV program "Death Valley Days" as "The $275,000 Sack of Flour" .  The program first aired in 1962 and starred James Best as Gridley.  See:


A search of Amazon and eBay suggests that Death Valley Days was not systematically preserved and released on tape or disk.  Only a few episodes starring really big stars seem to be in circulation.

When I attended Sac State I had a professor who was a member of  E Clampus Vitus an organization dedicated to gold rush history and generally having fun.  He played in their brass band.  I notice from some versions of the story that Gridley was accompanied by the local band when he carried his sack.  I could try to get in touch with him and see if he and his compatriots might want to participate as the band and extras. The club has a reputation for boisterousness which would certainly be appropriate.

Here is a version that I copied from http://www.eclectichistorian.net/Gridley/

One of the important aspects of the American Civil War is that it was a truly national conflict.  Virtually every sector of American society was touched by it in one way or another.  The devastation of war was most visible in the areas where the armies marched, camped and fought- but it was felt too in the communities north and south who sent their young men off to fight and endured the economic impacts of modern industrialized warfare.  Even in the far western states and territories, seemingly separated by geography from the war’s main theaters, patriots of both the Union and the Confederacy worked to further their cause.  Soldiers were recruited, funds were raised, and political maneuvers were made. 
      Political activity, however, was about more than just patriotism in the 19th Century.  Prior to the advent of such diversions as professional sports, cinema and television, politics was one of the only forms of visual entertainment available to most people.  When not staging elections to fill governmental posts, American men held boisterous elections for everything from positions in volunteer fire companies to officer’s commissions in militia units.   In small towns even those not running for an office usually knew somebody who was, and their support sometimes took strange and amusing forms.  Such was the case in the little mining town of Austin, Nevada Territory in April of 1864.   An election for mayor was being held, and a shopkeeper named Reuel C. Gridley, a Democrat, bet a Republican friend of his that the Democratic candidate would win the race.  Apparently deciding that a public spectacle should result from a public election, the men decided to put their dignity on the line, and the wager was made that the loser of the bet would carry a fifty-pound sack of flour from the towns of Austin to Clifton, a distance of about one and a quarter miles.
      Reuel Colt Gridley had been born in Hannibal, Missouri on January 23rd of 1829.  Mark Twain, who grew up in Hannibal, went to school with Gridley and wrote about him in his book Roughing It.  Gridley served in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War of 1846-48, and settled for a time in Louisiana, where he married, in 1850.  Coming to California in 1852, Gridley over the next ten years was a sort of Gold Rush jack-of-all-trades.  He worked as a prospector, newspaper publisher and banker.  Seeing a need for postal service in the Sierras, between 1859 and 1862 he ran an express service delivering mail and packages to places that Wells, Fargo and Company could not reach.  At some time in the early 1860’s Gridley and his family ended up in Austin, Nevada, where he was the senior partner in a general store.  His stone-built storehouse has survived to the present day. 

      So, it was this Reuel C. Gridley who bet his friend that that the Democratic mayoral candidate would prevail in the Spring election in Austin.  As it happened, the Republican won, and, true to the terms of the wager, on the morning of April 20th, 1864 Gridley appeared on the street with a 50 lb. sack of flour, decorated with American flags and bunting, and in a grand parade which included a band playing The Battle Hymn of The Republic, he hoisted the bag onto his shoulder and started to march amidst the cheers and jeers of the entire excitement-starved populace of Austin.  It took about an hour for Gridley to carry his burden the requisite 1.25 miles to Clifton, and upon arrival the procession took refuge in a local saloon.  Over liquid refreshments, the question of what to do with the flour was raised, and Gridley, an army veteran himself, made a suggestion:

      “This crowd of people has had its fun at my expense; let us see now who will do most for the sick and wounded soldiers.  We will put this sack of flour up at auction, and sell it, with the understanding that, whoever the purchaser may be, he shall pay the amount bid, and give the flour back to be sold again for the benefit of the Sanitary Commission.

      The crowd roared its approval, and the auction began.  Gridley himself won the first round with a bid of $300, but the sack was put up for symbolic auction again and again.  Competition flared as individuals and groups pooled their resources to outbid one-another.  By the end of the day a total of almost $5,000, a small fortune in 1860’s terms, had been brought in.  These proceeds were sent to the United States Sanitary Commission, a precursor of the Red Cross, which raised private funds to provide medical care for soldiers in the United States Army.  Raising funds for the Sanitary Commission in California and Nevada was nothing new.  Most famously the Unitarian Reverend Thomas Starr King toured California during the first half of the Civil War, delivering impassioned and eloquent sermons that encouraged his listeners to give to the cause of aiding the war’s wounded.  In the rough mining boom-towns, however, something other than King’s refined urbanity was desired and the absurdity of Gridley’s flour sack appealed greatly to the jocular prospectors.   Reuel Gridley suddenly found himself a local celebrity. Approximately three weeks after the first auction, Gridley and his sack of flour went on tour, making a triumphant circuit of the Nevada mining region, repeating the symbolic bidding-war wherever they went, and bringing in tens of thousands of dollars for the Sanitary Fund. 

      At this time “Sanitary Fairs” were being held all over the Union to raise money for the Commission.  In the summer of 1864 Gridley took his show (and his sack) on the road and held auctions at Sanitary Fairs being held in Sacramento, San Francisco and Stockton.  All along the way Gridley paid out of his own pocket for his expenses, determined to send every penny he raised to the Fund.  In January of 1865 Gridley even brought his sack to New York, where he was heralded by the newspapers and accorded the honor of having his (and the sack’s) likeness appear in an engraving in Harper’s Weekly.  Gridley’s Austin hometown newspaper, the Reese River Reveille, had the following to say about the image: 

     “R.C. Gridley, Esq., of this city, has not only got into New York, but also into the papers, bag and baggage.  “Harpers Weekly” for January 21 has an engraving purporting to be a picture of Gridley, and his famous Sanitary Flour.  Looking at the engraving, we are at a loss to tell which is Gridley and which is the sack of flour, but… you can have your choice.  We remember our fellow-townsman as a rather handsome man, but this has no more resemblance to Gridley “than I to Hercules”.

Gridley toured the eastern states but, as the Civil War drew to a close, interest in the cause of aiding the war’s wounded ebbed.  All told, the otherwise ordinary sack of flour had raised some $275,000 for the U.S. Sanitary commission during its career.   Gridley’s buckskin sack of flour, still carrying its flags and ribbons and emblazoned with the words “Gridley’s Sanitary Sack,” presently resides in a display-case at the Nevada Historical Society Museum in Reno.    
  

Upon his return to his store in August of 1865, Gridley found his business on the verge of bankruptcy.  Additionally, the stress of travel had badly weakened his health, from which he never recovered.  In 1866 a penniless Gridley and his family came to Stockton, California and in 1868 they moved to Stanislaus County where he again operated a general store.  Dying on November 24th of 1870, Gridley was interred in Stockton.  In 1887 a marble monument, complete with a statue of Gridley and his famous sack of flour, was dedicated at the site of his grave.
      The inscription on the monument, which still stands, hails Gridley as “The Soldier’s Friend,” a suitably-humble epithet for a humble man, but he deserves to be remembered for more than that.  The amount of money raised was indeed impressive but Gridley, the simple shopkeeper, also made by his actions an enduring statement which is all the more profound for its tacit nature.  During the course of great events it is natural for individuals to feel powerless, especially when isolated by distance and a lack of position and influence.  Gridley stood up as an example that everyone has something to contribute to the causes they believe in and, by working together, a community can accomplish far more than its members ever could separately.

Reuel Colt Gridley Monument
ADDRESS:Cemetery Ln & E Pine St, Stockton, CA 95204
PHONE:+1 213 480 3232
Reuel Colt Gridley Monument Details
DESCRIPTIONS FROM ACROSS THE WEB
Erected in honor of the soldier's friend, Reuel Colt Gridley
DIRECTIONS
From Stockton, CA - Head east on E Weber Ave toward N El Dorado St, Turn left at N El Dorado St, Turn right at E Harding Way, Turn left at Cemetery Ln
OPEN HOURS
4 scheduled tours at 10:00 AM, 11:30 AM, 1:00 PM, & 2:30 PM.

So what can be learned from all this?

1.  Gridley may have bet on the election but contrary to Twain he was not necessarily the candidate.
2.  Gridley may have thought of the idea of auctioning the sack for charity himself rather than someone in the crowd as Twain suggests.
3.  The sack was made of buckskin.  At least it was by the time the campaign was over.  It never occurred to me that flour sacks were ever made of anything but cloth.  If buckskin was a common material for flour sacks in the 1800s then we might want to simulate it with pleather or something.  On the other hand a cloth sack might have worn out from all the handling and been "reenforced" with buckskin as the campaign wore on.
4. Gridley's friends didn't think much of the likeness.  Of course maybe he grew his beard as he traveled east and so looked different to eastern artists or photographers.  However facial hair was fashionable during the civil war and probably had been popular in the west for even longer due to frontier conditions.
5. I like the way he is dressed in the photo.  That is the way I would have imagined a businessman and possible candidate to dress in the middle 1800's.
6. Perhaps a closer look at his statue would be instructive.
7.  The Gridley store in Austin appears to be in really good condition.  I don't know what the rest of the town looks like but it might be fun to stage the start of the flour sack carry from in front of it.
8.  According to the account above Gridley sought refreshment in a saloon where the auction idea was hatched.  Maybe we can find an authentic looking saloon in one of the old mining towns that wouldn't mind having us film in exchange for the publicity.
9.  If Gridley did indeed win the first auction he may not have been the auctioneer.

Items 1 and 2 do not matter if we want to tell the story from Twain's viewpoint but there appear to be independent sources that have a different angle.

I am interested in traveling to Stockton to get a closer look at the statue and to Reno to see the sack and the pictures.  Hopefully the Reno museum will have a docent who can answer questions about them.   If anyone else wants to go to either place however I wouldn't object.

Erick








Sun Apr 13, 2008 1:53 am

ewlorenz
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Message #551 of 719 |
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Mike: Thanks for the quick actions and update re our project. And welcome to the club; I know you'll be a great addition and we look forward to working with...
suebobw@...
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Apr 12, 2008
3:19 am

Reuel Gridley may have living descendants. See: http://westsidenewsonline.com/OldSite/westside/news/2004/1128/ features/ancestors.html For what it's worth...
Erick Lorenz
ewlorenz
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Apr 13, 2008
3:02 am

Thanks Erick. I'd like to go to both Stockton and Reno too. When do you plan on going? Mike Erick Lorenz <ewlorenz@...> wrote: Reuel Gridley may have...
M. Bethany
mbethany2004
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Apr 13, 2008
6:47 pm

Mike: I don't have any immediate plans but I will keep you posted. I'm not sure that I can so both locations in one trip. They are in opposite directions. I...
Erick Lorenz
ewlorenz
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Apr 13, 2008
7:58 pm

According to my Google Maps search there is a Gridley Store Museum. If the building is now in use it may not have the authentic look of that photo I sent. On...
Erick Lorenz
ewlorenz
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Apr 14, 2008
10:27 pm

Erick: In your searches, have you seen any reference to "Gridley Days" celebrations? In 2007, it was held June 12-15. -- Sacramento Amateur Movie/Video Makers...
suebobw@...
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Apr 15, 2008
5:14 pm

... Bob & Sue Here are the contents of the web page that advertised Gridley Days 2007. Notice that they reenact the flour sack carry as a race and they hold...
Erick Lorenz
ewlorenz
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Apr 19, 2008
4:47 am
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