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Field of Dreams versus the Great Depression
Field of Dreams versus the Great Depression

 by Diane Alden

September 13, 1999

Doctor Archie Graham played one inning, in one game, in 1905 as an outfielder for the New York Giants. He is famous today because a writer named W.P. Kinsella wrote an adult fairy tale titled Shoeless Joe, which was later turned into a block buster movie called Field of Dreams. Archie Graham never played ball with Shoeless Joe Jackson, one of the hapless guys involved in throwing the 1919 World Series. But the fairy tale story puts together baseball players who needed a second shot at their dreams. The Kinsella character builds a baseball field in Iowa, and the ball players gather as people come to see the game. Building the "field of dreams" was the whole point of the story.

In reality Archie Graham left baseball after his one inning in 1905. Growing up in a well to do aristocratic southern family Archie went to John Hopkins Medical School, and could have practiced at the best hospitals in the United States. But that is not what he did. While visiting colleagues at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, Doc Graham bought a train ticket and asked to go the farthest corner at the end of the train line. He ended up in a frontier mining town on the Mesabi Iron Range in the northeast quadrant of Minnesota.

Chisholm, Minnesota has been a small town forever, ranging in population research for his book, he came to know the tall lanky ex-ball player turned medic, who had been dead since 1965, by talking to dozens of the townspeople who knew him. When asked why he moved to a backwater like Chisholm, Kinsella invented Graham's response, but the locals who knew Doc said it would have been something he said: "It's my favorite place in the whole world. Once the land touches you, the wind never blows so cold again. You feel the land like it was your child. When that happens to you, you can't be bought."

For over 50 years no one ever bought Doc Graham. He became a beloved and respected school doctor who wore a black rain coat, always carried an umbrella and gave my father his first pair of glasses during the Great Depression. Without fanfare, he often helped struggling families and never asked for a fee. Even today, the aging population of this former mining boom town remembers him with respect and smiles. They also say that back in the Great Depression, Doc Graham was one of dozens of townspeople who pitched in to help one another through the greatest economic catastrophe of the 20th century.

Summers in this remote corner of Minnesota vary from finger crimping cold to downright Mississippi hot. The locals jokingly refer to the mosquito as the Minnesota state bird. White boulders left over from the glacier that rumbled through here 10,000 years ago litter the landscape, and eagles, wolves and black bears live here in significant numbers.

The Norman Rockwell setting in Chisholm has changed a bit since the days Doc Graham practiced medicine. Heavily Democratic, the DFL (Democratic Farmer Labor Party) remains in power, while other areas of the state more often vote Republican.

Mention Republicans or conservatives and you get, "but they are not for the working man like the Democrats." Even Governor Jesse Ventura is resented because he beat Democrat Skip Humphrey, son of Minnesota icon Hubert Humphrey.

These good and basically conservative people are convinced the R behind a candidates name stands for "rich republican." Despite the high taxes, gargantuan growth of government, and environmental regs which often keep them out of their own woods and lakes, the mind-set continues.

No amount of Democratic spending ever did anything for the Mesabi, except to increase the welfare rolls. Republicans have not been elected to Congress great-grandchildren of the people who lived through it act like it happened yesterday. Like some horrific ethnic cleansing, whose legacy goes on for generations, the Great Depression defines the people and politics of the region. The Republicans and Hoover got blamed for what happened. FDR got credit for creating make work like the WPA, CCC, and of course social security.

But change could be coming to Chisholm and the Mesabi. Young people, telecommuters, and Northwest Airlines are moving in. Northwest created a reservations center in this small town, and is so impressed with the work ethic and level of education here, that they are closing centers elsewhere.

On the outskirts of town, young couples with bicycle helmeted children ride or walk around Longear Lake. Large new homes are being built and young families are taking advantage of the bargain prices. And as though they had discovered a secret, corporate warriors are quietly setting up shop.

It took the South 30 years to go from Democratic stronghold to home of Newt Gingrich, Bob Barr, Fred Thompson, Paul Coverdel, Trent Lott, and Jeb Bush. The South forgave the Republicans for the Civil War. Maybe someday the folks in northern Minnesota will forgive them for Hoover and the Great Depression.

People like my folks and Doc Graham, who survived economic hard times, wars, social upheaval, and the most severe handicaps of nature, have somehow maintained the capacity to triumph over adversity. The optimism that created "fields of dreams" still exists in fly over country.


Diane Alden is a research analyst, writer, historian and political economist. She writes a column for NewsMax.com, Etherzone, Enterstageright, American Partisan, KeepAndBearArms.com and many other online publications. She also does occasional radio commentaries for Georgia Radio Inc. Reach her at wulfric8@yahoo.com.