One Potato, Two Potato, Three Potato, Four
...
By
Davis Bitton
In 1988,
when a news reporter with questionable motives asked vice-presidential
candidate Dan Quayle to spell potatoes, the vice-presidential
candidate should have answered S-P-U-D-S. Even better,
he should have asked the reporter to spell irrelevant.
Growing
up in southeastern Idaho, I could not very well ignore potatoes. Along
with sugar beets, they were one of the major crops produced
by farmers. Other crops were raised, to be sure, but potatoes
could be counted on to find a market and generate needed
cash for their producers.
Every
fall, students were excused from school for about two
weeks of "harvest vacation," during which they
could assist in harvesting both beets and potatoes. Not
only did the farmers need additional manpower; the crops
were essential to the region’s prosperity and thus had
an impact even on retail merchants in the towns. In communities
throughout southeastern Idaho,
hundreds, indeed thousands, of young people of junior
high and high school age fanned out to the farms seeking
employment.
Picking
potatoes was stoop labor. Usually working with a partner,
you moved along the row of unearthed spuds and filled
a basket. These two baskets, yours and your partners,
were then poured into a burlap sack, after which you continued
down the row. Some pickers used a specially designed belt
that enabled them to work alone and put the spuds directly
into the sack.
The
pay, as I recall, was ten cents a sack. After a couple
of weeks work I had earned somewhere between three and
four hundred dollars, which must be multiplied several
times for the equivalent in today’s dollar.
Since
your pay was dependent entirely on how many potatoes you
picked, you wanted to keep at it sack after sack, row
after row, hour after hour. I learned I could do about
as well as anyone else. Then one time my partner was a
young woman, Marjorie Worthen, from the farm neighboring ours. She was patient,
but she simply worked harder and filled her basket faster
than I did.
Let’s
face it, she made me look like a wimp. I might excel in
other activities, but on the ground level during the harvest
season I met my match and learned a lesson in humility.
Potatoes
were not always part of the human diet. They were raised
in South America from about 2000
B.C. Three and a half millennia later, they were introduced
in Europe and spread from country to country. The tuber had also moved
to North America, whence Sir Walter Raleigh is credited
with taking it to England
in 1588 — the year of the Spanish Armada. Although some
aristocrats and upper-class people disdained this food,
it became an important part of the diet in many countries.
By the
nineteenth century, in some countries more than others,
potatoes were a staple. Ireland was especially dependent
on this crop. There most people lived on small farms of
less than 15 acres, and more than 300,000 families survived
on minute plots of less than three acres. Without potatoes,
they could not survive.
When
blight caused crop failure in 1846, a national famine
ensued. Despite relief efforts, many perished from starvation
and from a typhus epidemic that followed in the wake of
the famine. Not surprisingly, many Irish fled the country,
and a massive influx of Irish immigrants entered the United States.
In 1846
Latter-day Saint refugees were making their way across
Iowa. In the
spring of 1847, as we know, a pioneer company set out
and by July had reached its destination in the Valley
of the Great Salt Lake. Having enough
food was a huge challenge. They were far from sources
of meat and grain in the Midwest,
and, arriving when they did, could not expect to harvest
a crop in 1847.
Sneaky
question: What were Mormons doing in the Salt
Lake Valley
on July 24, the day Brigham Young arrived. One answer:
planting potatoes. The advance party led by Orson Pratt
followed Young’s instructions to find a suitable spot,
soften the soil with water, plow, and plant different
seeds they had with them. The harvest later that fall,
as we can well imagine, was pitiful, given the inadequate
growing time. But the number of potatoes, even though
small, was multiplied, and they were ready to plant in
earnest the next spring.
As wagon
train after wagon train came into the Valley in late 1847
and subsequent years, as settlements were established
throughout the Great Basin, potatoes
continued to provide nourishment for the people.
In Idaho, Latter-day Saints were not the first to raise potatoes, an honor
that seems to go to Henry Harmon Spalding who raised them
at Lapwai in 1837. But clearly
the Saints laid the foundation for Idaho
potatoes, first in Franklin
after 1860. By 1882, immigrants into Idaho
from Utah had
2,000 acres of potatoes under cultivation. By 1904, Idaho harvested 17,000 acres of potatoes and by 1915, 33,000 acres.
After harvesting and sorting, the "spuds" were
shipped by railroad to other states.
Luther
Burbank also played a role. The famous plant breeder had
developed the Burbank potato and,
after his move to Santa
Rosa, California, introduced them
there. Another plant breeder, Lon D. Sweet, living in
Colorado, developed a mutation out of the Burbank that was resistant to blight and other
diseases. This became the famous Idaho russet. I know Idaho potatoes are famous because the license plate
on my car used to carry a picture and the words "famous
potatoes."
Potatoes
can require strength of character not only in the growers
and the pickers, including those who today use improved
seeds and harvest machinery, but also in other situations.
I love the example of the Dutch Latter-day Saints who,
at the end of World War II, were trying desperately to
survive. Church leaders encouraged them to plant potatoes,
which they did on land adjacent to chapels and other vacant
lots. In 1947, they looked forward to an abundant harvest.
At this
time German mission president Walter Stover visited the
Dutch Mission and, with tears in his eyes, told of the
hunger among Church members in Germany. Cornelius Zappey, president of the Dutch Mission, thought it would be
a wonderful thing to give the potatoes raised in the Netherlands to the destitute German Saints. But
because of the cruel mistreatment of the Dutch people
during the Nazi occupation (Ann Frank’s diary reminds
us of the conditions), President Zappey was not at all sure how the Dutch Mormons would respond.
Respond
they did, enthusiastically accepting the challenge. Potatoes
from the various plots were hauled by truck to The
Hague and placed in a warehouse. Overcoming many obstacles,
Zappey finally obtained permission
to transport them, and 75 tons of potatoes were carried
by truck into Germany
and distributed to thankful German Latter-day Saints.
Both the receivers and the givers were blessed.
I try
to stay away from potato chips these days. But I can still
enjoy a good baked potato from time to time and on special
days allow myself a serving of mashed potatoes. I may
think of Sir Walter Raleigh, or the Irish immigrants,
or the pioneers of 1847, or the Dutch and German
Church members as I say "Please, pass the potatoes." Remembering
Dan Quayle, perhaps I should say "Please pass the
spuds."