Travis Rutland,
Melinda Fellowes and the GreenScarf Idea
In the mid 1920s, Father
and daughter, Edgar Fellowes jr and Melinda, took him up.
They owned a string of farm community newspapers in the
west. She, had ambitions.
If she could syndicate
writers, she could pay them properly and widen the scope of
the papers from farm to some national news and comment.
Rutland was Southern
and with no college or high school. He was running as far
away as possible from the shame of being from a family that
owned lumber mills in the slave economy.
She found the eager, hawk-looking Rutland. His sharp
face really did seem to come to a beak. She liked his loping
stride, his independence of marriage, the work he did for
conservation bodies, the pith in his prose and his
GreenScarf ideals and she liked his sinews. She had learned
to do it with men and a woman at Sarah Lawrence College in
the east.
As shy in bed as he
was confident on foot, rustic in work boots -- even, later,
interviewing senators, and with an almost caricature corn
cob pipe, she was the first and last reporter she ever
invited to bed.
The syndication was a
step up, inviting men, not the other way round was good, her
sense of story was good. Also at Sarah Lawrence she met a
Lowenstein from the family who would help bankroll their
move to national journalism. Father and daughter wanted to
challenge the conservative TIME with a weekly in newsprint,
yet well illustrated with photographs. They called it
NOW! Rutland said she wrote G R E E N S C A R F S T O R
I E S not in green but in pink lipstick on a broken mirror
in the faraway cabin where they had ridden to make some
stories for the planned journal and some stories for their
own carnal pleasure.
Growing up in an
American 1920s of extremes of wealth and poverty, he was
shaped by asking... Why? Why did America have to cut down
every single tree there when the pilgrims came? What was
this vengeance on nature?
The 1920s produced
the TECNOCRACY movement. This was proposed by scientists
felt that the country -- so much wealth of new ideas and so
much poverty c 1930... the USA should be run on scientific
lines. Rutland flirted with this (which had much good sense,
yet was finally authoritarian). Instead he developed the
GoodScienceBadScience idea which he spelled as one word.
Learning how to discover and drill oil was good: the water
pollution left by oil wells and the theft of leases was a
dark side. It was fine for DuPont to try to produce
synthetic rubber. To claim that American workers were (or
should be) tough enough to avoid the resultant workplace
cancer was perverse.
NOW! was
Miss Fellowes concept. GreenScarf Stories was her way to tie
down his sometimes airy views on the folly of human
progress. GoodScienceBadScience contained the paradox that
made stories. What is good for the lumber company is not
good for the virgin forest. What is good for the drug
company bottom line may not be good for those who suffer the
side effects. What is good for 'finishing' Japan, the A
bombs, may draw you into a race whose anxieties no one can
avoid. What is good about water, using it, is bad for where
it otherwise might go.
NOW!,
Democrat-leaning rival to the more conservative TIME
magazine started with the stock market crash of 1929. The
Fellowes had cash in plenty and a production building in
Philadelphia, office in all important Washington were picked
up for little. They bought a printing press that was
bankrupt in Kansas City, centrally placed for rail
distribution north, south, east and west across the country.
At first Mr. Fellowes,
always that even to Miss Fellowes, his daughter did not like
Mr. Rutland's idea that 'science' could find an audience.
Mr. Rutland, even that in bed with her, and Miss Fellowes
proved him wrong with a three part series on the oil
industry, the developing technology of drilling, all the
benefits of refining and the horror of corruption, notably
the theft of leases, including from the Osage native
Americans, death of oil field workers and pollution of
streams irrigating farm land.
Rutland caught the mood of
1931, the benefits and promise of oil and the greed. It was
science in the strict sense of original research. It was
science in that oil drilling and geological surveying were
fast moving technologies. Black gold! It was all right until
your stream or even you were drowned in it. With several
such series Rutland helped to step up circulation, 100,000,
two, three, four to 700,000 when he wrote the new weapons
article.
When on Saturdays she had
entertained who she called 'this week's senator', then she
had Rutland late at night. When he wrote on the importance
of new weapons, she refused him the access and comfort.
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