THE CLEVELAND WORLD WAR MACHINE
BY ELBERT J. BENTON
The Great War found America without a
war or-
ganization. One phenomenon of the war
of the United
States with Germany was the response of
the people in
the crisis. The war was interpreted as
a people's war,
and the people made it their own. It
was a veritable up-
rising of the American people in the
defense of the high
moral cause which their President had
marked out for
them, and the result was one of the
most encouraging
movements in the history of democracy.
How far the
lessons in practical patriotism have
made for higher cit-
izenship and strengthened democracy
will be a problem
for the historians to determine. The
ways in which the
people of Cleveland made the war their
own constitute
the problem which I have undertaken. I
began my task
by preparing a directory of the
organizations doing war
work in Cleveland for the convenience
of the Cleveland
Central Draft Board, for which I was at
the time doing
special work. The chairman of the
board, Mr. Starr
Cadwallader, gave me many valuable
suggestions. But
this eagerness to assist in the survey
was shown by the
officers of all the organizations
without an exception.
You will not be surprised if I confess
that I am not
able at the present time to give
anything like a compre-
hensive narrative of the activities of
Cleveland in the
war, if by that is meant a documented,
chronological
narrative of the progressive
organization of the com-
(448)
The Cleveland World War Machine 449
munity, with credit to the diverse
personalities that have
had a share in them. For that the
sources are as yet in-
adequate. The most one can hope for at
this time is to
indicate what was the character of the
war activities,
where the work was done, and who were
the persons
responsible in its management.
It was necessary in Cleveland to
develop agencies for
war work as the need for the work
appeared. In some
cases the resulting organization was
merely an expan-
sion of an existing institution; such
was the case of the
Draft Boards for the War Department of
the Bureau
of Investigation for the Federal
Department of Justice.
The Chamber of Commerce adapted its
many commit-
tees at the beginning of the war to the
needs of the city.
The Red Cross expanded and adapted its
pre-war organ-
ization to the new situation. In other
instances the local
agencies were the product of
enthusiastic private citizens
anxious to serve, and possessing
organizing ability. The
Military Training Camps Association is
a striking illus-
tration of a purely private agency
making a place for
itself. Three days after the
declaration of war, Mayor
Harry L. Davis, in consultation with
others, appointed
a committee which came to be commonly
known as the
Mayor's War Committee "for the
purpose of taking care
of any extraordinary matters which
might arise during
the period of the war." From the
Chamber of Com-
merce and the Mayor's advisory committee
sprang many
committees of business and professional
men, often
closely related and even identical in
personnel and func-
tion, to meet exigencies as the
directors saw them. That
is, some were public institutions
provided for by law;
others were private, extra-legal. Some
like the Bureau
Vol. XXXVIII-29.
450 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
of Social Hygiene were extra-legal, but
because of their
close connection with a public
institution had all the ap-
pearance of a public institution, and
were in effect semi-
public organizations.
This survey has covered about sixty
distinct organ-
izations, varying greatly in size and
resources. I fan-
cied that it helped me to understand
the war machine of
Cleveland when I grouped the
organizations as (A) the
recruiting services of the Cleveland district,
(B) organ-
izations concerned with the production
of materials of
war, (C) organizations having to do
with the well-being
of men in service and their dependents,
(D) organiza-
tions to conserve resources and
stabilize social and eco-
nomic conditions, (E) organizations for
the enforcement
of the selective service laws and
regulations and the
preservation of order in general, (F)
organizations for
financing the Cleveland war machinery,
and (G) the
federal financial agencies for the Cleveland
district.
A. THE RECRUITING SERVICES OF THE
CLEVELAND
DISTRICT
The federal War and Navy departments
had the
usual war-time recruiting stations in
Cleveland until
the acts of Congress in August and
September, 1918,
practically closed the field for voluntary
enlistment.
When the draft system took over the
recruiting for the
army entirely and for the Navy
partially, the recruiting
stations either were closed as in the
case of the Army or
ceased to be active as in the case of
the Navy.1 The act
1 The War Department maintained a
recruiting station, 54 Public
Square, with Lt. Col. H. W. Stamford as
Commanding Officer. The War
Department's Cleveland Branch of the
Production Division, the Engineer's
Depot, primarily engaged in the
inspection of material for the War Depart-
The Cleveland World War Machine 451
of Congress which instituted the draft
system estab-
lished a group of draft boards to
administer the system
--the local and district boards, the
legal advisory boards,
appeal agents, and the medical advisory
boards.2 In ad-
dition to the American recruiting
agencies several for-
eign governments maintained offices to
recruit their own
nationals. The British and Canadian War
Depart-
ments maintained an office in Cleveland
until the Anglo-
American convention in September, 1918,
brought the
British and Canadian subjects within
the United States
under the jurisdiction of the draft
boards. The Czecho-
Slovaks, Italians, Poles, and Jews
appealed to their peo-
ple not caught by the draft system to
join in national or
would-be-national organizations in
combatant service
abroad.3 Just as the war
came to an end, in October,
1918, the War Department was
establishing in Cleve-
ment, examined candidates for the
Engineer Officers Reserve Corps. The
Office was at 420 Federal Building; the
Officer in Charge, Col. D. W. Lock-
wood. The Marine Corps maintained a
recruiting office at 532 Federal
Building; Officer in Charge, Major S. J.
Logan. The Navy Department
recruited for the regular naval service
at 506 Federal Building; Ensign
E. C. Keenan was in charge of the
office. At 828 Guardian Building was an
office under Lt. J. H. Clark to recruit
for the auxiliary services of the navy,
as for recruit ships, supply boats,
tanks, etc.
2 The F. J. Heer Printing
Company, Columbus, Ohio, 1918, published a
complete register of the Draft
Organization for Ohio under the title "Names
of Persons who are Engaged in the
Execution of the Selective Service
Law in Ohio."
The British-Canadian Recruiting Station,
opened in November, 1917,
and closed in September, 1918, was
located in the Lennox Building, Major
Peter Latham in charge. The same office
recruited for the Jewish Battalion,
and a Jewish recruiting station was
maintained on 55th Street, near Broad-
way. The Czechoslovak Recruiting Office
was at 5284 Broadway; Joseph
Masek in charge. The Station for
Recruiting the Polish Legion was at
7146 Broadway; Lt. J. Zebrowski was in
charge. The Italian Consul, Dr.
N. Cerri, 402 Superior Building,
gathered and despatched to Europe vol-
unteers from the Italians resident in
the United States for service in both
the Italian army and navy.
452
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
land at three local institutions for
higher education-the
Case School of Applied Science, St.
Ignatius College,
and Western Reserve
University--Students' Army
Training Corps, in order to train men
for the Officers'
training camps and for other special
army service.
The smooth, apparently harmonious,
functioning of
these various agencies for gathering
armies in a great
industrial center like Cleveland and
throughout the en-
tire United States was a surprise to
many prophets.
History will want to know how it was
possible. The re-
sult was in no small degree due to the
extra-legal citizen
organizations, manned for the most part
by volunteers
without salary or reward, that sprang,
so to speak, to
the assistance of the Government. The
Governor of
Ohio established at the opening of the
war a central
draft board for Cuyahoga County; the
Mayor's war
board then provided for its office
expenses. The central
draft board served as the selective
service headquarters,
as a bureau of information, and as a
general clearing-
house for the draft system in
operation. It performed a
service of incalculable value in
facilitating the work of
registering and inducting men into
service in coopera-
tion with the several draft boards. It
arranged for the
entrainment of the drafted men for the
training camps.4
The central draft board maintained a
war service record
office where a general card index of
all Cleveland men in
national service, Army and Navy,
volunteers and drafted
The headquarters were located in the
Central Armory. Mr. Starr
Cadwallader was the chairman of the
board; Mr. W. H. Keeling was the
secretary. Just before the end of the
war, Mr. Cadwallader resigned, and
Mr. Keeling became the chairman.
The Cleveland World War Machine 453
men alike, was built up.5 During
the summer of 1918 a
series of boards of instruction was
developed. A central
executive committee, with the chairman
of the central
draft board as the executive head, had
general oversight
of the system. Local boards of
instruction for each
local draft board in the city and
county placed the or-
ganization in a position to supplement
the draft system.
The boards of instruction became a part
of a national
system under the auspices of the
Provost Marshal Gen-
eral. The purpose in this case was
"to put the selective-
service men into camp willing, loyal,
intelligent, clean,
and sober, and thus to fit them better
for rapid progress
in becoming good soldiers." The
purpose was accom-
plished by systematic personal and
group instruction.
Members of the boards assembled the
selective service-
men before they left the city for
instruction; gave gen-
eral lectures on the object of the war and
the duties of
the soldier, and supervised social
entertainments for the
men and their friends.
A more striking illustration of the
share of private
initiative in supplementing the
activities of a public na-
ture in recruiting the national army
was that of the
Military Training Camp Association. The
Cleveland
organization was a part of a national
association formed
in 1917 to recruit men for the
officers' training camps at
a time when the War Department called
for volunteers
for these camps, and when there was
considerable anx-
iety in the country lest the response
of volunteers would
prove inadequate. The local branches
made for them-
5 The permanent value of such a record
in the community is evident.
The record office was located at 415
Union Building. Mr. Harold T. Clark
was the director; Miss Fader was the
secretary.
454 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
selves a place by giving civilian aid
to the army officers
who were detailed for recruiting for
the camps. As the
regular training camps gradually
supplied the deficiency
of candidates for the officers'
training camps by sending
the more promising men among the
drafted men to them
the Military Training Camp Association
turned more
and more to assisting the
representatives of the War
Department in recruiting men for
special services like
the Motor Corps, the Aviation Corps,
and the Tank
Corps. Toward the end of the war the
Association was
acting as the local agent for the War
Service Exchange
of Washington, securing for the Army
specially trained
men of any kind as wanted. In October,
1918, it had
begun to handle all local applications
for officers' com-
missions for the general staff of the
Army, becoming
thus in effect a local branch office
for the War Depart-
ment.6
B. ORGANIZATIONS HAVING TO DO WITH THE
PRODUCTION
OF THE MATERIALS OF WAR
It was natural that a large industrial
center like
Cleveland should have an unusual number
of federal
agencies located within its limits in
order to facilitate the
production of the materials of war.
There was, for
example, a large body of
representatives of the United
States Shipping Board's Emergency Fleet
Corporation.
One division of the Corporation was
concerned with the
reconstruction of old ships, the
transfer of ownership,
the purchase, etc, on the Great Lakes
for ocean service;
The office of the Association was at 39
Wade Building, though a
change to 108-122 Lennox Building was
made just before the War ended.
The Chairman of the organization in
Cleveland was Mr. Laurence Hamill;
the Secretary, Mr. George Comey.
The Cleveland World War Machine 455
another with making contracts,
supervising, and inspect-
ing new construction on the Great
Lakes; another with
the transfer of the ship of the
Corporation from the
Great Lakes to the ocean to be turned
over for high seas
operation; still another with
purchasing raw materials
for the ship-yards holding Emergency
Fleet Corporation
contracts; and finally an office having
in charge placing
men on the Emergency Fleet classification
list, and re-
moving them from the list. As the men
on the list were
exempted from the draft, the officers
in charge per-
formed the important service of
protecting the labor
supply of the ship-builders.7
The War Department was represented in
Cleveland
by an ordnance office, by the Equipment
Division of the
Signal Corps, and by the Motor
Transport Corps.8 The
function of the ordnance office was the
encouragement of
the production of ordnance material and
the making of
contracts for the manufacture of
ordnance, and the ship-
ping of the finished products to the
Army. The Signal
Corps was a branch office of the Dayton
District, and
was concerned with the production of
aircraft. The
Motor Transport Corps had in charge the
production
and the transport of bicycles,
motorcycles, automobiles,
7 The first three divisions were located
in the Perry-Payne Building.
Mr. F. A. Eustis was the Special Agent
of the Old Ships Division, Mr.
Henry Penton of the New Ships Division,
Mr. Walter Williams of the Divi-
sion of Operation. The office of the
Purchasing Division was at 789 Old
Arcade; Mr. S. E. Lewis was the District
Purchasing Officer. The office of
the Selective Service Division was at
710 Engineers Building; The Branch
Officer was Mr. Walter L. Flory.
8 The Ordnance Office was located at
2036 Prospect Avenue; Mr. Samuel
Scovill was the District Chief. The
Office of the Signal Corps was located
in the Union Building. Mr. A. S. Davis
was the officer in charge. The
Motor Transport Corps occupied rooms
adjacent to those of the Signal
Corps; Captain D. S. Devor was in
charge.
456
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
trailers, in fact all kinds of motor
power except tanks,
tractors, and airplanes.
Private enterprise came to the
assistance of the
Government in the production of war
materials in the
form
of the District Manufacturers' Commission--
Cleveland Division. The Commission
started at the be-
ginning of the war as the War
Industries Board of the
Cleveland Chamber of Commerce and
perfected its or-
ganization and changed its name during
the summer of
1918. The organization undertook to
bring the Govern-
ment and the manufacturers together,
and particularly
to organize the small isolated
manufacturers for the
production of materials needed by the
Government for
the war, to let them know the
Government's special needs
of the moment, and to secure for them a
share in the
Government contracts. In carrying out
this function
the Commission published daily lists of
Government
needs in the newspapers. It was no
small service which
it performed in distributing the
manufacture of war
materials throughout the district,
enlarging the field of
industry, equalizing the production in
small and large
centers of manufacture, and preventing
the congestion
of manufacture in large cities like
Cleveland and the
stagnation of business in the smaller
communities.9
C. ORGANIZATIONS CONCERNED WITH THE
WELL-BEING
OF MEN IN SERVICE AND THEIR DEPENDENTS
The War Department of the United States
took over
the care of the well-being of the men
in service in the
training camps and in the field in
Europe as no govern-
The office of the District Manufacturers
Commission was at 301
Chamber of Commerce. Mr. James H. Foster
was Chairman of the Com-
mission; Mr W. E. Tousley, Secretary.
The Cleveland World War Machine 457
ment ever has. The history of these
activities will stand
out as one of the brilliant
achievements of America at
war. The official Commission on
Training Camps Ac-
tivities, the Red Cross, and the
religious organizations
like the Young Men's Christian
Association and the
Knights of Columbus vied with one
another in the care
for the physical and spiritual needs of
the soldiers.
These activities the Government either
conducted or
fostered. But the care of the soldier
on leave and in
transit, and that of his dependents was
largely left in the
hands of private agencies.
The great organization with its
headquarters in
Cleveland known as the Lake Division of
the American
Red Cross was chiefly concerned with
the promotion of
production in the several local
chapters in the territory
of the Division of materials for the
comfort of men in
the camps and in field service.10 The
Cleveland chapter
of the Red Cross, like similar chapters
elsewhere, com-
bined the work of production of
materials for the com-
fort of the soldiers wherever they were
and civilian
relief for the men on furlough and
relief for their de-
pendents.11 At the beginning of the
second year of the
war, citizens of Cleveland organized,
under the aus-
pices of the local Red Cross, the
Canteen Club in order
10 The Headquarters of the Lake Division
was at 2121 Euclid Avenue.
Mr. James R. Garfield was the manager
during the first fourteen or fifteen
months of the war. Mr. B. F. Bourne
succeeded him as manager, and Mr.
F. E. Abbott became the Assistant
Manager with the reorganization during
the summer of 1918.
11 The headquarters of the Cleveland
Chapter were at 201 Chamber of
Commerce. Mr. Samuel Mather was the
Honorary Chairman; Mr. Alva
Bradley, Chairman; Mr. Henry Sheffield,
Secretary. The Civilian Relief
Committee of the local chapter
maintained offices at 706 Park Building,
Colonel D. L. Pond was Chairman of the
Committee.
458 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
to furnish soldiers and sailors while
in Cleveland with
a wholesome, comfortable clubhouse. The
club per-
formed the function which the community
centers did
at the training camps.12 But
this was only one of sev-
eral citizen agencies, the work of
bodies of self-sacri-
ficing and eager volunteers, occupied
with the promo-
tion of the well-being and the morale
of the soldiers
and sailors in Cleveland and of their
dependents.
There was the Chamber of Commerce
Committee
on Military Affairs. This was a
committee organized
more than twenty-two years ago. The
Mayor's War
Board at the opening of the war made
the members of
the Chamber of Commerce Committee the
War Board
Committee on the same subject. The War
Board made
appropriations from the fund at its
disposal for the
Military Committee's use.13 This
Committee repre-
sented the community in a general
oversight of the in-
terests of the soldiers and sailors; it
took charge of
military parades; it cooperated with
the other agencies
in enforcing the selective service law.
Toward the close
of the war the Committee had developed
an organization
for drilling the selective service men
before induction
into service. and for a military escort
at soldiers' funer-
als. The members of the Cleveland
Academy of Medi-
cine organized, in September, 1917, the
Cuyahoga Medi-
12 The Cleveland Canteen Club was at
2738 Prospect Avenue. Captain
H. P. Shupe was Chairman of the
Committee, having in charge the work
at the club, and Mrs. Myron A. Weeks was
the head of the local organiza-
tion at the club house.
13 The office was in the Chamber of
Commerce. The Chairman was
Captain H. P. Shupe; the Secretary,
Clifford Gildersleeve.
The Cleveland World War Machine 459
cal Relief Association.14 The purpose was to
aid the
families of physicians of Cuyahoga
County in case of
need while the supporting member of the
family was in
service. A board of trustees directed
its activities. The
funds came entirely from subscriptions
of members of
the medical profession. The Cleveland
Dental Society
organized a Preparedness League.15 This League of-
fered free dental service to selective
service men where
treatment would prepare them for
service. The work in
practice was assigned by the chairman
of the League to
different dentists who had volunteered
to give their serv-
ices in order to carry out the purposes
of the organiza-
tion. Somewhat similar in purpose was
the Attorneys'
War Service Board. This was the offspring of the
Cleveland Bar Association, and gave
free legal services
to the men in war service and
their dependents. Two
attorneys from the Bar Association, one
in the fore-
noon and one in the afternoon, were
assigned to the
headquarters in the rooms of the
Civilian Relief Bureau
of the Red Cross to meet and advise
those who had need
of such aid. Cases which required more
than office as-
sistance were allotted to the various
law firms which had
volunteered to give more extended help
in court proce-
dure, etc.16 The War
Mothers, not to be outdone by the
fathers in war work, formed what they
called The War
Mothers of Cleveland. Meetings were
held by it for the
14 The office of the Cuyahoga Medical Relief Association
wa sat 207 Ball
Building. The president of the
organization was Dr. J. C. Wood; the
Secretary, Dr. R. K. Updegraff.
15 The office was at 760 Rose Building.
Dr. George L. Bishop was the
chairman.
16 The
Headquarters of the Attorneys' War Service Board were at 704
Park Building. Howard A. Couse had
charge of the daily assignments to
the headquarters.
460 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
mothers of soldiers and sailors. The
purpose was to
help the mothers to sustain their own
morale, to counter-
act German propaganda among the class,
and give them
a bureau of information. The
association undertook to
protect the legal rights of the mothers
as the dependents
of men in service. A small
appropriation was made by
the Mayor's War Board to aid the work
of the War
Mothers.17 The Nursing
Section of the Women's Com-
mittee of the Mayor's War Board
recruited and placed
pupil nurses as well as graduate
nurses, and so indirectly
aided the community in the care of the
men in service.18
In the summer of 1918 the City Health
Office of
Cleveland met one need of the soldiers
and sailors by ex-
panding its moral activities into a
special Bureau of
Social Hygiene. As the city had no
funds with which
to aid the movement, private agencies
filled the gap.
The Mayor's War Board advanced $50,000
for the
work of the Bureau.
Clinics were established for the
treatment of vene-
real cases; hospital beds provided for
such cases; and a
propaganda of information in regard to
venereal dis-
eases conducted. The movement had in
mind not only
the well-being of the selective service
men and their de-
pendents, but in a greater degree the
men in the indus-
trial plants doing war work.19
But the one who opens up a discussion
of those or-
17
The War Mothers had Headquarters at the main central building of
the Young Men's Christian Association,
2200 Prospect Avenue. Mrs. Robert
E. Lewis was President; Mrs. Charles W.
Hall, Executive Officer.
18 The Nursing Section had
offices in the Goodrich Building. Mrs.
Alfred Brewster was Chairman of the
Section.
59 The Bureau of Social Hygiene was
located naturally with the City
Health Office at the City Hall. Dr. H.
N. Cole was the Chief of the
Bureau.
The Cleveland World War Machine 461
ganizations in a large city like
Cleveland which during
the War made a place for themselves in
promoting the
well-being of the selective service
men, and others in
service as well, has entered a
limitless field. Religious
organizations and secret orders
undertook more or less
definite work. The Young Men's
Christian Association
conducted classes specially adapted to
the needs of se-
lective service men or others intending
to go into the
army. The men were made welcome to all
the conven-
iences and opportunities of the central
organizations and
its branches. In a smaller way the
Knights of Colum-
bus and the Jewish organization of the
same kind under-
took something of the same thing. The
churches took
an active part in the promotion of the
morale of the
community, giving information through
sermons and
lectures on the issues of the War and
the duties of citi-
zenship. In many churches special
meetings of various
sorts were held for soldiers and
sailors. The men in the
camps and fields were shown that the
home church had
not forgotten them. The Masons formed a
War League
in the last months of the War for the
purpose of assist-
ing the members of the American
Expeditionary Force.
in returning to active civil life. The
field represented by
the activities of these organizations
was enormous. In
many cases it is still exceedingly
difficult to distinguish
between the war work and the normal
peace activities of
the organizations in this group.
Anything like an ade-
quate survey of the work of the
churches in particular
will require the study of sources which
have not yet been
collected.
462 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
D. ORGANIZATIONS TO CONSERVE LOCAL RESOURCES
AND
STABILIZE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC
CONDITIONS
The same interlinking of public and
private agencies
occurred in the organizations which
were formed to con-
serve local resources and stabilize the
social and eco-
nomic conditions of Cleveland. The
United States Fuel
Administration reached into the city in
two ways. The
representative of the National Fuel
Administration con-
cerned with the distribution of coal
for the Great Lakes
and Canada had his headquarters in
Cleveland.20 And
the State Fuel Administration of the
national system
had a Cuyahoga County Fuel Committee.
It was the
function of the county committee to see
that the coal
which was assigned to Cuyahoga County
reached the
people who should have it, at a fair
price.2l The United
States' Shipping Board's Recruiting
Service with its
branches ramifying throughout the
country touched
Cleveland. The local representative
recruited and
trained men for the Merchant Marine,
both engine-room
and deck officers.22
In the same manner the Federal
Employment Bu-
reaus were in the process of
organization in September
and October, 1918, throughout the
nation, and one
branch was organized in Cleveland. The
local bureau,
linked up with the State-City Free
Employment Bureau,
20 The office was at 311 Perry-Paine
Building. The manager was Mr.
C. A. Wetzel.
21 The office of the County Fuel
Committee was at 201 Chamber of
Commerce. The Chairman was Mr. Munson
Havens, the Secretary, Mrs.
H. F. Webster.
22 The office of the Recruiting Service
was at 834 Guardian Building.
Captain Irving L. Evans had charge of
the office. The inexperienced men
for the Merchant Marine were recruited
at the various branches of the
Marshall Drug Stores in Cleveland.
The Cleveland World War Machine 463
was intended to serve as a free labor
exchange. Subor-
dinate offices are at the present time
in process of for-
mation in various parts of the city for
the convenience
of employers and employes. The
organization is an out-
growth of war conditions, but intended
for peace times
as well.23 Similarly the
Federal Capital Issues Commit-
tee, appointed to investigate all
proposals for new capi-
talization or for expansion of capitalization,
had its local
committee.24 The Federal War Industrial Board had
just organized a local labor board as
the War ended. It
was the function of this board to
direct the man power
of the district into war-winning
channels by conducting
investigations as to the labor needs of
war plants and the
available labor in non-essential
plants. The actual trans-
fer of laborers was to be carried out
by the local office
of the Federal Employment Bureau.25
Here, as in the preceding divisions of
the subject, the
organizations which private initiative
created to supple-
ment public institutions has the
greatest interest to the
students of the history of the War.
Most of the agencies
of this class were in one way or
another connected with
either the Mayor's Advisory Committee
or the Chamber
of Commerce, or with both. This does
not mean that
the Mayor's Advisory Committee and the
Chamber of
Commerce ever consciously limited the
scope of their ac-
tivities to the conservation of
resources or the stabiliza-
23
The Federal-State-City Free Employment Bureau is located in the
City Hall. Mr. Charles F. Arndt is the
district superintendent.
24 The
office of the Local District Committee of the Capital Issues Com-
mittee was at 304 Citizens Building. Mr.
D. C. Wills became Chair-
man; Mr. Kenneth Barnard, Secretary; Mr.
Harrison B. McGraw, Counsel.
25 The Reverend Francis T. Moran was the
Chairman of the Labor
Board.
464
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
tion of social and economic conditions.
They did not,
in fact, do so; they had their
committees on other phases
of war work. Some have already been
mentioned. It
is true, however, that the majority of
their committees
were engaged in these phases of local
war work. The
Mayor's General Advisory War Committee
in practice
operated through its executive
committee, generally
known as the Mayor's War Board, and the
several sub-
committees of the general committee
which were created
as occasion arose. The members of the
War Board and
the several committees served without
salary. And the
same statement is true of the majority
of these private
agencies in war work. In the Red Cross
campaign of
the spring of 1918, the sum of $250,000
was set aside
for the purpose of financing the
activities of the Mayor's
War Board and the sub-committees. One
of the chief
functions of the War Board was the
distribution of the
funds at its disposal among its own
committees and
other organizations engaged in similar
work. Fre-
quently organizations having no organic
connection with
the Mayor's War Board received
subsidies from it. The
Board naturally became a powerful
factor in the war
machine of Cleveland; it possessed the
power to en-
courage work which it deemed wise by
liberal appropria-
tions, and to repress others not
considered wise or
soundly organized by withholding
endorsement and sub-
sidies wholly necessary.26
The Proceedings of the Mayor's War
Board, which
26 The
Mayor's War Board and the sub-committees had rooms in the
City Hall with the headquarters in Room
226. Mr. Myron T. Herrick was
the Chairman; Mr. Harry L. Vail, the
Executive Secretary throughout most
of the period.
The Cleveland World War Machine 465
met every two weeks, constitute a
continuous record of
war work which the board fostered.
The United States did not create a
complete central
and local organization for the
administration of the reg-
ulations of the Federal Food
Administrator as it did for
the Fuel Administrator. In Cuyahoga
County a sub-
committee of the Mayor's War Board
assumed general
supervision of the administration of
the federal food
regulations, and particularly of the
conservation of food.
The sub-committee, in turn, operated
through several
special organizations or officers. One
of these had in
charge the conservation of flour;
another, of sugar; a
third, the fixing of fair prices; a
fourth, law enforce-
ment; a fifth, publicity; and a sixth,
education in the
conservation of food. The officer who
had in charge
education of the housewives on
conservation operated
community centers. Twenty-four such centers were
opened during the summer of 1918. The
Mayor's War
Board included the expenses of the
various services in
its budget.27
The attempt to solve the housing
problem developed
along other lines in Cleveland. The
Directors of the
Chamber of Commerce appointed a housing
and sanita-
tion committee which began its serious
work by making
a housing survey of Cleveland. The
Mayor's War Board
supplied the sinews by a small subsidy.
The Federal
Government laid the mantle of approval
over the work
of the committee when the Department of
Labor made
the chairman the local representative
of the United
27 The headquarters were
in Room 226 of the City Hall. The Acting
Chairman was Dr. R. C. Roueche
at the end of the War; Dr. R.
H. Bishop
was Chairman earlier; Mr.
Wilbur S. White was Secretary.
Vol XXXVIII-30.
466 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
States Housing Corporation in
Cleveland. The commit-
tee then proceeded to differentiate its
activities by
several organizations. A local
organization was in-
corporated to build houses in order to
supply the needs
of those individuals who could not
build during the War
in the usual way. A new committee, the
Home Regis-
tration Service Committee, of the
Chamber of Com-
merce, under the same chairman as the
Housing Com-
mittee, expanded the activities of the
original committee
into new fields. The Home Registration
Service under-
took to find housing facilities for
laborers in war indus-
tries and to protect residents of
Cleveland from rent
profiteering during the War. To do
these things a Place-
ment Bureau was established in the City
Hall to assist
laborers in finding rooms; a Rental
Adjustment Board,
to deal with rent profiteers. These
officers were in this
field what the local food administrators,
the fuel admin-
istrators, and the employment bureau
were in another.28
The presence in Cleveland of several
nationalities, in
the assimilation of which little
progress had been made,
presented another problem. Both the
Chamber of Com-
merce and the Mayor's War Board
appointed a com-
mittee on Americanization. The two were
identical in
membership. The Mayor's War Board made
appropria-
tions for the support of the work. The
Committee on
Americanization cooperated with the
public school au-
28 The Housing and Sanitation Committee
and the Home Registration
Committee were located in Rooms 205 and
207 of the Chamber of Com-
merce. Mr. Paul L. Feiss was the
Chairman of both committees; Miss
Rumbold was the Secretary of the former;
Mr. Louis A. Moses of the latter.
The Placement Bureau and the Rental
Adjustment Board were located in
the City Hall. Mrs. Amy Hobart was the Director of the
former; Mr. E.
W. Reaugh the Adjuster of Rents.
The Cleveland World War Machine 467
thorities in opening classes for the
foreign-born popu-
lation-classes in English, civics, and
other related sub-
jects with the purpose of aiding the
members in adjust-
ing themselves to American conditions
and in the under-
standing of American ideals.29 The
Mayor's War Board
had a sub-committee on patriotism. The
Chairman of
the Committee organized a body of
Four-Minute Men,
or rather men and women, who gave
four-minute
talks at the theaters, the
moving-picture houses, and
other places of public gathering in
support of the war
work of the time in the city. Its
influence in the early
months of the War, when the issues and
problems of
the War were not comprehended and other
methods of
publicity undeveloped, was very great,
especially in solid-
ifying public sentiment and
strengthening the morale of
the community.30
One of the most active organizations in
the Cleve-
land war machine was the Women's
Committee. This
was organized on June 12, 1917, as the
Cleveland
Women's Committee of the Council of
National De-
fence. The Committee of the Mayor's War
Board on
Women's Activities was identical.
Apparently one or
the other was the real parent, and the
other the foster
parent; it does not matter which for
the purposes of the
present paper. The Women's Committee
carried on its
work through about fifteen departments
or sections.
29 The
Committee on Americanization had its headquarters at 226 in the
City Hall. The Chairman throughout the
greater part of the War was Mr.
Harold T. Clark. After Mr. Clark's
resignation in the fall of 1918, Pro-
fessor Raymond Moley succeeded him. Miss
Helen Bacon was the Sec-
retary.
30 The Committee like the other
sub-committees of the Mayor's War
Board had its headquarters at Room 226
of the City Hall. The Chairman
was Mr. Harry L. Vail; the Secretary was
Mr. J. C. Marks.
468
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
There was a section on the Registration
of Women for
Industrial Work; one on Food
Production, which meant
the education of women on markets and
the local food
supply; one on Food Conservation
through the use of
exhibits, lectures, demonstrations, and
through school
community centers; others on Women and
Children in
Industry; on Nursing, and Public
Health; on Maintain-
ing existing Social Agencies (giving
training through
Western Reserve University in Social
Service); on Con-
servation of Moral Forces (keeping open
four neighbor-
hood service centers in cooperation
with the Cleveland
Board of Education); on the Liberty
Loan (promoting
the sale of bonds for the Liberty Loan
Campaign); on
Education (training women in clerical
and general busi-
ness); on Automobile Service
(furnishing cars by vol-
unteers for war work); and two special
committees giv-
ing publicity to the work of the
various organizations of
the group.31
Three sub-committees of the Mayor's War
Board-
The War Gardens, the Boys' Camps, and
the Children's
Year Committees-and two of the Chamber
of Com-
merce-the Labor Relations Committee and
the Trans-
portation Department-should be included
in a survey of
this kind. The War Gardens Committee
promoted the
production of food through gardens. The
Boys' Camp
Committee maintained boys' camps at
North Olmsted
and Dover Center, and in that way
placed boys in farm-
ing communities where they might be of
help to the
farmers as laborers. The Children's
Year Committee
31 The
office of the Women's Committee was at Room 226 of the City
Hall. In the early part of the War Miss
Belle Sherwin was Chairman;
in the latter part, Mrs. Harry L.
Sanford was Chairman; Miss Ruth Stone,
Secretary.
The Cleveland World War Machine 469
was organized to carry out a drive of
the general gov-
ernment to save babies. Among the
activities of the
committee were a census of children
under school age,
the publication of a monthly Bulletin
of Instruction on
the care of children, and pamphlets on
Prenatal and
Child Welfare, the direction of a
fly-prevention cam-
paign, and cooperation with the Bureau
of Child Hy-
giene and the Babies Dispensary.32
The Labor Relations Committee of the
Chamber of
Commerce existed as its name would
indicate to help
employers and employes adjust their
relations. It set
up for the Federal Government a war
emergency course
for women employment managers, financed
the course,
and found positions for the new
managers. The Trans-
portation Department was in no sense a
product of the
War, but like many old organizations
found its routine
affected by the war problems of the
city. It gave much
consideration during the War to the development
of long
distance trucking, to the growth of a
rural market ex-
press; it located for the Federal
Government the trans-
portation depots needed by the army in
the Cleveland
district.33
The Mayor's War Board and the Chamber
of Com-
merce represented for the most part the
point of view
and the interests of the city of
Cleveland. There was a
32 The offices were in the City Hall.
The Chairman of the War Gar-
dens Committee was Mr. George A.
Schneider; the Director, Carl F.
Knirk. The Director of the Boys' Camps
was Mr. Charles W. Disbrow.
The Chairman of the Children"s Year
Committee, Mr. Alva Chisholm; the
Secretary, Dr. R. A. Bolt.
33 Chamber of Commerce Rooms, 201 and
203. The Chairman of the
Labor Relations Committee was Mr. W. B.
Stewart; Secretary, Mr. Mun-
son Havens. The Traffic Commissioner was
Mr. F. H. Bahr.
470 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
rural area within the county, but
outside of the city
limits scarcely served by such
organizations. On Octo-
ber 14, 1918, the Cuyahoga War League
was organized
to do for the district outside of the
metropolitan district
what the Mayor's War Board did within
the city. The
War Council set apart a fund to meet
the expenses of
the office; the county commissioners
provided the quar-
ters. The League brought into cooperation
the County
Superintendent of Schools, the County
Agricultural
Agent and the County Farm Bureau, and
thereby gave
promise of the creation of an effective
rural war ma-
chine.34
E. ORGANIZATIONS FOR ENFORCING THE
SELECTIVE SER-
VICE LAWS AND FOR PRESERVING ORDER IN
GENERAL
President Wilson made the case of the
United States
against Germany so clear, so impelling,
that an over-
whelming preponderance of public
sentiment in Cleve-
land supported him, and whatever
measures were neces-
sary to win the war. Seldom has the
nation been so
united as it was in this instance.
Certainly it never was
so united in a war. Cleveland formed no
exception to
the unity of purpose of the American
people. Federal
legislation increased the power of the
Administration
and the courts to deal with the
disloyal. An almost om-
nipresent system of agencies to enforce
the legislation
which repressed disloyal acts, and so
maintain national
unity of action and purpose, supported
the Administra-
tion and the courts. History will never
be able to de-
termine with any precision how far
apparent unity was
34 The
office was in the Old Court House, second floor. The Chairman
was Herman J. Nord.
The Clcveland World War Machine 471
hearty, spontaneous, and how far merely
submission be-
fore forces too powerful to be opposed.
But there is no
reason to suspect that a large element
of suppressed op-
position existed.
The Federal Government in peace times
has a very
meager organization with which to
discover the dis-
loyal or the law breaker. There was a
bureau of in-
vestigation as a part of the peace-time
machinery of the
Department of Justice charged with the
investigation
of every violation of federal law. It
was considerably
enlarged with the coming of the War.
However, it was
anticipated, or rather widely feared
that the draft regu-
lations and the espionage act would
place a heavy strain
on the existing organizations of the
Federal Govern-
ment. Here again private initiative
found a way to
enable the government to meet the
strain without build-
ing up a cumbersome central
organization. In July,
1917, an organization which was called
the Cleveland
Division of the American Protective
League was
formed. An office staff and a field
force grouped in
platoons and companies, altogether 1500
men, were as-
signed to the task of supplementing the
work of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. The
local organiza-
tion was a part of a national league,
and had the ap-
proval of the Department of Justice. It
was, in effect,
an extra-legal police body.
The American Protective League was an
ingenious
device for using the voluntary services
of a large body
of loyal citizens of each community in
the enforcement
of law. It revealed like many other
extra-legal organ-
izations of the War the latent forces
at the disposal of a
democracy. While this particular
organization con-
472 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
cerned itself chiefly with slackers,
deserters, and Ger-
man sympathizers, there were times when
its members
stood guard duty at war factories,
assisted the police in
the pursuit of ordinary criminals, gave
clerical help to
the police department, supplied
automobiles for public
service, and in other ways acted as an
extra-legal
police.35
F. ORGANIZATIONS FOR FINANCING THE
CLEVELAND WAR
MACHINERY
It has been shown that a large part of
the so-called
war work of Cleveland was extra-legal;
that is, the work
of bodies of private citizens. The work
of these bodies,
while mainly done by volunteers without
salaries, re-
quired large amounts of money for
office hire, clerical
help, and materials or equipment. These
funds were
raised in Cleveland entirely by
extra-legal organizations.
The Cleveland War Council was the
nerve-center of the
war machine. It conducted the campaigns
for raising
money and apportioned the funds among
the various
agencies which were recognized as doing
useful work.
It served in effect as a budget
committee. The fund,
over $6,000,000, which it raised in the
spring of 1918
was popularly known as the Victory
Chest.36
To bring the nerve-center into
communication with
the individual contributors in every
call for funds for
35 The Bureau of Investigation was in
the Federal Building, Room 304,
with Mr. Bliss Morton in charge. The
American Protective League occu-
pied rooms adjacent to the Bureau. The
Chief of the Cleveland Division
was Mr. A. C. Klumph; the First
Assistant Chief and the officer in charge
of the Cleveland work, was Mr. Walter D.
Foss.
36 The office was in
the Chamber of Commerce, Room 201. The Chair-
man was Mr. Samuel Mather; the
Treasurer, Mr. Myron T. Herrick; the
Secretary, Mr. Henry E. Sheffield.
The Cleveland World War Machine 473
war need, the Cuyahoga County War
Service League
was organized in February, 1918. It was
the practical
application of the methods of the
political party. The
authors understood the methods and the
value of ward
and precinct workers in a campaign. It
is said that the
organization enlisted nearly five
thousand workers, so
distributed as to ensure that every
house in the county
would be visited in each campaign. The
War Service
League supported not only the campaigns
for funds of
the Cleveland War Council, but also
those of the Federal
Government.37
G. THE FEDERAL FINANCIAL ORGANIZATION
FOR THE
CLEVELAND DISTRICT
The Central Government was represented
in the
Cleveland district for the several
liberty loan campaigns
by a Central Liberty Loan Committee for
the Fourth
Federal District. This committee
supervised the cam-
paign in the Federal District.
Subordinate committees
promoted the floating of the loan in
the several divisions
of the district. For Cuyahoga County there
was a local
committee.38 The problem of
interesting the people of
Cleveland in buying War Savings Stamps
led to an-
other special local committee. The
Cuyahoga County
War Savings Committee conducted a
continuous cam-
paign of education on the War Savings
System. The
37 The offices of the Cuyahoga County
War Service League were at 1107
Union National Bank Building. Mr. George
B. Harris was the Chairman;
Mr. Harry S. Blackburn, the Secretary.
38 The Central Liberty Loan Committee
had offices in the Park Build-
ing; the local committee at 325 Hickox
Building. Mr. D. C. Wills was the
Chairman, Mr. F. F. Wilkinson, the
Executive Secretary of the former;
Mr. C. A. Paine, the Chairman, and Mr.
Horatio Ford, the Secretary of
the latter.
474 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications different elements of the population of Cleveland were reached by secretaries and directors for the foreign ele- ments and the industrial groups of the city.39 39 The Cuyahoga County War Savings Committee had offices at 1104 Union National Bank Building. Mr. Robert Crouse was the General Di- rector. Mr. D. Gara, with an office in the Swetland Building had in charge the foreign elements with secretaries for each. |
|
THE CLEVELAND WORLD WAR MACHINE
BY ELBERT J. BENTON
The Great War found America without a
war or-
ganization. One phenomenon of the war
of the United
States with Germany was the response of
the people in
the crisis. The war was interpreted as
a people's war,
and the people made it their own. It
was a veritable up-
rising of the American people in the
defense of the high
moral cause which their President had
marked out for
them, and the result was one of the
most encouraging
movements in the history of democracy.
How far the
lessons in practical patriotism have
made for higher cit-
izenship and strengthened democracy
will be a problem
for the historians to determine. The
ways in which the
people of Cleveland made the war their
own constitute
the problem which I have undertaken. I
began my task
by preparing a directory of the
organizations doing war
work in Cleveland for the convenience
of the Cleveland
Central Draft Board, for which I was at
the time doing
special work. The chairman of the
board, Mr. Starr
Cadwallader, gave me many valuable
suggestions. But
this eagerness to assist in the survey
was shown by the
officers of all the organizations
without an exception.
You will not be surprised if I confess
that I am not
able at the present time to give
anything like a compre-
hensive narrative of the activities of
Cleveland in the
war, if by that is meant a documented,
chronological
narrative of the progressive
organization of the com-
(448)