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 Texas : Features : Columns : "It's All Trew"

Modern red tape
outgrew family Bibles, tin boxes

by Delbert Trew
Delbert Trew
Once upon a time, family records of births, deaths and marriages were kept on a page in the family Bible. Expenditures and income were kept written on the back of a feed store calendar hanging on the wall or in the Farmer's Almanac. None of these entries required more than a few lines of space to be clear and precise.

If you were fortunate enough to own land, you might have a few pages of abstracts or deeds denoting your ownership. Since most bills were paid by cash or barter with few receipts involved, most people had few "important papers" to protect and secure. This usually involved placing all in a big manila envelope and storing in a closet.

The Crash of '29 came along with the Depression, the Dust Bowl and the New Deal programs of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, which required all types of forms to fill out and keep in order to participate. The New Deal forever changed the way America did business.

The "dole" was not free. Most government checks, loans and assistance had to be paid back or at least accounted for.

Almost overnight, important papers multiplied. Taxes due were based on the amounts of income and operational expenditures which required good bookkeeping and receipts. These papers were best kept for years in case of audit.

Social Security arrived, making more papers. Banks began requiring financial statements before making loans. Suddenly, the storage of important papers grew. Penalties and laws put teeth into the need for secure storage.

Safety-deposit boxes were available but cost money and were not open except during banking hours and many people did not completely trust banks. The fireproof safes and file drawers were expensive and not always available to the rural people. Important papers were kept in every conceivable container imaginable.

When my father's important papers outgrew a small metal suitcase he contacted Howard Holt, a plumber and tinsmith in Perryton who built a galvanized storage box about 3 feet square by 16 inches deep with a padlocking door and shelves inside. As long as I can remember, this tin box kept dad's important papers sorted and secure. Mother even stained and varnished the outside so it would go with their bedroom furniture better.

After years of faithful use and when fireproof file cabinets became available, the old box was retired and nailed up in the ranch saddle house where it held livestock medicines and syringes. There was always a gallon of Neatsfoot Oil, a small paint brush and coffee can ready to use when you changed the oil in your saddle each year.

Each time I see this old tin box I think of all the business records it has held secure in its lifetime and the faithful service provided. It's a long way from the page or two in the family Bible that once held all the important facts about an entire family.

© Delbert Trew
"It's All Trew" February 25, 2008 Column
E-mail: trewblue@centramedia.net.
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