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Chapter Four
The Immediate Repercussions of the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937
This chapter deals with the immediate repercussions of the Marihuana Tax
Act of 1937. It is composed of an array of classified historical
correspondence and reports held by the Drug Enforcement Agency. This
correspondence and these reports shed new light on the Federal Bureau of
Narcotics' true role in the prohibition of marihuana. By the end of this
chapter it should be apparent that the Bureau had more than just a
corollary interest in the new hemp industry.
After
the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, the Federal Bureau of
Narcotics expressed a very specific concern regarding the new hemp
industry. Evidence of the Bureau's anxiety can be witnessed in a
Departmental memorandum which was circulated during the month of
December, 1937. The basic premise for the memorandum was that the Bureau
lacked a real understanding about marihuana as a drug and as a
legitimate crop. Now, since the Bureau had been given jurisdiction over
all facets of marihuana's usage, both legal and illegal, it had become
imperative for them to learn about the hemp plant. In principle, this
new desire to learn about the hemp plant seems highly suspect, since
Commissioner Anslinger was basically admitting to the Bureau's general
lack of knowledge regarding marihuana, even though they had previously
serenaded the media and public with their self-acclaimed expert
knowledge on the topic. The memorandum requested information on
marihuana in six distinct areas: agricultural, chemical,
pharmacological, sociological, economic, and industrial. Information
from the last two phases of the inquiry pertained to the hemp industry.
Among the topics of interest concerning Commissioner Anslinger were the
commercial uses for the hurds and the cellulose products that could be
made from the fiber. He also wanted to know the advantages of using hemp
over other raw materials and the prospects for hemp's use in the future.
There
was not a direct response to this memorandum; however, it appears to
have been in the possession of Dr. H. J. Wollner, the Bureau's
consulting chemist, who presented another memorandum of the inquisitive
sort back to Commissioner Anslinger on February 14, 1938. In this
document, Dr. Wollner expressed some concern over the Bureau's new task
of regulating marihuana. Specifically, he discussed three topics. The
first topic dealt with marihuana's unknown drug properties and the fact
that no one had developed a test which could accurately determine
whether or not the active principle was present. Skipping to the third
topic, Dr. Wollner noted that marihuana was a domestic plant unlike the
drugs of foreign origin, such as opium and cocaine with which the Bureau
was familiar. Returning to the second topic, Dr. Wollner observed:
"That the agriculture of the plant marihuana caters to a legitimate
industry." With regard to his second point, Dr. Wollner noted that
there was good chance that the cultivation of hemp for various
industrial purposes could be beneficial and that it could expand. He
recommended that the Bureau proceed with research to discover whether or
not a drug free hemp plant could be produced for industrial use. There
is no record of this research ever having been conducted.
Shortly
after the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, the potential
industrial advantages of cultivating hemp came to the attention of Henry
Morgenthau, Jr., the Secretary of the Treasury, who promptly contacted
Henry A. Wallace, the Secretary of Agriculture. Apparently, Secretary
Morgenthau had become aware of the interest of certain unidentified
paper manufacturers who were considering hemp as a potential raw
material for the production paper. The Secretary mentioned some
experimentation which the Treasury and Agricultural Departments had
jointly conducted over the summer of 1937. These experiments revealed
"that there was a tendency on the part of some of the Cannabis
plants to be lower than others in narcotic content." On the basis
of this discovery, Secretary Morgenthau suggested that it might be
possible to breed a strain of cannabis that was totally free of the
drug. Such a project would be beneficial to agriculture and industry. In
order to facilitate this avenue of research, the Secretary proposed that
the Treasury Department and the Department of Agriculture should
consider utilizing the appropriations that were available under the
provisions of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, Title 2, section
202. This law provided for four million dollars to be devoted to the
development and use of national crops. He concluded by stating that hemp
would cease to exist as an agricultural commodity unless action was
taken to insure its legitimate industrial usage.
Secretary
Morgenthau received a reply from Secretary Wallace's Department on May
3, 1938. It was not positive. Acting Secretary W. R. Gregg did not think
that it was feasible to expend any of the money appropriated by the
Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, Title 2, Section 202, because the
Act only allowed for the money to be spent on regular or seasonal crops
in which there were surpluses. The Acting Secretary of Agriculture did
express a degree of sympathy and agreed that the research which had
already been started the previous summer should be continued, but there
was one problem which promised to hold up the research. In 1938, the
researchers were still searching for a satisfactory method of testing
for the drug; therefore, further experimentation with respect to the
production of a drug free variety of hemp would have to wait. Acting
Secretary Gregg even went as far as to suggest that the Treasury
Department take up the matter of developing a satisfactory method of
testing for the drug. Despite the overall negativity of the response,
Acting Secretary Gregg knew of research that was being conducted into
the utilization of hemp hurds toward the production of cellulose at the
Department of Agriculture's by-products laboratory in Ames, Iowa. The
records of these experiments do not seem to exist anymore in the
Department's annual reports regarding these experimental projects.
Around
the time of the previous correspondence further concern regarding the
future of the hemp industry was expressed by Secretary Helen Moorehead.
She interviewed Dr. M. A. McCall, Chief of the Bureau of Plant Industry,
Dr. H. W. Barre, Principal Pathologist in Charge, Division of Cotton and
Other Fiber Crops and Diseases, and Dr. Brittain B. Robinson,
Agronomist, Division of Cotton and Other Fiber Crops and Diseases.
Secretary Moorehead sought information pertaining to the research
regarding a drug free strain of hemp. The Department of Agriculture's
men explained to her that the research could not proceed until Dr. H. J.
Wollner, the Federal Bureau of Narcotics' chief chemist, had perfected a
method of detecting the drug. They also explained that the pressure from
commercial interests to use hemp as a base for cellulose was impractical
from an economic standpoint unless it could be produced for less than
the present source, wood pulp, which sold for around three cents per
pound. None of the men had seen any evidence that hemp could be used to
produce cellulose competitively on the market against wood pulp.
Furthermore, the men said that in the past their experience with hemp
growers had been that they were promotional schemes designed to sell
patents or stock. There was no evidence that this time around it would
be any different. This opinion was no different from the one which the
Bureau of Plant Industry had expressed in 1931, with regard to the
initial efforts to promote the cultivation of hemp in 1930. In addition,
the men also believed that the Tax Act would not interfere with the
"honest growth of hemp." According to Secretary Moorehead, all
three men did express an interest in the matter and asked to be
contacted if they could be of any further assistance.
The
next event of consequence toward defining the Federal Bureau of
Narcotics' marihuana policy occurred on December 5, 1938, when the
Bureau convened the Marihuana Conference. Commissioner Anslinger and Dr.
H. J. Wollner presided over the meeting of 23 government selected
specialists. There was no one present from the various commercial
interests. Instead, Commissioner Anslinger allowed Dr. Andrew H. Wright
of the University of Wisconsin and Dr. Brittain B. Robinson from the
Bureau of Plant Industry to represent the commercial interests in the
discussions. The meeting opened with Commissioner Anslinger submitting
the agenda. He began with a brief update as to the proceedings of the
1938 SubCommittee on Cannabis, of the Advisory Committee on the Traffic
in Opium and Other Dangerous Drugs of the League of Nations, which
convened in Geneva, Switzerland. The majority of his synopsis dealt with
foreign research into the health hazards and the identification of the
active intoxicant principle. With regard to the commercial uses of hemp,
the SubCommittee was severely lacking in data; however, he did report
that there was a rumor about a variety of hemp which was grown in the
Anatolian highlands of Turkey that had too low a resin content to be
used for any type of illicit purposes. The Commissioner concluded by
explaining that the SubCommittee had decided that the information which
they had compiled was too incomplete for them to make any definite
recommendation regarding the perceived problem with cannabis.
Following
his summation, the Commissioner introduced Dr. Andrew H. Wright, who was
to explain the agricultural aspects of the domestic hemp industry. The
only point worth mentioning in Dr. Wright's testimony was the humble
grievance which he registered for the absent commercial interests.
Specifically, he referred to the negative public opinion that had grown
up with regard to the cultivation of hemp for whatever purpose, legal or
illegal. In his own words, he stated, "What they are concerned
about is the public position, that indefinite intangible thing, public
feeling about growing hemp at all." He continued and informed the
committee members that some of these commercial interests had
"already been subjected to some rather embarrassing
situations." Along the same line of thought he expressed further
fear that this negative public opinion could lead to hemp being placed
on the weed eradication list. Neither Dr. Wright nor the growers favored
such a development. These perceived problems concerned Dr. Wright, who
feared that they could adversely effect the legitimate cultivation of
hemp in the future. Again, in his own words, he stated, "Those in
the industry are naturally concerned. They have a stake in that they
have what little they have invested in the business."
After
Dr. Wright's brief testimony, Dr. Brittain B. Robinson was called upon
to discuss some more specific aspects pertaining to the domestic hemp
industry. During his turn, Dr. Robinson spoke about the history of the
hemp industry and pointed out the traditional usage of hemp. With regard
to the recent developments in the industry, he expressed the same
skeptical attitude which he had already voiced in an interview with
Secretary Moorehead of the Foreign Policy Association. Dr. Robinson's
opined that the commercial activity in Minnesota was of a promotional
nature. He mentioned that similar activities had occurred before but he
was not specific in his allegation. Aside from the activity in
Minnesota, Dr. Robinson did not have any further information of
relevance.
Despite
the skeptical conferences and adverse correspondence, there was still
plenty of activity in the hemp industry as the original investors and
promoters tried to salvage their dreams. For instance, on October 12,
1937, H. W. Bellrose, the President of the World Fibre Corporation,
contacted Supervisor Bass because of his deep concern for the future of
the hemp industry. His anxiety stemmed from the passage of the Marihuana
Tax Act. In this letter he mentioned the efforts of a Dr. Paul (no first
name was given) from California, who had lobbied before the state
legislature of California stating "that there were no ill effects
from the Hemp Plant where it was grown for Fibre, 'before' it went to
flower." Earlier, Frank Ridgway of the Chicago Tribune had
described this stage of the hemp plant's development to Supervisor Bass
as its "unripened" state. According to Bellrose, the
California legislature tested Dr. Paul's hypothesis and found that hemp
in its unripened state indeed contained nothing injurious to anyone. He
continued and pleaded that the Bureau consider a letter he was drafting
which would describe all the commercial advantages of hemp fibers and
hemp hurds before they proceeded forward with prohibitive measures.
In
this second letter, Bellrose unveiled his grand scheme for the
"rebirth" of the hemp and flax fiber industry. He began by
explaining that this "rebirth" could only be accomplished
through the means of mechanical decortication and that his company had
just perfected a machine for this purpose. To bring the importance of
this development to the attention of the Bureau, he compared the impact
the World Fibre Decorticating Machine would have on the hemp industry to
the effect the Eli Cotton Gin had on the cotton industry. It was to be
nothing short of revolutionary. Looking to the dismal situation of the
American farmer during the 1930s, Bellrose presented an argument
reminiscent of the alternative source debate by stating that hemp was a
crop for the industry, not for the human stomach and, therefore, it
presented a solution to the agricultural problem of overproduction with
regard to food crops, because industrial crops always had markets. After
this point he began to list the market opportunities for the various raw
materials of the hemp. He began with the bast fibers which he claimed
could be manufactured into "some four thousand textile
articles." Then he moved on to describe the commercial
possibilities for the by-product known as the hurds. These contained
roughly 78% alpha-cellulose which made them an ideal raw material source
for such products as paper, TNT, rayon silk, cellophane, and some 25,000
plastic products. Of these the paper pulp industry was the most
promising because it was a billion dollar industry and the United States
imported around 80 per cent of its paper and paper stock.
The
previous letter was the source for an article which appeared in the
February 1938 edition of Popular Mechanics, titled "The New
Billion Dollar Crop." In content, this article was practically
identical to the letter Bellrose sent to the Bureau in late 1937,
pleading for them to reconsider their prohibitive legislation.
Interestingly, the "billion dollar" reference pertains to the
newsprint market and it may be traced to a bulletin published by the
Newsprint Institute. According to this bulletin, the annual earnings of
the newsprint industry were one billion dollars. Bellrose used this
information to impress the Bureau and the public about the potential for
the new hemp industry.
Continuing
the previous letter, Bellrose's restated his concern over the passage of
the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937. His office was being flooded with
inquires regarding the new law and how it would effect the industry. The
primary stimulus for all the concern was not the actual passage of the
law, which had occurred virtually unnoticed, but an article which was
written by Frank Ridgway in the October 11, 1937 edition of the Chicago
Tribune. This article spelled out the prospective complications that
the new law would create and suggested that it might be more advisable
to just burn the crops than to try to persevere through the regulatory
measures. The main problem that Ridgway foresaw was the transfer tax.
The regulations stated that in order for hemp to be exempted from the
transfer tax it had to be free of any foliage that contained the drug.
This requirement was totally impractical, since it would mean that the
farmer would have to strip the hemp stalk of its foliage before he could
transfer it tax free to the processor. In either situation the farmer
was stuck without a profit; he would either be taxed or forced to pay
for additional labor.
After
this last letter, Bellrose brought the problem to the attention of the
Attorney General, who notified the Bureau. Acting Commissioner Will Wood
responded to Bellrose on November 7, 1937. In his response, he expressed
the Bureau's lack of concern regarding the complications of the transfer
tax. Acting Commissioner Wood simply stated, that the legislators had
taken the trouble to exempt the mature stalks from the transfer tax,
and, that it was the Bureau's understanding that the foliage fell off
during the retting process. His answer clearly demonstrates the Bureau's
ignorance regarding the cultivation of hemp, because the foliage did not
completely separate from the stalks during retting. The reason for the
Bureau's insistence on maintaining the transfer tax is best stated in
the words of Acting Commissioner Wood:
"I am sure that you would agree with me that
the transfer of the entire plant could not be exempted from the
operation of the act, because although the reputable manufacturers of
hemp fiber would have no interest in the foliage of the plant, there
are unscrupulous persons who would make use of such a loophole in the
law, and under color of a legitimate transfer of fiber stalks, would
be able to acquire and harvest all the resin containing foliage."
Before
Bellrose abandoned his dream of establishing a hemp industry, he tried
one last time to convince Frank Ridgway that the hemp they were
cultivating did not contain any of the active drug ingredients. In
January, 1938, Ridgway contacted Commissioner Anslinger and proposed
that the government conduct an experiment to see if Bellrose's
contention was true. Supervisor Elizabeth Bass wrote to Commissioner
Anslinger on March 5, 1938. Since Ridgway's letter in January, the
Commissioner had responded and requested that Ridgway send several
pounds of the hemp to be tested by governmental chemists. Apparently, by
March 10, no significant steps had been taken to analyze the marihuana
samples and Ridgway was going to postpone any further cultivation until
he met with Commissioner Anslinger. According to Supervisor Bass,
Ridgway wanted to discuss some new developments regarding the hemp
industry. In particular, he wanted to express the rapidly fading
enthusiasm of the processors who were "fearing troubles with the
government and small and not worthwhile profits." The records of
this meeting and the results of the tests are unknown.
Commercial
activity continued in Minnesota as well. On October 11, 1937, Frank
Holton contacted the Bureau regarding the new legislation and his
company's operations. He informed the Commissioner that his company had
contracted farmers in Southern Minnesota to grow hemp during 1934 and
1935. According to Holton, they had experienced some difficulty at first
since hemp was a new crop with which they had not been totally familiar.
Now, though, they were proceeding with plans to utilize the seed, fiber,
and hurd to produce oil, textiles, and cellulose. Recently, they had
become aware of the marihuana problem because of the publicity it had
received in the media and, as a consequence, they had learned of the new
Tax Act regulating the growth of hemp. Specifically, Holton requested
any information the Commissioner could provide him with about this new
development. The Commissioner's response was to send Holton a copy of Regulations
No. 1.
During
1936, Holton's main problem had been the hemp crops of 1934 and 1935,
which were still lying in the farmers' fields. The farmers were quickly
losing their patience with Holton, when Chempco, Inc. and the Central
Fibre Corporation had offered to purchase from their crops. Needless to
say, the sale was welcomed by both Holton and the farmers who actually
sold it for less than the contracted $15 per ton. After these deals,
they still had a significant quantify of hemp on hand, which continued
to be a bone of contention among the farmers. As a result of the
situation Holton found himself in, he decided to reorganize his company.
The new firm of Cannabis, Incorporated, was formed on April, 9, 1937, in
order to "manufacture and prepare hemp and other fibre from raw
material sources, etc., etc." Holton moved the new firm to Winona,
Minnesota where he occupied an old woolen mill. Over the course of the
spring and summer months of 1937, he conducted experimentation in
adapting the woolen mill machinery for the manufacture of hemp products.
This endeavor achieved very little success, and, in the end, Holton
settled upon producing mops.
In
1938, the Federal Bureau of Narcotics estimated that a total of 11,000
tons of hemp remained in storage on farms and at decorticating plants
throughout southern Minnesota. The Bureau sent an agent to inquire into
this situation and report back. Specifically, this agent was to
ascertain whether or not the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 was being
violated. According to the report produced by Field Supervisor H. T.
Nugent, the regulations had been violated in three basic ways. First
there was the problem of registering. The commercial interests applied
as Class 3, "dealers of mature stalks without foliage." This
classification was wrong according to Supervisor Nugent because the
foliage was never removed from the stalks and thus they should have
registered as Class 1. Second there was the issue of the transfer tax.
The regulations allowed for the tax free transfer of stalks that did not
have any of the drug carrying foliage. As with the first problem,
Supervisor Nugent observed that the stalks were never free of foliage;
therefore they were taxable, but the tax was never paid in many
instances. Finally, he noted that the crops still in the fields had not
been properly safeguarded, which was another violation.
In
conclusion, Supervisor Nugent pointed to the dilemma the Bureau faced
with the remaining stacks of hemp. There were two parties involved in
this issue, the farmers who physically possessed the crops and Holton
who legally controlled the crops. According to Supervisor Nugent,
Holton's company was in no position to purchase and decorticate the
remaining hemp, even though, he was planning to transfer it to
Mississippi, where he intended to use it for a textile blend with
cotton. Holton's plans evidently did not impress Supervisor Nugent and
the only solution seemed to be for the farmers to take Holton to court
in order to gain legal control of the hemp. Supervisor Nugent noted that
a committee had been formed by the farmers in the Lake Lillian area and
that they had elected Ojai A. Lende, Attorney at Law, to represent their
interest in the matter. Supervisor Nugent's opined that the just
solution was to compensate the farmers and to remove the hemp as soon as
possible because of the threat of pilfering.
The
earliest record regarding the legal action of the farmers in the Lake
Lillian area occurred in a letter from Lende to Senator Henrik Shipstead
of Minnesota, dated, January 27, 1938. In this letter, Lende informed
the Senator that hemp crops had been raised under contract during the
1934, 1935, and 1936 seasons in Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota. The
growing had been contracted by the Northwest Hemp Corporation which had
since experienced financial difficulties that had kept it from
fulfilling its contractual obligations. As a result, there were now 3000
tons of hemp being stored on the farms throughout the county waiting for
a market. This hemp has since been identified as marihuana and federal
legislation has been passed to control the traffic of the plant. The law
abiding farmers had duly applied for licenses to sell their hemp as was
stipulated in the new Tax Act, but they had never received their
licenses. In the meantime, the farmers had found a buyer, Chempco, Inc.,
and they were anxious to sell their hemp. Since Lende was their legal
representative, he was contacting the Senator with the hope of getting
the matter of licensing speedily resolved for the farmers.
Still,
by March 23, 1938, the issue had not been resolved. In another letter,
this time addressed to the Bureau, Lende again asked for the necessary
authorization to sell the crops. Apparently, all the Bureau had done was
send Lende information regarding the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937. From
this information, Lende learned that if the hemp was free of foliage it
was legally transferable and he expressed the belief that the hemp in
question was certainly free of foliage. The Bureau insisted on
inspecting the hemp before proceeding with authorization. The inspection
showed that there was still foliage, and, based on this observation, the
Bureau decided to test it for the drug principle. Late in April, Lende
was still awaiting an answer from the Bureau and he proposed that if
there was any drug content that the Bureau supervise the shipment of the
hemp. May and June passed and still no action had been taken by the
Bureau. In July, Lende pleaded for some sort of decision to be made,
stating that the depression "fell severely upon the farmers of
Yellow Medicine County." After this letter, Commissioner Anslinger
personally responded and informed Lende that the Bureau was
investigating the matter.
Supervisor
Nugent carried out the investigation and presented a report on the
matter on August 26, 1938. In the report, he conferred with Lende, and
explained that the Bureau would entertain the notion of a government
supervised transfer of the hemp, but that first he needed to gather
information about the purchaser, Chempco, Inc. Supervisor Nugent
discovered that the company was in serious financial difficulty and that
it was no longer in the position to make the purchase. The lost
opportunity can probably be attributed to the fact that the sale between
the farmers and Chempco, Inc. had been proposed over a year prior to
this investigation. Given the lapse of time, the market for the crops
had been lost and the hemp remained stacked in the fields. There was a
degree of sympathy evident in Supervisor Nugent's report toward the
farmers' situation and he expressed the intent to find a solution. He
also noted that something had to be done because the farmers were
violating the provisions of the Tax Act because they had not
reregistered, but is that really any wonder, considering the lack of
concern the Bureau had displayed toward their predicament.
The
situation had not changed by December 1938, when Lende wrote to
Commissioner Anslinger to notify him of legal action which he was taking
in behalf of many of the farmers to release them from the contractual
obligations. Two months later, Lende informed the Commissioner of his
successful litigation and stated that he had released a total of 5400
acres from the contract obligations. He also noted that there were
another 3000 acres of hemp which remained under the contracts. This
acreage belonged to farmers around the Mankato and Winnebago areas who
had expressed the desire to continue working with Frank Holton. After
divulging this information, Lende dropped a bomb in the lap of the
Commissioner, which is apparent from the question mark enumerating the
disclosure in the margin of the document. In essence, Lende stated that
he was proceeding with plans to seek an adjustment from Congress for the
damages that his clients had suffered in the hemp venture. The
Commissioner was a bit confused by this abrupt development and he made
note of his confusion in a reply to Lende in which he stated, "I
cannot understand on what basis it is expected that the Federal
Government should pay for these harvested crops of hemp..."
Commissioner
Anslinger received an answer to his query indirectly through Senator
Shipstead, who was similarly broadsided with this development. In a
letter addressed to the Senator, Lende began to explain the rationale
behind his decision to sue the government in the following words,
"You remember that I stated to you that there was a market for this
hemp in processed form but the passage of the Tax Act completely
destroyed the market and virtually confiscated this hemp for the
growers." Based on this assessment, Lende and his clients felt that
Congress should compensate them for the "actual out of pocket money
which the growers have sustained in the production of this hemp."
Lende informed the Senator that he had contacted Congressman August H.
Andersen, Congressman Elmer J. Ryan, and Congressman Harold Knutson, all
from Minnesota, about bringing up the matter of compensation during the
next session of Congress. Furthermore, he stated that the Bureau of
Narcotics possessed the data regarding acreages grown by individual
farmers which was necessary to carry out the appropriations.
Senator
Shipstead promptly contacted Commissioner Anslinger and requested his
opinion regarding both the matter of compensating the farmers as well as
regarding their right to sell the hemp they still had on hand. In his
reply, Commissioner Anslinger candidly explained that there was no basis
for the federal government to compensate the farmers of Minnesota for
the damages they had sustained and he also stated that the farmers were
free to apply under the provisions of the Tax Act for permits to sell
their crop of hemp, "provided that it is substantially free of
flowering tops and leaves." At the same time, though, the
Commissioner failed to inform the Senator that Lende had already
attempted to procure the necessary licensing, and that the Bureau had
denied him. As a result, the farmers represented by Lende lost a market
for their crops of hemp. Furthermore, the delay probably caused the
prospective purchaser, Chempco, Inc., to lose $25,000, and cease
operations.
Lende
received a reply from Senator Shipstead, who informed him that the
Bureau was going to investigate the matter further, but in a letter from
Lende to the Senator it is apparent that the Bureau had taken no steps
toward such an investigation. In fact, Lende was beginning to become
irate with Bureau's lack of concern and he asked for information as to
whether or not there might be other districts in the country which were
facing similar difficulties. The Senator passed this letter on to the
Commissioner, requesting the information which Lende asked for regarding
other hemp growing areas.
The
Commissioner promptly sent the Senator the information he had requested
on March 6, 1939. Without being specific, he informed the Senator that
there were approximately 371 producers of hemp registered under the
Marihuana Tax Act. He also stated that problems had only arisen in
Minnesota with respect to the application of the Tax Act and to the
availability of markets to sell the crop. The Senator relayed this
information on to Lende, who requested specifics about the locations and
names of the individuals involved in the operations cited by the
Commissioner. This request was passed on to the Commissioner, who
discovered that he may have created a problem by divulging this
information. Apparently, the area which the Commissioner had referred to
was Wisconsin, where hemp was raised for its fiber. The problem was that
the Bureau was never informed as to whether or not the hemp had been
free of foliage when it had been transferred from the field to the mill.
This situation presented an embarrassing dilemma for the Bureau since
they had given the farmers in Minnesota so many difficulties on this
point. Regardless of this situation, the Commissioner released the names
and locations of the three major commercial interests in Wisconsin:
Atlas Hemp Mills in Juneau, Badger Fibre Company in Beaver Dam, and the
Matt Rens Hemp Company in Brandon. He also explained that hemp was
raised in Kentucky on a small scale for the production of seed.
In
his next letter, Lende displayed a certain degree of antipathy toward
the Bureau's handling of the matter, and, in particular, he directed his
displeasure toward the Commissioner. Quoting from previous
correspondence on February 7, Lende noted the Commissioner's opinion
absolving the government of any responsibility for the failure of the
hemp industry:
"This hemp may be sold under the provisions of
the Marihuana Tax Act provided that it is substantially free of
flowering tops and leaves without respect to the transfer of the act.
Accordingly, the passage of the Marihuana Act of 1937 did not destroy
the market for hemp."
He continued and explained that the Bureau had found
that the foliage of the hemp stacked in Minnesota did contain the drug
principle. Despite this discovery, Lende continued to petition the
Commissioner for permission to sell the hemp. He was denied and in the
meantime there was no change in the situation. The hemp remained in the
fields where it was left unguarded and open for looters. From the
context of the letter it was apparent that Lende was becoming impatient.
He had never received the information regarding the other producers and
manufacturers and no progress had been made toward obtaining permission
to sell the crops. Expressing his anger, Lende stated:
"If I can find a market for the hemp I have in
mind to dispose of that hemp and tell Mr. Anslinger that he can go to
the region below and let him present the country with a spectacle of
arresting half a thousand farmers in Minnesota for selling an
agricultural crop grown off from their farms which were grown long
before Congress ever thought of the Marihuana Act."
In
another letter, Lende cited an article about a marihuana arrest which
had been recorded in the Minneapolis Journal of April 5, 1939. According
to Lende, there was a possibility that this marihuana had been obtained
from the hemp stacked the fields of Minnesota. Based upon this
assumption, Lende proposed that the Congress should consider the hemp a
risk to the public health and that they should confiscate it. The
Senator passed this letter and the previous one along to the Bureau.
Commissioner Anslinger replied on April 12, 1939. He notified the
Senator that he had given Lende the names of three companies in
Wisconsin in a previous letter. In defense of the Tax Act, the
Commissioner explained that the crops in Minnesota had been harvested
prior to the passage of the Act and, therefore, the Act could not have
killed the hemp industry. This excuse was extremely naïve. The
Commissioner understood the difficulties of establishing a new industry
and knew that it was first necessary to have the hemp grown before any
further work could be done. Specifically, the industry needed additional
time to experiment and perfect the technology to produce cellulose pulp
from the hemp. Such an endeavor required investment capital.
Commissioner Anslinger was aware of this necessity and used the Tax Act
to stop it from occurring.
Finally,
with regard to Lende's desire to sell the remaining crops, the
Commissioner insisted that Lende provide him with information on any
prospective purchaser. Upon the delivery of such information the
Commissioner promised to consider the transfer of the crops. This
transfer eventually occurred during the Second World War, when the
British Government contracted with a new venture, Hemlax Fibre &
Company, of Sacred Heart, Minnesota, to cultivate hemp for naval
cordage.
In
Illinois a slightly different situation developed, but, in the end, the
result was the same as it had been in Minnesota. Like the commercial
concerns in Minnesota, the Amhempco Corporation of Danville, Illinois,
intended to produce fiber for textiles and hurds for paper and
alpha-cellulose products. This project is of particular interest because
one of the buildings on the land purchased by the Amhempco Corporation
was used for the production of paper from cornstalks by a previous
venture. The former company, the Cornstalks Products Company, had not
survived, but while it was in operation it had been involved in an
effort to adapt alternative sources, other than wood, for use in the
production of paper. Ironically, this company had also been involved in
the previously described conspiracy to suppress alternative source
legislation in 1929, which would have appropriated government aid for
the development of farm waste industries.
Considering
the fact that Amhempco Corporation purchased the site of the original
operation, its organizers probably had a similar purpose in mind.
However, when the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 was passed, the principal
financial backers of the company filed for bankruptcy leaving about 300
creditors. Closer inspection reveals that the Amhempco Corporation, like
its predecessor, the Cornstalks Products Company, was formed as a stock
selling racket and as a device to secure a piece of the new market if
one developed. Furthermore, both operations were financially connected
to the investment banking house of J. P. Morgan & Company.
Apparently, the most powerful banking house in the nation also thought
that hemp might be commercially cultivated for its cellulose.
After
the passage of the Tax Act, the Bureau, in conjunction with the Treasury
Department, made a visit to Danville, in order to observe and discuss
the operations of Amhempco Corporation with the company manager, M. G.
Moksnes. During a meeting, Moksnes explained that Amhempco Corporation
had been formed for the production of fiber, which would be shipped to
the Massilon Company and used along with wool and hair for the
production of rugs. The Amhempco Corporation also intended to utilize
the hemp hurds for the production of cellulose, which could be used in
the manufacture of plastics and paper.
No
further correspondence between the Bureau and Amhempco Corporation
occurred during 1937. Then, on February 7, 1938, Moksnes informed the
Bureau that the Amhempco Corporation had ceased to do business.
Continuing, he informed Hester that he intended to reorganize the
business and that he needed to be advised as to the proper procedure of
licensing under the Tax Act. In particular, he wanted to know if the
growers of the 1937 crop were required to be licensed because they had
harvested their crop prior to the enactment of the law. Along with these
questions, he informed the Bureau that he intended to produce fiber for
the cordage trade, textiles, and the paper industry. There was no record
of any reply and the correspondence ceased again for approximately a
year and eight months.
The
story of Amhempco Corporation starts again in the fall of 1939. A
memorandum left by A. L. Tennyson, Chief of the Bureau's Legal Section,
recorded the events of a meeting between himself and Arthur S. Nestor,
who represented Fibrous Industries, Inc., of Chicago, Illinois. This
meeting took place on the afternoon of September 22, 1939. Nestor stated
that his company licensed the rights to use a hemp decorticating machine
and contemplated licensing this machine to the Illinois Hemp Company of
Moline, Illinois, which had been formed for the purpose of buying and
decorticating hemp and selling the fiber and hurd on the market. The
problem that Nestor wanted to bring to the Bureau's attention involved
the matter of a contract that the Illinois Hemp Company had entered into
for the purchase of 18,000 tons of hemp which was being held by the
Trustees in Bankruptcy for the Amhempco Corporation. He also informed
Tennyson that the Illinois Hemp Company planned on continuing its
operations once this stock of hemp had been decorticated by entering
into grower's contracts with farmers for future crops of hemp.
Nestor
stated that he had already discussed these plans with Dr. Brittain B.
Robinson of the Bureau of Plant Industry, who had suggested that he
present the matter to the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Responding,
Tennyson explained the provisions of the Marihuana Tax Act to Nestor,
taking special care to stress the clause referring to the transfer tax,
which stated that the tax was applicable to all transfers of hemp that
still had foliage attached to it. He continued and described the
problems that the Bureau had experienced with the hemp grown in
Minnesota. This reference naturally led Tennyson to inquire about the
nature of the hemp that the Illinois Hemp Company wished to purchase
from the Amhempco Corporation. If the hemp in question still retained
foliage, Tennyson informed Nestor that the approval of the Commissioner
would be necessary before the transfer could be legally conducted
according to the stipulations of the Tax Act. Tennyson further explained
that Commissioner Anslinger would require specifics regarding all facets
of the proposed business deal and that any additional growing of hemp
would require the same type of approval.
At
the conclusion of their discussion, Nestor expressed his desire to
comply with all existing regulations. He then proceeded to inform
Tennyson that the hemp industry had great potential to benefit the
American farmer. To support his contentions, Nestor produced letters
addressed to the Illinois Hemp Company from the Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Company, the Ford Motor Company, and companies manufacturing rope
and paper. After displaying these letters, Nestor expressed the belief
that the foliage could probably be removed from the hemp at little
additional cost to the company and that he would discuss this matter
with his engineer once he returned to Chicago. In closing, Tennyson
suggested that Nestor should not proceed with any transfers of hemp
until the Bureau had been able to conduct a thorough investigation of
his proposed plans.
Commissioner
Anslinger passed Tennyson's memorandum on to James Biggins, the District
Supervisor of Illinois, and requested that he investigate the Illinois
Hemp Company and Fibrous Industries, Inc. Evidently, the situation that
had occurred in Minnesota was still fresh in the Commissioner's mind
because he advised Supervisor Biggins to "carefully inquire"
into the identity of the individuals involved in these companies.
Supervisor Biggins assigned Narcotic Agent Cornelius J. Kelly to the
investigation and Agent Kelly submitted his report on October 6, 1939.
In the report, Agent Kelly stated that Nestor accompanied him to Tilton,
Illinois, which was in the vicinity of Danville, where the Illinois Hemp
Corporation's plant was located. According to Agent Kelly, the old
stocks of hemp were stored inside a fenced off enclosure and the total
amount was estimated to be 10,000 tons. He also noted that this hemp was
not totally denuded of foliage. Agent Kelly emphasized the previous
statement to Nestor and to an engineer that had accompanied Nestor. The
two men explained to Agent Kelly that another 6000 tons of hemp existed
on farms throughout the area and that the foliage most likely also
remained attached to this hemp. Nestor expressed his desire to comply
with the provisions of the Tax Act and began to confer with his engineer
about methods of removing the foliage, to which Agent Kelly responded,
that these matters would best be brought up with the Commissioner.
Following
his visit to the plant, Agent Kelly conducted a study of the Fibrous
Industries, Inc. From Agent Kelly's investigation, the Bureau learned
that the Fibrous Industries, Inc., had been chartered on April 19, 1939,
as a holding company. Surprisingly, Nestor's name did not appear in
relation to this company. Agent Kelly contacted Nestor to ask about this
situation. In an attempt to explain his absence, Nestor informed Agent
Kelly that he had acquired the exclusive patent rights to the Selvig
Decorticating Machine. Nestor continued and stated that the Fibrous
Industries Inc. was created after he had secured these rights and that
he had assigned the rights to license this decorticating machine to the
company. At the moment, Nestor stated that he was not connected to the
company except for his role as general manager, however, he informed
Agent Kelly that he planned on becoming the president and increasing the
capital once he settled some business matters. Nestor then proceeded to
inform Agent Kelly that several dummy officers with nominal shares in
the company had been listed as the company's management.
After
discussing the business of the Fibrous Industries, Inc., Agent Kelly
investigated the Illinois Hemp Corporation. He discovered that the
Illinois Hemp Corporation had been chartered on January 14, 1939. In
addition to this disclosure, Agent Kelly learned that the firm's
attorney was Elmer Johnson, a member of the Iowa State Legislature and a
prosperous and reputable businessman. Agent Kelly interviewed the
Vice-President of the Illinois Hemp Corporation, Wilbur E. Wright, who
oversaw the operations of the company's plant in Tilton. According to
Wright, the Illinois Hemp Corporation had paid Fibrous Industries, Inc.
$6500 for the rights to use the decorticating machine and that his
company also contracted to pay a royalty of one half cent per pound on
all finished hemp products to the Fibrous Industries, Inc.
During
this period of time, the decorticating plant and the hemp had remained
in the possession of the creditors of Amhempco. These creditors had come
together on April 1, 1938, and hired R. D. Acton to act as the trustee
for their possessions. After this action, Acton became the owner of the
hemp located at the plant in Tilton and on the surrounding farms.
According to Agent Kelly, there was approximately 16,000 tons of hemp in
Acton's possession, which he had contracted to sell to the Illinois Hemp
Corporation in January of 1939. He also stated that the Illinois Hemp
Corporation had been permitted to use approximately 7500 square feet of
the plant and parts of certain buildings to place and operate their
decorticating machinery and conduct their business. Agent Kelly then
reported that no payment was to be made for the hemp until it had been
processed and that operations were slated to begin on October 15, 1939.
Following this disclosure, Agent Kelly took it upon himself to ask
Wright, the Vice-President of the Illinois Hemp Corporation, whether or
not his company had registered under the provisions of the Marihuana Tax
Act of 1937. Wright replied that he had not and that he would confer
with Elmer Johnson, his company's attorney, about registering before
they commenced operations.
About
a month after Agent Kelly's report had been submitted, Nestor wrote to
Commissioner Anslinger. In his letter, Nestor explained that he had
conferred with two engineers and traveled to Wisconsin and Danville for
the purpose of discussing the problem presented by the foliage on the
hemp. As a result of his inquiries he formulated the following
conclusions:
- That the men interested in the handling of hemp in
Illinois and Wisconsin are of too high a type to ever remotely be
party to selling, or giving away any parts of the hemp plant that
could be used for marihuana.
- That they can be depended upon to do all things
needed to prevent any persons from obtaining, from their plants, any
of the leaves, flowers or seeds of the plant.
- That they universally hold the opinion that the
real danger of supply does not lie from the production of licensed
growers, or operators, but from unlicensed small growers and from
roadside growth.
- That the law is not interpreted alike by any two
of them. One understanding that the law allows him to do things a
certain way and another construes the law as nearly opposite.
- That some operators claim that at the time of the
hearing by the Committee a meeting was held at which were present
representatives of the Treasury Department and the Bureau of
Narcotics, also several processors of hemp. That an understanding
was arrived at as to the matter of handling the plant—and they
contend that they have been following such plan since that time.
- That there are several individual opinions as to
how the foliage problem could or should be handled.
- That the conditions in Wisconsin are different
than the conditions in Illinois, - and Illinois is unlike the
conditions in Minnesota or Kentucky. Kentucky, however, for the time
being, presents no problem.
- That they are of a unit in their desire to carry
out the intention of the law and to cooperate with the Bureau.
In connection with his conclusions, Nestor mentioned
that he had contacted Elmer Johnson, the attorney of the Illinois Hemp
Corporation, who had suggested that a meeting be convened between the
Bureau and the members of the hemp industry to discuss the matters of
handling of growth, transportation, possession and disposal of certain
parts of the hemp plant. Nestor also stated that he had mentioned
Johnson's suggestion to several other parties and to Dr. Andrew H.
Wright of the University of Wisconsin, claiming that they all expressed
an interest in the proposal of a meeting.
Commissioner
Anslinger promptly acknowledged Nestor's letter and stated that he
agreed that the matter seemed to justify the convening of a meeting.
However, the Commissioner was of the opinion that the meeting should
take place in Washington, D.C., where government experts from the
Department of Agriculture and the chemical section of the Bureau would
be available for questioning. In addition to this suggestion, the
Commissioner requested that Nestor grant him some time to gather
information regarding the current situation confronting the hemp
industry. Simply put, the Commissioner was stalling.
Meanwhile,
on December 5, 1939, Commissioner Anslinger contacted District
Supervisor James J. Biggins, requesting that he investigate the
operations of the Matt Rens Hemp Company of Wisconsin in an effort to
discover how they handled their hemp. The Commissioner requested this
information for the meeting which had been proposed by Nestor.
Apparently, the Commissioner was fearful that the Matt Rens Company was
transferring their hemp from the farms to the mill without paying the
transfer tax, which would create an embarrassing dilemma for the Bureau
for obvious reasons. Once the report was delivered, Commissioner
Anslinger informed Nestor that he would arrange for a meeting in
Washington, D.C., provided that a sufficient number of commercial
concerns were interested in such a meeting. After this communication
there is no further discussion of the proposed meeting, the reason being
that Nestor had been unable to secure a market for the hemp fiber which
he had begun to produce back in October of 1939. No doubt the delays and
the hindrance of regulations stifled the original enthusiasm for the
venture.
Later
in 1939, Dr. Andrew H. Wright of the University of Wisconsin contacted
the Bureau and discussed the matter of convening a conference. Dr.
Wright claimed that certain promotional people interested in the
decortication of hemp from a purely promotional standpoint were
responsible for proposing the conference. In connection with this
communication, he also sent a letter to Agent Kelly, describing the
matter in more detail. Dr. Wright stated that, at present, the
regulations and application of the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 were
satisfactory. To date, the enforcement of the law had not inhibited the
legitimate commercial production of hemp fiber and it had also served
its purpose to protect the public from the illicit use of marihuana. The
current pressure for a conference was being created by individuals who
were involved with the hemp industry from a promotional standpoint. In
his own words, Dr. Wright expressed the following concern, "I
seriously question the need for giving consideration to a request from
any individual or individuals who have a promotional interest."
The
real reasons for Dr. Wright's behavior are apparent in the fact that he
was employed by the Matt Rens Hemp Company of Wisconsin. This company
was the oldest of the surviving hemp concerns, having been established
in 1916. Its operations were conducted on a much smaller scale than the
hemp ventures in Minnesota and Illinois. During its history, the Matt
Rens Hemp Company had contracted to sell its processed fiber to the
United States Navy for cordage and caulking. Dr. Wright represented the
interests of the Matt Rens Hemp Company when he was critical and
sarcastic in his descriptions of the other commercial concerns, claiming
that they were promotional, and, therefore, that they should be ignored.
Furthermore, when he stated that the Tax Act had not hindered the
commercial cultivation of hemp, he was partially right, because the
Bureau never enforced the provisions of the Tax Act in Wisconsin.
Ironically,
the Wisconsin concerns were allowed to violate the stipulations of the
transfer tax while the Minnesota and Illinois ventures were forced to
strictly comply by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Why was the Bureau
inconsistent? First, the three concerns located in Wisconsin never
seriously mobilized to develop hemp as a cash crop for the production of
cellulose products like the ventures in Minnesota and Illinois. In
addition, the U.S. Navy was the main client of the Wisconsin concerns.
If the Bureau had given the Wisconsin industries trouble like they had
in Minnesota and Illinois, then they might have faced the indignation of
the Navy. On the basis of these two rationale, the Bureau chose to
ignore the hemp industry in Wisconsin.
Reviewing
the history of the immediate repercussions of the Marihuana Tax Act, the
Federal Bureau of Narcotics displayed several alarming discrepancies in
its handling of the new hemp industry after the passage of the
legislation. First, it stalled on research for the benefit of the hemp
industry. Then, the Bureau hampered the conduct of legitimate business
by strictly enforcing the stipulations of the transfer tax. And finally,
the Bureau displayed a propensity to be selective in its enforcement of
the provisions of the Tax Act. Taken as a whole, these dealings
effectively put an end to the new hemp industry.
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