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St. Paul, MN July 1935 |
A radio news story reports that in a major American city efforts to restrict the visible presence of homeless people (notice: not to address the fact of homelessness) include laws prohibiting sleeping in public, eating in public, and feeding people in public. The public policy issues related to how we address homelessness deserve to be commented upon, but that is not the point of this post. Rather, in the midst of an intense and prolonged heat wave this story recalls how people coped with heat in the pre-air conditioned era: they slept outside, sometimes in public places, they jumped in bodies of water, they wrapped themselves in damp sheets. Generally hot weather drove people into places where they saw more of each other rather than into the refuge of their own houses. Now the cost of getting cool is not only a higher utility bill and the environmental side-effects of increased energy usage, it is also reduced social contact.
I write this, of course, sitting in my newly air-conditioned office in a newly refurbished 130 year old building. And I don't wish to sleep outside with the mosquitoes. So I wonder how my predecessors reacted when the days and nights were hot. Did they keep working as if the temperature were mild? Did they stop often for a long drink of water? Did they give up cooking and eat only raw vegetables? Did they repair to the Canon River or Heath Creek for an afternoon of wading and splashing? Were those the days when Boe sat in Rolvaag's back yard smoking cigars and planning for a Greater St. Olaf?
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