Saturday, September 14, 2019

Early Scamming

Ever been scammed?

I have.
It's a terrible feeling when you realize what has happened.
But it's nothing new.
Allow me to illustrate:
Gramma and Grampa Berg on their wedding day
My Maternal grandparents emigrated from Sweden.
Grampa came first and started farming/ranching in Idaho.
Gramma followed later and they were married.
A short time afterward, they headed north, enticed by offers of beautiful farm land in Alberta. They settled on a half-section they acquired in the Brooks area.
Soon afterward, they met another couple who had been farming unsuccessfully in the area for some time and were ready for a change.
The man had a scheme.
A sure-fire, can’t-miss scheme.
“Trapping is the answer,” he said knowledgeably  “I’ve done it before. Get yourself a trap line and, in one winter, you can make enough to pay cash for the equipment you will need to farm.”
Grampa was intrigued by the idea.
No stranger to hard work, he was excited by the idea of trading long winter hours for the chance to start his farming operation with such a leg-up. He and Gramma decided they’d do it.
They studied the maps and decided on a tract of land further north of their new home place. A spot near Lac La Biche. They staked out their claim and moved into a small cabin near the train tracks.
Originally, the cabin had been erected for the use of the crew when they were laying said tracks. Their new friends (Remember the guy with the idea? Him.) had used it before.
It was . . . cozy, but it had every amenity. Walls and a roof. And a window and door. It also had a little stone oven that Grampa built. Outside. Gramma would build up a fire, let it burn down, then bake bread by the heat that remained in the stones. Beautiful bread. It was the one perk of living in a tiny cabin at the back of beyond.
Gramma Berg and her bread
For many long winter months, they and their friends/partners lived there and ran the trap line. Gramma’s first son, my uncle Glen, was born there.
They had a measure of success. In fact, by March, they had an abundant supply of furs.
The winter drew to a close. Even in northern Alberta, it does happen . . .
Plans were discussed to take the winter’s catch to the city to trade.
The decision was made that Grampa would stay at the cabin for one more week to take whatever animals he could in those last few days.
His partner would haul their furs to the city to trade.
The partner left.
Grampa caught up with him a week later in the city.
And that’s when things fell apart.
The partner claimed that he had lost their entire catch in the river when his boat swamped.
Their entire catch.
There was nothing Grampa could do.
He loaded up his wife and new son and their few belongings and headed back to his land near Brooks. One wasted, useless winter behind him. And a new farming operation ahead to be started without the leg-up he had counted on.
He did make a success of it and he and Gramma raised eight sons and my mom.
I’m sure the pain of that first set-back was completely overcome in the ensuing years.
That’s what we all count on when the scammers hit.
Sigh.

14 comments:

  1. There always have been - and always will be - folks who take advantage of other folks' hard work and honesty. I wonder how many other hard-working people that scammer hit? Grrr!

    And I wonder that about modern scammers too.

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    1. As do I. Do people wake up in the morning and wonder who they're going to bilk today? Sounds like a real lofty goal in life, right?!

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  2. The more things change, the more they stay the same...

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  3. It's hard to say what actually happened there. The partner was a family friend who had actually helped build the house at the farm in Millicent so Grandpa felt he could trust him. I've talked about this to other family members and who is really to say what actually happened. Mr. Pohm didn't show any increase in his own personal wealth so he could've been on the level. I guess we'll never know for sure...

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    1. According to the brothers (my uncles) the two couples first meeting was on the train when Grampa and Gramma emigrated and that was when the neighbour proposed the trapping scheme. Our uncles remained suspicious because Grampa had to track him down once he got back. Good on them that they actually became friends.

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    2. That makes sense too. I remember Mom's version of it and spoke about it when I spoke at her funeral. Uncle Roy was quick to tell me the other version. And I think that Roy's version was different than Glen or Bern's to some extent...

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    3. And the truth is probably somewhere in the middle of all of them!

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  4. He could also, if he was a good family friend, have been cheated out of his money when selling the catch, and was embarrassed to say anything about it.

    If he was a scammer, shame on him. Just like modern scammers.

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    1. Embarrassed or not, He should have come forward. Not wait until Grampa tracked him down!
      And I SO agree!

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  5. I woul have loved to taste that bread. Sounds like the partner was a real creep.

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    1. Gramma's bread was the stuff of legends. I never got the chance to taste that stone oven baked deliciousness. Rats. Now I'm hungry . . .

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  6. As interesting as the story was, the comments from your family were even more interesting. You may never know the truth of it, but it all ended well -a good ending, which doesn't always happen. Yes, scamming is nothing new. Confidence men (and women) are as old as the human race.

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