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        Salt Lake City; Amateur Sleuths; The Land of Cotton

        Idle Mormons, angry cotton pickers and a boom in detective fiction: a mix of intriguing and provocative stories set against a turbulent background of unemployment and recession.

        Anthology 1937 20 mins

        Overview

        A scheme to prevent idleness among unemployed Mormons; striking sharecroppers fighting for their rights and a β€˜crime club’ of amateur sleuths helping to solve real-life felonies: this compelling issue from 1937 shows The March of Time at the height of its powers and includes one of the most dramatic β€˜re-enactments’ in the entire series: the recreation of the murder of a black sharecropper and the brutal flogging of a pastor and social worker by angry plantation owners.

        The stories in this issue take place against a background of rising unemployment and reflect the March of Time’s commitment to producing stories which reflected social reality. The β€˜Land of Cotton’ story, which champions the striking sharecroppers and their angry demands for better pay and the right to organise, is ultimately compromised by a refusal to attribute blame. Nonetheless, the story (emphatically called β€˜King Cotton’s Slaves’ in the US edition) was deemed to be so provocative in its criticism of the planters that the March of Time’s business manager took out an extra $10,000 life insurance policy on director Jack Glenn, while he was filming near Memphis, Tennessee.