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The Craver Family’s Unusual Birth Announcement

CraverBirthAnnouncement.jpg

My serfs (okay, they prefer to be called “interns”) are still cataloging and filing away the more than 43,000 items I purchased at the recent Shelby Foote estate sale.

Every few hours, they will clamber out of the basement to show me something of interest, but I think that’s just an excuse to get a sip of water, a spoonful of porridge, and a breath of air. But occasionally, they really do find something intriguing, and this is a good example.

It’s a birth announcement, but cleverly written and designed as if it were introducing a new model car. “The Craver Production Company of 1900 Mignon Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee,” it reads, “Announce the 1935 Craver Baby Girl, Model Number One.”

This particular “model” was released on June 19, 1935. The proud parents are H.A. Craver, “designer and chief engineer,” and Dallas Craver, “production manager.” Even the good physician who helped with the birth gets a mention, with Dr. J.J. McCaughan listed as “technical assistant.”

It’s curious, at least to me, that the baby girl’s name is not given on the announcement. Even so, she came fully equipped with such special features as “two-lung power, double bawl bearing, free squealing, economical feed, scream-line body, water-cooled exhaust, and changeable seat covers.”

This was apparently the Cravers’ first child, and they wanted to make sure that everyone understood there would be no additional children anytime in the immediate future: “The management assures the public there will be no new models brought out during the balance of the year.”

I wanted to find out more about this rather clever family, but so far I’m stumped. I’m sorry to admit that the Lauderdale Library is missing some copies of old city directories, such as the 1935 edition. But later editions, from the late 1930s through the early 1940s, do not show this family as living in Memphis, and another family entirely is occupying 1900 Mignon. Birth, marriage, and death records online at the Shelby County Register’s Office don’t show this family, but that’s not too unusual because most of those records don’t cover the 1930s anyway.

I’ll have to do some further research before I can tell you just who the Cravers were, and where they went.

In the meantime, I just wanted to share this with you. Now, back to the basement, serfs!