How West Virginia's Mail Pouch Changed the Face of Advertising

You’ve probably seen them. Barns with faded paint usually in black or red with yellow lettering delivering an old message from another time: “Chew Mail Pouch” and “Treat yourself to the best.”  Once upon a time these hand-painted advertisements covered more than 20,000 barns all across America.

Cigars in the Loft

That Mail Pouch barn painting movement all started in a drygoods store in Wheeling, West Virginia.

Stuart Bloch is the former president of the Mail Pouch Tobacco Company in Wheeling. His great-grandfather was one of the two Bloch brothers that founded the company in 1879. The brothers had a dry goods store on Main Street in Wheeling. As a side business they made cigars in a loft above the store.

“In the course of making these cigars they had all these clippings they didn’t really know what to do with them,” Stuart said. “So they packaged up the clippings from the cigar business to create a new brand-type of chewing tobacco. They flavored it with molasses and licorice and so forth.”

Ohio River Mail 

And then they had to come up with a name. Back the late 1800s, one of the highlights in “the day of the life” was getting mail. People in Wheeling would line up at the banks of the Ohio River, anticipating the arrival of the mail pouch bags. The Bloch brothers took the popular thought and ran with it as a name for their new product: Mail Pouch Tobacco.  

The Ohio River had one other major impact on the Bloch brothers’ business.  

“We had a big flood in 1886,” Stuart said. “It flooded out the down stairs in the dry goods store but the cigar-making was okay upstairs.”

The Blochs bought a sugar mill on 40th street and transferred the tobacco end of the business but got out of the dry goods business. There are still 160 people working in Wheeling today making chewing tobacco and snuff.

Credit Charlie Kleine
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The Marketing Campaign  

Many people believe the key to the Mail Pouch success was the advertising.  It was in the early nineteen hundreds when Stuart Bloch’s grandfather Jess Bloch came up with the idea to advertise on barns along highways. Signs can still be seen today in 39 states.

“Farmers were interested in having their barn painted and we were interested in putting up the famous barn sign.” Stuart explained that crews were organized to paint and an individual was hired to lease barn space from farmers.  

“We got a cut rate for the advertising costs because in the beginning we paid the farmer with an annual subscription to the Saturday Evening Post or Collier’s, Life magazine was another one. Then in the later years we paid cash for the space.”

Industry’s Role

The Ohio Valley’s industry helped drive the chewing tobacco market. In the steel mills, coal mines, and in the oil and gas fields, workers could not smoke – so they chewed mail pouch tobacco instead. When oil and gas workers moved to fields out west, the barn paintings followed.

Credit Courtesy of James Thornton.
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Warrick painting signs.

Warrick – “He painted a lot of signs.”

Of course, everything was hand-painted in those days and the most famous Mail Pouch painter by far was Harley Warrick. For 55 years he painted or retouched over 20,000 Mail Pouch signs.

“He was remarkable in that he could paint these signs by himself,” Stuart Bloch recalled. “He’d put a sling up on the side of the roof, stand on it, pull on it, paint it lower it. Just remarkable!” Bloch remembers that Warrick painted a mail pouch sign at the World’s Fair, in restaurants, and even for individuals.

“He was a very gregarious guy. So he always enjoyed talking to the farmers were he was painting the signs and he be back about every three to four years, renewed his acquaintances with farmer, and it was an existence he really enjoyed.”

Bloch also learned that in the beginning of the mural campaign, barn painters would often take their families with them in the summer. 

“They would camp with their kids and their wife while they painted signs in that area. Then they would move on.”

Highway Beautification

In 1965 the federal Highway Beautification Act sought to restrict the vast number of local advertisements that were being placed near highways.

“Mail Pouch signs were on federal highways in many places. So I contacted our Senator Jennings Randolph and suggested that maybe Mail Pouch barn signs were a part of Americana that should be preserved, and he agreed.”

Senator Randolph did manage to get the barn paintings exempted. After the Highway Beautification Act just about all other sign painters went out of business yet Harley Warrick continued to paint and touchup older Mail Pouch signs on the back roads until his retirement in 1991.Then after the Tobacco Master Settlement of 1998, all tobacco ads were to be replaced with anti-smoking ads. Yet most of the Mail Pouch barn paintings were again, left untouched, cited as pieces of historical Americana.

Editor’s Note: The map of Mail Pouch barns reflects those still standing. The data contained within the map is attributed to mailpouchbarnstormers.org.

Food & Farm Coalition Identifying Food Policy Priorities for 2016 Session

Members of the West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition hosted their second annual food policy forum in Summersville Tuesday. The grassroots group is working to expand access to locally grown foods in the state while also improving the business climate for small farmers. While the discussions were preliminary, the group is beginning to identify its Legislative agenda for the 2016 session.

 

“We never know from day one to the sixtieth day what it’s going to be,” Senator Ron Miller warned the group as they began identifying their issues. He urged them to be flexible as they work with lawmakers through the legislative process.

 

A Democrat from GreenbrierCounty, the senator served for years as the chair of the Senate’s Agriculture Committee, but now that the chamber is under Republican control, Miller no holds the position. Still, he said agricultural policies aren’t as politically divisive as many of the other issues in the statehouse.

 

“Where it becomes political is if we emphasize agricultural issues,” he said. “A lot of time people in leadership don’t believe it’s important in West Virginia and it’s extremely important.”

 

Important, Miller said, because it can provide the economic diversification some regions of the state are desperate for.

 

“As a lot of our more historic industries have started declining, we can see food and farm businesses start as a small niche of economic development, West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition Program Director Megan Smith said.

 

So, Smith and the coalition are working on a grassroots level to aid those niche industries and zero in on policy changes that will help them thrive in West Virginia communities. The coalition’s gathering in Summerville was the first step in their annual process of choosing policy initiatives to back and turning them into actual pieces of legislation they can present at the statehouse.

 

Tuesday’s day long session included a workshop led by Ona Balkus with the Harvard Food Law and Policy Clinic. The clinic works with state-level groups across the country to increase access to healthy foods, prevent diet-related diseases and create new market opportunities for small farmers. They both research and write policy while promoting effective ways to share those messages with lawmakers, like community organizing.

 

“Because especially I think on the state and local level, if you have an organized coalition pushing for something, you can get a lot done,” Balkus said after the workshop.  “Legislators are listening. They’re not deaf to those kinds of efforts.”

 

The Food and Farm Coalition has seen recent success, getting lawmakers’ approval during the 2015 session for a bill that set up a better business structure for agricultural and recycling co-ops.

 

Still, Miller said the politics—and the money—will play a part in the agricultural issues the coalition tries to push during the 2016 session.  For the sake of the coalfields, he said, he hopes agriculture doesn’t get overshadowed.

 

 “We sometimes look for the power or the money in the state. Right now it’s gas, it was coal. Those still are two powerful areas,” Miller said, but agriculture is part of our state seal. It’s part of our history, but it’s also a part of our future and that’s what you have to do, you have to continue to emphasize the part that it can play in revitalizing southern West Virginia.”

 

The coalition plans to identify its top legislative priorities by the end of the summer, turn them into legislation and start shopping those bills to lawmakers for their support by interim meetings in September.

 

So far, possible initiatives include funding for mobile markets to increase access to fresh foods and legislation that would allow the sale of cottage foods, or foods like jams and baked goods produced in people’s homes.

W.Va. Farmers Face March 15 Deadline to Buy Crop Insurance

A deadline is approaching for West Virginia farmers to buy insurance for crops planted in the spring.March 15 is the closing date to either buy crop…

  A deadline is approaching for West Virginia farmers to buy insurance for crops planted in the spring.

March 15 is the closing date to either buy crop insurance or change an existing policy.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk Management Agency says insurable spring-planted crops include corn, spring oats soybeans and tobacco.

Farmers also can buy insurance for loss of revenue resulting from a change in the harvest price for corn and soybeans from the projected price.

Crop insurance is sold through private crop insurance agents.

W.Va. Senate Passes Bill Allowing Consumption of Raw Milk

West Virginia senators have narrowly approved a bill letting people drink raw milk through animal herd sharing agreements.

On Friday, the Senate voted 18-16 to approve the measure. Sen. Tom Takubo, a doctor, was the lone dissenting Republican vote. Sen. Bob Williams was the only Democrat voting in favor.

The bill wouldn’t allow retail sales of raw milk.

Instead, it would require filling out a contract of ownership for milk-producing animals. The person consuming the raw milk would have to sign a form acknowledging health risks.

Federal officials have warned of health risks when children, the elderly and pregnant women consume raw milk.

The bill next moves to the House of Delegates for consideration.

Senate Approves Non-Partisan Election of Judges

At the legislature today, with three weeks left in this session, the Senate suspended the constitutional rule that bills be read on three separate days to quickly move legislation to the house.  In the House, the Government Organization committee has rejected a bill that would give County Commissions the authority to pass smoking regulations.  These stories and more legislative news coming up on The Legislature Today. 

Two W.Va. Cities Chosen for Federal Food Initiative

  Two West Virginia cities have been selected to participate in a federal initiative designed to integrate local food systems and economic development.

Wheeling and Williamson are among 26 nationwide, including eight others in Appalachia, that will receive technical support from the Local Foods, Local Places initiative.

The Appalachian Regional Commission and five other federal agencies announced the winners on Wednesday in a news release.

ARC co-chair Earl F. Gohl says Appalachian communities recognize that food systems can plan a role in the development and revitalization of downtowns.

Gohl says the initiative will provide technical resources to help communities integrate food systems into economic development plans.

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