A Letter From America #11
Ernest Wessen
and the Midland Rare Book Company
From
the Antiquarian Book Review
If you were serious about collecting Americana a
half-century ago, you wanted to be on the mailing list of the Midland Rare Book
Company of Mansfield, Ohio. From this perch in the heartland of the United
States, its proprietor, Ernest J. Wessen, issued a series of catalogues entitled
Midland Notes, famous for the
quality of the items contained, the prices
reasonable even by the standards of those halcyon days, and the erudite and
acerbic notes which threw light into strange bibliographical cubby-holes. You
wanted to be on that list, but Mr. Wessen was as picky about his customers as
his books. One of the greatest present-day booksellers in this country, when
asked if there was a rhyme or reason to his shop, famously replied, "Yes,
my rhyme and my reason." Wessen practiced this philosophy in spades; one
wrong move and you were off the mailing list and out of the shop. As a result,
runs of Midland Notes are rare. In all, 102 were produced between 1937
and 1969, mimeographed on the squishy paper favored for elementary school
handouts of the era and stapled between stiff colored wrappers with an odd logo
suggestive of some Art Deco-ish theme. At a time when only the grandest book
catalogues had much in the way of annotation, Wessen never hesitated to write a
small essay on an interesting point regardless of value, hence their continuing
interest.
Wessen is a wonderful story in himself, worthy of far
more than a short notice here. How many booksellers have run a patent medicine
factory as well (maybe more than I think)? It is said that a number of little
old ladies in Mansfield couldn’t get through the day without a snort of his
(presumably alcohol-laced) vegetable tonic. How many of his peers could pick and
choose between where they would first offer their best stuff? A survey of the
famous Thomas W. Streeter auction catalogue reveals myriad Wessen provenance,
and the equally energetic collector Dr. Frank Siebert told me he valued Wessen
above all other sources. (I must digress and tell a story of Siebert visiting
Wessen once in the 1940’s. Arriving in the morning, the Doctor spent all day
looking at and talking about books without a break – something he could do for
24 hours at a stretch-until well past closing time, while a minor blizzard
gathered outside. When Wessen finally said that he had to get home to his
family, Siebert revealed he had left his own wife sitting in the car the whole
time.) A flavor of Wessen can be had from a published collection of his
correspondence with various customers, Rare Book Lore, edited by Jack
Matthews and published by the Ohio University Press in 1992.
I have long been intrigued by the possible usefulness
of Midland Notes as a reference source, but the lack of an index and the
scarcity of runs was frustrating. With some effort, about twenty years ago, I
managed to put a complete set together, and thought of doing a selection of the
most interesting and useful entries. To this end I would take a couple of
numbers with me every time I took a train trip to New York and mark them for a
"best of…" compilation. Then some Ohio booksellers told me they were
going to reprint the whole thing, with index, and I shelved my project in the
deepest corner of the warehouse. In the end, of course, nothing happened.
Now we arrive in the cyber age, and suddenly such lost
sources can be brought to life. I mentioned Midland Notes to my friend
Bruce McKinney, who has recently created one of the most useful new tools in my
corner of the rare book world, The Americana Exchange (www.americanaexchange.com).
The Exchange has been building a powerful bibliographical resource by entering
entire reference works in the field (Howes, Sabin, the American Imprints
Inventories, for example) into a database, making it possible to search an item
in multiple sources at once and opening the door to a number of sophisticated
search possibilities. Recognizing the immense research potential of dealer’s
catalogues, often untapped by more traditional scholarship, the Exchange is also
entering runs of importance, such as those of Edward Eberstadt & Sons
(largely Western Americana) or Maggs’ famed Bibliotheca Americana series of
the 1920’s (mainly pre-1800 material). To this they have now added Midland
Notes, with its broad view of the standard and the rare books of the
American Mid-West that passed through Wessen’s hands. With these tools even
the paths of specific copies can be traced: since the Streeter Sale is also in
the database, one can sometimes trace a rarity from a specific issue of the Notes
to its Streeter provenance.
Sites like the Americana Exchange are just starting to
open up a whole new world of reference for collectors and dealers (there is a
whole lot more that AE does, and I suggest that you go take a look). One odd
effect will be to take us back into the bookish past as well as into the future,
and Midland Notes will become far more widely circulated than its
proprietor ever would have imagined. It’s easy to say these luminaries of an
earlier generation would not have liked the Internet, but I don’t know. Wessen
in his youth was also involved in pioneering aviation – in many issues of Midland
Notes he offered copies of a 1909 air show program, a stack of which he
seems to have grabbed while serving as a signal man waving a checkered flag from
a tower as some Wright brothers plane sputtered past. He was ready to be on the
cutting edge of technology then, and I’ll bet he would be now. If not, a snort
of his patent medicine might have made him feel better.
– William S.
Reese



