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My Life
by
Burton S. Blumert
by Burton S. Blumert
I
was born (a few months before the Crash) at 4:20 PM on February
11, 1929, in the Crotona Park Hospital, the Bronx, New York. My
mother: a pert 20-year-old, my father, 26, a bon vivant. Both were
homegrown New Yorkers, and I would be an only child. From a poor
family, Goldie was eldest of four. The youngest of three, Max was
doted on by his parents and sisters. He would remain "spoiled" his
entire life.
My paternal
grandfather earned $10,000 per year as a designer of women's clothes.
Actually, with sketchbook in hand, he shopped the show windows of
Manhattan's finer stores, and "stole" the latest fashions with his
pad. Within hours, inexpensive "knock-offs" were being manufactured
and destined for department stores all over the nation. Grandpa
Jake's skills kept him well paid and in demand until his mid-80's.
Unlike most
young couples that were forced to live in cramped quarters with
their parents, my folks rented an airy, bright apartment in a brand
new building on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx. For young middle-class
Jews moving up, this was the place to be. I'm told that parts of
the Grand Concourse remain a prestige address to this day. It seemed
likely that the Bronx would have been the permanent home for the
young Blumerts, but then, when I was four-years-old, my sunny childhood
was disrupted.
I would reach
adulthood before I learned the details of what had happened. Max
had developed a great respect and affection for the young Italian
mobsters and their family affiliations in the Bronx. One night,
after closing the speakeasy he worked in, he witnessed the murder
of a Mafia family member. The Bronx DA sought my father as a material
witness. Fortunately, Max's "pals" gave him the opportunity to quietly
disappear "on the lam" rather than have him face a more predictable
and grisly fate. That wasn't so good for my mother and me. For the
next three to four years, I have vague and unpleasant flashes of
us moving from one place to another. Finally, we wound up living
in a grungy, furnished flat in Brooklyn Heights. To this day I despise
beaded room dividers.
Most likely,
Max spent those years in Cleveland, and I recall speaking to him
on the phone once or twice. I don't know where the money was coming
from, but my mother always seemed to have cash. Eventually, it was
safe for Max to come back to New York, but, the Bronx remained off
limits, and we became a Brooklyn family. I spent eight years in
public grammar school with the same 32 kids. They were all Jews,
except the Italian janitor's kid. The teachers were mostly Irish,
and the school principal, Miss Joanna Becker, was a magnificent,
and imposing German spinster.
We didn't know
it at the time, but our education was rigorous and first rate. After
all, this was the 1930's, the depth of the Depression, and jobs
were scarce. The New York City school system attracted the best.
A teacher's job was a plum. On to four years of high school. Although
my grades were good, there was always a group of girls who were
at the top. I easily won entrance to Washington Square College,
NYU. NYU was a private school and few parents could afford the tuition.
At the time most of the kids who continued their education attended
the free city colleges, like CCNY.
Can you imagine
having Greenwich Village as your campus? The Village was a cultural
treasure with creative people everywhere. While walking on the busy
streets, I encountered important writers daily. Poetess and critic
Eda Lou Walton taught my American Lit. course, and the American
Prima Ballerina Maria Tallchief sat next to me at the coffee house.
(How could I not fall in love with her?) My parents read books and
were high-school graduates, but I was not prepared for the culture
shock I faced in the classroom and on the Village streets. The art
and genius of Western Civilization was overcoming my senses. I became
a giant sponge absorbing everything, but retaining little.
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I was an adolescent
with little guidance. Several teachers tried to help. Poetess Eda
Lou Walton made a mark on my life with her friendship, and I think
of her when I talk to young people today. I remember my last year
at NYU. Graduate or law school remained a possibility, but it was
the draft that occupied most of my thoughts. The Korean War was
raging and every day there were new directives on how you could
or couldn't avoid the draft. After I graduated from NYU with a BA
degree, a family friend got me a job in a defense plant. While the
job got me exempted from the draft, I remember cutting aluminum
blocks with a band saw and doing it badly.
The days there
were numbered. The draft board was tightening the noose around my
neck. I quit the defense plant and was soon taking a US Army pre-induction
medical exam. In spite of complaining of poor health at every station,
I passed and was waiting for the letter of "Greetings" from the
US Army. And then a stroke of luck. The US Air Force was having
a tough time recruiting Flight Personnel. Potential applicants didn't
want to be stuck with an enlistment period of four years if they
flunked out of flight training. To attract these folks, recruiters
came up with a two-year enlistment plan. I was first in line that
next morning to enlist in the Air Force as an Aviation Cadet. It
was interesting how quickly my general health improved as I breezed
through the very same physical exam I had almost failed just weeks
earlier.
On the other
hand, it was disappointing to wash out of flight training due to
a problem with depth perception, but my Air Force career, although
short, was with some distinction. I earned a 3rd stripe in less
than 14 months, a record at the time. More important, my term in
the Air Force was only two years. My first semester at NYU Law School
started days after my release from active duty, but I knew from
day one that I was not to be a lawyer. In spite of family pressures,
law was not my calling. After dropping out of law school, leaving
NYC seemed appropriate. While in the Air Force, I saw much of the
US and learned that there was more than NYC. Answering a "blind"
NY Times help wanted ad, I hired on with a company whose clients
were suffering losses due to employee theft and inefficiency. After
a short training course, I became an industrial spy.
Only top management
knew my identity. I had two assignments, both in department stores,
one in Rochester, New York, and the other in Dayton, Ohio. I uncovered
"crimes" involving buyers who received "gifts" and provided false
inventory figures. I thought I was headed for a great career with
the firm until I was told that my next assignment was to infiltrate
a Mid-West industrial plant allegedly infected with gambling and
drugs. I turned the assignment down and decided to accept a job
offer from Reed's, a chain of women's millinery stores. It wasn't
as interesting as the industrial spy job, but my chances of survival
were better. What made the hat shop job appealing was that my territory
would cover the Old South from the Virginias and the Carolinas to
Alabama and Louisiana.
After
years of working for Reed's in the South, there was an opening in
the company's California territory. Moving to a suburb south of
San Francisco in 1958 was irresistible. My base was in San Mateo
County's new regional shopping center and nearby was a Coin Shop
geared toward collectors. I soon befriended the owner. Within three
months I evolved from a coin-collecting customer to becoming his
partner. For a while I split my time between both businesses, but
I knew I would have to decide upon one or the other. It wasn't easy
deciding between the security of the old-line retail firm or the
risk of going on my own. I chose to go out on my own. I never had
time to suffer any remorse. Incidentally, the security of Reed's
was an illusion. Two years after I sold my first gold coin, they
were out of business.
The coin business
placed me in the middle of the most amazing monetary revolution.
For the first time in America's history, silver was removed from
the coinage, and Silver Certificates were no longer to be honored.
Camino Coin became an integral part of what followed; the disappearance
from circulation of the silver coins and the change in regulation
allowing the trading of gold. Camino Coin earned a solid reputation
in the industry. I am very proud of that. Surviving since 1959 is
an accomplishment in itself. This led inexorably to wanting to know
more. More about money: more about the history of money. Ultimately,
I discovered the writings of Murray Rothbard. In 1973, I would meet
the great man and this changed my life forever. I became a passenger
on Murray's freedom train. My fate was sealed when I met Lew Rockwell
in 1980. The rest of the story you probably know, or can figure
out.
This recently
discovered essay was written in 2003.
July
22, 2009
Burt
Blumert (1929-2009)
was owner of Camino Coins, president of the Center for Libertarian
Studies, chairman of the Mises Institute, publisher of LewRockwell.com,
and the author of Bagels,
Barry Bonds, & Rotten Politicians.

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