Phillips Haynes Lord was a radio program writer and producer who was very active from the 1930s into the 1950s. He created the Gang Busters program that ran from 1935 - 1957. He had an idea for a character, the Rev. Seth Parker who was part backwoods philosopher and part clergyman. He crafted a set of scripts around it which included old-time music, mostly gospel. He started selling these to radio stations directly under the name "Seth Parker's Singing School." In 1929 NBC picked it up as a 30-minute program to run six days a week. I wrote about his career transition back in 2015. [LINK ]
According to the Encyclopedia of Women in Radio (1920 - 1960), the cast included Vernon Reed, Francis Diers, Lovina Lindbergh, Eunice Cole, Wilbur Showalter, Dan Hosmer, and Sue Fulton.But even that quite well-researched encyclopedia lists the Singing school as a 15-minute program and Seth Parker as airing as a 15-minute program Sundays 10:45 to 11:00 PM, 1931 - 1932. It was a huge success. He wrote a play that became a film "Way Back Home." They even released 12 sides of of 78 rpm gospel hymns by the Seth Parker Trio. (This is erroneously referred to as the Phillips Lord Trio in some accounts)
Then NBC started sending Seth Parker on the road. In 1931 a press release described Seth Parker and the Jonesport Neighbors as "going a-visiting." It was a funny way to describe a tour of this magnitude. They made stops in 23 states and two provinces of Canada leaving New York on October 4th and heading to Buffalo, NY. The complete itinerary is below. It's a grueling tour schedule that would have taxed even Black Flag. Shows 6 nights a week and travel almost every day.
DATE |
CITY |
STATE |
---|---|---|
10/5/31 | Buffalo |
NY |
10/6/31 | Hamilton |
ON |
10/8/31 | Pittsburgh |
PA |
10/9/31 | Erie |
PA |
10/10/31 | Cleveland (Broadcast) |
OH |
10/12/31 | Canton |
OH |
10/13/31 | Dayton |
OH |
10/14/31 | Cincinnati |
OH |
10/15/31 | Columbus |
OH |
10/16/31 | Youngstown |
OH |
10/17/31 | Sandusky |
OH |
10/18/31 | Cleveland (Broadcast) | OH |
10/19/31 | Akron | OH |
10/20/31 | Toledo |
OH |
10/21/31 | Detroit |
MI |
10/22/31 | Detroit | MI |
10/23/31 | Grand Rapids | MI |
10/25/31 | Chicago (Broadcast) |
IL |
10/26/31 | Chicago | IL |
10/27/31 | Minneapolis |
MN |
10/28/31 | Duluth |
MN |
10/29/31 | St Paul |
MN |
10/30/31 | Milwaukee |
WI |
11/1/31 |
Chicago (Broadcast) | IL |
11/2/31 | Davenport |
IA |
11/3/31 | Des Moines |
IA |
11/4/31 | Kansas City |
MO |
11/5/31 | Kansas City | MO |
11/7/31 |
Omaha |
NE |
11/8/31 |
Denver |
CO |
11/10/31 |
Salt Lake City |
UT |
11/12/31 |
Portland |
OR |
11/13/31 | New Westminster |
BC |
11/15/31 | Seattle |
WA |
11/18/31 |
Oakland |
CA |
11/19/31 | San Francisco |
CA |
11/22/31 | Los Angeles (Broadcast) |
CA |
11/23/31 | San Diego |
CA |
11/26/31 |
Phoenix |
AZ |
11/28/31 | Houston |
TX |
11/30/31 | Houston | TX |
12/1/31 |
San Antonio |
TX |
12/2/31 | Oklahoma City |
OK |
12/3/31 | Tulsa |
OK |
12/6/31 | Chicago (Broadcast) | IL |
12/8/31 |
Louisville |
KY |
12/9/31 | Nashville |
TN |
12/11/31 | Atlanta |
GA |
12/13/31 | Miami |
FL |
12/14/31 | Miami | FL |
The program began the same way each time:
"Way up on the coast of Maine is a little old-fashioned white farm house sitting high upon a hill and looking out over the Bay of Fundy. It's the home of Seth and Mother Parker, and her every Sunday evening their good neighbors gather to sing old-fashioned hymns in the old-fashioned way. Tonight we find them already in the sitting room. a fire blazing on the hearth takes off the chill of the evening air, and everything in the little sitting room spells peace and comfort."
In 1933, Lord came up with the tour to end all tours. He wanted to sail around thwe world and broadcasting his show via short-wave radio. He purchased a schooner named Georgette. It's four masts were 25 feet tall. It was 188-feet long and weighed 867-tons. The size is debated. Jim Harmon says 3 masts instead of 4. The Encyclopedia of Women in Radio states it was 150-feet long. A 1988 Popular mechanics article says 250 feet and 775 tons. I cant' even begin to guess how the numbers got so far apart. He packed under-water photographic equipment, a diving shell to be used for undersea exploration. But it was also a radio station with a 1,000 watt shortwave transmitter. Eugene Nohl handled the advance promotions which were fanciful to say the least. Plenty of talk about "...sunken civilizations of the South Seas Islands" complete with a "search for sunken treasure" and of course hunting for "Shipwrecks." It was allocated the call sign KNRA. The Frigidaire appliance company signed on to sponsor this joyride.
On November 20th, 1933 the Seth Parker departed from Totten, NY. The first broadcast was on December 16th from Portland, ME replete with a ship-load of local politicians. They continued broadcasting live on Tuesday nights from 10:00 - 10:30 EST, often on 6160, 6423, 6900, and 8840 kHz. With a crew of 27 people, the ship docked at various ports along the eastern seaboard such as Philadelphia, PA, Baltimore, MD; Charleston, SC, Savannah, GA, Jacksonville, FL, from where they broadcast their short wave radio program which was re-transmitted by NBC. In December of 1933 they crossed through the Panama Canal toward the South Pacific.
As the Rev Parker, Lord Phillips had a very wholesome image. But though he was essentially playing his own grandfather, Phillips was only 31 years old. There he was at sea with a boat full of musicians, booze and celebrities... The broadcasts sometimes revealed a bit of the frivolity behind the scenes of a voyage filled with wine, women and the proverbial song. The book Great Radio Heroes by Jim Harmon reported that "Afterward the ship rocked with lavish parties full of bubbles, giggles and hot jazz music. Disgruntled reporters... suggested that Seth Parker seemed to think he had already reached the promised land." [SOURCE]
In 1952 an article in the Pittsburgh Press newspaper described Lord as living "in a penthouse atop a New York City's Waldorf Astoria, owns a private island in Maine, and is a wealthy man with one of broadcasting's fabulous incomes. Credited with having originated more successful ideas than anyone in radio." In 1999, broadcast historian Elizabeth McLeod listed the Cruise of the Seth Parker as one of the top 100 old-time radio moments of the 20th century.
Thanks for this fascinating post! I have an NBC memo from 1935 chiding Fred Allen for mentioning Seth Parker on "Town Hall Tonight," but I never knew the context. Now I'm thinking it might have involved Lord's scandalous wine-women-and-song cruise.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, do you know anything about Lord introducing the Seth Parker character as a doctor? I have a couple of references to Parker as "A Country Doctor" in 1930, including one sponsor complaining that Parker was too "hick" to be a good pitchman for their product.
In any case, thanks for this and all of your other interesting posts. I love this blog!
I did read that but Lord also portrayed played The Country Doctor on NBC Blue from 1932 and 1933. I am not sure of the doctor thing is confusion between the series'... or if it was intended as a spin-off. I think it may have just be kind of derivative which created the confusion. contemporary ads didn't make the reference. And more interestingly I found a court case where Phillips Lord described the program and he doesn't mention the Seth Parker character. But there could also be copyright issues at play...
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