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You Order This Infant?
For literally centuries, when faced with
that eternal question “where do babies come from?” parents resorted to
a tried and true answer: the stork brings them. But where did the legend
come from?
It’s believed the bird-brained idea grew
out of the fact that European white storks were known to nest on roofs
and chimneys in the Spring, producing their own young at the same time
that the humans inside the house, were producing theirs. And so, they came
to be viewed as a sign of fertility, and a handy “out” for parents with
inquisitive youngsters.
In modern times, the arrival of babies
by or on a given date was termed a stork derby, with the most famous reproduction
race of all, being the result of a whimsical will.
Charles Vance Millar, of Toronto, Ontario,
died in 1926, leaving behind what was at that time, a considerable estate
worth around $125,000. Millar however, was quite the joker, with many of
his pranks based on human greed. While there were a number of quirky bequests
in his will, the one that got the most attention, was to the Toronto mother
who produced the most children in the ten years after his death.
The stork derby covered 1926-1936, a time
when the fortunes of many, were at their lowest. Minimum wage for a 60-hour
week, was a princely $12.50. Did the derby produce a population boom for
the Canadian city? Not really. Because according to statistical averages,
in those days of large families, the women who were at the forefront of
the dash for dollars, would likely have continued to have babies anyway.
Towards the end of the Stork Derby, the
stakes were upped. Millar’s estate included 100,000 shares of the Detroit
Tunnel project, valued at a total of $2 at the time of his death. When
the project became a reality, his shares increased the jackpot legacy to
around $750,000.
In the end, four women with nine legitimate
live births, each received $125,000.
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