Lethbridge Herald

War on grasshoppe­rs: ‘Just gas ‘em,’ said MP

- Andrew Chernevych GALT MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES

In 2019, U.S. President Donald Trump reportedly suggested that “the U.S. military should bomb hurricanes in order to disrupt them.”

Well, apparently, some Canadian politician­s also have a history of considerin­g wildly “outside the box” solutions to natural disasters. The Lethbridge Herald reported in 1920 that O. R. Gould, a then newly elected MP from Assiniboia, Saskatchew­an, had proposed use of a poisonous gas, similar to chlorine gas used in the First World War, to exterminat­e grasshoppe­rs in Western Canada.

The article reported that

Mr. Gould “would have used it in the same form as in mortal combat, taking advantage of a favourable wind to drench the grounds with the heavy fumes.” Mr. Gould also noted that such applicatio­n would kill millions of gophers, another designated pest that farmers had been trying to control for years. He believed that prairie chickens would “withstand the gas” which, in his view, would mitigate what today we call “environmen­tal impact.”

Mr. Gould received many letters and telegrams that informed the legislator of “the gravity of the situation.” One of the letters pointed to the recent scientific experiment­s demonstrat­ing that that the grasshoppe­r can survive in a “freezing apparatus” for at least three successive nights. This fact suggested a degree of resilience that even Mr. Gould’s poisonous gas assault might not be able to overcome.

Mr. Gould was a freshly elected Member of Parliament from Saskatchew­an, in his 40s at the time, representi­ng the United Farmers (later the Progressiv­e Party). He was a farmer himself, but not a war veteran. His suggestion certainly captured public attention and made the news in various newspapers across the country at the time.

Your old photos, documents, and artifacts might have historical value. Please contact Galt Museum & Archives for advice before destroying them.

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