This week, a century ago, The Halstead Independent published a piece about the city’s war against “the yellow peril.” Halstead’s Committee of Child Welfare placed a bounty on this peril and organized a citywide effort to eradicate the dent-de-Lion, the lion’s tooth, the common dandelion. “The slaughtered will be weighed and the price paid in cash,” it stated about the city dandelion bounty. Pickers earned 1 cent per pound of dandelion plants picked. “Now, all together to make Halstead the Town Without a Dandelion,” the article stated. That name never quite took. Despite children scouring the city’s yards and alleys for the weed on April 8 100 years ago, the dandelion remains throughout Halstead today.
Read more: Harvey County Now