A lot of material here - and again just a few minor points to make.
1) George Francis Train was a one time highly successful corporation promoters, who made a fortune in the building of railroads - especially the Union Pacific. But he was an eccentric. One of the articles points out he made five trips around the globe up to the 1890s (when his cushion of money finally ran out). His second one was in 1872, and caught the attention of novelist Jules Verne, who used it as the model for Phileas Fogg's similar trip in "Around the World in 80 Days". As a railroad promoter Train's trip was an advertising bonanza for his interests. He also set a model for real people, most notably newspaper reporter for the New York World, Nelly By, who did the tour around the world in 72 days in 1890 (and was met by Verne at Amiens, his home town, with the enquiry, "But where is Madam Aouda?" (Aouda is the heroine in the novel). Train also was a candidate for the Presidency in 1872 (one of about six minor candidates against President Grant running for re-election, and New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley). One of the other minor candidates was Victoria Woodhull, thus becoming the first well known woman candidate for the Presidency.
2) Victoria Woodhull and her sister Tennessee ("Tennie") Claffin remain two controvertial people in the history of the U.S. to this day. They got the notice of New York's very rich railroad and steamship king "Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt in the late 1860s, due to their claims ov being spiritualists. As such they supposedly gave him advice on stock manipulations and purchases, so that he eventually set them up as stock brokers. Whether he was smitten by the two ladies is anyone's guess. Vanderbilt's first wife died in the early 1860s, and he remarried a really young and pretty second wife. Frankie Vanderbilt signed one of the first versions of a pre-nuptial agreement, but the "Commodore" would show in his will his gratitude leaving her the then enormous sum of $500,000.00. So beauty had an effect on the old man (the Commodore was born in 1794 so he was entereing his 70s - by the way he was compis mentis up to his own demise in 1877).
The fact that Vanderbilt supported the Claffin sisters brought many customers, and apparently they were good at picking stocks (though one wonders if Vanderbilt tipped them off). But both were budding feminists, and believed in two "no-nos" of that period: 1) that women should have complete equality in the U.S, including the right to vote and to hold office; 2) that marriage was a dated convention, and if two people wish to have sex "free love" should be allowed. The latter was not exactly a point of view people would ignore. The leaders of the woman's suffrage movement in that period (Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia Mott) did not like being pushed into a set in the eyes of their critics with such colorful characters as the Claffin girls. They kept at arm's length to make sure their campaign for woman's suffrage was not compromised by any contact with Victoria and Tennessee. The Free Love business did not meet with approval with people like the anti-Vice crusader Anthony Comstock (as mentioned above). Only a few people like George Francis Train supported the two young women, and these supporters were considered eccentric or nuts.
Then came the explosion that shook New York City and Brooklyn. The girls also published a newspaper which told the news and also gave them a soapbox for their viewpoints. In 1874 they heard rumors about the misbehavior of a leading figure in the social and religious worlds of both Brooklyn and New York City (both still independent of each other). They traced them, and exposed them in their papers (as did their friend Train). It seemed that for a number of years Ms Libby Tilton, the wife of abolitionist speaker and writer (and editor of the nation's largest read religious paper) Theodore Tilton, was having too close a relationship with the head of the famious "Plymouth Church of the Fathers" in Brooklyn Heights, Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Beecher was wildly heralded for his work at spreading the work of abolitionism in the 1850s (as did his sister Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin") , and had even gone to England in 1863 on a speaking tour to express what the Lincoln Administration was trying to do in seeking victory in the American Civil War). He was America's highest paid Protestant clergyman of the day, and packed his church with congregants and visitors so that special ferry boats took them between Manhattan Island and Brooklyn on Sundays to hear Beecher - the boats were called "Beecher's boats".
Although he did support woman's suffage, Beecher had spoken out against Victorian and Tennessee, He openly felt they disgraced their sex with the Free Love argument. The revelations of his own sexual transgressions with Mrs. Tilton was just too good a story to ignore (and it was fun to get back at the hypocrite). So they published it, not giving his name at first, but leaving enough details in the story to make the reader realize it had to be Beecher and the Tiltons. Comstock got a court order that the sale of the newspaper was akin to selling illegal pornography, and had the paper closed - but the papers had been sold. Comstock also went after Train. But the damage was done, and Theodore Tilton resigned from his editorial job and left his wife. Soon Beecher was sued for alienation of affections of Mrs. Tilton by her husband. And the social order was rocked.
It would be the first of several dirty revelations. It turned out Beecher had also had an affair with the wife of the man who founded Plymouth Church. The wife was now dead, but before she died she confessed her sinning with Beecher to her husband. When he confronted Beecher with this, the man was thrown out of his position of being President of the Church's Board of Trustees. Another supporter, Frank Moulton, discovered that Rev. Beecher had also had an affair with his wife. Moulton soon was bringing suit against Beecher.
The trial was one of the biggest events of 1875. It's highpoint was when Beecher took the stand and kept denying every fact that had been brought out against him. However, astute courtroom experts noted that while others had been sworn in by placing their hand on the Bible and holding up their other hand, Beecher argued he could not be sworn in that way as it cheapened the value of the reveared word of God, so he was sworn in by the unusual method of one hand over his heart and the other one in the air. The experts pointed out this made (from the start) all of Beecher's testimony not only questionable, but unprosecutable as perjury as he was not sworn in properly!! The jury found for Beecher, probably due to his reputation as a religious man (prior to all this adulterous behavior being revealled) and he returned to his post at Plymouth Church. One of the onlookers, Henry "Marse Henry" Watterson, the Kentucky newspaper owner and editor, said that to him, Beecher's performance on the stand reminded him of a "dung hill covered in flowers".
Poor Libby Tilton, who had to testify, was abandoned by husband Theodore, who left the U.S. and spent the rest of his life living in Paris (he died in 1907). The Moultons split up as well. Apparently Beecher's local position in society was somewhat dented, but worse his wife always was aware of what he did behind her back and never allowed him to forget it. Comstock made sure that Victoria and Tennessee ceased publishing, but both met husbands who were English, and lived out the rest of their lives in Britain.
As mentioned earlier, after the Panic of 1893, Train's financial situation made for a smaller amount to support his life - so there were no more trips around the world. He died in 1904.
3. The kidnapping of Charles Ross in Germantown, Pa., on July 4, 1874.
The case is as interesting in it's way as the Ripper Case. Instead of a number of prostitutes being murdered gruesomely we have a boy of about 4 being kidnapped by two men in a buggy near his home, and in front of his two year old brother Walter. Christian Ross was a hard working, successful businessman, and he had just bought and paid for this lovely large mansion in Germantown. Possibly it was a mistake, as it advertised his wealth. The kidnappers may have noticed this, and earmarked him for a likely victim of extortion at it's cruelist.
Charley and Walter were playing in front of their home when the buggy or gig drove up with two men in it. They managed to lure Charley into the buggy and took off. The police investigation traced the gig, but found the men and Charley were seen headed out of Pennsylvania. Subsequent extortion notes were sent to Ross that suggested that Charley might be in New York City.
Ross was prepared to meet the demands of the kidnappers but was pressured (no other way of putting it) not to by the police and the rich men in his community - the latter fearing that if Ross paid off the ransom their own kids would be next). After a month of delays ordered by the police, the kidnappers warned Ross that he obviously was putting money above his son's life, and whatever happened afterwards was on his head. Then communication stopped.
In September 1874 a break occurred but it would be bungled by tragedy. The borough of Brooklyn was a whole city, and many sections that are now urban center were rural. One night a farmhouse was being broken into, and the owner, tipped off by noise, confronted two burglars with his shotgun and shot both. One (a man named Mosher) died on the spot, but his companion (a man named Douglas) managed to tell the farmer that the two of them had been the kidnappers of Charlie Ross. The farmer and the police on the scene tried to find out what happened to Charlie, but Douglas died before saying more than only Mosher and his brother-in-law knew.
Mosher's brother-in-law was a former policeman named William Westervelt. He was arrested and eventually tried as an accomplice in the kidnapping. He was found guilty and would serve a seven year term in prison. But he never admitted being in the crime, nor did he reveal if Charlie was dead or alive (and if alive, where he was).
Christian Ross would live for several decades more, spending every available moment tracind down "tips" and "clues" about where his son Charlie might be.
They all proved false. Sadly he died never seeing his son again. His surviving son Walter would live into the 1930s and also always wonder what happened to his older brother.
The most likely scenario is that Mosher and Westervelt probably killed Charlie at some point - maybe disposing his body in the East River of New York City.
This, by the way, was the first real kidnapping in American history - in that it was a plot to extort a ransom for the return of a person. Prior to this incidents occurred where people were kidnapped in public and never seen again (like the unknown fate of William Morgan in upstate New York, after he served a brief jail sentence, possibly due to Morgan revealing secrets of the Masons in a published book). After 1874 there were two variants on this case:
a) 1876 - the stealing of the body of dead multi-millionaire department store tycoon Alexander T. Stewart's body from it's temporary grave in St. Mark's of the Bouwerie Churchyard. Stewart's wife paid $100,000.00 for the return of the body within two years (in 1878). She got a bag of bones and the reassurance (as such) it was her husband's remains. Stewart's "remains" and his wife's are now somewhere in the area of the Garden City Episcopal Cathedral in Nassau County, New York (Stewart used his money to buy the land that became Garden City, New York).
b) 1876 - in a weird case a gang of counterfeiters attempted to steal the body of 16th President Abraham Lincoln from his tomb in Springfield, Illinois. Their purpse was to get some cash but also to spring the man who was their engraver, whom the authorities arrested and locked up a number of months earlier. This kidnapping was timed to occur during election night 1876, an night of singularly active voting activity in the soon to be controversial Tilden/Hayes Presidential contest. However the gang behind the scheme had a spy from the police among them, and the scheme fell apart on the night they were trying to get Old Abe's corpse. Eventually there was a trial, but oddly enough there was no law in Illinois about stealing a dead man's body. Robert Lincoln insisted on a prosecution - so the counterfeiters were tried for attempting to steal a coffin. The inciden actually was made into a movie in the 1950s with Victor Maglaglen.
Jeff
Kansas Physician Confirms Howard Report
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George Francis Train had crossed paths with Byrnes in 1873 when Train published a newspaper advertised as "obscene" to show solidarity with Victoria Woodhull and Tennie Claflin.
New York Sun, December 09, 1872, Page 4, Column 6
The New York Tombs: Its Secrets and Its Mysteries (San Francisco: A. Roman, 1874), The New York Tombs: Its Secrets and Its Mysteries (San Francisco: A. Roman, 1874), Pages 515-519
edited by James B. Mix, Samuel Anderson Mackeever
After the publication of the second number, [Anthony] Comstock, of obscene literature notoriety, went before the Grand Jury and complained of George Francis Train for editing what he styled an obscene journal, known as the Train Ligue. The Grand Jury found an indictment against Mr. Train, and Judge Ingraham ordered his arrest. On Thursday afternoon Mr. Comstock called on Captain Byrnes, of the Mercer-street police station, and placed the warrant in his hands. The Captain was informed that Train could be found at 735 Broadway. At that number John Wesley Nichols, the ostensible publisher of the Ligue, has a photograph gallery, and it was from his place and by him that the paper was supplied to newsdealers and others. Captain Byrnes went to the place, but Mr. Train was not there. Leaving officers Henderson and Young to watch the house, the Captain started on another clue in search of Train.
As he left the house a cart drove up. The Captain saw it and returned. In the meantime an indictment had been found against Nichols, and the warrant for his arrest had also been placed in the hands of Captain Byrnes. After the cart drove up to 735 Broadway it was loaded with about 1,500 copies of the Ligue, and then driven off. Nichols followed the cart. Captain Byrnes sent officer Carr with instructions to arrest Nichols and seize the papers. The driver turned down Fourth street, and thence drove down Mercer street, past the very door of the police station. Just there Nichols was arrested and the papers were seized. Captain Byrnes and officers Henderson and Young remained at 735 Broadway.
After the arrest Captain Byrnes saw a small boy hurriedly leave Nichols's apartments with a letter. Shrewdly surmising that this boy was the bearer of a letter to Mr. Train from Nichols's wife, informing Mr. Train of the arrest of her husband, the Captain sent officer Henderson to follow the boy. The messenger went direct to 313 West Twenty-second street, and entered the house. The officer, who was in civilian's clothes, followed. In the front parlor he found Mr. Train and arrested him. Mr. Train was at first indignant, but finally became calm, proclaimed himself a martyr, and wildly extending his arms, shouted, "Take me to the Bastile!"
Train was now in his element and equal to any emergency. He was never silent. He said to us,as we grasped his hand,"On the 2d of November I addressed 10,000 people in Broad street. A few days after that Woodhull and Claflin were arrested. I became satisfied that these innocent women were to be punished to satisfy the morbid sentiments of a cowardly community. I wrote two letters to the press in connection with their arrest. These letters created a furore, and the press, afraid of the public, refused to publish any more of my letters. I volunteered not only to become bail for these persecuted women, but started this paper to show the community that I had the courage to face public opinion, the same as I faced and defied 2,500 infuriated Californians, when I advocated in San Francisco the introduction of greenbacks. I issued two numbers of the Ligue. They claim that it is an obscene publication. This I do not deny; but if it is obscene the obscenity is culled from the Bible, for there is in the last number three columns of extracts from the Bible. I have been in thirteen prisons, but this is the only one that I have been in where there is nothing to cover myself with. Besides, sir, the indignity that has been thrust upon me. I am a gentleman of means and education, and they have placed me in the very cell in which a woman made three attempts to hang herself, and in which Bleakley, the murderer of poor Maud Merrill, over whose body six of your moral Christian ministers refused to perform Christian devotions, were confined."
The officials tried the freezing process, but Train laughed at them. His hot blood was more than a match for the cold devices of his keepers. Wrapped in his travelling rug, he paced his noisome cell like an angry tiger waiting for his rations. That winter was a season of uproar in Murderers' Row.
He made the Tombs his home despite the authorities. They consigned him to Murderers' Row in that prison, in the vain hope that the rigors of the place might terrify him into a flight from the city—-for the Grand Jury which indicted him had made itself a butt of ridicule, and his case threatened to give the Courts a deal of trouble. But Train, on crossing the threshold of the Tombs, said, "I'll raise hell in this Egyptian Sepulchre," and he stuck to his cell, persistently rejecting the Warden's invitations to a seat at his private tea-table, and absolutely refusing to go out occasionally and spend a night with his family in their palace on Murray Hill, saying: "If you once get me out you will lock me out, and I intend to stay here until I fulfil my mission." What his notion of that mission was passes human understanding; but to ordinary mortals it seemed only to be to keep his name before the public. This he contrived to do by organizing the Murderers' Club, with himself as President. The business of that Club, which was transacted in the hours set apart for the common herd of prisoners to spend in exercise in the corridors, was to make the place so much of a hell on earth as to invite the attention of the newspapers, and thus keep Train's name before the people. Train, however, did something for his fellow-prisoners in creating a fraternity in Murderers' Row, and there is little doubt that, under the fraternal feeling which he created, some of the money which paved the way for Wm. J. Sharkey's escape from the prison was paid in checks signed within the prison cells.
Finally his case came before the Courts, and never before was such a ludicrous farce enacted in a Court of Justice. Dignity, amid the scenes that daily occurred there, could not even be assumed by either Judge, Jury, or Counsel. It was one continual roar of laughter. Train outwitted counsel, and even the experts on insanity felt the keen shafts of his satire. On returning to the Tombs, after the adjournment of the Court on the first day, Train managed to elude the vigilance of the Deputy Sheriff, and actually walked to the jail, where to his astonishment he found that the Warden had, during his absence, removed all his traps to another part of the building, where the accommodations were much more cheerful. This Train denounced as tyranny, to be denied access to his cell. He struck an attitude, and said to the Warden:
"'Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage.' Away! away with me to the Bastile!"
Solitude, Train was not prepared for. The Warden found the weak joint in his mental armor, and he was forced to remain isolated from the Murderers' Club. After deciding in his own mind that the American people were a nation of dogs, he shook the American soil from his soles, mounted the poop-deck of an English steamer, and left the country in disgust. But since then he has crossed and recrossed the broad Atlantic, and now is with us again, ready to become Dictator of an Empire, and thereby fulfil his destiny.
---end
A sardonic review of Train's vita.
The Saturday Review, July 13, 1878, Pages 50-51
An American Prophet
MR. GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN is a nrophet who is chiefly honoured in his own country. He is the most American of Americans, and has discovered a number of specifics for the moral, intellectual, and physical maladies of his countrymen. He it is who proposes that all Americans should do as a thing of conscience what most Americans do at present without knowing it—-namely, "wear American clothes, develop American ideas, and use the American language." Mr. Train is being "run" at present by Mr. Leon H. Lempert (late manager Rochester Opera House), who finds that "the dramatic business is paralyized everywhere," and that the oratorical business pays better. The peculiar spelling of the word "paralyized" shows that Mr. Lempert has the courage of Mr. Train's ideas. It may be worth while, before briefly considering the events of Mr. Train's career and the theories which he promulgates, to notice the mode in which he offers his distinguished services to the American people.
Mr. Lempert sends to managers of Athenaeums, Parthenons, Literary Societies, and so forth, a document in which he sets forth that George Francis Train is "once more at the front." These words supply matter for profound thought. One seems to see the vast movement of the Anglo-Saxon race in the States passing across the stage of history in the direction of repudiation, paper money, general massacres of Chinese, and other reforms. Once more in the front, Mr. Train capers at the head of a cultivated people, and waves the banner of "Absolute Dictatorship and the Organization of Property." Perhaps these words mean that Mr. Train, or some one whom he can conscientiously recommend, ought to be made Dictator in America, and satisfy the working-men who have no work to do and the Western gentlemen who disapprove of hard money. At present the lecturer is content to accept fees of twenty-five cents a head from intelligent listeners. Managers of Athenreunis are assured that "selling tickets beforehand hedges against the storm "—-a figurative American expression, in which "the storm " probably means the lack of public interest. Meantime Mr. Lempert does his part in a munificent way. "I furnish the Lecturer, Three Sheet Posters, 'Hangers,' 'Dodgers,' Blackboard (which Mr. Train requires for the Stage), Tickets, and Ticket takers." Surely it must be well worth while to accept the offer of Mr. Train's services, hangers, dodgers, and three sheet posters! The manager who doubts has only to read the record of Mr. Train's life, and he must inevitably come to the conclusion that to engage Train is to "strike oil, Train oil."
If one glorious hour of crowded life be really worth an age without a name, what is the precise value of Mr. Train's career of fifty years? This is a question in the rule of three which may be left to American moralists and arithmeticians. Mr. Train was born in 1829 (as we learn from a brief abstract and chronicle of his adventures), and never, surely, were hours more "crowded" than his! "Just for a moment look at this index of a live life," says the compiler, and we do look, with feelings of awe and of gratitude to Providence, which has set the Atlantic between this small One Horse Island and the glorious energy of George Francis Train. "God bless the (comparatively) narrow seas that keep him off!" Mr. Train's earliest recorded exploit is to have been the grandson of the Rev. Geo. Pickering, who emancipated his slaves, and, like a sensible person, "declined a Methodist bishoprick." Mr. Train, too, has made great refusals in his day, and at the age of twenty-four "declined Presidency of Australian Republic, tendered by Ballarat Revolutionists." The discretion which refused the presidency of a Republic which does not exist was quite worthy of Mr. Train's maternal ancestor, the Rev. George Pickering. As to education, the new Dictator enjoyed "two years' college life in Holmes's Grocery Store." He retains a strong contempt for any college except that in which he and Dr. Schliemann are the most distinguished modern pupils. With the scorn of the truly practical épicier he asserts that "for two centuries no American University has produced a man intellectually six feet high." Greek and Latin education is "exploded," he holds, "except to manufacture apothecaries and botanists." "Living linguists cannot understand the dead" is another of his aphorisms which must have some hidden meaning. He also declares that "college students should be taught something more practical and nobler than law, medicine, and theology." These ideas are commonly held by people who have been educated behind the counter, and they not only win applause in America, but are very popular in serious and commercial circles in England.
The chapter of Mr. Train's schooling is soon closed. Having exhausted the lessons to be gathered from figs and the sweet influences of moist sugar, Mr. Train, at the age of twenty, "organized prepaid passenger business and small bills of exchange throughout Europe and America." This sounds very imposing; but, thanks to the wretched character of British education, we admit that it conveys no idea to our mind. Whatever Mr. Train may have done, he founded a house of business; and the adventures of 1850 are compressed into the eloquent sentence, "Income ten thousand a year." "Ten thousand a year! it is the romance of real life. Two summers followed on two winters' snows, and Mr. Train's income was reckoned at fifteen thousand. An English boy would possibly, at the age which Mr. Train had attained, have secured a paltry Fellowship. Tired of America and of Liverpool, Mr. Train, in 1853, introduced stage coaches, railways, Fourth of July celebrations, and telegraphs to Australia. Grateful revolutionists offered him the Presidency, as we have seen; but, observing that no White House was yet erected, Mr. Train put the honour aside. Mr. Train's later exploits, including the birth of a daughter and the publication of a book, are not of much interest till we reach the date 1859. Then this restless spirit introduced tramways to Europe, and built the first street railway. We cannot pretend to be grateful, though it may please Mr. Train to learn that the seed sown has fallen on fruitful ground. We are threatened with street railways drawn by steam engines, and a new horror and a fresh danger and eyesore will soon be added, no doubt, to the American improvements adopted in England. When a railway passes screeching on the level of the bed-room windows, London will rival New York in the plenitude of its mechanical abominations.
In 1862 Mr. Train was tried for manslaughter, and "entertained distinguished men at Sunday breakfasts." To give Sunday breakfasts was quite worthy of this restless person who, in July, was " knocked down in Faneuil Hall," and "escaped assassination at Alton." If an opponent of tramways, maddened by the noise of the bells and the wheels, so far forgot himself as to knock down and try to slay Mr. Train, he has our respectful sympathy though nothing, of course, can really justify murder. The distinguished men whom Mr. Train entertained at breakfast may regret to hear that their host has "one thousand personal notes in auto-books," whatever auto-books may be. In 1865 our hero "addressed the first Fenian Convention in Philadelphia," and in 1868 (after building an hotel in sixty days) "gave Susan B. Anthony fifteen thousand dollars to start the Revolution." A man who owns fifteen thousand dollars seldom wishes to start the Revolution; but we do not learn from history that Miss Anthony proved the Cleopatra of any "epoch-making" change in American or European society. [Actually Train and Anthony started "The Revolution," a newpaper.] In prison often, like other enthusiasts, Mr. Train now "passed ten months in European jails," and employed his leisure in "developing epigrams." In 1869 he ran himself as "Greenback candidate for President"; but the time was not yet ripe. Disappointed at home, Mr. Train in 1870 "organized the Commune" in Paris, and we fear it must be said that he did not organize it well. Perhaps he had the contract for petroleum, and he may have done a good stroke of business in that mineral oil. He was imprisoned at Lyons "by Ganibetta" and at Chicago by some other person, and he thinks that "gaol reforms" are among the most pressing wants of the age. Chicago could not be burnt without an accusation against Mr. Train, who was supposed to have set fire to the place to serve his private ends. In 1873 he became, so the document before us declares, "President of the Murderers' Club." He was imprisoned in "the Tombs" and the officers used to leave the door open in the fond hope that Train would run away "and release the Government of a White Elephant." Mr. Train at this time turned his energies to the confutation of the Christian religion, which his biographer calls X. "X was collared in the Tombs," says the popular biography, just as some people might say that Mr. Spofforth was "collared" by Mr. Thornton at the match between the Australians and the Orleans Club. After "collaring X," the intrepid Train "made the London Times back down "; but really the London Times backs down so often that Mr. Train need not boast of the feat. In 1834 he was converted to the doctrines which he now preaches from every friendly platform that is supported bv an adequate number of tickets at twenty-five cents. What are those doctrines? They are (some of them) already dear to the more feeble-minded friends of advancement in England. Mr. Train became a vegetarian. "Commenced taking two Turkish baths a day. Stopped animal food, and Butter condiments. . . Commenced diet of boiled rice and baked apple twice a day." In addition to these practices, Mr. Train renounced "the filthy habit of handshaking," and so far he is on the side of the Turks. He "permitted no grown person to speak with him but two minutes." This was his substitute for Comte's hygiéne cérébrale. In 1876 he "abolished anno domini, and adopted his own age, forty-seven, as new departure date of Psychologic Era." Mr. Train's last recorded exploit was a miracle. He "made a five years' cripple walk in Madison Square."
Mr. Train's doctrines, which he calls psychological, are the result of the experience of an active life. We do not say that had he not been educated in a grocery he would have arrived at his psychological opinions. That all men should borrow in gold and pay in paper; that none should shake hands (and among American politicians the habit may perhaps have its drawbacks); that all should take two Turkish baths every day; that "Japan should be our model for polite conversation," are among the stouter "planks" of Mr. Train's "platform." He also avers that "funerals when friends gather round the casket spread disease." When Mr. Train publishes his American Dictionary and Grammar we may learn that " casket" is American for coffin. "That vaccination is deadly poison" we have heard before from Mr. Train's English teachers or disciples. For the Millennium of Uncle Tom, and of Evangelical America, Mr. Train has substituted what he calls "the Evolution." "Evolution comes," says the Prophet, " when 60,000 churches are turned into Turkish Baths." Can the Prophet possibly have a pecuniary interest in Turkish Baths? If not, there seems little method in the gospel of Mr. George Francis Train. It is good enough for his audience, no doubt, and we can easily believe that Mr. Train is welcome in places where "the drama is paralyzed." The real fun must be after the lecture, when the audience is permitted to discuss the doctrines of Mr. Train while he, like Napoleon III., "answers for order." We do not know whether Mr. Train or an admirer is responsible for the "development" of this "epigram," which seems to put the matter in a nutshell:—-
The Present Evolutionized.
Working men! Pay no taxes!
Start the battle! Grind your Axes!
The only way to save the nation
Is immediate Repudiation!
----end
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An article about Train's world tour that mentions Klensch.
New York Sun, July 09, 1891, Page 7, Column 3
Citizen Train Comes and Goes
His Trip Around the World--Everything but the World's Fair Going to Smash
Citizen George Francis Train arrived by the
Majestic yesterday. He is on his fifth trip
around the world. The first was made thirty-fIve
years ago, and it took him two years to
make it. This one began at New Whatcom,
Wash., on May 9 and he set out to complete it
in fifty-five days. He won't succeed, but it will
be the quickest trip he has made.
A SUN reporter found Citizen Train at the
Continental Motel surrounded by papers on
which were pasted newspaper clippings, letters,
telegrams photographs, and sketches, each
devoted to a day of tbe trip.
"Yes, just arrived," he said, "leave for
Chicago this afternoon. Take a walk around
the room and look at the pictures. We're on
the eve of a revolution--everything will go to
pieces in thirty days. Seen this tea I brought
over?--new crop of Moyune; left Shanghai
May Z8. By the Way ,just say I'll save the
Worlds Fair. Ever seen a new fishing rod I
bought for a sixpence? Pulls out like A telescope.
Met my secretary, Mr Klensch?
Great fellow; pays all his own expenses and
does all the work. Travels just lor the
experience he gets.
Then Citizen Train told about his Journey.
He reached Yokohama in 11 days; Kobi,
Japan, in 12; Shanghai China, 16; Hong Kong,
18; Singapore, 24, and Port Said in 42. From
Fort Said he went to Brindisi, took the fast
mail train for Paris, and arrived in England in
time to catch tbe Majestic.
Fourth of July was celebrated on the Majestic.
Citizen Train wrote impromptu sonnets
on the backs of the menu cards and sent them
to many of the voyagers. He also made an
oration He said that during the whole trip he
had not soon an American flag on land or
water, except the one be wore around his
helmet.
Decorated with a Turkish fez and red sash,
and wearing a huge bouquet in his lapel, he
left at 4:50 o'clock last evening for Chicago.
He expects to reach New Whatcom on July 11
or 12, completing his trip in sixty-two or sixty-three
days. His last trip took seventy-seven
and one-half days. The next one, he says will
be made five years hence and will take thirty
days, going by way of Vladivostock, on the
Japan Sea, and over the new railway to St.
Petersburg. He reckons nine days from New
Whatcom to Vladivostock, nine by rail to St.
Petersburg, two to London, five to New York,
and three to New Whatcom.
---end
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, August 19, 1891, Page 2, Column 2
Crank Klensch Goes to New York
TACOMA, Aug. 18.--[Special.]--John N.
Klensch, of Whatcom, was in the city yesterday
en route for New York city.
Klensch acted as private secretary to
George Francis Train during his last trip
around the world, and now shakes hands
with himself and imitates Train in many
other ways. He is a vegetarian, and just
before leaving for New York he informed
Manager Kelley, of the Grand Pacific hotel,
that he will in that city fulfill for a society
of physicians an engagement to fast fifty
days for $10,000. Judging from the small
amount eaten by him while at his hostelry,
Mr. Kelley is of the opinion that Klensch
will succeed.
----end
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, September 27, 1891, Page 4, Column 4
Psycho Train's Secretary Insane
Chicago Special, Sept 22.
In the insanity court yesterdav, before Judge
Sherwood, John N. Klensch. the friend and companion
of George Francis Train, was placed on
trial. Inspector Schaak, on behalf of several
prominent German citizens, agreed to take
charge of Mr. Klensch. He was accordingly
discharged. Mr. Klensch, who is looked upon
as a crank by his friends, says he accompanied
Mr. Train upon his last trip around the globe.
He parted from Train in this city and has
remained here at liberty until arrested by the
West chicago avenue police for wandering about
the streets. Klensch is a native of Cappellan,
in tbe duchy of Luxembourg, where his family
resides. He talks six languages fluently, and is
versed in many arts and sciences.
----end
The fast Klensch participated in was marked by the death of one of the fasters.
New York Sun, November 20, 1891, Page 7, Column 5
Stratton's Fast Kills Him
G. Henry Stratton, the faster, died In Bellevue
Hospital about 4 1/2 A. M. yesterday. He
was one of half a dozen fasters with records
who set out on Oct. 5 to fast fifty days at Huber's
Museum, The others were; Collins, weight
144 1/2 pounds: Sanabrah. weight 138 1/2: Kirby.
163 1/2: Manning, 146 1/2, and Klensch. 143 1/2.
Stratton weighed 270 1/2 pounds.
The announced terms on which the fast was
conducted were that the participants were
each to got a salary of $20 the first week and
$35 the second. After the first fortnight each
was to got 10 per cent. of the gate receipts, the
remalnder to go to the one who fasted the
longest even if the fifty day's' fast was not
accomplished. Sanabrah and Manning gave out
at the end of six days. Kirby lasted thirteen
days and Klensch a fortnight. Collins lasted
twonty days. All drank alkaline waters of
some sort except Klensch, who drank Croton.
Stratton drank Bethesda water. When Collins
dropped out Stratton directed that whatever
he made out ot the fast should be givon to his
mother, Mrs. James Leclerc of Brooklyn, who
is 80 years old.
Stratton is said to havo taken nothing but
water until last week, Thursday, when the
action of his heart became so weak and he
vomited so exhaustingly that Dr. Herold prescribed
champagne at the rate of three teaspoonfuls
a day. This virtually ended the fast,
as the conditions were that only water should
be taken, Stratton, however. whllo he continued
to take champagne in evidently far
more liberal doses than were prescribed, insisted
that the fast was still on. und that it
would not be ended until he took something
solid.
In spite of the champngne Stratton was in so
bad case last Monday, forty-one days from the
beginning of the fast, that the doctors insisted
on his taking nourishment in the form of food.
It is alleged that he stuffed his handkerchief
into his mouth when thuy tried to make him
eat, saying that he would not take anything
solid until the fifty days had expired, as he
wanted to beat Succi's record. They persuaded
him to tako somo cocoa, however. but in
spite of the nourishment thus obtained he
continued to fail so rapidly that the doctors
had him taken to Bellevue Hospital.
He was at first put In one of the medical
wards, it being supposed that he was suffering
from debility due to his long fast but he speedily
showed so much strength, due apparently
to drink, that he was removed to the alcoholic
ward. When there he continued to exhibit a
vigor that seemed incompatible with the claim
that he had eaten nothing for forty odd days,
and he did not become quiet until threatened
with a straitjacket.
He was then able to take nourishment in a
liquid form, but his stomach became incapable
of retaining it. and he grew very weak.
Wednesday he passed in a sort of semi-stupor,
and toward evening he sank rapidly, in spite
of the peptonized food which was administered
in enemas. His pulse reached 140 before
it stopped.
Stratton lost flfty-three pounds in the course
of his fast. An autopsy made by Deputy Coroner
Donlln showed that the immediate cause
of death was alcoholic coma, due to cerebral
congestion, while a secondary cause was fatty
degeneration of the heart. There were two
and a half inches of fat on tho body. As. however,
there was no food in the stomaoh except
that administered at the hospital, Dr. Donlin
thought the fast might have been a real one,
and that the system had absorbed the muscular
tissue in place of the fat.
As to the alcoholism, it is acknnwlodged that
Stratton drank two quart bottles of champagne
in the four days following Thursday,
and it is also alleged that he got alcohol in
stronger form from an attendant at the
museum.
At the inquest, which will be held on Tuesday,
Coroner Hanly will endeavor to discover
who was responsible for Statton's [sic] death, and
whether thpse who aided and abetted him are
criminally liable.
Huber does not consider himself responsible
tor Stratton's doath. as he says the fasting
match was not initiated by him. J. M. Cousart
of Pittsburgh being the originator and manager.
There is $700. which will be paid to
Mrs. Leclerc.
Stratton's body was removed from the Morgue
soon after the autopsy and buried in Greenwood
in the afternoon by W. A. Stratton of
Brooklyn, the faster's brother. Stratton was
born in Brooklyn in 1851. He once fasted
thirty days at a public exhibition in Buffalo.
He was formerly a hotel clerk in Cortland and
was known as a teetotaler.
----end
In an odd twist, a sheriff publicly expressed his suspicions that a boy Stratton had adopted was actually Charley Ross, who was kidnapped in 1874. This was probably just one of many false identifications.
New York Sun, November 27, 1891, Page 7, Column 5
Another Charley Ross
The Sheriff of Cortland County Believes He is on the Track of the Long Lost Boy
Cortland, Nov. 26.--The death of G. Henry
Stratton in New York, after trying to break
Succi's fasting record, has brought to light a
strange story. It has been in the possession
of Sheriff Borthwick and the father of missing
Charley Ross of Philadelphia for two years.
These two men havo been working to identify,
in a boy adopted by Stratton, the missing
Charley Ross. Thiss morning Sheriff Borthwick
told this story:
"It is not generally known that Stratton was
a married man. He separated from his wife,
who is now in Minnesota, many years ago. The
separation was caused by Stratton introducing
into his family a boy whom he said he had
adopted. Mrs. Stratton did not want the boy in
the family, and when she gave her husband the
choice between herself and the boy he chose
the boy. This boy, I believe, was none other
than Charley Ross. 1 will not say now nor
until I have concluded my Investigation why I
believe this. When Stratton came to this village
he brought the boy with him. He was
known as Fred Stratton. although Stratton admitted
that he was not the boy's father. I
have been corresponding with Mr. Ross
in Philadelphia for some time. We have found
many little Incidents related by the boy that
have led Mr. Ross to believe that there may be
something in it. In some way Stratton learned
of what 1 know, and sent the boy to Denver. I
had many talks with him before he was sent
away, and what I learned I am not now at liberty
to say. As Stratton is dead. I believe much
more will come to light. Stratton was a very
peculiar man in many ways, but would
never tell where he got the boy. There are
many things about the boy that carry out
my belief. This boy has cut quite a figure in
Stratton's life. and. besides separating him
from his wife, prevented him from marrying a
Brooklyn lady of wealth. She frequently came
to this village to see Stratton. and would have
married him were it not for the fact that he
persisted in having this boy with him."
Sheriff Borthwick showed a large pile of
letters he had received from Mr. Ross. He
says he will continue his investigation until
his belief is either confirmed or knocked out.
Sheriff Borthwick is not a man to believe without
reason. and he says his reasons are formed
on good ground, which in time will be made
public.
---end
A book about the Ross kidnapping by the boy's father.
The Father's Story of Charley Ross, the Kidnapped Child (Philadelphia: John E. Potter, 1876), link
by Christian Kunkel Ross
Another book about the Ross case.
Life, Trial and Conviction of William H. Westervelt, for the Abduction of Little Charley Ross (Philadelphia: Barclay, 1875), link
By Erastus Elmer Barclay
The coroner's findings in Stratton's death.
New York Sun, December 09, 1891, Page 5, Column 5
The Faster's Death from Starvation
A Coroner's Jury Recommend that Such Fasts be Prohibited
Coroner Hanly and a jury containing nine
physicians held an inquest yesterday in the
case of George H. Stratton, who died at Bellevue
Hospital on Nov. 10 after going without
food for forty-one days in an effort to surpass
Succi's fast.
Deputy Coroner Donlin. who made the autopsy
on the faster's body, said that while
death was directly due to alcoholism, alcohol
would not have produced such an effect had
he been properly nourished. A secondary
cause was fatty degeneration of the heart.
Dr. Justin Herold. who with Dr. B.J. Wimmer,
oversaw of the fasting match, said Stratton
drank only seventeen teaspoonsful of
champagne, which he had prescribed as a cure
for nausea. The rest he presumed, was consumed
by Stratton's visitors. The witness described
in detail Stratton's fast, and declared
that when the faster began to break
down he advised him to discontinue it, Stratton
persisted, and could only be persuaded to
take food in the shape ot cocoa on tho forty-first
day,
The testimony went to show that Stratton
was alone responsible for his fatal fast. The
following verdict was returned:
"We, the jury in the case of the late George
Henry Stratton, find that his death at Bellevue
Hospital on Nov. 10. 1891, was induced by
starvation, and we further respectfully state
our conviction that such exhibitions should be
regarded as demoralizing and criminal, and
that they should be prohibited by legal enactment."
----end
A book on forensic medicine by one of the doctors mentioned in the article above.
A Manual of Legal Medicine (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1902), link
by Justin Herold
Returning to Klensch or Kleush.
New York Sun, December 17, 1891, Page 7, Column 2
A Faster's Insanity
Threatened to Pitch His Brother Out the Window--Once Citizen's Train's Secretary
At the Jefferson Market Court yesterday
Justice Kelly committed four persons to Bellevue
for examination by the city physicians.
John M. Kleush. 30 years old, who has been
living for the last week with his brother, at
702 Washington street, was one of the fasters
at Huber's Museum, but stayed in the contest
only five days. Prior to that he had been a
floor walker in a Fourteenth street store, and
before that had been private secretary to
George Francis Train, whom he accompanied
in his travels. Two years ago Kleush was injured
in an accident on the Staten Island
Rapid Transit Railroad, and got $2,400 damages.
When Kleush came to his brother's house a
week ago ho acted strangely, and on Tuesday
he told his brother that he was going to throw
him or one of the children out of the window.
The brother asked for time to reflect and make
a decision, and went to Justice Kelly for a
warrant. Court Officers Foley and Connolly
found the crazy man barricaded in his room
and had to climb into a window to arrest him.
He was lying on the bed nuked, having thrown
his clothes into the yard.
[...]
----end
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Thanks, Jeff.
The New York Sun's coverage of the Russell Sage bombing focused on the story that a dime museum cowboy gave to Byrnes that led to a socialist crank named Southworth. The Sun had some fun linking Southworth to a man who worked for the World.
I was also curious about the Sun's references to a George Francis Train, who seems to have convinced himself that the Sage bomber was a man, Klensch or Kleush, who served as Train's personal secretary on one of Train's around the world trips. The Sun's reporter wrote as if he expected Train to be known to the reader, and that he was not taken seriously.
New York Sun, December 05, 1891, Page 1, Column 5
With Nitro-Glycerine
A madman Blows Up Russell Sage's Office
New York Sun, December 06, 1891, Page 2, Column 1
The Dead Head Recognized
Inspector Byrnes Thinks He Has Struck the madman's Trail
[...]
Shortly before 10 o'clock George Francis
Train came to the Morgue and said that he
had given the bomb thrower "those black
socks." He took off his shoe to show that he
wore the same kind of foot wear. He had on
a pair of black socks. He looked at the
head in the bottle and said that he felt confident
that he could identify the man. But he
would not give any name. He said that he
could not make his identification certain until
he had seen Coroner Mesaemer, who, he said,
had a letter written in German by the dead
man.
[...]
----end
New York Sun, December 07, 1891, Page 2, Column 1
Mr. Sage Begins to Feel It
Very Tired Yesterday And Not Going Down To-Day
[...]
Oeorge Francis Train says that he gave the
bomb thrower the trousers he had on as well
as his black socks. "I bought those trousers
for $9 at Wanamaker in Chicago on March
8, 1890," said G. F. T "and I gave them to
him about six weeks ago. I have some
letters, whloh I think were written
bv Walsh, the man who wrote the
threatening letters to Russell Sage. The
letters I got from him were sensational;
he was going to do something to astonish
people. The man was a German. He was not
an Anarchist nor was he connected with them.
He was going to make a sensation and go
out in a blaze. The police have yet to come to
me if they want to find out who this man was."
[...]
----end
New York Sun, December 08, 1891, Page 5, Column 3
Russell Sage Pretty Deaf
--
Vrooman Knows Southworth
New York Sun, December 09, 1891, Page 1, Column 3
Russell sage Drives Out
Southworth Not Connected Yet With Any "Movement" to Dynamite Capitalists
[...]
.
"Prof." Denton has turned up. and says that
it isn't his head that's in the Morgue, G. F. T.
also admits that the dynamiter is not the man
he supposed. He thought it was Klensch, one
of the dime museum fasters, who is still in this
world.
[...]
---end
New York Sun, December 13, 1891, Page 9, Column 1
Mr. Vrooman, Organizer
His Enemies Saying Hard Things of Southworth's Associate
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There was also a pair of attacks aimed at J. P. Morgan Jr., known as Jack Morgan (1867 to 1943). Like his father a prominent banker and art collector, during World War I he led most of the U.S. banks in supporting Britain and the allies with loans. In 1915 he was at home in Glen Cove, Long Island, when a man calling himself "Frank Holt" knocked at the door, and when he was admitted ran into the house and shot Morgan in the abdomen and groin. Holt was knocked out with a large lump of coal, and the police arrested him. Morgan was rushed to a hospital and recovered eventually.
Holt was a curious character. His real name was Frantz Muenter (he is listed in the Wikipedia), and had once taught German at Harvard, when in 1908 his wife died. It turned he poisoned her. He fled, but remained in the U.S for the next seven years. Muenter suddenly developed a type of terrorist style patriotism, committing acts of terror and sabotage in the U.S. A short time before shooting Morgan he also bombed the cloak room of the U.S. Senate in the Capitol Building (a lot of damage, but no fatalities or injuries) and it later turned out he set a time bomb off on a ship called the S.S. "Minniehaha" with a cargo of arms for the Allies (the bomb went off but not near the cargo hold, and the fire was snuffed out). Muenter, when arrested, said he was fighting the sale of arms from American manufacturers to the Allies. He was arraigned for attempted murder (and still had the 1908 homicide case against him as well), but he hanged himself in his prison cell. As a result we still are not sure why he poisoned his wife, nor on what led to the splurge of patriotism (for example, if he felt so patriotic why did he not return to Germany to fight for her in World War I?).
The second time Morgan was targeted was in 1920. This was the tragic Wall Street bombing in that year. Morgan was in England on a trip, and while there learned that a horse and wagon had been parked at the corner of Broad Street and Wall Street next to the headquarters of the Bank of Morgan and across from the New York Stock Exchange. It blew up at lunch hour, killing over twenty people, and mangling many others. Despite years of investigations the police never solved who was responsible for the outrage. Jack Morgan returned from his trip and saw there were scrapnel damage from the bomb on the outside wall of his bank. He was asked if he wanted it repaired. He told his staff not to - it should remain a permanent monument for the dead and injured in the outrage. As a result you can see the small holes in the outside wall to this day.
Jeff
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It was not always safe to be a millionaire, as Gould and his banker-ally Sage learned. In 1892 there was a particularly bloody strike against the steel plants at Homestead, Pennsylvania, and the leader of the management forces was the younger partner of Andrew Carnegie, the very able and very forceful magnate Henry Clay Frick. It was Frick who hired Pinkerton men to be a private army against the Union workers at Homestead. The casualty rate was high (between 20 and 40 people on both sides). Then, while Frick was in his office giving his daily orders for the strike breaking (which eventually succeeded), a small man came into the office. He was Mr. Alexander Berkman, a anarcho-socialist, and boyfriend of the anarchist spokeswoman, Emma Goldman. Berkman attacked and injured Frick with a knife and gun. Frick was seriously wounded, and Berkman arrested. Berkman would have a heavy jail sentence for the attempted assassination. Frick would recover.
Whatever one thinks of Frick's anti-union feelings, one aspect of his career keeps his memory somewhat green - he was a major art collector, and his homes in his native Pittsburgh, Pa., and in New York City (on Central Park East facing 5th Avenue) remain two lovely art collection museums. I recommend then to you if you visit either city.
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Russell Sage Bombing
The New York World stole a march on Inspector Byrnes when it tracked down the identity of a Boston man who set off a bomb in the office of railroad magnate Russell Sage.
Everybody's Magazine, Volume 4, May, 1901, Pages 473-475
Adventures in News-Getting
The Mystery of Russell Sage's Assailant
About two o'clock one wintry afternoon in December, 18—-, when Wall Street babel echoed loudest, Russell Sage, the eccentric multi-millionaire, was much astonished, on looking up from his desk, to find himself confronted by a stranger who had entered his private office unannounced. The man was thin and nervous, but withal so commanding in attitude that the door-keeper had credited his statement of having an especial appointment at that hour.
Striding toward the desk, his eyes glittering with a strange wildness and one hand held back with aggressive uncertainty, the intruder demanded $1,500,000 in cash. The alternative, he assured Mr. Sage, was immediate death. The amazed banker knew that he had to deal with a desperate man; he felt that the quiver of an eyelash might for him beckon eternity, but still he hesitated. The sum was large. Let him consider.
Rising from his chair, he stood uncertain what to do, while a messenger-boy whistled in the hallway, and a few errant puffs—-advance-guard of a gale at sea—-rattled the windows, and the boisterous shout of curbstone brokers reached his ear as from a distant shore. His face must have betrayed his intention, for the madman suddenly drew out an ominous-looking parcel, flourished it about his head, and hurled it to the floor.
In the ghastly explosion that followed Mr. Sage, it may be remembered, suffered no injury, while a third person present, the unfortunate Laidlaw, was painfully hurt. As for the would-be murderer, he was so completely annihilated that nothing remained by which he might be identified.
From a newspaper man's view-point this attempt on Russell Sage's life was the most important event of a year. It was a dire tragedy, it concerned the rich, and mystery swathed it in heavy folds. Who was the man, and what were his motives? Was he, as Mr. Byrnes, then Chief of Police, asserted, one of a band of anarchists who had plotted to kill all the millionaires in New York, or simply some crazed soul with a "mission"?
Mr. Byrnes chose to adopt the former theory, and with the assistance of three hundred detectives he gathered in a houseful of suspicious characters. The finding of a man who declared that he had been asked to ally himself with such a plot lent color to this impression, and added to the consternation that already had its abode among wealthy folk. The mystery, however, declined to be resolved along these lines, and seven days elapsed only to find the police still groping for a clew.
At this crisis the city editor of one of the largest New York dailies [Wolrd], perceiving public interest to be more fervid than ever, called up a dozen of his cleverest reporters and assigned them to this one story. "Boys," he said, "we've got to find out who that man was. The boss says it must be run down, and you know what that means. It's an ugly story, that's sure, for the police have nothing to give you; but get out and hustle, and see if you can't make Byrnes look cheap." He then put one man in charge, outlined a scheme of procedure, and the reporters stepped out on their difficult assignment.
Among the number was a young man named Isaac D. White, who particularly wished to succeed in this assignment, because he had already earned some reputation for analytic ability and close observation. White appreciated, what every reporter soon learns, that a good mystery-story takes precedence over any other in a newspaper, because increased sales are invariably registered in the business office while the perpetrator of a celebrated tragedy is still unknown. It is the sort of thing that appeals to the public, and the paper merely reflects the universal craving for enlightenment.
Such a story, too, is the most difficult to cover, because persons to whom any revelation may be undesirable are certain to place obstacles in the way of investigation; and the only aid that a newspaper man might expect—-that of the police—-is oftentimes withheld from motives of jealousy or indifference. The reporter, therefore, must depend largely on his own resources, and the one who succeeds is reckoned valuable to any paper. His reward for merit by an outsider would be considered ridiculously inadequate, consisting, as it does usually, in a gruff acknowledgment from the city editor that he wrote "a good story." But that to a reporter is worth any trouble, even worth risking his life if necessary.
White first visited the wrecked apartment, which he found a mass of debris, with one end entirely blown away. No vestige of a clew appeared until, after one hour's tireless scrutiny, the reporter discovered two links of the dead man's watch-chain embedded in the wall. Nothing else was to be had, and tucking the links in his pocket he went uptown to the morgue and deposited them with the other remnants. These were limited to the unknown's head, a piece of his black diagonal coat, portions of underclothing, and a charred button, about which were collected some reporters and detectives, arguing on the impossibility of identification with such meagre material.
On looking over the articles a second time, White discerned something on the back of the button that urged him to make a more rigid examination. His heart beat wildly when the scraping with a knife revealed the name of a Boston clothier, a clew that had escaped every other eye. Fearful lest he attract attention, he did not trust to jotting the name down, but, with the words seared on his memory, replaced the button and made some irrelevant remarks to sidetrack suspicion. Once out of the building he sped away, sick with excitement.
Now had this reporter been a novice he might, on arriving at the office, have cast himself upon the city editor's neck from pure joy. But the seasoned man makes no such mistake. While working for a newspaper one should contain himself in the most dramatic circumstances. White only had to mention his clew to acquaint the city editor with its significance, but he also, being trained in the same school, made no demonstration. What he did was to take out his watch, glance quickly at a timetable, and turn in his chair to remark shortly:
"Next train leaves for Boston in forty minutes. Go and get that cloth and the button without fail, take 'em along with you, and—have your copy in early!"
Upon that he turned away wearily, vexed, to all appearances, at being disturbed. In reality his mind dilated with hope; he could think of nothing else. And the reporter! He reeled with the breath of life; but he knew his business.
In Boston White pounced on a directory, found his clothing-store on Milk Street, and was assured there by the manager that the button had been attached to one of their suits. A clerk soon dragged from the top shelf a roll of cloth whose texture corresponded with that of the fragment, and the cutter now came forward to identify the workmanship. "The shoulder," said he, "is the most difficult part to fit, and the arrangement of the seams complicated. Every cutter has his own particular style, and that's a sample of mine." White now felt so certain of success that when the name of Henry L. Norcross, a note broker on an adjacent street, appeared on the books as purchaser of the only suit made from that roll, he telegraphed to his paper:
"I have the man. Preserve me three columns."
And he was right. In a few hours he had found the dead man's family and positively identified him, after a heart-rending scene with his mother, who then learned her son's fate for the first time.
Next morning Simla and Buenos Ayres knew that Henry L. Norcross, a man born of humble parents, discontented with his station in life, and rendered desperate by reading books on socialism, was he who had attempted the murder of Russell Sage. But only two persons knew that a New York reporter with the aid of a single button had saved Norcross from a nameless grave, and solved a mystery for the whole world.
On the following day White was busy reporting an elopement.
[...]
----end
An account of Sage being asked to identify the remains of the bomber.
The New Broadway Magazine, Volume 20, May, 1908, Pages 133-140
Sherlock Holmes in Mulberry Street
by Alfred Henry Lewis
Page 139
[...]
Books could be written, books full of thrill and interest, of the dramatic, not to say dread, doings of detectives when they aim to startle some stubborn one into loquacity. Norcross sought to blow up Russell Sage, and blew himself up. There was something more in Mulberry Street than just a police theory that Norcross was not quite the stranger to Mr. Sage that Mr. Sage pretended. It was deemed advisable to make Mr. Sage “talk.”
To that end, a high police official—-I shall not name him—-carrying a huge basket on his arm, called upon Mr. Sage. That finacier was in bed, nerves a-tangle; for it is no laughing matter, nor conducive to steadiness, to have an assassin explode a bomb at your horrified feet.
The visiting officer stood at the foot of the bed, putting questions to Mr. Sage, who feebly bleated his replies. Suddenly, without warning, the officer reached into the basket, which Mr. Sage had as yet not beheld.
“Did you ever see this man before the day he tried to kill you?” demanded the officer; and, with the word, he held aloft the gory head of Norcross.
The test was a failure. Mr. Sage did not “talk"; his sole response was a screech, and next he fainted away.
[...]
----end
A summary of the lawsuit brought against Sage by a clerk, Laidlaw, who claimed that Sage had deliberately placed Laidlaw between Sage and the bomb just before the explosion.
The Art of Cross-Examination (New York: MacMillan, 1903), Pages 269-283
By Francis Lewis Wellman
The Cross-Examination of Russell Sage by Mr. Joseph H. Choate in the Laidlaw-Sage Case
One of the most recent cross-examinations to be made the subject of appeal to the Supreme Court General Term and the New York Court of Appeals was the cross-examination of Russell Sage by Mr. Joseph H. Choate, in the famous suit brought against the former by William R. Laidlaw. Sage was defended by the late Edwin C. James, and Mr. Choate appeared for the plaintiff, Mr. Laidlaw.
On the fourth day of December, 1891, a stranger by the name of Norcross came to Russell Sage's New York office and sent a message to him that he wanted to see him on important business, and that he had a letter of introduction from Mr. John Rockefeller. Mr. Sage left his private office, and going up to Norcross, was handed an open letter which read, "This carpet-bag I hold in my hand contains ten pounds of dynamite, and if I drop this bag on the floor it will destroy this building in ruins and kill every human being in it. I demand twelve hundred thousand dollars, or I will drop it. Will you give it? Yes or no?"
Mr. Sage read the letter, handed it back to Norcross, and suggested that he had a gentleman waiting for him in his private office, and could be through his business in a couple of minutes when he would give the matter his attention.
Norcross responded: "Then you decline my proposition? Will you give it to me? Yes or no?" Sage explained again why he would have to postpone giving it to him for two or three minutes to get rid of some one in his private office, and just at this juncture Mr. Laidlaw entered the office, saw Norcross and Sage without hearing the conversation, and waited in the anteroom until Sage should be disengaged. As he waited, Sage edged toward him and partly seating himself upon the table near Mr. Laidlaw, and without addressing him, took him by the left hand as if to shake hands with him, but with both his own hands, and drew Mr. Laidlaw almost imperceptibly around between him and Norcross. As he did so, he said to Norcross, "If you cannot trust me, how can you expect me to trust you?"
With that there was a terrible explosion. Norcross himself was blown to pieces and instantly killed. Mr. Laidlaw found himself on the floor on top of Russell Sage. He was seriously injured, and later brought suit against Mr. Sage for damages upon the ground that he had purposely made a shield of his body from the expected explosion. Mr. Sage denied that he had made a shield of Laidlaw or that he had taken him by the hand or altered his own position so as to bring Laidlaw between him and the explosion.
The case was tried four times. It was dismissed by Mr. Justice Andrews, and upon appeal the judgment was reversed. On the second trial before Mr. Justice Patterson the jury rendered a verdict of $25,000 in favor of Mr. Laidlaw. On appeal this judgment in turn was reversed. On a third trial, also before Mr. Justice Patterson, the jury disagreed; and on the fourth trial before Mr. Justice Ingraham the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Mr. Laidlaw of $40,000, which judgment was sustained by the General Term of the Supreme Court, but subsequently reversed by the Court of Appeals.
Exception on this appeal was taken especially to the method used in the cross-examination of Mr. Sage by Mr. Choate. Thus the cross-examination is interesting, as an instance of what the New York Court of Appeals has decided to be an abuse of cross-examination into which, through their zeal, even eminent counsel are sometimes led, and to which I have referred in a previous chapter. It also shows to what lengths Mr. Choate was permitted to go upon the pretext of testing the witness's memory.
It was claimed by Mr. Sage's counsel upon the appeal that "the right of cross-examination was abused in this case to such an extent as to require the reversal of this monstrous judgment, which is plainly the precipitation and product of that abuse." And the Court of Appeals unanimously took this view of the matter.
[...]
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Links to some of the World's coverage.
The Evening World (New York), December 04, 1891, EXTRA, Page 1
Explosion
Boiler Bursts at No. 71 Broad.
The Evening World (New York), December 05, 1891, EXTRA 2 O'CLOCK, Page 1
Who Was He?
A Possible Clue to the Bomb Thrower
The Evening World (New York), December 08, 1891, EXTRA 2 O'CLOCK, Page 1
Byrnes's Man Sane
Physicians Say Prisoner Southworth is no Lunatic
The Evening World (New York), December 09, 1891, SPORTING EXTRA, Page 3
As a Human Shield?
Clerk Laidlaw Claims Sage Used Him for That Purpose
[Word of the World's investigation seems to have leaked before the World could run the story. Did the reporter pose as "one of Byrnes' men?"]
The Evening World (New York), December 11, 1891, SPORTING EXTRA, Page 1
Is He the Man?
Missing Note-Broker Norcross May have Been Sage's Dynamiter
[The story about the World's Boston investigation.]
The Evening World (New York), December 12, 1891, EXTRA 2 O'CLOCK, Page 1
Norcross's Head
The Evening World (New York), March 11, 1892, BROOKLYN SPORTING EXTRA, Page 1
Sage on the Stand
The Millionaire a Witness at the Inquest on Norcross
The Evening World (New York), March 12, 1892, LAST EDITION, Page 1, Column 7
Sage Wants the Evidence
He Asks for a Copy of laidlaw's Norcross Testimony
Did Dr. Mary walker Know of the Dynamiter's Plans?
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I recommend that book "The Dynamite Fiend" about Alexander Keith (who is also to be found in Wikipedia.
Keith did make a large amount in financing and setting up blockade runners, but he was always looking out for the main chance. He really had no sense of loyalty to the Confederacy, and after the war he swindled an acquaintance who was a Confederate veteran. He may have practiced an early form of his "infernal machine" barratry in 1864 on a ship that was supposed to take a valuable cargo of costumes and belongings of a stage star to Halifax, and then be sent to Boston to be collected. The ship that was carrying this was sunk under murky circumstances. The cargo belonged to (of all people) John Wilkes Booth.
Hawthorne's account of the possible connection between Keith/ "Thompson" and the ship "City of Boston" is wrong. First of all, the steamship "City of Boston" was lost on a voyage in 1870 without any survivors. It was one of the great sea mysteries of that period, and Hawthorne mistakenly says it made it's voyage safely. At the time of the disaster nothing was certain if it sank in a bad storm, or hit an iceberg, or what. After the incident at Bremenhaven, it was recalled that Keith had possibly sent some cargo on it to Halifax (the city where Keith actually did come from). This was carefully reinvestigated by the New York City police, but it turned out that the lost cargo sent by a "Mr. Thompson" was sent by a real Mr. Thompson to Halifax, and was a cargo of furs. So whatever happened to the "City of Boston" in 1870 had nothing to do with the activities of Alexander Keith.
Jeff
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Thanks, Jeff.
In "An American Penman" the only real specifics about the gang of forgers is that they specialize in forging letters of credits and securities and cheating ar cards.
In "Another's Crime" a pickpocket lifts a purse from a woman in a jewelry store, removes some bank notes and then plants the empty purse on the woman's companion , who just happens to need money to pay off a gambling debt.
Julian Hawthorne claimed to have been acquainted with William Thomas, the "Bremen dynamite fiend," who Jeff mentioned earlier. It seem plausible that he knew him in Dresden, but his account seems inaccurate at points, and he seems to have depicted Thomas as having more successful than he was in order to set up the punchline for one of his anecdotes.
A review of a book about Thomas gives a summary of the case.
New York Times, June 29, 2005, link
BOOKS OF THE TIMES; A Man of Many Facets, All of Them Monstrous
By WILLIAM GRIMES
The Dynamite Fiend
The Chilling Tale of a Confederate Spy, Con Artist, and Mass Murderer
By Ann Larabee
Illustrated. 234 pages. Palgrave Macmillan. $24.95.
A brief bio of Julian Hawthorne gives some dates.
A Supplement to Allibone's Critical Dictionary of English Literature, Volume 2 (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1899), Page 792
By John Foster Kirk, Samuel Austin Allibone
Hawthorne, Julian, b. 1848, in Boston, Mass.; son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, infra; went to Europe with his parents in 1853, and after their return entered Harvard in 1863, but did not graduate. He began the study of civil engineering at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard, and was a student in Dresden, Germany, in 1868-70. From 1870 to 1872 he was employed as a hydrographio engineer in the department of docks in New York. In 1872 he went abroad, Spent two years in Dresden, and from 1874 till 1881 resided in London, where he was for two years on the staff of the Spectator and contributed to reviews and magazines. In 1882 he returned to New York. [...]
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Hawthorne mentions the Dresden story in an interview.
The Illustrated American, Volume 19, April 4, 1896, Pages 438-439
A Chat With Julian Hawthorne.
JULIAN HAWTHORNE, author of more than two dozen novels, two hundred shorter tales, many poems and a drama, has the figure of an athlete, the eye of a pioneer, the carriage of a soldier and the manner of a farsighted business man. He speaks in a low tone and is very quiet and unassuming in appearance. He is well-informed in affairs of general interest and is a most entertaining talker, but he never “talks shop" or mentions his own writings and literary career unless specially urged and questioned.
I had the pleasure of a chat with him the other day, and was of course curious as to his first venture in literature. In answer to a question he said:
"In 1865, while I was at Cambridge, I was very much interested in natural history and wrote a few articles on the subject for the Waver Magazine, though I never expected to see them in type, and was far too modest to sign my name. But they were printed, and I never recovered from that initial weakness."
You studied civil engineering, didn't you?"
“Yes; and in 1868, after I graduated, I went to Dresden, where I continued my studies for two or three years longer. It was there I met my future wife, who was from New Orleans, so you see we had a narrow escape from not meeting. On my return to New York I secured a position on the Dock Department under General McClellan, who had just taken charge. I was employed in taking hydrographic surveys, taking sounding off the docks, and sometimes sitting for hours at a time in a small boat in the middle of the river, ascertaining with the aid of instruments the exact speed of the current. It was winter time, and 1 don't believe Peary or Nansen ever got into colder quarters. The ferry-boats seemed to be charging at us from every direction, and we were frequently soaked when we reached shore. I was finally ousted by politics, and then was given a commission to go to New Orleans to build a canal.
“I afterward returned to Dresden, where I wrote ‘Saxon Studies,' one of my first successes. About this time I became acquainted with a man named Thomas, whom I met in Dresden. He was a most delightful fellow personally, and we became very intimate. Just before my return to America Thomas gave a dinner in my honor, making a farewell speech and bidding me good-bye with tears in his eyes. I afterward learned that he had intended placing an infernal machine on the ship in which I sailed, and was discouraged by his failure to secure what he considered sufficient insurance on his little ‘box." His amiable intention may have had something to do with his tearful farewell. He sent a machine out whenever he needed about $300, insured it well, and afterward collected. He finally made a miscalculation, with the result that his ‘box' exploded prematurely, causing the loss of a number of lives. He then blew his brains out, and I never knew of his rascalities until I saw his picture printed."
“Thomas : Do you mean Thomassen, whose infernal machine at a Hamburg dock made so great a sensation a few years ago?"
“The same."
[...]
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The long version of the story.
Cosmopolitan, Volume 45, September, 1908, Pages 431-439
A Great Criminal of the Last Generation
by Julian Hawthorne
THE CAREER OF ALEXANDER THOMAS REVEALED A MAN OF TERRIFIC PROPORTIONS AND PURPOSES--A MR. HYDE SUCH AS THE BRAIN OF STEVENSON NEVER DARED CONCEIVE
When I was about half my present age I was for four years intimate with one of the greatest criminals of his time—-of any time, perhaps; such, at least, was afterward his rating. I will add (for the peace of mind of the reader) that I did not suspect him while the friendship was going on, nor for a year or two afterward, when the truth was revealed to my incredulous eyes by a paragraph in a London paper. I said to myself, when I had read the item, “Of course that can’t be Tom!” and although the details fitted painfully well, I still withheld my belief until a portrait of him was published in (I think) Harper's Weekly, and further doubt became impossible.
Since then there have been several great criminals, whose careers I have studied; but I question whether, taking them all by and large, any of them quite measured up to my friend. He was of his own sort, of course; no one had before or has since done just the kind of thing that he did. He was, in his calling, an inventor, and perhaps a genius; one is apt to feel enthusiastic about a person of that caliber, and standards are scarce to compare him by. Hundreds of people, including his own wife and children, knew him as intimately, almost, as I did, and to not one of them did he ever for one moment reveal his secret; nay, that he had any secret to reveal. He was not of a species that anyone would suspect of having a secret, or of being capable of having one. We men and women of the world imagine that we know a man when we see him, and can assign him his proper place in our little gallery of types of human nature. But Tom went his way, looking us all smilingly in the face, opening to us his entire way and principle of existence (as we believed), and never a man or woman of us all had the glimmering of a notion as to what he really was, or would have believed an accuser who should have arisen and denounced him.
The whole civilized world was amazed and horrified when the truth about him came out; but its emotions were pale compared with those of us who had been his personal friends and were utterly convinced that, be his faults what they might (and he had many), he was at least as honest, as humane, and as simple and artless a human creature as had ever been created in this world. What was the effect of the revelation upon his other friends I do not know, for I never happened to speak with any of them on the subject; but upon myself it was so impressive that for many years I never mentioned his name at all, or thought of him when I could help it; and though I have, in the thirty years since then, told his story a few times to persons I knew well, and who, I thought, could appreciate it, yet this is the first time I have ever written about him; and, so sincere was my affection for him, it seems almost disloyal to disclose the facts about Tom even now. He did not cause me to lose my faith in human nature, as the phrase is, because he seemed so astounding an exception to human nature itself; but he did cause me to lose a great deal of my faith in myself—-in that cheerful cocksureness about things in general which appertains to so many of us. I have never since believed that I could see through millstones.
“Alexander Thomas” was the name he wrote down, in his sprawling, heedless handwriting, in the book of the names of members of the American Club in Dresden, Saxony, a pretty city in which I spent four happy years. There may have been a middle initial, but I have forgotten what it was. We called him Tom, and Old Tom, and made ourselves mightily free and easy with him. He was perfectly modest and unassuming in his bearing and conversation, and never did anything but chuckle good-naturedly—-there was never anything else so inexhaustible as Tom's good nature—-when some one or other broke a jest at his expense. He was an enormous creature, weighing at least three hundred pounds, though under six feet in height; with a big, clumsy head on a short thick neck and mighty shoulders; with rough red hair, a straggly red beard, and merry, sharp little blue eyes. He wasn't a mere hogshead of fat, though; he was hard all over, of tremendous strength, and of no little activity and lightness on his feet, so that I have seen him walk ten or fifteen miles on a hot summer's day, and run a hundred-yard sprint at the end of it, with less effort than most of us would have to make. He was always jolly, always chuckling, and he had a trick of running the tip of his tongue out of his mouth and curling it along his upper lip, just as you might See a fat, mischievous, harmless boy do it. It was a remarkably pointed tongue, and very mobile; and it, and this trick with it, may have been an index to his character, but I had not the skill to interpret it. He trod about the rooms of the club with a tread ponderous but light, as Count Fosco, a much less remarkable villain, might do; and he would sit and swap yarns with us for hours at a time, or he would take a hand at cards from noon till midnight, winning or losing the trifling sums that were hazarded in our club in those days, when no one was rich and we played for the fun of it. Tom was always strictly honest about settling up, however; and though we all regarded him as poor, even according to the standard that obtained among us, yet none of us would have hesitated to accept Tom's word for as good as his bond.
It is to be noted, in this connection (cardplaying, I mean), that we sometimes sat up at it rather late; and it happened quite often that, soon after midnight, the club waiter would approach Tom mysteriously and whisper something in his ear. Whereupon Tom would change countenance, throw down his cards, mumble some excuse, and leave the room; and we would see no more of him that night. What had happened? Was this, you may ask, a clue to his mystery? By no means; and you are forgetting that there was no mystery about Tom, that we knew of, to make a clue to. No: Tom's sudden defections were due to Mrs. Tom, who was a pretty woman, a bit of a shrew, very fond of her big husband, but withal very strict with him; and when he overstayed the midnight hour at the club she was in the habit of coming over and sending up word that she was waiting for him, and he must come home with her at once. He never kept her waiting on these occasions. He was devoted to her and their two children-—quite a fool about them, we used to say; and it was not because they “knew anything about him,” for they knew nothing, any more than anyone else did. It was pure affection, there is no doubt about that. But it amused us much that big Tom should be a henpecked husband, and we made great fun of it, both among ourselves and to him. He only chuckled, rather foolishly, and never resented it; and it was actually for the sake of this good little woman and her two children that his crimes were committed, and they lived on money that was obtained by the murder of hundreds of their fellow Creatures.
THE “BREMEN FIEND"
And I may as well say here that my friend Tom, whose name was written by himself in the club book as “Thomas,” was none other than the “Bremen Fiend,” and variously referred to afterward, by investigators who attempted to trace his career, as “Thomassen,” “Thompson,” “Alexander,” and I know not what besides. The enormity of his crimes stimulated an immense curiosity, speculation, and professional and amateur sleuthing on his behalf, the police of Germany comparing notes with those of the rest of Europe and America, and turning up every stick and stone that seemed in the least likely to reveal a criminal behind it. This quest was kept up for a year or more; but the results of it were out of all proportion meager. It was not found possible to determine even his nationality: one report had him a resident of Brooklyn, another of Nova Scotia, another of the Southern states, and so on. No one was able to prove anything on that poinr, and the truth as to his birthplace will never be known; for he had covered his trail too well. It was asserted that he had been a blockade-runner during our civil war, and that, after the war, in 1866, he had been charged with scuttling an English steamer on which he had shipped "goods," and insured them to the amount of twenty-four thousand pounds sterling. Whether or not this enterprising individual was our Thomas, at all events he escaped conviction, and disappeared. If it was he (and very likely it may have been), the adventure taught him prudence; and at the time I knew him he was doing business on less hazardous lines, and with better chances of immunity.
His method was as follows: He would ship a wooden case, delared as containing merchandise, on some steamer, generally a transatlantic liner, though his field may have been a wider one than this, for at about the time that the revelation concerning him took place, ten steamers and fifteen thousand lives were reported lost along our Pacific coast, whether or not through Tom's agency cannot now be ascertained. This packing-case of his would contain, not the merchandise that he declared, but enough dynamite or other high explosive to blow any ship to pieces, and an ingenious and powerful piece of clockwork mechanism to explode it withal. The mechanism slowly forced back a strong steel spring contained in an iron cylinder, the process being timed to last four or five days. At the expiration of the period a catch would be automatically released, setting free the spring, which would thereupon strike with great impetus against a sort of ramrod with a sharp point at its outer end (also contained in the cylinder), and this sharp point would be driven into the explosive, setting it off and sending the ship and every thing and person on it to the bottom of the sea. In course of time the ship would be reported at Lloyd's as “overdue,” then as “missing,” and finally as “lost”; after which Thomas would apply for his insurance, and get it; for the amount he claimed was never more than four or five hundred dollars. Not that he would not have liked to insure for more, but that, had he done so, his box of “merchandise” would have been liable to examination by the insurance agents, with results, of course, that would have brought Thomas's industry to an abrupt end. In order further to avert suspicion, he would ship on many different lines and insure in many different companies, none of which, for a sum so insignificant as that involved, ever thought it worth while to make an investigation, or ever regarded the unfortunate shipper as a suspicious person. No one, as I have intimated, not even an insurance agent, could look in Tom's ingenuous countenance and believe him capable of plotting evil against any living Creature.
ONE DOLLAR FOR EVERY HUMAN LIFE
If he succeeded in destroying as many as ten or a dozen ships a year, his winnings could not, therefore, have been more than five or six thousand dollars annually at most; and the scale on which he lived in Dresden would correspond to about that figure. The crew and passengers of each vessel might average five hundred persons; so my friend's livelihood would cost the world something like one human life for each dollar that went into his pockets. But he enjoyed every cent of it, and kept his wife and children in good style on it, besides being always ready to take his turn in standing drinks for the crowd, or participating in any reasonable “lark.” I remember, on one occasion, by the way, I was going to Berlin on a visit, and fixed upon Tom as my companion for the trip. When I proposed it to him, he said: “My dear boy, that would suit me up to the neck: we would have the time of our lives; but the truth is, I'm flat broke, and sha’n’t have a cent inside the next month. But if you can wait till then I'll get hold of three hundred dollars, and we can do the thing to the queen's taste.” However, I went without him. It turned out later (when the truth about him came out) that this three hundred dollars, which he duly received at the date he mentioned, must have been derived from the destruction of a vessel with one of his boxes on board. He was prepared to spend that money on a spree, and would, I doubt not, have enjoyed it with all the gaiety and recklessness that were innate in him.
It was stated that, as a precautionary measure, he was in the habit of assembling the materials for his shipments from various quarters—-the dynamite from America, the wooden and metal cases from Dresden, the clockwork from Vienna, Bernburg, or Leipzig. I know that he used to make occasional journeys to Leipzig, and that he employed an artisan there to make his clockwork. Thomas, it was afterward found, had told this man that the machines were for use in a silk-mill, and were intended to sever a thousand threads at one stroke. He once paid him a bonus of ten dollars for an extra good piece of work.
How many ships Thomas destroyed, how many lives he sacrificed, can only be conjectured: hypothetical lists were made out at the time, but the secrecy with which all his operations were carried out renders all such estimates little better than guesses, and it would not be worth while to recapitulate them here. When the catastrophe which I shall immediately describe took place, it was stated that Thomas had twenty machines in process of manufacture. This would indicate that he meant to enlarge his business—-perhaps to make one grand coup, and then to retire with the fortune accruing from it. He was of course well aware of the risk he was constantly running, from which no precautions could protect him; and he cherished dreams, perhaps, of a quiet old age with his wife and children, afar from the anxieties and uncertainties inseparable from the human struggle for wealth. But he awoke from his dream at the sound of an explosion which also made the world sit up and wonder and afterward shudder as at a revelation from the depths of hell.
The thing came about thus: Thomas had sent a box to be shipped at Bremen on the steamship Mosel, and a day or two before the date of sailing, he left Dresden and journeyed to Bremen, in order to see that all went right. This had been his habitual practice; and it showed that he recognized the constant peril of accident, and also that he had made up his mind what to do in the event of any accident taking place. He had decided that discovery of his guilt must follow sooner or later, and was resolved not to undergo the tedium of trial and imprisonment, followed by execution for murder. He knew a shorter way out of the difficulty, and was prepared to take it at a moment's warning.
On the afternoon of the 11th of December, 1875, a sunny day, mild enough to admit of sitting out of doors with comfort, Thomas was drinking beer with an acquaintance at a table on the sidewalk outside a saloon near the wharf. As he sat, he faced the wharf, and could see the Mosel lying there, while the stevedores were lowering freight into her hold with the aid of a derrick. His friend, opposite him, had his back to the scene. Thomas was, as usual, in jovial spirits, his broad face ruddy and his small blue eyes sparkling with conviviality behind his spectacles. A slight protuberance under the right-hand skirt of the blue sack coat he wore might have indicated, to an observant eye, the presence of a revolver in his hip-pocket; but he was not the object of observation or of suspicion. He was apparently at peace with all the world; no one wished him ill, and he wished ill to none. And yet he was at that moment deliberately condemning several hundred human beings to a violent and terrible death.
The stevedores hitched up their tackle round a medium-sized box, and up it swung into the air. Thomas watched it, and probably knew it as his own. Up it went; and in a couple of minutes more it would be safe in its place in the steamer's vitals, there to remain until, four days later, the steel spring should be released, and, with a tearing and deafening roar, as of fiends escaping from the Pit, the vessel should burst asunder in the sea, fifteen hundred miles from any land, and then, with all her contents, be engulfed forever. Thomas's eyes twinkled, and he raised his schoppen of beer to his lips.
THE FATE OF THOMAS
He set down the schoppen untasted. The box, just as it turned to swing over the vessel's hold, slipped from the chain loop, and fell from a height of thirty feet to the stone wharf. It broke to pieces. Instantly followed an explosion—-the very crack of doom. It was a noise too outrageous and intolerable for mortal nerves. It rent the massive granite wharf into powder; it drove in the whole side of the ship and scattered it in splinters. It shattered every window-pane within a radius of half a mile. In the smoky dust which went up from it were hurtled abroad the unrecognizable shreds of what, an instant before, had been two hundred living human bodies. It knocked the companion of Thomas off his chair, and left him dazed. But Thomas remained firm in his seat. With his left hand he grasped the edge of the table; his right went to his hip-pocket. As his friend picked himself up, he saw the big man in the blue suit draw a shining revolver and put the muzzle of it between his teeth. His finger tightened on the trigger, and a bullet tore through his brain. He did not fall, but retained his position, and did not die until the following day. Meanwhile, he was questioned by the police, but to no purpose, and it is probable that he uttered no word of any kind. Certainly he revealed nothing, and it was only later that his connection with the event was established. The explosion was at first supposed to have been an accident. Afterward it was surmised that Thomas was one of a group of malefactors; but this hypothesis was never substantiated. He shared his crime with no one; and what his part had been, and what the secret meditations of his heart, will never be known in this world.
A rumor was circulated, at the time, that another of the Thomas boxes had been shipped on the steamer City of Boston; but this was not confirmed, and the steamer made her trip safely. The Salier was another steamship for which fears were expressed for a while. Indeed, there was a panic among all ship-owners and insurance companies with whom the dead man had had dealings. As I have said, a number of other ships did mysteriously disappear soon after his death. But no one applied for insurance money on any “case of merchandise, contents unknown”; and slowly the fear died away. But for nearly a year afterward, paragraphs referring to Thomas appeared occasionally in European and American papers and periodicals. A generation has passed away since then; but still one will occasionally meet men of thirty or forty who have heard something about the “Bremen Fiend.”
THE MAN AND HIS CRIMES
Thomas, I am inclined to think, had the pride of an artist in his work, a secret enthusiasm in his trade. And one of the most wonderful things about him was that he kept that terrific secret so deep down within him that its existence was never suspected by his most familiar intimates. Yet was Tom, in his ordinary walk and conversation, the least secretive man I have ever met. He would blurt out anything, things to his own disadvantage as readily as anything else. He would get drunk at the club and talk with the loosest tongue imaginable; he had no reserves, no bit or bridle of any sort. He used to do many things which propriety forbade; and he would blab of them, in the confidences of intoxication, till you were certain you had seen to the very bottom of his foolish soul. And yet, all the while, that blackest and most hideous of secrets was lying within there, and he was so secure about it that he had no fear that the veil would be pushed aside. It was so deep down, perhaps, that he could not have reached it if he would. How could the least guarded of men be at the same time the most abysmally impenetrable? Was there a whole man, of diabolic and terrific proportions and purposes—-a Mr. Hyde such as even Stevenson never dared imagine—-whom we never caught one glimpse of, or dreamed of, hidden somewhere in that huge body? Was the man we saw, and thought we knew, only an actor's part, consummately and unremittingly played? It must have been so; and yet, I don't know. Somehow, I cannot think of Tom as insincere. His crimes were in some way distinct from himself; as Byron says of man's love—-that it is “a thing apart.” The devil had a part in him; but it had been agreed between them, when the bargain was made, that Tom, so long as he lived, was to retain his care-free and lighthearted disposition unaffected by the awful compact. Besides, I have little doubt that Tom was a thoroughgoing fatalist. He believed that it is appointed unto all men once to die, and that if he so arranged things that the death should be the occasion of profit to himself it altered nothing in the course of destiny. I have a special ground for this conviction, which I will now relate.
At one period of my Dresden sojourn, I had occasion to visit London to get out the English copyright on one of my books. I planned to leave on a certain steamer that called at Southampton on its way to New York. I did not expect to return to Dresden, but to take up my residence in England. When I told Tom of this, he expressed great and, as I felt at the time and still believe, sincere regret at losing an old and loved friend. He inquired with (as I thought) somewhat singular particularity the name of the vessel on which I intended to leave. When I told him, he sat silent for a time, and his ruddy and jovial countenance expressed, or seemed to express, genuine trouble; so that I felt that here was a man who truly cared for me. Finally he said: “Well, old man, partings are bad things; but they have to come, and we must make the best of 'em. No telling, you know, when you say goodby to a friend, whether you'll ever see him again. I’m sorry you're going; but if you must, why, you must, that's all! So I'll tell you what I’ll do; we'll get our crowd together, and I'll give you a good-by dinner–-a bang-up one, with all the fixings. If there's a man there that goes to bed sober, he'll be no friend of mine afterward. We'll drink your health, my boy, with all the honors; and whatever happens, don't you forget that Tom was your friend, and will see you through to the last-—don't you forget it!” And thereupon he shook my hand with the grip and emphasis of the giant that he was, and at once set about the preparations for the dinner.
Well, what of it? Only this, that there was a box of Tom's scheduled to be shipped on the very steamer which was to carry me to Southampton and also, according to Tom's calculation, to another world. He knew, when he made that speech to me, that I was doomed to die by his means, and that, when he bade me farewell, it would be forever. He was sorry—-why should I doubt it?—-and was ready to spend a part of the money my death would bring him in giving me a “bang-up” farewell banquet. He was a fatalist, and the creed of fatalism was in the words he spoke to me. The dinner was given, and no expense was spared, as the penny-a-liners say; and Tom made the speech of farewell, and tears ran down his cheeks as he made it. He embraced me, and we were all very much affected; and why should he have gone to this trouble and expense if he had been pretending? I feel sure that he meant every word and dollar of it; though I am not quite so sure that he also meant all the pleasure that he expressed when, a few days afterward, circumstances caused me to alter my plans so that I went by another boat. He had made his little fatalistic poem about me-—his elegy, so to say—-and may not have been altogether gratified when the emotion and the money turned out to have been wasted. But that is only my surmise; who knows anything about a man like this?
I have said that we had no cause for suspecting that everything about Tom was not open to the fullest inspection; but this is perhaps not quite accurate. I have alluded to the rumor that he had been a blockade-runner during the Civil War; there was a certãin flavor of the sea about him, though not such as to appear to any extent in his language. But he was fearless, reckless, powerful; and one could imagine him captain of a privateer, or perhaps even of a pirate, except that we could not have pictured Tom as making anybody walk the plank. He would have been certain to spare him at the last moment, and to invite him to take a drink and eat something. Whether or not he actually had been a pirate or a blockade-runner I cannot say; but obviously, if he had been, those industries must have seemed tame to him in the retrospect, when he contrasted them with the monstrous occupation which he followed during the latter years of his life. What would I not give for a complete biography of Tom, from the cradle upward, subjective as well as objective!
There was one other thing that might have afforded us a gleam of light on his character, had our eyes, seeing, been able to see. One afternoon, in the club, a smart young snippet of fashion, whom I shall call Fred, had been showing off some tricks of legerdemain, and amusing us by producing handkerchiefs out of our hats and silver coins from our ears and noses. Finally he came round to where Tom sat, ponderous and placid, looking out of the window abstractedly with his little twinkling eyes, and thinking, it may be, of the scene on the ship when his next machine went off. Fred began to extract inexplicable purses and bank-notes out of Tom's inner pockets and hat-linings, while the big, red-haired fellow sat inert; when all of a sudden a startling change took place in him. He sat erect, and a dark look frowned over his broad visage; he grasped the slender wrist of the prestidigitator, and almost crushed it in his massive grip.
“You quit!” he said, in a snarling, rasping voice, quite new to us. “I’ve seen men shot dead for less than that!”
Those words have never left my memory; they came like the explosion of a cannon in the reposeful midst of us. Though not very loud, there was such force behind them that they seemed to be driven clean through the slender frame of the unfortunate youth thus addressed, who staggered back appalled. And they left with the rest of us, who were astonished spectators of the incident, a vision of scenes of violence and passion in the past such as we had never before connected with our ideas of Tom. He appeared to recognize that he had thrown a sinister light upon himself; he lapsed into sullen silence, and soon rose and left the room. But after he had gone, we presently recovered our spirits, and told each other that poor Tom must have got out of bed wrong foot foremost that morning; that his wife had probably been scolding him, and other inanities of the kind. None of us imagined that we had had a glimpse of the true nature of one of the great wholesale murderers of mankind.
All the same, none of us afterward felt quite the same toward Tom as before; though our relations with him continued outwardly unaltered there was the perception of some cloud over them. I left Dresden not long after, and never saw him again. Two years, or less, later came the revelation. But I feel that it was only a superficial revelation, after all.
----end
A description of Thomas at the American Club in Dresden,
The New York Herald, December 23, 1875, Page 3, Column 4
The Dynamite Assassin
WHO WAS HE WHEN IN LIFE?--HAS HIS IDENTITY BEEN ESTABLISHED?--CURIOUS INCIDENTS OF BLOCKADE RUNNING DURING THE WAR
To the Editor of the Herald:--
From the editorials and communications in the
HERALD I am led to believe that Thompson, aliaS Thomas,
aliaS Thomasaen, is or was a person whose identity IS
not yet fully established. The writer was in Dresden
during the winter of 1869-'70. The American Club
was then in Its second year, and one of its chief
supporters and leading members was "Father Thomas," a
short, thick set, genial person, with full red beard. he
lived well, entertained handsomely and wAs regarded
by the resident Americans as a liberal gentleman. No
subscription for the relief of ibe poor was without
his name. In one instance two young American ladies
started a school which proved unsuccessful. He called
upon them, handed them $1,000 to furnish their rooms
and commence again, saying that if successful they
could repay him and if not they should not regard it as
a debt.
"Father" Thomas told the writer that he was in the
Confederate service during tne entire war, first as a
blockade runner, then as a soldier in Lee's army and
afterward again a blockade runner. His last service
was as caterer to Lee's army when it should arrive in
Philadelphia. He received instructions from the
government to go to Nassau, N. P., thence to
New York and Philadelphia, and in the latter
city make arrangements for Lee in his
Northern march. For this purpose he
received from the Confederate government a draft on
their English bankers for $36,000. In due lime he
arrived at Philadelphia and awaited Lee's advance. The
battle of Gettysburg convinced him that the rebellion
was soon to end. He saw that the North was prosperous
while the South was bankrupt. As he had lost
about $7,000 in the Confederate service he thought it
was not rubbery to repay himself in the best way he
could. He therefore came to New York and asked the
advice of a prominent banker, who told him to invest
in anything but United States government bonds. After
further inquiries he sold his bill of $35,000 and bought
United Stales securities and sailed lor Europe. Upon
the interest of United States bonds he inlormed me he
was then living.
One day Commodore Worden was in the club, when
"Father" Thomas said to him:--"Commodore, you
ruined me once. The Tennessee (I believe that was
the name of the blockade runner) was loaded with
cotton in Mobile Harbor, ready to run out by the first
opportunity; but you kept too strict watch, and one of
your mortar boats sent a shell through her, which
destroyed her and the whole cargo. Half thai cotton was
mine," The Commodore listened attentively and then
replied:--"Thomas, if ever I catch you in such bad
company again I should take as much pleasure in putting
a bullet through your heart as 1 did in putting that
bomb through the Tennessee."
Thomas straightened himself, and, throwing open his
coat, said:--"Commodore, if you ever do I shall
thereat open my coat thus and tell you to fire, for I
should deserve it then, as 1 now deserve it for what I
have already done. I am a thoroughly reconstructed
rebel."
Mr. Curtin was then then United States Minister at
St. Petersburg. His family were spending the winter in
Dresden, and he came dowu und remained there several weeks.
Just beforo be left he gave a dinner to the
members of tho club. At this dinner "Father" Thomas
was seated on ex-Governor Curtin's right hand. Mr.
Curtin's speech was delivered in one of bis humorous
veins, and, in paying a high compliment to Thomas, he
proposed the toast of "Our reunited country," and
called upon Thomas to reply. Thomas rose, cried like
a baby, finally commanded himself, spoke like a man
and won the hearts of all present.
The above incidents do not show him to be the devil
which tbe originator of this dynamite plot most
assuredly was. It is hard to believe that be sank so low
in six years. Yet, from the descriptions given in the
HERALD, "Father Thomas" resembles him strongly in
everything but character.
----end
he New York Herald, December 19, 1875, Page 5, Column 5
The Dynamite Demon
[...]
Yesterday morning a Herald reporter met an old associate
of the dead Captain, and in the conversation
that ensued obtained the following facts:--"His real
name was William King Thompson; he was a man
about forty-five years old and wore a full red beard; his
eyes were very small and quite blue; his temperament
was of the nervous sort, and at times his anger was
terrible in its expression. He wore glasses over his
eyes whenever I saw him, and I think he wore them
habitually, because he was so nearsighted. 1 should
think, from what I remember of his size, that he
weighed fully 27S pounds, I was intimately acquainted
with him during his residence in Leipzic in the fall of
1871 and until the summer of 1873, when he lived
there with his family. After that be moved to Strehla,
near Dresden, and I lost track of him. In conversation
he often told me of his friends In America, and
said that he was born in Brooklyn, L. I. I know very
well of his marriage. He wedded a beautiful woman
from Louisiana, I think, a native of. New Orleans. She
is living yet, and has four children to care for. I hope
that the sins of tho father will not fall upon their heads
for they are innocent. The Captain resided in Virginia
from 1862 until 1865, and his rapid accumulation of
wealth by blockade speculations was very familiar to
me."
[...]
----end
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A slight error
Whitaker Wright did not put the former Viceroy of India, the Earl of Ripon, into the chairmanship of the London and Globe firm. It was the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava who was put into that position, and he had too had been Viceroy of India.
Jeff
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Originally posted by TradeName View PostThanks, Jeff.
For some reason I read a couple more of the Julian Hawthorne/Inspector Byrnes novels.
Another's Crime starts out straightforwardly enough as a prodigal son is accused of filching bank notes from the married woman he is involved with in a not quite sinful way, but then descends into a series of improbable events and unlikely coincidences. Byrnes is a minor character, at best. I was unable to determine what true crime story, if any, inspired this novel.
Another's Crime: From the Diary of Inspector Byrnes (New York: Cassell, 1888), link
by Julian Hawthorne
You might think a novel called An American Penman would be mostly concerned with the doings of a forger from the United States, but instead the focus is on a newly impoverished Russian count who, down to his last two cents, is saved from ruin when Inspector Byrnes recruits him as an undercover agent to track down the titular criminal in Europe. Even the characters themselves are confused by some of the coincidences in this story. Again, I'm not sure which actual criminal may have inspired this tale.
An American Penman: From the Diary of Inspector Byrnes (New York: Cassell, 1888), link
by Julian Hawthorne
In 1913 Julian Hawthorne was convicted in a federal court of mail fraud in connection with the sale of mining stocks. It was reported that Hawthorne was run out of London by Labouchere.
A pamphlet credited to Hawthorne about a certain Biblical mine owner.
The Secret of Solomon (1909), link
by Julian Hawthorne
New York Sun, October 24, 1911, Page 11, Column 1
Julian Hawthorne Inquiry
Sale of $10,000,000 in Mining Stocks Scrutinized
The mining enterprises of Julian Hawthorne,
son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, to
which the SUN called attention a year
and a half ago, are under investigation
by the Federal Grand Jury sitting in Ihe
Post Office building. It was said yesterday
that a number of subpenas had been
issued calling for employees of
Hawthorne's companies and various persons
associated with him.
The Grand Jury proceedings have followed
an investigation by the Post Office
authorities. A rumor about the Federal
building yesterday was that action in
the case at the present time was a result
of an appeal made to Senator Elihu Root
by friends of his who had bought some of
Mr. Hawthorne's stock.
One of Mr. Hawthorne's associates
was sent for and had a talk with
Assistant United States Attorney Thompson
yesterday was Albert Freeman, who
has been peddling mining stock for years
and who next to Mr. Hawthorne has been
the chief figure in the Hawthorne Silver
and Iron Mines, Ltd., The Temagamini
Cobalt Mines, Ltd., and the Montreal-James
Company, to mention only a few.
Ex-Mayor Josiah Quincy of Boston is to
see Mr. Thompson to-morrow, but whether
he is to go before the Grand Jury or not
is not stated.
Mr. Quincy is a director of the King
Solomon Gold Mining Company one of
Freeman's early stock selling enterprises
which was going to pay 30 per cent. dividends
on a 10 cents a share basis, but
didn't. Mr. Thompson said yesterday
that he would like very much to see Mr.
Hawthorne himself, but thus far had not
succeeded in getting him. A son of Hawthorne
was one of his callers yesterday,
A iittle over a year ago after THE SUN
called attention to the outpouring of
stock from the Cambridge Building,
which had been going on for several
yeas. Mr. Hawthorn removed to London.
There he opened elaborate offices
and With the prolific pen which he had
diverted from other forms of literature
to mining prospectuses he began painting
for Englishmen the opportunities to
get rich through the purchase of Hawthorne
silver mines stock, Business
seemed to flourish there for a while until
Mr. Labouchere of Truth informed his
compatriots of what THE SUN had had
to say about the enterprises. After that
the stock sales fell off.
The office of the Hawthorne Silver
and Iron Mines, Limited is no longer in
the Cambridge Building where the Hawthorne
typewriters once clicked so merrily.
The name of Albert Freeman,
however, appears on the door of room 518,
Mr. Freeman was somewhere behind the
door yesterday. A girl in the office said
that the Hawthorne company's offices
was now at Kingston, Ont., and was in
charge of J. B. Hanna. For four years
Hawthorne and Freeman have been scattering
stock far and wide from their
headquarters in the Cambridge Building.
The stock selling stopped about
four months ago and with it the output
of literature describing the properties
up in Canada. Mr. Freeman says that
Mr. Hawthorne has sold his interest in
the companies to Hanna.
The Hawthorne Silver and Iron Mines
Limited. the last creation of the outfit
in the Cambridge Building, was represented
to own in Canada 12,000 acres
rich in iron, silver and gold. There
were two square miles of almost solid
silver, it seemed. It was to yield certainly
20 per cent., and with the expenditure
of capital, Mr. Hawthorne said,
it could easily be made to yield 100 per
cent. dividends in a year's time. There
were 15,000,000 $1 shares in this company
sold at the bargain price of 30 cents a
share at first and raised in price occasionally
to make them look more attractive to
the sucker list. There haven't been any
dividends in this or any other companies
described by Mr. Hawthorne's pen.
Before launching the Hawthorne silver
mines the outfit had launched the
Temagamini Cobalt Mines Ltd., capitalized
at $3,000,000; the Elklake-Cobalt
Mines with a capitalization of $1,000,000.
and the Montreal-James Company. All
were based on those acres and acres up
in Canada, to reach which you get off at
Temagamini and walk or ride the rest
of the way through the wilderness. Land
up that way, THE SUN showed, could
be bought at $1 an acre and leased for
much less, the reason being that the
experts employed by the big Cobalt silver
companies had decided that the silver
that was in workable quantities up that
way was in the few square miles of the
Cobalt cap and nowhere else. Small
surface showings sufficient to use for
stock selling purposes could be found
easily in divers places, however.
As each company of the Hawthorne-Freeman
string was pushed off the ways
the author seized his pen and described
glowingly the prospects of dividends
and ore shipmentS. Stock in the first
company was sold because, said Mr. Hawthorne,
they wanted to begin shipping
ore in ninety days. It was to rival the
big Cobalt producers. That was four
years ago. Next the Elklake-Cobalt was
to begin shipping ore on February 1, 1909.
There were hurry up letters from Freeman,
written from the camp, to help
along the big boost. And so it went.
Stock of the par value of something like
$10,000,000 has been successfully distributed
in return for real money.
----end
A sampling of NYT articles about the mining case. (Look for "download a high-resolution PDF" link on the abstract page.)
New York Times, October 24, 1911, link
Federal Probe into Hawthorne Mines
New York Times, January 06, 1912, link
Hawthorne Accused of $3,000,000 Fraud
New York Times, December 03, 1912, link
Hawthorne Wanted to be an Altruist
New York Times, December 04, 1912, link
Judge Hears Enough Hawthorne Letters
New York Times, December 13, 1912, link
40,0000 Hawthorne Letters
New York Times, March 15, 1913, link
Convict Three men in Hawthorne case
New York Times, October 16, 1913, link
Hawthorne out of Prison
I had heard that Julian Hawthorne got into legal trouble over a stock swindle, so thank you for bringing out what it was. The fact that he used ex-Mayor Josiah Quincy of Boston as one of his corporate directors was not uncommon in that period. Whitaker Wright, whose London and Glove Corporate Swindle of 1902-03 was a major disaster on the London 'Change, put the former Viceroy of India, the Marquis of Ripon into the post of Chairman of the Board (although Wright was what we'd term the C.E.O. and center of the firms). Ripon was so humiliated in the wake of the disaster at being used that his own life was shortened, and he died in 1902.
Quincy was of the "Boston Brahmin" group who directed the affairs of Boston and Massachusetts for much of the late 18th and 19th Centuries, so his addition to Hawthorne's business boards was on par with Wright using Ripon.
You would have to give more of the plots of both Hawthorne-Byrnes novels for one to ascertain the basis for the stories, and given how bad they are it probably doesn't matter.
Jeff
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-
Thanks, Jeff.
For some reason I read a couple more of the Julian Hawthorne/Inspector Byrnes novels.
Another's Crime starts out straightforwardly enough as a prodigal son is accused of filching bank notes from the married woman he is involved with in a not quite sinful way, but then descends into a series of improbable events and unlikely coincidences. Byrnes is a minor character, at best. I was unable to determine what true crime story, if any, inspired this novel.
Another's Crime: From the Diary of Inspector Byrnes (New York: Cassell, 1888), link
by Julian Hawthorne
You might think a novel called An American Penman would be mostly concerned with the doings of a forger from the United States, but instead the focus is on a newly impoverished Russian count who, down to his last two cents, is saved from ruin when Inspector Byrnes recruits him as an undercover agent to track down the titular criminal in Europe. Even the characters themselves are confused by some of the coincidences in this story. Again, I'm not sure which actual criminal may have inspired this tale.
An American Penman: From the Diary of Inspector Byrnes (New York: Cassell, 1888), link
by Julian Hawthorne
In 1913 Julian Hawthorne was convicted in a federal court of mail fraud in connection with the sale of mining stocks. It was reported that Hawthorne was run out of London by Labouchere.
A pamphlet credited to Hawthorne about a certain Biblical mine owner.
The Secret of Solomon (1909), link
by Julian Hawthorne
New York Sun, October 24, 1911, Page 11, Column 1
Julian Hawthorne Inquiry
Sale of $10,000,000 in Mining Stocks Scrutinized
The mining enterprises of Julian Hawthorne,
son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, to
which the SUN called attention a year
and a half ago, are under investigation
by the Federal Grand Jury sitting in Ihe
Post Office building. It was said yesterday
that a number of subpenas had been
issued calling for employees of
Hawthorne's companies and various persons
associated with him.
The Grand Jury proceedings have followed
an investigation by the Post Office
authorities. A rumor about the Federal
building yesterday was that action in
the case at the present time was a result
of an appeal made to Senator Elihu Root
by friends of his who had bought some of
Mr. Hawthorne's stock.
One of Mr. Hawthorne's associates
was sent for and had a talk with
Assistant United States Attorney Thompson
yesterday was Albert Freeman, who
has been peddling mining stock for years
and who next to Mr. Hawthorne has been
the chief figure in the Hawthorne Silver
and Iron Mines, Ltd., The Temagamini
Cobalt Mines, Ltd., and the Montreal-James
Company, to mention only a few.
Ex-Mayor Josiah Quincy of Boston is to
see Mr. Thompson to-morrow, but whether
he is to go before the Grand Jury or not
is not stated.
Mr. Quincy is a director of the King
Solomon Gold Mining Company one of
Freeman's early stock selling enterprises
which was going to pay 30 per cent. dividends
on a 10 cents a share basis, but
didn't. Mr. Thompson said yesterday
that he would like very much to see Mr.
Hawthorne himself, but thus far had not
succeeded in getting him. A son of Hawthorne
was one of his callers yesterday,
A iittle over a year ago after THE SUN
called attention to the outpouring of
stock from the Cambridge Building,
which had been going on for several
yeas. Mr. Hawthorn removed to London.
There he opened elaborate offices
and With the prolific pen which he had
diverted from other forms of literature
to mining prospectuses he began painting
for Englishmen the opportunities to
get rich through the purchase of Hawthorne
silver mines stock, Business
seemed to flourish there for a while until
Mr. Labouchere of Truth informed his
compatriots of what THE SUN had had
to say about the enterprises. After that
the stock sales fell off.
The office of the Hawthorne Silver
and Iron Mines, Limited is no longer in
the Cambridge Building where the Hawthorne
typewriters once clicked so merrily.
The name of Albert Freeman,
however, appears on the door of room 518,
Mr. Freeman was somewhere behind the
door yesterday. A girl in the office said
that the Hawthorne company's offices
was now at Kingston, Ont., and was in
charge of J. B. Hanna. For four years
Hawthorne and Freeman have been scattering
stock far and wide from their
headquarters in the Cambridge Building.
The stock selling stopped about
four months ago and with it the output
of literature describing the properties
up in Canada. Mr. Freeman says that
Mr. Hawthorne has sold his interest in
the companies to Hanna.
The Hawthorne Silver and Iron Mines
Limited. the last creation of the outfit
in the Cambridge Building, was represented
to own in Canada 12,000 acres
rich in iron, silver and gold. There
were two square miles of almost solid
silver, it seemed. It was to yield certainly
20 per cent., and with the expenditure
of capital, Mr. Hawthorne said,
it could easily be made to yield 100 per
cent. dividends in a year's time. There
were 15,000,000 $1 shares in this company
sold at the bargain price of 30 cents a
share at first and raised in price occasionally
to make them look more attractive to
the sucker list. There haven't been any
dividends in this or any other companies
described by Mr. Hawthorne's pen.
Before launching the Hawthorne silver
mines the outfit had launched the
Temagamini Cobalt Mines Ltd., capitalized
at $3,000,000; the Elklake-Cobalt
Mines with a capitalization of $1,000,000.
and the Montreal-James Company. All
were based on those acres and acres up
in Canada, to reach which you get off at
Temagamini and walk or ride the rest
of the way through the wilderness. Land
up that way, THE SUN showed, could
be bought at $1 an acre and leased for
much less, the reason being that the
experts employed by the big Cobalt silver
companies had decided that the silver
that was in workable quantities up that
way was in the few square miles of the
Cobalt cap and nowhere else. Small
surface showings sufficient to use for
stock selling purposes could be found
easily in divers places, however.
As each company of the Hawthorne-Freeman
string was pushed off the ways
the author seized his pen and described
glowingly the prospects of dividends
and ore shipmentS. Stock in the first
company was sold because, said Mr. Hawthorne,
they wanted to begin shipping
ore in ninety days. It was to rival the
big Cobalt producers. That was four
years ago. Next the Elklake-Cobalt was
to begin shipping ore on February 1, 1909.
There were hurry up letters from Freeman,
written from the camp, to help
along the big boost. And so it went.
Stock of the par value of something like
$10,000,000 has been successfully distributed
in return for real money.
----end
A sampling of NYT articles about the mining case. (Look for "download a high-resolution PDF" link on the abstract page.)
New York Times, October 24, 1911, link
Federal Probe into Hawthorne Mines
New York Times, January 06, 1912, link
Hawthorne Accused of $3,000,000 Fraud
New York Times, December 03, 1912, link
Hawthorne Wanted to be an Altruist
New York Times, December 04, 1912, link
Judge Hears Enough Hawthorne Letters
New York Times, December 13, 1912, link
40,0000 Hawthorne Letters
New York Times, March 15, 1913, link
Convict Three men in Hawthorne case
New York Times, October 16, 1913, link
Hawthorne out of Prison
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Originally posted by TradeName View PostThanks, Jeff.
There were rumors that J. Howard Welles had embezzled money from the US Army during the Civil War.
Memphis Daily Appeal, November 17, 1881, Page 2, Column 3
The Wells Frauds
J. Howard Wells, the man arrested for
attempting to blackmail Jay Gould in New
York on Monday, is remembered by some
of the old army officers as an officer who defrauded
the Government of between $1,000,000
and $2,000,000 during the war, and departed
for Europe before his shortcomings
were brought to light. He was a captain
and commissary of subsistence, and was for
a long time in charge of the purchasing depot
in Baltimore. His time expired and he
was mustered out May 19, 1865. He was relieved
by an officer whose name cannot now
be given, but for the present purpose may be
called Johnson, an old gentleman who
had seen some hard service in the field as
commissary of subsistence, but the aggregate
of his transactions was small and his experience
was very limited in dealing with large
values. Through Congressional influence
the authorities were influenced to give him
an easy berth for the last few months of his
service, and he was ordered to Baltimore to
relieve Wells. Wells's accounts were found
to be in perfect order, and his cash
and bank account corresponded with his
books to a cent. There only remained the
property on hand, which was necessarily
very large in bulk and value, Baltimore
being one of the chief purchasing depots for
the army. There were six large warehouses
filled with supplies, and these Wells exhibited
to Johnson, explaining that it would
consume much time to chetk off the property
in detail, and assuring him that everything
was correct. Johnson thereupon receipted
for the entire amount, both of
money and stores, which Wells claimed to
have on hand. Wells started at once for
New York, and within three days sailed for
Europe. Johnson's term expired May 31,
1865, aud an officer of tbe regular army was
sent to relieve him. Johnson exhibited his
books, cash and bank account as Wells had
done, and then attempted to turn over his
stores in bulk.
"No," said the regular army officer, "that
is not the way I do business. We will check
off the stores."
"But," said Johnson, "that is the way I received
them. It will take a long time to
check them off."
"It must be done," rejoined the other, "if
it takes six years."
Johnson's time was therefore continued,
and he was not released from his obligations
until December of that year. Meanwhile an
investigation was in progress, which disclosed
the fact that Wells was short in his stores between
one and two millions in value. His
method of operations was similar to that
more recently adopted by Captain Howgate.
It may best be understood from an illustration.
He went to a dealer in flour, for example,
and purchased 1000 barrels, for
which he received vouchers in duplicate
when be paid the money. He filled out the
first voucher in full, but said to the dealer
that his clerk would fill out the duplicate at
his leisure. Wells was aware a purchaser,
and transactions of the kind were so common
that no question was made by dealers
of the propriety of the action. After getting
his duplicate vouchers. Wells filled
out the one signed in blank, making the
purchase appear as 10,000 barrels, and this
raised voucher he turned into the accounting
office. He carried the 10,000 barrels
on his property returns and books, and
made his books and accounts agree with
scrupulous exactness. It was, in fact, impossible
to detect his frauds, except by
checking off his stores, aud this was a work
of months. He doubtless intended, if that
work was ever begun, to leave the country
before its completion, but his successor's inexperience
opened a way for the formal settlement
of his accounts, so that his record
was made complete up to the time he was
mustered out. Some irregularities were
hinted at a day or two after his departure,
and a rumor found its way into the Baltimore
papers to the effect that all was not as
it should be. Thereupon Mrs. Wells came
to Washington very indignant that any suspicion
of her husband's integrity should be
entertaiund. She, however, left almost immediately
and took an early steamer for
Europe. Since that time nothing has been
heard of the pair until the developments
contained in the New York papers of this
Morning.
It was learned during the investigation
that Wells, when at Baltimore, was a heavy
operator in Wall street, keeping large sums
on deposit in New York, as margins for his
speculations. It was given out in Baltimore
that he was very successful in operations in
gold.
At the time he was known in Baltimore, he
spelled his name "Well." and his autograph
in full, round hand, ''J. Howard Wells, Captain,
etc., U. S. Volunteers," is well remembered
by the accounting officials of tbe Treasury
and the Commissary Department,
---end
The rumors do seem to date back to 1865.
Daily National Republican (Washington, D.C.), August 01, 1865, SECOND EDITION, Page 2, Column 7
Rumored Defalcation
The Pittsburg Commercial of Saturday contains the following:
"There Is considerable talk in reference to
a Government official in the Commissary Department
who not long ago was in the
Commissary Department in Baltimore, now
absent, he having resigned or been requested
so to do. Rumor has it he is a defaulter to
the Government in a large amount, probably
$300,000. It is hoped these reports may
prove untrue, and that the party in question
will be able to square up satisfactorily to
himself, his friends, and all others concerned.
One report is, that the party in question has
gone to Europe."
The last officer in charge of the Commissary
Department here, and who recently
resigned, was Capt. J. Howard Wells, formerly
of New York, who is said to have gone to
Europe. We know nothing connecting him
with tne alleged defalcation. Balt. Amer.
---end
Welles seems to have been promoted to colonel after leaving the army.
Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States, February 6, 1867, Page 162
By United States. Congress. Senate
To be lieutenant-colonels by brevet.
Brevet Major J. Howard Wells, late captain and commissary of subsistence of Volunteers, for faithful services during the war, to date from March 13,1865.
[...]
To be majors by brevet.
J. Howard Wells, late captain and commissary of subsistence of volunteers, for faithful services during the war, to date from March 13,
----end
Thomas Byrnes testified about the Welles case before the state senate committee that was investigation the New York Police Department by way of explaining how Jay Gould had become his personal stock broker.
Report and Proceedings of the Senate Committee Appointed to Investigate the New York Police Department, Volume 5 (Albany: 1895), Pages 5717-5722
by New York (State). Legislature. Senate. Committee on Police Dept. of the City of New York, Clarence Lexow, Jacob Aaron Cantor
December 29, 1894
By Chairman Lexow:
Q. Just give us the details as rapidly as you can? A. I want to say that, in 1891 [sic; 1881], there was a man named Colonel Howard Wells, who was a colonel in the army; and I understood then, and do now, that he was the commissary in charge of New Orleans when Butler entered there, and had charge of the commissary's stores at New Orleans; he had been a rich man and he lost his fortune; he came on here to New York; he conceived the idea that he had lost his fortune, and he might have lost it in the Gould properties; after losing his fortune, he started writing a series of letters to Mr. Gould and Mrs. Gould, stating that he was dedicated by God to kill him for the Wge amount of destitution, etc., that he had brought on people, and giving some of the properties, the Gould properties, that he had lost his money in; and stated that if he was not reimbursed that he would kill Gould on sight; there were a series of those letters sent to Mr. and Mrs. Gould; the letters did not appear to annoy Mr. Gould; they did annoy Mrs. Gould very much; so much so that there was a meeting at their house and Mr. Connor was sent for, Washington E. Connor, who was Gould's partner at the time; Mrs. Gould was very anxious to ascertain who that man was, fearful relative to her husband; after that interview Mr. Connor sent for me, and I went to see him at his house; he was living at that time, I think, at Forty-fifth street, between Fifth avenue and Madison avenue; he explained the whole matter to me, and said that Mr. Gould was indifferent about the matter to an extent, but that the family was very much annoyed, and wanted to know if it was not possible to have this man arrested; I pursued the usual channel that I would do in a case of that kind; such a case as that, blackmail, or threatening to kill, for some days, and was unable to locate this man; I had a further interview with Connor, and in the meantime he had conceived the idea that they could trace who this man was through the stock market, by giving points how to buy and sell stock, for the purpose of reimbursing them for what he stated he had lost; the letters that came were all to be answered through the personals in the New York Herald; we talked it over, and Mr. Connor, through me, put a personal in the Herald, asking that this man should send a key to the stocks that he wanted to make money out of; he sent this key, that I will now read: it is dated November 13, 1881.
Q. Is that the original paper you hold in your hand? A. No, sir, it is not; it is a copy of the original.
Q. Made at the time? A. No; this has been made within three or four days.
Q. And what did you make it from? A. From the newspaper accounts of that time; as it was printed in all the newspapers for a week, probably, in and out; he called Western Union, "Windsor," and all that stock was to be sent up for his people; there would be a personal put in the New York Herald, "Windsor, uptown;" the day that that was put in the newspaper there were a few thousand shares of Western Union sold, and through Mr. Connor's knowledge of the market, through the knowledge of the Gould brokers on the floor, they were able to trace every share of that stock to the different offices, and who the purchasers were; it did not show that any man had bought any large quantity of that stock; Erie was called "Spoon;" Texas Pacific, "White;" Manhattan Elevated, "Salvation;" Northern Pacific, "Common Wheat;" Northern Pacific preferred, "Cohen;" Lake Shore, "Exchange;" Pacific Mail, "Concord;" now if there was a personal put in the paper, we will say for "Ooncord Downtown " he knew that that day that he could go and sell Pacific Mail, and it would be a sure thing for it to go down, and it did go down; there not one of them ciphers there in that key that I haven't put in the newspapers, and there is not one of them that the market has not either went up or down on that day; that knowledge that I had for three months, or for two months, if I was a dishonest man I could have made $500,000 out of it; I could have used that key; I could have took two or three men and sent them to different cities, or right here in New York, and had them bought two or three thousand stocks on that, either up or down, I had a sure thing, there was no chance in the world for me to loose [sic]; that is the only sure thing I ever had in my life; but I didn't do it, of course, I only say that; now, that ran along for some two or three months, and at no time during that period of time was Connor, or his associates in the board, able to trace any large quantity of stock to any one man, because if they had they might assume that was the man, and followed him up and got his handwriting, as we had a lot of his letters, because at that time Mr. Gould had Mr. James, who was postmaster-general to have Mr. Pierson give Mr. Connor and myself all his letters, and in running them over we could pick out his letters immediately, because it was a long scrawling hand that could be detected in a second; now, Connor had partially given up, and myself too, this fellow; I had went over these letters probably 150 times in the office, and there was one night I was going over them again, for I don't know, probably the fortieth or fiftieth time; and for the first time I discovered that every letter that was sent to Mr. Gould was posted in station E; station E has a boundary I think from Fourteenth street to Forty-second street, from Fifth avenue to the North river; I immediately had a diagram made of station E, and I found that there were 102 letter-boxes into it; I took the streets north and sorth and east and west, placed the letter-boxes on the corners where they belonged, and there I had station E, and concluded that we could carry out a scheme that I had formulated in my head that night going home, that we could get that fellow in one day; I went and saw Mr. Connor the next night and talked to him about it, and told him that if we could get the postmaster-general, or the postmaster of the city of New York, Mr. Pierson, on Sunday to give us 100 letter-carriers by paying for them—-he paying for them—-that I was satisfied we could get that man on Sunday, in one day; he asked me how; I said, well, I will put a long personal in the Herald on Saturday night upbraiding this man for giving away the information that we give him, or that Mr. Gould is giving him, he thought it was coming from Mr. Gould, to other persons for the purpose of making money; the moment he would read that personal it is the most natural thing in the world that he would hasten to write a letter to Mr. Gould on Sunday assuring him that he would not give that information away to anybody else, that he was simply utilizing it for his own benefit; Mr. Connor thought well of it, thought it was a feasible and practicable thing, and he made arrangements to get those letter-carriers on Sunday, as it was an off day; I then perfected a system—-
Q. Now, superintendent, pardon me, while of course this is extremely interesting, our time is drawing to a close and I have a series of questions; I would like that you would get to the point of your first investment with Mr. Gould, get to that point, if you please? A. My first investment with Mr. Gould was a short time after that, after this man was arrested and was put under bail, and Mr. Gould went to the Tombs and made a complaint against him; Mr. Gould sent for me and I went to his house, he wanted to make me a present of a large sum of money, which I declined to take, he was very much astonished but I declined to take it just the same; in a short time after that in his office he told me he was going to buy me some stock, didn't tell me what it was; I asked him about putting up a margin, etc.; well, he said, "He didn't think it was necessary;" I told him I would rather do it, that I had the money; he said, "All right," and I gave Mr. Gould $10,000; he operated in stocks for me whenever he went into an operation himself, and give me the benefit of profits that accrued from them until the time he died, which was about $185,000.
Q. Well, that $10,000 that you gave Mr. Gould at the commencement, did you draw that from bank? A. No; I don't believe I ever had a bank account at the time.
Q. Where had you the $10,000? A- Well, I don't know, I couldn't tell you; I don't believe I had it in the bank.
Q. Had you it in your house, had you it in safe keeping in any place? A. One moment, let me try to get at it Mr. Goff; I couldn't tell you truthfully where I had it.
Q. It is not so long ago superintendent? A- No; it is only 14 years ago.
Q. Ten thousand dollars is quite a large sum of money? A. Yes; but where ever I had it you can bet I was taking good care of it.
Q. I haven't any doubt about that; can you not tell us where you had it? A. For the moment I can not; I will tell you as I go along if I think of it.
Q. It was not in bank? A. I don't say it was not in hank; I don't think it was.
Q. Was it in the keeping of your wife? A. That I don't know.
Q. Was it in the keeping of your friend? A. I can not answer the question truthfully.
Q. Has it escaped your memory for the time being? A. Yes, sir; I may be able to tell you going along.
Q. Is it not remarkable that your memory would fail upon such an important point as that, as to where that $10,000 was? A. No; it is not remarkable; I have to think of so many things, and I travel along so quick, and it wouldn't be remarkable; but as I go along I will try and think of it and tell you.
Q. We will try and get at that later; we have it then that from that $10,000 that you first gave Mr. Gould there flowed to you a profit of about $185,000? A. Possibly, yes.
Q. And did that include the additional $40,000 that Mr. George Gould has made since his father's death? A. No; that is in addition to that.
Q. Now, did you ever invest money with any other person to apply to the purchase of stocks on margin except with Mr. Gould? A. Yes, sir
Q. Will you tell us with whom? A. Is that absolutely necessary; now, I want to say to you that in my position I have been brought in contact with a great many people, some of them are large operators and large investors in the stock market; sometimes business of a private nature where they have been benefited, I mean where there has been blackmailing letters and things like that sent to them, and where the ends of justice have been better served where they would refuse to make a complaint, and all that kind of thing, and they have from time to time advised and bought me stocks which I have made money out of.
Q. In other words that you have had by reason of your position as inspector of police, chief of the detective department, opportunities for winning the confidence or gratitude of men to whom you had rendered service in the nature indicated? A. You can put it in that way, yes, sir.
Q. You would not have had the opportunities were you not in that position? A. No, sir; I would not.
By Chairman Lexow:
Q. Do you mean, superintendent, that you were first brought in relation with them by reason of your official position? A. Yes, sir.
Q. And that afterward culminated in personal friendship? A. Yes, sir.
By Mr. Goff:
Q. Was your office, as chief of the detective bureau of New York, placed at the service of these persons? A. No, sir; it was not.
Q. Then how did you win their confidence? A. As I say, in many cases those people have had trouble by people attempting to blackmail them and doing many other things, and in that way I have been called in to it; my official position, so far as that is concerned, was placed at their disposal for the purpose of protecting their property and their business in and about the vicinity where it was conducted.
Q. But it was your duty, apart from all considerations of future profit, to protect that property? A. Yes, sir; and I did it very thoroughly, too.
Q. But were you moved to protect that property by the hope of gaining the friendship and gratitude of the powerful people in connection with the stock market? A. No, sir; I was glad to have their friendship and gratitude, but my first—-it was my duty first to do it.
Q. Is it not strange, superintendent, that in these various matters where you simply performed your duty as a public officer for the protection of personal property that such remarkable results should have followed? A. They did not follow for the protection of property by any means.
Q. But these successful speculations were not the result of your own judgment? A. The result of my own judgment—-I never bought a share of stock in my life on my own judgment that I didn't lose all I put up, on my own judgment.
Q. As matter of fact, there have been firms in Wall street in whose office you lost considerable money? A. Yes, sir.
----end
There is a reference how Col. Welles (or Wells) embezzlement of government funds in 1865 resembled those of "Captain Howgate". Captain Henry Howgate of the U.S. Signal Corps was their quartermaster in Washington, D.C. from the late 1870s until 1882, when he disappeared as soon as it was apparent his books did not balance. Soon it turned out that he'd been doing what Welles had been doing a decade earlier, but in his case it was because of his special position in the Signal Corps in Washington. He and his pretty young wife were constantly in the center of the social world in the nation's capital, frequently throwing parties to get Congressmen to support military expenditures. As soon as he knew that he was found out (using government monies to maintain his image as a well-to-do socialite) he fled. However he was later recaptured and tried and convicted for a few years imprisonment.
Jeff
Leave a comment:
-
Thanks, Jeff.
There were rumors that J. Howard Welles had embezzled money from the US Army during the Civil War.
Memphis Daily Appeal, November 17, 1881, Page 2, Column 3
The Wells Frauds
J. Howard Wells, the man arrested for
attempting to blackmail Jay Gould in New
York on Monday, is remembered by some
of the old army officers as an officer who defrauded
the Government of between $1,000,000
and $2,000,000 during the war, and departed
for Europe before his shortcomings
were brought to light. He was a captain
and commissary of subsistence, and was for
a long time in charge of the purchasing depot
in Baltimore. His time expired and he
was mustered out May 19, 1865. He was relieved
by an officer whose name cannot now
be given, but for the present purpose may be
called Johnson, an old gentleman who
had seen some hard service in the field as
commissary of subsistence, but the aggregate
of his transactions was small and his experience
was very limited in dealing with large
values. Through Congressional influence
the authorities were influenced to give him
an easy berth for the last few months of his
service, and he was ordered to Baltimore to
relieve Wells. Wells's accounts were found
to be in perfect order, and his cash
and bank account corresponded with his
books to a cent. There only remained the
property on hand, which was necessarily
very large in bulk and value, Baltimore
being one of the chief purchasing depots for
the army. There were six large warehouses
filled with supplies, and these Wells exhibited
to Johnson, explaining that it would
consume much time to chetk off the property
in detail, and assuring him that everything
was correct. Johnson thereupon receipted
for the entire amount, both of
money and stores, which Wells claimed to
have on hand. Wells started at once for
New York, and within three days sailed for
Europe. Johnson's term expired May 31,
1865, aud an officer of tbe regular army was
sent to relieve him. Johnson exhibited his
books, cash and bank account as Wells had
done, and then attempted to turn over his
stores in bulk.
"No," said the regular army officer, "that
is not the way I do business. We will check
off the stores."
"But," said Johnson, "that is the way I received
them. It will take a long time to
check them off."
"It must be done," rejoined the other, "if
it takes six years."
Johnson's time was therefore continued,
and he was not released from his obligations
until December of that year. Meanwhile an
investigation was in progress, which disclosed
the fact that Wells was short in his stores between
one and two millions in value. His
method of operations was similar to that
more recently adopted by Captain Howgate.
It may best be understood from an illustration.
He went to a dealer in flour, for example,
and purchased 1000 barrels, for
which he received vouchers in duplicate
when be paid the money. He filled out the
first voucher in full, but said to the dealer
that his clerk would fill out the duplicate at
his leisure. Wells was aware a purchaser,
and transactions of the kind were so common
that no question was made by dealers
of the propriety of the action. After getting
his duplicate vouchers. Wells filled
out the one signed in blank, making the
purchase appear as 10,000 barrels, and this
raised voucher he turned into the accounting
office. He carried the 10,000 barrels
on his property returns and books, and
made his books and accounts agree with
scrupulous exactness. It was, in fact, impossible
to detect his frauds, except by
checking off his stores, aud this was a work
of months. He doubtless intended, if that
work was ever begun, to leave the country
before its completion, but his successor's inexperience
opened a way for the formal settlement
of his accounts, so that his record
was made complete up to the time he was
mustered out. Some irregularities were
hinted at a day or two after his departure,
and a rumor found its way into the Baltimore
papers to the effect that all was not as
it should be. Thereupon Mrs. Wells came
to Washington very indignant that any suspicion
of her husband's integrity should be
entertaiund. She, however, left almost immediately
and took an early steamer for
Europe. Since that time nothing has been
heard of the pair until the developments
contained in the New York papers of this
Morning.
It was learned during the investigation
that Wells, when at Baltimore, was a heavy
operator in Wall street, keeping large sums
on deposit in New York, as margins for his
speculations. It was given out in Baltimore
that he was very successful in operations in
gold.
At the time he was known in Baltimore, he
spelled his name "Well." and his autograph
in full, round hand, ''J. Howard Wells, Captain,
etc., U. S. Volunteers," is well remembered
by the accounting officials of tbe Treasury
and the Commissary Department,
---end
The rumors do seem to date back to 1865.
Daily National Republican (Washington, D.C.), August 01, 1865, SECOND EDITION, Page 2, Column 7
Rumored Defalcation
The Pittsburg Commercial of Saturday contains the following:
"There Is considerable talk in reference to
a Government official in the Commissary Department
who not long ago was in the
Commissary Department in Baltimore, now
absent, he having resigned or been requested
so to do. Rumor has it he is a defaulter to
the Government in a large amount, probably
$300,000. It is hoped these reports may
prove untrue, and that the party in question
will be able to square up satisfactorily to
himself, his friends, and all others concerned.
One report is, that the party in question has
gone to Europe."
The last officer in charge of the Commissary
Department here, and who recently
resigned, was Capt. J. Howard Wells, formerly
of New York, who is said to have gone to
Europe. We know nothing connecting him
with tne alleged defalcation. Balt. Amer.
---end
Welles seems to have been promoted to colonel after leaving the army.
Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States, February 6, 1867, Page 162
By United States. Congress. Senate
To be lieutenant-colonels by brevet.
Brevet Major J. Howard Wells, late captain and commissary of subsistence of Volunteers, for faithful services during the war, to date from March 13,1865.
[...]
To be majors by brevet.
J. Howard Wells, late captain and commissary of subsistence of volunteers, for faithful services during the war, to date from March 13,
----end
Thomas Byrnes testified about the Welles case before the state senate committee that was investigation the New York Police Department by way of explaining how Jay Gould had become his personal stock broker.
Report and Proceedings of the Senate Committee Appointed to Investigate the New York Police Department, Volume 5 (Albany: 1895), Pages 5717-5722
by New York (State). Legislature. Senate. Committee on Police Dept. of the City of New York, Clarence Lexow, Jacob Aaron Cantor
December 29, 1894
By Chairman Lexow:
Q. Just give us the details as rapidly as you can? A. I want to say that, in 1891 [sic; 1881], there was a man named Colonel Howard Wells, who was a colonel in the army; and I understood then, and do now, that he was the commissary in charge of New Orleans when Butler entered there, and had charge of the commissary's stores at New Orleans; he had been a rich man and he lost his fortune; he came on here to New York; he conceived the idea that he had lost his fortune, and he might have lost it in the Gould properties; after losing his fortune, he started writing a series of letters to Mr. Gould and Mrs. Gould, stating that he was dedicated by God to kill him for the Wge amount of destitution, etc., that he had brought on people, and giving some of the properties, the Gould properties, that he had lost his money in; and stated that if he was not reimbursed that he would kill Gould on sight; there were a series of those letters sent to Mr. and Mrs. Gould; the letters did not appear to annoy Mr. Gould; they did annoy Mrs. Gould very much; so much so that there was a meeting at their house and Mr. Connor was sent for, Washington E. Connor, who was Gould's partner at the time; Mrs. Gould was very anxious to ascertain who that man was, fearful relative to her husband; after that interview Mr. Connor sent for me, and I went to see him at his house; he was living at that time, I think, at Forty-fifth street, between Fifth avenue and Madison avenue; he explained the whole matter to me, and said that Mr. Gould was indifferent about the matter to an extent, but that the family was very much annoyed, and wanted to know if it was not possible to have this man arrested; I pursued the usual channel that I would do in a case of that kind; such a case as that, blackmail, or threatening to kill, for some days, and was unable to locate this man; I had a further interview with Connor, and in the meantime he had conceived the idea that they could trace who this man was through the stock market, by giving points how to buy and sell stock, for the purpose of reimbursing them for what he stated he had lost; the letters that came were all to be answered through the personals in the New York Herald; we talked it over, and Mr. Connor, through me, put a personal in the Herald, asking that this man should send a key to the stocks that he wanted to make money out of; he sent this key, that I will now read: it is dated November 13, 1881.
Q. Is that the original paper you hold in your hand? A. No, sir, it is not; it is a copy of the original.
Q. Made at the time? A. No; this has been made within three or four days.
Q. And what did you make it from? A. From the newspaper accounts of that time; as it was printed in all the newspapers for a week, probably, in and out; he called Western Union, "Windsor," and all that stock was to be sent up for his people; there would be a personal put in the New York Herald, "Windsor, uptown;" the day that that was put in the newspaper there were a few thousand shares of Western Union sold, and through Mr. Connor's knowledge of the market, through the knowledge of the Gould brokers on the floor, they were able to trace every share of that stock to the different offices, and who the purchasers were; it did not show that any man had bought any large quantity of that stock; Erie was called "Spoon;" Texas Pacific, "White;" Manhattan Elevated, "Salvation;" Northern Pacific, "Common Wheat;" Northern Pacific preferred, "Cohen;" Lake Shore, "Exchange;" Pacific Mail, "Concord;" now if there was a personal put in the paper, we will say for "Ooncord Downtown " he knew that that day that he could go and sell Pacific Mail, and it would be a sure thing for it to go down, and it did go down; there not one of them ciphers there in that key that I haven't put in the newspapers, and there is not one of them that the market has not either went up or down on that day; that knowledge that I had for three months, or for two months, if I was a dishonest man I could have made $500,000 out of it; I could have used that key; I could have took two or three men and sent them to different cities, or right here in New York, and had them bought two or three thousand stocks on that, either up or down, I had a sure thing, there was no chance in the world for me to loose [sic]; that is the only sure thing I ever had in my life; but I didn't do it, of course, I only say that; now, that ran along for some two or three months, and at no time during that period of time was Connor, or his associates in the board, able to trace any large quantity of stock to any one man, because if they had they might assume that was the man, and followed him up and got his handwriting, as we had a lot of his letters, because at that time Mr. Gould had Mr. James, who was postmaster-general to have Mr. Pierson give Mr. Connor and myself all his letters, and in running them over we could pick out his letters immediately, because it was a long scrawling hand that could be detected in a second; now, Connor had partially given up, and myself too, this fellow; I had went over these letters probably 150 times in the office, and there was one night I was going over them again, for I don't know, probably the fortieth or fiftieth time; and for the first time I discovered that every letter that was sent to Mr. Gould was posted in station E; station E has a boundary I think from Fourteenth street to Forty-second street, from Fifth avenue to the North river; I immediately had a diagram made of station E, and I found that there were 102 letter-boxes into it; I took the streets north and sorth and east and west, placed the letter-boxes on the corners where they belonged, and there I had station E, and concluded that we could carry out a scheme that I had formulated in my head that night going home, that we could get that fellow in one day; I went and saw Mr. Connor the next night and talked to him about it, and told him that if we could get the postmaster-general, or the postmaster of the city of New York, Mr. Pierson, on Sunday to give us 100 letter-carriers by paying for them—-he paying for them—-that I was satisfied we could get that man on Sunday, in one day; he asked me how; I said, well, I will put a long personal in the Herald on Saturday night upbraiding this man for giving away the information that we give him, or that Mr. Gould is giving him, he thought it was coming from Mr. Gould, to other persons for the purpose of making money; the moment he would read that personal it is the most natural thing in the world that he would hasten to write a letter to Mr. Gould on Sunday assuring him that he would not give that information away to anybody else, that he was simply utilizing it for his own benefit; Mr. Connor thought well of it, thought it was a feasible and practicable thing, and he made arrangements to get those letter-carriers on Sunday, as it was an off day; I then perfected a system—-
Q. Now, superintendent, pardon me, while of course this is extremely interesting, our time is drawing to a close and I have a series of questions; I would like that you would get to the point of your first investment with Mr. Gould, get to that point, if you please? A. My first investment with Mr. Gould was a short time after that, after this man was arrested and was put under bail, and Mr. Gould went to the Tombs and made a complaint against him; Mr. Gould sent for me and I went to his house, he wanted to make me a present of a large sum of money, which I declined to take, he was very much astonished but I declined to take it just the same; in a short time after that in his office he told me he was going to buy me some stock, didn't tell me what it was; I asked him about putting up a margin, etc.; well, he said, "He didn't think it was necessary;" I told him I would rather do it, that I had the money; he said, "All right," and I gave Mr. Gould $10,000; he operated in stocks for me whenever he went into an operation himself, and give me the benefit of profits that accrued from them until the time he died, which was about $185,000.
Q. Well, that $10,000 that you gave Mr. Gould at the commencement, did you draw that from bank? A. No; I don't believe I ever had a bank account at the time.
Q. Where had you the $10,000? A- Well, I don't know, I couldn't tell you; I don't believe I had it in the bank.
Q. Had you it in your house, had you it in safe keeping in any place? A. One moment, let me try to get at it Mr. Goff; I couldn't tell you truthfully where I had it.
Q. It is not so long ago superintendent? A- No; it is only 14 years ago.
Q. Ten thousand dollars is quite a large sum of money? A. Yes; but where ever I had it you can bet I was taking good care of it.
Q. I haven't any doubt about that; can you not tell us where you had it? A. For the moment I can not; I will tell you as I go along if I think of it.
Q. It was not in bank? A. I don't say it was not in hank; I don't think it was.
Q. Was it in the keeping of your wife? A. That I don't know.
Q. Was it in the keeping of your friend? A. I can not answer the question truthfully.
Q. Has it escaped your memory for the time being? A. Yes, sir; I may be able to tell you going along.
Q. Is it not remarkable that your memory would fail upon such an important point as that, as to where that $10,000 was? A. No; it is not remarkable; I have to think of so many things, and I travel along so quick, and it wouldn't be remarkable; but as I go along I will try and think of it and tell you.
Q. We will try and get at that later; we have it then that from that $10,000 that you first gave Mr. Gould there flowed to you a profit of about $185,000? A. Possibly, yes.
Q. And did that include the additional $40,000 that Mr. George Gould has made since his father's death? A. No; that is in addition to that.
Q. Now, did you ever invest money with any other person to apply to the purchase of stocks on margin except with Mr. Gould? A. Yes, sir
Q. Will you tell us with whom? A. Is that absolutely necessary; now, I want to say to you that in my position I have been brought in contact with a great many people, some of them are large operators and large investors in the stock market; sometimes business of a private nature where they have been benefited, I mean where there has been blackmailing letters and things like that sent to them, and where the ends of justice have been better served where they would refuse to make a complaint, and all that kind of thing, and they have from time to time advised and bought me stocks which I have made money out of.
Q. In other words that you have had by reason of your position as inspector of police, chief of the detective department, opportunities for winning the confidence or gratitude of men to whom you had rendered service in the nature indicated? A. You can put it in that way, yes, sir.
Q. You would not have had the opportunities were you not in that position? A. No, sir; I would not.
By Chairman Lexow:
Q. Do you mean, superintendent, that you were first brought in relation with them by reason of your official position? A. Yes, sir.
Q. And that afterward culminated in personal friendship? A. Yes, sir.
By Mr. Goff:
Q. Was your office, as chief of the detective bureau of New York, placed at the service of these persons? A. No, sir; it was not.
Q. Then how did you win their confidence? A. As I say, in many cases those people have had trouble by people attempting to blackmail them and doing many other things, and in that way I have been called in to it; my official position, so far as that is concerned, was placed at their disposal for the purpose of protecting their property and their business in and about the vicinity where it was conducted.
Q. But it was your duty, apart from all considerations of future profit, to protect that property? A. Yes, sir; and I did it very thoroughly, too.
Q. But were you moved to protect that property by the hope of gaining the friendship and gratitude of the powerful people in connection with the stock market? A. No, sir; I was glad to have their friendship and gratitude, but my first—-it was my duty first to do it.
Q. Is it not strange, superintendent, that in these various matters where you simply performed your duty as a public officer for the protection of personal property that such remarkable results should have followed? A. They did not follow for the protection of property by any means.
Q. But these successful speculations were not the result of your own judgment? A. The result of my own judgment—-I never bought a share of stock in my life on my own judgment that I didn't lose all I put up, on my own judgment.
Q. As matter of fact, there have been firms in Wall street in whose office you lost considerable money? A. Yes, sir.
----end
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Some information on Col. J. Howard Welles
The Brooklyn Eagle turned out to be good as a source, and what it said actually supports the account of Chief Walling in his memoirs about the incident:
The critical newspaper for us is the edition of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle of Monday, 14 November 1881 which as the story three times (once in an editorial). The account of the arrest is on Page 2 (as is the editorial) column 8:
"Colonel J. Howard Welles, an elderly gentleman of high social and family relations and a hitherto unblemished reputation, was arrested in New York yesterday while posting a blackmailing letter to Mr. Jay Gould. COlonel Welles' position in society and in business was so high that the charge seemed almost incredible, but he not only confessed his guilt but threatened suicide. The second letter was written to Mr. Gould on October 117, the first having been received a month previously. The writer seemed to be feigning insanity and his statement was to the effect that God had deputized him to slay Mr. Gould. The matter was put into the hands of the police and yesterday he was arrested. Almost every day lately a fresh letter had been received, all mailed at Station E on Eighth Avenue and thirty-third street. Yesterday fifty men were detailed from the Post Office Department to watch the letter boxes and a number of detectives were placed on duty with them. Whenever a letter was dropped in any one of the boxes one of the Post Office men went immediately to the box and looked at the letter. A signal had been decided upon when a letter addressed to Jay Gould was dropped into the box. At 3 o'clock an elderly man carelessly dropped a letter in, and soon the signal was given. In an instant he was arrested. The man was stunned with amazement, and at the station house broke down, wept piteously, and threatened to kill himself."
Interestingly the arraignment is reported in a separate article in the same edition of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle for November 14, 1882, but on page 5. It stated that Major Welles went before Judge Bixby of the Tombs Police Court (the Tombs being the lower Manhattan prison that was used in 1882), accompanied by Inspector Byrnes, and Detectives, Radford, Reilly, and O'Connor. The indictment was for "endeavoring to extort blackmail from Mr. Jay Gould". This report of the arraignment added the detail that Welles was nabbed by the cops on Sunday November 13, 1881 on the corner of Seventh Avenue and 34th Street [the Section E post office no longer stands and the site of this (near where I once worked) is close to Macy's Department Store and the second Madison Square Garden.] Bixby granted Byrnes a remand as he wished to bring in evidence (apparently some documentary) to bolster the arrest and arraignment. From the brief description Byrnes sounds like he was so used to doing this that he was working as smoothly as a trained Assistant District Attorney would under similar circumstances today. A description of Major Welles is in this article. Besides reminding us he was the nephew of "ex-Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles" he is described as having a "severe cast of features", side whiskers, moustache, stands five foot eight inches, and is 53 years of age. He gave his address as No. 6 East 39th Street. [This address probably no longer exists too - that area is now the garment center.]
Back on page 2 there had been an editorial on the incident, and it too mentioned some information in columns 1 and 2. Most we have already, but it does show the amount of work Byrnes put into this case. He had been having that post office watched for 10 days before the arrest, and used the services of the letter carriers and an equal number of detectives watching the 118 post office boxes in the building. One thing is added that I was aware of but it was a separate incident. Earlier in 1880 there had been an incident in lower Manhattan involving Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix, the head of Trinity Church Parish (Episcopalian), and one of New York City's principle religious figures. Like Major Welles, Dix came from a prominent family, his father was General John Dix, who was active in the Civil War and Governor of New York State for awhile in the 1860s. in 1880 Rev. Dix, a man with little personal sense of humor, started getting deluged by people showing up with items like grand pianos, moving vans, dancing troups, opera singers, and other crazy types of people and items, all of whom had gotten letters supposedly from Dix to come to his home at an early hour as he wanted to have use of them or there services, or merchandise. He never sent any of these letters. This peculiar (but somewhat funny) situation continued until the letter writer (who was copying a similar joke created earlier in the 19th Century by humorist and novelist Theodore Hook) was accidentally exposed and arrested. There is a book about this incident "The Rector and the Rogue", which I read years ago. In that case the letter writer ended up in jail.
The odd thing about the information in this case is the Brooklyn Eagle does not reveal further details of the legal action. HOWEVER,
We jump ahead to the Brooklyn Daily Eagle for Thursday, May 8, 1913 (roughly 103 years ago last week). On Page 3 they have an article concerning the will of a wealthy merchant and three bequests which stirred up some scandalous discussion. On page 3, column 5, is an article entitled "No Romance Hidden in Will." It discussed the will of one Russell, a coffee importer connected to Williams, Russell, and Co., at 101 Front Street, Manhattan. This gentleman had died in March 1913 . He was born in 1854 in Brooklyn, the son of William S. S. Russell, one time Vice President of the Long Island Railroad. He had become very rich, but spent most of his life living in a townhouse in Manhattan with two sisters ( who survived him and inherited the bulk of his million dollar estate) and (when she lived) his mother. However he left $25,000.00 apiece to three children of an old friend of his, Mrs. James H. Welles. The three offspring were John Philip Turner Welles (age 30), Winifred Welles, and Russell (interesting name that) Welles, who was the youngest and matriculating at Cornell University. Apparently his motive was he was a friend of the family through the mother, and felt the children had need for money. [If you recall, when Col. Welles began his extortion plot he had chosen Gould because Gould's "tips" regarding stock investments had caused Welles to lose most of his money - hence his desire to get it back from Gould this way.]
He had met their mother Mary Waite when they were young people and they had been friends. She was the daughter of Congressman John Turner Waite, and her uncle was no less than Chief Justice Morrison Waite of the U.S. Supreme Court (1873 to 1888). Here though the article changed one name. Initially it said she was Mrs. JAMES H. Welles. Now it said she was married to John HOWARD Welles, and that they married in Washington. The article also states her husband was the nephew of Gideon Welles. It does not say that the marriage was in Washington D.C., or the state of Washington.
Because of the size of these bequests (in 1913 $25,000.00 was like $200,000.00 today) mere friendship just was too much for people to accept. Could the kids have been Mr. Russell's? Was there a love affair between Russell and Mrs. Welles? His friend and executor James H. Halstead denied any such thing. However, as mentioned before Russell died in March 1913. On April 22, 1913 Mrs. Welles died, only one month and three days after. Both were buried fairly close to each other in Norwich, Connecticut.
Anyway that is all the material I found on this subject.
Jeff
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