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  • #16
    Hi Jeff

    Thanks for that.

    Presumably it was the same kind of thinking that led to his wife being listed on the passenger list as "Mrs Bloom." In fact, if you look at the next name, John Leslie, his wife is listed as 'Mrs Leslie' even though other members of his family have an initial or a full forename.

    Maybe the company encouraged husbands and wives to travel together - the wives would keep an eye on their husbands and ensure that they weren't making whoopee while on company business.

    I have found Bloom in the 1880 and 1900 censuses. In 1880 he and his wife Sarah E Bloom are living in Sullivan, Madison NY. There doesn't seem to be a street address. In 1900, still in Sullivan, he has a new wife, Kathaline, who is 28 years his junior. They've been married a year.

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    • #17
      I don't know the answer to that either, Robert. His first passport was issued when he was around 22 years old. Maybe he had to change it, because his marital status changed and she was now with him?

      Mike
      The Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
      http://www.michaelLhawley.com

      Comment


      • #18
        Thanks Mike. Well, surely he had to go abroad on business between 1880 and 1888, and he is given as married in the 1880 census. But anyway, it's a minor point.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Robert View Post
          Hi Jeff


          Maybe the company encouraged husbands and wives to travel together - the wives would keep an eye on their husbands and ensure that they weren't making whoopee while on company business.

          I have found Bloom in the 1880 and 1900 censuses. In 1880 he and his wife Sarah E Bloom are living in Sullivan, Madison NY. There doesn't seem to be a street address. In 1900, still in Sullivan, he has a new wife, Kathaline, who is 28 years his junior. They've been married a year.
          I believe the proper way of looking at the address is Madison, in Sullivan County, New York. It's a county in the western tier of the state, named after the American Revolutionary War General John Sullivan, who in 1779 was sent on an anti-Six Nation attack on the Iroquois, that led to the destruction of their villages. In it's day it was lauded as a major important victory against the British allies in the Native American peoples (there had been some massacres of American settlers in the Cherry and Wyoming valleys of upstate New York by the Native Americans and the Tories like Walter Butler, and this was the response to that). Today we probably would not think so highly of Sullivan's brutal warfare - but as late as the 1930s his picture appeared on a United States Postage Stamp.

          Jeff

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          • #20
            Thanks Jeff.

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            • #21
              I believe the proper way of looking at the address is Madison, in Sullivan County, New York. It's a county in the western tier of the state, named after the American Revolutionary War General John Sullivan, who in 1779 was sent on an anti-Six Nation attack on the Iroquois, that led to the destruction of their villages. In it's day it was lauded as a major important victory against the British allies in the Native American peoples (there had been some massacres of American settlers in the Cherry and Wyoming valleys of upstate New York by the Native Americans and the Tories like Walter Butler, and this was the response to that). Today we probably would not think so highly of Sullivan's brutal warfare - but as late as the 1930s his picture appeared on a United States Postage Stamp.

              -Jeff Bloomfield-

              Jeff....my Greatx4 Grandpop was also a (Brigadier) General in the Indian Wars...he knew Sullivan. His name was Josiah Harmar

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              • #22
                Originally posted by Howard Brown View Post
                I believe the proper way of looking at the address is Madison, in Sullivan County, New York. It's a county in the western tier of the state, named after the American Revolutionary War General John Sullivan, who in 1779 was sent on an anti-Six Nation attack on the Iroquois, that led to the destruction of their villages. In it's day it was lauded as a major important victory against the British allies in the Native American peoples (there had been some massacres of American settlers in the Cherry and Wyoming valleys of upstate New York by the Native Americans and the Tories like Walter Butler, and this was the response to that). Today we probably would not think so highly of Sullivan's brutal warfare - but as late as the 1930s his picture appeared on a United States Postage Stamp.

                -Jeff Bloomfield-

                Jeff....my Greatx4 Grandpop was also a (Brigadier) General in the Indian Wars...he knew Sullivan. His name was Josiah Harmar
                http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Indian_War
                Hi Howard,

                The Indian Frontier War in Upstate New York is barely remembered at all these days. Only one silent film and one sound film were made about them that are worth watching.

                1) America (1924) - D.W. Griffith, director. Starring Neil Hamilton, Carol Dempster, and Lionel Barrymore. It actually does deal with the Tory led raids into the Cherry Valley, with Barrymore as the villainous Walter Butler. Hamilton is Nathan Holder, and Dempster (Griffith's mistress, whom he tried to make into a star) was the heroine. Griffith tried to do for the American Revolution in "America" what he did for the Civil War in "Birth of a Nation", but the result showed a lack of his old vigor. Interestingly, Butler/Barrymore ends up killed by his allies.

                2) Drums Along the Mohawk (1940) - John Ford, director. Starring Henry Fonda, Claudette Colbert, Edna Mae Oliver, Ward Bond, John Carradine. A nicely done early American Ford "western", based on Walter Edmunds' best selling novel. Carradine, of course, is the villain - a Tory who is leading the Indians against the settlers who support the revolution. Oliver's performance was a stand-out in this film, and earned her an Academy Award nomination. It's in color too - which is wonderful given the forest scenery. Of historical interest here was it is the only American film to look at what may have been the bloodiest, and most grueling battle of the Revolution: the battle of Oriskany (1777). Americans under General Nicholas Herkimer fought the British and their Mohawk - Iroquois allies in the forests in that area, and the battle lasted about ten hours - and was hand-to-hand combat. We see part of the battle, and the return of the American wounded, including the dying General Herkimer. After the war a county upstate was renamed for General Herkimer.

                Thanks for the citation regarding the Northwest Indian Wars in Wikipedia, which led me to a biography on General Harmer. He seemed a competent General, and his replacement by Arthur St. Clair meant little immediately (St. Clair was beaten in a battle, and replaced by "Mad" Anthony Wayne, who defeated the Indians at the "Battle of Fallen Timbers" in 1795).

                Do you have anything more about Mr. Bloom.

                Jeff
                Last edited by Mayerling; 03-12-2015, 03:30 PM.

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                • #23
                  No, Jeff....I'm sorry that I don't.

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                  • #24
                    Hi all,

                    I'm intrigued by Bloom's comment he was with Tumblety on numberous occasions at the Mansion House. I live fifteen minutes away from that very house!

                    Sincerely,

                    Mike
                    The Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
                    http://www.michaelLhawley.com

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      On Baking Powder, Yeast, Litigenous Millionaires, and the Pole

                      This is, regrettably, one of those long detailed reports of findings that are curious, but tangential to our looking at Tumblety or the Ripper.

                      It turns out that Wikipedia had plenty of information on the Hoagland-Ziegler Court battle of 1888, and on Royal Baking Powder Company, Joseph Christoffel Hoagland, William Ziegler, and the long forgotten Baldwin and Fiala Polar "dashes".

                      To begin with, under Royal Baking Powder Company, it was founded in 1870 but (according to the article on Ziegler) was founded as Royal Chemical Company. It changed it's name to Royal Baking Powder Company in 1888.

                      This is a critical year for that concern. The founders (again in the article on Ziegler) were Ziegler, Hoagland, and one John P. Seal. Seal has not Wikipedia entry as of today. 1888 was, as you recall, the year Ziegler brought suit against the Hoaglands for getting salaries from the company that were far in advance of what they actually did at the firm. He lost the case, and sold his stock, worth $4,000,000.00 (in 1888 dollars!!) With his profits (keep in mind, little in income taxes in 1888) he purchased the Price Baking Powder Company of Chicago and the Tartar Chemical Company of Jersey City, New Jersey.

                      Hoagland was born on June 19, 1841. He was the President of the Royal Baking Powder Company. The account of the split with Ziegler in the brief article on Royal Baking Powder in Wikipedia calls it, "acrimonious". Hoagland married Caroline C. Mattack, and they had a son John A. Hoagland, who died in April 1942. Joseph Hoagland passed on to his reward in December 1899). As for the company he, Ziegler, and the unknown Mr. Seal created, it survived Mr. Hoagland until 1929. But SURPRISE!!! - it did not disappear due to the crash! It and Fleischman's Yeast, and three other companies merged to create STANDARD BRANDS. It still exists under a different name.

                      Ziegler is an interesting gentleman. His German immigrant parents lived in Pennsylvania when he was born on September 1, 1843. After a wandering youth (including a stay on an uncle's farm in Iowa), he ended up working in New York City from 1863-1865 in a wholesale drug and chemical company, and attended the "College of Pharmacy" for one year.

                      He married in 1886 a Mrs. E. [for Edith] M. Gamble, and in 1892 they adopted a boy as their son.

                      Ziegler seems to have been public spirited in some ways. He sued the Long Island Water Company over a deal it made with the then city of Brooklyn, and by this action saved the citizens of the city $1,500,000.00. He also brought suit against the Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, forcing it to pay $500,000 in taxes to Brooklyn. Ziegler also had an expensive suit against the Lake Elevated Railroad in Chicago that won $1,000,000.00 in damages - and the article on Ziegler says it set a precedent but does not go into details.

                      He liked yachting, and owned a sloop "Thistle". It was missing for a few days in 1896, and it was feared Ziegler was dead. Although he turned up his brother-in-law apparently had died of grief (I did not make up that - it's in the article).

                      His most curious public spirit is totally forgotten today. Ziegler belonged to many clubs (God, he was both a Mason and a Knight's Templer!!), including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (then something of a rich man's club), the Union League Club of Chicago, and the Explorer's Club (as well as some dealing with Arctic Exploration).

                      He was fascinated by polar exploration. Now today if you mention this period from say 1890 - 1912 there are six or seven names that pop up (some for dubious reasons). They are Frijold Nansen, who made the famous "drift of the Fram" in 1893-96 that showed the currents in the Arctic seas; Lt. (later Commander, and then Rear Admiral) Robert Peary and his assistant Lt. Matthew Henson, who are usually credited with having attained the North Pole (after four expeditions) in April 1909; Dr. Frederick Cook, who had helped explore Antarctica on the "Belgica" expedition - with Roald Amundsen as one of his teammates - in the 1890s, then claimed he reached the top of Mt. McKinley in 1906 (disputed), and then claimed he reached the North Pole in April 1908, a year before Peary and Henson (also disputed - as is the Peary claim nowadays); Roald Amundsen ( who would be the first man to go through the Northwest Passage by boat completely in the ship "Gjoa" in 1903-1905, and then become the first man to reach the South Pole and return alive in 1911-12; Ernest Shackleton, who discovered the Beardsmore Glacier in Antarctica, came within 97 miles of the Pole in 1907, but decided to return to base with his men and survive - which has been called the bravest action in all polar exploration, and who led the 1914 "Endurance" expedition, where his ship was crushed in the ice but his skills as a leader got all his men out alive in an incredible series of adventures; and Lt. (posthumously Rear Admiral) Robert Falcon Scott, who led two expeditions to Antarctica, and lost his life and those of his party of four other men, trying to beat Amundsen to the South Pole. Those were and are the big names. If you think of any others, the most likely is the Swedish aeronaut, Saloman Andree and his two companions Frankel and Strindberg, who tried to fly by balloon to the North Pole in 1897, but failed and died on the return trip.

                      To this list add the leaders of the three Ziegler financed expeditions: The first two were led by Evelyn Briggs Baldwin, and the third by Anthony Fiala. Baldwin apparently spent most of his time arguing with his officers and achieving little - certainly not "dashing to the Pole" as Ziegler wanted. Fiala tried but found the realities too difficult. These three attempts (from 1901 to 1905) were the stuff for humorists, and may have influenced a string of panels in the then popular "Katzenjammer Kids" involving the "Captain" trying to get his polar expedition underway. [Fiala's abilities are questionable - in 1914 he was approached to assist in getting supplies together for former President Theodore Roosevelt's Amazon expedition up the "River of Doubt". Apparently Fiala eventually bought the wrong food for that expedition.]

                      Zieglar died of a stroke on May 25, 1905. He had been in an accident a few months earlier, and many felt he never recovered from it's effects. He left an estate of $10,000,000.00. His wife died in 1932.
                      Last edited by Mayerling; 03-13-2015, 10:25 AM.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Mike, Jeff

                        Here are a couple of articles from the Buffalo Courier, one contemporaneous and one from five decades after the Whitechapel Murders.

                        The first link takes you to an article on J. W. Booth...and brings up Tumblety.
                        The second is entitled The Long Haired Doctor.




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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Mayerling View Post
                          ...and may have influenced a string of panels in the then popular "Katzenjammer Kids" involving the "Captain" trying to get his polar expedition underway.
                          Hans and Fritz? Did they succeed in finally liquidating the Captain and the Professor?

                          Two rotten little bastards, but very likable.

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by Scott Nelson View Post
                            Hans and Fritz? Did they succeed in finally liquidating the Captain and the Professor?

                            Two rotten little bastards, but very likable.
                            They get to attack the Captain and the Professor (as always) but get their customary spankings as well.

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Howard Brown View Post
                              Mike, Jeff

                              Here are a couple of articles from the Buffalo Courier, one contemporaneous and one from five decades after the Whitechapel Murders.

                              The first link takes you to an article on J. W. Booth...and brings up Tumblety.
                              The second is entitled The Long Haired Doctor.




                              http://www.jtrforums.com/showthread....077#post264077
                              Hi Howard,

                              fascinating about Booth and Tumblety in the Booth article. Every now and then something about Booth's connections with the Confederate agents in Canada comes out, resurrected from old newspaper reports - that frequently are not indexed anywhere under Booth's name. May I recommend an interesting book called "The Dynamite Fiend: The Chilling Tale of a Confederate Spy, Con Artist, and Mass Murderer" by Ann Larabee (New York, Houndsmill: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005) ISBN 1-4037-6794-6. This is a book about Alexander Keith, a member of a well known Nova Scotia (Halifax) family, who sided (mostly for personal profit) with the Confederates as an agent and part-time blockade runner in the American Civil War. Actually he was totally unscrupulous, frequently cheating his fellow Confederates and Confederate sympathizers in order to make money. A ship that he had a large interest in had several trunks on it of personal and theatrical property that belonged to Booth, and the ship was destroyed for insurance purposes, with the loss of Booth's property. This was near the time of the kidnapping and assassination schemes. His career continued in the post-war period, including cheating Confederate veterans out of money in various business schemes in the U.S. Eventually Keith moved with his family to Europe, settling in Germany as "William Thompson", and got involved in more barratry frauds - but possibly more deadly than his first attempt. He used various explosive devices with timers to blow up ships at sea with insured cargos. But in 1875 one of his devices was accidentally dropped while being loaded into a ship, "the Mosel" at a pier at Bremerhaven, and the explosion killed over forty people (and injured more). Keith, who was on another boat, say what happened, realized the bomb would be traced to him, and killed himself. He became known (posthumously) as "the dynamite fiend".

                              It's a good read, and I recommend it. Nothing in it regarding Tumblety though.

                              jeff

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Howard,

                                The way I see it, these are outstanding finds! The second article talks about him visiting the theater with his dog and the first article talks about him hanging with the actor, Booth. I believe you're right about the first article not about Tumblety, giving it a sense of credibility.

                                I need to review these more. Again, great find Howard.

                                Sincerely,

                                Mike
                                The Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
                                http://www.michaelLhawley.com

                                Comment

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