October 28, 2021

Artifact #88: Soapy Smith's son speaks with Annie L. Williams about a manuscript on his father.

Artifact #88
Letter
June 20, 1944
Jeff Smith collection

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few days ago you called me and told me you had a manuscript based on the life of Jeffrey Smith"

     Artifact #88 is a typed response letter from the famed New York drama and motion picture agent, Annie Laurie Williams to Soapy Smith's son, Jefferson Randolph Smith III.

     Annie Laurie Williams, the agent who sold Margaret Mitchell's “Gone With the Wind” to David O. Selznick for the film, Opened her career and firm in 1929, representing some of the most important American authors, including Margaret Mitchell, Harper Lee, John Steinbeck, and Lloyd C. Douglas.
     Jefferson Smith apparently had written a manuscript and offered to send it to Williams' agency. Unfortunately, I do not know the location of that manuscript. Likely, it is still in family hands somewhere. The letter is addressed to Jeffery Smith, 136-31- 58th Avenue, Flushing, L. I., (Long Island, New York). In 1942, two years before this letter, records show that Jeff still lived in Missouri. The next address is a Los Angeles, California one, in 1952. Jeff kept outsiders in the dark in regards to his father. He held "behind-the-scene" political and newspaper positions that he feared would be jeopardized if certain people were to find out who his father was. In 1946 Jeff's daughter, Joy Roberta Smith, got married in New York. It is possible that Joy lived in New York in 1944 and that Jeff used her address as a mailing location, in order to keep his life as the son of a famous bad man on the quiet, if the manuscript deal went sour. Also take note that Annie Williams mentions Jeff as going "back to Texas." Jeff may have listed his residence as "Texas." As part of this attempt to hide his identity Jefferson used the names "Jeffrey" to identify both himself and his father, while hiding his and his father's real identities.     

Below is the text of the letter.
 
June 20, 1944
 
A few days ago you called me and told me you had a manuscript based on the life of Jeffrey Smith and if I were interested you would let me read it. I am interested and hope you can come in and bring the manuscript and talk to me before you go back to Texas. If I don't happen to be in my sister Pamela Barnes will talk to you and you can leave the manuscript with her.
 
Sincerely yours,
Annie Laurie Williams (signature and typed)
 
 
Annie Laurie Williams

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Jefferson Randolph Smith III
 











Jefferson Randolph Smith III: pages 7, 107-08, 167, 417-18, 546, 584, 587-89.






"One of the healthiest ways to gamble is with a spade and a package of garden seeds."
—Dan Bennett








October 26, 2021

Artifact #87 Soapy Smith's sister, Emmie Lu Gardner writes to her nephew Jefferson.

Artifact #87
Letter side A
Jeff Smith collection

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t is quite interesting to know you are living in a haunted house."
 
Artifact #87 is a response letter from aunt Emmie Lu Gardner, (Soapy Smith's sister), age 45 to Jefferson Randolph Smith III, (Soapy's son), age 25. It's a typical "keeping up with the family" type letter. Below is the transcribed text. 

Waco Texas
Dec 11th. 1912

Dear Jeff:
 
     Your most welcome letter was received a few days ago was very glad to hear from you. It is quite interesting to know you are living in a haunted house, and yet there's lots of people who firmly believe in ghosts. I received a long letter from cousin Nellie Kate Smith of Newnan Ga they are all well. The weather is very bad has been raining for about 4 weeks and still raining. I hope it will clear up. Received a card from Temple They are all well. I hope you will be able to secure a good position your chances seem very favorable at present. I am glad to know that you all well and enjoying yourselves. With love and best wishes to all. your Loving Aunt.

Emmie Lu Gardner
927 Franklin St.

     This is the only mention that the Smith home in 1912 was haunted. Being an adamant historian I am not really one who trusts most ghost stories, but if any household could be haunted, I would guess that the family of Soapy Smith would be one of them.
       Nellie Kate Smith (1868-1950) of Newnan, Georgia was the daughter of Ira Ellis Caspar Wistar Smith and Caqtherine Romanze "Kate" Edmundson. Newnan (Coweta County) is where Soapy Smith was born and raised until 1876-77.
     Temple, Texas is where Soapy's surviving family members lived, his father, Jefferson Randolph Smith II having died there in 1902.
 

Artifact #87
Letter side B
Jeff Smith collection

(Click image to enlarge)

The envelope below is addressed to "Mr. Jeff Smith, St. Louis, Mo." At the lower left is "C" (care of) "St. Louis Times, Editorial Department." Jeff worked as a newspaper editor for much of his adult life.
 
Artifact #87
Envelope
Jeff Smith collection

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Emmie Lu Gardner
1867-1913


Jefferson R. Smith III
age 25

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Nellie Kate Smith
1868-1950

 
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Jefferson Randolph Smith III: pages 7, 107-08, 167, 417-18, 546, 584, 587-89.





"I bet on a horse at ten-to-one. It didn't come in until half-past five."
—Henny Youngman