Showing posts with label Jeff Smith's Parlor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Smith's Parlor. Show all posts

November 7, 2021

Color version of Web of Arachne located in Turkey.


Web of Arachne
Oil painting from Turkey
by "V. Lenp___???"

(Click image to enlarge)



 
OPY OF WEB OF ARACHNE?

 
 
 
 
 
A gentleman from Ankara, Turkey contacted me wishing to sell me an oil painting of the Web of Arachne (by Fernand Le Quesne) that he purchased at auction.

Web of Arachne
Oil painting from Turkey
Close-up

(Click image to enlarge)



There are slight differences between the black and white and color versions. Besides different artists, I caught the difference when I placed the photos side-by-side (see attached photo). The names of the artists are different, but the most tell-tale difference is the center of the large web on the far right of the paintings. Looking closer at details, such as the foreground details, like the grass and plants shows a lack of detail seen in the original. I am guessing that the artist may have been a student artist, or possibly an artist painting and selling works as their own. Could this copy possibly be evidence that the original was in color?


Web of Arachne
Original by
Fernand Le Quesne
Colorized

(Click image to enlarge)


The print that Soapy purchased hung in Jeff Smith's Parlor so we know that without any question that Fernand Le Quesne painted The Web of Arachne at some point previous to 1898. Ads for the print and others like it, are reported to have sold at the Columbian Exposition in 1893, so it's likely that Le Quesne painted it at some point before the opening of the fair. Guessing that he started painting by age 20, it is conjecture that the The Web of Arachne was painted sometime between 1876-1892. But when did artist "V. Lenp???" paint it?



(Click image to enlarge)



Web of Arachne
Oil painting from Turkey
Rear of frame

(Click image to enlarge)

The story of how I "discovered" Soapy Smith's connection to the Web of Arachne is very interesting. Go down to the links below "Web of Arachne" and you can read about it.
 







"The better the gambler, the worse the man."
—Publius Syrus











August 4, 2020

The Web of Arachne, colorized.

The Web of Arachne
by Fernand Le Quesne
(1856 - 1932)
Colorized by Curtis Byrne
(Click image to enlarge)








HE WEB OF ARACHNE
COLORIZED.
It's great to see what this painting may have originally looked like.


     As I recently hung my framed print of The Web of Arachne, by Fernand Le Quesne (1856 - 1932), in my new place, I wondered why the artist didn't colorize it? Then I pondered if the original was not indeed in color? Once again, I returned to researching this art piece. At the same time I imagined what the print would look like colorized, and recalling that numerous people on Facebook make a hobby of colorizing old photographs. I decided to publish a request for someone to colorize The Web of Arachne, and within one day, Curtis Byrne rose to the occasion and created a stunning color version of the print (see top pic).
     The print that Soapy purchased hung in Jeff Smith's Parlor so we know that without any question that Fernand Le Quesne painted The Web of Arachne at some point previous to 1898. Ads for the print and others like it, are reported to have sold at the Columbian Exposition in 1893, so it's likely that Le Quesne painted it at some point before the opening of the fair. Guessing that he started painting by age 20, it is conjecture that the The Web of Arachne was painted sometime between 1876-1892.

HOW I FOUND THE PAINTING.

     I have always found the decor inside Jeff Smith's Parlor in Skagway, Alaska of great interest. Each picture hung on the walls had special meaning and were hung there for specific reasons. The ones on the west wall, behind the front bar in the three photographs of the inside of Jeff Smith's Parlor (see photo below) are dedicated to patriotic war promotion during the Spanish-American War. But what about the pictures on the side and back walls? Was there any meaning in them, or were they simply hung strictly for decor?

The Web of Arachne
hanging inside Jeff Smith's Parlor
North wall, small office room
(circled in yellow)

(Click image to enlarge)

     One framed picture held special interest for me, as it appeared to have female nudes in it. In one photograph of the inside of Jeff Smith's Parlor the print is hanging on the north wall, inside the small office in the back end of the Parlor (see photo above). In another photograph the framed print has been moved to the east wall, opposite the front bar wall. In the photograph above you can see it directly behind Soapy's head (see photo below).
     In looking at the two photographs with the framed print, you can see that the details in the print are extremely difficult to make out. In 2011 I began searching to identify the art piece. I compared thousands of paintings online, in hope of finding a match, but had no luck. After months of searching I had pretty much given up on ever finding it, but then one day I stumbled upon it, completely by accident.

     One day while searching through my daily eBay saved searches I came across a postcard of what appeared to look like a typical saloon painting of a reclining nude female. In fact, it was Russian art from the 1890s. I love saloon nudes so I noted that the postcard was in the 19th century art category of "risque art." That created a new search topic, and I was looking through the many thousands of "risque" works when I came across one that immediately had a familiar look to it. It did not take but a second to realize that I had found the missing artwork I had been looking for. With the aid of historian Steve Stapp, I was able to gather my first bit of information about the mysterious painting and it's creator, including hints of where Soapy may have purchased the print.
 
The Web of Arachne
hanging inside Jeff Smith's Parlor
East wall
(just behind Soapy's head)

(Click image to enlarge)


     I found the painting but the information about it was very vague, and information on the painter was even more barren. My first found data was that the painting was titled either Nude Nymph in Net or Nude Nymph in Spider Web, and that the artist was a Russian painter named P. Le Quesue or Le Queysen. These were English translations, and in time I learned that the correct title of the painting is The Web of Arachne, but I still could not find anything about the artist, and for good reason. I recently discovered that the artist was not Russian, but a French painter named Fernand Le Quesne (1856 - 1932). Although I now had the paintings title and correct artist, I have still yet to find much about either.

WHY IS THERE NO COLOR PRINT OF THE WEB OF ARACHNE
AND WHY IS SO LITTLE KNOWN OF IT OR THE ARTIST?

     Fernand Le Quesne (1856 - 1932) was a known French artist, but yet only two surviving examples of his work are known to have survived. Interesting to note that both of these are in color, meaning that there is a good chance that The Web of Arachne was also in color. Le Quesne died in 1932, before the start of WWII. The number of paintings and art destroyed in Europe during WW2 was a staggering loss to the world. To top the loss was the fact that most of the art destroyed, had not been photographed using color film, thus there are mostly black and white photographs of the works destroyed during the war devastation. I believe that much of Le Quesne's work, including the original painting of The Web of Arachne, was destroyed. As most art book authors tend to use color photographs of the known artists of the world, the photographed works of Le Quesne was likely passed over, and his history became "lost." 

HOW AND WHERE DID SOAPY FIND A PRINT OF THE WEB OF ARACHNE? 

     Where did Soapy possibly see and purchase a print of The Web of Arachne? There is a good possibility he either found a copy at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition or in Denver.

Collection of prints sold in Denver by
The White City Art Company
(circa 1893)

(Click image to enlarge)

     It appears that the print of The Web of Arachne was first offered for sale in the United States in 1893 at the Columbian Exposition. As Soapy Smith did attend the fair, it is possible he purchased the print there. In 1897 it was offered for sale in Denver, and Soapy may have purchased it there, though he was a "wanted man" by the county court for running out on a bond in 1895, and there is no confirmed evidence that he returned to Denver after 1896.
     The White City Art Company, 611 Manhattan Building, Chicago, Illinois was founded in 1893 to supply souvenirs to the 1893 Chicago Columbian Exposition, they continued to publish prints, illustrated souvenir books, and postcards in the years that followed, until they closed their doors in 1909 (source: Metropolitan Postcard Club of New York City).

White City Art Company
ad for The Spider's Web
published in the book Out West
 
(Click image to enlarge)

     According to the William J. Jenack Auction house The White City Art Company also had a location in Denver but at this time the years of operation are not known.
     In 1897 The White City Art Company published Out West, the photographic story of four women who traveled across the country. On the very last page of the book is an art ad by the art company (see pic above).
     The above ad offers an 11" by 14" print of The Spider's Web, which is without a doubt, The Web of Arachne, for $1.00 from the Chicago store. The Denver location is not mentioned. The framed print shown hanging on the wall of Jeff Smith's Parlor appears to be 11" by 14."

The Web of Arachne
by P. Le Quesne
black and white as originally sold

(Click image to enlarge)

      In 1902 The White City Art Company published the book, Master Paintings of the World, Edited by Dupont Vicars. On page 184 is a print of The Web of Arachne. The photograph above was taken from this book.

 WHY WAS SOAPY INTERESTED IN THE WEB OF ARCHNE? 
"Welcome to my parlor," said the spider to the fly.

     Besides being a fun painting of nudes, why would Soapy be interested in this particular print? Is it just pure coincidence that the painting shows victims caught in a web, just as victims to Soapy's swindles were caught? I believe his interest in the print is it's obvious connection with the poem, The Spider and the Fly published in 1829 by Mary Howitt. I also believe that the print and the poem influenced his use the term Parlor when naming his Skagway, Alaska saloon (Jeff Smith's Parlor).
     Though there certainly there must be others, I can say that to date, I have yet to run into another saloon that included the term Parlor in its name. It is likely that the poem was an influence for Soapy's use of Parlor.
     Soapy had a good sense of humor and consistently utilized hidden, subliminal, messages in his endeavors, such as using the address of his Skagway saloon (317 Holly) as the membership computation of his law and order society, when countering the vigilante committee of 101. Another great example is the "Seal named Jeff" story published in a Spokane, Washington newspaper. It centered on a seal, named "Jeff" who found it's way back "home," believed to be a brilliant ruse published by Soapy to secretly let his friends in Spokane, including saloon owner "Doc" Brown, know that he was in town, perhaps during a power struggle there, or Soapy's attempt in avoiding the law. It is my belief that Soapy and his Soap Gang referred to catching victims much as a spider catches bugs in a web. Jeff Smith's Parlor was one of Soapy's "webs," so it would be natural to take a liking to the poem, The Spider and the Fly.

     The poem is a cautionary tale of a cunning Spider who ensnares a naive Fly through the use of seduction and flattery, much like the Soap Gang ensnares their prey. The tale is a warning against those who use flattery and charm as a front for potential evil. The opening line "Will you walk into my parlour?", often quoted as "Step into my parlour" or "Come into my parlour", has become an aphorism, often used to indicate a false offer of help or friendship that is in fact a trap. The line has been used and parodied numerous times in various works of fiction. Following is the 1829 version of the poem in its entirety.

The Spider and the Fly
by Mary Howitt

"Will you walk into my parlor?" said the Spider to the Fly,
"'Tis the prettiest little parlor that ever you did spy;
The way into my parlor is up a winding stair,
And I have many curious things to show you when you are there."
"Oh no, no," said the Fly, "to ask me is in vain;
For who goes up your winding stair can ne'er come down again."

"I'm sure you must be weary, dear, with soaring up so high;
Will you rest upon my little bed?" said the Spider to the Fly.
"There are pretty curtains drawn around, the sheets are fine and thin;
And if you like to rest awhile, I'll snugly tuck you in!"
"Oh no, no," said the little Fly, "for I've often heard it said
They never, never wake again, who sleep upon your bed!"

Said the cunning Spider to the Fly, "Dear friend, what can I do
To prove that warm affection I've always felt for you?
I have within my pantry, good store of all that's nice;
I'm sure you're very welcome - will you please take a slice?"
"Oh no, no," said the little Fly, "kind sir, that cannot be,
I've heard what's in your pantry, and I do not wish to see!"
"Sweet creature," said the Spider, "you're witty and you're wise;
How handsome are your gauzy wings, how brilliant are your eyes!
I have a little looking-glass upon my parlor shelf;
If you step in one moment, dear, you shall behold yourself."
"I thank you, gentle sir," she said, "for what you're pleased to say;
And bidding good morning now, I'll call another day."

The Spider turned him round about, and went into his den,
For well he knew the silly Fly would soon come back again;
So he wove a subtle web in a little corner sly,
And set his table ready to dine upon the Fly.
then he came out to his door again, and merrily did sing,
"Come hither, hither, pretty Fly, with the pearl and silver wing;
Your robes are green and purple, there's a crest upon your head;
Your eyes are like the diamond bright, but mine are as dull as lead."

Alas, alas! how very soon this silly little Fly,
Hearing his wily, flattering words, came slowly flitting by;
With buzzing wings she hung aloft, then near and nearer drew, -
Thinking only of her brilliant eyes, and green and purple hue;
Thinking only of her crested head - poor foolish thing! At last,
Up jumped the cunning Spider, and fiercely held her fast.
He dragged her up his winding stair, into his dismal den
Within his little parlor - but she ne'er came out again!

And now, dear little children, who may this story read,
To idle, silly, flattering words, I pray you ne'er heed;
Unto an evil counselor close heart, and ear, and eye,
And take a lesson from this tale of the Spider and the Fly.

     In Greco-Roman mythology, Arachne was a great mortal weaver who boasted that her skill was greater than that of Minerva, the Latin parallel of Pallas Athena, goddess of wisdom and crafts. Arachne refused to acknowledge that her knowledge came, in part at least, from the goddess. The offended goddess set a contest between the two weavers. According to Ovid, the goddess was so envious of the magnificent tapestry and the mortal weaver's success, and perhaps offended by the girl's choice of subjects (the loves and transgressions of the gods), that she destroyed the tapestry and loom and slashed the girl's face. “Not even Pallas nor blue-fevered Envy \ Could damn Arachne's work. \ The brown haired goddess Raged at the girl's success, struck through her loom, Tore down the scenes of wayward joys in heaven.″ Ultimately, the goddess turned Arachne into a spider. Arachne simply means "spider" in Greek (source: Arachne, Wikipedia).

With the poem in mind I believe Soapy came across a print of the painting The Web of Arachne and decided that it belonged on the wall of his saloon, as an inside joke. It should be noted that if Soapy purchased this print previous to 1895 then it possibly hung on the walls of the Tivoli Club in Denver, as well as others he operated before the opening of Jeff Smith's Parlor.

~ My sincere thanks go to Steve Stapp and Curtis Byrne for their help ~










Feb 1, 2012
Mar 4, 2012






"Then,” said Soapy, “I got the reputation of being a gunman, and of course after that whenever there was any little difficulty it was simply a question of the man who could draw the quickest and shoot the straightest. So here I am now, marked as a bad man when as a matter of fact I have a very gentle disposition and an affectionate nature."
—Saunders Norvell, Forty Years of Hardware, 1924



AUGUST 4


1735: Freedom of the press is established. acquittal John P. Zenger, of the New York Weekly Journal is acquitted of charges dealing with seditious libel by the royal governor of New York.
1753: George Washington becomes a Master Mason.
1790: The Revenue Cutter Service is formed. This is the beginning of the U.S. Coast Guard.
1821: The Saturday Evening Post begins publication.
1859: After failing to kill the editor in a duel, Sylvester Mowry aggress to buy the Weekly Arizonian and publish it in Tucson, Arizona Territory.
1873: The “Packsaddle Mountain fight.” A band of Indians stealing horses in Llano County, are followed by a posse for twenty-five miles. The two groups clashed in a gun battle at the top of Packsaddle Mountain. Three Indians were killed and four of the posse were wounded. The battle is the last known Indian fight in the county.
1882: Fort Larned, Kansas is abandoned. It was originally established in 1859 to protect traders along the Santa Fe Trail.
1886: John “Doc” Holliday is arrested in Denver, Colorado for vagrancy. The Denver Tribune-Republican writes that Holliday’s “…only means of living is gambling in its worst form and confidence work.”
1889: Spokane, Washington business district burns.
1895: Outlaw Zip “Dick Yeagar” Wyatt is shot and captured by the Anti-Horse Thief Association of Sheridan, Oklahoma, five miles southeast of Marshal, Oklahoma Territory. A gun battle ensues in which Deputies Ad Polk and Tom Smith hit Wyatt in the pelvis and stomach, before he surrenders.




April 15, 2017

Skagway, Alaska Photograph: 1908-1928

SKAGWAY, ALASKA
Circa 1908-1928
Jeff Smith collection

(Click image to enlarge)






ATING MY LATEST ACQUISITION:
Skagway, Alaska, circa 1908-1928

I purchased a great old photograph of Skagway, Alaska (photo #1) that I originally had guessed to date post-1935. I thought this because it appeared that Soapy Smith's saloon, Jeff Smith's Parlor, was on the south side of Sixth Avenue, which was moved there by Martin Itjen in 1935 (photo #4).

Upon closer examination I came to a preliminary conclusion that the photo was older than 1935. My first clue was the amount of original structures still standing, many of which were gone by 1935. I gathered up my photographs of Skagway and quickly realized that the Parlor was still on the north side of Sixth Avenue, in it's original location (photo #1). I circled the Parlor in yellow, on the far right side of the photo, but the Parlor cannot really be made out and positively identified. At this time period the Parlor was owned by the Hook and Ladder Company, Skagway's volunteer fire department (1900-1935).

Upon my first examination of the photograph (photo #1) I assumed that the white-walled building across the street from the Parlor (circled in red in photo #1) was the Parlor, but looking at the same location in a photograph taken in 1898 (photo #2) we see the same two buildings circled in yellow. The red arrow points to Jeff Smith's Parlor during the time Soapy was alive.  

HOLLY STREET
(now Sixth Avenue)
June 1898
Red arrow points to Jeff Smith's Parlor
Courtesy University of Alaska, Fairbanks


JEFF SMITH'S PARLOR
circa 1916
Owned by Hook and Ladder Company
courtesy Library of Congress

(Click image to enlarge)


Now that I was able to determine that the photograph was pre-1935 I undertook to see if I could nail-down an earlier date. I researched some of the buildings along Broadway, the first being the Golden North, the large three story hotel at the south end of Broadway (far left of photo #1). The third floor of the hotel was completed by August 1908 so the photograph cannot be earlier than 1908. Next, I looked at some of the structures that I knew did not endure the ages. The Clayson Block, circled in yellow (photo #1) was destroyed by fire in 1928, so my new acquisition cannot date after 1928. I was not able to obtain a more precise date but I am sure it can be made.



JEFF SMITH'S PARLOR
Circa 1940s
After Martin Itjen moved and rebuilt
Jeff Smith collection

(Click image to enlarge)




"How men of good family and connections East can come here and marry prostitutes–take them out of a dance house–I can’t see. "
—George Parsons
diary entry
July 16, 1880



APRIL 15


1813: U.S. troops under James Wilkinson attack the Spanish-held city of Mobile, in the future state of Alabama, during the War of 1812.
1817: The first school for the deaf opens in Hartford, Connecticut.
1850: The city of San Francisco, California is incorporated.
1859: Along the Colorado River in New Mexico Territory (present day Arizona), work begins on Camp Colorado, which is meant to assist emigrants en route to California. The name soon changes to Fort Mojave.
1861: President Lincoln mobilizes the Federal army in preparation for the Civil War.
1862: The Battle of Peralta, the westernmost battle of the Civil War, takes place in New Mexico Territory (present day Arizona). At Picacho Pass an advance unit of the California Column from Yuma defeats a Confederate detachment of Texans. Upon learning of the battle, Confederate troops retreat from Tucson, Arizona.
1865: President Abraham Lincoln dies from the bullet he received in Ford's Theater by John Wilkes Booth the previous night.
1869: The Supreme Court, in Texas vs. White, rules that secession from the Union is unconstitutional.
1871: James Butler “Wild Bill” Hickok becomes the marshal of Abilene, Kansas. His salary is $150 a month.
1877: Captain William Hancock files the first claim in Arizona Territory, under the Desert Land Act.
1879: John Chisum recommends Pat Garrett to Governor Lew Wallace of New Mexico Territory, as the man to take care of the outlaws running east of Fort Sumner.
1881: Outlaw “Billy the Kid” is convicted of murder in Mesilla, New Mexico Territory for the shooting of Sheriff William Brady. The “Kid” is sentenced on the 15th to be hanged on May 13, 1881. He escapes while being held in Lincoln.
1881: The Battle of Keating's Saloon takes place in El Paso, Texas. After two Mexican officers conducting an investigation of international cattle rustling are killed, Mexico demands an inquest of the two men. Constable Gus Krempkau acts as interpreter, which angers the rustlers. At noon, Krempkau leaves the courtroom and is accosted outside Keating's Saloon by George Campbell, a friend of the rustlers. While Cambell and Krempkau argue, John Hale, comes up and shoots Krempkau in the chest. Hale runs behind a post in front of the saloon when Marshal Dallas Stoudenmire appears on the scene. Stoudenmire fires at Hale, killing him instantly, but a second shot wounds an innocent man emerging from the saloon. In the meantime, a dying Krempkau fires at Campbell, striking him in the wrist and toe. Krempkau dies at the steps of the saloon, when Campbell, returns fire. Stoudenmire then shoots and kills Campbell.
1889: A marshal's posse in Oklahoma Territory kills a couple of “sooners,” and captures a group more, nine days before the official start. Sooners are settlers who sneak onto the Public Domain territory to make land claims before the official start of the land rush.
1892: The General Electric Company is organized.
1892: Soapy Smith “leases” McGinty the petrified man for $3,000 and leaves Creede, Colorado back to Denver to place it on display there.
1894: First public showing of Thomas Edison's kinetoscope in New York City.




October 28, 2016

Faked Jeff Smith's Parlor match safe

Jeff Smith's Parlor match safe?
 
(Click image to enlarge)







abricated, fraudulent, fictitious.
The faked Soapy Smith match safe.



    On October 16, 2016 an eBay auction ended with a winning bid of $392.67 for a match safe that supposedly came from Jeff Smith's Parlor, Skagway, Alaska. The match safe itself is antique, but it is not from Jeff Smith's Parlor. At one time I was a collector and seller of match safes. I learned what I could from books but I never considered myself an expert on them.
    This safe naturally caught my eye as it appeared to be related to Soapy Smith. There are some major flaws which exposes the fact that this was fabricated by someone that is not familiar with Soapy and Jeff Smith's Parlor.

  1. Jeff's Place Saloon: That was not the name of the saloon. The term name "Jeff's place" was used in the 1935 biography, The Reign of Soapy Smith. It was used in conversations by people who knew Soapy, such as "you will find Pete down at Jeff's place."
  2. Tobacco spirits cards: The term spirits was rarely used for the advertising of alcohol in the 19th century. The ads for Jeff Smith's Parlor specifically states "no cards - no gambling."
  3. The saloon pictured on the back of the match safe is not Jeff Smith's Parlor.

Wait, that's not Jeff Smith's Parlor?
 
(Click image to enlarge)


This cranky and crooked eBay seller made sure I could not contact him, blocking my address from eBay contact. If you read his description below you can see that he has no intentions of returning anyone's money easily, especially if you find out that the item is a fake.

We don't want to misrepresent anything and if we accidently [sic] do, please return the item for a refund. Do not ask to return something if you simply have second thoughts, buyer's remorse, you tried to sell for a profit but couldn’t, your spouse is busting your chops about how much you spent, you find one for less, it doesn't fit your décor, or you just wanted to see what it looked like close up. Ask questions before you bid. But again, If we have accidently [sic] stated something wrong, please inform us of what we said that was incorrect and if so, we will be more than happy to refund your money. Extrapolations, assumptions on your end, conjecture, simply don't count. We want to know what we stated was incorrect and that is the only reason for a return. If you can't handle that, please refrain from bidding. Remember, this is an auction and not Nordstrom's or Macy's. We are fair and we expect you to be.

I am hoping that the buyer contacts me.

SOURCE: eBay





"And when I die don't bury me deep; leave one hand free to fleece the sheep."
— (Opening text from the 1941 film Honky Tonk)



OCTOBER 28

1636: Harvard College is founded in Massachusetts. The original name was Court of Massachusetts Bay Colony. It was the first school of higher education in the new world.
1776: The Battle of White Plains takes place during the American Revolutionary War.
1793: Eli Whitney applies for the patent for his cotton gin.
1835: Texan militia and Mexican soldiers skirmished near San Antonio at the battle of Concepción in Texas, the opening engagement in the siege of Bexar. Some 90 Texans under command of James Bowie and James W. Fannin Jr., defeat a force of 275 Mexican soldiers and two cannon. Causalities on the Mexican side include fourteen killed and thirty-nine wounded. The Texans have one killed and one wounded.
1869: William F. Cody, chief scout for the 5th Cavalry returns to Fort McPherson, Nebraska to winter. In the past year he participated in seven expeditions and nine battles against Indians tribes.
1869: Comanche and Kiowa Indians attack the 4th and 9th Cavalry expedition, camped near the Fresh Water Fork of the Brazos River, Texas. Captain John Bacon and a detachment pursue the Indians for 30 miles and counter attack them. Eight Indians are killed, several more wounded. An Indian girl is taken prisoner.
1878: With less travel on the Sante Fe Trail due to the arrival of the railroad in 1870, the garrison at Fort Larned, Kansas is transferred to Fort Dodge.
1880: Tombstone City, Arizona Territory, Marshal Fred White is shot and killed by William “Curly Bill” Brocius. The gun discharged when Brocius was handing over his pistol to White, when Deputy Sheriff Wyatt Earp grabbed Brocius from behind. The death is ruled an accident.
1880: The 10th Cavalry is attacked while scouting near Ojo Caliente, Texas. Two soldiers are killed.
1886: The Statue of Liberty is dedicated in New York Harbor by President Cleveland. The statue, originally known as "Liberty Enlightening the World," is a gift from France.
1894: Denver, Colorado prostitute Marie Contassot, age 23, is the second of three serial-murders the newspapers called “the triplet murders.” The killer struck first on September 3 and for the last time on November 13, and then disappeared from history, perhaps frightened by a $1000 reward and a slew of private detectives joining the city police search net.
1901: Famed trick shot, Annie Oakley, is seriously injured in a train wreck while traveling with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show near Lexington, Kentucky.
1904: The St. Louis, Missouri police department becomes the first to use fingerprinting.





September 11, 2016

The Layman-Odem Revolver from Soapy Smith's, Jeff Smith's Parlor

The Layman-Odem revolver and letter
photo by George Layman
 
(Click image to enlarge)







he Layman-Odem revolver

      Named after owners George Layman and Albert Odem, this artifact was introduced to me by owner George Layman via Larry Zeug, an old friend.



      The revolver is a nickled Harrington and Richardson Young America Bulldog. A more complete history of this model can be found at the NRA Museum. Mr. Layman claims the letter and revolver are authentic. This post is not meant to be an authentication or a judgement call, but rather am merely reporting on an interesting story and claim. The letter that comes with the pistol reads as follows.  

This Young America revolver was given to my uncle in 1935 by Willie Neuille. Mr. Neuille got the revolver from a Mr. J. Tanner who owned a hardware store near Skagway and found the gun hanging on a nail behind the bar in the old Jeff Smith’s Parlor saloon around 1911. I owned it ever since my uncle gave it to me during the war.

Albert Odom


The Layman-Odem revolver and letter
photo by George Layman
 
(Click image to enlarge)

      The letter is fascinating in itself, including the mention of "J. Tanner," which is most likely vigilante Josias Martin Tanner, who witnessed Soapy Smith's murder on Juneau Wharf on July 8, 1898? The following day he is made a temporary deputy U.S. marshal by Judge Sehlbrede, until the U.S. Marshal agrees and officially swears him in. Tanner did indeed operate a hardware store in Skagway, where it has been reported numerous times that he sold old guns and artifacts that he claimed "once belonged to Soapy." The fact that this revolver came from Tanner may strengthen or weaken the authenticity of the claim that it was "found ... hanging on a nail behind the bar in the old Jeff Smith’s Parlor saloon."
      Another question arises with the 1911 date. After Soapy Smith's demise in July 1898, his partners in the saloon business, John and Frank Clancy, took over the saloon until 1899. Until 1900 it was the Sans Souci Restaurant and Oyster Parlor. In the Fall of 1900 the city of Skagway purchased the building to house the fire department's Hook and Ladder Company. The insides of the building were gutted, including the front bar. Martin Itjen purchased the building in 1935 and made it into a museum. "Around 1911," when the revolver was found, the city fire department had already owned the gutted building for a decade. If this story is authentic then there is some important information missing. 



"The class of people who want to get something for nothing are no match for those who give nothing for something."
The Daily Standard, August 2, 1882



SEPTEMBER 11


1609: Explorer Henry Hudson sails into what would later be named New York harbor and discovers Manhattan Island and the Hudson River.
1776: A Peace Conference is held between British General Howe and three representatives of the Continental Congress, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and Edward Rutledge. The conference fails to reach an accord and the war for independence continues for seven more years.
1777: American forces under General George Washington, carrying the “stars and stripes” (American flag) into battle for the first time, are forced to retreat at the Battle of Brandywine Creek.
1786: The Convention of Annapolis opens with the aim of revising the articles of the Confederation.
1789: Alexander Hamilton is appointed by President George Washington as the first secretary of the treasury.
1814: The U.S. fleet defeats the British Navy in the Battle of Lake Champlain, Vermont during the War of 1812.
1842: 1,400 Mexican troops capture San Antonio, Texas. They retreat, with prisoners.
1857: Indians, incited by Mormon Elder John Lee, kill 120 Arkansas settlers bound for California, in the Mountain Meadows Massacre, Utah Territory. The Mormons persuaded the emigrants that they could freely pass unharmed if they surrendered their arms. The Indians murdered all but 18 children. Twenty years later, on March 3, 1877, Lee would be executed for his part in the murders.
1875: The first comic strip to appear in a newspaper is "Professor Tidwissel's Burglar Alarm," featured in the New York Daily Graphic.
1877: The first comic-character timepiece is patented by the Waterbury watch Company.
1878: Outlaw Billy the Kid spends the night at John Chisum's camp, New Mexico Territory.
1883: The mail chute is patented by James Cutler. The device is first utilized in the Elwood Building in Rochester, New York.
1885: Apache Indian Chief Geronimo, and a small band of Indians, shoot a man cutting poles, murder another in ambush, and murder a teen herding cattle, kidnapping his 11-year-old brother.
1897: A ten-week coal workers strike in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio comes to an end. The workers win an eight-hour workday, semi-monthly pay, and company stores are shut down.
1904: The U.S. battleship Connecticut is launched in New York.
1910: The first commercially successful electric bus line opens in Hollywood, California.




May 31, 2016

New May 1, 1898 Soapy Smith Decoration Day photo found

Holly Street, Skagway, Alaska
May 1, 1898
Courtesy of Alaska State Library - Historical Collections
 
(Click image to enlarge)



Holly Street, Skagway, Alaska
May 1, 1898
Courtesy of Alaska State Library - Historical Collections
 
(Click image to enlarge)









ecoration Day 
Skagway, Alaska, May 1, 1898





     Historian Diane Purvis of the Facebook group Pacific Northwest, Alaska, California, and British Columbia has located a second photograph of the May 1, 1898 parade. Because there are only slight variations in the two shots it is obvious that they were taken just seconds a part. The bottom photograph was located previous to 2009. It is in my book Alias Soapy Smith. One key difference is that the photographer etched in "Decoration Day Skagway" twice in the latest find. This determines with certainty that this photograph is from May 1, 1898.
     In Alias Soapy Smith I recorded that the date of the photograph was May 1, 1898, but according to E. J. "Stroller" White of The Skaguay News the parade took place on Monday May 30. However, the Denver Evening Post reported on the parade in their May 24 issue, six days prior to the festivities. The article is copied from the May 2 edition of the Skagway News that mentions the parade occurring "last Sunday," making the date of the parade May 1.

Why such a wide variation in the dates of Decoration Day and Memorial Day?

Decoration Day is what Memorial Day was first called. Today we celebrate it on the last Monday in May, but in the 19th century Decoration Day was celebrated on different dates all across the country, between late spring and early summer. 


The following is from the Denver Evening Post May 24, 1898.

By 7 o’clock … upwards of six hundred men and many ladies could be seen on the streets wearing red, white and blue badges which read: “Freedom for Cuba! Remember the Maine! Compliments of Skaguay Military Company. Jeff R. Smith, captain.” At 7:30 o’clock a procession nearly two blocks in length formed on Broadway, led by a carriage containing Dr. Hornsby and Moore, Walter Church and Deputy United States Marshal John Cudihee, and headed by the Skaguay Cornet band. Standard Bearer Tanner of Denver, Colo., proudly bore a large silk flag on which is inscribed the words, “First Regiment of Alaska Militia.”
     Beside him marched Captain Jeff R. Smith of the Skaguay guards.
    Following were members of the United States Army, the Skaguay guards and citizens in all upwards of four hundred men, to say nothing of a number of women, who [being] patriotically inclined, donned male garb, and joined in the procession. Along [the way] were seen many banners and transparencies on which were inscribed such mottoes as “Death to Weyler,” “Down with Spain,” “Freedom for Cuba,” etc. To the soul inspiring strains of “Marching Through Georgia,” the procession headed up Broadway to Seventh avenue thence west to Main street and to the post office, where the nation’s flag was saluted, and with bared heads, the gallant members of the procession and upwards of two thousand sidewalk escorts listened to the melody of that old tune so dear to the heart of every American, “The Star Spangled Banner.” From the post office the march was continued to the United States customs house on State street, when heads were again bared and that time-honored American melody, “Yankee Doodle,” floated out on the evening breezes.
     From the customs house the procession headed for the city hall, where Captain Smith gave the order to “break ranks.” And a general round-up took place on Fifth Avenue before the city hall, but the avenue was crowded the entire distance between State and Broadway. By previous arrangement Dr. J. A. Hornsby had been selected as chairman of the “spread eagle” portion of the exercises, and for ten minutes he entertained the large crowd with the kind of patriotic speech that causes a man to want to take the next steamer for the scene of action. Dr. Hornsby retired by introducing the well known attorney, Walter Church, who, in his usually happy, eloquent and pleasant manner, delivered an address aptly appropriate and pointed. He was followed by Attorney I. N. Wilcoxen, a battle-scarred veteran of the last war. Mr. Wilcoxen is still able and willing to battle for the stars and stripes, and before his able address was concluded all his hearers were ready to enlist in the good cause. F. T. Kellar followed in a speech rampant in vim, vigor, humor and patriotism. He is only a “boy” but the war spirit is strong within him.
     Jeff R. Smith, captain of the Skaguay Guards, made the closing address.
     While Jeff’s eloquence is not of that style which is said to make arches of Irish oak resound, yet he has a manner which causes his hearers to vociferously applaud. He closed his address by asserting that he had actually captured Weyler, and had him then and there in custody.
     The Seattle Post Intelligencer quoted Jeff’s closing remarks.
    “There is one man, who in this terrible strife, has transcended the bounds of fair war. He has murdered the helpless and weak, debauched women and starved little children. Mr. Chairman, this man we have with us today. I have him here, and now we will proceed to hang and burn Butcher Weyler.”
     The Denver Evening Post continued.
     At that moment “Weyler” was run up on a pre-arranged wire and properly hooted at by the crowd. A big bonfire was at once started, and Weyler was burned in effigy amid the deafening yells of upward of two thousand enthusiastic Americans.



Sources:
Wikipedia: Decoration Day










Decoration Day, May 1, 1898
April 1, 2010










Decoration Day: pages 500-502.





"He died with many good deeds to his credit, as well as the other kind, but it is always the bad things he did which people remember."
—Henry “Yank Fewclothes” Edwards
Alias Soapy Smith, p. 592.



May 31


1854: The Kansas-Nebraska Act is passed by Congress.
1859: The Philadelphia Athletics are formally organized to play the game of Town Ball.
1867: Two soldiers on escort duty from Fort Dodge are killed by Indians near the Bluff Ranch, Kansas.
1870: E. J. DeSemdt patents asphalt.
1877: Colonel Nelson Miles reports that 2,300 Sioux Indians have surrendered in the last two months, at the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail Agencies in Nebraska.
1879: Madison Square Garden in New York opens.
1880: The League of American Wheelman, the first U.S. bicycle society is formed in Newport, Rhode Island.
1883: Soapy Smith purchases a street vendors license to sell his prize package soap in Washington City, Iowa.
1884: Dr. John Harvey Kellogg patents flaked cereal (Corn Flakes).
1889: More than 2,200 people die after the dam in Johnstown, Pennsylvania collapses. In Denver, Colorado Soapy Smith donates to a charity drive to help the survivors.
1900: Carry Nation goes on her first saloon wrecking rampage in Kiowa, Kansas.