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Friday, November 1, 2019

The third Mrs A D Jones


(rewritten and revised from a few years back - for those who enjoy the trivia as well as the scholarly stuff)


Albert Delmont Jones (now calling himself Albert Royal Delmont) married Bambina Maude Scott on September 29, 1904. He was around 50 years old at the time and (if the 1920 census is to be believed) she was 21. A 1922 newspaper has a claim that her first husband was a Cincinnati millionaire. Cincinnati was certainly one of ADJ’s past locations. (Interview question: “Tell me, Bambie, what was it about this 50 year old millionaire that first attracted you to him?”) Bambina liked the name Delmont and kept it through several subsequent marriages, including John Hopper and Cassius Wood. In 1922 she was last heard of (under the Delmont name) planning to marry a Lawrence Johnson.

In the newspapers she is sometimes Bambina Maud Delmont and sometimes Maud Bambina Delmont and Maud sometimes has an E on the end, and sometimes not. But the “Delmont” is consistent.

Bambina liked getting married, but didn’t always finish the paperwork for her divorces and was subsequently charged with bigamy on one occasion.


In the 1920 census returns she was running her own shop in Los Angeles selling and fitting corsets.

Bambina’s claim to fame (or infamy) is her part in the Roscoe Arbuckle scandal. Fatty Arbuckle was a silent film comedian who was huge (in more than one way) in his day. He is probably remembered in film circles today as the man who gave Buster Keaton his start in the movies.

Arbuckle was savaged by the media when he was suddenly arrested and accused of rape and murder after a 1921 party in San Francisco. The victim was a small part actress named Virginia Rappe. The charge was subsequently reduced to manslaughter. Arbuckle went through two hung juries before being cleared at a third trial where the jury were out for all of six minutes, using five of them to write a statement making a formal apology to him for the injustice he had suffered.

There was little doubt that Virginia Rappe’s death was preventable. Health problems exacerbated by a series of abortions made her fragile, and she didn’t get prompt or proper care when she was taken ill. But the lurid accusations against Arbuckle all originated with Rappe’s companion who crashed the party, namely Bambina Maud Delmont. While Wikipedia cannot be called the most accurate of sources, it does quite a nice line in character assassination: “Delmont had a long criminal record with multiple convictions for racketeering, bigamy, fraud and extortion, and allegedly was making a living by luring men into compromising positions and capturing them in photographs, to be used as evidence in divorce proceedings.”  The Weekly World News in 1961 veered into alliteration by accusing her of being a “Tinseltown tart.” Her unsubstantiated testimony at the original hearing got Arbuckle indicted, but then the prosecution deliberately kept her far away from all the actual trials, because her obvious inability to tell truth from fiction would have immediately sunk their case.

So this was the third Mrs ADJ.

When you consider ADJ’s history after his “fall from grace,” it would appear that some people just seem made for each other.

Albeit briefly.


Addenda

For those who love trivia and conspiracy links, Arbuckle’s own third wife was Addie Oakely Dukes McPhail, the former wife of Lindsay Matthew McPhail, who was the son of Matthew Lindsay McPhail who had helped lead the New Covenant breakaway from the Society in 1909. You really couldn’t make this stuff up.

(With grateful thanks to Miquel for originally providing the McPhail connection)


5 comments:

B. W. Schulz said...

Please forward to me a link to the newspaper where Bambina claimed her first husband was a millionaire.

jerome said...

The Nebraska State Journal and the Lincoln Journal Star, both for February 3, 1922, have her "intended" Lawrence Johnson stating this. (I have sent you cuttings back-channel). He will have got this information from Bambina, but I will look further in case the words can actually be directly put in her mouth.

ZionsHerald said...

Thank you Jerome for these very detailed and interesting investigations into a little known portion of WT history. This helps fill in in some of the gaps in the early history and gives background to the recent Day Star issues that we have been able to uncover.

roberto said...

Russell must not have regretted Jones at all. Year after year, Jones became incomprehensible in theology and moral conduct. The people around him were disqualified. Thanks Jerome for the research

jerome said...

It seems strange that Bambina should disappear so well. For such a self-publicist this was uncharacteristic.

In Ancestry there are only two entries for her usual name Bambina Maud Delmont – a marriage in 1912 to John Hooper and her 1920 census return where she is running a shop. Trying to track the history of her 1922 intended husband, Lawrence Theodore Johnston, yields his history, but no mention of her. He was a “theatrical” who died in the 1940s. His photograph, complete with the most unconvicing hairpiece ever seen, is out there. But I suspect that Bambina didn’t become Mrs Johnston after all.

Bambina is in the 1900 census for Lincoln, Nebraska, under the name Maud Scott. She is 17. She has an older brother named Jay C Scott. He is 19. Jay’s draft registration card for World War 1 has Maude Hopper, sister, down as next of kin. Jay’s history can be traced down to a military grave marker in 1960, but there is no sign of his sister. And they sound the sort of family who maybe didn’t keep on touch.

She had other sisters, Helen, Ethel (reportedly married seven times) and Lucille, but their names disappear.

David Yallop wrote the definitive history of the Fatty Arbuckle case in The Day the Laughter Died, and over several decades managed to track down and interview each of his three wives. But even he loses sight of Bambina in 1922.