The Jane Crossley Affair
Jane
Crossley was the widow of John W. Crossley, a well-known carpet manufacturer
and merchant. She entrusted twenty-seven
thousand dollars to her brother, Henry B. Adams, a partner with Crossley in the
carpet business. A New York Times article suggests that Mrs. Crossley
knew she was speculating, but the prospect of riches seems to have blinded her
to caution: “Mrs. Jane Crossley conceived a desire to speculate in order to
increase her fortune” giving her brother ... $27,000 to invest for her in
speculative stocks.” An
undated clipping from the New York Tribune says the money was
transferred “at various times” which seems to suggest that initially the
investments performed well. In 1891 or
1892 Adams chose A. Delmont Jones as his broker and the Crossley fortune was
invested in Staten Island Rapid Transit and St. Paul, Minnesota and Manitou
Railroad bonds. Much more risky was an investment in oil stocks. Jones sold the
oil stocks at “a great loss and sold the Manitou bonds without Mrs. Crossley’s
knowledge.” Adam had taken an eight thousand dollar mortgage on Jones’
furniture to secure the investment, realizing six thousand dollars at its sale.
Jane Crossley sued her brother to recover her money resulting in a “mixed up
and complicated” case.
There is insufficient
record to expand on Jones’ role. I suspect that he sold the railway bonds to
cover some of his own debts. His debts were accumulating and fraudulent claims
were unraveling. If so, he paid for that mistake by losing his very expensive
furniture.
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