Sierra Lady

Desperate brides, dental surgery and death threats…the last two days have involved a bit of all three areas and then some. Every time I submit the new book about mail order brides I am told by the editor that I’m 4 or 5 thousand words short. So I write a few more chapters and turn those in and another word count shows that I’m still 4 or 5 thousand words short. I’ll be back at it again today. I am going to submit a chapter about the Harvey Girls. If I’m still 4 or 5 thousand words short you’ll hear a scream of frustration from coast to coast. Yesterday’s visit to the dentist was a treat. And by treat I mean horrifying. I’m not a good patient during a simple cleaning removing several fillings and replacing them with new ones to save my molars really sends me over the edge. After poking my gums with a sharp instrument for several hours the doctor pointed out to me that my gums were bleeding. I felt the need to mention that they weren’t bleeding when I came in and that maybe the problem was him. I feel better today. The death threats have eased up somewhat. For a couple of days I was receiving emails that explained that “my days were numbered.” Whose days aren’t number? In the midst of the hate mail and name calling I received an email of encouragement I want to share. I do this not to suggest I’m deserving of such kindness but to point out that there are angels disguised as human beings who offer encouragement when it feels all hope is lost. “Hi, I attended some of your wonderful seminars at the SASS convention and I was deeply moved by your terrible experience with “Missouri Justice” and I applaud and pray for you, for what you are doing to help your brother. His story is tragic and needs to be told as there are so many men out there who have been unfairly incarcerated by terrible women who use the law to warehouse their husbands or boyfriends in hellish conditions, just because they can. You are brave and a woman of incredible strength, I feel the Lord is working through you to not only help your brother but to help others, and to get recognition to change the law into a process that reveals the offenders and champions the innocent. You go girl!!! Best wishes Sierra Lady S.A.S.S.” God bless you, Sierra Lady and thank you. Now it’s time to return to Object Matrimony, which is the title of the mail-order bride book due to be released next year.

Sydney Lindsay

The hardest aspect of writing is writing. I spend the day reviewing the research I’ve done on a particular individual and desperately try to create an original way to tell their story. That’s what I hope to do with Victoria Woodhull today. My goal is eight pages by the days end. I am anxious to speak with a gentleman who emailed me this weekend who is a relative of Harvey Logan from the Wild Bunch. Maybe there’s an untold story there. I’m excited to start digging. Of course nothing I write can compare to the pithy, succinct, hate-ridden emails I received this weekend. One example of such an email read, “Die, Die, Die, B___, B___,B____ for sticking up for your brother.” My personal favorite was “You should be repeatedly raped and thrown in a grave for defending your brother.” What started it all was the following email – complete with a bogus email address so there was no way to respond. All subsequent emails contained a fake email address as well. The tracking device on my computer system and the one built into the website quickly traced the author of the letters to a home in Norborne, Missouri. They initially tried to hide their location at a spot in Dallas, Texas, but again…the tracking devise. As I’m focusing on writing this morning I have to applaud the author of the hate mail. They decided not to be long winded with their thoughts. They were brief, to the point, and guilty. I can smell their fear all the way in California. In spite of the hate mail I’m going to continue to champion my brother. The emails make me believe we are on the right track. If the false accuser of my brother was secure in her testimony there would be no need to write such letters. Here is a copy of one of the first emails – certainly the only one tame enough to share.
Your Name
Sydney Lindsay
Your Email
syd.linds99@gmail.com

Message
You are seriously an awful person for continuing to defend your brother. Shame on you.

Apart from the fact the email address is a fraud (which given the author I’m not surprised) the use of the word “seriously” makes one believe the author is under the age of 20. As a published author I’d edited this piece by removing the word “seriously”. It’s not needed. I wish I could critique the other emails in this journal entry but they were too graphic to include here. And now it’s time to continue with my own writing. I’m overwhelmed with work and I’m grateful for that.

The Mighty Pen

I am amazed sometimes how much life can be crammed into a week. Work, Bible study, rehearsals for the Christmas play at church, phone calls and emails with the lawyers involved in Rick’s case, lunch meetings about the condition of today’s prison system, private investigating assignments… I’d love some down time but need to be at an architectural committee meeting first thing this morning. I’m going to make plans to go to Monterrey soon and spend some time on Cannery Row. I don’t think I’ll have time to visit historic Monterrey for a few months but I can dream. I’ve been working on a book about women outlaws of the Mid-West and focusing on a lady named Victoria Woodhull. When she was arrested in 1872 for obscenity, she was one of the most notorious female outlaws at the time. And what was considered obscene at that time consisted of Woodhull sharing with readers of her newspaper the notion of “free love.” She believed women should be able to select her own lovers – such a controversial idea in the late eighteen hundreds. A few times during the day I check to see how many people have visited my website. I average about 65 visitors a day. Yesterday however I had 209 visits. I was very excited until I did a check and found out the hits came from one location in Lees Summit, Missouri. The user is a repeat visitor to the site who works at a hospital. I guess it’s to be expected. As Voltaire once said, “Fear follows crime and is its punishment.” That fear will only intensive as the year progresses. I’ve been waiting a long time for justice to be served – even longer to write about it. The Plea will be the full story of what happened to Rick and I’m more anxious to write about that than I’ve been about writing anything in a long time. It almost seems as though the desire to write at all was leading to this pivotal point. Amazing how God works.

Never Forget

“No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country.” General George S. Patton, Jr.,in Patton by Francis Ford Coppola. Patton never was one for tact, but this quote reminds me of the events that took place today seventy years ago. I’m grateful to the men and women who fought for my freedom. I’m thankful for those souls in faraway countries today that are protecting this nation. I pray that the people in this country never forget the price that was paid for freedom. WWII Vets are passing away at an alarming rate and with them goes the history of that time. My grandfather served in WWII, my father in Vietnam, my brother Corey in the Gulf War, and my brother Rick served in Desert Storm. I spoke a bit about Rick and his service to our country last night at a women’s ministry mixer. Rick was one of the most patriotic men I ever met. His pride in country, as have mine, eroded away when we saw how the justice system really works. Part of the lesson at last night’s event was to write down the name of one person who was hindering you in your walk with the Lord. We were challenged to write down the name of one or two people we couldn’t forgive. I know who they are. I see their faces every day in my mind’s eye but I couldn’t bring myself to write their name on a paper. These two women have taken so much – more than they will ever realize. I have my own war against them that will hopefully come to a close in the New Year. I will not rest until they pay for the lives they have ruined. They grossly underestimated the devotion to what is decent and right. As Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto said to his superiors upon learning of the success of the attack on Pearl Harbor, “I fear all we have done is awaken a sleeping giant and filled him with a terrible resolve.” The war rages on.

Want Ads

With any luck I’ll be able to turn in the last chapter for the second edition of the mail-order bride on the frontier book. The publisher hasn’t decided on a title yet, but they are always good at coming up with great titles so I have no doubt they will do the same for the next book. I met a gentleman a few days ago that had appeared on an episode of the program History Detectives and spoke about mail-order brides. He and his wife found several photographs of mail-order brides at an antique store and used them in the episodes. It seems like many great historical pieces are in private hands. I’d love to find such a collection in my travels – some wonderful artifact hidden behind a velvet photo of Dogs Playing Poker maybe. There was quite a bit of interest expressed in mail-order brides among the readers at the convention I attended this past week. I thought I’d share a bit of what I learned about the subject and included in the introduction of the new book. When gold was discovered in the far west during the 18th century, a billowing mass of humanity swept toward the setting sun with the swiftness of a tidal wave. Prospectors, businessman, and explorers came seeking a better way of life and the hope of amassing a fortune. No matter what riches were to be had or the endless territories yet to be conquered, unattached settlers who made the journey longed for a companion to share the new land. Due to the rigors of the frontier the males were in the vast majority. The few women that did migrate to points beyond the Mississippi were laundresses, cooks, or adventurers with no desire to wed, pioneers with children, or soiled doves.  The need for marriageable women in the west immediately following the Gold Rush was great. According to the October 6, 1859 edition of the Daily Alta California newspaper, it was estimated that there were 200 men to every women. At the close of the Civil War the need for men in the East was as pronounced. Capitalizing on that need on both sides of the country were mail order bride publications. Women and men in search of a spouse placed advertisement and corresponded with individuals they hoped would agree to marry them. The couples could exchange as few as three letters before accepting a proposal. Others choose to write one another for several years before committing their lived to the interested party. Prior to 1865, the cost to mail a letter more than four-hundred and fifty miles was $.22 from where the correspondence originated. Many of the mail order brides were at least that far away.  Women en route to the place where their future husbands were located carried the few personal belongings they owned in a trunk or satchel. An additional dress, bed clothes, lace collars and cuffs, (used to wear over an old dress for a Sunday church service), a family Bible, photographs, and a book or two were all they usually brought with them.
Brides who consented to move west to wed endure a difficult journey whether traveling by stage, with a wagon train or by steamship. The desire to be a wife and have children was so overwhelming women happily agreed to make the strenuous one hundred and twenty nine day trip from Independence to San Francisco. Wagon trains and stagecoaches were hot and crowded and the vehicles easily overturned. Sea travels wasn’t any more comfortable and could be dangerous as well. Mail order brides boarding steamships on the East Coast ventured up the Pacific for a trip that lasted more than three months. Between 1852 and 1867, one hundred and sixty steamships burned, two hundred and nine blew up, and more than five hundred and seventy vehicles hit an obstruction in the water and sank.  The popularity of two mail order bride catalogues, Matrimonial News and the New Plan, sparked entrepreneurs to tap into the market and create their own publications. All were devoted to the proposition that every man should have a mate. Traditionalists criticized the patrons that employed the unconventional method of selecting a spouse. Prospective brides and grooms defended their decision to court via mail with a quote all the matrimonial newspapers and magazines carried. “Correspondence between intelligent young ladies or gentlemen cannot fail to sharpen the wits and brighten the intellect and is an excellent discipline for the mind. It is an educator in many ways, and the practice of friendly letter writing should be encouraged.”
More than one hundred and sixty years after the first mail order bride was sent for, the method of choosing a life partner is still being used. Hearts West II contains stories of the origin of the practice, the romantic unions that came about as a result, as well as the disappointments and desertions. As I mentioned, the title of the book will not be Hearts West II. I’ll keep visitors to the site updated on the change.

No Place Like Home

Saturday night and I can’t wait to be home. Although I met some wonderful people at the SASS Convention in Vegas, I’m not a Vegas fan. It’s been a long trip. It’s been a long year. Watching It’s A Wonderful Life while I wait to leave for the airport. I love the movie but George Bailey is never able to leave Bedford Falls. Happy ending not withstanding I always felt badly for him because of that. People at this conference were incredibly long suffering and let me prattle on about the books. At some point, and for reasons that escape me at the moment, I talked to the audience about my brother. He’s always at the forefront of my thoughts especially so at this time of year. Each man’s life touches so many other lives and when they aren’t around it leaves an awful hole. I’m on the lookout for a miracle.

An Excerpt From Cowboy True’s Christmas Adventure

Cowboy True worked at the Rocking R Ranch. He was tall and thin and always wore a big smile. His hair was messy and his cowboy boots were always dusty. He spent his days rounding up cattle and taming wild stallions. Cowboy True was a friendly fellow. He liked to make up games and play with the children who lived down the road in a small town called Sweet Water. He had a way of making folks laugh and feel happy, and he never passed up a chance to do a good deed or help out any of the townspeople who might have needed it.

Cowboy True did a lot of helpful things for people. One day he would carry the Widow Martin’s groceries home for her. On another day, he might sweep the steps out in front of the Sweet Water Mercantile for the store’s owner, Mister Hamilton. Cowboy True seemed to be the most helpful around Christmas time. He liked the holidays best of all because the town would be full of happy people needing help carrying Christmas gifts from store to store.

Every Christmas Eve, the people of Sweet Water would have a Christmas barn dance. Everyone in town and at the Rocking R Ranch would get dressed up and go to the dance. The townspeople would sing Christmas carols, exchange presents, and eat a lot of Christmas cookies and cakes. People would come from miles around to celebrate the Christmas season.

One Christmas Eve, Cowboy True finished up his chores, washed his face, tried to comb his messy hair, saddled up his horse, placed his special Christmas gifts in his saddlebags, and rode off of for the barn dance.

An Excerpt From Outlaw Tales of California

Four teams of tired, uninspired horses pulled a line of buckboards filled with coffins over the dry, dusty terrain twelve miles outside of the village of San Juan Capistrano. The wagon drivers and a dozen other men riding with them stared soberly out at the land. Ahead in the near distance they could see a smattering of dead bodies strewn across the semi-desert floor. Misshapen dead horses, bloating in the heat, lay beside their lifeless owners.
As the buckboards inched closer to the carnage, the vehicle’s wheels cut through clotted blood pools spread over the ground. The drivers slowed the teams to a halt and without speaking the men on board the wagons began unloading the wooden crates. Their busy hands then lifted the bodies off the hard earth and placed them in the caskets. All of the corpses were wearing badges, five of the men were deputies and one was Los Angeles Sheriff James R. Barton. Each of the lawmen were riddled with bullets, they had been stripped of their belongings and their right eyes had been shot out.
The objective of the slain posse, dispatched on January 22, 1857, was to track down a cattle rustler and horse thief named Juan Flores. Flores’s criminal activities began in 1855. He had run rough shot over a stretch of Southern California that extended from Sacramento to the San Joaquin Valley. Along the way he recruited more than 50 outlaws to assist him in the looting and killing of ranchers and their families. When Sheriff Barton learned of Flores’s hideout he wasted no time organizing volunteers. The experienced lawman believed he could apprehend the murderous bandit. He had no idea when he was riding hard towards the area where Flores was last seen that he was riding into an ambush.
Once the Sheriff’s body and that of his deputies were secured in the coffins the boxes were stacked inside the buckboards. Another posse was sent out to find Flores and bring him to justice, now not only for his existing sins, but for the brutal slaying of Barton and his men. The search for Flores was the largest manhunt in Old West history.
Juan Flores was born in 1835 in Santa Barbara, California. His parents were well respected members of the community and proud of the handsome son they believed would grow up to be an exceptional man. It is not known what prompted Flores to abandon the high hopes his mother and father had for him and embark on a life of crime. Historians suggest that the Floreses were a struggling family of farmers and that Juan aspired for a more affluent lifestyle. He was not opposed to achieving his goal illegally either. He left home at 17 and joined a gang of ruthless cattle rustlers made up of American drifters, Mexican bandits, ex-convicts, fugitives and army deserters.
Cattle was a critical element of the West’s economy. California grown beef used to supply the growing population of prospectors and immigrant families and it increased daily in price. Because of the escalated cost the territory was infested with bands of cattle thieves committing depredations upon the ranges. Ranchers not only had to worry about bandits stealing from them, but hungry and desperate Native Americans as well. Some cattle owners lost their entire herds to either the Indians or the rustlers. Flores rode with a bandito bunch that raided cattle farms around the area of Rancho Santa Margarita. He primarily focused on stealing horses and was eventually arrested for the offense in 1856. He was tried and convicted and was ordered to serve his time in the jail at San Quentin. Flores was bitter over his circumstances and restless with the wait inside a cell. Anxious to be free, he teamed up with a hundred other inmates in a massive jailbreak. The plans were thwarted before the prisoners were able to flee the premises, however.
Flores was discouraged, but not defeated. With the help of several fellow outlaws, his second attempt to bust out of prison was a success. The elaborate escape involved overtaking the crew onboard a ship docked at the wharf at Point San Quentin. The inexperienced bandit sailors steered the vessel out of the harbor amidst a barrage of gunfire from prison guards and law enforcement. The lawless crew navigated the ship through the open waters, making it to the Contra Costa shoreline where they docked. The men then split up and went their separate ways.
Law enforcement combed the hills around Santa Barbara looking for Flores and the others, but the felons could not be found. Flores had managed to allude the lawmen making his way to San Luis Obispo. Once he reached the picturesque town, the ambitious renegade immediately began enlisting a host of like-minded criminals to join him in his illegal ventures.
The most savage of all of Flores’s recruits was 20 year-old Andres Fontes. Fontes claimed he was driven to a life of crime by Sheriff James Barton. The two had been in love with the same woman when Barton accused Fontes of stealing a horse to get rid of him. Fontes spent two years in prison and vowed to kill Barton when he was released. His hatred for law enforcement and bent toward lawbreaking made he and Flores natural allies.
Bandits were drawn to Flores’s charm and criminal vision. He organized and led more than 50 men on numerous cattle rustling raids. It was an easy transition from cattle rustling to robbery for Flores. He organized the looting of small towns, stage holdups, and the ransacking of prospector’s camps. He and his men also kidnapped lone travelers and held them for ransom. Dead bodies were often times left in the wake of the mayhem. Residents in mining communities throughout the state were petrified of the fugitive. Flores fueled the fear with bold, public acts of violence. In late 1856, the bandit and his gang snatched a German settler off a trail outside of San Diego. They demanded the victim pay a hefty sum for his release, but the settler refused. Flores made an example of the man in the town square. With hundreds looking on, he shot the stubborn emigrant to death.
With the help of his love interest, Chola Martina, Flores and his desperados invaded the homes and businesses of two well-known mercantile owners in San Juan Capistrano. One of the men was murdered trying to protect his property. News of the outlaw’s continual vicious attacks prompted Los Angeles Sheriff Barton to form a posse and set out after the murderers and thieves. Barton had been informed that Flores’ band was some 50 men strong, but he believed the number had been exaggerated by hysterical crime victims. The Sheriff’s underestimation of the strength of Flores’s gang resulted in his death. One of the men that gunned down Barton was Andres Fontes. At last he had his revenge.
General Don Andres Pico, a prominent Los Angeles land owner, ranger and the brother of the last Mexican Governor of California, took charge of forming a posse after the slaughter of Barton and his deputies. Pico pulled together a 51 man army of Mexicans and Americans to go after Flores. Pauma Indian leader, Manuelito Cota in Temecula, joined the General in his efforts. Manuelito recruited 43 Indians for the task. A group of enraged citizens in the San Diego area made up a third posse out to track down Flores. Pauma scouts ventured ahead of the posses to look for clues as to where the bandit might have fled. The location of Flores camp was finally narrowed down to the mountains around El Cariso. With the assistance of one of Flores’s former gang members, Pico’s Californians, as they were known, were able to find the exact location of Flores’s cabin hideout. The Californians attacked the shelter under the light of a full moon. The desperados inside fired on the posse killing or wounding many of their pursuers. Some of the bandits were shot while trying to make a run for their horses, others were captured unharmed and some managed to get away. Juan Flores and Andres Fontes were two who escaped.
Flores and Fontes were lost in the smoke of gunfire and vanished into the tangled mountain thicket. General Pico sent for reinforcements and shortly after his supply of guns, ammunition and men were replenished, he continued the pursuit of the outlaw. On February 1, 1857, a faction of the posse headed by Doctor J. Gentry from Los Angeles, cornered Flores and two of his companions near Santiago Mountain. The bandits shot it out with the posse members, but realizing they were outnumbered they surrendered. Flores and his diminished band of followers were escorted to a nearby ranch were they were placed under guard in a weathered adobe building. The prisoner’s stay was meant to be temporary. Given Flores’s previous success at escaping his captures, the authorities wanted more law enforcement on hand to escort the criminal to the Los Angeles jail.
In spite of the precautions taken, Flores wriggled out of his cuffs and broke out of the crumbling, clay holding cell. Posse member’s tempers flared at the news that Flores had gotten away. General Pico ordered his deputies to immediately put to death the members of Flores’s gang that were arrested with him. Pico then helped enlist more than 120 men to join the manhunt to find Juan Flores. For eleven days, one of the largest posse assembled in the Old West searched the territory along the Los Angeles River between San Juan Capistrano and Temecula.
Almost 24 hours after Flores had escaped he was stopped by two armed sentinels patrolling the grounds at a Simi Valley ranch. He lied about his identity, but his suspicious behavior led the guards to take him to the ranch owner to be questioned further. The land baron recognized the bandit and informed his men that the scoundrel in custody was none other than Juan Flores. Flores was taken to Los Angeles where he was tried and sentenced to death. After his trial ended on February 14, 1857, a hostile crowd surrounded the jail demanding the notorious outlaw be turned over to them. They wanted Flores hung at that moment. On February 21st the criminal was turned over to the enraged mob and they led him to the gallows.
Before the noose was placed around his neck, Flores’s arms and legs were bound and his eyes were covered with a white handkerchief. He whispered a few last words and then the trap door was sprung. He did not die instantly. The fall was shorter than planned and the rope was a bit too long. After a gruesome six minute struggle it was over. Flores was 22 years-old when he died.

An Excerpt From Happy Trails

Hundreds of excited children, with hard-earned nickels and dimes clutched tightly in their fists, exchanged their money for a ticket at Saturday matinees across the country in the 1940s. The chance to see singing cowboy Roy Rogers, his horse, Trigger, and leading lady Dale Evans come up against the West’s most notorious criminals brought young audiences to theatres in droves. And, in the process, it elevated western musicals to one of the most popular film genres in history.

Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were the reigning royalty of B-rated westerns for more than a decade. They helped persuade moviegoers that good always triumphs over evil in a fair fight and that life on the open range was one long, wholesome sing-along. Together, the King of the Cowboys and the Queen of the West appeared in more than 200 films and television programs.

Roy and Dale made their first pictures together in 1994. The film, The Cowboy and the Senorita, brought an estimated 900,000 fans to movie houses in America and began a partnership for the couple that lasted fifty-two years. The chemistry between Roy and Dale was enchanting, and together they were an entertainment powerhouse. In addition to their films, they had popular radio programs, comic book series, albums, and a long list of merchandise (including clothes, boots, and toys), all bearing their names.

Roy and Dale were successful individuals, as well, Dale, a talented singer-songwriter, performed with big band orchestras, shared the stage with Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, and penned many popular tunes, including the song that would be Roy and Dale’s theme, “Happy Trails.” Roy was a co-founder and member of the group the Sons of the Pioneers. The band made a name for itself singing original country music songs, including “Cool Water” and “Tumblin’ Tumbleweeds.”

Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were married in 1947. As a couple they were consistently ranked in the top ten among the western stars at the box office. They costarred in twenty-nine movies and recorded more than 200 albums together. In 1951, they parlayed their fame to the small screen, appearing in a half-hour television show aptly called The Roy Rogers Show.

When they weren’t working, the western icons spent a great deal of time visiting children in hospitals and orphanages. They were dedicated Christians who sought to serve the hurt and needy. They would later be recognized by national civic organizations for their humanitarian efforts.

Roy and Dale’s off-screen life was filled with a great deal of love and happiness. They had nine children, whom they adored and showered with affection. Their family was no stranger to tragedy though. One child, Robin, died of complications associated with Down syndrome. An adopted daughter, Debbie, died in a church bus accident when she was twelve; their adopted son, Sandy, suffered as accidental death while serving in the military in Germany. Robin’s death inspired Dale to write Angel Unaware, the first of her more than twenty books.

After the couple was semi-retired from the entertainment industry, they greeted fans at the museum in Victorville, California, and enjoyed life with their children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. Thousands of western enthusiasts and fans alike now make the pilgrimage to Branson, Missouri, where the Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Museum is currently located. They come to get a glimpse of their heroes’ six-shooters, boots, costumes, and other personal artifacts on display.

The Rogers family’s collection of priceless items elicits fond memories of an inspirational pair who used their immense talent to encourage moral and spiritual strength. The artifacts draw visitors back in time to when knights of the American plains yodeled, wore white hats and fancy boots, and thrived on defeating the outlaws and rescuing the defenseless.

An Excerpt From Pistol Packin’ Madams

Tessie Wall
Barbary Coast Madam

Madam Tessie Wall’s invitation to officers at the annual Policeman’s Ball after laying a $1,000 bill on the bar – 1913

A parade of horse drawn carriages deposited fashionably dressed San Francisco citizens at the entrance of the Tivoli Theatre. A handsome couple holding hands and cooing as young lovers do, emerged from one of the vehicles. A figure across the street, hidden in the shadows of an alleyway, eyed the pair intently. Once the couple entered the building Tessie Wall stepped out of the darkness into the subdued light of a row of gas lamps lining the busy thoroughfare. Tears streamed down the svelte, blonde’s face. The pain of seeing the man she loved with another woman was unbearable.

Several hours before, Tessie and her ex-husband, Frank Daroux entertained passerbys with a robust argument over the other woman in his life. After accusing the man of being a liar and a thief, Tessie begged him for another chance and promised to make him forget anyone else he was involved with.

 

Frank angrily warned Tessie that if she started anything he would put her “so far away that no one would find her.”

The words he had said to her played over and over again in her head. “You’ve got my husband,” she mumbled to herself. “And you’ll get yours someday. It’s not right.” She chocked back a torrent of tears, reached into her handbag and removed a silver-plated revolver. Hiding the weapon in the folds of her dress, she stepped back into the dark alleyway and waited.

It wasn’t long until Frank walked out of the theatre, alone. Standing on the steps of the building, he lit up a cigar and cast a glance into the night sky. Preoccupied with view of the stars, Frank did not see Tessie hurry across the street and race over to him. Before he realized what was happening, Tessie pointed the gun at his chest and fired. As Frank fell backwards he grabbed hold of the rim of a nearby stage. Tessie unloaded two more shots into his upper body. Frank collapsed in a bloody heap.

Tessie stood over his near lifeless frame, sobbing. When the police arrived she was kneeling beside Frank, the gun still clutched in her hand. When asked why she opened fire on him she wailed, “I shot him, cause I love him, God-damn him!”

 

 

Tessie Wall was one of the Barbary Coast’s most popular madams. Since entering the business in 1898 her life had been mired in controversy. Born on May 26, 1869, she was one of ten children. Her mother, who died when she was forty-four, named her chubby, ash-blond daughter Teresa Susan Donahue. Her father, Eugene was a dock worker and spent a considerable amount of time away from home. Teresa and her brothers and sisters took care of themselves.

By the time she turned thirteen, Teresa, or Tessie as she was referred to by friends and family, had developed into a beautiful, curvaceous young woman. She turned heads everywhere she went in the Mission District where she lived.

In 1884, Tessie accepted a marriage proposal from Edward M. Wall, a handsome fireman twice her age. Edward was a heavy drinker and was often out of work because of his “weakness.” Tessie supported them with her job as a housekeeper. Two years after the pair married they had a son. Joseph Lawrence Wall’s life was short. He died four months after his birth from repiratory complications. Tessie was devastated and following her husband’s example, took up drinking to dull the pain.

Joseph’s death had an adverse effect on Edward and Tessie’s relationship. Both blamed the other for their loss. The Wall’s marriage ended in bitter divorce.

 

Historians believe heartbreak over her child’s death and subsequent demise of her marriage contributed to Tessie’s decision to enter into a life of prostitution.

Before venturing out on her own, Tessie continued to keep house for some of San Francisco’s most prominent citizens. While in their employ, Tessie learned about the unconventional desires and habits many of the elite society members possessed. After learning how much money they were willing to pay for their debauchery, she decided to go into business for herself. In 1898, she purchased a brothel and hired a stable of beautiful young ladies to work for her.

In two years time Tessie’s “lodging house” had become so successful that she was able to open a second brothel.

Tessie Walls’s bordello was visited by some of the wealthiest business men and politicians in the state. Upon entering her business clients were greeted by elegantly dressed women offering them wine and champagne. The home itself was equally inviting and posh. It was furnished with antiques, plush red-velvet sofas and armchairs and a large gold fireplace. The draperies and bedroom furniture was just as ornate. She had a giant, gold Napoleon bed decorated with swans and cupids. The dresser and matching mirror was gilded in gold.

 

 

Madam Wall’s parlor house was recognized as one of the best in the city. Tessie herself would spend time with her guests before they left with a lady of their choosing. She listened intently to their stories about life and work and would laugh uproariously at their jokes. Patrons were so captivated by the charms of their host that they often admitted that when they sat down in the parlor and started talking to Tessie they often forgot what they came for.

Tessie Wall knew the importance of advertisement. The method she used to promote her house was unconventional, but effective. She would clothe her girls in the latest garments from Paris and New York and send them out on the street for all to admire. Every Saturday afternoon Tessie’s girls would hold a parade on Market Street. Everyone in the neighborhood would come out to see the new fashions being worn by the demimonde.

Once other madams saw how popular the parades were they launched their own exhibitions. It wasn’t uncommon on weekends to see numerous women marching on opposite sides of the thoroughfare modeling the latest styles. Parlor houses with the best showing reaped the benefits in the evening. Due in large part to Tessie’s welcoming personality and the voluptuous ladies that worked for her, Tessie’s brothel was usually the one that did the most business.

 

Madam Wall’s parlor house yielded a sizeable profit, but the opportunities the income afforded her and the conversation she enjoyed with an array of customers, couldn’t keep her from thinking about her son. During those melancholy moments she would once again turn to alcohol. By this point in her life Tessie was able consumed enormous quantities of wine and drink most men under the table. Often times she challenged beer drinkers to champagne drinking contests. The famous boxer John L. Sullivan was one such participant. Sullivan was unaccustomed to the effects of champagne and after twenty-one drinks he passed out. Still standing after twenty-two drinks, Tessie won the contest and was forever referred to as “the woman who licked John L. Sullivan.”

The life and business Madam Wall had built for herself was almost destroyed by the great fire of 1906. A massive earthquake rocked San Francisco on August 1, causing electric lights to fall, spark and set fire to buildings and homes along Market Street. The blaze spread throughout the city reducing multiple structures to ash.

Despite her best efforts Tessie’s parlor house did not survive the inferno. The only item she managed to save was the gold fireplace. When she rebuilt the brothel a year later the resilient item was put back in place.

 

It became the focal point of the house and the subject of much conversation for years to come.

The new parlor house was just as popular as before, but competition from new rival houses had heightened. Jessie Hayman, the madam from a high-class establishment near Tessie’s, had attracted many clients and the business continued to grow daily. Madam Wall was forced to come up with fresh ways to promote her house.

In addition to the weekly parades of her employees dressed in their finest, Tessie decided to show off her staff at music halls and theatres. Every Sunday evening Tessie and her ladies would attend a vaudeville performance at the Orpheum Theatre. She purposely arrived late so all eyes would be focused on her beauties as they made their way to their seats.

The stunt drastically increased nightly business. When Jessie Hayman learned what Tessie was doing she began taking her ladies to the theatre too. On Sunday nights the two madams would try and best each other with grand entrances that seemed to upstage the performers. Determined not to be out done, Tessie decided to keep her girls from attending a couple of shows. The spectacle of their arrival always generated a lot of attention and she hoped their absence would do the same.

 

The empty seats did peak the public’s interest and just as the conversation about where they were died down, Tessie and her ladies returned. As the lights dimmed, the curtain went up, the music started and Madam Wall and her girls made their way down the aisle. As though on cue, the show suddenly stopped, the house lights were turned up again and all eyes were on Tessie and her ladies.

For every public attempt to increase business there were private deals being made to do the same. It was not uncommon for hotel clerks, bell boys, head waiters, chefs at restaurants and cabbies to be paid handsome sums to direct wealthy men to the finer parlor houses. Such help was generally worth ten percent of the amount earned from that customer.

Over her long career Tessie made friends with several well known figures. One such man was politician Milton Latham who would later become the Governor of the state. At the time of their meeting he was a struggling architect. Tessie was struggling herself. A public outcry against houses like hers from moral citizens prompted city officials to place restrictions on a madam’s ability to add more rooms to their business. Construction on new houses of ill repute were also restricted.

 

In spite of the limitations Latham wanted to build Tessie a new bordello. Madam Wall laughed at the thought and reminded him of the police blockade on houses like hers. “It’s so strict right now,” she told Latham, “that I can’t even put out red lights or hang red shades.” After Latham managed to convince Tessie that it was doable and his offer was sincere, she agreed to try and acquire a building permit. To her surprise she was granted one.

Latham built an exquisite home in the city’s Tenderloin district. The three story, terra-cotta structure had twelve suites, a large kitchen and dining room, a saloon, three parlors and a ballroom. An average of fourteen women lived and worked at the house. Some came to the ornate business from as far away as France. The majority of Madam Wall’s highly sought after employees were young and blonde. A thirty something brunette known as Black Gladys garnered the most attention at the home.

Madam Wall’s parlor house on 337 O’Farrell Street was a popular stop for college men and young entrepreneurs. Tessie’s clients could pay for the services of her ladies by cash or credit and did not normally spend the night. If gentlemen did stay overnight however, they were sent on their way only after their clothes were pressed and they were served a full breakfast.

 

Among the many repeat customers at Tessie’s establishment was Frank Daroux. Frank was a gambler and politician. He held a high ranking position within the Republican Party and had a weakness for brothels. One evening in 1909, he wandered into Tessie’s place and was instantly captivated by the flamboyant madam. She was equally charmed by him. Frank invited Tessie to dinner and the two laughed and conversed through an elaborate meal.

The evening left a lasting impression on Frank, not merely because the company was stimulating, but because Tessie drank a considerable amount of wine. In addition to the fine French food the pair was served in a private dining room, Tessie enjoyed twenty bottles of champagne and never left the table.

Tessie was attracted to Frank for a variety of reasons. He resembled Napoleon, a man she thought was devilishly handsome. He was cleaver, smart and well respected in the community. It was that kind of respectability that Tessie longed for. After a whirlwind courtship and significant persuasion on her part, the pair were married.

Frank felt his career in politics would suffer if it was widely known he married a madam so he insisted the wedding take place out of town and then be kept a secret.

 

Tessie reluctantly agreed to his terms, but made him promise she could host a party to celebrate their commitment to one another. One hundred guests attended the grand affair. They were treated to a delicious feast and eighty cases of champagne.

The Daroux’s marriage was rocky from the start. Preoccupied with his public image, Frank demanded Tessie remove herself as madam and run the business in a more covert manner. Tessie agreed hoping the action would also allow the two to spend more time together. Frank, however, often left his new wife alone while he oversaw the activities at various gambling houses he owned. When he was home neighbors would overhear the pair loudly arguing in the early hours of the morning.

The difficulties between the two worsened when a new mayor and city council, bent on reform, was elected to office. The conservative public servants wanted to stamp out gambling and prostitution in San Francisco. Once the Daroux’s livelihoods were threatened they turned on one another.

In an effort to convince politicians that his business practices and personal life were respectable, Frank removed himself even further from his bride.

 

He befriended the new elected officials, convincing them that profits earned from his establishment could financially benefit themselves and the city. He attended posh social engagements and rallies unaccompanied by Madam Wall.

The more powerful Frank became politically, the more he tried to persuade Tessie to sell the parlor house. He reasoned that if she got out of the business it would ultimately make him look better once news of their marriage became common knowledge. As further enticement to give up the parlor house, Frank purchased a home for Tessie in the country. The gesture did not bring about the desired result. Tessie refused to leave the bustle of the city. “I’d rather be an electric light pole on Powell Street,” she told her husband, “than own all the land in the sticks.”

No matter how much she might have questioned the wisdom of marrying a man who did not accept her as she was, Tessie’s dreams of being embraced socially by San Francisco’s elite never wavered. She longed to be invited to chic affairs where important and well respected guests appeared.

By the spring of 1911, she had managed to wrangle an invitation to the Greenway Cotillion, a dinner and dance held to honor the city’s founding fathers.

 

The invitation, for Madam Wall and twelve of her girls, was procured by a politician and regular guest of the parlor house and came with a stipulation. If the ladies chose to attend their identities had to be disguised by champagne bottle costumes they would be required to wear. Tessie agreed.

Her appearance at the cotillion, even if it was disguised, impelled an unnamed socialite to invite Madam Wall to the annual Mardi Gras Ball. Wearing tails and a top hat, Frank attended the gala with his wife. Tessie’s dress was tasteful and understated. She was disappointed, but not surprised that her name was not listed in the local newspaper as one of the Mardi Gras attendees. She remedied the omission by reporting the loss of an expensive diamond broach at the location of the ball. The report was followed by a lost and found article placed in the San Francisco Examiner. Everyone who read the newspaper that day knew the notorious O’Farrell Street madam had been at the Mardi Gras Ball.

Having managed to get herself on the guest list for many more engagements, Tessie was able to convince Frank that she was no longer political poison and was now worthy of a church wedding. Frank consented to a public ceremony, but was adamant about Tessie retiring from the business.

 

This time she acquiesced and transferred the management of the house to one of her employees. Given the magnitude of the sacrifice, Tessie expected Frank to do something for her. At her request he promised to make all the arrangements for the reception and agreed to her guest list, choice of music and location.

Once a priest who would marry them was secured a wedding date was set. Nearly two years from the date Frank and Tessie were initially married, the two renewed their vows. The second ceremony was held in the rectory of St. Mary’s Cathedral.

Within hours of the nuptials the Darouxs were exchanging insults. Frank had disregarded all of Tessie’s requests for the reception and she verbalized her irritation in a toast where she announced that she was returning to her parlor house business as quickly as she could. Towards the end of the evening the pair had once again reconciled. Frank took that opportunity of brief calm to present his wife with a wedding gift. News of the expensive gesture of affection made the papers the following day.

“$10,000 Pearl Necklace Wedding Gift to Bride/Frank Daroux Marries Miss Theresa Donahue.”

The San Francisco Chronicle – July 12, 1911

 

After a brief honeymoon, Frank and Tessie returned to the lives they had made for themselves. Frank kept active in politics and oversaw business at his gambling dens. Tessie focused on her brothel. Religious groups staunchly opposed to parlor houses began a crusade to drive them out of business. Madam Wall’s place was a prime target. Frank did nothing to stop the powers-that-be from threatening her livelihood. But that was the least of her problems. Unbeknownst to Tessie, her husband was betraying her in a more profound way.

The Daroux’s relationship had always been a volatile one. They never shied away from quarreling in public. Frank grew tired of the embarrassing outbursts and was frustrated with the way it was diminishing his influence on key political figures. His attention eventually turned to a less combative woman he met at a fund raiser. In 1915, the two began having an affair. Tessie found the pair out and vowed to kill the woman if she came near her husband again. Frank stayed in the marriage another two years before walking out on Tessie and filing for divorce.

Like all of the other disagreements Tessie and Frank had in their eight years of marriage, the fight over how their union would end was made public as well.

 

Tessie made it clear to all who would listen that she did not want to lose Frank and she contested the divorce numerous times. After a long and vicious court battle the marriage was finally dissolved.

Tessie returned to her house to nurse her wounds. Her heart was broken. She couldn’t accept that Frank was officially out of her life. In a desperate attempt to win him back she secretly followed him around, waiting for a chance to speak with him and convince him to return to her.

The evening Frank was shot the two had quarreled over Tessie’s threat to appeal the divorce. Frank warned his ex-wife that he’d “break her” if she went through with the action. He hurled a string of obscenities at her as he turned and walked away. She heard from a friend that Frank and his mistress were going to attend the theatre that evening and she decided to confront the two there.

“Then I didn’t know what I did,” Tessie explained to the police after the shooting. When asked about the gun Tessie told authorities that she bought it because of the other woman. “That woman took my husband away from me,” she cried. “For three or four years she has been going with him. It made me mad.” Tessie pleaded with police to take her to the hospital where Frank was so she could see him.

 

As they transported the sobbing madam to the sanitarium, she professed her undying love for her “darling husband.”

Frank was conscious when Tessie entered the emergency room. The three bullets she had emptied into his upper torso had missed his vital organs. Doctors expected him to make a full recovery. The police escorted Tessie to his bedside and asked Frank if she was the one who shot him. “Yes, she shot me,” he responded. “Take her away. I don’t want to see her.” According to the San Francisco Chronicle, “Tessie Daroux lifted her handkerchief to her face in a gesture of horror and reeled back into the arms of the officer.”

Madam Wall was booked on a charge of intent to kill and held without bail for three months. Bail was finally granted when Frank was given a clean bill of health. In a move that surprised everyone, Frank announced to authorities that he had made a decision not to press charges on Tessie. She took the news as a sign of his continued affection for her and filed an appeal on the divorce. Frank had hoped the incident and his willingness not to prosecute would drive Tessie away. Once he found out that she was appealing the divorce he changed his mind about pressing charges.

?

 

The shooting and subsequent court activity was front page news. The scandal reeked havoc on Frank’s political future. His peers informed him that he was a liability and suggested relocating. Frank agreed, reversed his decision again about having Tessie prosecuted and made arrangements to marry his mistress.

Days before Frank was to marry the other woman. Madam Wall again took gun in hand. This time she set out to kill her rival. When she found her eating lunch at a popular restaurant, Tessie shot through the glass window at the future Mrs. Daroux. Her aim was poor and the woman was not hit. Tessie was arrested and while she was being held, Frank remarried. With the stipulation that Tessie not be released until they left town, Mr. And Mrs. Daroux agreed not to press charges. Frank and his bride then moved to the east coast.

Madam Wall went back to her parlor house, boxed up all of the busts and painting she had of Napoleon and stored them away. She never fully retired from the trade and remained a controversial figure throughout the duration of her life.

On the morning of April 28, 1932, Tessie pulled an impacted tooth that had been bothering her. That evening she died of a hemorrhage following the extraction.

 

Newspapers marked her passing with an obituary Tessie had preapproved.

“One more bit of “the San Francisco that was” has drifted off in that uncharted Sargossa that holds the old Barbary Coast, the Poodle Dog, the Silver Dollar, the Bank Exchange, the Mason Street Tenderloin and those other gay haunts that made San Francisco famous through the Seven Seas.”

The San Francisco Chronicle – April 30, 1932

Mrs. Teresa Susan Wall Daroux was 63 years-old.

“Drink that up, boys! Have a drink on Tessie Wall!”