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As a chorus girl on Broadway in 1901, Nesbit was introduced to acclaimed architect ] by ],<ref name = "Florodora date">''Prodigal Days''; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 3.</ref> who was a member along with Nesbit in the company of '']''. White—a notorious womanizer known as "Stanny" by his close friends and relatives—was then forty-seven years old and Nesbit sixteen. With her actual birth year often obscured by her mother, Nesbit may have actually been just fourteen years old when she first met Stanford White. A practiced voluptuary, White was a calculating seducer who used intermediaries to disarm the girl he had marked as his new conquest. In an era when the buxom, amply curvaceous ] epitomized the ideal of feminine beauty, the teen-age Nesbit's diminutive, sylph-like form appealed to White’s penchant for collecting the rare, teen-age treasure. Nesbit was initially struck by White’s imposing size, which “was appalling…he seemed terribly old.”<ref>Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 105</ref> As a chorus girl on Broadway in 1901, Nesbit was introduced to acclaimed architect ] by ],<ref name = "Florodora date">''Prodigal Days''; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 3.</ref> who was a member along with Nesbit in the company of '']''. White—a notorious womanizer known as "Stanny" by his close friends and relatives—was then forty-seven years old and Nesbit sixteen. With her actual birth year often obscured by her mother, Nesbit may have actually been just fourteen years old when she first met Stanford White. A practiced voluptuary, White was a calculating seducer who used intermediaries to disarm the girl he had marked as his new conquest. In an era when the buxom, amply curvaceous ] epitomized the ideal of feminine beauty, Nesbit's diminutive, sylph-like form appealed to White’s penchant for collecting the rare, teen-age treasure. Nesbit was initially struck by White’s imposing size, which “was appalling…he seemed terribly old.”<ref>Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 105</ref>


===== "The Red Velvet Swing" ===== ===== "The Red Velvet Swing" =====

Revision as of 02:21, 17 August 2012

Evelyn Nesbit
Evelyn Nesbit in 1900, photographed by Gertrude Käsebier
BornFlorence Evelyn Nesbit
(1884-12-25)December 25, 1884
Tarentum, Pennsylvania
DiedJanuary 17, 1967(1967-01-17) (aged 82)
Santa Monica, California
NationalityAmerican
Other names
  • Evelyn Nesbit-Thaw
  • Evelyn Nesbit Thaw
Occupation(s)Model, chorus girl, actress
Spouses
ChildrenRussell William Thaw

Evelyn Nesbit (December 25, 1884 – January 17, 1967) Evelyn Nesbit was the professional name of Florence Evelyn Nesbit, a popular American chorus girl and artists’ model whose liaison with renowned architect Stanford White immortalized her as "The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing."

In the early part of the twentieth century, the figure and face of Evelyn Nesbit was ubiquitous, appearing in mass circulation newspaper and magazine advertisements, on souvenir items and calendars making her a cultural celebrity. Her career had begun in her early teens in Philadelphia and continued in New York posing for a cadre of respected artists of the era, James Carroll Beckwith, Frederick S. Church, and notably Charles Dana Gibson, who idealized her as a “Gibson Girl.” She had the distinction of being an early “live model,” in an era when fashion photography as an advertising medium was just beginning its ascendancy.

As a stage performer, and while still a teen-ager, she garnered the attention of the then forty-seven year old architect and New York social lion Stanford White, who became her lover and dedicated benefactor. Nesbit achieved world-wide notoriety when her jealous husband, multi-millionaire Harry Kendall Thaw, shot and murdered Stanford White on the rooftop theatre of Madison Square Garden on the evening of June 25, 1906, leading to what the press would sensationalize as “The Trial of the Century.”

Early life

File:Evelyn Nesbit, 5 yrs.jpg
Florence Evelyn Nesbit, age 5, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

She was born Florence Evelyn Nesbit on December 25, 1884, in Tarentum, a small town near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her actual year of birth remains unconfirmed; her real year of birth may have been 1886. In later years, Nesbit confirmed that her mother at times added several years to her age in order to circumvent child labor laws. She was the daughter of Winfield Scott Nesbit and his wife, née Evelyn Florence McKenzie, and was of Scots-Irish ancestry. Legend has it that so beautiful was the newborn little girl that neighbors came for months after her birth to gaze at and admire her. Two years later, a son Howard was added to the family.

Nesbit had an especially close relationship with her father striving to please him with her accomplishments. Mr. Nesbit was a man who did not subscribe to the sexist prejudices harbored by many of his male contemporaries towards women. He recognized his daughter's intellectual interests and encouraged her vivacious curiosity, and innate self-confidence. Cognizant of her love of reading, he chose books for her to read and set up a small library for her pleasure. It was diverse material, fairy tales, fantasies, and uniquely included books regarded as of interest to boys only—the “pluck and luck” stories so popular in that era. When Nesbit showed an interest in music and dance, he influenced her to take lessons in those areas. Although Mr. Nesbit displayed no outward favoritism of either of his two children, Nesbit knew she was her father’s “star.”

The Nesbit family moved to Pittsburgh around 1893. By all accounts, her father, an unambitious attorney, was an affable man and a feckless manager of the family’s finances. Her mother, Evelyn Florence, was an example of the Victorian cloistered woman, content to dedicate her adult life to the domestic responsibilities of running a household and raising children. Winfield Scott Nesbit died suddenly at age forty when Nesbit was eleven years old. Nesbit, her brother and mother were bereft, left broken, and penniless. They lost their home and watched as all their possessions were auctioned off to pay outstanding debts. Mrs. Nesbit, an unworldly woman, without the experience or inner resources to navigate the world, found herself and her children in desperate circumstances. Unable to find work that would enable her to earn money using her estimable dressmaking skills, a protracted period of time followed where the family existed solely through the charity of family and friends. All three lived a nomadic existence, invariably sharing a single room in a series of boarding houses. To ease the financial burden, Nesbit's brother Howard was often sent to live with relatives or family friends for indeterminate periods of time.

Eventually, Mrs. Nesbit, again with donated funds, rented a house with the intention of running her own boarding house as a profitable business enterprise. Loathe to collect the rent from the boarders herself, she handed that responsibility over to twelve-year-old Nesbit, relying on her daughter’s pre-pubescent charm, markedly in evidence, to collect money from the traveling salesmen and other transient males who constituted the establishment’s core clientele. Many years later in 1915, Nesbit described this period in her family’s misfortunes: “Mamma was always worried about the rent…it was too hard a thing for her to actually ask for every week, and it never went smoothly.” Even at such a young age, Nesbit recalled her discomfort with being the rent collector; instinctually she sensed it was somehow inappropriate. Ultimately, lacking the temperament, or savvy to make the boarding house endeavor a success, Mrs. Nesbit’s attempt to provide her family with financial stability proved a failure.

Under continuous financial distress, which showed no prospect of improvement, Mrs. Nesbit moved to Philadelphia in 1898. She had acted on the encouragement of a friend who advised her that relocation to Philadelphia could open opportunities for her employment as a seamstress. Nesbit and her brother Howard were sent to an aunt, and then transferred to a family in Allegany whose acquaintance their mother had made some years earlier.

Mrs. Nesbit obtained employment not as a seamstress, but as a sales clerk at the fabric counter of Wanamaker’s department store. She sent for her children, and subsequently both the fourteen year old Nesbit and twelve year old Howard also became Wanamaker’s employees, working twelve hour days, six days a week. It was at this time that Nesbit's modeling career began by a serendipitous encounter with an artist who was struck by the teenager’s beauty and evocative charisma. The artist asked Nesbit to pose for a portrait, and after verifying the artist was a woman, Mrs. Nesbit agreed to let her daughter pose. Nesbit sat for five hours and earned the sum of one dollar. This led to introductions to other artists in the Philadelphia area, and she became the favorite model of a group of respected, reputable illustrators, portrait painters, and stained glass artisans. In later life Nesbit explained: “When I saw I could earn more money posing as an artist’s model than I could at Wanamaker’s, I gave my mother no peace until she permitted me to pose for a livelihood.”

Modeling career

James Carroll Beckwith, Portrait of Evelyn Nesbitt, c. 1901.
Photograph by Rudolf Eickemeyer, Jr., 1901
"I should like to kiss you," Evelyn Nesbit in seductive pose on souvenir card
Evelyn Nesbit represents "The Queen of Hearts" on a playing card

“Super-Model,” and “Pin-up Girl”

In June 1900, Mrs. Nesbit, leaving her children in the care of others, re-located to New York City, again hoping to find work as a seamstress or clothing designer. She had less success in finding employment in the competitive environment of New York City than she had had in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. Philadelphia artists, with the idea of jumpstarting Nesbit's modeling career, had provided letters of introduction to New York artists— however, Mrs. Nesbit made no use of these prospective contacts. In November 1900, still without employment, she finally sent for her children and the three were re-united and as was their custom shared a single back room, in a building on 22nd Street in Manhattan. Financial necessity, and Nesbit's insistence on resuming modeling finally prompted Mrs. Nesbit to make use of the Philadelphia recommendations by contacting James Carroll Beckwith whose primary patron was John Jacob Astor. This was to be a fortuitous association for young Nesbit that opened up a world of further modeling opportunities for her, as Beckwith was a respected painter and instructor of life classes at the Art Students League. An elderly, courtly man, Beckwith felt protective of the teenage girl whose self-directed determination to pursue a modeling career aroused his paternal concern. He provided her with letters of introduction to legitimate artists such as Frederick S. Church, Herbert Morgan, and Carl Blenner. Unhappily, Mrs. Nesbit was thrust into the role of managing her daughter’s career. Unsophisticated, chronically indecisive, and plagued with bouts of inertia, Nesbit's mother was unable to provide either the business acumen nor the vigilant, proactive guardianship required to ensure the best interests of a teenage girl working as a studio model—Mrs. Nesbit was the antithesis of the archetypical “stage mother.” In a later interview with reporters, Mrs. Nesbit maintained that: “ I never allowed Evelyn to pose in the all together,” (in the nude). Two artworks, one by Frederick Church dating to July, 1900, and another by Beckwith in 1901, contradict Mrs. Nesbit, as they display a skimpily clad or partially nude Evelyn.

Evelyn Nesbit became one of the most in-demand artists' models in New York. She became a popular cover face on women’s magazine of the period, Vanity Fair, Harper’s Bazaar, The Delineator, the Women’s Home Companion, Ladies’ Home Journal and Cosmopolitan. Inside the advertising pages of these magazines, and in newspapers, Nesbit's business became the business of creating consumer demand for toothpaste, face creams—a sundry array of commercial goods. Her likeness and form was ubiquitous, showcased on sheet music and souvenir items—beer trays, tobacco cards, pocket mirrors, postcards, chromolithographs. She was often posed in vignettes dressed in various guises: a Japanese geisha, country maiden, woodland nymph, Grecian goddess or Gypsy. The photo postcards were known as “mignon,” (sweet, lovely) whose pictorials were of a suggestive sensuality in contrast to the graphic display of the female body depicted in the notorious “French postcards” of the day. Evelyn Nesbit arguably, became the first pin-up girl, posing for calendars for Prudential Life Insurance, Swift, Coca-Cola and other corporations.

Charles Dana Gibson, one of the country’s most renowned artists of the era, added Nesbit to his pantheon of "Gibson Girls," her profile framed by her luxuriant hair rendered to resemble a question mark. The work, formerly titled "Women: The Eternal Question" (1905) remains one of Gibson's best-known works. ,

The photograph, use of what was then referred to as the “live model” in newspaper and magazine advertising was still in its infancy, yet gaining in popularity, moving to supplant print illustration. Nesbit obtained work modeling for an early pioneer in fashion photography, Joel Feder. The assignments were less strenuous, posing sessions being shorter in duration and the pay was lucrative. While working for Feder, Nesbit earned five dollars for a half-day shoot, and ten dollars for a full day; approximately two-hundred sixty dollars per day in 2010 dollars. Eventually, the fees Nesbit earned from her prolific modeling career exceeded the combined income she, her brother, and mother had earned at Wanamaker’s department store in Philadelphia. The high cost of living in New York City, however, still caused strain on their finances.

Chorus girl and actress

Nesbit became disaffected and bored with the long hours spent in confined environments maintaining the immobile poses required of a studio model. Her popularity modeling had generated the interests of theatrical promoters, some legitimate and some disreputable, offering her acting opportunities. Nesbit pressed her mother to let her enter the theatre world, and Mrs. Nesbit ultimately agreed to let her daughter attempt this new way to augment their finances. An interview was arranged for the aspiring performer with John C. Fisher, company manager of the wildly popular play, Florodora, enjoying a long run at the Casino Theatre on Broadway. Mrs. Nesbit’s initial objections were softened by the knowledge that some of the girls in the show had managed to marry millionaires. In July of 1901, costumed as a “Spanish maiden,” Nesbit became a member of the show’s chorus line whose enthusiastic public dubbed them the “Floradora Girls.” Billed as “Florence Evelyn,” the new chorus girl was called “Flossie the Fuss,” by the cast, a nickname which displeased her, and induced her to change her theatrical name to Evelyn Nesbit.

After her stint as a “Floradora Girl” ended, Nesbit sought out other theatrical possibilities. She won a part in a production, which had just come to Broadway, The Wild Rose. After an initial interview with Nesbit, the show’s producer, George Lederer, sensed he had discovered a new sensation. He offered her a year contract, and more significantly, moved her out of the chorus line, and into a position as a featured player— the role of the Gypsy girl, “Vashti.” The publicity machine began to roll, possibly fueled by Stanford White’s influence, and she was hyped up in the gossip columns and theatrical periodicals of the day. On May 4, 1902, The New York Herald showcased her in a two-page article, liberally enhanced by photographs, promoting her rise as a new theatrical light, detailing her career trajectory from model to chorus line to key cast member. “Her Winsome Face to be Seen Only from 8 to 11pm,” the newspaper title announced to the public. The press coverage invariably touted her physical charms and potent stage presence; her acting skills were rarely mentioned.

Relationships

Stanford White

Stanford White

As a chorus girl on Broadway in 1901, Nesbit was introduced to acclaimed architect Stanford White by Edna Goodrich, who was a member along with Nesbit in the company of Florodora. White—a notorious womanizer known as "Stanny" by his close friends and relatives—was then forty-seven years old and Nesbit sixteen. With her actual birth year often obscured by her mother, Nesbit may have actually been just fourteen years old when she first met Stanford White. A practiced voluptuary, White was a calculating seducer who used intermediaries to disarm the girl he had marked as his new conquest. In an era when the buxom, amply curvaceous Lillian Russell epitomized the ideal of feminine beauty, Nesbit's diminutive, sylph-like form appealed to White’s penchant for collecting the rare, teen-age treasure. Nesbit was initially struck by White’s imposing size, which “was appalling…he seemed terribly old.”

"The Red Velvet Swing"

White maintained a multi-floor apartment on West Twenty-fourth Street situated above the toy store FAO Schwarz. The entranceway to the apartment was a doorway located adjacent to the store’s back delivery entrance. White invited Evelyn and Edna Goodrich to dine with him there for lunch. In her memoir Prodigal Days, Nesbit described her introduction to White’s apartment. She was immediately overwhelmed by the décor; the walls adorned with fine paintings, the ornate, carved furniture, and the heavy red velvet draperies, which were drawn against the afternoon light. The only illumination in the room was the glow of soft lighting emanating from concealed placement in the room. The other guest in attendance was an older man who White introduced as Reginald Ronalds. The luncheon table was laid with food, which to Nesbit was an exotic delight—gourmet dishes prepared by Delmonico’s restaurant. Nesbit was allowed one glass of champagne. Afterwards, they all ascended two flights up into a room decorated in green where a large, red velvet swing was suspended from the ceiling by ropes entwined with ivy-like vines. Nesbit was amused by the swing and consented to sit in it as White with increasing momentum propelled her vigorously into the air. A game ensued whereby Edna Goodrich held a Japanese paper parasol by a cord; the object was for Nesbit's foot to target the parasol repeatedly swinging and aiming until the parasol was shredded. Nothing improper took place that day other than an aesthetic delight in the day’s festivities.

Outwardly a witty, kind, generous man, the newspapers frequently described him as “masterful,” “intense,” “burly yet boyish.” He was able to impress both Nesbit and her mother as an “interesting companion.” White moved mother, son and daughter into a suite at the Wellington Hotel, which he himself had opulently decorated. Nesbit's bedroom was white and rose red, the drawing room a deep green, a reference to White’s 24th Street apartment and the green hued room where the red velvet swing hung from the ceiling.

Mrs. Nesbit grew favorably disposed to Stanford White. His interest appeared genuinely paternal, arranging for her fatherless son, Howard, to attend the Chester Military Academy located near Philadelphia. Over time White managed to convince Mrs. Nesbit that a brief trip to visit friends in Pittsburgh would be a beneficial respite. He overcame her anxieties concerning her daughter’s welfare left unchaperoned in New York, pledging his assurance that he would watch over the young girl.

Nesbit wearing flower wreath headband
The "Mirror Room"

Several nights after her mother left for Pittsburgh, Nesbit and White were together in his 24th street apartment. The two dined and drank champagne. White then proceeded to give Nesbit a tour of rooms, with the finale an unveiling of the “mirror room.” This ten-by-ten foot room, situated on the same floor where the red velvet swing was installed, had walls and ceiling entirely paneled in mirrors and furnished with a green velvet sofa. More champagne was consumed and Nesbit changed into a yellow satin kimono. This is the last memory she had before losing consciousness. She subsequently awoke lying nearly naked in bed next to White. She "entered that room a virgin," but did not come out as one.

John Barrymore

John Barrymore, known as “Jack,” had seen the show The Wild Rose at least a dozen times since its opening, so entranced had he become with Evelyn Nesbit on the stage. The two actually met at a lavish party given by Stanford White who had invited Barrymore, the brother of a friend, the renowned stage actress, Ethel Barrymore. In 1902, a romance blossomed between Nesbit and the young Barrymore. It was a unique relationship for Nesbit in that the twenty-one year old Barrymore was a contemporary, a man close to her own age. He was a witty, fun-loving companion and Nesbit became smitten with him. After an evening out, the couple often returned to Barrymore’s apartment remaining there together well into the early morning hours. Avoiding the family path of entering the acting world, Barrymore was casually pursuing a career as illustrator and cartoonist. Although he showed some promise in his chosen field, his salary was small and Nesbit's mother considered him an unsuitable match for her seventeen-year old daughter. Both Mrs. Nesbit and White were greatly displeased when they found out about the relationship. White engineered a plan to separate the couple by arranging for Nesbit's enrollment in a boarding school located in New Jersey and administered by the mother of noted film director, Cecil B. DeMille. In the presence of both Mrs. Nesbit and White, Barrymore had asked Nesbit to become his wife, but she turned down his marriage proposal.

Harry Kendall Thaw

File:Z-ARCH-16.jpg
Harry Kendall Thaw, husband of Evelyn Nesbit

Aside from her relationship with John Barrymore, Evelyn Nesbit was involved with other men who vied for her attention. Among those were polo player, James Montgomery Waterbury and the young magazine publisher Robert J. Collier. Through all, Stanford White still maintained a potent presence in her life, maintaining his position as generous benefactor. The association, however, which would come to dominate Nesbit's life, came in the person of Harry Kendall Thaw, the son of a Pittsburgh coal and railroad baron. With a history of pronounced mental instability since childhood, Thaw heir to a forty million dollar fortune, led a reckless, self-indulgent life. Thaw had been in the audience of The Wild Rose, attending some forty performances for the better part of a year. Through an intermediary, he ultimately arranged a meeting with Nesbit, introducing himself as “Mr. Munroe.” Thaw maintained this subterfuge, with the help of confederates, while showering her with gifts and money before he felt the time was right to reveal his true identity. The day came when he confronted Nesbit and announced with self-important brio: “I am not Munroe…I am Henry Kendall Thaw, of Pittsburgh!”

Fateful revelations in Europe

Nesbit underwent an emergency appendectomy, at which time the solicitous side of Thaw came into play. He promoted a European trip, convincing Nesbit and her mother that such a pleasure excursion would hasten Nesbit's recovery from surgery. The trip proved to be anything but recuperative. Thaw’s usual hectic mode of travel escalated into a non-stop itinerary, calculated to weaken Nesbit's emotional resilience, compound her physical frailty, and unnerve and exhaust Mrs. Nesbit. As tensions mounted, mother and daughter began to bicker and quarrel, leading to Mrs. Nesbit’s insistence on returning to America. Having effectively alienated her from her mother, Thaw then took Nesbit to Paris, leaving Mrs. Nesbit in London.

The confession

In Paris, Thaw continued to press Nesbit to become his wife; she again refused. Aware of Thaw’s obsession with female chastity, she could not in good conscience accept his marriage proposal without revealing to him the truth of her relationship with Stanford White. What transpired next was a marathon session of inquisition, during which time Thaw managed to extract every detail of that night —how— when plied with champagne— Nesbit lay intoxicated, unconscious— and White “had his way with her.” Throughout the grueling question, and answer ordeal, Nesbit was tearful and hysterical; Thaw by turns was agitated, weeping, and gratified by her responses. He further drove the wedge between mother and daughter, condemning Mrs. Nesbit as an unfit parent. Nesbit blamed the outcome of events due to her own willful defiance of her mother’s cautionary advice and defended her mother as naïve and unwitting.

The castle

Thaw and Nesbit continued their travel through Europe. Thaw, as guide, chose a bizarre agenda, a tour of sites devoted to the cult of virgin martyrdom. In Domrémy, France, the birthplace of Joan of Arc, Thaw left a telling inscription in the visitor’s book: “she would not have been a virgin if Stanford White had been around.”

Thaw took Nesbit to a castle, the "Schloss Katzenstein" in the Austrian Tyrol, the foreboding, gothic structure sitting near a high mountaintop. Thaw segregated the three servants in residence, butler, cook and maid in one end of the castle; he and Nesbit taking quarters isolating them in the opposite end. This was where, Nesbit, to her horror, became Thaws’s prisoner. She was locked in her room by Thaw, whose persona took on a dimension she had never before seen. Manic and violent, he beat her with a whip and sexually assaulted her over a two-week period. After his reign of terror had been expended, he was apologetic, and incongruously, after what had just transpired, was in an upbeat mood.

On her return to New York from Europe, in the company of friends, Nesbit unburdened herself, disclosing the ordeal of her imprisonment in the Austrian castle. It was only now that others came forward with dark disclosures about Thaw and his propensity toward myriad addictive behaviors. From several men she was told that Thaw “…took morphine he was crazy.”

Marriage

Although he was still a part of her life, over time Nesbit came to realize that she had no future with Stanford White. She also knew her entanglement with White had compromised her reputation; if the extent of their involvement became common knowledge, no respectable man would make her his wife. She also harbored some resentment towards White, faulting him for never being candid with her about Thaw’s excesses and derangement.

As a teen-ager, Nesbit had spent much of her formative years thrust into the adult society of artists, and theatre people, her development had proceeded without the camaraderie of contemporaries her own age. Her mother had re-married, and although she had been an inept guardian, their estrangement was now a fact; the new Mrs. Charles Holman was now effectively out of her daughter’s life. Nesbit also feared a renewal of the poverty and deprivation, she, her brother and mother had suffered for many years. Her vulnerability and isolation became palpable.

Thaw had pursued Evelyn Nesbit obsessively for nearly four years, continuously pressing her for marriage. He told her he would change his behavior— once they were married, he would live the life of a “Benedictine monk.” Thaw was contrite about what had transpired at the Austrian castle. His explosive anger and rage had been directed at the man he called “The Beast,” Stanford White. He knew Nesbit had been White’s victim. Thaw, with a perverted sense of justice, and a show of magnanimous charity, assured Nesbit he had forgiven her.

Craving financial stability in her life, and keeping Thaw's "sweet, generous, and gentle side,” in the forefront, Nesbit finally consented to become Thaw’s wife. “Mamma Thaw” agreed to the marriage decreeing that her future daughter-in-law give up the theatre and modeling and that her past life be forever obliterated; it was never to be talked of or referred to.

They were wed on April 4, 1905. Thaw himself chose Nesbit's wedding dress. Eschewing the traditional white gown, he dressed her in a black traveling suit decorated with brown trim. Newspapers announced that the new Mrs. Thaw was now the "Mistress of Millions."

The two took up residence in the Thaw family home, Lyndhurst, in Pittsburgh. Isolated with “Mama Thaw,” subject to her strict religious precepts, and the puritanical like-minded social group, which assembled in the Thaw home, Nesbit became the proverbial “bird in a gilded cage.” In later years Nesbit took measure of life in the Thaw household. The Thaws were anything but intellectuals. Their value system was shallow, and self-serving: “the plane of materialism which finds joy in the little things that do not matter—the appearance of ….”

Envisioning a life of travel and entertaining, the newly-wed Mrs. Harry Kendall Thaw was rudely awakened to a reality markedly different. Thaw himself entered into his mother’s sphere of influence, seemingly without protest, taking on the pose of pious son and husband. It was at this time that Thaw instituted a zealous campaign to expose Stanford White, corresponding with the reformer, Anthony Comstock, the infamous crusader for moral probity and the expulsion of vice. Because of his activity, Thaw became convinced that he was being stalked by members of the notorious Monk Eastman Gang, hired by White to kill him. Thaw started to carry a gun. Nesbit later corroborated his mind-set: “ imagined his life was in danger because of the work he was doing in connection with the vigilance societies and the exposures he had made to those societies of the happenings in White’s flat.”

Murder of Stanford White

It is conjectured that Stanford White himself was unaware of Harry Kendall Thaw’s long-standing vendetta against him. White considered Thaw a poseur of little consequence, categorized him as a clown—and most tellingly, called him the “Pennsylvania pug” —a reference to Thaw’s baby-faced features.

June 25,1906 was an inordinately hot day. Thaw and Nesbit were stopping in New York briefly before boarding a luxury liner bound for a European holiday. Nesbit had been tense and uneasy throughout the day, as Thaw spent the day in and out of their hotel suite ostensibly taking care of last minute details for their voyage. It was not until late that day that Thaw disclosed his plans for the evening. He had purchased tickets for a new show Mam'zelle Champagne, written by Edgar Allan Woolf, premiering on the rooftop theatre of Madison Square Garden. Accompanying them would be two of Thaw’s male friends. They first stopped at the Cafe Martin, where they inadvertently saw Stanford White, before proceeding on to Madison Square Garden. In spite of the suffocating heat, which did not abate as night fell, Thaw inappropriately wore a long black overcoat over his tuxedo, which he refused to take off throughout the entire evening.

At 11:00pm, as the stage show was coming to a close, Stanford White appeared, taking his place at the table that was customarily reserved for him. Thaw had been agitated all evening, and abruptly bounced back and forth from his own table throughout the performance. Spotting White’s arrival, Thaw tentatively approached him several times, each time withdrawing in hesitation. During the finale, "I Could Love A Million Girls", Thaw produced a pistol, and standing some two feet from his target, fired three shots at Stanford White killing him instantly. Part of White’s face was torn away and the rest of his features were unrecognizable, blackened by gunpowder. Thaw remained standing over White’s fallen body, displaying the gun aloft in the air, addressing the crowd. Witness reports differ as to the exact pronouncements Thaw made, and while the specific wording varies, all share a similar theme: “I did it because he ruined my wife! He had it coming to him. He took advantage of the girl and then abandoned her!" "You'll never go out with that woman again." In his book The Murder of Stanford White, Gerald Langford quoted Thaw as saying "You ruined my life," or "You ruined my wife," and The New York Times account the following day stated "Another witness said the word was "wife" instead of "life,"" contradicting the report made by the arresting officer.

The crowd initially suspected the shooting might be part of the show, as elaborate practical jokes were popular in high society at the time. Soon, however, it became apparent that Stanford White was dead. Thaw, still brandishing the gun high above his head, walked through the crowd and met Nesbit at the elevator. When she asked what he'd done, Thaw said that he had "probably saved your life."

As Thaw was taken into police custody, Nesbit managed to extricate herself from the ensuing chaos on the Madison Square rooftop. Not wanting to return to the hotel suite she shared with Thaw, she took refuge for several days in the apartment of a chorus girl with whom she had struck up a friendship. Years later, Nesbit described her traumatic condition: “A complete numbness of mind and body took possession of me…I moved like a person in a trance for hours afterward.

Media frenzy

Front page, New York American, June 26th, 1906

As early as the morning following the murder, news coverage became both chaotic and single-minded, and ground forward with unrelenting momentum. A person, a place, or event, no matter how peripheral to the murder of Stanford White was seized on by reporters and hyped as newsworthy copy. Facts were thin but sensationalist reportage was plentiful in this, the heyday of tabloid journalism. The hard-boiled male reporters of the yellow press were bolstered by a contingent of female counterparts, christened “Sob Sisters” —also known as “The Pity Patrol.” Their stock and trade was the human-interest piece, heavy on sentimental tropes and melodrama, crafted to pull on the emotions and punch them up to fever pitch. The rampant interest in the White murder and its key players were used by both the defense and prosecution to feed malleable reporters any “scoops” that would give their respective sides an advantage in the public forum. News coverage mercilessly dissected all the key players in what was called the “Garden Murder.” One florid account written to tug the heartstrings, keynoted Nesbit's vulnerability: “Her baby beauty proved her undoing. She toddled as innocently into the arms of Satan as an infant into the outstretched arms of parental love…” Neither was her mother spared the scrutiny of rogue reporting: “ She knew better. She also knew she was sacrificing her child’s soul for money…”

Only one week after the murder, a film, "Rooftop Murder" was released for public viewing at the nickelodeon, rushed into production by Thomas Edison.

Stanford White, in death, was not spared the firestorm of printed invective, which not only excoriated him as a man, but also questioned his professional achievements as architect. The Evening Standard concluded he was “more of an artist than architect,” his work spoke of his “social dissolution.” The Nation was also critical: “…He adorned many an American mansion with irrelevant plunder.”

"The Trial of the Century"

Defense strategy

Thaw’s mother was adamant that her son not be stigmatized by clinical insanity. She pressed for the defense to follow a compromise strategy; one of temporary insanity, or what in that era was referred to as a “brainstorm.” Acutely conscious that her own family had a history of hereditary insanity, and after years of protecting her son’s hidden life, she feared her son’s past would be dragged out into the open ripe for public scrutiny. Protecting the Thaw family reputation had become nothing less than a lifetime crusade for Thaw’s mother. She proceeded to hire a team of doctors, at a cost of some one-half million dollars to substantiate that her son’s act of murder constituted a single aberrant act. Evelyn Nesbit in later years described the determination with which Thaw’s family worked to favorably spin his mental deficiency: “…the Thaws will put the biggest lunacy experts that money can buy on the stand…Harry was a madman but they will prove it nicely…”

Star witness

Again maneuvering her way through the a gauntlet of reporters, the curious public, the sketch artists and photographers enlisted to capture the effect the “harrowing circumstances on her beauty,” Nesbit returned to her hotel and the assembled Thaw family.

It is conjectured the Thaws promised Nesbit a comfortable financial future if she provided testimony at trial favorable to Thaw’s case. It was a conditional agreement; if the outcome proved negative, she would receive nothing. The rumored amount of money the Thaws pledged for her cooperation ranged from twenty-five thousand dollars to one million dollars. Nesbit was now well aware that any solicitude or kindness shown her by the Thaw enclave was predicated on her pivotal performance on the witness stand. She was to present a pitiful portrait of innocence betrayed by the lascivious Stanford White. Thaw was to be the white knight whose noble, courageous act had avenged his wife’s ruin.

Nesbit's mother remained conspicuously absent throughout her daughter's entire ordeal. Her brother Howard, who had come to regard Stanford White as a father figure, blamed Evelyn for his death.

The two trials

Harry Kendall Thaw was tried twice for the murder of Stanford White. Nesbit testified at both trials; her examination on the witness stand was an emotionally tortuous ordeal. In open court she was forced to expose her relationship with Stanford White, and to describe the intimate details of the night she lost her virginity. Up until that point in time, the night of her sexual assault had been a secret she had guarded, at the request of White, and other than White, only she and Thaw knew what had transpired.

Due to the unusual amount of publicity the case had garnered, it was ordered that the jury members be sequestered—the first time in the history of American jurisprudence that such a restriction was ordered. The trial proceedings began on January 23, 1907, and the jury went into deliberation on April 11th. After forty-seven hours, the twelve jurors emerged deadlocked. Seven had voted guilty, and five deemed Henry Kendall Thaw not guilty. Thaw was outraged that the trial had not vindicated the murder; that the jurors had not recognized it was the act of one chivalrous man defending innocent womanhood. The second trial took place from January, 1908 through February 1, 1908. At the second trial Thaw pleaded temporary insanity.

Thaw was sentenced to incarceration for life in the Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminally Insane in Beacon, New York. His wealth allowed him to arrange accommodations for his comfort and be granted privileges not given to the general Matteawan population. Immediately after his confinement, Thaw marshaled the forces of a legal team charged with the mission of having him declared sane; the effort took seven years. The prolonged legal procedures compelled his escape from Matteawan. In 1913, he strolled out of the asylum where a pre-arranged car and driver was waiting to take him over the Canadian border into Sherbrooke, Quebec. He was extradited back to the U.S., but in 1915 was released from custody after being judged sane.

Children

Evelyn Nesbit and son, Russell William Thaw, 1913

Evelyn Nesbit gave birth to a son, Russell William Thaw on October 25, 1910 in Berlin, Germany. Nesbit always maintained he was Thaw’s biological child, conceived during a conjugal visit to Thaw while he was confined at Matteawan. Thaw, throughout his life denied paternity.

In 1911, Nesbit reconciled with her mother. Her mother took on the role of caregiver for the child while Nesbit sought out opportunities to support herself and her son.

Later years

File:Nesbit & Clifford, 1917.jpg
Dance team of Evelyn Nesbit and Jack Clifford striking a pose, June 24, 1917
File:Thaw & Nesbit, 1926.jpg
Nesbit and first husband Harry Kendall Thaw, June, 1926

Throughout the prolonged court proceedings, Nesbit had received financial support from the Thaws. These payments, made to her through the Thaw attorneys, had been inconsistent and far from generous. After the close of the second trial, the Thaws virtually abandoned her, cutting off all funds. She was now left to her own resources to provide for herself. She found modest success working in vaudeville, and on the silent screen. In 1914, she appeared in Threads of Destiny produced at the Betzwood studios of film producer Siegmund Lubin.

Nesbit divorced Thaw in 1915. In 1916 she married dancer Jack Clifford; the two had worked up a stage act together. Their marriage was not a success. Nesbit seemed unable to start a new life as the public refused to let her relinquish her past. Audiences came to see “the lethal beauty” associated with the “playboy killer,” and the murder of Stanford White. Clifford came to feel his wife’s notoriety an insurmountable issue, his own identity being subsumed into that of “Mr. Evelyn Nesbit.” He left her in 1918, and she divorced him in 1933.

In the 1920s, Nesbit became the proprietor of either a tearoom or speakeasy located in the West Fifties in Manhattan. The actual libation served remains obscured in history. She may have run more than one establishment during this decade.

Harry Kendall Thaw, who as late as 1926 was still keeping his ex-wife under surveillance by private detectives, went to Chicago where Nesbit was hospitalized. He learned his ex-wife, despondent after losing her job dancing at the Moulin Rouge Café, had swallowed a disinfectant in a suicide attempt. The reunion generated speculation on the status of their relationship. One newspaper reported on January 8, 1926: “Thaw to Visit Chicago: Reconciliation Rumor.” In an interview with the press, Thaw revealed he had for some time been giving Nesbit ten dollars a day through an attorney as a “token of pleasant memories of the past when we were happy.” They were photographed together in June 1926 and Nesbit gave an interview to The New York Times, stating that she and Thaw had reconciled, but nothing came of the renewed relationship. Harry Kendall Thaw died in 1947; in his will he left Nesbit a ten thousand dollar bequest from an estate valued at over one million dollars.

Evelyn Nesbit published two memoirs, The Story Of My Life (1914), and Prodigal Days (1934).

She lived quietly for several years in Northfield, New Jersey. She overcame suicide attempts, alcoholism, and an addiction to morphine, and in her later years taught classes in ceramics. She was a technical adviser on the 1955 movie The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing.

Death

Evelyn Nesbit died in a nursing home in Santa Monica, California, on January 17, 1967, at the age of 82. Nesbit was buried in Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Filmography

  • Threads of Destiny (1914)
  • A Woman's Revenge (1915)
  • A Lucky Leap (1916)
  • Redemption (1917)
  • Her Mistake (1918)
  • The Woman Who Gave (1918)
  • I Want to Forget (1918)
  • Woman, Woman! (1919)
  • Thou Shalt Not (1919)
  • A Fallen Idol (1919)
  • My Little Sister (1919)
  • The Hidden Woman (1922)


herself

  • The Unwritten Law: A Thrilling Drama Based on the Thaw-White Tragedy (1907)
  • Broadway Gossip No.2(1932) (*short)

In popular culture

Non-fiction accounts

  • The Architect of Desire – Suzannah Lessard (White's great-granddaughter)
  • Glamorous Sinners – Frederick L. Collins
  • Evelyn Nesbit and Stanford White: Love and Death in the Gilded Age – Michael Mooney
  • Looking for Anne of Green GablesIrene Gammel
  • The Murder of Stanford White – Gerald Langford
  • The Traitor – Harry K. Thaw
  • The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing – Charles Samuels
  • The Story of my Life – Evelyn Nesbit Thaw – 1914
  • Prodigal Days – Evelyn Nesbit Thaw – 1934
  • American Eve: Evelyn Nesbit, Stanford White The Birth of the 'It' Girl, and the 'Crime of the Century' – Paula Uruburu – 2008

Fictional accounts

See also

References

  1. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books," 2008,
  2. Mooney, Michael Macdonald, "Evelyn Nesbit and Stanford White: Love and Death in the Gilded Age," Morrow, 1976
  3. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books," 2008, p. 22, ISBN: 978-1-59448-933-8
  4. ^ Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books," 2008, p. 24-26, ISBN: 978-1-59448-933-8
  5. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books," 2008, p. 31-32, ISBN: 978-1-59448-933-8
  6. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books," 2008, p. 34-35, ISBN: 978-1-59448-933-8
  7. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books," 2008, p. 40-41, ISBN: 978-1-59448-933-8
  8. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 56, ISBN: 978-1=59448-933-8
  9. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 52-55, ISBN: 978-1=59448-933-8
  10. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 58-59, ISBN: 978-1=59448-933-8
  11. ^ Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 73, ISBN: 978-1=59448-933-8
  12. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 75-76, ISBN: 978-1=59448-933-8
  13. www.foundationsof america.com/index.php, retrieved August 16, 2012
  14. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 84
  15. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 87-88
  16. ruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 153-155
  17. Prodigal Days; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 3.
  18. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 105
  19. Prodigal Days; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 27.
  20. www.pbs.org, "Evelyn Remembers," retrieved, July 12, 2012
  21. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008,
  22. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 114-115
  23. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 116
  24. Prodigal Days; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 37.
  25. Prodigal Days; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 41.
  26. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 165-167
  27. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 189
  28. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 182-188
  29. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 212-213
  30. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 216-218
  31. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 221
  32. "Evelyn's Story," Oct. 27, 1903 Affidavit: Evelyn Nesbit vs. Harry K. Thaw, The affidavit was introduced at the close of the state's case in the Harry Thaw murder trial, retrieved July 29, 2012l
  33. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 225
  34. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 229
  35. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 244
  36. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p.251-252
  37. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 193-194
  38. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 258
  39. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 255
  40. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 256
  41. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 260-261
  42. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve,"Riverhead Books, 2008, p.282
  43. ^ Thaw Murders Stanford White New York Times; June 26, 1906; page 1.
  44. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve,"Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 297
  45. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve,"Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 284
  46. (From an alleged statement to police by Nesbit’s former friend, actress Edna McClure) Mrs. Thaw Urged Her Husband On- The Washington Post; July 9, 1906; pg. 1
  47. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 318
  48. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve,"Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 318- 319
  49. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve,"Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 301
  50. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve,"Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 306-307
  51. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 323
  52. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 289
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  54. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 312
  55. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 333, 339
  56. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 322
  57. "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 354
  58. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 358
  59. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 359
  60. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 360, 363
  61. >Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 362
  62. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 358-361
  63. Prodigal Days; Evelyn Nesbit, Julian Messner Publishers, New York, 1934, page 276.
  64. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p. 368
  65. Uruburu, Paula, "American Eve," Riverhead Books, 2008, p.368
  66. www.gotham.fromthesquare.org, retrieved July 9, 2012
  67. www.murderpedia.org, "Harry Kendall Thaw," retrieved July 20, 2012
  68. www. afflictor.com, “Old Print Articles,” Harry K. Thaw, retrieved July 20, 2012
  69. www.neohumanism.org, "Evelyn Nesbit," retrieved July 20, 2012
  70. "Mrs. Thaw Dies; Early Trial Figure". Los Angeles Times News Service. January 18, 1967. Retrieved 2010-10-09. Mrs. Thaw, died Tuesday in a convalescent home here. ... After the murder trial she toured Europe with a dancing troupe where a son, Russell Thaw, was born. ... {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  71. "Evelyn Nesbit, 82, Dies In California; Evelyn Nesbit of '06 Thaw Case Dies". Associated press in the New York Times. January 18, 1967. Retrieved 2010-10-09. Evelyn Nesbit, the last surviving principal in the sensational Harry K. Thaw-Stanford White murder case of 60 years ago, died in a convalescent home here yesterday, where she had been a patient, for more than a year. She was 82 years old. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  72. "Irene Gammel, Looking for Anne of Green Gables: The Story of L.M. Montgomery and her Literary Classic (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2009)". Youtube.com. 2008-01-10. Retrieved 2012-07-30.

Further reading

  • "American Eve," Paula Uruburu, Riverhead Books, 2008, ISBN 978-1-59448-933-8
  • Prodigal Days: The Untold Story of Evelyn Nesbit, ISBN 978-1-4116-3709-2 also ISBN 1-4116-3709-7

External links

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