Showing posts with label MARK TWAIN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MARK TWAIN. Show all posts

Friday, January 11, 2019

Connecting The Dots: Isabel Lyon's Invisible Trail

 Isabel Lyon
The telephone was dead.” Those were the ominous words of Clara Clemens in her nostalgic book about her father, Mark Twain. But these words were about an emergency concerning her mother, a little explored incident in 1904 during Olivia Clemens' dying days while supposedly convalescing in Italy. And these words naively introduced a mystery, that during Olivia Clemens' death throes, the family discovered that their telephone lines had been cut. It could have been the inspiration for any number of television murder mysteries. But it was real. And as poor Olivia suffered another of her deadly heart attacks, the family struggled through the Italian village where they were staying to get word to a doctor to come immediately.

And still the doctor never came.

Later they discovered that someone had inexplainably locked the entry gate to their compound on the outskirts of Florence. The doctor who finally answered their desperate pleas could not enter their villa to give assistance and after waiting some time he eventually gave up and left. Olivia barely survived, and the incident led to her decline and death a few months later. And the Clemens soon returned to America to bury her and gladly forget the string of dysfunctions and tragedy they left behind.

But it seemed to me, as I read Clara's account, that someone wanted Olivia to exit the stage, sooner than later, and did everything they could to assist her demise. What followed after their return to America was enough suspicious activity to launch a Hitchcock movie.

 Clara Clemens in Austria with her piano teacher, Leschetitzky. 
They found her hands were too small- she switched to Voice.

Sweet, devoted Clara mentioned this terrifying series of deadly coincidences as an aside in her book, which was intended to add some color to their tragic misadventure, but strangely, trustingly, she never really tried to connect the dots of these and other Twain family mysteries. At least not publicly. Caught up in the glow of Mark Twain's worldwide aura, Clara had spent a lifetime alternately testing and adoring her father, and was content now to launch his legacy higher onto the Olympus of mankind's greatest achievers. And that would require more than a little willful ignorance. Making sense of the “Twain mysteries” as I call them, would have been counter-productive to her grander purpose, and in fact no writers of Twainiana have ever been so inclined. Nobody has ever wanted to connect those ominous dots.

So that is why you are here now, as I propose to do just that. I have no claim to know what happened... but I do know what was summarily ignored for over one hundred years. And some useful facts have emerged since then which make the Twain narrative twist and contort into a much darker saga, punctuated with mismanagement, bankruptcy, premature deaths of two of his children, sabotage of Olivia's health, a staff who surgically embezzled him, and an unethical biographer who embalmed Twain's image as he squeezed every drop of blood from it.

And then there was the great-granddaughter who was adopted out and almost never knew she was a descended from “the Lincoln of American Literature.” The true Clemens family legacy falls way below the majestic literary Olympus which was constructed for posterity.

These and other sad facts are the “rest of the story” as Paul Harvey might have said, and may be the very best example of how public images of prominent figures have always been manufactured. And this is no great cultural revelation. But MARK TWAIN? Really?

Yes, and we have Albert Bigelow Paine to thank for our delusions.

This will be no short essay. I have read dozens of books and studied this subject from the viewpoints of several first hand witnesses. And I do not believe in coincidences. At least not strands of them that light up like a Christmas tree, with no apparent source. Everybody loves or at least knows of Mark Twain. Or they think they do. But actually nobody does. Maybe his family, and his biographer, but then the rest of us were limited in understanding due to insufficient data.

Also to be considered, when the general public has decided that it will worship, it willfully, blindly ignores all distractions, including reality. Modern politics proves that point. Mark Twain was a prophet of modern Agnostic philosophy. His religion and vision of America became a moral substitute among the learned, and he became the magnetic demi-god of the New Age; The Everyman's conscience of Western culture. He was and still is largely untouchable.

So here I dare...

 Sam without his hair. Below is a cartoon illustrating
 that he was known to cut it off when abroad.


His actual name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens, and in many ways he paralleled another huge historical figure who has also stood the test of time. Like Jesus, of whom he was patently dubious, he is most-often remembered by a name he was not born with. He was most famous for non-conformity and being disrespectful of the status-quo and the authorities who imposed it. His words upset as many people as he ingratiated, and yet he made a worldwide impact with them. His real life story has several versions, and has been obscured by well-meaning handlers, and he has been elevated and argued over ever since.

But Mark Twain was no Jesus, perhaps his antithesis. Yes, he was a sort of “anti-Christ.” He struggled with his Faith and sported many misgivings about God all of his life, and wrote rather freely about them. His amazing, wonderful wife protected him, by protecting the public from his most heretical tirades. “Mark Twain” may have been his most prolific and creative when launching his irreverent attacks, chapter and verse, challenging religious convention, literally speaking for the Devil in the first person, becoming... the Devil's advocate. Of course, not believing in God, he did not believe in the devil either. Religion and hyperbole were inseparable.

Letters from Earth, a collection of his most daring blasphemies, was categorically censored by everyone who consulted him, and probably exacerbated dear Olivia's heart troubles. Scandal and controversy within the family over this and other later writings led to more than a domestic dispute. So upset had Livy become, with his very appearance, that towards the end of her battle for life, Sam was forbidden by her doctor to even enter her bedroom, and had to communicate through a medium. And that was usually daughter Clara; the middle child, the trusted messenger between her parents, and a resourceful liar when necessary. Clara protected Olivia and probably extended her life by some months. And Clara became our contact with the real Clemens behind the “Paine” curtain.

Livy had been warned of Sam's apostasy long before the children came, and had suspended her qualms about them. In fact when he courted her, her parents had not approved, and had turned down his proposals. Even Olivia was not receptive at first, and yet Clemens would not give up and wore them all down. The third time had been the charm, as Sam Clemens more deftly camouflaged his unconventional theories, and learned to talk about “God” in a more general sense. He was a master of hyperbole. Like many women in love, no doubt Livy assumed he would change with time. And Sam had no idea that he had met his match.

Olivia Langdon was the daughter of devout Quakers who had been active in the famous “Underground Railroad” before the Civil War. She was courageous and knew what it was like to put her faith on the line, even break the law for a higher Law... to obey God rather than the traditions of men; to risk her own freedom as she helped others to gain theirs. Sam and all of his friends and associates lifted Olivia up as a near saint, a bastion of integrity, and Samuel Clemens' most valuable friend and asset.

In contrast to Livy's strength of character, Sam had enlisted in the Confederate militia in Missouri and then abandoned his company after the first skirmishes with Grant's troops. (Later he found serendipity in this when he spoke before then President Grant) He fled the war with his older brother who had been appointed as secretary of the Nevada Territory... by Abraham Lincoln. When North fought South, Sam went West. Clearly Sam was conflicted by the war to his inner core... as any thinking person would have been, and found refuge by exotic travels. This would become a habit of a lifetime.

Accompanying his stalwart brother Orion, he was to serve as the secretary to the secretary. But soon he was camping in the mountains and panning for gold, between writing scandalous editorials for local newspapers. That was when he discovered his alter-ego and gave it a name; Mark Twain. Sam would coin the words, Mark would suffer the consequences.

By the time Livy met him, he had been all over America, even to Hawaii, Europe and the Holy Land. He had braved the seas and the Rocky Mountain wilderness, mined for gold, written to entertain a national audience, learned how to charm people and miraculously to make a living with his gift of sarcasm and wit. And he was sure beautiful Olivia could not resist him. Unfortunately for her inner peace, he was right. And noble, long suffering Olivia took on a lifetime project which ended (for her) in frustration and confusion in a foreign land.

And perhaps her end was assisted by an unseen hand. The pure light of Olivia Clemens- darkened by the cryptic mysteries within the family have become an irresistible fascination for me.

 Olivia Clemens, from a detail in a tintype of
 her with daughter Clara and her boyfriend.

Sam had played along with Olivia's unorthodox Christianity... and they coexisted amiably with their irreconcilable opinions, and each was allowed his own self-styled Faith. But as they raised their three daughters, the differences eked out. Clara wrote of how she and her sisters, even as children, spent long conversations reasoning with their father, who argued freely with them... as an equal. You might say his was a childlike disbelief. Everyone, his wife, his best friend, his daughters, all eventually docked in his harbor of deep and inconsolable doubts. Clemens shouldered psychological wounds from the loss of his younger brother in a tragic steamboat accident. THAT was when he knew “God” made mistakes. He had seen great poverty and injustice in the world, and had no confidence in mankind and even less in any god. He often castigated the “damned human race,” as he claimed that he could do a better job running the Universe. “Free Will” made absolutely no sense, if “God” was all powerful. Sam created monuments in his mind to his colossal questions, and loved dancing around them with his family and friends. In their darkest moments, neither really knew what they believed.

But as smart as he thought he was, Clemens continuously made stupid, costly judgments. Terminally hapless at business, most of his attempts at investment, and there were many, had ended in failure and left him near bankruptcy. He had been forced to drag his family all over the world, partly on a laborious lecture circuit, partly running from mounting debts back home, but mostly running from accountability as always from publishers, and his adoring public. For a dozen years Livy held their little band together in various refuges in Europe, while Sam went back and forth, playing cat and mouse with his American financial quagmire. Meanwhile the transplanted family was inevitably, strongly influenced by the more liberal European style of Christianity.

At the same time, Sam Clemens wove a roguish network of American artists and writers, intellectuals and inventors, who followed the more bohemian philosophies of Walt Whitman and company. Concepts of religion in this free society were individualized and vastly subjective and self-suiting. Sam's irreverence found fertile ground and his doubts evolved into revolutionary spiritual assertions. And everything became toxic with his family and his public once he put these ideas down in a manuscript. The spiritual lines were drawn.

As the Clemens daughters grew up, they found compromise between their parents in a new denomination, Christian Scientism... and similar attempts to repackage religious faith. Mark Twain became more and more outspoken in his unbelief, and even wrote scathing attacks on Christian Science, after oldest daughter Susy embraced it. Thou shalt have no other gods before me...

But for the girls these unresolved questions only made Sam Clemens a more adorable project for the entire family. And their efforts were not in vain. He always seemed to find the most plausibility for hope in mankind and Eternal things when around them. But when his oldest daughter Susy perished prematurely in 1896, from spinal meningitis, at just twenty-four years old, neither marrying nor bearing children, Sam abandoned any pretense of faith with a vengeance.

 Albert Bigelow Paine traced Clemens' relentless
 cynicism back to the death of his beloved Susy.

The family was in transit at the time, returning in groups after a world tour. They had left Susy behind in the States, and learned while returning that she was ill. Olivia and Clara were aboard ship and were too late, but on their way. Sam had to console himself back in England, and did a poor job of it... writing profusely of his regrets and failures as a father.

My remorse does not deceive me. I know that if she were back I should soon be neglectful of her as I was before- it is our way.”

I feel sure that he was trying to comfort himself by the use of “our,” when the girls would have said for him to speak for himself. The self-absorption was HIS way. What had started with the cynicism of a world traveler, became militant anger towards mankind and the god who made it, and himself of course. And as his family fell apart, Sam Clemens' soul was exposed, with no stable personalities to guide his drifting raft.

After realizing what a soul-grinder he was putting his grieving wife through, Sam had a temporary change of heart, as he often would do. Never quite positive about his most outrageous postulates, Sam would often, if only momentarily, reverse himself. He often spoke and wrote of “Providence” and eternal damnation, and quoted the Bible. As much as he tried, he could never successfully expunge his own personal Judeo-Christian paradigm.

While in Florence, one of his love notes during the medical restraining order illustrates his vacillations: “I do love you so my darling, and it grieves me so to remember that I am the cause of your being where you are. I WISH- I WISH- but it is too late. I drove you to sorrow and to heart-break just to hear myself talk. If I ever do it again when you get well I hope the punishment will fall upon me the guilty, not upon you the innocent.”

One of Clemens' pet peeves was how God allowed bad things to happen to good people. To Clemens, the only kind of God worth believing in was one who gave you favor in this life. Especially if you were anyone who actually tried to live a good life. There should have been rewards for persons like Livy, for good behavior. As he lived on, he became convinced that Earth was all the hell this universe needed. Of course that is what every unbeliever is counting on.

But tormented with doubt and grief, he capitulated and wrote Livy that he had been wrong, that he would never question God or the concept of heaven again, that he was grateful to know Susy's final destination, which they would all someday share. Well, most of them. But then shortly he would revert to that destination being mere dust, a mere wishful fantasy. A human contrivance. Still the comfort of it was irresistible. Sam could never resist any heart-warming pleasure. He loved to hate and punish and he loved more to forgive and indulge.

In the end, Clemens' unresolved anger, depression, and written blasphemies pushed Olivia away into a heartbreaking relational crisis. For her loving soul there was the horrifying realization that Sam was probably never going to share her eternal Heaven. Meanwhile they had raised their precious, but fragile daughters in this sieve of religious confusion. Conversely she must have been reminded of the mental security of the Faith of her childhood, and the lifetime of refuge it had provided. What slippery slope had she leaped down into? What had she done? It was too much. Her heart began to fail. And her bedroom became her only refuge from him and his relentless, godless rebellion. The doctor had forbidden him to even talk through the door. This was no way to sustain a marriage, or a life. I contend that she died of a broken heart.

And among them already there may have been an “agent provocateur” who was planting seeds of mayhem, and even gently manipulating events towards a tragic end. Grief-stricken herself, Clara would not have imagined the complex struggle going on in the household, but years later, if she had any powers of analysis, with hindsight she would have seen it clearly. But her own book never connected the dots. Why she never did is another mystery. 

 Isabel Lyon, Sam Clemens, and his daughter Jean.

The Clemens had hired a new member for the Twain entourage around 1902, over a year before they left for Italy. Clever and attractive, Isabel Lyon had been a neighborhood friend who Sam had found to be an excellent game-partner at parties. The picture above appears to have been taken early in their friendship and probably before her employment, perhaps around 1900. When they realized that extra assistance would be necessary to fulfill Olivia's routine roles in the function of their family, which included serving as her and Sam's personal secretary, Isabel was ready and available and a welcome addition. She came highly recommended by friends. But later on Lyon was unveiled to be cunningly manipulative, instinctively Machiavellian, ruthlessly ambitious, and worshipful if not in love with Mark Twain.

Knowing that in Sam Clemens' last days, Lyon would be sued as a conspirator in a stunning embezzlement scheme, and that the Clemenses grew to believe she was an evil influence on the Twain enterprise, all while she built herself a lavish lifestyle at Clemens' expense, makes one think again about those mysterious severed telephone lines. That inopportune locked gate; Life-saving first aid blocked for Mark Twain's dying wife.

After Olivia's death, Isabel's largely unseen hand relocated Clemens, created and furnished a new mansion called Stormfield to her tastes, as well as a wonderful smaller cottage for herself. Calling him “the King” she surrounded him with parasites, took over his public image and most importantly, created a joint bank account. And quietly, carefully she conspired with a doctor to send Jean, Sam's youngest, away to an institution because of her epilepsy, “for his protection.”

During Isabel Lyons' term of service, Mark Twain's life became that of a glamorous yet dependent puppet, where all of Clemens' self-indulgent tendencies became his undoing. Looking back on this unfortunate time from our perspective, it is hard not to condemn all of the people involved. In fact they all did, at least blame one another, with Samuel Clemens himself taking the blame and shame of it all in his old age.

Always given to fast company, Clemens had taken on an unsavory professional clique and a superficial social circle to fill his life. What followed should have been a national scandal, except that Clemens had employed the most able of publicists, his biographer and ultimate trustee, Albert Bigelow Paine. Paine was cunningly able to seal the lid on all things Twain, and protect that legacy to this very day. That is another story of deception and intrigue.

Albert Bigelow Paine entered Sam Clemens' life as if called by Providence. A talented man himself, Paine was ambitious where Clemens was phlegmatic, cautious where the great author was reckless, in effect the common sense and business mind that the legendary bard had always lacked. Paine had just successfully written and marketed the biography of Thomas Nast, the most famous and influential political cartoonist in the world. When Mark Twain sent his compliments, he moved in for the kill. Charming and ambitious, he swiftly proposed and sealed a deal to write Twain's biography. Partnering with Samuel Clemens was just the beginning of a long series of beneficial encounters, and served to attract similar publishing contracts with the creme of Clemens' associates, the leaders of various high profile professions; the most famous actress, the most famous Texas Ranger, even his own award-winning version of Joan of Arc, all while tailoring, pressing and riding Twain's coattails.

Albert Bigelow Paine is really the central figure in this story, and was probably the collector if not photographer of many of the images on this website. Although he wrote volumes about others, and children's books and novels and poetry, little was written about him. In fact there were good reasons for this. A bigamist and forger, his personal life would have inspired an American comedy scandal, but instead he has become a forgotten phantom. Few Twain writers have ever really been curious about him, and those who were chose to shrug him off as the black sheep of an elite American cabal. But it was Paine who gave us the Mark Twain we think we know. The Clemenses trusted him completely, never aware of his character issues, and left him in custody of the Twain legacy. Paine was the proverbial “fox in the hen house.”

And Albert Paine often found himself in league with Isabel Lyons. But he played the field, giving special attention to Clara and later to Jean Clemens, who came to depend on him greatly. Eventually Lyon and Paine accused one another of all kinds of mischief, their final assessment being of mutual contempt and distrust. They were both right. But Paine played his hand more effectively, and ended up not only the trustee of Mark Twain's literary legacy, but he was given the highest tribute by Clara Clemens in her book.

Clara dedicated her insightful book titled My Father Mark Twain to him, and she wrote “affectionately” that he “ ...understood my father and faithfully demonstrated his love for him...” Paine's complete hijacking of Twain thus became the sanctioned spin on Samuel Clemens for way over one hundred years. It took that long for scholars to detect what may have been the most successful and misleading handling of a major literary force in American history.

Paine and Twain lived next door to one another, traveled together. Entertained together... Encouraged by Isabel Lyon, Mark Twain was going everywhere, winter and summer, in his trademark whites, establishing the iconic Twain image we all recognize. He often took along charming young girls, adolescents, to ride in his buggy and add sweetness and innocence to his personal and public space. His daughters had been his angels in the flesh, and after they were grown he adopted new ones, called “Angelfish,” to keep his breaking, lost soul refreshed. Sam depended on the tangible innocence in these girls to represent true goodness and purity, things he almost refused to believe in. Strangely, little girls became his objects of worship, his gods. Just like his idol, Joan of Arc, in Clemens' “Angelfish” he found persons whom he could admire and trust, give the benefit of the doubt, and place his faith in. 

 Twain proudly escorted his "Angelfish" like
 they were his grandchildren. He never lived to
 enjoy any of his own.

Finally Clara began to realize that Isabel was evolving from Goldilocks into the Big Bad Wolf. Over time she began to be suspicious of poor Jean's three year banishment, her father's supposed detachment, and Isabel's obvious control over the whole Clemens household. Twice she initiated an investigation, and twice her father stopped it and protected his trusted secretary. Meanwhile Lyon had attached herself to Ralph Ashcroft, a much younger man who had recently taken the job as Clemens' financial manger, but who had all the charm of a boa constrictor. They were soon to be engaged, and in short order Ashcroft had designed a three-way partnership between Clemens and Isabel and himself. Amazingly, each shared an equal percentage of the ownership, making Ashcroft and Lyon an overwhelming majority. Clemens not only signed on to this egregious incorporation, but also gave them complete power of attorney to all of his assets. Strangely, this man of disbelief placed his complete faith and trust in these two scoundrels.

But Albert Paine was watching the new partnership with sharp concern, and eventually Clara also began to wonder, more forcefully, where all of her father's money was going... And after a surprise audit it became clear that Ashcroft and Lyons had routed an excessive amount of money into his business interests and her own house and clothes and lifestyle. In lieu of more accountable financial compensations, such as royalties or commissions, they arranged a steady flow of cash “gifts,” while sometimes refusing funds to Sam and the family.

Quickly the two were fired and sued, and eventually publicly chastised for their malfeasance. Clever as ever, they soon got married, so as to prevent either from having to testify against the other.

Isabel Lyon had convinced everyone interested that Jean's exile was absolutely necessary, due to her dangerous epileptic fits, more for the peace and happiness of Sam Clemens than for Jean. Letters to and from Jean had been intercepted, removing her from the dialogue, while “Angelfish” were recruited and used to fill his emotional void. Clemens was being handled like a fragile emperor, and with Lyon's management, nothing and no one would threaten his utopia. After a good deal of discussion and consternation, the Clemenses finally decided that Jean should be brought home. But her doctor was adamant to adhere to Lyon's program. Finally Sam managed to wrestle her away and bring her home “temporarily.” Jean quickly adjusted, working a garden, riding her horse, thankful to have her life back and having a great time. She was finally home and she never went back.

 Jean only enjoyed a few months of home with her 
family, after years of separation due to her epilepsy.

But Lyon became furious. Her plan, her authority, her control was suddenly in jeopardy. Even today, knowing what we know, we do not know what it was that caused Isabel to persecute Jean so. But it was obvious from her reaction that the two could not share Sam Clemens, could not be in the same organization. What had transpired between them? What did Jean know that made Isabel so uncomfortable? Surely Jean's seizures would not have frightened her so much. Whatever it was, it was not long before Isabel was packing her belongings, filling suspicious trunks full of undocumented contents, as she spent a mysterious time rummaging upstairs in the Clemens attic. At the same time treasured Clemens heirlooms disappeared, including a string of carnelian beads, confirming that she was indeed a thief. And since she had her own cottage, why the upheaval? It appears that she had been living in the Clemens home, and was moving out because Jean was moving in...

Watchful Clara got a key to one of Isabel's trunks and was insisting that it be checked, and once again Sam protected Lyon from embarrassment. The pattern of outrage and then indulgence on Clemens' part must have been as infuriating as Lyon's brazen predation. Perhaps Clemens had given her things... family things, that he did not want Clara to see. It was a mess, and it is possible that Clara wanted to wash her hands of the whole thing then, understanding that her father's bark was much more cutting than his bite, and detecting a basic lack of conviction of his drastic accusations. By now he had characterized the duo as a “criminal couple,” calling Lyon a “liar, a forger, a thief, a hypocrite, a drunkard, a sneak, a humbug, a traitor, a conspirator, a filthy-minded and salacious slut...” It was hard to tell whether his name-calling was the reaction to a personal betrayal or the rantings of an old man angry with himself. It was probably both.

Ashcroft soon married Lyon, for reasons of convenience and legal protection, and they planned to immediately leave for England on a honeymoon. They were warned not to leave the country, but they could not be stopped and sailed across the pond for refuge, where they found none. When they arrived in London, they had to face Jean's publicized telephone conversation, where she said flatly that Isabel Lyon had stolen money from her father and diverted it into her own house. This international humiliation had to sting, especially coming from someone considered crazy by the indignant newlyweds. It had to be a hollow vacation, with so much awaiting back home. So there was nothing to do but return and face the consequences. The newspapers followed every new development.

Then it got ugly, as only wealthy and powerful and artistic persons can get. Sam sent his lawyer Charles Lark and Jean, now a functioning adult and trusted family member, to confront Isabel Lyon. One can only imagine the fire in Jean's eye, as she was assigned to negotiate Lyon's eviction. Clemens had decided that he would renege on his gift of the cottage, and the attached acreage. He refused their request that he soften his accusations of theft and deception. The Ashcrofts did not savor becoming the goats of Mark Twain's pasture. There would be no place to hide, no way to save their reputations.

Lark tried to handle the conversation, and Jean was intended to serve only as a witness. Clemens was offering a generous cash deal, $4000 to get rid of her forever. Lyon fought to stay and keep her home. Lark threatened that her obstinateness would only further anger Mr. Clemens and result in criminal prosecution for her and her husband. She pleaded innocence, but finally she apologized and committed to repay anything she owed and even agreed to sign the deed of her cottage over.

When they returned with the paperwork, Lyon fell apart and became an emotional wreck. She begged Lark for sufficient time to relocate... at least two months, and he agreed. When Lark stepped outside and told Jean, she objected and they reduced the time to just six weeks. This may have been Jean's spitefulness taking over after all the misery Lyon had caused her, but any satisfaction it gave her was short lived. Literally.

Jean had publicly accused and humiliated the Ashcrofts, from America to England, and then personally made the terms of Lyon's eviction as hard as possible. If Isabel Lyon ever had a roaring nemesis, it was Jean Clemens.

Later it was the more stable Clara who went with Lark to Lyon's home, to consummate a six-week lease contract, to start the countdown for Lyon's imminent expulsion. Lyon's mother handled the meeting, claiming Isabel was ill. Armed with insufficient facts, she valiantly defended her daughter, until Clara was forced to burst out that Isabel was guilty, and there would be no grace given. Insults were exchanged, threats flew, but little satisfaction was ever extracted from Isabel Lyon for the years of sabotage she had waged on Sam Clemens and his family and estate. The beads were mysteriously returned.

What followed was a public scandal which played out in the newspapers, where Ralph Ashcroft wrote scathing public announcements smearing Clemens as incompetent and his daughters as frivolous and neglectful. Ashcroft especially attacked Clara Clemens as a free-spending, irresponsible, musical farce. When he discovered that Twain would not respond to a public format, he wrote and defended himself and his wife with abandon.

All of this unpleasantness, the emotional meltdowns, the breakdowns in trust and friendship, the public humiliations, the disintegration of the Twain reputation, the exposure of Sam Clemens as a fool and a narcissist, must have been a terrible assault on Jean, who had gratefully returned to the Clemens home with the highest of hopes, after years of isolation. She distracted herself with decorating the house, putting up a Christmas tree, buying gifts for the family. She must have missed her mother very much.

Then, on Christmas Eve, 1909, the family's longtime servant Katy Leary found Jean dead in her bath tub. The family supposed that she had died from a seizure, perhaps drowning, perhaps a heart attack. Jean was only twenty-nine. It could have been a routine head injury in the tub, a sip of eggnog, or a mountain of stress which triggered another seizure. And it might have been something much more evil. But she would never challenge or frustrate or embarrass Lyon again. And Lyon's greatest threat and possible adversary had been silenced. 

 
I cannot help but “string the beads”... the cut telephone wires, the closed gate, the banishment of Jean, the embezzlement, the theft of Clemens family treasures... and wonder if the death of Jean Clemens was not an act of rage or revenge by someone who had almost pulled off the commandeering of the Mark Twain household, and the considerable wealth that went with it.

Strangely, everyone accepted this sudden death as a blessing, since Sam had worried about who might look after Jean after his passing. Everything in the Clemens family orbited around Sam as the sun, so that it seemed fitting if their deaths should happen according to his time-table. No one ever connected the dots.

Within a short time, the legal battles with the Ashcrofts were over, and they were already separated, soon to be divorced. Clara was in Germany with the love of her life, finally married to Ossip Gabrilowitsch, the famous Russian pianist. They would move around the globe and eventually have a daughter who could not cope with the swirling Clemens creativity and rootlessness, and she died almost destitute in California, quite young, probably of a drug overdose. And not before having a child out of wedlock and giving her up for adoption. An innocent little angelfish, perhaps saved from tragedy and godless searching. She would be mature and distant from it all when she would discover that she had been born into American royalty, albeit decadent. Grandmother Clara might have done her a great favor, finding her a safe refuge from the dark legacies of Stormfield.
 
Samuel Clemens was left alone with his thoughts. If there were dots to connect, Clara would have been the only one to do it. And she was thousands of miles away. Albert Bigelow Paine handled what little was left, to pal around with the Lincoln of American Literature. To play pool all night, smoke expensive cigars, and entertain the Who's Who of the world as they worshiped an American legend too important to even get out of bed. Paine did understand Samuel Clemens better than anyone, and perhaps he really did love him. And maybe Clara had been right, saluting the real “mysterious stranger” in their midst. Someone who was satisfied to serve and protect the beloved old storyteller, to tidy up his behemoth, garbled archive, and secure his legacy for generations. Someone who dared not attract attention to himself, who would subvert his own story as much as he would broadcast others.

 This likeness is sort of symbolic... an usual view of 
a "no frills" Sam Clemens... shorn if you will and kind
of naked to the world.

Strangely, Albert Paine was who and what Sam Clemens needed and deserved. After all the mystery and intrigue, and story telling and story stifling, and generations of enjoyment for millions... they served each other well. 

 For doubters- a comparison graphic showing known images 
of the individuals purported to be in this bizarre tintype.

Friday, December 7, 2018

A Series of "Coincidences"?

This is a website that believes in miracles. If you read and explore it, you will quickly see why. Over a year ago I began to acquire an extraordinary antique image collection... from an Internet auction, one at a time, which should wind up as a collection in the Smithsonian some day.


In the meantime, I am trying to research the images and figure out what I have. I have read scores of books... and sometimes they have explained what I have, as illustrated in this blog. Seemingly ordinary things and events described in biographies about the subjects have become historical proof of the images themselves. With no provenance, these “coincidences” have become the only evidence I have that this whole incredible project is what I think it is. Many images are explained in blog articles below... but for now here is the big picture of what I think you are looking at.

 
I BELIEVE, these images were once resting in the archives of Mark Twain, and later his biographer, Albert Bigelow Paine, who eventually had custody of all things Twain. Sam Clemens was a naturally curious man, and had many varied interests, and especially in human nature and current events, and no less Paine, his personal biographer and confidant. He opened doors for Paine, who wrote some very important biographies of the most important creative personalities of their time. I think, I THINK, that these two, separately and then collectively amassed a vast photo archive which eventually fell into “temporary” storage upon their deaths and sadly, into irrelevance and obscurity.

Authors are often sought out and courted to write important and not-so important biographies of the important and the self-important. They often consider these projects, and during the earliest stages of developing these biographies, many unrealistic ideas and goals are negotiated... and often the authors themselves start out with grandiose schemes... and probably the frills most often dreamed of- and just as often the most often dashed are the ideas, pipe dreams, of profuse illustrations in the proposed book. Everybody loves pictures.... except publishers, who hate paying for them, and thin them out mercilessly. Thus every manuscript for that matter, whether or not it ever gets published, is often accompanied with scores of pictures for illustration that will never be used; Pictures that have been promised by the authors to be returned to their sentimental owners... some day.

And that often never happens... for many reasons. Mostly because books take a long time to produce, and authors hold on to the loaned pictures hoping the publishers will change their minds, realize the value of the illustrations, and ask for them. By the time all hope for using the images has been dashed, the authors are working on new books, the image owners have gotten old and even died, and the images are forgotten about and sit waiting to be returned- indefinitely. They cannot be thrown away... or sold... and they sit in dark corners until the authors get old or die, and then are sold off at some estate sale, or hailed off, along with a mountain of unwanted books and papers and artifacts that are common in an author's personal archives. I am sure it is a story often repeated.

 Deeply personal and rare tintypes of famous families... in this case neighbors of the Clemens... I thought these (1 & 2) were of Mary Cassatt's mother... and was not surprised by the name of the book  in her lap when enlarged: The Practical Painter.

Now imagine what kinds of things MIGHT have been lurking in the neglected corners of the likes of Mark Twain or Albert Bigelow Paine, his biographer. Both men were world travelers, who were the first to be asked to consider the most exciting and prestigious projects in the country. And for every project they completed, scores went unfinished, saved for a “rainy day.” Both men knew the “Who's Who” of upper society, and the Counts and no counts... and either of them could easily have stashed the stunningly important image collection seen here.

Here is the wonderful part, for most of the people pictured in this Victorian image collection, there is a direct link or at least a possible link, to one or both of these men. I believe that the best intentions they had about returning this mountain of borrowed images evolved over decades into a truckload of dusty boxes which were disposed of, and thankfully, somebody looked at them and saw their value... probably a hundred years later. That is where I come in.

A lifelong history lover, I am an instinctive detective, and an artist with a brain for recognizing likenesses. It has been an exciting year, and after many hundreds of hours of research, this blog is finally starting to make sense. These are important images, I believe from personal collections of many famous people, once entrusted to two of the most important writers of the Nineteenth Century. But they had never been published. Not then, not until now, and right here.

You are looking into the secrets and riddles of our history, some deliberately, some by happenstance, and all once intended to illustrate American and some European biographies never written, or at least never published. Lawmen, outlaws, entertainers, politicians, writers, artists, and many more. There are many photographs, merely collected, for the visual delight they inspired. AND, I BELIEVE, some of them may have been the work of Albert Paine who was also a photographer.

Dive in!

Sunday, December 2, 2018

Welcome to Albert's Secret Legacy Chest

You have surfed into a deep stream of mystery and creativity that will take both of us years to understand. 

 You could be an English Lit. Major and still never have heard of this author, who wrote the first biographies of America's creative brain trust, and much more...

So welcome- if you can take this first step into artistic and historical oblivion, I will take the lead the rest of the way. My mission is to bring obscure and yet important and fascinating objects to the surface, and perhaps add some nuances to history.

This whole blog is a wayward planet whose sun is a creative genius and mysterious player during the Victorian age... a man who for good reasons chose to live and die in relative secrecy, but who amassed a large legacy of American literature; Biographies of the premier creative giants of his age, Twain, Gish and Nast, scores of children's books, novels, and stories that could have inspired the Twilight Zone. And if I am correct in my theories... a mountain of photography of all the news makers of the day, some collected and some he photographed himself. 

I stumbled onto the photographs, seen here for the first time, and they have led me to one of the greatest untold networks of creative minds ever formed. Artists, detectives, writers, models, prostitutes, outlaws, spies... all providing the critical mass of an unseen Rolodex of the right-brained talents and iconoclasts of the Industrial Revolution. 


 His name was Albert Bigelow Paine, and after you get through with this blog you will never forget him. Because here we have thrown back the veil and uncovered his monument, which has been sleeping where he buried it, right under our deadened American noses.

Albert Bigelow Paine had many reasons for ducking behind his colossal literary monument, his unequaled diversity, his uncanny success, and instead trusting to time and saturation to place his flag at the peak of American cultural achievement.  But his unexpected death and poor planning, and perhaps poorer politicking, left his flag stuck in a bottomless chasm instead. 

Paine was at the very least a great talent, a passionate writer, but also a ruthless literary appropriator... even a thief, and a bigamist and a con-man... and probably a forger and well, we still don't know what all. He was the perfect example of the fine line between crime and art, of the creativity within man that can be used for either good or evil, and especially a prime example of right-brained abilities and how they have always run amuck without much understanding or appreciation, and way too much trust in this left-brained world.

His vapor trail left so much jealousy and resentment and suspicion that he had worn out any goodwill that might have preserved his legacy. A.B. Paine was the worst and the best of artistic genius, and after his star had fizzled, it had used up all the oxygen in its time slot. So you and I have never heard of this person.

And this is so strange, given that he was personally responsible for establishing the halls of fame for some of our greatest cultural icons... He may have been one of the first to understand fame and the art of managing it, of public relations, of creating and protecting a public image. But Paine had no one to do for him what he had done for others.  

Thus he planted essential flags of immortality on the Olympus of Americana, and then perished, his own considerable contributions to be forgotten, no museums, no magazine articles, not even a biography... 

Nothing but the same superficial bio, a paragraph, barely modified, repeated in footnotes in scores of publications and websites, too uninterested to investigate further.

We should have been asking hundreds of good questions, when someone could have answered them. What happened to Paine's early career of photography? The photographs? How did he manage to skirt prosecution of all of his crimes? How did he, an unknown writer from the Midwest, manage to ingratiate himself with the most famous people in the United States, in order to write their biographies? Operating in New York under an assumed name, hiding from his wife, and hiding his second family from his first wife... yet writing cutting edge manuscripts which gained the confidence of America's most popular bard, Samuel Clemens, and through him attracting the most enviable commissions in the country. How? How did he maintain and profit from that relationship long after Clemens was dead, continuing his magic with Clemens's only surviving daughter, who was convinced that he was the only person who ever "understood her father."


How did he continue to release previously unknown, unpublished works of Clemens, squeezing the last drop of blood from the dustbin of the Twain archive? Even finishing uncompleted works, combining, rearranging others... all while editing or writing sequel biographies of Twain, and award-winning books of his own? It was a magnificent whirlwind of commercial literary success not often experienced by any author of any age. And acknowledging all this, how could we then not know of him?

THAT is what this blog seeks to answer... and it will take some doing. The answers will come, not by reading something on the Internet, but from research and a good deal of creative deduction. It will take a writer and and photographer and a right-brained person like Paine to unlock the mysteries... and that... 

would be me.


Friday, November 9, 2018

Mark Twain and JESSE JAMES! Do YOU believe?

It is a scientific truth that things do not fall together. Nobody can explain the Universe or a single atom, or how or why they came together. Or how or why they stay together. Things never fall together, and given any opportunity, they will always try to fall apart. So when they do fall together, it is something like the Creative Force of the universe willing it so... 

 Upon meeting, Jesse supposedly said to Mark Twain, " I suppose we are the greatest in our line."  [Image is totally photo-shopped.]

At the heart of my theory on this blog - is the shear number of images which have an uncanny resemblance to famous people who were in some way related to one another, all discovered from ONE SOURCE.  HUNDREDS.  Over two hundred interrelated people who can be tied to Mark Twain or his biographer, Albert Bigelow Paine.

But when I started this project, I had no idea just how related they would turn out to be. My first major clues were provided by GOOGLE Search which effortlessly showed me who to look for.   After I recognized someone pictured in an auction, GOOGLE would find me pictures to compare to, and more importantly, would also (unsolicited) show me the faces of persons which were associated with the person I was researching. That is the mind of a search engine... ANYTHING related. It would teach me and familiarize me as I dug into a particular person's “image community.” That way when a familiar face (because of my endless surfing on GOOGLE) popped up in an auction, I may not have known who they were, but I recognized that they were known historically as a family member or associate to somebody I already researched.

In some cases, the relationships suggested by GOOGLE were absolutely correct, although shocking to me. I had a lot of reading to do!

There was a lot of back and forth. And this research has also led to many dead-ends and false alarms and disappointments. There were seemingly scores of certain individuals who had too many look-alikes. Sometimes I wondered whether I was delving into a collection of carefully assembled look-alikes. In fact Mark Twain and A. B. Paine were actually obsessed with the prospects of look-alikes, and used the concept in several books. 

 An example of the acceptable likenesses of outlaws of the time.

And then there were the unexpected historical inconsistencies. Before 1880, many famous people, especially those “out west,” were poorly or rarely photographed, or in some cases popular, historically accepted images of them were not them at all. For many recognizable western personalities, the best image we have today is a picture of a picture of a picture. So desperate were the early writers to get published, they often used poor quality or bogus photographs to strengthen their chances of publication and improve on subsequent sales. Most people, including law enforcement, had never seen a clear photo of the most famous outlaws until they were propped up, stiff and grimacing, outside some frontier morgue after they had been eliminated from the Most Wanted list.

And there was lots of monkey business with the criminal corpses as frontier photographers seized the opportunity to make a buck off of these grisly images of bullet-riddled badmen-made-good. But actually, there were practical reasons for obtaining good photographs of the most famous outlaws, even dead. Besides the fact that the public wanted to see and the papers wanted to show them, law enforcement agencies all over needed them to clear look-alikes, satisfy ID confusion between outlaw siblings, and to be sure sought-after criminals with large rewards were actually dead. The public release of these photos also helped promote the idea that crime did not pay.

Still every mother's son loved to read cheap western publications which sported sensational images of American criminals, dead or alive. Dead, wild-eyed outlaws with their guns laid artistically across their perforated chests were a bonus!

 In this collection was only one such photo which I acquired for soon-to-be obvious reasons. Once again the seller had no idea what it was, and to me it looked a lot like Jesse James. Since I had already acquired around a dozen James family related tintypes, from the same seller, I could not pass on it, even if there were some “problems” with it.

I have thought about it a lot, even talked with an undertaker, trying to satisfy myself about the anomalies. In the meantime it got a lot more complicated with the reading of JESSE: A Novel of the Outlaw Jesse James, by Max McCoy. I had missed it completely, when McCoy released this captivating book in 1999, which did not make a huge splash in history. And it's a good thing it didn't. Because McCoy made the whole thing up and led many of us, who trusted him astray.


IF you are interested in Jesse James, or the supposed (original) author of this book, Mark Twain, or just want to read the most convincing guerrilla soldier's account of the Civil War (that I have encountered) then this book is sure to grab you as it did me.

In a nutshell, according to McCoy's story, Jesse James approached Mark Twain long after his supposed demise, and gave his personal account of his life to be written and published by Mark Twain... “when the coast was clear,” we assume. It is a very convincing account, and given the shameless, well received lies Mark Twain published, McCoy should damned proud of himself.

It was a killer. In every respect. The condition and the circumstances surrounding McCoy's incredible "find" suggest a possible legal entanglement, and even a fire, and a rescue from it, and certainly damage and a loss of pages in the manuscript.But of course, much later he came out and admitted the whole thing was a hoax created when  he was suffering from a a sort of writer's slump. In fact Max McCoy claims he doesn't even remember writing the story.

You will have to read the book to answer your multiple questions about how all this transpired, because I need to get to the meat of my part of the story. According to McCoy's tease, which he admits was a hoax, Jesse James successfully faked his death with the help of his wife and the Ford brothers, (James's cousins) who had been offered a generous reward to deliver him dead. Very handily, John Thomas Samuel, a younger half-brother of the most Wanted Man in America, just happened to die from an old gunshot wound and was conveniently laid in his place. The rest was fake history.

John Thomas Samuel even favored Jesse in appearance and general description, and since very few people had ever seen the outlaw, and only one somewhat recent photo of him was in circulation, and (like Jesse) the corpse sported a full beard which helped to disguise him for any skeptics, it was a smooth deception. Never questioned, the switch miraculously gave Jesse James a chance for a new start in life. According to the story, it required Jesse's wife and family to move away and start their own life without him- in Kansas City. This was an acceptable option compared to the life they had.

To add to the illusion, the book is damn well written, although seemingly not Victorian enough to be from Twain's pen. Expletives and other profane situations in JESSE seem to be major exceptions to Twain's otherwise fairly Midwestern propriety.  And up till now, nobody knew what Jesse James might say if he had the chance. But I propose that even Jesse would not have formed some of these thoughts and words... in many ways he was more chivalrous than Mark Twain... and it would take a day to make all those points, so I would rather make my argument for what the wonderful manuscript that McCoy published was.

Max McCoy readily connected the manuscript with Twain's biographer Albert Bigelow Paine, establishing what everyone now calls plausible deniability. In other words, Paine, the bad guy of Twain lore, wrote it. Kind of like the Devil made me do it.  IF Twain had somehow met with Jesse James, he would have handwritten the notes and even the final manuscript, to then be transcribed. The fact that McCoy claimed that he worked from a badly damaged, typed manuscript brings a third chef into the stew. (But there only ONE!) The book was written to make every impression that it was a joint effort, if not somewhat contentious, between Mark Twain and Jesse James, but that could have been only part of the evolution of this manuscript. 

Then it laid fallow for almost one hundred years. 

Many details are related by James (or whomever) which are little known facts, and almost impossible to have been recorded by any other than a James family member. It seems unlikely and almost impossible for this detailed, introspective confessional to have been a product of some Twentieth Century researcher. The age of the typed story, mildly edited by McCoy, placed its origins long before this kind of exhaustive research had become a standard in historical biography. And frankly few writers then (or now) could have conjured up the stink of war and the smell of black powder which reeks from this unpretentious account.

Too bad it was all a lie. It is a masterful work that reads believably as the forging of these two American legends... “the greatest in their lines” as James supposedly remarked at their first meeting.  Since it is NOT them, and not a legitimate collaboration, then the creator of this ruse is to be adored and congratulated. One HELL of a storyteller. It is a work of genius on several levels, and stands on its own.



 
Still, I am hard-headed, and McCoy turned me on to something valuable here, a very intriguing theory about Jesse James's faked death.. let's go back to the last time we saw Jesse. In the coffin. There must have been dozens of photographs made of Jesse during that famous session after his assassination. Supposedly Bob Ford killed Jesse with a .44 caliber pistol, sending a large projectile, at almost point blank. It is hard to image the small amount of damage done to the forehead of the deceased. The baby face of the bearded man looks to be in his twenties. Jesse was a hardened 35. Think 50 in human terms. And Jesse had very high, very prominent cheekbones, totally missing after death! Jesse also had a long turned up nose, with a substantial bulb on the end, totally missing after death! Jesse had thin hair, and a receding hairline, conveniently covered by a beautiful head of hair, after death.

 An authentic photograph, known in antique circles as a "CDV" of Jesse James.

But that is not all. Not only was his face either obscured by facial hair or just not right, those who prepared his body for burial were careful to arrange his hands in each photo so the missing digit on his left hand could not be seen. Because it was not missing! They did however rip his shirt open to display “old” Civil War wounds... which were right where... brother John Thomas had been shot as well. 

 All images of James are accepted as authentic, 
except mine in the middle, which is relatively unknown.

You can't make this stuff up. Look for yourself... And then there is my photo. I bought this because it looked like a dead guy... who could be mistaken for Jesse James. Propped up in his burial suit, hair mashed from being crammed into a casket that was too short, (or later into a body bag for transport) his ill fitting clothes look like somebody struggled to dress him and then gave up... and took the photos in a rush, but why? Better photos had been taken, when he had first been brought in, his shirt “still bloody” from the shooting. 


 It looks like somebody wiped a bloody hand on his left shoulder, as if trying to create the impression of violence. But the individual finger prints are easily observed. Someone, probably a relative had cleaned him up and prepared him to be photographed for posterity. But a large caliber bullet from behind should have left considerable damage at the exit hole. Pleasant faced “Jesse” sports a moderate gash above his left eye. In more probability, it was a much smaller bullet, and according to the book, applied after death. The whole family was in it up to their lawless eyeballs, or at least up to their cunning smirks.

If in fact they were part of a body-switch plan to release Jesse from his tortured life, they would have known how important it was to deceive and not raise suspicions. And getting convincing photos was important to satisfy the authorities. Many a Pinkerton man would want to inspect them. They craftily provided a body with a bullet that could pass for the Southern folk hero. It was every bit as outlandish as attacking the Northfield bank.

Notice how Jesse's head is bent slightly to make
 him fit into a casket which was almost too small.

Meanwhile the differences between my dead Jesse and theirs are explainable. Only the dead man's ears keep the two likenesses from being the exact same man.

It is apparent from the first and most famous postmortem photos and illustrations of James that they had trouble getting John Thomas/Jesse's eyes to stay closed. This was not unusual. After the body was put on ice, to retard deterioration, the skin became even less flexible and whatever expression was achieved would become fixed until professional techniques could be applied (And probably never were).

In other words, a dead body sometimes has a life of its own. 

"Jesse" was taken by train to his home church in Clay County to be viewed by friends and family before burial. I propose that my photo was taken by law enforcement on the other end of the train ride, not for posterity but to finally provide a face for their files. They may have been unaware or distrustful of the first series of photos. He had probably been shipped in a bag and laid on his ear and so his ear appears to stick to his head... rather than angle out like it should when thawed out. They sat him up, now hunched over and stiff from being shipped in a iced down box, and put on his burial clothes. He looked far from natural. A frontier photographer would not care whether his eyes were closed or staring him in the face... as my Jesse sleepily tries to do. They just wanted proof... that the most wanted outlaw in history was permanently retired.

I'm sure some lawmen later studied the photographs and were still not satisfied. Nor should they have been. But there was no way they were going to pursue their suspicions. And how could they? The evidence was buried, they still had no likeness of Jesse James to compare to, and John Thomas Samuel was unavailable for comment.

Very few people knew about Jesse's half-brother who had been struggling for life at home. He had been wounded at a party, almost died, went into a coma, then recovered, then, according to the book, (and unknown to the outside world) he suddenly died after some time passed. And here opportunity presented itself, to a desperate and devious clan. The Samuels had always been a very remote, private network of counterculture. There was a network of deadly protection surrounding the Samuel household. Several detectives had gone there never to be seen alive again. When the body was interred on the property near the house, that would have been the appropriate and least accessible thing (for inquiry) they could have done. And if John Thomas got up and walked out, nobody would know or care.

 So far, I have found only one photo of "John Thomas Samuel" 
(upper right).  Compare! None of these faces look like
 the authentic Jesse James (right-center & bottom right). If the
 old man is Jesse, his nose grew some (plausible) but he
 appears to have the expected triangular face and those
 high cheek bones.

 The only known photo of John Thomas was taken with
 Jesse's son (left), born in 1975, who appears to be in his
 mid-forties. This would make John Thomas 59.
 Jesse James would be 73.

According to McCoy's book, It is John Thomas Samuel buried in Jesse's grave... or was, as he was exhumed and moved to be buried next to Zee, Jesse's wife, after she passed away. Then exhumed again much later to compare his DNA to descendants. The DNA tests were positive, only proving that the remains were a match to the James family... but it could have been Jesse or John Thomas, or any male offspring of Zerelda Cole James Simms Samuel.

Could it be that even though McCoy told a whopper, part of his account about James is true? Even the truth about Jesse James? If not, whatever happened to John Thomas Samuel? If he lived until 1932 as his family claimed, how is it that there are so few photographs of him?


 You have to wonder, how these discrepancies have been ignored so long...


 William Pinkerton, the detective blamed for the tragic explosion at the James/Samuels home, where little Archie Samuels was killed. He later confided that he intended to burn the house down.



McCoy's elaborate tale really hit the spot, for Twain and Jesse James enthusiasts. Although Samuel Clemens had spent most of his time in  Missouri across the state in Marion County, he had a lot in common with the outlaw. They had both grown up in Missouri river towns, he on the Mississippi, James on the Missouri. Raised in a slave-holding state, they both enlisted in local Confederate militias during the Civil War. Both claimed the discomfort of having killed men during the war and had trouble with wartime atrocities they witnessed. 

 The X's are Confederate guerilla engagements by either Quantrill or Bloody Bill Anderson. The money signs represent bank or train robberies by the James-Younger Gang.

Most of the engagements and atrocities committed by Bloody Bill Anderson and his guerillas, which included Jesse, were right between the two men's hometowns.  Half a dozen of the guerilla attacks were just a days ride from Hannibal, where Mark Twain based many of his writings. Twain openly described himself as a "border ruffian from the state of Missouri."  Thus both men hated the Pinkertons, politicians, and neither had much use for preachers.  All through JESSE, one can read Mark Twain's sentiments about war, slavery and the human race through Jesse's dialogue.

IF Twain met Jesse James as an old man and agreed to write his story, IF he wrote it or at least started it, IF Paine finished and typed it, then what Max McCoy published as a curiosity was in fact one of the most significant manuscripts of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. But alas, it was just out of McCoy's devious mind. And as wonderful as it is, it is bound to generate a whole knew generation of Jesse James mythology. I totally enjoyed the novel and it drove me crazy about six months until learned the truth about it. McCoy really created a stinker.

And deep down, I think he knew it.

By the way, Max McCoy is the creator of Indiana Jones and the author of several novels about him... and has written many books himself. After that kind of success, he might understandably have let a dead dog lie. But it was too tempting... a story, that if it had been true, would have been the story of the 20th century.

Later he has published groundbreaking information about Albert Bigelow Paine, and his astounding indiscretions, which you can read about below.