[Phono-L] Ada Jones

Ryan Barna ryansrecords1 at hotmail.com
Sat Apr 12 14:34:04 PDT 2008


I'm no Ada Jones expert -- I'm just citing some info Milford Fargo put together many years ago.Jones was born June 1, 1873 at her parents' home at 78 [!] Manchester Street in Oldham, Lancashire, England, but her birth wasn't registered until August 18th. She was baptized as "Ada Jane Jones" on June 15, 1873 in Oldham's St. Patrick's Church. Her parents were James Jones and Ann Jane Walsh. I haven't inspected any of these documents.Ada married the dancer Hugh Flaherty on August 9, 1904. This is according to the New York City Marriage Index, which I have access to, so Ada's real married name was "Flaherty," not "Flarhaty" as the death certificate shows. Their daughter, Sheelah Flaherty, lived from 1906 to 1936. Whether or not she married with children, I don't know. Fargo mentioned in a July 18, 1981 letter to Ron Dethlefson that he had copies of both Sheelah's birth and death certificates.You might be interested in knowing that Sheelah took part in a few records with her mother. She's documented in "The Golden Wedding" (Edison Disc 50513), and "A Day in Toyland" (Peerless Orch. with Jones, Porter, Meeker, and Sheelah, Edison Disc 50673, Blue Amberol 3875). I also have the latter title on Emerson 1096 crediting "Orchestra with Toy Instruments." Although the Emerson files had disappeared years ago, I'm pretty certain I hear Sheelah in it. Ada Jones and Steve Porter are definitely audible.Now, as far as Fargo's research and collection goes, his cylinders and discs where sold separately when he passed away in 1986 (the Eastman School of Music, where he was the Professor of Music Education, didn't want them--at least that's what his widow Lois told me). His research papers on Jones went with the discs, and I know the person who has them, who happens to be a good friend of mine. I asked if he wanted to photocopy them so I could give them a home on my website, but that depends on when he can find them. Plus, he has limited Internet access, so he can't really scan them for me either. But Fargo's paper collection likely contains these birth certificates, primary documents regarding Ada, and probably other stuff I'm not aware of.As far as corrections to the death certificate go, I prefer to preserve historic (and legal) documents as they were, as not to "disturb" history. I do agree on correcting errors, and I will apply these corrections on my site momentarily. Legally, I can't do anything to change the certificate at the health department, but I know that Ada had some half-siblings, who probably have descendents living today. Although I usually prefer to preserve original documents as they were.I believe "W. J. Armstrong," the informant on her death certificate, is "Armstrong, the Man of Mystery," who was travelling with Jones' show at the time. The clerk's office probably needed someone nearby to supply her personal information, so they chose Armstrong to tell what ever he knew about her. For her age, he could've just said, "Maybe her 40s?" Nobody can really expect anyone to know who their associates' parents were either, especially if they were deceased. It's possible that they couldn't get her husband Hugh Flaherty to supply the info at the time.Hugh was an overly private individual -- he wouldn't want anyone knowing his family's background info anyway, or having record collectors ask him about Jones, etc. Back in the 40s, Jim Walsh wrote that Hugh was already dead, when he actually lived until 1961, because he wanted to protect his privacy. At first he denied that he was Jones' widower when Milford Fargo was trying to track him down, until Fargo finally got him to agree to a taped interview. I have not listened to the tape, but I know someone who has a copy, so it definitely exists.Sorry I had to generalize most of this, I'm not that big on Jones (most of what I'm writing is second hand info). I wish I had Milford's documents (or better, Milford himself) to answer these questions for me, but if I can get my friend to submit some of his papers, most of this picture can be straightened out.Ryan Barnawww.phonostalgia.com
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