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Salem Tutt and J. Homer Tutt

Tutt Brothers

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  1. Salem Tutt Whitney ( Salem Tutt; 1875–1934)[1] was married three times.
    1. Whitney's first marriage was to Emma A. Baynard (maiden; 1872–1908) – her second. They married May 6, 1903, in Philadelphia at Crucifixion Episcopal Church, Rev. Henry Laird Phillips (1848–1947), officiating. Rev. Phillips, in 1877, became the first African-American rector of the Crucifixion Church in 1877. Baynard was a sister of William Andrew Baynard, a pianist, who, with Salem and Emma, had, in 1900, been a member of the Oriental Troubadours, concert musicians composed of:
      1. William Andrew Baynard (1869–1941), first tenor and painist[2]
      2. Charles Henry Puggsley (1868–1932), second tenor and soloist
      3. C. Wellington Barrette, aka George W. Bartlett, first bass and baritone soloist
      4. Salem T. Whitney, lion basso and comedian
      5. Emma A. Baynard, prima donna, first soprano and soloist[3]
      6. Nettie Taylor (1882–1963), contralto, cornet, guitar, banjo, mandolin. Nettie married, 1901 in Philadelphia, William A. Baynard.
      7. Jennie Taylor, Nettie's sister, soprano, cornet, banjo, guitar, mandolin
      8. Walter Jones, dancer, late of Lew Dockstader's Minstrels
        Note: Nettie and Jennie's brother, Charles Taylor (1888–1963), was a Philadelphia musician. He had been featured on Keith's Circuit playing two violins, simultaneously. For many years, he was leader of the Standard Theatre Orchestra in Philadelphia.[4]
      9. Miss Brown, vocalist
      10. Montrose Douglass, bicycle and unicycle stunt artist[5]
      11. Ben Toledo, juggler
      12. Alice Castel, prima donna
      13. Mabel Brown
      14. Sam Gardner
      15. Sank Sims[6]

      Emma previously, on March 17,1897, in Williamstown, Pennsylvania, married Lewis E. Puggsley (1858–1935), an operatic tenor soloist, with whom she had a son, Baynard Lewis Puggsley (1898–1956). Lewis Puggsley was a brother of Charles.

    2. Whitney then married Emma Jackson
    3. Whitney then married Nina Marshall
  2. Jacob Homer Tutt (1882–1951)

Half-brother

  1. Sheridan Davis

Works

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  • George Washington Bullion Abroad. Joseph W. Stern & Company (publisher) (Joseph W. Stern; 1870–1934)
Lyrics by J. Homer Tutt and S. Tutt Whitney; music by James J. Vaughan
Library of Congress
OCLC 497482855

Copyrights

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Original copyrights

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  • George Washington Bullion Abroad. Music by James J. Vaughan ( James Joseph Jefferson Vaughan; 1874–1945). Lyrics by J. Homer Tutt and S. Tutt Whitney. Library of Congress. OCLC 497482855.
Catalogue of Copyright Entries, Part 3, Musical Compositions, New Series Library of Congress, Copyright Office
  1. Vol.  10; Part 2, October 1915; No. 10 (1915). "Love Me Anywhere". © Jos. W. Stern & Co., New York; 15 October 1915. 2 c. 27 October 1915. E371361. p. 1176.
  2. Vol.  10; Part 2, October 1915; No. 10 (1915). "Manyanna" ("Land of To-morrow"). © Jos. W. Stern & Co., New York; 13 October 1915. 2 c. 27 October 1915. E373166. p. 1056.
  3. Vol.  10; Part 2, October 1915; No. 11 (1915). "Old Kentucky Blues". © Jos. W. Stern & Co., New York; 30 October 1915. 2 c. 30 October 1915. E373167. p. 1056.
  4. Vol.  10; Part 2, October 1915; No. 12 (1915). "Dear Old Southern Moon". © Jos. W. Stern & Co., New York; 13 October 1915. 2 c. 27 October 1915. E371362. p. 1141.

Puggsley Brothers

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They started out with the Puggsley Brothers:

  1. Louis E. Puggsley, operatic tenor soloist
    Children:
    1. Irvin Clythwaite Puggsley, who, according to his World War I draft registration, was a traveling musician with Drake, Walker Co. of New York.
  2. Richmond C. Puggsley, actor (who preferred scenes from Shakespeare)
    Children:
    1. Harper Horatio Puggsley (1887–1918) was a comedic acrobatic dancer. He married Marion Williams January 18, 1914, in Philadelphia, during on performance, both on stage while, while both were doing an acrobatic turn.[7]
  3. Charles Henry Puggsley (1868–1932), tenor, dancer, acrobat,[8] and Philadelphia piano teacher

... Louis as manager.[9] Salem's stage surname, Whitney, was established by Louis Puggsley, who borrowed it from Myron W. Whitney (1836–1910), a famous concert basso.[10][11]

Jean Barnett Stearns

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Stearns was first married on October 18, 1931, in Yonkers, New York, to Betty Stearns (née Elizabeth Dixon; 1909–1996), whose father, Joseph Moore Dixon (1867–1934), was, from 1921 to 1925, the seventh Governor of Montana.

Stearns then married – in October 1956, in Manhattan, New York – Jean Stearns (née Jean Barnett; born 1922). Jean was from White Hall, Illinois, and had attended MacMurray College (class of 1943), but transferred to the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where, in 1945, she earned a Bachelor of Arts in English. Her mother, Helen Barnett (née Helen Isabell Beaty; 1889–1981), was a music teacher in White Hall. Jean's father, Fleet Barnett ( Ralph Fleetwood Barnett; 1895–1981), owned and operated a pottery shop in White Hall.

Filmography

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Bibliography

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Notes

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References

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News media







Books



  • Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era. Midnight Marquee Press. p. 348. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
    1. Collier-Macmillan (1968). OCLC 655466715 (all editions).
    2. Macmillan (1971). OCLC 900269 (all editions).
    3. Schirmer (1979). OCLC 720681903 (all editions), 1069868504 (all editions). ISBN 0-0287-2510-7, 978-0-0287-2510-9.
    4. Da Capo Press (paperback) (1994). OCLC 610972997 (all editions). LCCN 93-40957. ISBN 0-3068-0553-7, 978-0-3068-0553-0.
    5. (page nos. in the Da Capo edition, accessible via Archive.orglink)
      1. "J. Homer Tutt". pp. 152, 255
      2. "Salem Tutt-Whitney". pp. 76, 152, 156, 255


  • George Washington Bullion Abroad (musical comedy). Manhattan: Joseph W. Stern & Company (publisher). OCLC 497482855. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |lay-date=, |lay-url=, |lay-format=, and |lay-source= (help)