July 28, 2021

Michel Branamour Menard (1805-1856)

    Michel Branamour Menard, Indian trader, entrepreneur, and founder of the Galveston City Company, the only son of Michel B. and Marguerite (de Noyer) Menard, was born on December 5, 1805, at La Prairie, near Montreal, Quebec. The illiterate youth became an engagĂ© of the American Fur Company at Detroit about 1820 and worked in the Minnesota area for two years. In 1822 he joined his uncle, Pierre Menard, former lieutenant governor of Illinois, in the fur trade at Kaskaskia, where he learned to read and write French and eventually English. While working for Menard, he became a resident trader to a band of Shawnees living near Ste. Genevieve, Missouri. He was chosen a chief and moved with the tribe to the White River in Arkansas Territory and later, in 1828, to the Red River below Pecan Point.

    On December 1, 1829, Menard applied for citizenship in Nacogdoches, where he continued to collect skins and furs from the Shawnees and other Indians. He also began trading at Saltillo, Coahuila, exchanging horses, mules, and permits to locate Texas land for manufactured goods. By 1834 he owned 40,000 acres scattered from the lower Trinity River above Liberty to Pecan Point. He built a combination sawmill and gristmill on Menard Creek in 1833, which he operated with the aid of his cousin, Pierre J. Menard, and other relatives who moved to Texas. He continued to send forest products to Menard and VallĂ© and the American Fur Company until 1836. Menard represented Liberty County at the Convention of 1836 and, though he believed independence impractical, bowed to majority will and signed the Texas Declaration of Independence. President Burnet chose him to negotiate a peace treaty with the Shawnees, Delawares, and Kickapoos in northeastern Texas. Among Menard's land speculations was the 1834 arrangement to acquire title to a league and labor on the eastern end of vacant Galveston Island, a site forbidden to non-Hispanic Texans without permission from the president of Mexico. Menard was unable to develop it prior to 1836, and his title was questioned by rival claimants during the First Congress of the Republic of Texas. He had to pay the republic $50,000 to clear his title and had to take in many other partners besides the original investors.

    The Galveston City Company was organized in April 1838 and began issuing deeds to investors and purchasers. Menard, as Texas commissioner, unsuccessfully sought a loan from the United States for the new republic in 1836-37 and represented Galveston in the Fifth Congress, 1840-41. He married four times. His first wife, Marie Diana LeClerc of St. Genevieve, whom he married about 1832, died of cholera aboard a ship en route to Texas from New Orleans on May 14, 1833. He married his second cousin, Adeline Catherine Maxwell, in late 1837, but she died during the yellow fever epidemic in Galveston in July 1838. Next he wed Mary Jane Riddle in 1843; she died in 1847. His fourth wife was Rebecca Mary Bass, a widow with two daughters whom Menard adopted in 1850, the same year the couple became parents of a son. Menard struggled to make his speculations and businesses more profitable, but financial reverses in 1856 finally hurt him severely. Menard was a Catholic and a Mason and was known as a great raconteur. No two accounts of his life are the same, due to his prodigious tales to friends and family. He died at home in Galveston on September 2, 1856, and was buried in the Catholic Cemetery in Galveston. Source


Old Catholic Cemetery
Galveston

COORDINATES
29° 17.574, -094° 48.738

July 14, 2021

Philip Singleton (1781?-1836)

    Phillip Singleton, one of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists, received title to a league of land at the mouth of Yegua Creek on the west bank of the Brazos River in what is now southeastern Burleson and northeastern Washington counties on August 19, 1824. The census of March 1826 classified him as a farmer and stock raiser aged between forty and fifty. His household included his wife, Susanna (Walker), two sons, and three daughters. In 1828-29 Singleton settled on the north side of Buffalo Bayou and built a log house that was afterwards bought by Lorenzo de Zavala and became Zavala's first home in Texas. Source 

Note: This is a cenotaph. While the official details of his death are uncertain, family legend relates that he was killed by Indians while hunting and his body never recovered.


Glendale Cemetery
Houston

COORDINATES
29° 43.210, -095° 16.523

July 12, 2021

Robert Rudolph "Bob" Marquis (1924-2007)

    Bob Marquis, American professional baseball player, began his professional career in 1947 with the Lufkin Foresters, hitting .346 with 22 doubles and 16 triples in 140 games. He was sent to the Beaumont Exporters in the New York Yankees system, and with them he played in four games, going 0-for-1 at the plate. In 1948, he played for Beaumont (two games) and the Quincy Gems (126 games), hitting a combined .333 with 15 home runs, 18 triples and 21 doubles. Marquis split the 1949 season between Beaumont (20 games) and the Binghamton Triplets (106 games), hitting a combined .236 in 453 at-bats. He hit .293 in 151 games for Beaumont in 1950, and with the Kansas City Blues in 1951 he hit .278 in 123 games. He played for the Blues again in 1952, hitting .246 in 97 games. On August 28, 1952, he was traded to Cincinnati with Jim Greengrass, Ernie Nevel, Johnny Schmitz and $35,000 for Ewell Blackwell. The Reds' manager, Baseball Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby, had been Beaumont's skipper in 1950. He made his big league debut on April 17, 1953. In 40 games with the Redlegs (as the Reds were known from 1953-1958) that year, he hit .273 with two home runs, a triple and a double in 44 at-bats. Despite posting an OPS+ of 108, that would end up being his only year in the big leagues - he played his final game on July 7. He also spent 61 games in the minors that year; with the Portland Beavers he hit .271. Back in the minors in 1954, he hit .282 with 16 triples in 143 games for Beaumont. Source

Park View Garden
Forest Lawn Memorial Park
Beaumont

COORDINATES
30° 07.423, -094° 06.020

July 7, 2021

Dorothy Eloise Malone (1924-2018)

    Actress Dorothy Maloney, better known as Dorothy Malone, was born in Chicago on January 30, 1924, to Robert Ignatius Maloney and Esther Emma (Smith) Maloney. She was the oldest of five children. The Maloneys moved to Dallas when Dorothy was three years old. When her younger sisters Patsy and Joan developed polio, Robert and Esther searched for the best treatment and consulted various doctors across the United States, but both sisters died in 1936. During this time, Malone boarded at the Catholic Ursuline Academy of Dallas for three years. She remained a devout Catholic and told Photoplay magazine in 1957 that her religion “had been much more than a part of my life. It would be more correct to say that my life has been a part of my faith.” During her studies at Ursuline Academy, she served as class president. She graduated as salutatorian in 1936. Malone graduated from Highland Park High School, where she had been the president of the Latin Club, captain of the basketball team, voted ROTC Queen, and elected into the National Honor Society. She was also a member of the school’s Dramatics Club and, as a senior, won first place in the Dallas district one-act plays. After graduation, she attended the Hockaday School’s junior college before transferring to Southern Methodist University in 1943. At SMU Malone studied courses in language and science, and she joined the drama club. While she was appearing in a university play, RKO Pictures film studio scout Edward Rubin saw her performance. Impressed, Rubin asked her to read additional scenes with an actor from Houston. He then mailed a contract offer to her, which she initially ignored because she thought the offer was a mistake and did not want to leave SMU. Rubin nudged the process along by initiating more correspondence, and, encouraged by her brother William, Malone flew to Hollywood with her mother and signed with RKO.

    Her film debut was as an uncredited model in Gildersleeve on Broadway (1943). She subsequently had mostly uncredited roles in a series of unremarkable movies before signing with Warner Bros. around 1945, when she dropped the ‘y’ from her last name; thus, Dorothy Malone was born. One of her most notable early roles with Warner Bros. came when she was cast as the bookstore owner in The Big Sleep (1946) starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. In a memorable scene, Malone’s character closes the bookshop, takes off her glasses, and shares a glass of rye with Bogart. Her first major part came two years later when she played opposite Dennis Morgan and Jack Carson in the Technicolor musical, Two Guys from Texas (1948). In the film, which Photoplay called “More foolish than funny,” Malone played a ranch owner, and the characters portrayed by Morgan and Carson vie for her affection. From the late 1940s into the early 1950s she acted in a number of films of various genres - from crime dramas, musicals, and Westerns (including South of St Louis [1949] and Colorado Territory [1949]) - produced by Warner Bros., MGM, RKO, and Universal. In her spare time, she enjoyed supporting various charity organizations and took part in speaking engagements. At some point in the early 1950s Malone left Hollywood and, with the intent of getting married, returned to Dallas, but the engagement fell through. She did charity work and was involved in church activities in the Dallas area and worked for an insurance company before she decided to move to New York City. There she studied in the American Theatre Wing before eventually returning to Hollywood.

    Malone, a brunette, dyed her hair blond for her role in Young at Heart (1954). She later credited this change as a pivotal moment in her career and felt that the blond locks promoted a more sensual aura and thus attracted more sultry roles. Her most critically-acclaimed performance was as Marylee Hadley in Written on the Wind (1956), in which she co-starred with Rock Hudson, Lauren Bacall, and Robert Stack. The movie, which revolves around the fictional Hadley family, portrayed Malone’s character Marylee as, according to the Washington Post years later, an alcoholic "nymphomaniac rich girl" who spends the film trying to seduce her childhood friend, played by Hudson. Her onscreen blond bombshell persona was typical of many of the film roles for actresses in the 1950s. Malone’s performance in Written on the Wind earned her the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress at the 1957 Oscar ceremony. She dedicated her win to her brother William, who died at the age of sixteen in 1954 after he was struck by lightning while golfing at the Dallas Athletic Country Club. Malone’s post-Oscar films include Man of a Thousand Faces (1957), in which she played Lon Chaney, Sr.’s (performed by James Cagney) first wife, and the Diana Barrymore biographic film Too Much, Too Soon (1958) opposite Errol Flynn. She received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960. Her last film role was a small part in Basic Instinct (1992), in which she played convicted murderer Hazel Dobkins.

    Malone transitioned to the small screen in the 1960s and starred as Constance Mackenzie in the primetime soap opera Peyton Place. The television series, which premiered in September 1964 on ABC, co-starred Warner Anderson, Ed Nelson, and future celebrities Mia Farrow and Ryan O’Neal. During filming, Malone developed increasingly serious health issues, which ultimately required a ten-hour surgery for blood clots that blocked blood flow from her heart to her lungs in 1965. She took a leave of absence from the show while she recuperated and returned that November. Actress Lola Albright played Constance for fourteen episodes during her recovery. Unhappy with the direction of her character during the later years of Peyton Place, Malone complained about Constance’s lack of substance. She was subsequently written out of the show in 1968. Malone sued the producers of Peyton Place and received an out-of-court settlement. Despite her dramatic exit, Malone reappeared as Constance in two Peyton Place made-for-television movies - Murder in Peyton Place (1977) and Peyton Place: The Next Generation (1985). She also appeared in individual episodes of various television series throughout the 1970s. Dorothy Malone married three times. She met her first husband, French actor Jacques Bergerac, at a Hollywood party. They wed at St. Theresa’s Church in Hong Kong on June 28, 1959, during her filming of The Last Voyage (1960). The couple had two daughters, Mimi and Diane, both born in Los Angeles. In 1964 she divorced him on grounds of cruelty, alleging physical abuse. The child custody proceedings proved contentious; Bergerac claimed his wife tried to alienate their children from him. Co-parenting also proved disastrous. The two constantly battled over their daughters’ upbringing. Malone moved back to Dallas in 1968 after a judge granted her permission to move with her children. 

    In April 1969 she married New York stockbroker Robert Tomarkin in Las Vegas, but the union was short-lived, and the marriage was annulled later that same year. Two years after her annulment from Tomarkin, she married Dallas businessman Charles Huston Bell at her Dallas home on October 2, 1971. They divorced on August 14, 1973. Dorothy Eloise Malone died from natural causes on January 19, 2018, at an assisted-living facility in Dallas and encrypted at Calvary Hill Cemetery. Source

St John Mausoleum
Calvary Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum
Dallas

COORDINATES
32° 86.671, -096° 87.209