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Evalyn Walsh McLean

Evalyn McLean (née Walsh; August 1, 1886 – April 26, 1947) was an American mining heiress and socialite, famous for reputedly being the last private owner of the 45-carat (9.0 g) Hope Diamond (which was bought in 1911 for US$180,000 from Pierre Cartier), as well as another famous diamond, the 94-carat (18.8 g) Star of the East. She also authored the memoir, Father Struck It Rich, together with Boyden Sparkes.[citation needed]

Evalyn Walsh McLean
Portrait of Evalyn Walsh McLean (1914), wearing the Hope Diamond
Born
Evalyn Walsh

(1886-08-01)August 1, 1886
DiedApril 26, 1947(1947-04-26) (aged 60)
Resting placeRock Creek Cemetery
Washington, D.C., U.S.
OccupationHeiress
Known forLast private owner of the Hope Diamond
Spouse
(m. 1908)
Children4
Parent(s)Thomas Walsh
Carrie Bell Reed Walsh

Early life

McLean was born on August 1, 1886, in Leadville, Colorado,[1] the daughter of Carrie Bell Reed, a former schoolteacher, and Thomas Walsh, an Irish immigrant miner and prospector. She had one sibling, a brother, Vinson Walsh (1888–1905), who died in a car accident in Newport, Rhode Island, at age 17.[2] When she was 12 years old, her father discovered a gold mine and became a multimillionaire. The family moved to a large mansion on Massachusetts Avenue in Washington, D.C. At the age of 14, she moved to Paris for singing lessons. Instead, she lived a wild life, coloring her hair, adding rouge to her cheeks, and drinking alcohol.[1]

The Hope Diamond

On January 28, 1911, in a deal made in the offices of The Washington Post, McLean's husband purchased the Hope Diamond for US$180,000 (equivalent to $5,235,000 in 2021) from Pierre Cartier of Cartier Jewelers in New York.[3] The Hope Diamond was traditionally associated with a curse, but no tragic events befell the couple until eight years later. Due to the rumors of a curse, her friends and mother-in-law urged her to sell it back, but Cartier refused to buy it.[4]

Personal life

In 1908, she married Edward "Ned" Beale McLean, the son of John Roll McLean and heir to The Washington Post and The Cincinnati Enquirer publishing fortune. They had four children, two of whom predeceased their parents:

  • Vinson Walsh McLean (1909–1919), who died aged 9, after being hit by an automobile[5] (The maternal uncle for whom he was named had died in a car accident at age 17.)
  • John Randolph "Jock" McLean II married three times:
    • Agnes Landon Pyne Davis Bacon (née Davis), in 1941
    • Elizabeth Muhlenberg “Betty” Brooke Blake Phipps Reed (née Blake), in 1943
    • former model Mildred W. "Brownie" Brown Schrafft née Brown (July 14, 1917 - January 9, 2019), in 1953. In 1976, Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt rented Brownie McLean's Palm Beach estate, El Solano, and used it as a background for published photographs. In January 1980, she sold the mansion to Yoko Ono and John Lennon. She turned down the Hope Diamond in 1952, when offered to her by her husband, after his mother's death, due to the alleged "curse" associated with it.[6]
  • Evalyn Washington "Evie" McLean (originally named Emily Beale McLean) [7] (November 16, 1921–September 20, 1946), married United States Senator Robert Rice Reynolds (1884–1963),[8] and was found dead by her mother less than five years later, at age 24.[9] A coroner's inquest determined the cause of death to be an accidental overdose of sleeping pills.[10]
    • Evie's daughter Mamie Spears Reynolds, was the first woman to qualify for the Daytona 500,[11] and married Luigi "Coco" Chinetti Jr., the son of Italian race car driver and Ferrari agent Luigi Chinetti, in 1963; they divorced two years later.[12][13] She later married Joseph E. Gregory, with whom she had two children.
  • Edward Beale McLean, Jr., married Ann Carroll Meem, in May 1938. Their divorce was granted in July 1943 and, in August, he married actress Gloria Hatrick, with whom he had two sons, Ronald and Michael. Ronald died, in 1969, from enemy fire, while serving in Vietnam as a first lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps.[14] McLean and Hatrick divorced in January 1948 and, that October, McLean married Manuela Mercedes "Mollie" Hudson, who had been the first wife of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt Jr. In August 1949, Gloria married actor James Stewart. McLean Jr. and Hudson-Vanderbilt separated in the 1960s, then divorced in 1973, after which he married a fourth time, to Patricia Dewey.[15]

The site of the McLean home, Friendship — a sprawling country mansion built for her father-in-law by John Russell Pope and which was located on Tenleytown Road, N.W. — is now a condominium complex known as McLean Gardens. The original house was demolished in the 1940s though some of the property's garden features remain intact, as does the Georgian-style ballroom. A later residence, also known as Friendship, is located at the corner of R Street, N.W. and Wisconsin Avenue, and remains a private home. Her childhood home, a grandiose Second Empire-style mansion at 2020 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., is now the Indonesian embassy.

McLean was a friend and confidante to Alice Roosevelt Longworth and Florence Harding, the wife of Warren G. Harding, the 29th President of the United States. McLean and Harding frequented movie theaters and played bridge together and had a close relationship.[16]

McLean and her husband made a highly publicised journey to Russia, shortly after the October Revolution, in an effort to get Ned's uncle, George Bakhmeteff, reinstated as the Russian ambassador to the US.[17] An American diplomat, William Bullitt, had to talk McLean out of flaunting the Hope Diamond on the streets of Moscow as a symbol of the superiority of capitalism.[18]

She was a victim of Gaston Means, a former FBI agent, murder suspect, and grifter, who claimed he had set a deal to free the Lindbergh baby for a ransom of over US$100,000, which she advanced him. Means disappeared with the money, only to resurface months later in California, and ask McLean for additional funds. Suspicious of Means' activities, she helped lead police to him; he was also wanted for various other crimes and civil actions. That ultimately led to his conviction and imprisonment on larceny charges.

Edward McLean eventually died in a mental institution in 1941.[19]

Death and estate

On April 26, 1947, at aged 60, McLean died of pneumonia, then was buried in Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington D.C., in the Walsh family tomb, alongside her daughter.[20] The Reverend Edmund Walsh, S.J. vice president of Georgetown University read her funeral service, which was attended by family, and close friends including United States Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy.[20]

Upon her death, the principal of her estate and her jewelry, including the Hope Diamond, were left to her seven grandchildren, to be managed by four trustees until the five oldest grandchildren passed their 25th birthdays.[8] The trustees were:

  1. Frank Murphy, United States Supreme Court Justice
  2. Thurman Arnold, former Assistant Attorney General
  3. Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen, American bishop and later archbishop of the Catholic Church
  4. The Reverend Edmund Walsh, S.J. vice president of Georgetown University

Her sons, however, received the proceeds of the Walsh Trust, which was established by her father Thomas Walsh, who had died in 1910. She gave her son-in-law, the former United States Senator Robert Rice Reynolds, lifetime use of the McLean home, Friendship. If the home was sold by the Trustees, he was to receive the proceeds of the sale.[8]

In popular culture

Her highly promoted trip to the Russian SFSR is mentioned in the Cole Porter song, "Anything Goes", in the lines "When Missus Ned McLean (God bless her) / Can get Russian reds to "yes" her, / Then I suppose / Anything goes."[21]

References

  1. ^ a b Anthony, Carl Sferranza (1998). Florence Harding: The First Lady, The Jazz Age, and the Death of America's Most Scandalous President. W. Morrow & Company. p. 133. ISBN 0688077943.
  2. ^ Staff (February 26, 1932). "MRS. T.F. WALSH, SOCIAL LEADER, DIES Widow of Former Miner Who Won Fortune in Colorado Is Stricken in Washington. ONCE HOSTESS TO ROYALTY Honored by Albert, King of the Belgians, for Her Work for His People in the World War". The New York Times. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  3. ^ "Treasures of the World - Hope Diamond". PBS.
  4. ^ Anthony 1998, p. 134
  5. ^ Staff (May 19, 1919). "M'LEAN HEIR KILLED BY AN AUTOMOBILE Nine-Year-Old Who Would Inherit $100,000,000 Struck in Road Near His Home". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  6. ^ "LENNON MANSION BRINGS $3.5 MILLION", by Julie Eagle,South Florida SunSentinel, February 6, 1986. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  7. ^ McLean, Evelyn Walsh (2007). Father Struck It Rich. Western Reflections Publishing Company. p. 198. ISBN 978-1-890437-26-8.
  8. ^ a b c Staff (May 1, 1947). "' Unlucky' M'Lean Hope Diamond Left in Trust for Grandchildren Gem Will Be Worn No More for at Least 20 Years — Sons Inherit Walsh Estate — Reynolds Gets Life Use of 'Friendship'". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  9. ^ St. Petersburg Times, September 21, 1946.
  10. ^ "Mrs. Reynolds' Death Accidental," The New York Times, October 4, 1946
  11. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths — GREGORY, MAMIE SPEARS REYNOLDS". New York Times. 21 November 2014.
  12. ^ "Mamie S. Reynolds Married in Chapel". New York Times. 28 July 1963.
  13. ^ Tuscaloosa News, October 10, 1965
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-15. Retrieved 2011-05-06.
  15. ^ Nashua, New Hampshire Telegraph, August 9, 1949
  16. ^ Anthony 1998, p. 136
  17. ^ Hansen, Stephen A. (2014). A History of Dupont Circle: Center of High Society in the Capital. Charleston, S.C.: The History Press. ISBN 9781625850843. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  18. ^ Smith, Kathryn (2016). The Gatekeeper. New York: Touchstone. p. 151. ISBN 978-1-5011-1496-0. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  19. ^ Staff (April 28, 1947). "HOSTESS MAGNIFICENT". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  20. ^ a b Staff (April 30, 1947). "MRS. M'LEAN BURIED BESIDE HER DAUGHTER". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  21. ^ Canden Schwantes (11 March 2014). Wild Women of Washington, D.C.: A History of Disorderly Conduct from the Ladies of the District. The History Press. p. 99. ISBN 978-1-62619-367-3.

External links

  • The Hope Diamond, PBS
  • The Thomas Walsh Mansion, Embassy Row, Washington DC
  • Queen of Diamonds, Joseph Gregory McLean
  • The World of Famous Diamonds
  • Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian on YouTube
  • The Notorious Hope Diamond

evalyn, walsh, mclean, evalyn, mclean, née, walsh, august, 1886, april, 1947, american, mining, heiress, socialite, famous, reputedly, being, last, private, owner, carat, hope, diamond, which, bought, 1911, from, pierre, cartier, well, another, famous, diamond. Evalyn McLean nee Walsh August 1 1886 April 26 1947 was an American mining heiress and socialite famous for reputedly being the last private owner of the 45 carat 9 0 g Hope Diamond which was bought in 1911 for US 180 000 from Pierre Cartier as well as another famous diamond the 94 carat 18 8 g Star of the East She also authored the memoir Father Struck It Rich together with Boyden Sparkes citation needed Evalyn Walsh McLeanPortrait of Evalyn Walsh McLean 1914 wearing the Hope DiamondBornEvalyn Walsh 1886 08 01 August 1 1886Leadville Colorado U S DiedApril 26 1947 1947 04 26 aged 60 Washington D C U S Resting placeRock Creek CemeteryWashington D C U S OccupationHeiressKnown forLast private owner of the Hope DiamondSpouseEdward Beale McLean m 1908 wbr Children4Parent s Thomas WalshCarrie Bell Reed Walsh Contents 1 Early life 2 The Hope Diamond 3 Personal life 4 Death and estate 5 In popular culture 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditMcLean was born on August 1 1886 in Leadville Colorado 1 the daughter of Carrie Bell Reed a former schoolteacher and Thomas Walsh an Irish immigrant miner and prospector She had one sibling a brother Vinson Walsh 1888 1905 who died in a car accident in Newport Rhode Island at age 17 2 When she was 12 years old her father discovered a gold mine and became a multimillionaire The family moved to a large mansion on Massachusetts Avenue in Washington D C At the age of 14 she moved to Paris for singing lessons Instead she lived a wild life coloring her hair adding rouge to her cheeks and drinking alcohol 1 The Hope Diamond EditOn January 28 1911 in a deal made in the offices of The Washington Post McLean s husband purchased the Hope Diamond for US 180 000 equivalent to 5 235 000 in 2021 from Pierre Cartier of Cartier Jewelers in New York 3 The Hope Diamond was traditionally associated with a curse but no tragic events befell the couple until eight years later Due to the rumors of a curse her friends and mother in law urged her to sell it back but Cartier refused to buy it 4 Personal life EditIn 1908 she married Edward Ned Beale McLean the son of John Roll McLean and heir to The Washington Post and The Cincinnati Enquirer publishing fortune They had four children two of whom predeceased their parents Vinson Walsh McLean 1909 1919 who died aged 9 after being hit by an automobile 5 The maternal uncle for whom he was named had died in a car accident at age 17 John Randolph Jock McLean II married three times Agnes Landon Pyne Davis Bacon nee Davis in 1941 Elizabeth Muhlenberg Betty Brooke Blake Phipps Reed nee Blake in 1943 former model Mildred W Brownie Brown Schrafft nee Brown July 14 1917 January 9 2019 in 1953 In 1976 Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt rented Brownie McLean s Palm Beach estate El Solano and used it as a background for published photographs In January 1980 she sold the mansion to Yoko Ono and John Lennon She turned down the Hope Diamond in 1952 when offered to her by her husband after his mother s death due to the alleged curse associated with it 6 Evalyn Washington Evie McLean originally named Emily Beale McLean 7 November 16 1921 September 20 1946 married United States Senator Robert Rice Reynolds 1884 1963 8 and was found dead by her mother less than five years later at age 24 9 A coroner s inquest determined the cause of death to be an accidental overdose of sleeping pills 10 Evie s daughter Mamie Spears Reynolds was the first woman to qualify for the Daytona 500 11 and married Luigi Coco Chinetti Jr the son of Italian race car driver and Ferrari agent Luigi Chinetti in 1963 they divorced two years later 12 13 She later married Joseph E Gregory with whom she had two children Edward Beale McLean Jr married Ann Carroll Meem in May 1938 Their divorce was granted in July 1943 and in August he married actress Gloria Hatrick with whom he had two sons Ronald and Michael Ronald died in 1969 from enemy fire while serving in Vietnam as a first lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps 14 McLean and Hatrick divorced in January 1948 and that October McLean married Manuela Mercedes Mollie Hudson who had been the first wife of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt Jr In August 1949 Gloria married actor James Stewart McLean Jr and Hudson Vanderbilt separated in the 1960s then divorced in 1973 after which he married a fourth time to Patricia Dewey 15 The site of the McLean home Friendship a sprawling country mansion built for her father in law by John Russell Pope and which was located on Tenleytown Road N W is now a condominium complex known as McLean Gardens The original house was demolished in the 1940s though some of the property s garden features remain intact as does the Georgian style ballroom A later residence also known as Friendship is located at the corner of R Street N W and Wisconsin Avenue and remains a private home Her childhood home a grandiose Second Empire style mansion at 2020 Massachusetts Avenue N W is now the Indonesian embassy McLean was a friend and confidante to Alice Roosevelt Longworth and Florence Harding the wife of Warren G Harding the 29th President of the United States McLean and Harding frequented movie theaters and played bridge together and had a close relationship 16 McLean and her husband made a highly publicised journey to Russia shortly after the October Revolution in an effort to get Ned s uncle George Bakhmeteff reinstated as the Russian ambassador to the US 17 An American diplomat William Bullitt had to talk McLean out of flaunting the Hope Diamond on the streets of Moscow as a symbol of the superiority of capitalism 18 She was a victim of Gaston Means a former FBI agent murder suspect and grifter who claimed he had set a deal to free the Lindbergh baby for a ransom of over US 100 000 which she advanced him Means disappeared with the money only to resurface months later in California and ask McLean for additional funds Suspicious of Means activities she helped lead police to him he was also wanted for various other crimes and civil actions That ultimately led to his conviction and imprisonment on larceny charges Edward McLean eventually died in a mental institution in 1941 19 Death and estate EditOn April 26 1947 at aged 60 McLean died of pneumonia then was buried in Rock Creek Cemetery Washington D C in the Walsh family tomb alongside her daughter 20 The Reverend Edmund Walsh S J vice president of Georgetown University read her funeral service which was attended by family and close friends including United States Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy 20 Upon her death the principal of her estate and her jewelry including the Hope Diamond were left to her seven grandchildren to be managed by four trustees until the five oldest grandchildren passed their 25th birthdays 8 The trustees were Frank Murphy United States Supreme Court Justice Thurman Arnold former Assistant Attorney General Msgr Fulton J Sheen American bishop and later archbishop of the Catholic Church The Reverend Edmund Walsh S J vice president of Georgetown UniversityHer sons however received the proceeds of the Walsh Trust which was established by her father Thomas Walsh who had died in 1910 She gave her son in law the former United States Senator Robert Rice Reynolds lifetime use of the McLean home Friendship If the home was sold by the Trustees he was to receive the proceeds of the sale 8 In popular culture EditHer highly promoted trip to the Russian SFSR is mentioned in the Cole Porter song Anything Goes in the lines When Missus Ned McLean God bless her Can get Russian reds to yes her Then I suppose Anything goes 21 References Edit a b Anthony Carl Sferranza 1998 Florence Harding The First Lady The Jazz Age and the Death of America s Most Scandalous President W Morrow amp Company p 133 ISBN 0688077943 Staff February 26 1932 MRS T F WALSH SOCIAL LEADER DIES Widow of Former Miner Who Won Fortune in Colorado Is Stricken in Washington ONCE HOSTESS TO ROYALTY Honored by Albert King of the Belgians for Her Work for His People in the World War The New York Times Retrieved March 17 2016 Treasures of the World Hope Diamond PBS Anthony 1998 p 134 Staff May 19 1919 M LEAN HEIR KILLED BY AN AUTOMOBILE Nine Year Old Who Would Inherit 100 000 000 Struck in Road Near His Home The New York Times Retrieved 18 March 2016 LENNON MANSION BRINGS 3 5 MILLION by Julie Eagle South Florida SunSentinel February 6 1986 Retrieved August 23 2019 McLean Evelyn Walsh 2007 Father Struck It Rich Western Reflections Publishing Company p 198 ISBN 978 1 890437 26 8 a b c Staff May 1 1947 Unlucky M Lean Hope Diamond Left in Trust for Grandchildren Gem Will Be Worn No More for at Least 20 Years Sons Inherit Walsh Estate Reynolds Gets Life Use of Friendship The New York Times Retrieved 18 March 2016 St Petersburg Times September 21 1946 Mrs Reynolds Death Accidental The New York Times October 4 1946 Paid Notice Deaths GREGORY MAMIE SPEARS REYNOLDS New York Times 21 November 2014 Mamie S Reynolds Married in Chapel New York Times 28 July 1963 Tuscaloosa News October 10 1965 1Lt Ronald Walsh Mc Lean Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2011 05 06 Nashua New Hampshire Telegraph August 9 1949 Anthony 1998 p 136 Hansen Stephen A 2014 A History of Dupont Circle Center of High Society in the Capital Charleston S C The History Press ISBN 9781625850843 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Smith Kathryn 2016 The Gatekeeper New York Touchstone p 151 ISBN 978 1 5011 1496 0 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Staff April 28 1947 HOSTESS MAGNIFICENT The New York Times Retrieved 18 March 2016 a b Staff April 30 1947 MRS M LEAN BURIED BESIDE HER DAUGHTER The New York Times Retrieved 18 March 2016 Canden Schwantes 11 March 2014 Wild Women of Washington D C A History of Disorderly Conduct from the Ladies of the District The History Press p 99 ISBN 978 1 62619 367 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evalyn Walsh McLean The Hope Diamond PBS The Thomas Walsh Mansion Embassy Row Washington DC Queen of Diamonds Joseph Gregory McLean The World of Famous Diamonds Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian on YouTube The Notorious Hope Diamond Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evalyn Walsh McLean amp oldid 1124267049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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