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Authors: Vladimir Alexandrov

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Trukhanova, Natal’ia Ignat’eva.
Na stsene i za kulisami. Vospominaniia.
Moscow
, 2003.

Tumanov, Kniaz’ Iazon K. “Odessa v 1918–19 g.g.”
Morskie zapiski. The Naval Records
. Vol. 22, No. 1, Issue 59 (1965), 65–90.

Tuminez, Astrid S.
Russian Nationalism Since 1856. Ideology and the Making of Foreign Policy.
Lanham, MD, 2000.

Ul’ianova, G. N., and M. K. Shatsillo. Introduction. P. A. Buryshkin.
Moskva kupecheskaia
. 1954. Rpt. Moscow, 1991, 5–36.

United States Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. 
Records
of the Assistant Commissioner for the State of Mississippi, 1865–1872.
Microfilm, 50 Rolls. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Service, 1971.

Utesov, Leonid
. S pesnei po zhizni
. Editor Iu. Dmitriev. Moscow, 1961.

Uvarova, Elena D. “Ermitazh.”
Estrada Rossii XX Vek. Entsyklopediia.
Editors E. D. Uvarova et al. Moscow, 2004, 764–66.

———. “Var’ete.”
Estrada Rossii XX Vek. Entsyklopediia.
Editors E. D.
Uvarova
et al. Moscow, 2004, 105–7.

———. “Yar.”
Estrada Rossii XX Vek. Entsyklopediia.
Editors E. D. Uvarova et al. Moscow, 2004, 788–89.

Van Riper, Benjamin W. “City Life Under the Bolsheviks.”
Atlantic Monthly
(February 1919), 176–85.

Varlamov, Aleksei.
Grigorii Rasputin-Novyi.
Moscow, 2007.

Vecchi, Joseph.
“The Tavern Is My Drum.” My Autobiography
. London, 1948.

Vertinsky, Aleksandr.
Pesni i stikhi
. Washington, DC, 1962.

Vsia Moskva.
Moscow, 1901, 1911, 1913, 1916, 1917.

Waldron, Peter. “Late Imperial Constitutionalism.”
Late Imperial Russia: Problems and Prospects.
Edited by Ian D. Thatcher. Manchester, UK, 2005, 28–43.

Wallenstein, Peter.
Tell the Court I Love My Wife: Race, Marriage, and Law—An American History
. Gordonsville, VA, 2004.

Weeks, Linton.
Clarksdale and Coahoma County
. Clarksdale, MS, 1982.

Wharton, Vernon Lane.
The Negro in Mississippi 1865–1890
. The James Sprunt Studies in History and Political Science, Vol. 28. Chapel Hill, NC, 1947.

White, T. W.
Guests of the Unspeakable. The Odyssey of an Australian Airman—Being a Record of Captivity and Escape in Turkey
. London, 1928.

Wilder, Craig Steven.
A Covenant with Color. Race and Social Power in
Brooklyn
.
New York, 2000.

Williams, Edward V.
The Bells of Russia. History and Technology.
Princeton, NJ, 1985.

Williamson, Joel.
A Rage for Order. Black/White Relations in the American South Since Emancipation
. New York, 1986.

Willis, John C.
Forgotten Time: The Yazoo-Mississippi Delta After the Civil War
. Charlottesville, VA, 2000.

Wood, Ruth Kedzie.
The Tourist’s Russia
. New York, 1912.

Xydias, Jean.
L’Intervention française en Russie. 1918–1919. Souvenirs d’un témoin
. Paris, 1927.

Yildiz, the Municipal Casino of Constantinople: The Historical Past of the Palace and Park of Yildiz
. Constantinople: A. Ihsan, 1926.

Zia Bey, Mufty-Zade K.
Speaking of the Turks
. New York, 1922.

Zorkaia, Neia M.
Na rubezhe stoletii. U istokov massovogo iskusstva v Rossii 1900–1910 godov.
Moscow, 1976.

Zürcher, Erik J.
Turkey. A Modern History
. London, 1993.

Abbreviations
Individuals
 
 
 
Frederick
Frederick Bruce Thomas
Hedwig
Hedwig Thomas
Valli
Valentina “Valli” Thomas
Elvira
Elvira Jungmann; after 1918, Mrs. Elvira Thomas
 
 
BHC
British High Commissioner, Constantinople
USHC
United States High Commissioner, Constantinople
BSS
British Secretary of State
USSS
United States Secretary of State
 
Titles
 
 
 
AC
Atlanta Constitution
Am
Artisticheskii mir
As
Artist i stsena
Az
Artist i zritel’
B
Le Bosphore
BDG
Boston Daily Globe
BG
Boston Globe
CD
Chicago Daily
CDe
Chicago Defender
CDE
Columbus Daily Enquirer
CDM
Charleston Daily Mail
CDT
Chicago Daily Tribune
CM
Constantinople-Matin
CT
Chicago Tribune
DNT
Duluth News-Tribune
EN
Evening News
ES
Eastern Spectator/Le Spectateur d’Orient
HC
Hartford Courant
ICC
Iowa City Citizen
JO
Le Journal d’Orient
LAT
Los Angeles Times
MG
Manchester Guardian
Mv
Moskovskie vedomosti
Nrs
Novoe russkoe slovo
NYT
New York Times
NYTr
New York Tribune
ON
Orient News
P
Programma
Rezh
Restorannaia zhizn’
Rzh
Rampa i zhizn’
S
Stamboul
Sa
Stsena i arena
SFN
San Francisco Chronicle
Tg
Teatral’naia gazeta
Ti
Teatr i iskusstvo
Tk
Teatr i kino
VM
Vsia Moskva
Vp
Vecherniaia pressa
Vt
Var’ete i tsirk
WP
Washington Post
Prologue

1

2
Jenkins
: Jenkins to USSS, April 6, 22, 1919; Burri on Odessa, CP Odessa, box 1, RG 84.
conditions in Odessa:
Papers Relating 1919
, 751, 753;
Munholland, 49–50, 53; Brygin, 478; Xydias, 302.
d’Anselme:
Munholland
, 56–58; see also Margulies, 307; Kantorovich, 261; Kettle, 249–53; Priest, 90.
Bagge:
BHC to BSS, April 26, 1919; Bagge’s interview with d’Espèrey, April 20, 1919, FO 371/3964, 362–65, NA.

3

4
Frederick’s stolen passport:
Frederick to Ravndal, May 10, 1921, CPI 337.
Russian citizenship:
petition to Imperial Ministry of Internal
Affairs
, Aug. 2, 1914: RGIA f. 1284, op. 247, d. 26. 1914–1915 g.g. (5 pp.);
application presented to Nicholas II and his approval:
RGIA f. 1276 (Sovet ministrov), op. 17, d. 345, ll. 134–35 ob.

5

6
evacuation:
Jenkins’s reports to USSS, CP Odessa, box 1, RG84.
Olga:
BHC to USHC, Feb. 26, 1920, DPT 411.
Frederick’s loss of fortune, Odessa’s banks:
Sackett; Gurko, 147; Kettle, 253. Jenkins’s reports to USSS, ibid. Bagge interview with d’Espèrey, April 20, 1919, and Bagge to Graham, May 8, 10, 12, 1919, Letter and memoranda on evacuation of Odessa, FO 371/3964, 362–97, NA.

7

8
Imperator Nikolay
’s delays, d’Anselme’s announcement, London Hotel:
Lobanov-Rostovsky, 332–33; Kettle, 253; Kantorovich, 263.
confusion indescribable:
Jenkins’s reports to USSS, CP Odessa, box 1, RG84; Silverlight, 207.
Cooke:
BHC to BSS, April 25, 1919; Cooke on evacuation of Odessa, FO 371/3964, 337–61, NA; Kettle, 254, 255–57. MLB, April 10, 1919, Special Report on Odessa Evacuation. 
Imperator
Nikolay
’s departure, Bolsheviks arrive, Odessa’s appearance:
Jenkins’s reports to USSS, ibid. Lobanov-Rostovsky, 338; Kantorovich, 264; Tumanov, 85; Kettle, 256.

9

10
Imperator Nikolay
and conditions:
Lobanov-Rostovsky, 338; Kettle, 256. Bagge to Graham on evacuation of Odessa, FO 371/3964, 366–97, NA.
Imperator Nikolay
’s voyage:
Chevilly to Haut Commissaire, April 7, 1919; Bigaut to Vincent, April 21, 1919; d’Espèrey to Haut
Commissaire
, April 6, 7, 16, 1919; Vincent to Poulon, April 22, 1919, Ankara (ambassade), lot no. 2, Haut-Commissariat français à Constantinople, année 1919, boxes 2, 38, CADN.

11

12
“delousing”:
it was similar throughout the Constantinople area: Tumanov, 87; N. Kormilev, “Proshchai, Odessa! 2,”
Nrs
, May 8, 1975, 3; I. Gardner, “Bredovyi khorovod,”
Nrs,
July 15, 1977, 2.

13

14
d’Espèrey and French arrangements:
d’Espèrey to Haut Commissaire,
April 6, 16, 1919; Vincent to Poulon, April 22, 1919, Ankara (ambassade), lot no. 2, Haut-Commissariat français à Constantinople, année 1919, boxes 2, 38, CADN. Vincent to British Naval Attaché, April 14, 1919, FO 371/3964, 415–18.
Bolsheviks in Odessa:
Papers Relating 1919
, 768;
Gde obryvaetsia Rossiia
, “Oblozhenie burzhuazii,” 272.
Thomases arrive in Constantinople:
DF.
“nervous collapse”:
Jenkins to USSS, “Urgent” telegram, May 29, 1919, Department of State, Decimal File, box 1460 (123J 411/65), RG 59.

15

16
Constantinople and Bosporus:
“City of Minarets and Mud,”
NYT
, Nov. 5, 1922, 4, 13; “Constantinople, Where East Met West,”
AC,
Aug. 5, 1923, 21; Marcosson; Armstrong, 71–72.

Chapter One

1
“The Most Southern Place on Earth”:
Cobb.
Hannah and Lewis, November 4, 1872:
information about Frederick’s parents and his date of birth is compiled from various sources: TT, CC, U.S. Census data for 1870 (the Thomas family was counted twice by mistake) and 1880, and his passport applications.
they had been slaves:
TT; Sackett.
blacks outnumbered whites, most blacks owned nothing:
1870 U.S. Census, Schedule 1: Population, and Schedule 3: Productions of Agriculture, Coahoma and Tallahatchie Counties, Mississippi; Cobb, 30; Weeks, 34; Aiken, 9–10, 17.

2

3
1869 auction:
CCR S, 19. Lewis was credited with having produced 48 bales of cotton by June 1, 1870 (U.S. Census, Schedule 3, Productions of Agriculture, District No. 5, Tallahatchie County, Mississippi), which means that he took possession of the land before the spring of 1869.
Cheairs brothers:
TT; Edwards, 1981, 6–7; Edwards, in Mabry, 1, 59. Cheairs family members were still active in the area in the 1880s and 1890s: Calvin Cheairs’ Executors v. Samuel D. Cheairs’ Administrators, 671; 1880 U.S. Census, Special Schedules of Manufactures, Nos. 7 and 8, District No. 110, Tallahatchie County, Mississippi.
depression, land prices:
Cobb, 54–55, 74; Willis, 45–46.
Thomases’ first season:
1870 U.S. Census, Schedule 3, Tallahatchie, ibid.

4

5
Coahoma County’s appearance, character, settlement:
Cobb, vii, 5, 8, 10, 14, 30, 43, 78; Weeks, 3, 9, 34; Bonner, 31–32; Edwards, 1980, 7.
lives of the rich:
Cobb, 16.
lives of slaves, mosquitoes, black children’s mortality:
Cobb, 20–22; 13, 45; Weeks, 7; Williamson, 47.
slaves kept illiterate:
Margo, 7–8.

6

7
freedmen, sharecropping, whites thwart land rental:
Cobb, 51, 55, 60, 71; Aiken, 17; Williamson, 46.

8
Frederick’s siblings, parents:
U.S. Censuses, 1870, 1880. In court documents filed in 1890 and 1891, India mentioned only Frederick and her daughter, his half sister, Ophelia.

9

10
Lewis’s character:
see below, Memphis newspaper stories for October 1890; Dickerson v. Thomas (April 1890), 781.
parents’ literacy:
India was literate: CC, 1880 U.S. Federal Census for Coahoma County, MS.
Lewis was illiterate:
1870 U.S. Federal Census, Tallahatchie County, MS. In all CC documents he “makes his mark.”
names:
Puckett; I am also grateful to Professor Glenda Gilmore for additional information.
Bruce:
Biographical Directory
; “Blanche Kelso Bruce.”

11

12
Frederick’s childhood, hunting, fishing, wildlife:
Cobb, 15, 44; Weeks, 7; Bonner, 32, 59, 2; Cohn, 1948, 26.
smells and sounds:
Bonner, 56–61, 128, 127; Oats, 2; Cohn, 1995, 2.

13

14
1870 census data:
Schedule 3, Productions of Agriculture in District No. 5, Tallahatchie County.
48 bales:
estimate based on data from 1870 census.
hired hands:
1880 U.S. Census, Schedule 2, Productions of Agriculture in District 101, Coahoma County, shows “Key” and “Ralph Florida” in the Thomas household.

15

16
land transactions:
CCR: I, 295–96; L, 229–30; Q, 69–70, 615–617; R, 269–270; S, 19–20, 306–307; V, 412–16; W, 258–59; CCR CC, 155–58. CCD 1: case 655, 317; case 900, 446. CCM 3: 113, 211, 249, 300, 365–66, 368, 378–80, 492–93, 510–11, 543–44, 582–83, 595–97, 628–29. CCM 4, 1893–1905: 33, 218, 221–23, 231–32. CCD [no number], Probate Side: 230, 510. CCI E: 282–85.
white English partner:
CCR L: 229–30; George Rudman: Ancestry.com, Incoming U.S. Passenger Lists, and 1880 U.S. Census.

17

18
Thomases donate land:
CCR S: 306–7.
blacks and churches:
Aiken, 21; Lomax, 70; Wharton, 256–57, 262; Williamson, 47, 172–73.
church
a log cabin:
Sydnor, 41.
A.M.E. Church in Friars Point:
Willie Oats Jr. to Florence Larson, Aug. 12, 1996, North.
Cherry Hill church:
Edwards, 1980; Edwards, in Mabry, 22; Nicholas, in Mabry, 33, 34; Brieger, 167.
Cheairs brothers:
Samuel and other family members are buried in the Cherry Hill Cemetery: Cemetery.
churches in Mississippi:
Williamson, 53; Aiken, 26; Wharton, 248; Weeks, 143. On white schools in Coahoma County in 1870, and the first white school in Clarksdale in 1884, see Weeks, 142.
Bureau of Refugees:
“Freedmen’s Bureau.”
Black
education
:
Wharton, 249; Margo, 6.

19

20
second major turning point:
Dickerson v. Thomas (April 1890) and Dickerson v. Thomas (October 1890). Quoted phrases and specific
details
are drawn from the published reports. There are discrepancies between the state supreme court’s summary and the much more
detailed
account in CC; I have used both sets of documents.
Dickerson’s wealth:
Biographical and Historical Memoirs
, 647–68.
“it weren’t no use in climbin”:
quoted by Sacks, 13.

21

22
Maynard and the Cutrer brothers:
CCD 1: case 655, 317; Weeks, 92, 165–66. Cutrer’s crime was reported widely: “Slandered Once Too Often,”
BDG
, July 31, 1890, 4; “The Shooting of Editor F. F. Chew,”
CDT
, Aug. 1, 1890, 5; “An Editor Fatally Shot,” July 31, 1890,
NYT
, 5.
Dickerson family’s roots:
Weeks, vii, 73; U.S. Census Slave Schedule, 1860; U.S. Censuses, 1870, 1880.
first scandal:
Dickerson et al. v. Brown; Wallenstein, 82–84; Bercaw, 158–61. Before the Civil War, it was illegal in Mississippi to emancipate a child born to a female slave. Cheairs et al. v. Smith et al. refused to confirm a will in which a white planter attempted to free two mulatto children.
$115,000:
U.S. Census, 1870.

23

24
newspaper in Jackson:
quoted in Bercaw, 160.
Dickerson clan:
U.S.
Censuses
1880, 1900.
Lewis’s case against Dickerson:
CCD 1: case 655, 317; CCM 3: 113, 211, 249, 300, 365–66, 368, 378–80, 492–93; case also
summarized
: Dickerson v. Thomas (April 1890).
boardinghouse:
TT.
court’s
decision on April 19, 1889:
CCM 3: 378–80.
“misrepresentations”:
Dickerson v. Thomas (April 1890), 783.
courthouse location:
Weeks, 175.
Clarksdale’s founder:
“John Clark,” in
Biographical and Historical Memoirs
, 553–54.
Daniel Scott, warring factions:
“A Mob in Mississippi,”
BDG
, July 8, 1887, 1.
Dickerson and train station:
Weeks, 73.

25

26
court’s “Opinion”:
Dickerson v. Thomas (April 1890), 784, 781.
“writ of assistance”:
CCM 3: 492–93.

27

28
Thomases deed half their farm:
CCR CC: 155-58.
“lynchingest” state:
Cobb, 91.
Thomases move to Memphis in summer of 1890:
this can be deduced from TT;
Dow’s Memphis
, 1891, 120–21; in Coahoma County, the verdict’s aftershocks lasted from April 1889 until October 1890, with a peak in June 1890. A Shelby County death record indicates that Lewis had been a Memphis resident since 1887; this seems to be an error, although it is possible that he visited the city more than once.

29

30
sixty thousand, largest cotton market, 1866 race riot, lynchings
increase
.
Dow’s Memphis
, 1889, 47; Bond and Sherman, 46, 70–71.
rented a house:
Memphis Avalanche
, Oct. 29, 1890, 1.
Dow’s Memphis
,1891, 920–921.
house and its location:
Insurance Maps of Memphis
, 1888 and 1897.
Lewis’s work:
Dow’s Memphis
, 1891, 920–21, and advertisement following 968; TT; Memphis newspaper articles (see below).

31

32
Frederick’s job:
TT.
Weir’s market:
Dow’s Memphis
,1891, 968.
Howe Institute:
TT, in which he refers to the school as “Howe’s
University
”; Bond and Sherman, 94;
Annals
, 162. Eastbrook was principal c. 1888–1892.
Howe curriculum:
Bond and Sherman, 42, 71, 94;
LeMoyne Normal Institute,
1883–1884, which probably resembled Howe’s a half dozen years later.

33

34
boarders at Lewis and India’s house, events that followed:
local newspapers provided extensive and often lurid coverage:
Memphis Appeal
, Oct. 29, 1890, 4; Oct. 31, 1890, 5;
Memphis Avalanche,
Oct. 29, 1890, 1; Oct. 31, 1890, 1; Nov. 2, 1890, 11;
Memphis Public Ledger
, Oct. 28, 1890, 1; Oct. 29, 1890, 2; Nov. 1, 1890, 5;
Memphis Daily Commercial
, Oct. 29, 1890, 5; Oct. 31, 1890, 5. There are some discrepancies among the accounts. In a number of instances, I quote or repeat the exact wording of the newspaper stories.

35

36
supreme court’s explanation:
Dickerson v. Thomas (October 1890), 158.
India’s petition:
CCM: 510–11; CCD Probate Side: case 431, 230.
her revival of lawsuit:
CCM 3: 543-44.
case’s
convolutions:
CCM 3: 595–97, 628–29; there is some confusion in the court documents regarding the size and location of the property. In 1891, India revived a second lawsuit that Lewis had begun against James A. Peace: CCR Q:
69–70; CCM 3: case 900, 582–83; Weeks, 32, 61, 63, 83.
Dickerson’s death:
CCM 4: case 655, 218; U.S. Census 1880.
Coahoma County Chancery Court’s decision:
CCM 4: 221–23, 231–32; CCI E: 282–85.
India in Memphis:
presumably with Ophelia, she moved to a smaller house at 417 Clay Street:
Polk’s Memphis Directory for 1892
, 963, 1108, 1148;
Insurance Maps of Memphis, 1897
.
India moved to Louisville:
she worked for the family of William C. Kendrick:
Caron’s Directory 1893
, 616, 1092;
1894
, 616, 1089;
1895
, 604, 1078;
1896
, 646, 1154 (her name is given erroneously as “Indiana”).
Frederick’s “desire to travel”:
TT.

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