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Showing posts with label Jack Benny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Benny. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2024

Cora Salisbury: Jack Benny’s Mentor

Promotional photo for Cora Folsom Salisbury and Jack Benny, circa 1911.

In Lake County's entertainment history, “the man from Waukegan,” Jack Benny, takes center stage. But where would Benny have been without his “irresistibly funny” vaudeville mentor, Cora Salisbury?

Years before settling in Waukegan and teaming up with Benny, Cora Salisbury enjoyed fame on the vaudeville circuit.

Vaudeville entertainment was popular from the mid-1890s to the early 1930s. Most vaudeville acts were part of a troupe of about a dozen individuals who traveled from town to town. Their acts included magic, acrobatics, juggling, comedy, music, song and dance, and trained animals. 

Cora was born to Eliza A. Knofsker and James H. “Harry” Folsom on February 13, 1868, in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Her father’s untimely death in 1883 prompted her mother to earn a living providing meals and lodging in their home. Many of their boarders were part of traveling theatrical troupes. These artists inspired a teenage Cora to learn about contemporary music and the stage, leading her to pursue a career as a musician and entertainer.

One of Cora Folsom Salisbury's first public performances was noted 
in The Oshkosh Northwestern, Wisconsin newspaper on April 15, 1887.

In 1888, Cora married newspaperman Charles P. Salisbury, who changed careers to manage theaters and a musical theater troupe in New York. In 1892, Cora began performing with the troupe as a pianist and elocutionist—using her voice, gestures, and comedic timing to entertain.

In 1903, after divorcing her husband for “non-support,” she set out on a solo tour of vaudeville houses in the upper Midwest as Miss Cora Folsom Salisbury. Her act featured an “artistic pianologue” that blended comedy with her original ragtime piano compositions. 

On her return to Oshkosh in late 1907, the local newspaper heralded her success: “Miss Salisbury has an act that is absolutely new. It is also irresistibly funny. She is a good-looking little woman, but is willing to sacrifice her good looks and graceful carriage at times to amuse the public.”

Publicity for the talented pianist and composer Cora Folsom Salisbury's 
debut at the Barrison Theater. Waukegan Daily Sun, June 25, 1908. 

After 16 years on the vaudeville circuit, Cora had a chance to settle down. In April 1908, she moved to Waukegan to become the musical director for the recently opened Barrison Theatre on Sheridan Road. There, her knowledge of music and performance was admired.

The Barrison Theater is shown at left with awning. In addition to her musical work at the Barrison, Salisbury was a Waukegan Woman's Club member and, in 1915, spoke at the Carnegie Public Library (right) on the history of musical instruments. Postcard, circa 1908. Dunn Museum 61.8.101.

In the musical director position, Cora performed as a pianist with Barrison’s orchestra and as a solo act. Her role also included playing music for each artist’s act along with “subtle interpretation” piano accompaniment during the showing of silent motion picture films. 

The Waukegan Daily Sun gushed at her first solo performance on June 25, 1908, stating, “She is a vaudeville artist of rare talent, of charming stage mannerisms… We feel she belongs to Waukegan.”

Waukegan Daily Sun, June 22, 1908.

On that same night, the Waukegan Junior Orchestra played at the Barrison. Among its musicians was a 14-year-old Benjamin Kubelsky on violin. This was possibly the first time Cora Salisbury met the future Jack Benny.

In January 1909, “Bennie Kubelsky” made his debut performance as an act at the Barrison. The following year, he joined the Barrison Orchestra under Salisbury’s direction.

Waukegan Daily Sun, November 28, 1910.

In 1910, three vaudeville theaters in Waukegan merged into the Greater Barrison Vaudeville group, and Cora continued as "musical directress."

In addition to her work as musical director, Cora composed music and earned an income from her copyrighted compositions. Before recordings were available, composers earned a living through sales of their sheet music. In 1911, her “Lemons and Limes Rag” was a big hit, and “Ghost Dance” was played at the Majestic Theatre in Chicago and “heralded as the greatest characteristic orchestra number written in years.”

"Ghost Dance" by Cora Salisbury, 1911. Jenne Ven Antwerpen, YouTube.

Hein’s department store in Waukegan hired her to “take charge” of its music department. To promote and sell music, many department stores employed a “song plugger” to play sheet music for patrons to purchase. Cora Salisbury was among many noteworthy “pluggers” nationwide, including George Gershwin and Irving Berlin.

Hein's Store ad announcing the addition of Miss Cora Salisbury to its music department.
Waukegan Daily Sun, January 11, 1911.

In February 1911, Cora was the musical director for the Elks Minstrel Show at the Schwartz Theatre in Waukegan. The Daily Sun wrote that Salisbury is a “mistress of a sorcery of the keys which carried the entire show through to a vast success.” Benny Kubelsky, the “rag time violinist,” also appeared at the show.

Shortly after this performance, Cora convinced Benny’s parents, Meyer and Emma Kubelsky, to allow him to tour with her.

That summer, the duo set out on a coast-to-coast tour with their act “Salisbury and Benny: From Grand Opera to Rag Time.” The 43-year-old Salisbury enjoyed returning to her roots while mentoring the promising 17-year-old on his first vaudeville tour. For their performance at the Bijou Theater in Kenosha, Wisconsin, Benny was billed as “The Fiddlin Kid.”

On breaks in 1912 and 1913, they returned to Waukegan, where they performed at Neal’s Candy Shop and the Hein’s Store.

Publicity photo for "Salisbury and Benny: From Grand Opera to Rag Time." Circa 1912.

In February 1913, a review of Salisbury and Benny’s performance at the Hippodrome in Lexington, Kentucky, described the 19-year-old Benny as “a rather lazy looking youth." The reviewer went on to say that Benny "holds his violin as if it might weigh a few hundred pounds, but nevertheless he gets the music… every time he pulls his bow across the strings, he either gets a howl from his audience or they sit entranced.”

By early 1914, the pair’s touring and partnership concluded. The most significant contributing factor was likely the need for Cora to remain in Waukegan to care for her ailing mother, Eliza. Over the years, Cora had also suffered from bouts of facial neuralgia. 

Salisbury suffered from occasional bouts of facial neuralgia, a condition that causes intense pain similar 
to an electric shock on one side of the face. Waukegan Daily Sun, May 20, 1909.

On February 5, Cora and Benny made one final appearance on the same stage—though as separate acts—for the Waukegan YMCA’s charity event.

Benny found a new partner in pianist Lyman Woods. They began touring as “Benny and Woods: From Grand Opera to Rag Time,” giving Benny top billing and changing Salisbury for Woods.

Publicity photo of Jack Benny taken for his new act "Benny and Woods" at DeHaven Studio, Chicago, circa 1914. 
Dunn Museum 93.34.54

On October 4, 1914, to the surprise of her friends, and at the age of 46, Cora married Navy Warrant Officer George L. Aulmann (1867-1939).


Waukegan Daily Sun, October 7, 1914.

Cora Salisbury Aulmann continued as a pianist and composer at local venues and parties. In March 1915, she gave up her position at the Barrison Theatre due to her declining health and the strain of looking after her mother, who passed away later that year.

In January 1916, Cora sold her Schiller piano and left for sanitariums in Chicago and Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, seeking to improve her health. On her return trip to Waukegan with her husband, she became ill with peritonitis and was hospitalized.

On April 16, 1916, Cora Salisbury Aulmann died at the Jane McAlister Hospital in Waukegan. 

Her husband, George Aulmann, noted in the Waukegan Daily Sun after her death: "My wife improved so much under the treatment at Fond du Lac that both she and I were confident that she was going to get well." 

Cora Folsom Salisbury, circa 1911. Ragpiano.com.

Cora Salisbury found her home in theater venues and the laughter and applause of appreciative audiences. She was a talented vocalist, pianist, and a rare female ragtime composer whose comedic timing may have influenced Jack Benny’s comedy skits.

Her legacy may best be remembered in the success of her protégé. Those early years in Waukegan and on the road with Cora were crucial to Jack Benny’s career. No wonder he always spoke of his mentor with kindness and gratitude.

Women often held supporting roles in vaudeville, but Cora Salisbury broke the mold with her successful solo “pianologue” act and equal partnership with Jack Benny.

- Diana Dretske, Curator ddretske@LCFPD.org

Check out the DunnTV Historymakers: Cora Salisbury video on YouTube.

Sources: 

Lake County History Archives, Bess Bower Dunn Museum, Libertyville, Illinois. 

MayoClinic.org "Trigeminal Neuralgia Symptoms and Causes."
RagPiano.com
YouTube.com
"A Fine Program," Oshkosh Northwestern, April 15, 1887. 
"Salisbury-Folsom: A Quiet Afternoon Marriage at the Home of the Bride," Oshkosh Northwestern, June 6, 1888.
"Here to Get a Divorce: Mrs. Charles P. Salisbury of New York in the City," Oshkosh Northwestern, May 14, 1903.
"Wins Success on Stage: As a 'Pianologist' Mrs. Charles P. Salisbury Makes a Hit in Vaudeville," Oshkosh Northwestern, Nov. 23, 1907.
"Local Musician Gains Fame as a Composer," Waukegan Daily Sun, June 6, 1908.
"Salisbury Intermezzo Is Issued Today: Latest Composition of Barrison Leader," Waukegan Daily Sun, June 16, 1908. 
"Cora Salisbury Scores Heavily at Barrison: More Than a Pianist, She is a Great Vaudeville Artist," Waukegan Daily Sun, June 26, 1908. 
"Made Such Hit Had to Deliver Curtain Speech," Waukegan Daily Sun, June 27, 1908.
"Makes Her Debut Tonight," Waukegan Daily Sun, June 28, 1908. 
"Draw Big Crowds at the Barrison," Waukegan Daily Sun, January 16, 1909. 
"Here's a Stage Heroine: Miss Cora Salisbury Suffers of Neuralgia; Plays On," Waukegan Daily Sun, May 20, 1909.
"Gets Offer From Oshkosh: Miss Cora Salisbury Will Remain in Waukegan," Waukegan Daily Sun, May 2, 1910.
"Orchestra Gets Praise," Waukegan Daily Sun, November 28, 1910.
"Miss Salisbury at Hein Store," Waukegan Daily Sun, January 10, 1911.
"Cora and Ben Are Hits at the Bill: Attracting Capacity at Orpheum, Gary, Ind.," Waukegan Daily Sun, September 5, 1911. 
"At The Empire," Montgomery Alabama Advertiser, February 25, 1912.
"Tonight Another Fine Musical Show at Bijou," Kenosha News, June 20, 1912.
"Tonight at Opera House Cora Salisbury," Oshkosh Northwestern, October 10, 1912.
"Salisbury and Benny Make Hit at the Hip," The Lexington Herald, February 18, 1913.
"Salisbury and Benny to Perform at Hein Store Supper and Dance," Waukegan Daily Sun, October 30, 1913.
"Charity Concert is Pronounced a Decided Success," Waukegan Daily Sun, February 6, 1914.
"News Today in Brief Form [Salisbury-Aulmann wed]," Waukegan Daily Sun, October 7, 1914.
"Music Department in Meeting Monday at Library Rooms: Mrs. Cora Salisbury-Aulmann Gave a Very Interesting Paper at Meeting," Waukegan Daily Sun, January  26, 1915. 
"Benny Kubelsky and Partner [Woods] Head Bill at Barrison," Waukegan Daily Sun, March 23, 1915.
"Cora Salisbury Severes Ties with Barrison," Waukegan Daily Sun, May 17, 1915.
"For Sale: Schiller piano," Waukegan Daily Sun, January 13, 1916.
"Mrs. G.L. Aulmann Passes Away at Hospital Sunday: Better Known as 'Cora Salisbury' Club Woman, Talented Pianist and Composer," Waukegan News Sun, April 17, 1916.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Great Lakes Naval Base Turns 100!

Large letter postcard by the Curt Teich Co. Chicago, 1950. OCH185. 

This year (2011) marks the centennial of the establishment of Naval Station Great Lakes.

The success of the American Navy during the Spanish-American War of 1898 prompted talk of establishing an additional naval recruit training station. In 1911, the "U.S. Naval Training Station, Great Lakes" in North Chicago opened. 

A key player in the creation of the new naval training facility was Congressman George Foss (1863-1936) of northeastern Illinois. Foss spearheaded the idea of a naval training station on the Great Lakes to Commander Hawley, U.S.N. in 1902. Hawley spoke highly of the number and quality of recruits from the Midwest.

That same year a Naval Appropriations Bill was passed, appointing a board to select a suitable Great Lakes location for the training station. At least 36 sites were considered. By 1904, the fight in Congress had become brutal, despite the number of locations being narrowed down to four—Lake Bluff (North Chicago), Racine, WI, Milwaukee, WI and Muskegon, MI. Eventually a provision was drafted to give the President of the United States authority over the appointed board, bypassing Congressional arguments.

In the end, it was Foss who played a pivotal role in locating the training station. Foss realized that the purchase price of $1,000 per acre for the North Chicago site was the chief objection. He enlisted the aid of the Commercial Club of Chicago (the same group that in 1887 presented Fort Sheridan to the U.S. Army) and got the Club to subscribe more than $100,000 for the purchase. The Commercial Club offered the government over 160 acres free of charge. The board then recommended the North Chicago site, President Roosevelt approved it, and construction began in 1905.

Postcard of Administration Building (Building 1), circa 1918. Dunn Museum M-86.1.316

Renowned Chicago architect, Jarvis Hunt (1863-1941), was commissioned to design the original 39 buildings, built between 1905-1911 at a cost of $3.5 million. One of the landmarks is Building 1, also known as the Clock Tower or Administration building. Completed in 1911, the building is made of red brick and has a tower that stands 300 feet over the third floor of the building. 

Postcard "Learning to Lower a Boat," Great Lakes, circa 1918. Dunn Museum 95.20.1

The first recruit, Ordinary Seaman Joseph W. Gregg (1893-1966), arrived at Great Lakes on July 1, 1911. Gregg was from Indiana and served in the U.S. Navy from 1911 to 1914. He is buried at U.S. Naval Cemetery, Great Lakes. 

Postcard "Sham Battle with Tank in Action" at Great Lakes, circa 1915. Dunn Museum, Fort Sheridan Collection 92.24.274

In January 1917, there were 618 sailors in training at Great Lakes. By that August, with the United States' involvement in World War I, the number of sailors grew to 50,000. A tent city and temporary buildings were built to accommodate this swell in numbers, and the facility expanded from 167 acres to over 1,200. 

During the World War I, Great Lakes became the largest training station in the U.S., graduating 100,000 men. Trainees included Waukeganite and Hollywood great Jack Benny, along with Hollywood notables Spencer Tracy and Pat O’Brien. Football great and owner of the Chicago Bears, George Halas, Sr., also trained at Great Lakes. 

John Philip Sousa and the Great Lakes Band at Great Lakes, circa 1918. 

Also during World War I, famous American bandleader, John Philip Sousa (1854-1932), was stationed at Great Lakes. 

In 1917, at the height of his career and in support of the war effort, Sousa assumed the musical directorship of the Great Lakes Band. “The Naval Reserve March,” also known as “The Great Lakes March,” was written in 1918 during his tenure as the director of the Great Lakes band.

Photograph of Great Lakes Band on parade on Genesee Street, Waukegan, IL, circa 1930. Dunn Museum, Fort Sheridan Collection 92.24.1708.

During World War II, Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service (WAVES), were assigned to Great Lakes in 1942. Since the base had no barracks for women, they were given housing in Lake Forest and commuted to the base. By January 1943, there were over 100 officers and over 650 enlisted  WAVES stationed at Great Lakes.
 
The "Golden Thirteen," the first African American naval officers. Photographed by Vories Fisher for Life Magazine, 1944.

The first African American naval officers in U.S. history were commissioned at U.S. Naval Training Station, Great Lakes in 1944. At the time, there were 100,000 Black sailors in the U.S. Navy, and it was decided that Black officers were needed to lead and inspire the men. 

Sixteen men successfully completed the officers' training course, but the Navy commissioned only 12 as officers and an additional man as a chief warrant officer. The Golden Thirteen were: Jesse Walter Arbor, Phillip G. Barnes, Samuel Edward Barnes, Dalton L. Baugh, Sr., George Clinton Cooper, Reginald E. Goodwin, James E. Hair, Charles Byrd Lear, Graham E. Martin, Dennis Denmark Nelson, John W. Reagan, Frank E. Sublett, Jr., William Sylvester White. 

Master chief petty officer and master diver, Carl M. Brashear (1931-2006). Wikipedia.com. Public domain. 

In 1948, Carl M. Brashear (1931-2006) joined the Navy and attended basic training at Naval Training Center Great Lakes from February to May. Years later, Brashear became the Navy's first African American Deep Sea Diver and Master Diver. 

Today, Naval Station Great Lakes is the only training station for the U.S. Navy. All recruits go through this base and an average of 800 graduate each week.

Photo of sailors at Great Lakes, circa 1951. Dunn Museum Collections. 

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Andrew Carnegie and His Library Legacy


Before towns had public libraries they often had “reading rooms.” Waukegan had maintained one through its library association beginning in 1845, but the dream was always to have a true library for its citizens. If not for a generous donation from Andrew Carnegie in 1903, that dream may have taken many more years to be realized.

Andrew Carnegie visiting Waukegan, circa 1903. LCDM Collection.
Carnegie (1835-1919) was one of America’s most successful businessmen. He immigrated to the United States from Scotland with his family in 1848, and settled in Allegheny, Pennsylvania.

Carnegie worked at a cotton mill, Western Union and the Pennsylvania Railroad before beginning his own business in 1865—the Carnegie Steel Company.

Through his shrewd and often criticized business practices, Carnegie became the world’s wealthiest man.

He was convinced that education was life’s key and that people should have access to information for self-education. In this regard, he established the first Carnegie Library in his hometown in Scotland in 1881.

The first Carnegie Library in the United States was built in Braddock, Pennsylvania in 1889. Curt Teich postcard A23659 (1911).

The amount of money that Carnegie gave each town was based on U.S. Census figures, and averaged about $2 per person. Nearly all Carnegie libraries were built according to "The Carnegie Formula," which required matching contributions from the town that received the donation. Generally, this meant the people had to be willing to raise taxes to support the library. He also required that the town provide the building site, and free service to all.


The Carnegie Library in Waukegan, with its unusual semicircular shape and Ionian Greek style architecture stands at the corner of Washington Street and Sheridan Road. It served as the community’s library from 1903-1965.


Jack Benny worked as a pit musician at the Barrison Theater (on left in postcard above) until 1911, when he left Waukegan to perform in a vaudeville act with Barrison pianist Cora Salisbury. Postcard, circa 1907 (LCDM 61.8.101).


Carnegie's donations coincided with a time of expansion for many towns, and when states were seeing the need to establish public libraries. Waukegan Public Library, circa 1910 (LCDM 61.8.121).


Another view of the library, showing the unusual construction on the bluff at Sheridan Road, circa 1945 (LCDM 2006.17.2).

In all, Carnegie provided the funds to build approximately 1,900 public libraries in the United States and over 2,800 worldwide. It cost him over $41 million to build the U.S. libraries, and in his lifetime he gave away $350 million. After his death, the Carnegie Corporation of New York continued his tradition of philanthropy.

Waukegan's "new" public library is located on County Street, near the county courthouse. The Carnegie Library still stands on Sheridan Road, and there is much debate over what function the building can serve.

One of America’s greatest living writers, and Waukegan native, Ray Bradbury (1920- ), discovered books and a love of reading at Waukegan's Carnegie Library, benefiting from Andrew Carnegie's belief that “the man who dies rich, dies disgraced.”

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Waukegan's 150th



This year, Waukegan celebrates its 150-year charter as a city. This large letter postcard from the collections of the Curt Teich Postcard Archives exudes the vibrancy of 1950s Waukegan.

Waukegan's history goes back to at least 1695, when it is believed a trading post existed on the bluff overlooking Lake Michigan, in the area of today's Sheridan Road and Water Street. The post would have facilitated the fur and silver trade in northeastern Illinois. A map by surveyor Thomas Hutchins, published in 1778, records this location as "Riviere du Vieux Fort," and a year later the journal of ship's captain Samuel Robertson refers to the site as the "petit Fort."

The remains of a decaying structure were found by settlers in 1835, and the new settlement was named “Little Fort.”

Despite its key location on Lake Michigan, Little Fort remained quite small until 1841, when a countywide vote relocated the county seat here from Libertyville.

In 1849, the community reached a population of about 2,500, and it incorporated as a village and changed its name to Waukegan. The designation “little” was no longer satisfactory, and the Native American equivalent--Waukegan--was agreed upon, meaning “fort” or “trading place.” In 1859, this receipt (above) was issued from the town's treasurer. By then, the city had grown to 3,400 inhabitants. The Native American image on the receipt seems to represent the town's name, and the woman with goods and a ship behind her represents trade and commerce.

When this photo was taken on November 22, 1870, Waukegan was a hub of commerce. It was connected to Chicago by train, and its port was one of the busiest on the Great Lakes. The view is Genesee Street south of Madison Street.







The city's centennial was celebrated in grand sytle in 1959. Men were encouraged to grow beards, in remembrance of the city's founders.

Favorite son, Jack Benny, was brought back for his very own "Jack Benny Day." Here are two Chicago Tribune photographs by Ford Wilson of "Waukegan's Own" Jack Benny.

Note Jack Benny sitting on the backseat of the white convertible designated his "personal car." He's being driven on Genesee Street in downtown Waukegan. In the second photo, his car appears to be led by a police color guard.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Jack Benny

Perhaps no entertainer is better known than the beloved Jack Benny (1894-1974), who, as he loved to say, was born in Waukegan a “long, long, long time ago.”

Actually, Benny was born Benjamin Kubelsky in a Chicago hospital to Waukegan residents Emma Sachs and Meyer Kubelsky. He first performed as a violinist when he was only eight at the Waukegan Phoenix Opera House. His mother fretted that “without practicing, he’ll be a nothing.” Though Benny loved the violin, he hated to practice. He was a daydreamer and after only one year of high school was thrown out of Waukegan Central High.

In 1911, Benny left home to perform in a vaudeville act with pianist and composer, Cora Salisbury. He eventually gained recognition. 

After Benny became a star of radio, film, and television, he never forgot his hometown. Benny often mentioned Waukegan in his act and visited there frequently.

Jack Benny at the Waukegan Centennial celebration in 1959. Lake County Museum of History in Wauconda, IL. Dunn Museum Collection.

Benny is pictured celebrating Waukegan's centennial in this rare color photo (above). The event was held on June 25, 1959, at the Lake County Museum of History in Wadsworth (predecessor of the Bess Bower Dunn Museum). Benny judged a fiddling contest, and though he was an accomplished violinist, he no doubt mocked his skills.