Ryan;

Today, I mailed you a printout of Milford Fargo's discography of Ada Jones
recordings. It's 38 pages long. He had also made a list of her cylinders,
and a copy of that is included. It runs 13 pages. To say that she was a
proliphic recording artist would be the understatemant of a long time.
There were some duplcations of performances, but those were ones where she
went from label to label, doing the same thing. I guess that all artists
did that in those days. I hope that all this helps, and will round out the
matrial on hand for this great artist.


> [Original Message]
> From: Ryan Barna <[email protected]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Date: 4/13/2008 3:49:04 PM
> Subject: [Phono-L] Re: Ada Jones
>
> Jones' grave is unmarked. Milford Fargo took a picture of it back in the
60s (which he sent to Jim Walsh, which I looked at last August at the
Library of Congress). Not only was it unmarked, but it was very unkempt
with weeds covering it.
>  
> Jones is not the only person with incorrect information on her death
certificate. Arthur Fields has the wrong birth year, age, and parents on
his. In fact, I don't think Fields ever legally changed his name (when he
applied for Social Security back in 1938, he applied as "Abraham
Finkelstein"), so it's possible that the name on Fields' certificate is a
false one! And what about Will F. Denny? A terrific singer of such
forgotten and amusing songs like "You'll Have to Get Off and Walk," "I'm
the Man That Makes the Money in the Mint," and "Up Came Johnny with His
Camera." Denny was traveling with a show when he died in Seattle in 1908,
and nobody knew who his parents were, or his correct age. And that's a
puzzle I'm still trying to solve.
>  
> At least three of us (including myself) tried to obtain Billy Murray's
birth certificate at the Philadelphia City Archives, but it was never
recorded in the birth registries (neither was Arthur Fields). The only
primary sources we have for Murray's birth is his World War I draft card,
and his Social Security application. And neither of Murray's younger
brothers were ever recorded in the Colorado birth index, because Colorado
did not require birth and deaths to be recorded by law until 1900.
>  
> This whole discussion comes to show that you can't simply rely on one
source for definitive background information. It's not my intention to
reproduce incorrect information on the Internet, but it's all the more
reason to share some of these original documents anyway -- to demonstrate
what was originally done, then correct them. I will definitely be
annotating the documents when I get a chance this evening.
>  
> In response to Douglas, I would definitely like to see the discography
that Milford put together. I also have some discography resources in which
I might be able to improve some of it, and I'd like to share it when I
create an Ada Jones section on my website. I'll let his wife Lois know
about this, and I'll make an effort this week if my friend can locate any
of Fargo's papers. I would be grateful for your help, Douglas. I'd hate to
start over again at square one when someone like Milford spent over 40
years researching and collecting detailed information regarding Jones'
life, some of which he probably never published. (This also makes you
wonder what will happen to your research when you're gone -- will it be
preserved someplace where future curiosity seekers will find it, or would
they have to start over from scratch? This is part of the reason why I
created Phonostalgia in the first place. At least if something happened to
me, most of my stuff [and others] will still be preserved and accessible.)
>  
> Ryan Barna
> www.phonostalgia.com 
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