On this date in 1921, actor Fatty Arbuckle is arrested in
San Francisco for the rape and murder of aspiring actress Virginia Rappe.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Mountain Meadows Massacre (1857) & Actor Fatty Arbuckle Arrested for Rape and Murder (1921)
On this date in 1857, Mormon guerillas, stoked by
religious zeal and a deep resentment of decades of public abuse and federal
interference, murder 120 emigrants at Mountain Meadows, Utah.
Although historical accounts differ, the conflict with
the wagon train of emigrants from Missouri and Arkansas apparently began when
the Mormons refused to sell the train any supplies. Some of the emigrants then
began to commit minor depredations against Mormon fields, abuse the local
Paiute Indians, and taunt the Mormons with reminders of how the Missourians had
attacked and chased them out of that state during the 1830s. Angered by the
emigrants' abuse and fired by a zealous passion against the growing tide of
invading gentiles, a group of Mormons guerillas from around Cedar City decided
to take revenge. Cooperating with a group of Paiute Indians who had already
attacked the train on their own initiative, the Mormon guerillas initially
pretended to be protectors. The guerillas persuaded the emigrants that they had
convinced the Paitues to let them go if they would surrender their arms and
allow the Mormons to escort the wagon train through the territory. But as the
train again moved forward under the Mormon escort, a guerilla leader gave a
pre-arranged signal. The Mormons opened fire on the unarmed male emigrants,
while the Paiutes reportedly murdered the women. Later accounts suggested that
some Mormons had only fired in the air while others killed as few of the
emigrants as they could. But when the shooting stopped in Mountain Meadows, 120
men and women were dead. Only 18 small children were spared. As a direct result
of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, the U.S. government demanded a new settlement
from Brigham Young. In 1858, the Mormons agreed to accept a continued presence
of federal troops and a Gentile governor for Utah Territory. No further
significant Mormon-Gentile violence occurred, and the Latter Day Saints were
thereafter largely left to govern themselves. But the era of complete Mormon
domination of Utah ended as a result of the tragedy that day in Mountain
Meadows.
Arbuckle was later acquitted by a jury, but the scandal
essentially put an end to his career. Roscoe Conkling Arbuckle was born on
March 24, 1887, in Smith Center, Kansas. He worked as a vaudeville performer
and starting in 1913, began appearing in Mack Sennett’s Keystone Cops comedies.
Arbuckle became known for his comedic pratfalls and pie-throwing. In 1917,
Arbuckle formed his own company and began writing and directing films, many of
which starred his friend and fellow comedian Buster Keaton. In 1919, the
heavy-set actor signed a $1 million per year deal with Paramount Pictures, an
extraordinary sum for the time. In early September 1921, Arbuckle went to San
Francisco with two male friends for a short vacation and checked into the St.
Francis Hotel. The men hosted a party in their suite, during which a guest
named Virginia Rappe, who had been drinking, became ill. Rappe died several
days later from peritonitis caused by a ruptured bladder. Maude Delmont,
another guest at the party, claimed Arbuckle had raped Rappe and injured her
bladder. Arbuckle’s arrest on September 11th by the San Francisco
police soon generated a massive scandal. Arbuckle maintained his innocence, but
he was lambasted in the press and the public, unused to Hollywood scandal,
boycotted his films. The politically ambitious San Francisco district attorney
was determined to prosecute Arbuckle, even though Delmont turned out to be a
questionable witness, with a criminal record of her own. Several other
witnesses would later claim the prosecution had intimidated them into giving
false testimony. After two mistrials, the jury in Arbuckle’s third trial found
him not guilty and even issued him an apology. Despite this favorable outcome
for Arbuckle, the U.S. film industry nevertheless temporarily banned him. He
subsequently attempted a comeback and even directed several films under the
pseudonym William B. Goodrich, but his career never fully recovered and he
struggled with alcoholism. Arbuckle died of heart failure at age 46 on June 29,
1933, in New York City.
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