Wednesday, June 8, 2022

The mystery of "Scotch May"

In the 1969 biography Houdini The Untold Story, author Milbourne Christopher relates a curious story from the Houdinis home life. He writes:

    The star of The Master Mystery was confronted by a minor mys­tery in his own home. When Houdini was in Scotland, Bess had hired a maid, Bethel May Dove, and brought her back with them to New York. Bethel May was a conscientious worker and seemed to enjoy her work in the Houdini household. She was twenty-one and almost a part of the family. One night Bess went to Bethel May’s room to give the girl her instructions for the next day. Ten minutes later Bess passed the door again and noticed that it was open. She walked back, looked in. Miss Dove was gone; so were her clothes and her wardrobe trunk. Harry told the police he thought she might have run away to marry a soldier. He knew exactly how his elephant disappeared, but the vanishing Dove baffled him.

I don't know Christopher's source for this [see UPDATE], but Houdini confirmed the maid's existence in a letter he wrote in June 1919 to a Mr. DeVega in Glasgow. The letter is in the collection of Edwin A. Dawes and in it Houdini writes:

    Our Glasgow maid ran away with a soldier, and hope she has been lucky in her choice.
    You know we took a scotch girl along to America. Such is life.

The missing maid doesn't get much of a mention in any other biography and she has pretty much slipped into obscurity. "Such is life" indeed. But now the case may be reopened as we might have finally found the missing maid...and more!

The current issue of Marco Pusterla's Ye Olde Magic Mag contains a fascinating article about a Scottish woman named Evelyn Kaye who claimed the Houdinis were her guardians for seven and a half years. The source is an undated article from a Glasgow newspaper (Marco speculates it was probably from around 1950). The article makes quite a few mistakes, such as saying Houdini died in 1934, but Evelyn's tale is intriguing. Here's an excerpt:

    Mrs. Kaye comes of a theatrical family. Her mother, known as Jessie Crawford, was an actress in old-time melodramas at the Princess's Theater in the days of Richard Walden.  
    When Houdini first came to Glasgow to perform at the Coliseum music hall in 1912, he and his wife and secretary lodged with the family in Abbotsford Place.
    They became great friends. Two years later when the Houdinis were going to America it was agreed that they should take Jessie Crawford's delicate 12-year-old daughter with them for her health's sake.
    A year later her mother died and the child was left under the guardianship of Houdini who later made her his dresser and co-assistant with Mrs. Houdini in a number of his illusions. They always called her "Scotch May."

The article goes on to say that the one-time "Scotch May" knew the methods of Houdini's Vanishing Elephant and Walking Through a Brick Wall, but that she would never reveal Houdini's secrets. It also says she married a Glasgow optician, but was now widowed. Interestingly, she had reached out to magician Robert Harbin, who was performing at Glasgow's Pavilion Theater, and knowing Houdini had a magician brother named Hardeen, asked Harbin if he was also related to Houdini. Harbin introduced her to a newspaper reporter and that is how this article came to be.

It was our friend and long time reader Leo Hevia who made the connection to the story in Christopher. So could Evelyn Kaye be the missing maid?

There are some discrepancies. Houdini was not in Scotland in 1912. But he was there in 1913. The two women have different names, but "May" is common between them and Kaye is likely a married name. We see in the DeVega letter that she came from Glasgow, but the letter can also be read as if Houdini is talking about two different women. And the math doesn't quite work as Christopher says the maid was 21, but the newspaper account would make her closer to 18-19 at the time of her vanishing act. But none of this is fatal to the case and more fits together than not, so I think it's very likely Bethel May, Evelyn Kaye and "Scotch May" are the same person.

This opens the door to a few possibilities. On occasion, Bess would talk about having a daughter. I've always thought that was bizarre, but perhaps Bess is talking about May who is, essentially, an adopted daughter. It also may be time to re-check post 1914 photos and see if we can catch a glimpse of Scotch May herself.

Finally, if we've discovered a new member of Houdini's household, is she able to provide any fresh insight? Well, she does, and it's a bit of a bombshell! Regarding Houdini as a person, the original article reads.

    He didn't drink or smoke, Mrs. Kaye tells me, and he worked indefatigably, often taking two years to perfect a single illusion. He taught himself 12 languages, and towards the end of his life was going blind, like his mother, his sister and his brother, an X-ray research doctor.

So here we have yet another mention of Houdini's faulty eyesight. But going blind? And his mother blind??? This is first time I've ever heard that. But the mention of his sister and brother's blindness is correct. Also, this article ran while Leopold was still alive, so knowledge of his blindness, which came on later in his life, just bolsters Evelyn's insider credentials. 

So maybe she revealed a Houdini secret after-all?

Houdini going blind?

A big thank you to Leo Hevia for his research. To Marco Pusterla of Ye Olde Magic Mag for permission to quote the original article. And to Edwin A. Dawes for showing me the original Houdini maid letter.

UPDATE: Our friend Marco Pusterla has discovered that Milbourne Christopher's source for the maid story was the November 15, 1918 issue of The Sphinx. This puts the disappearance around that time. The article also confirms that Bethel May came with the Houdinis from Scotland "six years ago", which also generally matches Evelyn's account. So just more evidence that Evelyn and Bethel are one in the same. Thanks Marco!

19 comments:

  1. Jimmy Grippo related to me that Houdini was blind in his left eye from a chip from a dropped broken plate. This was in his last year's he told me the eye was discolored and he had all his photographs from his finale tour retouched so it would not show!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Dixie! Yes, I remember that from your book and I was thinking about that.

      Delete
  2. I'm wondering about the temporary move to Hardeen's house. Did the young maid tag along? Was a maid even necessary at Dash's place? I wonder if she took off before the move? Or after the return to 278?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I was thinking the same thing. I'm sure she tagged along. They were responsible for her. It sounds like her vanishing act happened in late 1918 or early 1919, so they were back at 278.

      Delete
    2. I'm going with that as well. She tagged along to Dash's house and split after the return.

      Delete
  3. Wow, DeVega gets a mention. That is so cool. I have a pic of him. He wrote to Houdini that another EA was claiming during the war that Houdini was a spy for the Germans.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I actually don't know who DeVega was. Feel free to fill us in. Houdini a German spy? But hearing that ticked him off.

      Delete
    2. An entry in Magicpedia on DeVega. He was a Scottish magician from Glasgow:

      https://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=De_Vega

      Delete
    3. Interesting article but what I really want to ask is if anyone else is seeing a ghost image of a couple sitting/standing behind the gate in the photo of Houdini's home? Probably just a coincidence or my imagination....!

      Delete
    4. Reflection of the windows. Perhaps people passing by

      Delete
    5. Or Scotch May never left! ;)

      Delete
    6. There's a dark, shadowy figure in the window of the next building on the right...

      Delete
    7. Really interesting! Thanks for sharing. (I love that image on the cover of "Ye Olde Magic Mag,' too.)

      Delete
  4. Perhaps Houdini's poor eyesight explains missing the punch coming at him leading to his death?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No--Houdini wasn't that blind. He looked at the portrait sketch Smilovitz drew and remarked that he looked tired in the drawing.

      Delete
  5. Fascinating! What I'd like to know is what prompted an almost-"daughter" to leave the Houdinis in that manner? At that age a possibly forbidden romance would be a strong motivation, but there has to be more to the story considering Scotch May lived with them for so many years. I'm impressed by Houdini's shrug of a mention in the letter; he seems to have no resentment towards the runaway, as he might be expected to have had in the circumstances. The 1950 article doesn't address how she left the family? Did she marry the soldier? How and when did she return to Scotland? What a neat screenplay this would make!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I, too, was surprised that she left so abruptly, especially given her apparent closeness with Bess and Harry. Maybe they had a quarrel with the young lady? Maybe the Houdinis had met the soldier and voiced some opposition or objection? Very intriguing!

      Delete
  6. I would love to read the police report on this. Might provide some answers. We now know she vanished in late Oct or early Nov 1918. Anyone know how to find police reports from this time?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That area of Manhattan appears to be under the police jurisdiction of the 24th Precinct, so that would be one place to inquire (assuming it was called the 24th precinct a century ago, and I suspect it was). There is also an NYC gov site for record requests, but for something that old, who knows (presumably most records would be handwritten). Would take a bit of digging!

      Delete

Translate