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(OCT 17, 2005) WBAN has just received "Part II"
on the 1920's femaile boxer Jeanne La Mar. (AKA: Jean La mar, The
Countess Jeanne La Mar, The Countess, Jeanne Vina Lamar.) Writer Terry Graham and Sarah
Jo Rauschl provided this fascinating history of this past boxer, and a deep
mystery that surrounds her.
THE COUNTESS OF BIG JOHN FLAT
A lone coyote roamed the brush field
slope next to two tin shelters and a worn and abandoned cabin.
His mind was on a tasty morsel of a rabbit that he just saw
darting through the brush. As he turned to pad his way down
slope, he glanced towards the tin sheds, and the weathered house
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He couldn’t fight the shiver that raised
the hairs on it’s back. Something about the quite place always gave him
the willies. Then his brain focused on the task of capturing a meal, he
turned away and heading down the slope.
There was good reason for the eerie sensation that the abandoned
homestead caused. It once belonged to Countess Vina Jeanne Lamarr, a
feisty tough little woman that might have been a world champion boxer in
the early 1920's.
Countess Lamarr once boxed in
Allentown, Pa., and went three rounds with bantam-weight Bugs
Moran and Bobby McLean. Lamarr’s boxing craze continued when she
moved to Big John Flat. She knocked down forest Ranger "Mac"
MacDonald with a single punch. Imagine her surprise when he got
up, dusted himself off, retorted, "My lady, that’s it!", and
picked her up and bodily threw her over the railing of Big Pines
ranger station. She landed on her fanny on the grass below the
railing, and McDonald had no problems with her after that.
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In 1941, Countess Lamarr also frequented
the Valyermo, Ca. CCC camp, because boxing matches would be staged
there. In one night, she knocked out two male fighters. Her 5'2 stature
might not have seemed too threatening, but her 170 pounds appeared to be
more muscle than fat.
Known as the "Mystery Woman of Big John Flat", by Wrightwood, Ca. local
newspaper reporter Susan Gates, Lamarr had suddenly disappeared,
abandoning her home on Big John Flat in 1942. Rumor had it that she
quickly left for sights unknown immediately after the body of her nephew
was found near her isolated cabin. Finally, after almost sixty-three
years, those rumors appear to be supported with fact.
According to Donna, Garry and Darell Farnbach, the surviving
grandchildren of the original 1917 homesteaders of Big John Flat,
Farnbauh and Cash, the woman known as Countess Vina Jeanne Lamarr
obtained the permission to use their road in 1923, to transport building
supplies to the slopes of Big John Flat to build her home.
Donna, Garry and Darell, lived with their parents, Alberta, daughter of
homesteader Fanny and Albert Cash, and Gerald, son of Arilla and Joe
Farnbauh. At first, the family came up to their homestead during the
summer and on weekends. Subsequently, they moved up full time to the
quiet area of Big John Flat. It was during these years, that they became
very acquainted with Countess Vina Larmarr and a young man that Lamarr
identified only as her nephew, Gus Von Harren.
One of the scraps of paper
recovered from Countess Lamarr's weathered and abandoned
homestead was a automobile insurance policy belonging to "Gus",
which for the first time, provided his proper name: Gustave M.
M. (Martin) Van Harren.
Countess Jeanne Lamarr got along with the Farnbauhs, but seemed
ready to pick fights with ranch hands and forest rangers in the
area. She also had the cravings for strong drink, and many times
it brought out the worst in Lamarr. |
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The strong drink also loosened her lips.
It was during these times that she would admit to the Farnbauh family
that Gus was really her son. It was believed that the Countess kept that
a secret from most people because she was ashamed that she had a child.
The Farnbauhs all loved the young Gus, he had a kindly spirit, was very
helpful to them, and he loved the mountains in which he lived. He was an
artist, perhaps a gift he picked up from a private finishing school that
he attended during his teenage years. His art was done by pencil, and in
very fine detail, he drew things that were mechanical, such as airplanes
and automobiles.
Many things indicated that Lamarr did not treat him as a son. She
refused to admit Gus was her son, and barely treated him like a nephew.
She would frequent downtown San Bernardino, particularly around the
seedy place of D Street. She was known to spend days away from home,
leaving Gus alone in the isolated area.
Upon her many trips to San Bernardino, the Countess would later return
with different "handymen", to work on the house. According to then
Angeles Forest Administrator Harry Grace, the men were dirty and unkempt
and appeared to be homeless. Lamarr would apparently use the men for
sexual favors in exchange for handy work around her Big John Flat home.
Countess Vina Jeanne Lamarr continued to frequent San Bernardino. At
times she would put ads in the San Bernardino Sun for a handyman. But it
seemed that most of the time, she simply picked them off the streets
that were once known to support drunks and street walkers. The work at
Lamarr’s house consisted of brush clearing and other outside work.
Beside the normal ‘roll in the hay", Lamarr would also pay the
‘handyman’ a small salary. "Sometimes a man would stay for a day and
walk out, sometimes others would stay longer", remarked ranger Harry
Grace.
An unknown time in the middle of 1941, Ranger Harry Grace was living in
the rock house, near present day Jackson Lake and Camp Big Pines. He and
his wife heard shooting down towards Big John Flat. Approximately one
half hour later, a unkempt man about 50 years old showed up and said,
"That woman is crazy! She shot at me! It missed!" Shots might have
missed him, but his suitcase was supporting a bullet hole in it’s side.
The strange man at Grace’s door claimed that Countess Lamarr was
shooting at him with a 30.30 rifle, and he wanted ranger Grace to go
down and arrest her. Harry Grace said he had no authority to do that,
for her house was outside forest lands. He was not a law enforcement
officer, anyway. He told the man that he should get in touch with the
L.A. County Sheriff.
The man told Angeles Forest ranger Harry Grace the following:
Countess Lamarr had sent him out to kill a rabbit for dinner. While he
was out crawling around looking for a rabbit, he discovered a skeleton
near her house. Lying beside the skeleton was a .22 cal. Rifle. His
first thought was that Lamarr killed the man (the dead one) as he hunted
rabbit for her. After he had discovered the skeleton, he quickly went
into the house, got his suitcase and took off. Lamarr shot at him, and
then followed him part way down the trail towards Big John Flat and
towards her garage.
Ranger Grace told the man to go the the Park (Big Pines Ranger Station)
and make a call to the Sheriff Department, and they would determine if
it was a murder case or not. According to the audio statement of Harry
Grace, the man did.
Angeles Forest ranger Harry Grace continued by saying that Countess
Lamarr told "county people" who worked in the area, that the skeleton
was that of her nephew, who had been living with her three or four years
before he had ‘disappeared". As far as ranger Grace knew, nothing was
done about this skeleton business. It soon became a regular story among
the people at Big Pines.
Grace concluded by saying that in 1942 (he did not know the exact date),
he heard that the Countess Vina Jeanne Lamarr was found dead in a hotel
in downtown San Bernardino, California, from unknown causes.
Was the skeleton that the handyman discovered on Lamarr’s property, that
of her son/nephew?
The Farnbaughs told this writer that the Countess gave them two
different stories of what happened to her son/nephew, Gustave M. Martin
Van Harren "Gus", when the Franbaugh family showed concern when he was
suddenly missing. Lamarr first said that he got mad at her and ran away.
The Farnbaughs was suspicious of that story, since "Gus" always came to
their ranch when he had problems with his mother, Lamarr. The second
story came over a week later, when Lamarr came to their house drunk. She
yelled and screamed that their father, Gerald, killed her son "Gus", and
she had his fingers in a box to prove it. At the time of this incident,
Mr. Farnbaugh was at work at present day Edwards Air Force Base.
The Farnbaughs described the last resting place of the bones that
belonged to Gus. It was small pit area used by Lamarr to dump her
garbage. His bones were covered with lime.
A short time after the handyman had discovered the skeleton on Lamarr's
property, the Countess Vina Jeanne Lamarr abandoned her home on Big John
Flat and was never seen by the Farnbaugh family again.
At the current time, the writer is waiting word from local law
enforcement agencies to verify the finding of Gus Van Harren’s body, and
what was the outcome of the discovery of Countess Vina Jeanne Lamarr’s
body in San Bernardino.
As for the legend of "The Mystery Woman" of Big John Flat, it seems to
have ended right where it began. Among the quiet isolated slopes of Big
John Flat.
Just a blast from the past -Terry Graham, Wrightwood, CA |
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