"This brings to mind a curious Dallas arson a saturday night Jan '64 of a "golden pheasant restaurant" "
"The guy who owned the restaurant was Charles D. Bryant. He was charged with arson but eventually aquitted. It sure was a strange case as two workers testified that in the months leading up to the fire, Bryant had offered them money to burn the establishment down."the golden pheasant restaurant. it was on commerce north side and was just east of the magnolia bldg.
a curiosity regarding a letter that the golden pheasant restaurant had which caused Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT some strife...
http://jfkassassination.net/russ/testimony/demohr_j.htmThe testimony of Jeanne De Mohrenschildt was taken at 4:45 p.m. on April 23, 1964, at 200 Maryland Avenue NE., Washington, D.C., by Mr. Albert E. Jenner, Jr., assistant counsel of the President's Commission
Mr. JENNER. And you eventually were divorced from your first husband?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Yes.
Mr. JENNER. He retained the name Robert LeGon?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Yes.
Mr. JENNER. He didn't change his name back to Bogoiavlensky?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. No.
By the way, do you know he is in a rest home?
Mr. JENNER. Yes; I do.
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. There was a lot of unpleasantness around in that time, because he was already going off completely.
Mr. JENNER. And you were divorced from him in the summer of 1959?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Oh, no, no; before that. It was 1957, spring of 1957. Yes; it was in the spring of 1957.
I believe it was first of May or something. I don't remember exactly. But it is pretty close.
Mr. JENNER. And you married your present husband, George De Mohrenschildt, in the summer of 1959?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. 1959, yes; in June, towards the end of June.
Mr. JENNER. And your daughter who was born to you in New York City----
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. In Manhattan Hospital.
Mr. JENNER. She was--her given name was----
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Jeanne Elinor LeGon.
Mr. JENNER. And she changed her name to Christiana?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Yes; her father did it. She was just a youngster. You know what happened to him mentally. He went completely--I don't know, maybe when people go crazy, lots of things begin to bother them, maybe his conscience was bothering him because he dropped his father's name or something. But for a particular reason he didn't take it himself, but he put it--insisted that my daughter will take the name.
Mr. JENNER. What name?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Bogoiavlensky--and drop the LeGon. And she was baptized--she was brought up as Episcopalian. I never baptized her, because I wanted her to choose her own religion when she grew up. I know too many people who have too many difficulties later when they find out they want something else. By the time she was baptized she liked the name Christiana and she took that name. And he changed her name to Bogoiavlensky again. So it was very, very unpleasant and horrible, what the poor fellow didn't do.
Mr. JENNER. Did he cause you some difficulty with respect to accusing you of being a Communist?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. I don't know if you have a letter,
I wish I would have a letter what he did. You see I had charge accounts throughout the country, because I was making very good money. Lord and Taylor, Saks, all the biggest restaurants everywhere. And when that happened, I actually told him that is the end, I am divorcing you, and that is it, and there will be no change back, nothing at all, he sent out letters to all of these places, to all the restaurants, all the department stores, including Niemans, and I believe Niemans showed me the letter,
and there was a Golden Pheasant Restaurant--they showed me the letter--that so and so, and he expressed in a horrible way that Eugenia Fomenko Bogoiavlensky, my ex-wife, she is--almost putting that I am a spy, and God knows what in it, and that he is not responsible for my debts, for my accounts.
It was 1957, and since 1941 I was the one that made all the money in the family. I was the one making all these things, bringing up my child. So that was horrible. That is not all. He sent letters, and he signed "FBI"--make believe they are from the FBI. He sent to all my people in New York, firms that I work with, that also I am a spy or something, this and that, horrible.
And I was in Europe that summer. And a friend of mine came over and said "What is the matter with you?" She said, "What happened to you? The FBI are looking for you."
I said, "Are you kidding me?"
She said, "No ;" one of the manufacturers showed her the letter.
I said, "For God sakes, this is ridiculous, I never heard of such a thing.
So when I come back to New York I right away went to see all of them.
They said, some were laughing about it. But some I know they had a little something behind their heads.
Mr. JENNER. They were worried?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Yes; even a thing like that, a prank like that, already set people thinking. And do you know that I could not get a job in New York, just because of that? And, fortunately, being in Texas, I switched to designing dresses and sportswear, and I had two jobs in no time in that market.
And I was able to get--I lost my job in Texas while I was in Europe because of that.
He sent that to my employer.
I never told that--I don't know if my present husband knows it--because that would really kill him, a thing like that.
But it was eventually straightened out. But I was actually out, I couldn't get a job, my daughter had to go to the university, I had to send her money. I had nothing.
EDIT:: here's another curious cincidence to do with the Golden Pheasant and the Dallas Bluprint Co above it
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. The first name was Valentin, and the second one was Bob--they called him Bob. So which one is right, I don't know. But I liked Bob better.
Mr. JENNER. What was his last name?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. His last name was Bogoiavlensky.
Mr. JENNER. And you were married when?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. I believe we were married in 1932, in the fall.
Mr. JENNER. In what business or profession was your husband engaged when you were married?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. Well, at the time when we were married, he was--we were both working, making designs and constructions--making plans and building houses together.
Mr. JENNER. Were you associated in business?
Mrs. De MOHRENSCHILDT. It wasn't exactly business. I don't know--it is not done like it is done in the United States. We just knew how to build houses, we knew all the measurements and everything, and we had the project---somebody wanted a house of such and such dimensions, we would design it, make all the
blueprints, and then we had worked with contractors and had the building constructed. And then I believe he was also working in the--the Japanese were building their airport.
What to make of all this?