I wonder what went through Sister
Aimee's mind in the days after she drowned., when she realized she had to go back to Los
Angeles. I do not believe for one second her story of being kidnapped. But that
leaves the question, not of what she was doing for the five weeks of
her mysterious disappearance - we can assume she was doing the
everything not allowed by her religion - but rather how she conceived the story she came up with. Like everyone else who
does something stupid, Sister Aimee had no trouble justifying her
fabrication. The great Catholic thinker St. Thomas Aquinas defined a
lie as a statement at variance with the mind, meaning truth is
anything you believe in, a philosophy useful for every saint caught
sinning. At least for awhile.
“Oh, have you heard the story of
Aimee McPherson?
Aimee McPherson, that wonderful person,
She weighed a hundred eighty and her hair was red
She preached a wicked sermon, or so the papers said.”
Ballad of Aimee
She weighed a hundred eighty and her hair was red
She preached a wicked sermon, or so the papers said.”
Ballad of Aimee
Aimee's story never wavered, once she
walked out of the desert and into Agua Pietra on Wednesday, 23 June,
1926. She always repeated it verbatim, always refusing to allow
questions to interrupt the flow of her story. “I sent my
secretary to the hotel to phone the temple” she began, adding she
then went into the water for another swim. As she was
rising out of the surf a couple named Rosie and Steve approached,
saying they had a dying child in a car nearby, who needed Sister
Aimee's ministrations. She went willingly, and was guided to a parked
car near the Ocean Park Bathhouse (above), where the minister was violently
shoved inside and drugged. When she awoke several days later Steve
told her, “You've taken enough of our girls from us, so turnabout
is fair play.” After several days of waiting for a response to
their half million dollar ransom note, they took Aimee for an all day
drive, ending in a little adobe desert shack, where they were joined
by a large Mexican man named Felip.
“Now, Aimee built herself a radio
station
To broadcast her preaching to the nation.
She found a man named Armistead who knew enough
To run the radio while Aimee did her stuff.
She found a man named Armistead who knew enough
To run the radio while Aimee did her stuff.
After briefly releasing their
frustrations by torturing their victim with a lit cigar butt, the men
disappeared. Then Rosie - or so the story ran - left to buy
cigarettes. Once alone, Aimee spotted an opened can of varnish in a
corner of the shack. She “wormed” her way over (above) and “commenced
the awkward endeavor of cutting the rope on the can's edge.” Aimee
said she figured it was about 11:30 in the morning when she was
finally free. Outside, she ran until she collapsed, rested and then
ran again. She kept running until she reached Agua Prieta, over
twelve hours - and twenty miles - later. Or so Aimee said.
“Now, they had a camp meeting out at
Ocean Park
Preached from early morning 'til after dark.
Said the benediction, then folded up the tents,
And nobody knew where Aimee went.”
Said the benediction, then folded up the tents,
And nobody knew where Aimee went.”
Later that morning, while a cab was driving Sister Aimee the few hundred yards across the border to the
Calumet Hospital (above) in Douglas, Arizona. the Agua Pietra Police Chief,
Silverrio Villa, followed Aimee's trail four miles, where he found “a
small shack...Tracks made by her shoes were found all around the
shack but not beyond, though a search was made as far as Gallardo,
nine miles away.” Doctors told the Arizona Daily Star there were
burn marks on her fingers, binding marks on her wrists and ankles,
and there were blisters on the bottoms of her feet..
She told her tale to the district attorney.
Said she'd been kidnapped on a lonely trail.
And in spite of all the questions, she stuck to her tale.”
Said she'd been kidnapped on a lonely trail.
And in spite of all the questions, she stuck to her tale.”
Told her mother and daughter would be arriving by
train in the morning, Aimee responded, “Won't it be grand when my
mother gets here. I can hardly wait to see her.” Then she suddenly
asked, “Do you think I will be welcomed back?” She need not have
worried. There were thirty thousand cheering believers waiting for
her arrival (above) at Los Angeles Union Station two days later. The L.A.
Fire Department showed up in their dress uniforms, an airplane flew
overhead and dropped rose petals. Hearst Gossip columnist Louella
Parsons lead a large press contingent. Perhaps a hundred thousand of
the devout lined Glendale Boulevard (renamed the “Avenue of
Triumph”) to welcome Aimee back to her temple (below).
Uncovered a lot of spicy information.
Found out about a love nest down at Carmel-by-the-Sea,
Where the liquor was expensive and the loving was free.”
Found out about a love nest down at Carmel-by-the-Sea,
Where the liquor was expensive and the loving was free.”
However, the cops were suspicious about
Aimee's story, even before they heard it. When word of her suspected
drowning broke, an off duty Culver City police officer reported he
had seen Sister Aimee riding in the front passenger seat of a sedan,
heading away from the beach, just half an hour after she supposedly
drowned. His wife backed up his story. Acerbic L.A.historian Louis
Adamic, who regularly called the evangelical preacher the “Queen
Aimee of Moronia.” reacted to tale of desert survival by writing,
“Aimee was no more kidnapped than I am an incognito shah of
Persia.”
A folding bed with a worn-out look.
The slats was busted and the springs was loose,
And the dents in the mattress fitted Aimee's caboose.”
The slats was busted and the springs was loose,
And the dents in the mattress fitted Aimee's caboose.”
The reporters noticed that the colors
on Sister Aimee's dress (above), in the closet of her room in the Calumet
Hospital, had not faded in the sun, despite her half day hike. Nor
did her corset bear any sweat stains, nor the dress scars after stumbling for
hours (half in the dark) through a desert populated with plants
covered in hypodermic sharp needles and stiff oily razor sharp
leaves. The dresses' collar and cuffs were as pure and white as if
they had just come from a laundry. She was not sunburned, her lips
were not cracked, and the hospital was not treating her for
dehydration. And then there was the watch. When they interviewed the miracle woman reporters
standing two feet from her bed could see none of the alleged bruises
on her wrists or ankles. Her feet may have been covered with
blisters, as she claimed, but her shoes (below) were not even scuffed. In
fact, closer inspection revealed grass stains on the insteps.
Residents confirmed there was no grass within a hundred fifty miles
of Douglas, north or south of the border.
“Well they took poor Aimee and they
threw her in jail.
Last I'd heard she was out on bail.
They'll send her up for a stretch, I guess,
She worked herself up into an
awful mess”They'll send her up for a stretch, I guess,
When newsreels of Aimee's home coming
appeared in Los Angeles movie theaters, they were greeted with cat
calls and loud booing. A beat up model T Ford was spotted around
town with a message scrawled across the back in chalk, “I ain't
Aimee, so I'm still missing.” Also missing was the gimpy legged
married gentleman (below) who had been the chief engineer at Aimee's
temple.
Now, Radio Ray is a going hound;
He's a-going yet and he ain't been found.
They got a description, but they got it too late.
'Cause since they got it, he's lost a lot of weight.
He's a-going yet and he ain't been found.
They got a description, but they got it too late.
'Cause since they got it, he's lost a lot of weight.
Kenneth G. Ormiston had been hired in
February of 1924 to help Sister Aimee set up her new radio station,
KFSG, (for 'Kall' Four Square Gospel), at the Temple on Glendale
Boulevard. In addition to all the technical work required, Kenneth
also spent hours in the isolated third floor radio room, coaching the
35 year old Aimee on transferring her impassioned theatrical
performances into the confines of radio. She was often heard giggling
to Ken's quick and irreverent wit during pauses in her broadcast
sermons. He had left the station in January of 1926, amid rumors of a
romantic entanglement with "the world's most pulchritudinous
evangelist". After her drowning, naturally the cops wanted to speak to him, but it
was two weeks before he came in for an interview. Then he had
immediately disappeared again. And the feeling among the cops and
the press was, there was a connection between these two vanishing
people.
Now I'll end my story in the usual
way,
About a lady preacher's holiday.
If you don't get the moral then you're the gal for me
Cause there's still a lot of cottages down at Carmel-by-the-Sea.
If you don't get the moral then you're the gal for me
Cause there's still a lot of cottages down at Carmel-by-the-Sea.
Pete Seager “The Ballad of Aimee
Mcphearson” 1926
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