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Mary Ella Roberts was born on August 12,1876 near Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. Her parents, Tom and Cornelia were still
living in his mother's house with five other family
members. Shortly after her sister OLIVE was born, they
moved into a home of their own just down the street.
At fifteen, her career was foreshadowed when she had
three short stories published in a local magazine for
a dollar each. When she was seventeen, she applied to
nursing school and also met a young doctor by the name
of Stanley Marshall Rinehart. They married when she
was nineteen.
Mary found herself in the role of homemaker and a baby
boy was soon on the way. Stanley Jr. was born in 1897.
Her second son, Alan, arrived in 1900 and her third
son, Ted, was born in 1902. One of the side effects
of her pregnancies was constant nausea and she became
very weak. Dr. Rinehart's half-brother, head of the
hospital where she had been a nurse decided to try to
feed her broiled lobster, bits at a time. By miracle
this stayed down. This experience with lobsters served
her well when she came to Bar Harbor.
She
had always loved to write and had many short stories
published in magazines but she was too busy to do any
serious writings. However, when the Rineharts suffered
a $12,000.00 loss in the stock market, Mary began writing
more to help out financially.
Mary had also tried at writing plays. A few were Broadway
hits, like Seven DAYS and The Bat. There were a few
others that just did not make it.
World
War I affected Mary's life tremendously. She consented
to go to England as a war correspondent for the Saturday
Evening Post in January of 1915. England was full of
journalists and Mary wanted to get to the front but
her contacts told her there was nothing they could do
to help. She then convinced the Belgian Red Cross to
give her the proper credentials she needed and she promised
to make the American people aware of the horrible conditions
at the Belgian front.
In 1921, her husband, Stanley Rinehart was appointed
as a medical consultant to the Veteran's Bureau, so,
they moved to Washington D.C.. They were soon caught
up in the social and political scenes. Dr. Rinehart
having grown frustrated with his government job and
having arthritis which kept him from practicing surgery,
resigned to open a private practice specializing in
tuberculosis.
Mary's latest book at the time, Lost Ecstasy, a romance,
was very successful. Hollywood paid her $15,000.00 for
the movie rights. I Take This Woman, starring Gary Cooper
and Carole Lombard was released in 1931.
Stanley
Jr. and Ted, along with a friend John Farrar, started
their own publishing company in 1929 and Mary Roberts
Rinehart was one of their first authors.
Dr.
Rinehart handled the finances since Mary had a tendency
to spend easily. She had invested in some ventures unwisely
and the Crash of 1929 had hit them hard. Stanley blamed
himself and Mary thought this aided in his declining
health over the next few years. Dr. Rinehart died in
1932 with his family by his side.
Mary continued to live in their Washington home, alone
except for a few servants. One of these was Reyes, the
Filipino cook, who always considered Dr. Rinehart his
boss and was somewhat uneasy about taking orders from
a woman-this attitude was to have bizarre consequences
later. In 1934 Mary suffered a heart attack. This left
her heart weak and she was mostly unable to climb stairs
and get around her big house. She also missed the rest
of the family. In 1935, she moved to an apartment in
New York City.
The
Rineharts had been spending their summers at a ranch
out west or vacationing in Florida or renting beach
houses on the northeast coast. She was looking for a
new summer place.
She
first came to Bar Harbor in 1935 and rented a cottage
attached to one of the hotels. In 1936, she rented a
house and in 1937 decided to buy Farview. This purchase
gave Mary a new interest. Bar Harbor in 1937 was changing
from the carefree life of earlier days. The beautiful
sea, the mountains, and big cottages were still there
but a lot of the large homes were for sale. Her 1945
book, The Yellow Room was in a Bar Harbor-like setting.
In the summer of 1938 Mary had a lot of construction
and landscaping done. The house was built around an
open courtyard with a reflecting fish pond. High on
a hill, the view of the bay was breathtaking and reminded
Mary of an aerie. She later renamed it Eaglesgate.
She moved into the house in 1939. She furnished it in
light pastel colors and colorful upholstery. She had
the architect put in a low-silled picture window in
her bedroom so she could lie in bed and still see the
water and islands.
In 1938, Mary finished her fortieth book, The Wall,
set in a disguised Bar Harbor filled with intrigue,
murders and a love story. She considered this one of
her best novels. The Saturday Evening Post agreed and
paid her $65,000.00 for the serial rights. She had just
finished it when, unfortunately, she had her most severe
heart attack, putting her on oxygen for a time and nitroglycerine
for the rest of her life.
Mary, now in her mid-sixties was slowing down. She had
just four books, along with some short stories and magazine
articles during the war years of 1940-46.
Her summers in Bar Harbor were now filled with friends,
dinner parties and social events as her health improved.
Her son Alan was recovering from pneumonia one year
and the two of them would go sit in the sun at the top
of Cadillac Mountain.
The absence of her husband's handling of the finances
were felt from time to time and at one point even put
Farview up for sale. She could not let go of any of
her servants. Farview was large and it was hard to find
maids. She then hired a butler in the summer of 1947
and her Filipino cook, Reyes, was not happy about it.
He had been with the Rineharts for 25 years and he was
always highly praised for his skills.
One day, Reyes, told Mary he was leaving. She was used
to hearing this from him and paid it no mind. The next
day, Mary found his wife, Peggy, a maid, crying. Peggy
said Reyes had been drinking the night before and they
had a fight when she refused to leave with him. Mary
was reading in the library before lunch when Reyes came
in. They spoke a few words when he pulled a gun from
his pants pocket and pulled the trigger within point
blank range of her face. Luckily, the gun misfired.
He tried again and Mary leapt to her feet and ran. She
entered the kitchen, Peggy, and Theodore Falkenstrom,
her chauffeur, saw what was happening. Ted tackled the
cook and grabbed the gun. Peggy ran to get the breathless
Mary a nitroglycerine tablet and Ted went and threw
the gun over a garden wall. The butler ran down the
street to get help thinking he was the intended victim.
As Mary was in the hall on her way to phone the police,
she saw a young man standing outside the door. The boy
said he was looking for a job as a gardener's assistant.
"Young
man," Mary said, "you'll have to come back later.
There is a man here trying to kill me." The boy
never returned.
As
Mary stood at the phone, again in the library, Reyes
came up behind her wielding a long carving knife in
each hand. Ted and the gardener came running in and
again knocked him down. Peggy sat on his chest, and
Ted held his arms getting cut by the flailing knives.
Finally, the police arrived and took Reyes away.
Mary's son Alan flew up that night to be with his mother.
The next morning he gave her the news that Reyes had
hung himself in his jail cell. A Catholic priest allowed
him to be buried in sacred ground since he was "Plainly
of unsound mind." Mary had no anger against the long-time
cook and paid for his funeral.
After
all this, there was still more in store for Mary Roberts
Rinehart and the town of Bar Harbor. The summer was
very hot and dry, and in October a small grass fire
turned into an inferno. More than 17,000 acres and almost
250 houses burnt including Mary's Farview.
She wrote several more books, including a private memoir
for her children before she succumbed to a final heart
attack in 1958.
While she lived in Bar Harbor the latter part of her
life, her presence there has never left. Farview is
located on Eden Street where the Wonder View Inn is
now located. Still, the view from the hilltop is breathtaking
and the grounds beautiful.
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