[Preface] 
                [Orville's 
                Worlds] [Family] [Young 
                Orville ] [To New York] [To 
                London, and back] [The Second Marriage, 
                1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage, 
                Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, Two 
                careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]
                  Young 
                  Orville
                John 
                  William Harrold married Emily Chalfant in 1872, owning a farm 
                  on Richmond Road in Cowan, Indiana, just south of Muncie. Orville 
                  was born in their brick farmhouse on November 17, 1877, which 
                  is the date in the family bible and the date that Orville used 
                  on official documents. (An incorrect year has seeped into numerous 
                  references.) He was their only surviving child, and there is 
                  no indication that he had a middle name or initial. Farming 
                  was tremendously hard physical work before engines came to farm 
                  equipment in the 20th century. At the least, Orville 
                  learned early of disciplined labor and long hours, becoming 
                  physically fit, which he valued throughout his life. According 
                  to a later interview with his father, both family sides were 
                  musical, Orville’s mother’s maternal family (the Jacksons) apparently 
                  having excellent voices1. Orville’s grandmother had 
                  been an able singer, and at age 65, his mother could hit a clear 
                  high C with an exceptional voice. Orville’s father was also 
                  a singer and church chorister in the village2, and 
                  Orville was present for family choir practices, his father claiming 
                  that by age three Orville had learned the hymns and could sing 
                  them at home. It was also claimed that by age five Orville sang 
                  songs for patrons in local stores3.
                
                The 
                  family moved to Lyons, Kansas when Orville nine, the child’s 
                  first great adventure4. While a small random town, 
                  Kansas was booming during the late 1880’s, and Orville’s father 
                  managed a livery in Lyons, the connected being “a sort of distant 
                  relative” named Lee Stanford5. The family had relocated 
                  to larger Newton, Kansas by 1891 or 1892, when Orville was about 
                  thirteen, exposing him to new opportunities. A school music 
                  supervisor there was Mrs. Gaston Boyd, an English lady who had 
                  graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston6. 
                  Local lore claims that she passed by young Orville on the street 
                  as he was shooting marbles and singing taunts at his companions7. 
                  Taking the boy in hand (at least figuratively), she gave him 
                  singing lessons and encouraged him to participate in choral 
                  activities. 
                
                In 
                  1893, Orville placed in a group of combined Kansas choruses 
                  that performed at the Chicago Columbian Exposition. More than 
                  just getting out of Newton, singing had earned a trip to a major 
                  city and a world fair, having a mile-long cultural bazaar called 
                  the Midway and Mr. Ferris’s huge new wheel-shaped ride. Orville 
                  gained special mention there from choral director, Professor 
                  Frederick Archer8, and was recruited to join the 
                  choir of Grace Church in Chicago (which his mother refused). 
                  This judge appears to have been Frederic Archer, founding conductor 
                  of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra in 1896, who is known to 
                  have played organ at the Columbian Exposition9. Archer 
                  was succeeded, after a few years at Pittsburgh, by a rising 
                  Victor Herbert.
                
                Mrs. 
                  Boyd also encouraged Orville to participate in regional singing 
                  festivals, including the State Jubilee competition in nearby 
                  Hutchinson, Kansas. He finished prominently in one of these, 
                  receiving his first newspaper notice for his nascent talent. 
                  This was in May of 1894, after the economic crash of 1892, being 
                  his last year in Kansas. His voice was changing then, presenting 
                  a period of musical limbo (though by no means an absence of 
                  music), but his voice had earned him notice, and a glimpse of 
                  the larger world to be considered and sought.
                
                At 
                  that time, Orville also sang with a Newton, Kansas group who 
                  fancied themselves as the Pumphouse Gang, as the father of one 
                  allowed them to use the basement of the town pumping station. 
                  They sang and played a variety of instruments, and others would 
                  occasionally drop in, such a fellow announcing one evening that 
                  they would soon hear news of him. The group later learned that 
                  their acquaintance was Emmett Dalton, youngest and only surviving 
                  of four Dalton brothers after their much publicized shootout 
                  while simultaneously robbing two banks in Coffeeville, Kansas, 
                  near the Oklahoma border. The Pumphouse Gang reportedly visited 
                  Emmett in jail at Coffeeville, moving from there down through 
                  Oklahoma and Texas, playing at barrooms and local spots, passing 
                  the proverbial hat10. The Coffeeville shootout occurred 
                  on October 5, 1892, when Orville was approaching age fifteen, 
                  raising the question of whether he really went with the group, 
                  or was simply around when the event occurred. But, Orville was 
                  a free-flying and unmotivated student who may have trekked off 
                  for a period. Another version of Orville’s wandering is that 
                  he ran away from Kansas in 1894, at age sixteen, for the family 
                  had lost everything there during the depression11. 
                  Whatever actually happened, the later Kansas period is when 
                  he reportedly played music with a group of wandering companions, 
                  sometimes traveling by railroad boxcar, and independently wound 
                  his way back to Indiana, where the family joined him within 
                  a short time12. Corroborating at least a fragment 
                  of the legend, Orville told a Hutchinson, KS audience in 1913 
                  that he had once nearly broken his back hopping off a train 
                  in the local rail yard12.5. 
                
                Back 
                  in Cowan, Orville remained unsettled and unfocused during adolescence 
                  and early adulthood, although never far from music. He led something 
                  of a Bohemian lifestyle, with a roaming disposition, but was 
                  affable and well liked. He described another brief adventure 
                  after his return to Indiana, during which he played clarinet 
                  in a local country band. With the outbreak of the Spanish American 
                  War, the band traveled to nearby Indianapolis in order to enlist 
                  in the army as a group, and as a band, arriving complete with 
                  instruments13. This quite confounded the enlistment 
                  office, which concluded to house the band overnight in their 
                  stables, sleeping as best they could on straw and saddles. As 
                  many of the youth had never spent a night outside their beds, 
                  they reconsidered their quest and began slipping away under 
                  cover of darkness. The only three remaining by morning struck 
                  out for home, Orville having concluded that he would be dismissed 
                  in any event for being under enlistment age.
                
                Orville 
                  worked at odd jobs in Cowan, and according to family lore, sometimes 
                  plucked chickens at the Neil Barefoot farm. A later article 
                  reiterated that he worked at poultry packing, and that he sang 
                  during this period in a Cowan barbershop group called the Chicken 
                  Pickers’ Quartette13.5.  Orville’s parents arranged 
                  for him to learn violin, which he later taught in Muncie14. 
                  He extolled the violin as excellent training for a singer, being 
                  a fretless instrument that forced the musician to constantly 
                  be attuned to pitch and strive to control it15. Once 
                  in Muncie, Orville was again singing in church choirs, his voice 
                  settling into a high tenor. His mother reportedly wanted him 
                  to be an evangelist, but he got no closer than the choir at 
                  the Jackson St. Christian Church. He did not graduate from high 
                  school, but worked at a variety of minor jobs, including the 
                  shipping department of the Ball Jar Company. He was also commuting 
                  by train to Indianapolis to play violin in an orchestra, but 
                  as his associates there were more impressed by his voice than 
                  his violin, he found himself becoming a popular singer in Indianapolis 
                  German social clubs16.
                
                Orville 
                  worked for some time as a Muncie grocery clerk, which was something 
                  of stability for him, so that on October 22, 1898 he married 
                  Euphamia Evelyn “Effie” Kiger (1878-1963). She was a childhood 
                  friend from Cowan, and an energetic outgoing woman who had perfect 
                  pitch and played piano by ear. She was a hometown sort of girl 
                  who likely found an attractively exciting character in long-haired 
                  Orville. Orville taught violin, while Effie taught piano, and 
                  would play while Orville sang, for he was known as a natural 
                  voice who would sing on about any occasion, to the extent that 
                  his last wife scolded him for giving away his talent.
                
                Various 
                  characters wandered through 19th century Indiana, 
                  spreading their messages and goods. Most famous was John Chapman, 
                  known simply as Johnny Appleseed. As rustic was a homegrown 
                  Indiana character named Ginseng Johnny, who, along with his 
                  brother, gathered wild roots and herbs that were sold for their 
                  healing powers. A more refined sort was Alexander Ernestinoff 
                  (1853-ca.1930), who spread music throughout central Indiana. 
                  Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, he graduated from Conservatory 
                  of Music there. Having a fine voice, he was pursuing a music 
                  career in Berlin when several Americans recruited him to New 
                  York to lead a German opera company for a complete tour of the 
                  United States. Having met his wife in New York, he relocated 
                  again in 1876 to take charge of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, 
                  also leading there several German choruses. From this, he was 
                  engaged in 1881 to lead the Indianapolis Maennerchor, still 
                  extant as a fine men’s chorus. Ernestinoff spent the next forty 
                  years cultivating music and music education throughout the region, 
                  forming and directing the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, as 
                  well as numerous area choruses and local choral events. No isolated 
                  mid-westerner, Ernestinoff was known in American music circles, 
                  especially among German clubs, singing organizations (Lyra Society 
                  and Music Verein), and opera performers. 
                
                When 
                  he married, Orville was participating in Ernestinoff-led Muncie 
                  choruses, where Ernestinoff would certainly have recognized 
                  Orville’s talent. Orville’s passion was obvious when Effie had 
                  their first child, in 1899, naming the girl Adeline Patti Harrold 
                  (always known as Patti), after Italian operatic soprano, Adelina 
                  Patti, who rivaled Jenny Lind as one of the most famous 19th 
                  century singers. (Adeline is the daughter’s name in the family 
                  bible and on legal documents such as passports, and Orville 
                  used that spelling. She went briefly by Adelina when first working 
                  in New York.) A second girl was named Marjorie Modjeska Harrold, 
                  after the Polish-born dramatic actress, Helena Modjeska, and 
                  their son was Paul Dereske Harrold, after Polish-born Paris 
                  opera tenor Jean deReske. (Effie complained that she could not 
                  pronounce her own children’s names.) Sometime after the birth 
                  of Orville’s daughters, Ernestinoff took him for two days to 
                  Cincinnati for performances by the New York Metropolitan Opera 
                  of La Giaconda and Parsifal17, his 
                  first real experience with grand opera. By one account, not 
                  necessarily to be believed, he heard Caruso sing on that occasion, 
                  to which he responded, “I can do that17.5”
                
                The 
                  other two children followed in 1901 and 1903, along with a pit 
                  bull terrier named Moses (commonly known as “Mose”), shortly 
                  after which Orville was an officer, and Ernestinoff was director, 
                  of Muncie’s newly formed Apollo Club, a men’s chorus in which 
                  both Orville and his father participated. The Apollo Club practiced 
                  weekly, and gave occasional performances at the Wysor Grand 
                  Opera House, where Orville was groomed as a soloist. Ernestinoff 
                  was coaching Orville, but Orville was of a roving disposition 
                  and was resisting persuasions to settle down. On Monday, May 
                  16, 1904, the club presented an afternoon recital, at which 
                  Orville sang the finale from the early Wagner opera Rienzi, 
                  and for which Ernestinoff had arranged for well-known Metropolitan 
                  Opera contralto, Madame Ernestine Schumann-Heink, to perform. 
                  (She was still singing occasionally with the Met when Orville 
                  arrived there fifteen years later.)
                
                After 
                  hearing Orville, Mme. Schumann-Heink proposed that he study 
                  in Germany for two years to complete his musical education, 
                  for which she would arrange employment in order that he could 
                  support his family there18. The event made news around 
                  town, sparking public speculation regarding what he would do. 
                  One newspaper later reported that Mme. Schumann-Heink occasionally 
                  made such offers, but that little really came of them19. 
                  Even if a genuine opportunity, it would have entailed a myriad 
                  of practical difficulties, for while probably hearing German 
                  language regularly, the family was unlikely to cope with sudden 
                  total immersion. More restrictive, Effie would not have considered 
                  such a trip, whatever Orville’s thoughts. She never wanted to 
                  leave Muncie, and never did. Orville stated years later that 
                  Mme. Schumann-Heink may as well have advised the postman to 
                  purchase a steam yacht20, and the offer was never 
                  acted upon. Orville might have had the itch in 1904, but Germany 
                  was too far, too complicated, too soon.
                
                After 
                  beginning as a gospel singer and becoming popular entertainment 
                  at local clubs, Orville suddenly had elevated credibility and 
                  determined desire. Having been taking singing lessons with a 
                  Muncie vocal teacher named Harry E .Paris21, who 
                  had arrived from DePauw University in the 1890’s, Orville began 
                  training seriously with Ernestinoff in Indianapolis. Ernestinoff 
                  advised him to get in front of audiences at every opportunity22, 
                  and encouraged him to go to New York by any possible means, 
                  for any significant vocal career was going to happen outside 
                  of Indiana. No huge move was planned immediately, and Orville 
                  and Ernestinoff were pictured in the newspaper, together with 
                  Apollo Club officers, nearly a year after the Schumann-Heink 
                  encounter. Life went on while dreams gelled into plans. Orville 
                  worked during this period as shipping clerk for the Muncie Casket 
                  Company, known around town for singing while he delivered coffins. 
                  He was making $10 per (six-day) week, a reasonable income in 
                  that day23. (Henry Ford advertised paying $2 per 
                  day at his River Rouge plant, about a decade later, but few 
                  workers really received that much.) 
                
                Ernestinoff 
                  had an opera background and was influential in regional cultural 
                  affairs. Indianapolis hosted an immense German singing festival 
                  in 1908, with Ernestinoff as choral director, and attended by 
                  Mme. Schumann-Heink among other German opera performers. While 
                  it is presumptuous to suggest that he had arranged the 1904 
                  Muncie engagement solely to connect Mme. Schumann-Heink with 
                  his top pupil, he likely made an effort to bring them together. 
                  He may well have sought a higher opinion of Orville’s talent, 
                  as well as an impetus to get Orville focused on his potential 
                  future. Ernestinoff later arranged for Orville a concert, with 
                  orchestral accompaniment, at Indianapolis’s German House auditorium, 
                  in which an aria from Gounod’s Queen of Sheba carried 
                  him progressively from high A to high B to high C. The audience 
                  responded uproariously, and Ernestinoff declared that Orville 
                  could reach high D with equal ease24. It was probably 
                  through Ernestinoff that Franz Van der Stucken, chorister and 
                  director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, provided Orville 
                  a letter of introduction to Madame Cosina Wagner (widow of the 
                  German opera composer) at Bayreuth25.
                
                The 
                  Muncie meeting between Orville and greatness also attracted 
                  a business manager and patron. Doctor James M. Quick, local 
                  physician and Treasurer of the Apollo Club, financed Orville’s 
                  singing lessons and organized concert engagements through Indiana 
                  and Ohio during 1905 and 1906. Orville reportedly overshadowed 
                  a polished Chicago tenor named George Hamlin at a meeting of 
                  the Indiana State Teachers’ Association26. (Hamlin 
                  was a touring concert tenor whom Orville would meet again in 
                  New York during WWI.) The arrangement with Dr. Quick was a business 
                  contract, in which the doctor would help support Orville and 
                  send him to New York to become an income-producing singer, after 
                  which Orville would split his first five-years of proceeds27. 
                  A winter concert tour netted $35 (3 week’s pay), funding a trip 
                  to New York City, and perhaps costing Orville his job28. 
                  The arrangement with Dr. Quick indicates that a major decision 
                  had been made regarding Orville’s future. Orville and Effie 
                  must have discussed how any such future might play out, and 
                  events brought the momentous departure in early 1906, when Orville 
                  was twenty-nine. 
                
                As 
                  a brief aside, the above mentioned George J. Hamlin was another 
                  interesting regional tenor. Born in Elgin, Illinois, he was 
                  the son of John A. Hamlin, who with brother, Lysander, made 
                  and sold Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. This was a liniment for rheumatic 
                  pain, which they distributed through traveling minstrel shows. 
                  They managed classic “snake oil” medicine shows in horse drawn 
                  wagons, in this case producing musical events and distributing 
                  songs and sheet music. Several noted Indiana troubadours, James 
                  Whitcomb Riley and Paul Dresser, had gotten starts in Hamlin 
                  traveling shows. This rough sounding business was sufficiently 
                  productive that young George was educated at Andover Academy 
                  (now Philips Andover), and trained with George Henschel (English 
                  baritone, pianist, and first conductor of the Boston Symphony 
                  Orchestra) likely either in England or at the Institute of Musical 
                  Art (now Juilliard). Around the turn of the century George Hamlin 
                  toured Europe for several years, a bit before meeting Orville. 
                  Hamlin later sang with the Chicago Opera Company before migrating 
                  to New York during the teen years. 
                
                Effie 
                  and Orville were both children of Cowan, Indiana farms, but 
                  Orville reveled in singing, socializing, and large adventures. 
                  While Music may have helped unite them, it was now prying them 
                  apart. Orville had been born with a gift, which he readily enjoyed, 
                  but he also enjoyed being freewheeling and unconstrained. His 
                  voice repeatedly attracted attention, establishing his image 
                  within the community. Once it attracted the attention of the 
                  outside world, it became part of the community identity, and 
                  grew to define Orville. Singing had coaxed him to Hutchison 
                  (KS), Chicago, Cincinnati, and Indianapolis, tempted him with 
                  Germany, and would send him to New York. No matter how musical 
                  and in love he and Effie were, Orville had been leaving by degrees 
                  for a decade, preparing for the day when he would really depart. 
                  He was finally off to New York to test his talent and grit, 
                  returning only when he failed, if even then. Effie loved Orville 
                  enough to let him go, undoubtedly suspecting that she would 
                  never follow, and that if Orville succeeded he might never return.
                
                1. What Do You Know About Orville Harrold?, Muncie Evening 
                  Press, May 7, 1921
                2. Hoosier Tenor, The Indianapolis Sunday Star Magazine 
                  Section, December 10, 1911, pg. 1
                3. What Do You Know About Orville Harrold?, Muncie Evening 
                  Press, May 7, 1921
                4. ibid.
                5. From Hutchinson Jubilee to Grand Opera in Paris, 
                  The Hutchinson News, December 13, 1910, pg. 10
                6. Obit, New York Herald Tribune, October, 24, 1933
                7. Picked From the Street, The Hutchinson News, February 
                  17, 1912, pg. 12
                8. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold (Etude 
                  Magazine, New York, July, 1922) pg. 443
                9. Musical Instruments at the World’s Columbian Exposition, 
                  Frank D. Abbott & Charles A. Daniell (The Presto Co, Chicago, 
                  IL, 1895) pg. 137
                10. Obit, New York Herald Tribune, October, 24, 1933
                11. Hoosier Tenor, The Indianapolis Sunday Star Magazine, 
                  December 10, 1911, pg. 1
                12. ibid.
                12.5. Orville Harrold, World’s Greatest Tenor, First 
                  Sang Here, un-attributed news clipping in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, 
                  concerning appearance in Hutchinson, Kansas
                13. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold, pg. 
                  443
                13.5 Orville Harrold Worked And Sang His Way To Fame, 
                  un-attributed news clipping in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, concerning 
                  appearances in Chicago and Lafayette, Indiana
                14. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold, pg. 
                  443
                15. ibid.
                16. Harrold Still Subject, The Indianapolis Star Sunday, 
                  February 6. 1910, pg. 10
                17. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold, pg. 
                  443
                17.5 Orville Harrold’s Career Reviewed, Indiannapolis 
                  Sunday Star, November, 26, 1911 
                18. Young Muncie Tenor Honored by Prima Donna, Muncie 
                  Morning Star, May 19, 1904
                19. Muncie Sunday Star, November xx, 1911, from the 
                  scrapbook of Effie Kiger Harrold
                20. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold (Etude 
                  Magazine, New York, July, 1923) pg. 443
                21. Orville Harrold Wins Audience, Indianapolis Star, 
                  February 14, 1913
                22. The Stage in the Twentieth Century, Volume 3, Robert 
                  Grau (Broadway Publishing Co., New York, 1912) pg. 282
                23. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold, pg. 
                  443
                24. The Recital, The Lima (Ohio) Daily News, May 5, 
                  1905, pg. 2
                25. ibid.
                26. Orville Harrold’s Career Reviewed, Muncie Sunday 
                  Star, November 26, 1911, from the scrapbook of Effie Kiger Harrold
                27. Hoosier Tenor, The Indianapolis Sunday Star Magazine, 
                  December 10, 1911, pg. 1
                28. Obit, New York Herald Tribune, October, 24, 1933
                
                  
                  Next ...
                [Preface] 
                [Orville's 
                Worlds] [Family] [Young 
                Orville ] [To New York] [To 
                London, and back] [The Second Marriage, 
                1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage, 
                Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, Two 
                careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]