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Buck Jones was the 481st person of,
eventually, 492 who died in the 12-15 minute Cocoanut Grove nightclub
fire in Boston, Massachusetts, on November 28, 1942, 60 years ago.
Buck died Monday, November 30th, of critical second- and third-degree
burns to the face, mouth and throat, and smoke inhalation. He
would have been 51 on December 12th. In the ensuing 53
years, many reports and stories have been perpetuated concerning Buck's
heroism in leading trapped victims to safety and returning to the raging
inferno to help others.
Did it happen? Let's look
objectively at the facts and then decide. First, a bit of
background on why Buck was even at a nightclub. Buck's contingent was on
a combination war bond selling tour and promotional junket for his Monogram films. On November 27, Buck phoned his wife, Odille, to
tell her he'd caught a cold on his cross-country tour. Although not
in the best of health when the group reached Boston, he stayed on rather
than disappoint children who expected to see him Saturday,
November 28th. That Saturday, as Buck visited a children's
hospital, several pictures of him were taken. One of those
has been widely publicized over the years as the last photo taken of
Buck. Actually, the last picture taken of him was with promoter
Martin Sheridan at their hotel following an afternoon radio interview.
Mid-morning, Buck went to the Boston
Garden for a rally of about 12,000 children. In a drizzling rain
that afternoon, Buck and a group watched the Boston College -- Holy
Cross football game from the mayor's box. Buck also gave a
newspaper interview. In an August 21, '95 letter to me, the
tour's Boston publicity representative, Martin Sheridan, stated: "I
arranged Buck Jones' schedule in Boston with the exception of the
Cocoanut Grove dinner. We were supposed to have been at
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