Ep. 4—The Story of Johnny Ochsner, The Rich Kid Romeo, and the Lovesick Stowaways
TRANSCRIPT
Hi, this is Knox Bronson at the Secret History of Frisco podcast. We have a rather remarkable episode today. It is the story of an Oakland man, two women who followed him across the Pacific as stowaways, one from San Francisco to Hawaii, one from Hawaii back to California, with dreams of matrimony, and a third woman with whom he eloped to Reno after jilting the first two. It is also the story of underage sex, burglary on a high seas luxury liner, the intervention of the FBI, naval officers, juvenile court, and one mother very determined to protect her randy son from what she perceived as ever-circling gold-diggers.
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Newspapers in this era, the Thirties and Forties, carried a tremendous amount of local news, often of a very personal nature. The story of Oakland oil heir Johnny Ochsner and his failed romantic escapades went on for years and the stories were carried in newspapers around the world.
As Johnny’s story began in 1946, when he was 19, the biggest movie of the day was the noir classic, “The Postman Always Rings Twice.”
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The Secret History of Frisco
Elmer “Bones” Remmer
Jimmie Tarantino
Bill Wren
Managing Editor of the SF Examiner, Bill Wren ran the city, played the horses, and didn’t like to pay up when he lost a bet.
Bob Patterson
Shell Cooper
Sally Stanford
Frank Sinatra
Mickey Cohen
Thomas Lynch
Herb Caen
Louella Parsons
Estes Kefhauver
“Freddie Francisco, alias Bob Patterson, once posed as a member of royalty. He assumed the title of a Count, under the name of Maximilian B.H.M. Carlton as the son of Marquis of Gahnst and a subaltern in the Black Watch regiment, and as such was arrested in Tucson, Arizona and on Jan. 27, 1928, was arrested for grand larceny by the Chicago Police. (Can you picture columnist Francisco as a count?)”—Jimmie Tarantino, Hollywood Life Magazine.