Monroe Salisbury(1876-1935)
- Actor
- Producer
Monroe Salisbury was born Orange Salisbury Cash, the son of David Cash
and Ellen Louise Salisbury Cash, and grandson of Aaron Cash and Ann
Roat Cash of Evans, Erie County, New York. He grew up with two sisters,
Adelaide Mary Cash and Anna Louise Cash. By 1900, he was a working
actor supporting his widowed mother and living in Providence, Rhode
Island. He performed on Broadway between 1903 and 1906. By 1914, he
left New York for Hollywood to work in films and became well-known,
playing opposite such actors as Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., Lon Chaney, and
Ruth Clifford eventually becoming a movie idol. He was six feet tall
and ruggedly handsome, making him a great choice for western films. His
most famous part was that of Allesandro in the film "Ramona" (1916). By
the late 1920s, the aging actor was less in demand and he struggled to
find parts. His last movie was in 1930 after which he disappeared from
the Hollywood scene. On July 2, 1935, Salisbury was admitted to Patton
State Hospital for the Insane in San Bernardino, California, his name
unknown, his occupation a hotel clerk. A month later, on August 6th he
fell, hitting his head and fracturing his skull. He lay in the morgue
for two days before his sister, Adelaide Cash Bosche, identified him
giving his real name as Orr S. Cash. His cremated remains were buried
in the same grave with his mother, Ellen, who died in 1929, in the
Rosedale Cemetery, Los Angeles, California.