Whom God Hath Joined Filming Locations

Whom God Hath Joined filming locations

Where was Whom God Hath Joined filmed? Whom God Hath Joined was filmed in 1 locations across United States in the following places:

Whom God Hath Joined Filming Locations

St. Augustine is a city on the northeast coast of Florida. It lays claim to being the oldest city in the U.S., and is known for its Spanish colonial architecture as well as Atlantic Ocean beaches like sandy St. Augustine Beach and tranquil Crescent Beach. Anastasia State Park is a protected wildlife sanctuary. The Castillo de San Marcos is a 17th-century Spanish stone fortress with views of the St. Augustine Inlet.

Whom God Hath Joined (1912)
Runtime: 0 minutes
Rating:
Release year: 1912
IMDB: tt0339901
Plot summary

A young mechanic, temporarily residing in a southern city, found that business was slack in his trade, and decided to send his wife to her relations in the north until happier days dawned. He did not dream that he was putting her in peril, and when later he received word that the ship upon which she sailed had been lost with all on board, he was frantic with grief and self-reproach. Life in this city became hateful to him, and having no ties that bound him there, he abruptly departed into the country, deciding to wander wherever fate might lead him. He found, that after a period of sorrow and suffering, his lines were cast in pleasant paths, for he met a kindly old farmer, who offered him a job, and soon grew to absolutely trust him. His employer had a daughter, and as time passed on, the girl showed him favor, while the farmer made it manifest that he would only be too glad to trust the future of his child in the hands of one who but a short time before had been a stranger. The young man did not love the girl as he had loved his wife; but he was very fond of her, had almost a filial affection for her father, and gradually, as time dulled his anguish, he became convinced that his happiness depended upon a second marriage. So he proposed, was accepted, and the course of true love seemed to be running very smoothly. In the meantime, the wife was slowly regaining her strength. She had not met death in the wreck, but was the one survivor, having been found nearly dead, by some fishermen, who had discovered the broken fragments of the ship. When able to sit up, her memory was gone, and it was not until many weary months had passed, that she was able to remember who she was, and what had happened. By this time the husband had vanished, and the poor, weak woman found it impossible to trace him. She kept up the search, however, and finally, by chance, located him, reading in a paper of his approaching marriage. The wife reached the house on the day set for the ceremony. There she met her rival, arrayed in her wedding gown, and told her who she was. The untutored country girl, in her first moment of anguish, denied that the man of her choice was the husband of the other woman, and fiercely ordered her away. In terror of her life, the wife departed, and the country girl followed her to the porch of the house, and grimly watched her as she staggered off. She saw her attempt to cross the railroad tracks, slip and fall, striking her head on the tracks and lying there unconscious. The same moment the watcher heard the whistle of the approaching train, and knew that if she refused to aid, that the obstacle that might prevent her marriage to the man she loved would be removed. First she watched her grimly, determined that she should die. The train was coming on rapidly, but the woman's thoughts traveled far more swiftly. She hated her rival bitterly, but she could not let her die. In the end she dragged her from the tracks, restored her to her husband, and tearfully watched the couple as they departed from her life, happy after their long period of suffering. The girl remained at the farmhouse, and during the long, lonely years that followed, she frequently wondered whether she had done right in sacrificing her happiness. "Is love worth a crime?" she mused, and somehow she could never answer the question to her own satisfaction.

Genres
Drama
Short
Cast
Marguerite Snow
James Cruze
Florence La Badie
Directors
George Nichols
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Whom God Hath Joined filming locations