Jones lived the life of a millionaire. The first of his three Detroit parsonages was a three-story, multiroom mansion at 246 Ferry Avenue and was described as "luxurious" in an article in
The Detroit News of July 2, 1944. This mansion is located in the
East Ferry Avenue Historic District and was formerly the Fritz Funeral Home, one of the oldest black-owned firms of this type in Detroit. When Prophet Jones obtained the mansion, he operated it as a rooming house for twelve couples. This home is a large, elegant structure which consists of three floors and a basement. The third floor was a dance hall and entertainment room, with high ceilings and hardwood floors. The second floor included bedrooms and quarters for the maid. The first floor had a large living room, a dining room and a sun room. Prophet Jones called this mansion the "French Castle". It was also known as the "Dominion Residence". According to
Hue magazine the Arden Park Dominion parsonage was previously a fifty-four-room former gambling
casino, which Jones purchased from gambler
Danny Sullivan. According to
Ebony the house was purchased by his flock at reported cost at that time, $30,000. The house had been previously built in 1917 by
General Motors Corporation executive Edmund A. Vier for $100,000. The house was styled after an 18th-century French
chateau. The interior of the home was hand-carved woodwork, gold-painted ceilings, ornate brocade drapes and wall-to-wall carpeting with pile as deep as an English lawn. The home was also furnished with various exquisite furnishings, many of which were gifts from congregants and other well-wishers. Some of these gifts, such as a $7,000
grand piano, $8,000 worth of
silver plate, a
stained glass window installed at a cost of $1,200 and other rooms of expensive furniture, were so opulent that reports stated that 'they awed visitors'. A massive double door guarded the front entrance to the mansion, and Dominion security inspected visitors carefully through a glass panel before unlocking it. It was also reported in the press that of all of Jones' possessions, he cherished his expansive wardrobe of almost five hundred expensive matching suits and ties, exotic, colorful and bejeweled robes and ensembles, some foreign imported, others tailor-made specifically for him. Jones received visitors to the 'French castle' parsonage in a small paneled
study, dominated by a life-size portrait of himself in a white robe. In a report in
The Detroit News it was reported that the room was stiflingly hot because a gas fire burned in the
fireplace twenty-four hours a day. When asked why this was so, the report stated Jones said that God had told him never to let the fire go out. The report also stated that children's
toys were observed aligned along the fireplace of the study. Jones stated, when asked, that they were meant to symbolize "the lack of toys" in his own "impoverished boyhood". His childhood was also disconnected from traditional masculine hobbies or experiences growing up. He had stated that he had never held a baseball bat, nor played with marbles. Jones employed a personal staff of twelve domestic servants who were financed by the Dominion. His cooks went everywhere with him. "A great person preaching the unadulterated gospel has to be careful", he said. Jones alleged that the founder of the Triumph Church, Father Smith, had died in 1920 after being poisoned by adversaries. Later Jones sold his "French Castle" to rival
Daddy Grace. This left him with his third large residence at 8311 La Salle Blvd, Detroit. This home continues to serves as the current Detroit Dominion parsonage. At his Arden Park home in the 1950s Jones hosted lavish eight-day-long birthday banquets, called
Philamethyu and
Hushdomcalama in his honor that were much covered in the press. Michigan governor
G. Mennon Williams and Detroit mayor
Albert Cobo sent him birthday greetings in 1954. Prominent African Americans from the elite of politics, business, sports, entertainment and music such as
Lionel Hampton and his wife Gladys Hampton attended the birthday banquets and other gatherings held in the Sky Room. In addition to his high level parties and celebrations at his Arden Park parsonage the press also covered Jones's visit to
Father Divine at his Pennsylvanian estate in 1953. Jones was also friendly with C. L. Franklin for some time. In addition to being interviewed by the likes of Burt Lancaster, a local Detroit TV reporter, Jones also employed his own press agent, Ulysses W. Boykin, the owner of the
Detroit Tribune newspaper and a former staff aide to boxer
Joe Louis. Another aide of Jones, Ophelia Kemp, was the mother of Hollywood actress Freda Rentie. Jones attended the famous singer
Dinah Washington's funeral, and was classified as a mourner in the
Jet 1964 issue. ==Death==