One of the greatest resources I have for my family tree is
my Grandfather’s Autobiography. It isn't anything fancy but gives some names
and places of events that occurred in his life. Some accurate, some not so accurate but I love the insight it gives in the life he and his family lived.
This has proved to be extremely helpful in finding out information
about my Great Grandmother, Mabel. She was 30 when she died and had four boys
under the age of 10 at the time.
Mabel Rose with her two sons; Charles (top left) and William (on her lap) circa 1915 |
Mabel was born in Rushville, Indiana on June 16, 1893 to
James Henry and Cordia (Cowger) Condon.
The first record I have of Mabel is the 1900 census1.
She lives with her parents and two siblings: Charles and Lorene in Rushville,
IN. It also states they live on 3rd Street.
Figure 1 http://libx.bsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/InHisAtls/id/1097 |
In the next census, 19102, we find Mabel
living with her father James and her brother Clarence in Indianapolis. She is
listed as being a milliner. How cool is that, she made hats!
She met and married Clarence Rose on April 27th,
1912 in Indianapolis, Indiana. She was 18 and he was 26. I wish I knew how they
met, he was living in a boarding house in Columbus, IN and was a common
laborer. I am going to go ahead and put it out there that they had to get
married as their first son Charles Everett was born on January 6, 1913. Just
shy of 9 months, maybe he was born early…..
In the 1913 City Directory3, Clarence (and I
presume Mabel) were living at 908 Church Street in Indianapolis. There isn't a
house there anymore but Lucas Oil Stadium is in the backyard now.
Mabel stood by her man as she had another child in 1914,
William James. The family then picked up and moved to Chicago. Charles wrote:
Excerpt from Autobiography of Charles Rose, 1993 |
The only record I have of the family living in Chicago is
Clarence’s WWI Draft Registration Card4 that states they
lived at 2317 Indiana Avenue Chicago, Illinois and Mabel is his family contact.
Eventually Mabel and her boys moved back to Indianapolis and
she divorced Clarence. I don’t know when this all happened but I have found
Mabel, Charles and William (Bill) living in Indianapolis in what is known as
the Fairview Settlement. Charles called it Hawville in his autobiography.
Excerpt from Autobiography of Charles Rose, 1993 |
According to The Family Service Association of Indianapolis
Records 1879-1971:
It was located next to Crown Hill Cemetery just south of
Butler-Tarkington. Mabel and her boys lived in a boarding house with 7 other
people.
In February of 1920, a third child was born to Mabel and
Clarence, Robert.
So Mabel had three boys, her husband deserted her and according
to Charles, Mabel was working at the PREST-O-LITE Battery Company in
Indianapolis making batteries. PREST-O-LITE started in Indianapolis in the
early 1900s making headlights for electrified buggies using the gas, Acetylene.
Not until 1927 did PREST-O-LITE begin the manufacture of batteries. Whether
battery acid had anything to do with her demise could be true, it could have
been other chemicals the factory used as well. They weren’t too keen on safety
back then: http://www.firstsuperspeedway.com/articles/prest-o-lite
I believe her and the boys were living with her father
outside of Speedway in his garage according to Charles:
Excerpt from Autobiography of Charles Rose, 1993 |
Going by what Charles stated, Grandfather (Mabel’s father)
lived on Luett Avenue in Indianapolis at this time. Luett Avenue runs parallel
to a set of railroad tracks and just on the other side of those tracks is now
the Brickyard Crossing Golf Course and Motor Speedway.
She married again (I use this term loosely as I don’t think
she married, as there is no record of this marriage) to George Washington
Keller sometime around 1921. As with all the other women in my family tree,
many marriages I believe were due to convenience. Mabel had three boys and
needed help, I get it.
With this union between Mabel and George, a fourth son was
born: Arthur Raymond Keller. They were
still living in Indianapolis.
Excerpt from Autobiography of Charles Rose, 1993 |
Mabel died July 15, 1923. George Keller kept his only son
Raymond, Robert was adopted by Mabel’s Aunt; Della (Delila) Heisel. Charles
and William were sent to an orphanage that subsequently sent both to work on
farms. *Update-Della was Mabel's Aunt, not her sister.
Excerpt from Autobiography of Charles Rose, 1993 |
Mabel was buried in Rushville, Indiana in East Hill Cemetery
where Charles and Bill eventually placed a headstone. It reads “Mother Mabel
Rose Keller 1895-1923”.
- 1. Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004
- 2. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.
- 3. Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
- 4. United States, Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. M1509, 4,582 rolls. Imaged from Family History Library microfilm.
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