
Showing posts with label Louisville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisville. Show all posts
Saturday, June 26, 2010
The MELVIN Gals ~ 1941 Plymouth Sedan ~ Louisville, Kentucky
In this photo are some of the MELVIN women from my husband's family standing in front of a 1941 Plymouth Sedan. Left to right: Cousin LaVerne Moore (daughter of Wm. & Grandaunt Ruth MELVIN Moore), Grandaunt Myrtle MELVIN Robinson, Great Grandmother Edna Metcalf MELVIN-Price, Grandaunt Bessie MELVIN Church. Photo taken somewhere in the West end of Louisville probably around 1943-44.

Saturday, June 19, 2010
The Great 1937 Flood - Louisville, Kentucky - Why Nobody Cried
The Great Ohio River Flood
Louisville, Kentucky 1937
In January of 1937, rains began to fall throughout the Ohio River Valley, eventually triggering what is known today as the "Great Flood of 1937". On January 27 the water level reached 57 feet in Louisville. 70 percent of the city was under water and 175,000 people were forced to leave their homes. The river in Louisville rose 6.3 feet between the 21st and 22nd. With the river reaching nearly 30 feet above flood stage, Louisville had the greatest height of the flood.
In my stash of memories given me by my husband's family I have two items reflecting the aftermath of this flood, one of death and one of strengthened spirit.
Rose Bodenbender Melvin, wife of Charles Walter "Uncle Bud" Melvin, besides being afflicted with an ectopic pregnancy, contracted pneumonia as a direct result of stress and living conditions during the flood and died on February 23rd. She hadn't quite reached her 33rd birthday.
And then I have this small clipping from the Louisville Courier Journal. I could have trimmed it up but I chose to scan it as I received it. This article was submitted to the Editor by Myrtle Maxine Melvin Robinson, "Myrt The Flirt" as her family fondly called her. Myrtle was my husband's maternal great aunt, sister of his grandmother Florence Polly, "Granny Hide". Bud Melvin mentioned above was their brother.
Why Nobody Cried

Labels:
Bodenbender,
Great1937Flood,
Louisville,
Melvin,
OhioRiver
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Tombstone Tuesday: Oliver's Tomb, Then And Now ~ Sarah's Return
Sonora Cemetery, Sonora, Sutton County, Texas
My great grandfather Oliver Morton Wallen died from Tuberculosis in 1907 at the age of 37 years. He and his family left Kentucky with the hope that the drier climate of Texas would slow the progression of the disease that had affected his lungs for years. Sadly, it was in vain as he died within two years of moving.
Below is the picture of Oliver's tomb just after he was buried. Pictured left to right: his brother Jesse Uriah, his widow Sarah Francis (Davis), twins James Hobart and Charles Homer, twins Sula Susan and Thomas Miller, and my grandfather William Jesse. This is the only existing picture of Jesse Uriah that I am aware of. Jesse Uriah also died of Tuberculosis ten years later.
Pictured below is the same stone taken within the past couple of years. This photo and the top photo were taken by my cousin Larry Martin and his wife Kathy of Somerset, Kentucky.
My great grandmother Sarah returned to Mt. Vernon in Rockcastle Co., Kentucky after Oliver's death but before she returned she went to Victoria, Texas to visit with other family members, probably Oliver's father, stepmother and half siblings. Dale R. Wallen, son of twin James Hobart, wrote to his uncle Charlie and told him this story that I have transcribed verbatim:
"Dear Charlie,
This is the story, as best I can remember, that Uncle Bill told me, when I took him to see his Father's grave in 1961.
He said after the funeral of his Father, Uncle Jessy, put Mother and the two sets of twins Tom and Sula and Hobert and Homer on a train to Victoria, Texas. Uncle Jessy, took him (Uncle Bill) and most of there belongings in a wagon and left for Victoria, befor the train. (I think they may have left a day befor their mother). The night the train passed the wagon Uncle Jessy lit a handful of matches so that mother could tell how far along in the trip they were. (He did not tell me how long the wagon trip took.) In Victoria other relatives were waiting for them. (He did not tell me about the return trip to Ky. other that it was 3 to 4 months, after the funeral.)
Dale R. Wallen"
Oliver died on January 19, 1907 and on August 16, 1907 this announcement was made in the Mt. Vernon Signal: "LEVEL GREEN NEWS: Mrs. O. M. Wallen and children who migrated to Texas two years ago have returned to old Kentucky ."
A year and a half later we find this announcement in the Mount Vernon Signal on January 22,1909: "GRIFFIN 'S MILL NEWS: Mrs. Sarah Wallen is preparing to send her children to the Masonic Home."
Sarah taught school in Louisville until she removed the children from the Masonic Home. See my blog Wordless Wednesday: At The Louisville Widows And Orphans Masonic Home for more information and photos. She then went on to teach in Rockcastle Co., Kentucky .
I have copies of the original entry and dismissal papers from the Masonic Home in Louisville which they sent to me in September of 2000. All five children were received on Saturday, May 1, 1909, 11 a.m. on the recommendation of Ashland Lodge #640, "children of deceased Master Mason". They were discharged on October 6th, 1911 to their mother. According to Frances Caroline (Wallen) Towner, her father (twin Thomas Miller Wallen) told her that his mother Sarah had said that even if they had nothing to eat they would never be separated again and sometimes, he said, they went to school with only a piece of bread in their lunch pails.

Labels:
Davis,
Louisville,
MasonicHome,
Texas,
TombstoneTuesday,
Wallen
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Wordless Wednesday: At The Louisville Masonic Widows And Orphans Home
~Oliver Morton Wallen's Widow And Children~
Taken at the Masonic Widows and Orphans Home in Louisville, Kentucky in 1908.
Left to right: Sula Susan, Thomas Miller, James Hobart, Sarah Frances (Davis) Wallen, Charles Homer, and William Jesse (my grandfather).
My great grandfather Oliver was a Master Mason.
Masonic Widows & Orphans Home and yard, a large four story building located on 2nd Street south of Bloom, was incorporated on January 15, 1867. In 1927, the home was relocated to a 176-acre farm on Frankfort Avenue .
[ULPA 1994.18.0136], Herald Post Collection, 1994.18, Special Collections, University of Louisville , Louisville , Kentucky . http://digital.library.louisville.edu/u?/heraldpost,137

Labels:
Davis,
Louisville,
MasonicHome,
Wallen,
WordlessWednesday
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