Showing posts with label FlorenceSholes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FlorenceSholes. Show all posts

Mar 2, 2024

The Susie Situation - Episode 6 - Hot For You

This can be viewed as a YouTube video (below) or read as a blog post (below that.) Accompanying documentation is at the end.



How far would you go for your Significant Other? Would you eat the food she likes? Move to the city he loves? Would you change religions? If your man were big into blackmail, would you participate? 

If you are joining us for the first time, this is Episode 6 in a series. Kate, Melody, and Nancy have been exploring a family mystery involving Aunt Susie, whose family house and barn burned down in 1912, soon after she was shipped off to a school for girls. We found out that Frank Hamilton was arrested for harming Susie, but was there a trial? We think all of these things are related, and we think this fire marked the beginning of this family’s downward spiral into intermittent homelessness. We’ve hired a genealogist to help us find out more, and we’re anxiously awaiting her findings.

We've also taken a look at my grandfather, Orland Carver. Grandpa Orlie. We don’t like what we see. But what about his wife, Annis Hubbard Sholes Carver? How does Grandma Annie fit into this equation?

It's 2018. The MeToo movement goes global. Sears and Roebuck goes bankrupt. And I receive a 54-page packet of court papers in the mail. The genealogist tells me they are preliminary court papers. Most are handwritten, in a really fast scribble, chicken scratch legalese, and they are incomplete.

What does she mean by incomplete? Well, they do suggest that a trial occurred, but they do not say what happened at the trial. There are papers about the original arrest, about the trial being rescheduled to a later date, subpoenas for witnesses to appear, and some curious pre-trial testimony from Ruth Hamilton.

I have to switch glasses, magnify the writing on a big screen, and reread this really bad handwriting several times, but fortunately, I have some experience reading chicken scratch.

It's 1978. The TV Show Dallas debuts on CBS. Everyone at school is singing "You're the one that I want" after watching Grease for the 3rd time. And The Reverend Jim Jones shocks the world, leaving us all with a new saying, "Don't drink the Kool-Aid." I'm 19 years old, working my first college job, grading freshmen comp papers. These are handwritten. Scribbled. Chicken scratch. I get a lot of practice reading really bad handwriting.

Throughout the semester a parade of young men come through the English Department doors in search of homework help. One of these boys asks me out. I change college majors because of him, follow him to another town, even get a job where he works. One Saturday night he takes me out to dinner at our favorite Chinese restaurant. He says he has something important to discuss. He reaches into his pocket. Is he about to propose? I hold my breath as he extends his hand and opens it to reveal ... his key to my apartment. He says he needs to give it back because he has just proposed, to his other girlfriend, and she said yes. That's when I realize, my man-picker is malfunctioning. Broken down. In need of an upgrade!

Like grandmother, like granddaughter. And now I wonder, if I had married that man, after changing my major and following him to another town, how much would I have been willing to do to keep him happy? Watch his TV shows? Raise kids his way? Blackmail the neighbor of his choice?

It's 1888. Imagine Annie Hubbard, 19 years old, at a neighborhood barn dance in Mars, Nebraska. Chet Fields plays the fiddle. His brother Ed is there too. When the Fields brothers play, all the young people come. The air crackles with a mix of nerves and excitement. Annie tugs at the faded ribbon in her hair as she watches him across the rough-hewn dance floor. The new boy, with his sun-streaked hair and the beginnings of a shy smile. He glances her way, then quickly down at his boots. The music breaks off, replaced with the dance caller's booming voice. Annie turns to her friend, swallowing a surge of disappointment. But then she sees him, shouldering his way through the crowd. "Hello, I'm Charley. Would you like to dance?"

I don't know if that's what happened, but dances were popular in the area, and so was Chet Fields. By March of 1889, Annie Hubbard and Charley Sholes must have found a meeting spot much more private than a public dance hall. According to her divorce papers, Annis and Charles got married on October 9, 1889, and he then deserted her, on October 9, 1889. Daughter Florence was born on December 31, 1889. It looks like Annie and Charles never planned to live together. I don't know if Florence ever met him or his 2nd family.


And you know that little voice I mentioned last episode, the one that says, "You're no good; you should be ashamed; you need to know your place?" How loud do you think that voice gets in the head of an unwed pregnant girl in 1889? Or a divorced lady with a small child? So when Orlie Carver came along, willing to marry her, did Annie feel like she had many choices? Don't you just want to travel back in time, take her by the shoulders, and shout, GRANDMA, THINK THIS THROUGH?!!

What do we really know about Annie? Not a lot. Childhood stories suggest that the Hubbard children were playful, with a tendency towards mischief, and that they all had a solid education in Vermont before arriving in Nebraska. Not a college education, but good for the times. 

Dad said Annie was not particularly demonstrative. Orlie was more affectionate, when he wasn't being violent. He also said that Annie had a lot of anxiety in later years, and that once she almost gave up on life. It was some time after the fire, in a little spider-infested stone house in Kansas, the house that leaked like a sieve, where she tried to hang herself from the rafters, but Uncle Bob cut her down. Bob would have been quite young still, perhaps 9 or 10?

Bob also tells of her calmly removing my dad, little Willie, from the middle of the bed when he was a toddler, so that she could shoot a rattlesnake that she saw hanging from the rafters directly above where he slept. 

And Dad wrote about Annie's actions during the 1918 Influenza Epidemic, when she spent countless hours caring for sick neighbors.

We’ve heard that in the years after the fire, Annie’s children were often dirty and unkempt, that she was often sick, and that she had a tendency to forget what years her children were born when reporting their ages to school authorities, or to coroners.

And what was her relationship with Orlie? From Dad's description, Orlie was in charge, and Annie's job was to follow along. 

At the end of her life Annie lost a fight with colorectal cancer. She was 56 years old, and when the kids visited the hospital, they report that she was incoherent, probably from pain medication. I don't think that's how she would like to be remembered. I'd rather remember her as the lady who shot down the rattlesnake. Annie, get your gun!

But now we have a new story from Ruth Hamilton. Ruth paints Annie in a very different light. Of course, just like that dance story that I made up a few paragraphs back, we have no idea how much of Ruth's story is true. 

It's 1911. September 12. Annie is a mother of eight. She’s been living with Orlie for 14 years. The Hamiltons are neighbors. And here is what Ruth Hamilton says in her pre-trial testimony. She says that Mrs. Carver came to the Hamilton home after dinner and asked to speak with her husband, Frank, who was upstairs resting. He came down. Then Mrs. Carver said, "I am going to send you over the road for having Susie out all night, but I am willing to settle if you will give me your grey team."

Ruth asked Mrs. Carver if Frank had done anything wrong or harmed Susie in any way, and Mrs. Carver said that he had not, but that he had Susie out all night, and that was against the law, and that she would send him over the road for it unless Frank gave her that grey team. 

According to Ruth, when the Hamiltons turned Mrs. Carver down, she then said that she would be willing to settle for the bay colts, which were inferior to the grey team, not worth as much money. And when they refused to part with either the greys or the bays, Mrs. Carver proclaimed in a loud and angry voice, "I will make it hot for you and send you over the road."

Ruth goes on to testify that Carver and his wife live on a Kincaid homestead not far from the Hamilton's, and that on several occasions they've offered to trade the entire homestead for that grey team.

And finally, Ruth says that she ran into Mrs. Carver in front of the drug store in O'Neill on the same day after the preliminary hearing in this case, and she said to her then, “I hope you feel better since you swore to all those lies!" 

Whereupon Mrs. Carver started to cry and answered, "I had to do it, and if you were in my place, you would do it." 

Where do I start?

Everybody seems to agree that Frank had Susie out all night. Had her out where? What would a middle aged neighbor-man be doing all night with a 13-year-old girl that falls into the category of “not harmful”? Astronomy lessons? Feeding homeless cattle? I've wracked my brain. 

And what about the language here? Would somebody with Grandma's education level use phrases like "I will make it hot for you" or "I will send you over the road"? Maybe. 

Then there's this whole thing about the horses. The Carvers would do anything to get those greys. Would a set of horses really be worth an entire 600-acre homestead? And I'm remembering comments Kate used to hear from the family years ago, "The Carvers were nothing but a bunch of horse thieves." I didn't think they meant literal horse thieves, but ... maybe they did?

And finally, back to the language. 

  • I will make it hot for you. 

  • I will send you over the road. 

Doesn't this sound like something we should put on a set of travel mugs?

2018 was an eventful year, with all these court papers, and this new story about Grandma. Newspapers started to be digitized at a faster and faster pace. And I talked to Cousin Melody for the first time. You know that surgery I mentioned back in Episode One? It's Melody's fault I got that surgery to start with. If you want to hear more, check back next time!


Thanks to Amy Johnson Crow for providing a framework for people who don't know what to say next when writing about genealogy. We're loosely following her 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks framework. 

Photo Credits From the video

The Pre-Trial Testimony of Ruth Hamilton

I am going to put this in a separate post here.

Florence's Birth Year

We have several documents to help understand Florence's birth year. When put together, the evidence suggests December 31, 1889 as the logical birth date. Further evidence in the future may prove this incorrect; however, it is a reasonable conclusion at this time.

Birth Certificates, Announcements Etc
Unfortunately, no birth certificates were issued for this time frame, and so far I've found no church records or announcements in local papers. The Neligh Leader was publishing quite regularly at that time and seems to have covered the Mars area fairly well. I see a number of references to Cyrus and Mary Carver in 1889. In next door Knox county the Niobrara Pioneer was also in print. But, nothing about this birth, so far.

Whenever her birth month is listed, it is always listed as December, so I'm going to assume December is correct.

These state that Charles and Annis were married Oct 9, 1889 and that he deserted her on Oct 9, 1889. They further state that daughter Florence is 6 years old. This was initially filed on January 14, 1896 and then finalized on June 5, 1896.

Obvious thing here: it is all handwritten, and the 5 and the 6 look very similar. So I could be wrong in how I am reading that handwriting. But the part that says when they were married and when he deserted her is very legible.

This is in April of 1906 and states that Florence is 16. It is signed by Florence, Annis, and Orland. This would put her birth year in 1889 if birth month is December.

1900 Census Record
This was enumerated on June 28, 1900. It says that Florence is 10 and was born in December of 1889. The birth years and ages of the other children are correct, although I cannot tell you why Clarence is called Admiral here.








1910 Cen1910 Census Record
This was enumerated on May 10. It states that Florence is 19, which would put her birth year in 1890 if birth month is December.


1920 Census Record
Taken in January 1920. Age 30 in January 1930 puts birth date in 1889 if birth month is December. Note that this record is extremely accurate. All 8 children's ages are correct (according to the birth information I have for them) including the 3 youngest, whose ages include number of months. 


This gives a birth date of Dec 31, 1890, provided by husband Clarence. It wouldn't surprise me at all for Clarence to get the birth year incorrect. He's got 9 kids, no wife, and a funeral. He's getting ready to pack the whole bunch up and drive them all to Grandma and Grandpa's house so they can try to fit 10 more people into a 3 room abode where some of the Carver kids are already camping in the back yard. When does he have time for the finer things in life, like remembering what year his dearly departed was born?

Gravestone
Says "1889 - 1890" age 30. Since 2 out of those 3 facts are incorrect, I don't put much stock in the gravestone. It is wonderful that somebody put it there that, but it is not a good source for factual info. Probably put there later by one of the children?

Feb 18, 2024

The Susie Situation - Episode 5 - Stale Old Stories

You can watch this on YouTube (below). Copies of news articles are in the written version (below that.)



If you’re joining us for the first time, we are cousins investigating a 100 year old family mystery. We call it The Susie Situation. This is episode 5.

Feb 1, 2024

The Susie Situation - Episode 4 - Sensational Testimony

If you're joining us for the first time, we're investigating a family mystery from 1912. It centers around a homestead fire in Nebraska. One word of caution, this week's content does include references to historical events that contain sensitive information, so discretion is recommended.

This can be watch as a video (below) or read as a blog post (below that). 



Jan 21, 2024

The Susie Situation - Episode 3 - Follow The Clues

If you're joining us for the first time, we're some cousins trying to unravel an old family mystery. We call it The Susie Situation, and this is Episode Three.  You can read here, or watch on YouTube (below.)

Jun 21, 2018

Florence Sholes Carey Death Certificate 1921.05.21 Bristow Nebraska

Description:
Florence Sholes Carey Death Certificate

Source:
Nebraska State Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics

Transcription:
Place of Death
County: Boyd 8 - Township: Lynch – Registered No 4031
Full Name
Florence Octavia Carey
Sex
Fem
Race
White
Origin
American
Spouse
C. D. Carey
Date of Birth
Dec 31 1890
Age
31 years 4 months 22 days
Occupation of Deceased
Housewife
Birthplace
Nebr
Name of Father
Chas Sholes
Birthplace of Father
Not Known
Maiden Name of Mother
Annis Hubbard
Birthplace of Mother
Vermont
Informant
C. D. Carey 17 W Madison St, Norfolk, Nebr
Filed
6/1/1921 Norfolk, Nebr, Talich/Registrar
Date of Death
5-22-1921
I hereby certify that
I attended deceased from May 17 through May 22, 1921
Last saw her alive on May 21, 1921
Death occurred at 6 am
Cause of Death
Pelvic Peritonitis, duration 8 days
Disease COntracted at
At her home
Did an operation proceed death?
No
Autopsy?
No
What Test Confirmed Diagnosis?
Microscopical
Signed
Ron Place, M. D. 5/23/1921, Bristow, Nebr

Image:
Nebraska State Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics Lynch, Boyd, NE Registered No 4031

Clarence Carey WW1 Draft Registration 1918.09.12 Bristow Nebraska

Description:
WW1 Draft Registration Card

Images:
Page 1 of Clarence Carey's Draft Registration Card,  Registration Location: Boyd County, Nebraska; Roll: 1711448; Draft Board: 0.

Page 2 of Clarence Carey's Draft Registration Card,  Registration Location: Boyd County, Nebraska; Roll: 1711448; Draft Board: 0.

Florence Sholes and Clarence Carey Marriage Certificate 1906.04.26 O'Neill Nebraska

Description: 
Florence Sholes and Clarence Carey Marriage Certificate

Source:
State of Nebraska

Transcription:
Mr. Clarence D. Carey to Miss Florence Sholes. State of Nebraska, Holt County. License is hereby granted to any person authorized to solemnize marriages according to the laws of said State, to join in marriage Mr. Clarence D. Carey and Miss Florence Sholes.

Name
Clarence D Carey
Florence Sholes
Age
27
16
Color
W
W
Place of Birth
Cedar Falls, Iowa
Venus, Nebr
Father’s Name
William Carey
Charles Sholes
Mother’s Name
Bertha Wolff
Annis Hubbard

In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court, at my office in O'Neill in said County, this 26th day of April, 1906. C.J. Malone, judge. Witnesses: Elberta Spindler and Margaret V Hall.

Image:


Annis Hubbard and Charles Sholes Divorce Record 1896.06.05 Antelope County Nebraska

Description:
Annis Hubbard and Charles Sholes Divorce Record

Source:
Nebraska divorce records
Provided by Sandy Dempsey

Transcription:
In District Court of Antelope County Nebr., Petition

Annis H Sholes, Plaintiff vs. Charles E Sholes, Deft.

The plaintiff complains of the defendant for that on the 9th day of October 1889 in Antelope County, Nebraska, she was married to the defendant, and has since resided herein, and has ever since said marriage conducted herself toward the defendant as a faithful, chaste, and obedient wife.

2nd The defendant, disregarding his duties as a husband, on the 9th day of October 1889 willfully deserted the plaintiff, and for more than five  two years lost past has been willfully absent from her without a reasonable or just cause. (Note: Updated 11/6/24 after consulting with Sandy Dempsey and looking more closely at the handwriting. The word is very likely "two".)

3rd The following children are the issues of said marriage to wit, Florence Octavia Sholes, aged 6 years.

4th The plaintiff further represents that said defendant is a man of vicious and vulgar habits, and is wholly unfit to be entrusted with the care, custody and education of children.

The plaintiff therefore prays that she may be divorced from said defendant and that she may be given the custody of said child and that said defendant be decreed to pay her reasonable alimony, and for such other relief as equity may require.

State of Nebraska, Antelope County:

I, Annis H. Sholes, plaintiff in the above entitled action, do solemnly swear that I believe the facts stated in the foregoing conclusion to be true.

Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 5th day of June, 1896. E O Kilvairnis. Notary Public.

Images:






Oct 24, 2016

Annis and Orland, Venus and Mars

One of my favorite family jokes, which always falls flat, is "Grandpa was from Mars, Grandma was from Venus." My children smile uncertainly. The grandkids look confused.

"Don't you remember the book that was all the craze a few years ago? Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus?"

Blank stares. Finally somebody will say, "Oh. Ha-ha."

Mars and Venus are both ghost towns now. Annis Hubbard's mother Jane took a homestead in Venus in 1886. Orland Carver's family moved to nearby Mars a few years before that, in 1877. Venus is marked on the map below. Mars is just a little bit southeast, in Royal. (If Royal doesn't show up, make the map a little larger by clicking on the "+" sign.)


Grandpa

Orland William Carver Sr. was born in Wisconsin on Nov 20, 1869. We've heard he was born in Janesville, but La Valle, Sauk County, Wisconsin seems more likely based on the family's location in 1870. His parents were Cyrus Hoyt Carver and Mary Jennette Allen.

Grandpa was the youngest of eight children: Seven boys and one girl. My father thought the girl's name might be Nettie; however, an unknown person on Familysearch.org has it listed as Roxy. This girl died at age 11. All of the boys lived to adulthood. They were: Dorr, Orin, Loren, Oliver, Donley, Barton and Orland.

Notes on spelling: Mary's middle name may have been spelled Jeanette, Jenet, Janet, or Jennette. Dorr's name has been spelled Dorr, Dor, and Door and in one record, David. Donley has also been spelled Donaley.

The family moved from Wisconsin to Nebraska with a group of other settlers. Among them was a man named Samuel Haskin, who appears to have been a close family friend. The Haskins and Carvers took homesteads near each other.

As they reached adulthood, some of the Carver boys also took homesteads in the Mars area, Grandpa included. Homesteading in Nebraska was not an easy life for any of these families, and over the years many moved away.

Grandpa and ? and Alta, maybe

My dad's early notes say that Grandpa's first marriage was to Grandma, but later he updated those notes to indicate a previous marriage to an unknown lady, and that they had one daughter named Alta. I haven't found any information about this marriage or child.

Grandpa and Grandma

I haven't seen any confirmed photos of Grandpa. Dad describes him as stocky, white, medium height, brown hair, blue eyes. Good luck getting a sketch artist to draw that for you! But since I don't have a likeness of his face, I'm going to show you the next best thing, a photo of his handwriting.

This is from Florence Sholes' marriage license. I think it says something like, ”I give my consent Miss Florence and Mr Carey to be married. Orland W. Carver.”  Since the sides are cut off and his handwriting is not quite as pretty as Dad's, it is hard to decipher. Below that is Grandma's handwriting.



We don't have any family stories about how Grandpa and Grandma met, but here is my theory. One of the Haskin girls, Mercedes, married Grandma’s brother, Edmund Hubbard. I imagine that at some point Annis came by to visit her brother, and there was Orland, neighbor man, with his keen good looks and stunning penmanship.

Maybe they met at one of those dances the Carvers liked to host. He winked. She blushed. They danced. And then they got married, proving once and for all that poor Grandma's man-picker was in serious need of repair.

I want to say good things about Grandpa, I really do. Here are some things.
  • He used to rock the kids to sleep and sing them hymns.
  • He fathered children who grew up to be good people.
  • My father loved him.
  • Without him, I would not exist.
OK. That's all I've got. I'm just not sure what was going on with him, but it seems like life started out well enough but went downhill over the years. Whatever was wrong, Grandpa, I'm sorry for you and wish your life had been better. More than that, I'm sorry for your family.

Florence Sholes and Clarence Carey

Updated 6/21/18 to include Census and Draft Registration Information

As mentioned previously, Annis Hubbard and Charles Sholes had one daughter, Florence Octavia Sholes, born on December 31, 1890. I don't know how much time she spent with her biological father. Chances are she didn't know him, but that is conjecture.
  • Her parents were married in 1889, and Annis filed for divorce in 1895. 
  • The divorce papers say that Charles had been gone for more than five years, I think. The handwriting gets really hard to decipher. 
  • Florence was 6 at the time the divorce was filed.
April 1906 -- O'Neill, Nebraska
At age 16 Florence married a 27-year-old from Iowa named Clarence Dean Carey. Don't lose track of Uncle Clarence. He just keeps showing up in this family. We name a Carver boy after him. We marry him, twice. And we have a lot of children with him.

May 1910 – Washington, Knox, Nebraska 
The census shows the family living in Washington, Knox, Nebraska.
1910; Census Place: Washington, Knox, Nebraska; Roll: T624_849; Page: 4A; Enumeration District: 0127; Image: 918; FHL Number: 1374862.

Name:
Clarence D Carey
Age in 1910:
31
Birth Year:
1879
Birthplace:
Iowa
Home in 1910:
Washington, Knox, Nebraska
Race:
White
Gender:
Male
Relation to Head of House:
Head
Marital Status:
Married
Spouse's Name:
Florence Carey
Father's Birthplace:
Iowa
Mother's Birthplace:
Germany
Household Members:
Name
Age
Clarence D Carey
31
Florence Carey
19
Laverne Carey
3
Esther Carey
1




Jan 1920 – Mullen, Boyd, Nebraska
By 1920 the family has moved to Mullen, Boyd, Nebraska. This is about 16 miles east of Spencer, where Orland and Annis are living in 1910.

1920; Census Place: Mullen, Boyd, Nebraska; Roll: T625_980; Page: 2B; Enumeration District: 25; Image: 524.
Name / Age / Birth Year:
Clarence D Carey / 40 / abt 1880
Birthplace:
Iowa
Home in 1920:
Mullen, Boyd, Nebraska
Race / Gender:
White / Male
Marital Status / Spouse
Married / Florence O Carey
Household Members:
Name
Age
Clarence D Carey
40
Florence O Carey
30
William L Carey
12
Esther I Carey
11
Marvin E Carey
9
Richard H Carey
7
Harold E Carey
5
Louie G Carey
3 8/12
Mable M Carey
1 4/12 
Ida G Carey
0 4/12


Sept 1918 – Bristow, Boyd, Nebraska
Per Clarence’s WWI draft registration, the family is in Bristow, Boyd, Nebraska, where Clarence is farming.

May 1921 -- Florence dies in Bristow
I feel like Aunt Florence was probably exhausted all of the time. She had nine kids in 14 years. Shortly after the birth of child number nine, on May 22, 1921, she died of peritonitis.

After her death, Clarence and the children went to stay with Annis and her second husband, Orland Carver, in Norfolk, Nebraska. They put up a tent in the back yard and camped out while Clarence tried to figure out what to do.

It must have been very hard for a low-income farmer/laborer with that many children to figure out how to care for them and make a living at the same time. Annis helped, but she was not in good health. Some of the children ended up in foster care or were adopted out.

From Dad's Journal

Here is an excerpt from my father's journal about this family.

"Florence had died at the age of thirty-three or thirty-four, at the birth of her ninth child. I could scarcely believe it -- nine children in fourteen years.

"Eleven days later, a 1914 Overland full of Careys came to a halt in our driveway. The kids probably didn't pile out according to age; and I'm not too sure whether fourteen-year-old William LaVern was even along. I think he probably came later by bus or train.

"Be that as it may, twelve-year-old Esther was there. A pretty child she was, and almost petite. She had probably been holding the baby during the ride, although ten-year-old Marvin or eight-year-old Richard could have -- or perhaps even seven-year-old Harold. However, it would hardly have been wise to delegate this chore to five-year-old Louis Gustave (Gussy), four-year-old Mabel, or two-year-old Ida Grace, known to us as Gracie.

"Esther and Dick could have passed for twins, had he been big enough. The rest of the family had lighter colored hair -- more on the brownish order -- and it wasn't wavy like Esther's and Dick's. Neither was Vern's. As for that tiny bundle they called "Clareton" (Clareton Lee) I just couldn't tell whom he looked like. I remember well, however, that Clarence, his father, took Clareton from Esther's arms, carried him to my mother, who stood waiting in the doorway of our three-room house, and placed him in her arms.

"'Here Grandma', he said smiling, 'take him. He's yours.'

Dad goes on to explain that between the Carvers and Careys, there were 16 people in a three-room house. Dad and his brother Ashton were already sleeping out back in a tent due to lack of room. The solution? Grandpa and Clarence emptied out the tent and created double bunk beds (full sized beds that several children could cram into at once.)

"Poor Mom! Can you imagine a sick person managing a home with so many children in it? I don't know how she managed to cook for such a gang, even with the help of Esther and Sina. Drainboards? Sinks? Faucets? Not in our house. We simply washed in one dishpan, rinsed in another, and somehow stacked the dishes on the table to drain.

"The family made do like this most of the summer, until Clarence Carey found a house for rent. Eventually the government stepped in and put several of his children in fostor homes, much to his distress. The baby, however, stayed with Grandma.

"When Grandma was hospitalized, Sina quit school to watch Clareton. She did her best to care for him, but after Grandma died and Grandpa left home, it was more than she could do."

I'm not sure of the timing of all of this. Grandma died in 1925 but I don't know when she was hospitalized. Dad's sister Sina Belle Carver would have been about 14 when Florence died and 17 when Annis died. Eventually Sina married Clarence, but that's a story for another time.

The Carey Children 

William Lavern (Vern) Carey 1907
I see Vern in the Nebraska area and unmarried in the 1940 census, nothing after that and haven't located any family members.

Esther Irene Carey 1909-1999
Esther helped to raise Clarence's second set of children, if I understand correctly.

Marvin Eldon Carey 1910-2002
Marvin moved to Portland, Oregon. My dad used to go visit him occasionally. I think. Or maybe that was Gus.

Richard H Carey 1913-1943
Richard died fighting in World War II. He is buried in Carthage, Tunisia. He was a private in the 26th Infantry 1st Division.

Harold E Carey (Beed) 1915

Louis Gustav (Gus) Carey 1916-2007
Gus also lived in or visited Portland at some point, at least this is what my vague childhood memory tells me.

Mable Mae Carey (Beed) 1919

Ida Grace Carey (Rowlette) 1920
Ida Grace or possibly Grace L. Uncertain. Her name may have changed when adopted.

Clareton Lee "Buddy" Carey (Rowlette) 1921
As an adult it appears his name is spelled Clair.

After Florence died, Harold and Mable were adopted by the Beed family. Grace and Buddy were adopted by the Rowlette family. I don't know too much more about them at this point but hope to hear more from Carey cousins in the future.

Notes:
The above excerpt from my father's journal is also published in the book "Journal of a Not-So-Perfect Daughter", Chapter 7 "Twisted Trees". Author Nancy Carver Abbott. Publisher Pacific Press Publishing Association. Originally published 1998. Kindle ebook published 2013.