Thursday, March 1, 2012

Hobart Then and Now:
Augustus Wood House/St. Bridget Church

Circa 1911 and 2012.

Catholic Parsonage, PM 1911
St. Bridget Church
(Click on images to enlarge)

Yes, by 1911 it was the Catholic parsonage, but it started out as the home of Augustus and Jessie Wood and family.*

I just recently bought this colorized version of a postcard I had already put up on the Downtown Hobart blog.

Here is an 1882 biographical sketch of the Wood family from Porter and Lake Counties (Goodspeed/Blanchard):
AUGUSTUS WOOD, son of John and Hannah E. (Pattee) Wood, was born in Danvers, Mass., in 1828, and in 1836 came with his parents to Lake County. At the age of twenty-one, he engaged in clerking at Crown Point and Michigan City; in 1855, he entered in business at Wood's Mill, carrying a stock of general merchandise until 1880, when he moved to Hobart, built a store, and resumed his trade in dry goods, notions, groceries, crockery, etc. He is a Knight Templar and belongs to the Valparaiso Commandery; he was married at Michigan City, in 1852, to Jessie M. Brown, a native of Cincinnati. They have three children living — Carrie M. Ryan, of Valparaiso; Abbie M. Bullock, of Hobart, and John J. Wood, now associated in business with his father.
Jessie Brown Wood, incidentally, was born in 1833, per the 1900 Census.

The photograph below comes from the Hobart Historical Society museum.

Wood house, rear, undated
(Click on image to enlarge)
Image courtesy of the Hobart Historical Society.


Handwritten notes on the back: "Augustus Wood house/Earle's Retreat/now St. Bridget church site/Photo guess approx 1890/From E. Reinerth [sp? the name is hard to read]."

I don't know what those big curving things are — maybe the jawbones of a whale??

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Here is the verso of the 1911 postcard:

Catholic Parsonage, 1911, verso
(Click on image to enlarge)

So nice of Dora to spell out her relationship to Elizabeth for us!

The 1910 Census shows 22-year-old Elizabeth La Hayn living on Washington Street in Valpo, with her married brother, John, his wife and two young daughters. Elizabeth was employed in a laundry, which must have been miserable work.

Dora was her older sister. The 1900 Census shows John, Dora, Hattie (another sister) and Elizabeth living with their grandmother; John, the eldest, was only 19 — were they orphaned so young?

In 1902 Dora married Edward Jentzen (Indiana Marriage Collection). By 1910 they had two small children and were farming rented land in Porter County.

My impression is that "How you was?" and "We looked for youse" are just Dora's way of being playful.

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*Augustus and Jesse Wood's daughter, Abbie, married Simeon Bullock, brother of Gilbert Bullock → Ainsworth connection!

3 comments:

Janice said...

Okay I'll be the first--a whale from Lake George? But you're correct--they do look like whale bones!

Ainsworthiana said...

Who knows what may lurk at the bottom of Lake George?

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