Monday, February 23, 2026

"Cow in Lake," 1908

Here's a random pointless postcard I bought that doesn't tell us anything helpful about Hobart, but I'm too tired to do anything serious today.

2026-02-23. Unidentified rural Hobart, 1908 01
(Click on images to enlarge)

I'm sure it looked all verdant and serene when August Haase photographed it. Hate to think about the mosquito larvae wriggling around in that water.

The postmark is 1908.

2026-02-23. Unidentified rural Hobart, 1908 02

"Cow in lake," someone has helpfully written on the back. This is "down on the river," according to the writer, so maybe somewhere along the Deep River?

I think the writer is Lillian Maud Collins and the addressee her future husband, Joseph Archibald Teegarden. They were married in 1911. Awww, isn't that sweet? but nothing to do with Hobart.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Love and Death at the Ainsworth Crossing

For Fred Ahrens, the 1920s started out with grief upon grief. In February 1920, he lost his mother to complications of influenza. In February 1921, his 38-year-old wife, Mollie, died of tuberculosis. Fred was left with a young daughter and son to raise. He moved into his widowed father's house, where his sister, Mary, could help with the children. His former home became a rental property.

In May of 1923, the house got a new tenant, a former Chicago resident named Catherine McManus. She had something in common with Fred: she too had lost a spouse and was raising a daughter and son on her own. Her husband, Matthew, had died in 1918. For a few years after her loss, Catherine had remained in Chicago, working as a waitress and taking in boarders to make ends meet.

Catherine probably was familiar with Hobart long before she moved there. Her married sister was a Hobart resident for some ten years before moving to Gary. Their mother, Carolina (Lena), had been one of the local Springmans by birth. Lena's first husband (Catherine's father) was Nicholas Semmer, whose parents had farmed in Ross Township in the mid-19th century before relocating to Chicago. Her second husband was Fred Maybaum. So Catherine had many local relations, and surely friends and acquaintances too. Fred Ahrens may have been among the latter.

He soon became something more. These two bereaved hearts found solace in each other. Catherine and Fred fell in love, decided to marry, and quietly told their family and friends of their decision.

Since the two of them were an item, it was natural for them to travel together to the surprise birthday party planned for Rollie Sizelove, an Ainsworth-area farmer, on the evening of January 9, 1924. They would drive south from Hobart on present-day State Road 51, cross the Grand Trunk tracks at Ainsworth, turn right onto Ainsworth Road to reach the Lincoln Highway, then west to Colorado and north to the Sizelove farm.

But their journey ended at the Ainsworth crossing.

2026-02-18. 1924-01-10 News, Fred Ahrens and Mrs. Catherine McManus Killed at Ainsworth
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Hobart News, 10 Jan. 1924.


2026-02-18. 1924-01-11 Gazette, Two Hobart Citizens Killed
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Hobart Gazette, 11 Jan. 1924.


There was no indication that Fred might have been trying to beat the train, as in the case of an earlier accident at this railroad crossing. It seems that he simply didn't notice it in time to react.

2026-02-18. 1924-01-17 News, Accidental Death Coroner's Verdict Ainsworth Tragedy
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Hobart News, 17 Jan. 1924.


2026-02-18. 1924-01-18 Gazette, General News, inquest testimony about Ainsworth accident
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"General News," Hobart Gazette, 18 Jan. 1924.


A double funeral for Fred and Catherine, held at the Evangelical Lutheran Church, was widely attended.[1] They were laid to rest in the Hobart Cemetery.[2]

The surviving family members thanked their friends and neighbors as one:

2026-02-18. 1924-01-17 News, Card of Thanks
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Hobart News, 17 Jan. 1924.


The orphaned children all had relatives willing to give them a home:

2026-02-18. 1924-01-17 News, Local and Personal
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"Local and Personal," Hobart News, 17 Jan. 1924.



_______________
[1] "Local Drifts," Hobart Gazette, 18 Jan. 1924.
[2] Catherine's grave is listed on findagrave.com and in the NWIGS's Hobart Township Cemeteries. Fred's grave does not appear in either source; nor does his wife's (Mollie).

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Merrillville Then and Now: 73rd Avenue at Madison

Yet another view of the Walter Bros. garage, from a postcard I bought a few months ago. The photographer, C.R. Childs, stood along present-day 73rd Avenue and pointed his camera east toward Madison.

2026-02-07. Walter Bros. ca. 1917 a
(Click on images to enlarge)

Here's a screenshot from Google street view, 2024:
2026-02-07. 73rd at Madison 2024
Image courtesy of Google Maps.

In spite of its stylish design, which I totally love, the back of the postcard is not helpful for purposes of fixing its date …

2026-02-07. Walter Bros. ca. 1917 b

… but we know it dates to 1913 or later, since the photo is captioned "Lincoln Highway."

I consulted the Ainsworth vintage-car expert for further help, and he tells me:
There are a couple of cars (like the one closest on the right) that appear to be Model T Fords (not new looking). Ford's last year for gas headlights was 1914. Headlights were electric after 1914 and the car on the right appears to have gas lights. Walter Brothers sold Buicks and the truck in the doorway could be a late teens Buick delivery truck. The cars on the highway fit the 1916/1917 timeframe.
So I'm estimating the date of this photo to be circa 1917.

Concerning the starting date of the Walter Bros. garage business, A Pictorial History of Merrillville says this:
Like their father, Ernest "Cheese Henry" Walter, the three sons, Howard, Leslie, and Clarence, were capable business men who undertook their enterprise in 1917 when they were only 18, 20, and 21 years of age, respectively.

At first, the young entrepreneurs operated out of Elbert's Garage, an old wooden building; later they relocated to the Keilman building on the southwest corner West 73rd Avenue and Madison Street [i.e., where this photo was taken].
But in the on-line local newspapers, I found this 1913 item:

2026-02-07. Hammond-Lake-County-Times-Dec-02-1913-p-6
(Click on image to enlarge)
Lake County Times (Hammond, Ind.), 2 Dec. 1913, p. 6.


This seems to say that they were already running a car-rental business in 1913, at which time Howard (b. 1893) was 20, Leslie (b. 1895) was 18, and Clarence (b. 1897) was 16.

I also found this 1915 item:

2026-02-07. Apr-10-1915-Hammond-Lake-County-Times-p-7
(Click on image to enlarge)
Lake County Times (Hammond, Ind.), 10 Apr. 1915, p. 7.


So they were selling Fords and Overlands already.

But I found nothing to specify where their business was located at any particular time.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

"Going to the (Something) With It"

This is the last entry in the Jeremiah Wiggins estate papers, and I can't read it.

2026-02-01. Wiggins estate 06e
(Click on image to enlarge)
Image courtesy of Alice Flora Smedstad.


Here is my pathetic attempt at a transcription:
_______ [Wigens?] __________ _________ _________ _________ _______ _____ going to the _________ with it    $2.00

July 1839                _________ _______
I tried a few free AI enhancing programs, which didn't produce anything more legible.

My only remaining hope is that someday its meaning will be revealed to me in a dream.