Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Bold Jumping Spiders of Ainsworth

This itsy-bitsy spider swung down from the top of the garage doorframe on a single thread of silk.

2026-04-07. Bold jumping spider 01
(Click on images to enlarge)

2026-04-07. Bold jumping spider 02

It is a Bold Jumping Spider. Their scientific name is Phidippus audax — audax, Latin, meaning bold, daring; and Phidippus, a Greek name meaning "one who spares horses." So, while they are day-hunting carnivores, the horsies need not fear them. It didn't bite me either, even while I was "persuading" it to move off the sidewalk by brandishing a leaf at it.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Easter Greetings

2026-04-05. 1915-06-23 Strong to Harms 01
(Click on images to enlarge)

I know, it doesn't say "Easter," but it says "Greetings" and it's got flowers and it's the best I can do.

The verso reintroduces the mysterious Cora Harms

2026-04-05. 1915-06-23 Strong to Harms 02

… only this time she's in Hobart, not Logansport. I still can't figure out who she is and how she's connected to anyone in this area. I think her maiden name was Dempsey. She worked as a dressmaker until marrying Charles W. Harms in 1907, when she was about 42, if she was born in 1865 as she told the enumerator of the 1910 Census. Then this happened:

2026-04-05. Logansport-Pharos-Reporter-May,29-1917-p-10
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Logansport Pharos-Reporter, 29 May 1917.


Later Logansport directories list her operating a fur and dressmaking business as Cora Dempsey. But I can't find her in censuses or fill in the rest of her story. She may have remarried one or two times.

As for the postcard's sender, Marie Strong — you'd think that with all the Strongs around here I could connect her to someone local, but you'd be wrong. I can't even figure out for sure who she was.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

A New Ainsworth Baby

I came across this little announcement and thought today was a good day to post it, this being Eldon Harms' 102nd birthday anniversary.

2026-04-01. 1924-04-03 News, Births - Eldon Harms
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Hobart News, 3 Apr. 1924.


Above the Harms announcement, another Ross Township birth introduces a name I haven't heard before — Herter. If I've found the right people, Peter and Anna Herter, along with little Indiana-born Madeline, were in Wisconsin by the 1930 Census. I shall see if we get any more news of them before they leave Ross Township.

Random items from the same issue — electricity problems in Deepriver, and isn't it nice to have your own Delco plant? Also, road problems around S.R. 51 and 61st Avenue.

2026-04-01. 1924-04-03 News, Around Deepriver - Delco light plants
(Click on image to enlarge)
Hobart News, 3 Apr. 1924.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

William Kruse, and Elusive Farms

On January 29, 1924, William Kruse died. His obituary tells us how the Kruse schoolhouse got its name.

2026-03-26. 1924-01-31 News, william kruse obit
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Hobart News, 31 Jan. 1924. See also "Wm. Kruse Passes Away," Hobart Gazette, 1 Feb. 1924; "Hobart," Lake County Times (Hammond, Ind.), 2 Feb. 1924.


The only record we have of William owning a farm across from the Crown Hill Cemetery shows up in the 1891 Plat Book — his crossed-out name suggesting that he used to own 39.5 acres in Section 20, Twp. 36 N., Range 7 E. (a half-acre having gone to the school) …

2026-03-26. 1891 Sec. 20, Twp. 36 N, Range 7 E.
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… but had sold it to Wm. H. Rifenburg.

Another connection between William Kruse and the schoolhouse turns up in a Hobart Township Trustee's account book entry dated July 23, 1890:

2026-03-26. HTTA1888-059 1890-07-23 Wm. Kruse - Hobart Twp. Trustee account ledger
(Click on image to enlarge)
Image courtesy of the Hobart Historical Society, Hobart, Indiana.


William received $75.50 for a "school house lot" and 8.5 days' labor. Probably $20-$30 of that was labor (if we can judge by the entry below him, where John North got $27.75 for 8 days' labor plus supplying his own team of horses). Since we know this school was in District #5, we can identify a few more entries relating to it: on August 2, P. (Philip?) Roper was paid $27 for 9 days' work by his team of horses (maybe himself as well); and the same day, William Rifenburg received over $400 for supplying lumber for the Districts 5 and 8 schoolhouses. All of this suggests to me that the Kruse schoolhouse was built in the summer of 1890. The Lake County records say it was built in 1925, but I believe that is an error.

♦    ♦    ♦

And now, let us speak of farms "near Ainsworth."

I was aware of a large farm southeast of Ainsworth that William Kruse bought sometime after 1891 and sold in 1913 to William and Vena Shults. But that is not the farm mentioned in the obituary.

Here is the 1870 Census showing the 13-year-old William Kruse and his siblings with their parents, Frederick and Johanna, in Ross Township:

2026-03-26. 1870 Census Kruse
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Image from Ancestry.com.


Looking at the 1874 Plat Map, we don't find a farm owned by F. Kruse, but we do find one marked "F. Kruser":

2026-03-26. Kruser, Ross Twp. 1874
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And we need only compare F. Kruser's neighbors on the map to Frederick Kruse's neighbors on the 1870 census to see that the map-maker just added an extra r to confuse future generations.

It's hard for me to imagine exactly where the Kruse house stood, as shown on the 1874 map — I have to imagine Hickory Top with no railroad, and to me the railroad seems as much a part of the landscape as the Deep River. And in 1874 Ainsworth Road still followed its original path. I don't suppose the 1874 map-maker was excruciatingly precise about the placement of the house, as he or she seems to place it in the part of the (present-day) horse pasture north of Ainsworth Road that is low and inclined to flood, and probably was the same way back then.

Here is the Kruse farm marked on the 1939 aerial photo (I'm not entirely sure I've got the boundaries right!):

2026-03-26. Kruse farm, 1939 aerial
(Click on image to enlarge)
Image from https://igws.iu.edu/ihapi/map/


The only structure on the property is the station built when the railroad came through in 1880. No trace remains of the old farmhouse, or cabin, or whatever it was. I do wonder if it might have been picked up and moved across the street, and is now hiding as one of the houses on the west side of S.R. 51 described by the county records as having been built in the 1890s. But there is no way of knowing that.

In 1917 when some of the Chester property was involved in an action to quiet title, one of the names involved was Frederick Kreuser. Which makes me ask myself if perhaps that was the original German spelling of their surname, and they decided that Kruse (which is a perfectly good German surname) seem more American? If so, they were remarkably committed to that one Americanization, since Frederick's grave marker, which is otherwise in German ("hier ruhet in Gott…") and gives his first name as Friedrich, sticks with the Kruse surname; so does Mrs. Kruse's. The other possibility is that — especially if the Kruses were not literate — someone else was writing down their name as they spoke it and imagined some extra letters in the German pronunciation of Kruse.

William shares a grave marker with his wife, Minnie, who died in 1897.

♦    ♦    ♦

Emma Dunn, who had looked after William and his family from shortly after Minnie Kruse's death, was also a German immigrant, born circa 1860. I can't trace her before the 1900 census, when she first appears in the Kruse household, widowed, as housekeeper. If I've found the right death certificate, she died in the "Lake County Poor Asylum" on February 1, 1936, and is buried — God knows where.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Darn Lucky Kids of Ainsworth

This photo was (somewhat crudely) printed on a postcard …

2026-03-23. 1909-04-29 Playhouse (unidentified) Ainsworth to Deepriver 01
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… and mailed on April 29, 1909, from Ainsworth to the 13-year-old Phillip Waldeck in Deepriver (by someone who didn't know how to spell Phillip):

2026-03-23. 1909-04-29 Playhouse (unidentified) Ainsworth to Deepriver 02

These lucky kids are unidentified. I think their parents memorialized this awesome playhouse by taking the photo and having it printed on at least one postcard. So many nice things! — kid-sized rocking chairs, two dolls, a teddy bear loading up a toy train, and curtains in the window.

What do you want to bet these kids were some of Philly's many Maybaum cousins? I'm just taking a wild guess.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Never Trust a Cute Goat Story

I thought this goat story was cute, and its being on the front page of this small-town newspaper was cute, too.

2026-03-15. 1924-01-24 News, There Are Goats, and Goats, and Goats
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Hobart News, 24 Jan. 1924.


As everyone in Hobart in 1924 did, we know the Veal family: Walter Veal married Hazel Thompson in August 1922, and we saw the announcement in November 1923 of the birth of that little daughter.

Reading further in the microfilm, I found this item in the "Local Drifts" of the Hobart Gazette of March 21, 1924.
Baby Ruth Olivia, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Veal, who live on South Center street, died suddenly about 7 o'clock Wednesday morning, March 19, aged 3 months and 20 days. The child had seemed rather delicate all along, and gave the parents much anxiety. Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Church of Christ by Rev. R. Warren Main.
The death certificate gives the cause of death as maramus, with bronchitis contributory.

At this point the goat story stopped being cute, and became a story of worried parents trying ineffectually to help their very sick baby. I was moved to look further into this family, and found a long history of trouble and grief.

We know that Myrtle, Walter's previous wife, had a nervous breakdown and then died "due to a complication of diseases." When we check the death certificate, we find a grim situation: the contributory cause was interstitial nephritis; the main cause was dementia praecox, which, as I understand it, is an outdated term for schizophrenia.

I initially thought Myrtle had been Walter's second wife. A little digging on Ancestry.com brought me to a family tree that had dived deep and found two wives before her. The first, Iva Ball, had married Walter in 1900 in Preble County, Ohio (not too far from his hometown of Greens Fork, Indiana); they were divorced sometime before May of 1907, when she remarried. (I believe the stepdaughter referenced in Myrtle's obituary was born during this marriage: Lucille Veal Fye (1901-1973).) In 1907 Walter married Florence Olvey in Wayne County, Indiana; they were divorced in Colorado in 1910. In 1911 came his marriage to Myrtle Mantauk in Cass County, Indiana.

One man with two divorces was unusual in the early 20th century. It didn't bode well, then or now. Did Hazel Thompson know about Walter's past when she decided to marry him?

Less than a year after Walter and Hazel lost their little daughter, they had another: Ellwyn Lorraine, born in Hobart on January 5, 1925, who would be known by her middle name. The Veal family was still in Hobart when Kenneth Lee Enos was born in March 1927. By June 1929, when Mary Margaret was born, they had moved to the unincorporated village of Mexico, Indiana, where they remained at least through April 1930 when the 1930 census was taken.

They were in the small town of Akron, Indiana for the births of their next two children: Enos Glen (January 1931) and Robert Glen (July 1932).[1]

Then the family moved to Nappanee, where Doris Jean was born in October 1934 and George Morris (named for Hazel's dead father) in December 1936.

That's a lot of children and a lot of moving in ten years. This was all happening during the Great Depression, while Walter was practiced a dying trade (blacksmithing), so I imagine the family's life was not easy.

This 1937 story came out of Nappanee:

2026-03-15. Children Find Journey Short, South Bend Tribune, 1937-06-25, p. 21
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South Bend Tribune, 25 June 1937.


The children were probably Kenneth (10) and Enos (6). The grandmother in question was Nancy Thompson. I remember Eldon Harms telling me that Nancy sewed clothing for her grandchildren, and the Eva Thompson collection includes an envelope sent to Nancy from Nappanee on which someone has noted a measurement for Nancy's use in sewing a dress for the eldest Veal child, Lorraine:

EvaT053
(Click on images to enlarge)
Images above and below courtesy of Eldon Harms.


EvaT054

But something tells me that the 1937 story about the hitchhiking children is not as whimsical as it sounds. The kids might have wanted to go see their nice grandma, yes; but they might also have wanted to escape from a home that was stressful and perhaps even violent. The "something" telling me that is a 1939 story:

2026-03-15. Circuit Court, Elkhart Truth (Elkhart, Ind.), 24 Feb. 1939
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"Circuit Court," Elkhart Truth, 24 Feb. 1939.


The 1940 census, taken in April and May, records a scattered family. Walter was still an inmate at the Putnam County penal farm. Hazel was in St. Joseph County, keeping house for a widowed farmer with four children; her youngest child, George, was living there too.[2] The three boys, Kenneth, Enos, and Robert,[3] were all in Elkhart County, living at the Bashor Children's Home. The two oldest girls, Lorraine and Mary Margaret, were in Wabash County, inmates of the White Manual Labor Institute.[4] Five-year-old Doris Jean had been adopted by a childless Indianapolis couple, William and Hazel Hart, and was now named Carolyn.[5]

Hazel was finished with Walter. By November 1940, she had moved to South Bend and filed for divorce.

2026-03-15. Beating Victim Seeks Divorce from Prisoner, South Bend Tribune, 13 Nov.  1940
(Click on image to enlarge)
South Bend Tribune, 13 Nov. 1940.


In January 1941, Hazel married the 55-year-old Otto Keck, whose wife had died in the spring of 1940. He had three adult children,[6] and lived in the village of Wyatt, southeast of South Bend, where he operated his own well-drilling business. There Hazel joined him. No doubt she brought little George with her; I'd like to think she brought her other children as well.

On July 11, 1942, at the age of 41, Hazel gave birth to twins — Jerry Alan and Joyce Ann. The following year, they died within a day of each other.

2026-03-15. Joyce and Jerry Keck, Bremen Enquirer, 4 Nov. 1943
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Bremen Inquirer, 4 Nov. 1943.


According to their death certificates, Joyce died of scurvy, Jerry of broncho-pneumonia, but both suffered from malnutrition. Perhaps the disorder that had killed little Ruth in 1924 had surfaced again. But unlike Ruth, who seems to be lying in an unmarked grave in Crown Hill Cemetery, these little ones' graves are marked with an impressive stone.

By the way, I am not reassured by the fact that of all Hazel's own children, only George is listed among the survivors in the twins' death notice. The others may have still been scattered. But Robert, at least, joined Otto and Hazel's household in time to be counted with them, and his brother George, in the 1950 census.

After the twins, Hazel had no more children, and — aside from losing her mother in 1944 — no more heartbreak, I hope, at least until Otto died in 1959. All her other children were still living at Hazel's death in 1972.


When Eldon Harms was telling me about the Thompson family, he never hinted that Hazel's life had been so difficult. Perhaps he didn't know.

_______________
[1] I can't find a birth certificate for Enos. I got his birth date from his Korean War draft registration.
[2] To the enumerator (or maybe to her employer), she described herself as widowed.
[3] The census enumerator put him down as "Lester" Veal, but his age is right for Robert.
[4] The enumerator added a note to the name: "home for problem children." This institution, during the latter part of the 19th century, had been one of the notorious boarding schools in which Native American children were forcibly placed.
[5] I owe this information to a family tree on Ancestry.com; I would never have figured it out on my own. The 1940 census reported that Carolyn had been living in the Hart home since 1935, which would mean she was adopted as an infant, but that may have been an assumption on the enumerator's part. (I mean, the enumerator might have asked one of the adults, "Where were you living in 1935?"; that person said, "Here"; and the enumerator assumed the answer applied to the child too.)
[6] Still living, that is; one son had been killed in an accident in 1938.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Dead Man's Curve

"The curve west of Ainsworth on the Lincoln highway" — there is only one.



It may be haunted by a Fort Wayne "booze runner" who met his untimely end there sometime in 1923.

2026-03-10. 1924-01-24 News, Booze Runner Gets Six Months
Hobart News, 24 Jan. 1924.

$200 in 1924 would be nearly $4,000 today.

That spot is also known by the locals, so I am told, as Whiskey Corner (because people who drank and drove tended to smash up there).