Name | Hildred Rosamond Thurow | |
Birth | 25 Sep 1897 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA |
Christening | 24 May 1898 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA |
Gender | Female | |
Graduation | 1915 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA |
Winona High School | ||
Graduation | 6 Jun 1917 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA |
Winona Normal School | ||
Occupation | 1917-1919 | Sanborn, Redwood County, Minnesota, USA |
Music Supervisor, Sanborn Schools, | ||
Occupation | 1919-1921 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA [2] |
3rd grade teacher, Jefferson School | ||
Residence | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA | |
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_UID | CF324DF6C0734746ABCE6CF9814BB3D4353D | |
Death | 30 Aug 1993 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA |
Burial | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA, Woodlawn Cemetery | |
Person ID | I11 | Larry and Jane's Family Tree |
Last Modified | 21 May 2023 |
Father | Louis Henry Thurow, b. 14 Sep 1860, Kolberg, , Pomerania, Germany d. 26 Dec 1943, Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA (Age 83 years) | |
Mother | Emma Lenore Staack, b. 23 Dec 1859, Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA d. 7 Nov 1941, Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA (Age 81 years) | |
Marriage | 24 May 1883 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA |
Family ID | F14 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family | Rolland Harvey Wilson, b. 30 Apr 1895, New Hartford Township, Winona County, Minnesota, USA, Dakota Village d. 11 Jan 1974, Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA (Age 78 years) | |||||||
Marriage | 17 Sep 1921 | Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, USA | ||||||
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Children |
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Family ID | F7 | Group Sheet | Family Chart | ||||||
Last Modified | 21 May 2023 |
Event Map |
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Photos | Hildred_Thurow_Wilson.jpg | |
Emma and Louis Thurow, Hildred and Rolland Wilson on steps Probably taken at Louis Thurow's house in Winona | ||
Louis and Emma Thurow Family | ||
Hildred Thurow at age 12 Hildred apparently sent this picture to her sister, Clara, in Duluth, MN, in August of 1910. The back of this picture is a postcard where she has written: "Sis. Now how do you like. Some face, all grin & no smiles. Babe" | ||
Hildred Thurow by train tracks (1915) From Page 49b in Hildred's Album | ||
Hildred Thurow walking by shore of Lake From Page 43a in Hildred's album Probably taken on shore of Lake Winona | ||
Hildred Thurow Age 13 (1910) From Page 09b in Hildred's Album | ||
Family at Thurow Cottage in Dakota Louis Thurow, Emma Thurow, Louis James Wilson, ?, ?, James Thurow, Dave Wilson, Hildred Wilson, ? Can anyone help identify the other persons in this photograph? | ||
Three Thurow Sisters - Laura (Dot), Clara, Hildred Taken in Hildred Wilson's new home on Washington Street in Winona | ||
Hildred Thurow sitting on porch From Page 12a of Hildred's album The house is located on the corner of Harriet and W. 3rd Streets in Winona | ||
Hildred Thurow and sports fans (1915) From Page 32a of Hildred's album Hildred and friends were cheering for Winona High at a game versus La Crosse | ||
Hildred Thurow sitting on gravestone (1913) From Page 03a in Hildred's album. This picture was probably taken at Woodlawn Cemetery in Winona | ||
Women on Railroad Hand Car From Page 08a in Hildred's album Taken near Sugarloaf Hill in Winona. Hildred is in front on the left. | ||
Women on Railroad Hand Car (1915) From Page 09a in Hildred's album. Another picture of the women riding the railroad hand car near Sugarloaf in Winona. Hildred is on the right in this picture. | ||
Hildred Thurow in tree with three women nearby (1915) From Page 09a in Hildred's album The two women in the picture are not identified. The picture was probably taken near Lake Winona. | ||
Hildred and Three Other Women From page 23a in Hildred's album. The other women may be family members. It appears that they are going on an outing. The inscription reads, "A' Board." | ||
Hildred and Others in Easter Outfits (1914) From Page 25a in Hildred's album I suspect that some of the other individuals in the picture are family members but I haven't positively identified them. | ||
Hildred at Slumber Party (1914) From Page 32b in Hildred's album | ||
Hildred with Girls in Woods (1914) From Page 32b in Hildred's album Hildred is on the left | ||
Girls after swimming at Latch bathhouse From Page 34a in Hildred's album The note next to the picture is "After the Dip." Hildred is on the right. The Latch beach was directly across the Mississippi River from downtown Winona. It may no longer be there. | ||
Hildred Thurow with Sophomore Girls (1913) Form Page 02a of Hildred's album. Hildred is on the left. | ||
Hildred Thurow with high school friends in La Crosse (1913) From Page 02a in Hildred's album Hildred is in the second row | ||
Hildred Thurow on lawn with another girl (1911) From Page 03a in Hildred's album This picture was taken prior to the construction of the Thurow home on Harriet and W. 3rd Streets in 1912. I have not located the address where it was taken. | ||
Girls Making Fudge at Thurow Home From Page 06b in Hildred's album. This picture was taken near the front porch of the house that Louis Thurow built at the corner of Harriet and W. 3rd Streets in Winona. The house is still standing and the Thurow box factory was on the same block on the corner of Wilson and W. 3rd Streets. When the house was built, the box factory could be seen from the back of the house, but there are now some intervening buildings. | ||
Hildred and brother changing tire on Brush Runabout car (1912) From Page 10a in Hildred's album. According to Wikipedia: The Brush company was founded by Alanson Partridge Brush (February 10, 1878, Michigan – March 6, 1952, Michigan). He was a self-taught prolific designer, working with Henry Leland at Oldsmobile, and went on to helped design the original one-cylinder Cadillac engine.[1] Although there were many makes of small runabouts of similar size and one to four cylinders at this time (before the Model T Ford dominated the low-price market), the Brush has many unusual design details showing the inventiveness of its creator. The Brush Runabout Company, along with Maxwell-Briscoe, Stoddard-Dayton, and others formed Benjamin Briscoe's United States Motor Company(USMC) from 1910, ending when that company failed in 1913. Runabouts, in general, fell out of vogue quickly, partly due to the lack of protection from the weather. After Brush and the other companies of the USMC folded into Maxwell Motor Company, President Walter Flanders wrote in 1913 document "Why We Did Not Use All Our Plants", the Brush factory in Detroit (along with the Flanders and Sampson Plants) were to remain open and running as factories. Touted as the "Everyman's Car", Brush designed a light car with a wooden chassis (wooden rails and iron cross-members), friction drive transmission and "underslung" coil springs in tension instead of compression on both sides of each axle. Two gas-powered headlamps provided light, along with a gas-powered light in the rear. The frame, axles, and wheels were made of oak, hickory or maple, and were either left plain or painted to match the trim. Wider axles were available for use in the Southern region of the United States, where a 60-inch tread fit wagon ruts on country roads.[3] The horn was located next to the engine cover, with a metal tube running to a squeeze bulb affixed near the driver. A small storage area was provided in the rear, with a drawer accessible under the rear of the seat. The engines were a single-cylinder, four-stroke water cooled design, producing 6BHP, with power going to a chain-driven rear axle. The rear-axle disengaged one of the rear wheels while driving around a curve to avoid undue wear and tear on the drivetrain. A feature of engines designed by Brush was that they ran counter-clockwise instead of the usual clockwise. This was Brush's idea intended to make them safer for a right-handed person to crank-start by hand. Prior to the invention of the electric starter, crank-starting a clockwise-running engines frequently resulted in dislocated thumbs and broken forearms if the hand crank kicked back on starting. According to a contemporary review from Cycle and Automobile Trade Journal in 1907, author Hugh Dolnar described the recently introduced Brush as a "...very, very new and also very, very old, as will be seen from the detailed construction illustrations below..." In his critique of the Brush, Dolnar was referencing the decision to use wooden axles. | ||
Hildred Driving Brush Runabout (1912) From Page 14a in Hildred's album The other individual in the car is possibly Hildred's brother, Bill. | ||
Hildred with group of friends on fence From page 22a in Hildred's album Hildred is on the far right. There is no date on this album page. The inscription on this picture is only "Well, Here we go." | ||
Hildred Thurow and Friends Outdoors From Page 23a in Hildred's album Hildred is at the center of the picture | ||
Hildred Thurow on Bench (1915) From page 42b of Hildred's album | ||
Girls on Latch Beach in swimsuits From Page 34a in Hildred's album Hildred is second from the right. | ||
Hildred with other girls in woods (Summer 1914) From Page 01a in Hildred's album Hildred is the one on the right. They are really dressed up to be romping in the woods. The other girls in the picture are unidentified. | ||
Another picture of girls in the woods (Summer 1914) From Page 01b in Hildred's album | ||
Hildred and her friends wading (1913) From Page 04a in Hildred's album. | ||
Hildred and her friends on edge of water (1913 From page 04a of Hildred's album | ||
Hildred and three others posing in outfits (1914) From Page 04b in Hildred's album. This picture was taken in the yard of the house on Harriet Street. The three other persons are not identified. | ||
Hildred playing guitar in yard (1914) From Page 04b in Hildred's album. Picture taken in yard of house on Harriet Street in Winona. I think this is Hildred but I am not sure. | ||
Hildred with cheerleader flag in yard (1914) From Page 03b in Hildred's album | ||
Hildred and girlfriends lying on grass with feet up (1913) From page 05a in Hildred's album. Hildred is possibly the girl on the right. | ||
Four Thurow sisters (Gertrude, Clara, Hildred, Laura) From Page 27b in Hildred's album I think these are the four sisters. It definitely looks like Gertrude on the left and I think the others might be Hildred's other two sisters. There is no note on this page. | ||
Girls on steps of school (1914) From Page 20a in Hildred's album Hildred is second from left. | ||
Hildred Thurow in boat at summer camp (1915) From Page 49a in Hildred's album. There are four pictures on this page which is dated August 23-29, 1915). They appear to have been taken at a summer camp. | ||
Girls at summer camp in water (1915) From Page 49a in Hildred's album. Hildred appears to be the girl on the left. | ||
Hildred with two other girls on railroad mail cart (1912) From Page 10a in Hildred's album. Hildred is on the left. This picture possibly could have been taken at the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad tracks. | ||
Hildred in yard dressed as Indian maiden From Page 03b in Hildred's album. The picture was taken in the yard of the Thurow house on Harriet Street so it would have been in 1913 or later. | ||
Girl and Hildred rowing boat at summer camp (1915) From Page 48b in Hildred's album. The inscription on the page is "Camp Nepahwin, Black Bird Island." I have not been able to locate this island. There is a Lake Nepahwin south of Sudbury, Ontario, north of Lake Huron, but there is no Black Bird Island there. These pictures seem to have been taken somewhere on the Mississippi River. | ||
Hildred in Tree (1910) From Page 09b in Hildred's album. It seems she really liked climbing trees. | ||
Hildred sitting in front of a building. From Page 11a in Hildred's album. The location of this building has not been identified. The caption is only "Interesting." | ||
Hildred and two other girls on fence From Page 13a in Hildred's album) This picture was maybe taken on the road across Lake Winona. | ||
Hildred Sitting on Pile of Logs From Page 17a in Hildred's album. The inscription next to this picture is "Bums." | ||
Hildred and two guys at cookout From Page 18a of Hildred's album. The two guys are unidentified. | ||
Hildred Standing on Road From Page 18a in Hildred's album. This picture maybe is taken on the road that is now U.S. Highway 61, somewhere in the vicinity of the Village of Dakota. It looks like Queen's Bluff is in the background. The inscription next to the picture is "It's Empty." | ||
Cookout From Page 21a in Hildred's album. Hildred appears to be the person standing. It looks as if they are cooking pancakes. | ||
Seven Girls Sitting on Grass From Page 33a in Hildred's album. | ||
Two Girls Walking Up Hill From Page 33b in Hildred's album. It looks like Hildred on the right. There is a horse in the background. The caption is "All a Mistake." | ||
Five Girls Walking on Road From Page 40a in Hildred's album. Hildred is the girl in the middle | ||
Hildred Walking by Shore of Lake Winona From Page 41a in Hildred's album | ||
Hildred Walking on Bluffs From Page 41a in Hildred's album. It looks like it might be Kings Bluff or Queen's Bluff in the background. These bluffs are south of Winona about 17 miles near La Moille, a small village | ||
Hildred Walking on Road Below Bluffs From Page 42a in Hildred's album. The location of this picture is recognizable as along W. Lake Street which runs at the base of the bluffs near Lake Winona. The wall she is standing by is still there. | ||
Hildred Walking in Woods From Page 43b in Hildred's album. | ||
Hildred Lying in Flowers From Page 43b in Hildred's album | ||
Hildred on Steamer G.W. Hill (July 28, 1915) From Page 45a in Hildred's album. Assume this was taken on the excursion to La Crosse. | ||
Hildred on Steps From Page 48a in Hildred's album. The person behind Hildred seems to be kneeling at the door which seems strange. | ||
Hildred Walking on Path From Page 28b in Hildred's album. | ||
Hildred in Yard From page 50b in Hildred's album. |
Notes |
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Sources |
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