Cousin LaVerne Mooney:
Part II – A Melancholy Middle
St. Luke did not have many facts about our Lord upon which to report for His ages 12 to 30 years. Neither do I for LaVerne. In the absence of facts, as every Irishman knows, one is allowed an increase in degrees of freedom to invoke one’s own inspired imagination. While inspired, unlike the sainted physician, I am only imperfectly so. The leaps I take in this missive, I trust, the reader will find, at least, reasonable.
The U.S. 1910 Census informs us that Laverne, age 12, resided at the Mooney Rockport (aka “Berea”) farm. Question: Where did James and LaVerne reside from 1902 until James was institutionalized on March 25, 1905? I think it reasonable to speculate that at some point after Cora’s death in November 1902, James and LaVerne moved to the Berea farm.
James Leo Mooney’s death certificate indicates the cause of death as chronic myocarditis with epilepsy as a contributory cause. The coroner’s report states that the onset of James heart condition, the immediate cause of death, was in 1930. The report also notes that signs of epilepsy, the contributory cause, began in 1900. If true then James epileptic like seizures began before the traumatic events of his life in 1902, i.e., death of his daughter, Loretta, and wife, Cora.
If accurate, the coroner’s report also tells us that James’ unpredictable seizures likely rendered him an unreliable caretaker for his infant daughter after Cora’s death. LaVerne’s maternal grandparents, the Kelseys, lived more than 40 miles away in Kipton, Ohio. We also know that Captain Ed’s modus operandi was never to abandon his own when in need.
So, shortly after Cora
Kelsey Mooney’s death in November 1902, I speculate that, James (age 32) and
LaVerne (age 4) joined the Mooney family becoming then the 7th and 8th
members of Captain Ed’s clan to take up residence at the farm: Captain Ed (age
57), his wife Margaret (age 46), sons William (age 25), Charles (age 17),
daughter Zita (age 12) and sister-in-law Sarah (Sadie) Sharon (age 43).
After 3 years of caring for his eldest son at the farm, Captain Ed decided, reluctantly I believe, to commit James to the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics in hopes that James would be cured of his seizures.
LaVerne Mooney |
We do have (a tip of the hat again to Chuck Hallinan!) a news
article reporting that Zita and LaVerne visited LaVerne’s maternal grandparents (the Kelsey’s) in Kipton, Ohio (~ 20 miles southwest of Elyria) in August 1906. The article suggests that Zita was a friend to Cora Kelsey’s sister, Nellie, who was just 6 months younger than Zita.Aunt Zita and LaVerne: "Kipton or bust!" |
Best guess: a 1904 De Dion-Bouton Model Z Tonneau |
1910-De-Dion-Bouton-Modele-Routier-25 |
First "Berea 1" road race ~ 1910.
Edwardian cars driven by ladies with Edwardian hats. (No hats or hairdos were injured in this race; top speed ~20 Mph) .
LaVerne Mooney |
LaVerne Mooney |
As Chuck Hallinan has reported in this blog, the year 1918 was a hard one for the Mooney family. In March, Zita’s mother, Margaret, died and in December, Evangeline died.
Charles & LaVerne Mooney |
In 1920, LaVerne and Zita vacated the farm and took up residence at Zita’s newly purchased home at 4827 Riverside Dr., located just south of the farm. A number of real estate transactions beginning in 1920 and culminating in 1923 show that Captain Ed’s heirs and the Sharon heirs sold both the Mooney and Sharon farms.
During this time, 1915 - 1920, LaVerne pursued her education, qualifying as a stenographer around 1920. The stenotype, invented in 1913, was the novel Information Technology machine at the turn of the 20th century. Stenographers, like LaVerne, were at the cutting edge of modern office technologies.
LaVerne Mooney |
From 1921 to 1923, LaVerne worked as stenographer for various companies in the Cleveland area. In 1922, or thereabouts, Zita relocated to San Antonio to join step-brother Charles in his business as an interior decorator. We lose track of LaVerne from 1923 to 1928. However, by 1928, we know that LaVerne is in Columbus, OH.
Sometime after Zita’s left Ohio in 1922 and before 1928, LaVerne relocated to Columbus, perhaps to allow more frequent visits to her father at the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics in Gallipolis (~ 100 miles to the south) or to intervene in his treatment. A movement was underway to legalize the sterilization of "undesirables", i.e., epileptics, in Ohio and the hospital's superintendent was a strong promoter. The idea of Social Darwinism altered Darwin's notion of the survival of the fittest to survival for only the fittest. The idea of eliminating the "unfit" from society influenced Americans, especially during early 1920’s. The acceptance of eugenics, especially the sterilization of epileptic inmates, as a necessary treatment to protect society from the "feeble-minded" was growing. It's promoters began to seek enabling legislation to work their largely unfounded hypothesis. (See Post Script: Ohio Hospital for Epileptics- Hospital or Asylum?).
On May 5, 1928, LaVerne (age 29) and Mearl Harned (age 37) applied for a marriage license at the Franklin County courthouse and solemnized their marriage the following month on June 15, 1928. In the subsequent year, the 1929 Columbus City Directory lists LaVerne as a stenographer at the Town & Village Insurance Agency. A good guess is that LaVerne met Mearl at the Columbus office of the Equitable Life Insurance Company where Mearl was an Assistant Manager.
Family tradition reports that “Mearl took off with another woman” shortly after they relocated to PA. A good guess as to the “other woman” was Golda Nevada Hanes, a local who, like Mearl, was in her second marriage also soon to be on the rocks. After being deserted in ~ 1930, LaVerne returned to Cleveland but did not divorce Mearl until sometime after 1937. Mearl and Golda bounced around as “man and wife” in PA and NY until 1960 when Mearl married “Goldie”.
We know that LaVerne was close to her aunt Zita. Chuck H’s research shows that, until her death in April 1939, Aunt Sarah (Sadie) Sharon was also close to her niece, Zita. After Zita’s departure to Texas from ~ 1922 to 1937, and LaVerne’s to Pennsylvania, the threesome reunited in Cleveland sometime before 1937.
(It is, I think, odd that Sarah is absent in all the Mooney group photos (that I have) taken at the farm during family reunions. Perhaps Sarah was the group’s designated photographer.)
LaVerne, Zita and Sadie -- Lifelong Friends
Sarah (Sadie) Sharon |
Bridget (Aunt) Zita Mooney |
LaVerne Mooney |
1343 West Blvd. |
The 1934 Cleveland City Directory lists LaVerne (age 36) and Sarah (Sadie) Mooney (age 75) residing at 1343 West Blvd. It's reasonable to think that LaVerne on her return to Cleveland moved in to live with her great Aunt Sadie.
Sometime before May of 1937, Aunt Zita returned to Cleveland from San Antonio and joined LaVerne and Sarah at the same address. The San Antonio, Texas newspaper's report on the death of Charles Mooney's reads, "Charles Mooney ... died in Cleveland, Ohio, Thursday night after a year's illness. ... He disposed of his interests here a month ago and went to Cleveland to reside with his sister, Miss Vita [sic] Mooney." Charles died May 20, 1937 (age 52).
The three generations of Sharon/Mooney women, reunited after 15 years, remained at the West Blvd. address until Sarah's death on April 3, 1939 (age 80). After Sarah's death, records show that LaVerne moved to 1373 W. 80th Street Apt. #4. Although the City Directory does not list Aunt Zita as residing in the same apartment building on W. 80th until 1951, it's reasonable to assume she remained with LaVerne after Sarah's death.
Another Tip o' the Hat to those who contribute to the PAF file! |
Post Script: Ohio Hospital for Epileptics- Hospital or Asylum?
Gallipolis is along the
Ohio River about 55 miles
southeast of Chillicothe and 44 miles northwest of Charleston, West Virginia. In 1892,
Governor William McKinley of Ohio authorized funding for the construction of a
facility to care of for the state’s epileptics. (McKinley’s wife, Ida
Saxton, after the death of their two infant daughters [Katherine (b.1871,
d.1875] and Ida [b.1873, d.1873], descended into a deep depression and was
diagnosed as epileptic.) Moved perhaps
by his personal experience, McKinley initiated the first public work program in
the United States to provide for the care of epileptics.… there were approximately 7,000 Ohio residents with epilepsy, many residing in the community with varying degrees of success and supervision, with 417 in county infirmaries, 165 in state asylums and 64 in county jails—646 in all. (Ohio Hospital for Epileptics (1901). CE Brinkworth, Buffalo, NY, pp. 6–8).
The Ohio Legislature provisionally titled the facility, “The Asylum for Epileptics and Epileptic Insane”. Prior to its opening, the facility underwent a name change to, “The Ohio Hospital for Epileptics”, indicating a lack of understanding as to the cause of the disease and its treatabiltiy. On Thanksgiving Day, November 20, 1893, Governor McKinley declared the opening of the facility for the admission of patients, the first of the specialized epilepsy colonies in the United States.
In 1901, the hospital consisted of an administration building, thirteen residence cottages, a number of support buildings, and a building for insane patients that could house two hundred people. Unfortunately, the early reviews were not good: The original institution … was little better than a series of unlovely barracks, closely grouped, of severe lines and cheerless. The so-called “cottages” were designed for from fifty to seventy-five patients each, admitted of little or no clinical aggregation of cases, and were much too large for discipline. In fact, the original plan of institution apparently was the creating of a special almshouse for the housing of the state’s epileptics. (JAMA; October 15, 1904; THE OHIO HOSPITAL FOR EPILEPTICS, Vol. .)
It seems clear that there was growing acceptance of eugenics in the general environment of institutional care in Ohio. By an act of the Legislature during the 1910–11 session, a Central Board of Administration was created to oversee all state benevolent institutions, uniting 18 state institutions under one administrative authority. In 1912, Allen W. Thurman, President of the State Board of Administration, declared that if a law for sterilization was not passed the State of Ohio would be bankrupt within ten years by the expense of caring for the weak-minded (New York Times, 9/25/1912).
In 1918, The Ohio State Institution Journal was established, publishing articles from staff and superintendents across Ohio’s institutions. Here eugenic views were very publicly espoused, advocating the need to segregate “the unfit” of many types, including those with epilepsy, and curtail their ability to reproduce through surgical means (Emerick, 1918; Haynes, 1920; Clark, 1920; Goebel, 1920).
Dr. G. G. Kineon headed the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics for 32 years from June 1911 until his death in 1943. Following Dr. Kineon’s appointment as Superintendent, “there was growing acceptance of eugenics in the general environment of institutional care in Ohio” (Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3775289/).
{His] eugenic views were very publicly espoused, advocating the need to segregate “the unfit” of many types, including those with epilepsy, and curtail their ability to reproduce through surgical means. …
In 1919, in “Heredity as a Factor in Epilepsy”, Kineon discussed the causes of epilepsy with an emphasis on hereditary. He showed a bias to assume a hereditary etiology …
The State of Ohio alone has between eight thousand and nine thousand recorded epileptics … a great many of these are unrestricted and allowed to propagate their species … this is a big mistake and a gross injustice to the people of our State.
… may it not be well to consider sterilization of the chronically defective as a means of preventing the propagation of their species? (John Schwartz, Assistant Physician at the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics).
Our failure [at treating epilepsy] is largely due to the fact that we are trying to tackle the problem from the wrong end. We … neglect to cure those who may succeed him. In other words, … we start to find a way to prevent them from developing into new plants like the parents from which they sprang.
If you cut down the parent thistle plant, there can be no production of its kind. The same holds good with the epileptic—only we cannot actually cut down the parent, but the production of the offspring can be prevented …
There are different methods by which a reduction in the number of defectives may be accomplished; first, by education of the general public concerning …the best methods to prevent the continuance of undesirable hereditary taints …. Education is the only method which will induce people to adopt such preventative measures as segregation and sterilization. (Kineon, 1920, p. 59).
What the eugenists lacked in data, they made up with enthusiasm. Under the pretense of being science, the promoters claimed the cause of the "defectives" burdening society to be hereditary. The promise of eugenics -- the controlled breeding of supermen -- coursed across the U.S. How would LaVerne, a 22 year old woman, the daughter of a diagnosed and institutionalized epileptic, react to this crusade to sterilize the "feeble-minded"? Did LaVerne believe she had the predisposition for epilepsy? Did thinking so affect her decision to marry or have children? We'll have to wait for the Parousia to find out.
See: The Eugenics Crusade https://www.pbs.org/video/the-eugenics-crusade-jtaetc/
Post-Post Script:
I recall in a family tradition that Martin Leo Mooney died from falling on or being gored by a cow's horn. Perhaps the story cited Martin Leo instead of James Leo as the victim and the fact that James Leo survived rather than died was less dramatic (Irish rule on storytelling employed).
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