On April 1, 1910, George Albert, my uncle, was born to Ellen and Adlore Vadnais. Ellen was 22 years old and Adlore was 21 years old. At the time of George’s birth the couple was renting and living with Adlore’s mother Jennie Vadnais at her home on the northeast corner of Murray Avenue and Third Street in White Bear Lake. The address was 253 Third Street.
At the time George was born, Adlore was working for the railroad as a freight handler, a job he had held for just over 4 months.
George was baptized by Father M. A. Ryan at St. Mary of the Lake Church on April 17, 1910. His godparents were his grandparents Albert and Celestine Peltier. The record shows an incorrect birth day of April 5th.3
George’s brother Charles Adlore was also born in this home, the same home where their father Adlore had been born.
On June 10, 1912 Adlore and Ellen purchased Lot 30, Oakhurst Acres, White Bear Lake, Ramsey County, Minnesota.4 The address at that time was 1309 Fourth Street and the property was about an acre in size.
The family moved about two blocks away to their new home on Fourth Street where George would welcome ten more siblings and also, as quite a young boy, witness the death of 2 of those siblings.
George’s future wife, Frances (Fran) Catherine McHugh was born on June 21, 1912 in Aberdeen, Brown County, South Dakota to Michael and Winifred (Maney) McHugh.5 She was the 4th of 6 children born to the couple.
In the 1920s, the McHugh family moved to White Bear Lake.
Both George and Fran attended St. Mary’s School where they probably first met one another.
George received his first Holy Communion on May 30, 1920 at St. Mary’s Church and he was confirmed at the church on October 14, 1923.
Fran would continue her education at St. Joseph’s Academy in St. Paul, graduating from there in 1930.6 George would attend at least one year of high school before going to work. During his teen years he was employed as a delivery boy for Long’s Grocery in White Bear and he also worked at White Bear Drug Store as a soda jerk.
In 1929 tragically George was burned in an accident involving kerosene. He was sent to California to recuperate. The pictures taken of him out west speak to the recuperative powers of his trip. Don’t forget, the United States had Prohibition from 1920 to 1933. George was just 9 years old when it started and when he went to California at 19 years old, Tijuana, Mexico, just south of San Diego, was the place to go to experience “the world.” Mexico had no anti-drinking laws and for those that liked to throw money around while imbibing, there was gambling. It must have been quite the draw for young George. Nothing like he had ever seen before!
The couple with George in the Log-Cabin Bar picture is also in the previous picture. I assume that he would have been staying with someone that the family knew. Alvina O’Neil, George’s first cousin once removed, daughter of Cordelia (Vadnais) and William O’Neil, lived in Whittier, California at the time; I wonder if this is her and her husband, William Caezza. I’m not sure that we’ll ever know.
October 29, 1929, Black Tuesday, marked the beginning of the Great Depression. Judging from the growth of White Bear Oil Company, the Vadnais family was not heavily impacted. The 1930 census enumerates 20 year old George in the family home at 1309 4th Street along with his parents and 9 siblings who range in age from 18 years old down to 13 days old. George is shown as being in the oil company industry as a truck driver.7 I assume he was delivering fuel for White Bear Oil Company, which by then was located on the northwest corner of 4th Street and Bald Eagle Avenue.
TO BE CONTINUED…
Thanks for visiting, come back soon,
Cynthia
© 2024 Copyright by Cynthia Vadnais, All Rights Reserved
Footnotes for George Albert Vadnais and Frances Catherine McHugh post (part 1)
My heart is full! Thank you so much, Cynthia!
Love, Sue
About the stock market crash—-my mom retold the story of grandpa coming home, taking grandma to the stairs off the dining room, closing the door and giving her the bad news of what they’d lost, crying.
Great story, anxious to continue reading. Thanks so much, Cynthia.
oxoxox
Cindy,
What a great post!!! Thanks so much for all of your hard work…things I never would have known if not for your dedication. It’s wonderful to learn so much about our family.
Mary
This is absolutely the best! Love seeing the pictures and reading the history of our family. Miss Grandpa and Grandma every day!
Thank you, Cynthia!
There are so many photos I’ve never seen of our Grandpa Vadnais!
Just love reading about the old days and looking at the pictures with the descriptions!
Thanks Cindy 😊
Great story and pictures!
Fran