Losing her mother—and in such a devastating way—must have
been difficult for Rose Kober. Though we can hope life turned out better for
Rose in the years following Anna Kraus’ 1921 death, such wishes don’t always
come true.
Looking through the New
York City area newspapers of the era, the Kober name
surfaced a number of times in that same decade. Though I often comment that
mine was not a family likely to have their name show up in The New York Times, in this one case, I have to take that statement
back, for Rose’s mother-in-law became the next subject in my search.
Appearing on page forty six of the August 10, 1927, edition
was the following brief entry, under “Wills for Probate—Queens”:
KOBER, PAULINE D. (July 31). Estate $3,000 real and $3,000 personal. To brother, John J. Hutton of 717 Ninety-sixth Street, Woodhaven; grandchildren, Pauline M. Thomas of 93-17 Eighty-fifth Avenue, Woodhaven; Florence H. Thomas and Clara B. Thomas of 80-00 Ninety-sixth Street, Woodhaven; daughter, Pauline J. Thomas of 80-00 Ninety-sixth Street, Woodhaven; son, George W. Kober, and his wife, Rose, of 80-20 Ninety-sixth Street, Woodhaven; nurse, Kate Heil of 717 Ninety-sixth Street, Woodhaven. Daughter, Pauline, executrix.
Though George Kober lost his mother on July 31, 1927, she
herself was following in the footsteps of her own husband, for George William
Kober had passed away only a few years earlier, on June 12, 1925.
For Rose, that meant the sudden and unexpected loss of her
mother in 1921, followed by her father-in-law in 1925, and then her
mother-in-law in 1927. That she was named in her mother-in-law’s will was
likely small consolation in the face of so many losses. And considering how
many family members were named along with her, the inheritance seems just as
tiny—at least in today’s mindset—as the awards on Monopoly game cards.
That was not the last of such consolations for Rose,
however. Five years later, a brief entry on April 27, 1932, alerts us to yet another
loss Rose suffered. Incongruously—or, perhaps not so much unlike it—wedged under a soap-opera-styled story sprawled
across the front page of the second section of the Long Island Daily Press, the insertion read,
LEAVES ALL TO WIDOWRose Kober of 89-29 96th street, Ozone Park, is given the “more than $2,000” estate of her husband, George W. by a will on file in the surrogate’s court.
The only solace with all this loss... is the fact she had plenty of family (and perhaps friends) - that hopefully were supportive of each other.
ReplyDeleteP.s., sounds like you now have a list of some more cousins... all those Thomas' folks!
DeleteYes, I will be keeping an eye on those Thomas folks! But what I'm really hoping to find is some sort of indication that Rose was getting support from her own supposed brother!
DeleteThat was 35,000 in buying power by todays standards. Not too bad at least she was not penniless:)
ReplyDeleteYeah...I couldn't resist looking that one up, too, Far Side! Considering the actual amount was not revealed--just a generic category--she might well have gotten more.
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