Archive for June 15th, 2011

15
Jun

News of Miss Emelia Goldsworthy

   Posted by: admin    in People

The Fort Dodge Messenger: June 15, 1905

News of Miss Emelia Goldsworthy

Former Fort Dodge Girl Continues to Rise in Art Work.

She Will Teach in Normal

Leaves Excellent Position in Indianapolis Schools to go to Kalamazoo, Mich. – Picture in Indianapolis Paper Fine Work.

Friends of Miss Millie Goldsworthy, a former Fort Dodge girl will be interested to know that her picture appears in a recent Indianapolis paper, below it is a very complimentary notice concerning her.

Miss Goldsworthy lived in Fort Dodge during her girlhood and commenced her studies in art in this city. Later she went to Chicago and then to New York and abroad, to study, and has made herself one of the finest instructors of art in schools, in the United States.

From time to time news of her continued success has reached Fort Dodge and her flattering offer to each in a summer at school for teachers was the last news of her continual rise. The following item shows that after efficient work in Indianapolis she goes to teach in a Michigan normal school. The manner in which she has spent the last few years, and the way she has rendered herself to those with whom she has associated, is shown in the item:

“Miss Emelia M. Goldsworthy will sever her connection with the city schools at the close of this term, to become head of the department of art instruction of the Western State Normal School at Kalamazoo, Mich., Miss Goldsworthy was honor (sic) guest as a farewell reception given in the art department of the Shortridge High School. Miss Seegmiller, Miss Selleck, Otto Stark and others assisted in receiving, and leading artists of the city were among the guests. Miss Goldsworthy has been connected with the schools here for seven years and visited fifty-eight buildings. The association with teachers and pupils has been very pleasant, and Miss Goldsworthy regrets that she much leave them. Before coming here she was supervisor of drawing at Calumet, Mich. She studied at the Chicago Art Institute and Pratt Institute, and spent the summer of 1900 abroad, visiting the galleries of Europe. Other summers she has spent sketching at Ipswich, Mass., and the neighborhood of Indianapolis and Brookville. Miss Goldsworth (sic) has received many good-by (sic) letters from teachers and pupils, which she will take with her as treasures from her agreeable life in this city. A number of Indianapolis teachers will go to Kalamazoo with Miss Goldsworthy to attend the summer session of the Normal school.”

(Editor’s note: Google resources tell me that she was born in Platteville, Wis., in 1869 and died in Los Angeles, Calif., in 1955. She apparently married some time after this article, because many of the references I found list her as Emelia Goldsworthy Clark. On FamilySearch.org, I found a marriage record of Emelia Goldsworthy to Irving Clark in Kalamazoo, Mich., on 2 June 1920. He was 49, she was 50.)

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15
Jun

Sunday’s Chapter of Accidents

   Posted by: admin    in Accident

The Fort Dodge  Messenger: June 15, 1903

Sunday’s Chapter of Accidents

Heroism of Sister Saves Two Year Old Daughter of Mrs. Anna Svaleson from Death.

Child’s Clothing Was on Fire.

Katie Hanson Falls Eight Inches and Breaks Her Collar Bone – Sylvester Worley Has Hand Pierced by Blow From Pick.

A painful accident which came very near resulting in the death of a child, occurred on Sunday morning. The little two-year old daughter of Mrs. Anna Svaleson while playing alone in an upstairs room of her home on Eleventh avenue south, in some way lit some matches which set the child’s dress on fire. In a moment the little girl’s garments were ablaze and her pitiful screams could be heard for blocks away. The little one’s sister, who was down stairs came to the rescue and smothered the flames which would soon have caused the child’s death and probably set the house on fire.

The little girl was badly burned about the abdomen and thighs but will recover within two weeks.

■ ■ ■

Katie Hanson, the thirteen year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nels Hanson, living at 1026 Eleventh avenue south, fell a distance of not over eight inches from a hammock on Sunday, and broke her collar bone. The child was lying in the hammock which was almost touching the ground when the rope broke, letting her fall. She struck on her shoulder, in such a manner as to break the bone.

The injury was given prompt medical attention, and is not regarded as serious.

■ ■ ■

While attempting to move a dummy coal car in the Illinois Central coal shed, Sylvester D. Worley had his hand pierced thru by a pickax which was being wielded on some coal by Isaac Hedgecock at four o’clock Sunday afternoon. The pick went clear thru Mr. Worley’s hand, causing the wound to bleed copiously and giving Mr. Worley intense pain. Medical attendance was immediately summoned but the wound was not dressed without considerable loss of blood. The injury was purely accidental.  Mr. Worley will recover without permanent inconvenience.

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