Knox-Lincoln-Kennebec County ME Archives Biographies.....KRAMER (Gray), Ethel Davis December 5, 1871 - April 16, 1910 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/me/mefiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Bill boggess william-boggess@webtv.net April 11, 2006, 12:57 pm Author: Bill Boggess (revised;10/30/05)        ETHEL DAVIS (GRAY) KRAMER (1871AR-1910IL)       Ethel Davis GRAY was born Tuesday, 5 December 1871, at Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas, to Virginia LaFayette (Davis) and Colonel Oliver Crosby GRAY (President of Masonic, St Johns' College). She was their third and last child following Clyde Leslie (1859MN-1861AR) and Carl Raymond (1867AR-1939DC).       Ethel's mother said of her after birth, that she had a white cotton head, a woodshed nose, blue eyes and a cholic, thinking the blue eyes and cotton head would change, for those were NOT a family trait. Three years later Ethel was found still with uncommonly white skin, also, her hair, as seen in picture taken at Bentonville, AR after the 1874 move to Fayetteville, was fine, thin, and all in frizzle of curls.       The GRAYs, following conclusion of "The Brooks-Baxter War" and Civil War Reconstruction, moved to Fayetteville, Arkansas fall of 1874 where Ethel grew up with her four year older brother Carl. Mother and father were faculty members at, 1871 created, Arkansas Industrial University (AIU); Virginia, Drawing & Painting (1874-1881), Oliver, Civil Engineering (1874-1879) and Mathematics (1874-1895). (See booklets; "The Grays From Maine", and "The Story Of Two ARKANSAS Pioneer School Teachers")       Her mother's (Jennie to family) letters reveal Ethel often accompanied her to classes at AIU.       Following life in a hotel for over two years, the Gray family bought a run down, snake infested piece of property with a vacant house and wet-weather stream Feb 1877, fixed it up and moved into their own quaint rambling English cottage, olive green in color at Dickson and Gregg streets. This was a block east of the university.       Parents deeded easterly portion of their 2-1/4 acre property, along Dickson Street, to "Frisco" (St Louis & San Francisco RR) for the new railroad tracks and facilities, becoming a major interest to Carl who at age 15, went to work for "Frisco" the first 28 years of his 56 year railroad career. (See booklet; "Carl Raymond Gray").       Washington County, AR 1880 census finds the GRAYs living in this charming cottage, its ornamental woodwork at porch, with vines, shrubbery and fruit trees in just the right places for their white pony, "Jule", to roam. Everything about the home reflected her mother's artistic taste, such as the long west room's fireplace surrounded by hand painted tiles to interest the children. Also written was;              "Carl was a sturdy brunette with coal-black hair and eyes, while Ethel was the exact opposite, a slender, fairytale-princess type with golden curls and blue eyes, and of exquisite daintiness." ---- all described in written memories by childhood younger friend and neighbor, Hattie E Williams (born 1877) "OUR NEIGHBORS --- THE GRAYS", published May 1958, in "FLASHBACK", of Washington County Historical Society, copy furnished by Carl's granddaughter, Wint (Gray) Bones, d/o Howard Kramer GRAY, M D (1901MO-1955MN).    The children witnessed their mother's eight-month lingering death from cancer occurring 1:30 pm Tuesday afternoon of 17th of August 1886 at home. The disease was discovered in December 1885 by Dr W B Welch, who had served as a Surgeon in Princeton, Arkansas following the Battle of "Jenkins' Ferry" Saturday, 30 April 1864 while Virginia lived in nearby Princeton, helping at hospitals, maintaining the 1983 published diary in Arkansas Historical Quarterly. It, concerning events from 1863 to 1866 at Princeton while Ethel's father was off fighting the Civil War east of the Mississippi River, as Company A commander with 3rd Arkansas Cavalry and divisional Provost Marshall, a regiment organized by Col Solon Borland, M D,1861, whose daughters, Fannie & Mollie were close friends, Mollie, later Ethel's step-mother, was father's 2nd wife.       Ethel attended Presbyterian's Lewis Academy in Wichita, Kansas, where brother Carl and his family (married 6 December1886) were living in 1889, and where her future husband LeRoy Kramer was born 19 August 1875 to Henry & America (Baynum) Kramer.       Ethel & Carl gained a "step-family" 17 June 1889 when their father married Mary (Mollie) Melbourne (Borland) Beattie (1850AR-1938MO) with teenage children, two daughters, Grace & Mary and a son, Godwin. (Daughter of his 1st military commander, U S Senator Solon Borland, M D (1811VA-1864TX), See booklet; "That Man Named Solon")       Ethel and four year younger step-sister, Mary Borland Beattie (1875TN-1962MS) attended AIU classes 1892/96. Mary B graduated 1896, "with distinction", 1st AIU class to be adorned with caps & gowns.     Special Collections at University of Arkansas reported, 1 February 2005, finding the following, numbered 1 - 6: 1. In the Arkansas Industrial University, Catalogue of Students, For the Session Commencing September 2d, 1878, and Ending June 12th, 1879, an "Ethel Gray ... Fayetteville, Washington County" is listed on p. 18 in the "School of Drawing and Painting". 2. In the Arkansas Industrial University, Catalogue of Students, For the Session Commencing September 3rd, 1883, and Ending June 12th, 1884, an "Ethel Gray ... Fayetteville, Ark." is listed on p. 14 in the "Art Class". 3. In the Arkansas Industrial University, 1891-92, Catalogue of Students, an "Ethel Gray ... Fayetteville ... Washington" is listed on p 113, in a section called "Special". 4. In the Arkansas Industrial University, 1892-93, Catalogue of Collegiate Students, an "Ethel Gray ... Fayetteville ... Washington" is listed on p 109, in a section called "Special". 5. In the Arkansas Industrial University, 1893-94, Register of Students, an "Ethel Gray ... Fayetteville ... Washington" is listed on p 125, in a section called "Special". 6. In the Arkansas Industrial University, 1894-95, and 1895-96, Register of Students, an "*Ethel Gray ... Little Rock ... Pulaski" is listed on p 145, in a section called "Special".  The * is for "those in attendance the first session (March 5, '95 ended July 17, '95...For this short session no catalogue was used), but not the last".       Ethel GRAY is next found in 1897 "boarding" with father and step-mother at 18th & Center Streets, Little Rock where May 1895, father became superintendent and step-mother matron of Arkansas School for The Blind, --- where 26 years earlier, in 1869, the school had constructed and dedicated its first brick building in honor of her father, "Colonel GRAY", while teaching at nearby Masonic St Johns' College, --- however, replaced in 1950 by Governors Mansion using "300,000" of school's old bricks.       The June 1900 census found Ethel, single, living with brother Carl's family in Monett, Barry County, Missouri(ah). Her soon to be husband, LeRoy Kramer, Esquire, worked for Carl as traveling secretary and confident, at "Frisco" since 1897, is found in a rooming house, same town. Ethel Davis GRAY married LeRoy Kramer Wednesday, 6 June 1900, later everyone moving to St Louis, Missouri where brother Carl and wife Harriette named their third/last son Howard Kramer in1901.       Their beloved father, Colonel Oliver Crosby GRAY, died at age 73, in Little Rock, 9 December 1905.       University of Arkansas built and dedicated GRAY HALL, in 1906, to honor Colonel Oliver Crosby GRAY's memory. (1966, Removed for Mullins Library)       Ethel gave birth to a daughter named Virginia who died, Thursday, 30 July 1908, --- Kramer's are not found in 1910 census but then Ethel died at age 38, Saturday, 16 April 1910 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois while LeRoy was assistant Vice-President of Rock Island RR, She was buried in Fayetteville, Washington County, Arkansas, Monday, April 18th, next to her father, in lot 144, of Historic Masonic, now Evergreen Cemetery.       LeRoy married Margaret Frances (Hull) Hannegan, Saturday, 17 February 1912 in Chicago they raising a family of one daughter and two sons, whose grandson, LeRoy Kramer, III, of Harbor Springs, MI has corresponded. LeRoy with wife Margaret are pictured on page 72, Life Magazine's 21 December 1936 issue celebrating the 50th wedding anniversary of Carl and Harriette GRAY in Omaha, Nebraska. LeRoy later became President of world-wide GATX Corporation.       Ethel, with daughter Virginia, are peacefully at rest in the beautiful Historic Masonic, now Evergreen Cemetery, Fayetteville, Arkansas, Lot 144, along side her mother, father and step-mother (un-marked). She like her mother before her, was an artistically inclined person, differing only by Ethel's blue eyes and blond hair.          ---------<>---------- Additional Comments: See: File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/me/knox/bios/kramergr5bs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/mefiles/ File size: 9.4 Kb