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- From an article On Milwaukee.com from August 25, 2021, link:
https://onmilwaukee.com/articles/ethel-smith-photos
The photos were taken by Ethel Smith (pictured at right in a photo by an unknown street photographer), who Shawn says Grandpa Smith?s sister, born in 1899 in Bay View to Alfred and Margaret Smith, who lived at 1707 E. Rusk St., a home the family kept until 1966. Ethel was the eldest of five children and was never married or had children of her own, says Shawn.. Instead, she was a very supportive matriarch to her siblings, nieces and nephews. Although not many of my family members who knew her are still alive, all spoke highly of her and her generosity Ethyl died due to complications from surgery in 1962.
According to an obituary in the Milwaukee Sentinel in November of that year, Smith, 64, had, since January, been the assistant to Nicholas J. Lesselyoung, the vice president and secretary of the Milwaukee Gas Light Company.
In her 45 years with the company, she has served as secretary to five vice presidents before Lesselyoung.
"Born in Milwaukee, Miss Smith was graduated from South Division High School in 1917," the paper reported. She began work immediately for the gas company as a stenographer. Within two years, Miss Smith was named secretary to Ewald Haase, vice president, secretary and treasurer of the utility.
Miss Smith was a member of the American Records Management Association, of which she was past historian and publicity director, and the Nature Club of Milwaukee.
This long tenure at Wisconsin Gas Co. explains Smith photographs at the Gas Light Building, including shots of women, who were presumably her colleagues. Ethel, who never learned to drive, had many hobbies, according to Shawn, including photography. ?She had a good camera for the time, says Shawn. Most of her pics are of family, family holiday gatherings, fish "she liked fishing" and botany.
The South Shore Water Frolics were an important event in the neighborhood and she took photos of the parades and related events throughout the years. I'm not sure she would've ever imagined the time capsule they would later become.
A time capsule they are and we're thrilled she took them, that the Smith family preserved them and that Shawn is sharing them here.
Enjoy this colorful photographic walk or parade back to 1950s Milwaukee.
https://onmilwaukee.com/articles/ethel-smith-photos
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