A
few years ago I wrote an article on How Old Was Rose Ball? Due to Maria
Russell’s contradictory testimony in Russell vs Russell (1906) there were
several possibilities on Rose’s age when she joined the Russell household in Pittsburgh.
In fairness to Maria, she was trying to remember events from nearly twenty
years before, and we can’t discount the stenographer having an off day.
Equally, the information written by J F Rutherford in the Ecclesiastical
Heavens booklet was written nearly thirty years after events, and was not based
on first hand knowledge.
However,
as a result of further research I am now happy to accept that my main premise
in the above mentioned article has been proved wrong. I still think there are
points of value in the article; hence it has not been deleted. But we can now
establish that Rose Ball joined the Russell household in late 1888 or early 1889.
She would have been 19 years old, but could have looked younger at the time.
The
evidence comes from examining the life of her brother, Charles U Ball. Charles
joined the Russell household and workforce before Rose did. Rose then wrote and
asked if she could come and join him? We know when Charles died and now also know
when he came to Pittsburgh. This is that story.
The
basic story of Charles and Rose came out in Russell vs Russell (1906). Quoting
from the Paper Book of Appellant, page 90, the exchange went like this.
CTR:
“We had a young man in the office by the name of Charles Ball, who came to us
from Buffalo, and was deeply interested.”
Counsel:
“What has that got to do with the girl?”
CTR:
“That was the brother. She wanted to come because her brother was here. After
her brother died, she was lonely and Mrs Russell and I both thought a great
deal of her. She was a very young looking girl…we treated her in every way as a
daughter, and told her we considered her such, and she told us she considered
us as parents.”
Some
accounts describe Rose as an orphan, but this is not true. A check of
genealogical records shows the family to be alive in Buffalo. In fact, if more
people had only read the Russell vs. Russell (1906) transcript they would know
this. Shortly after stating that CTR and Maria treated her as a daughter, CTR
testified:
CTR:
“(She) had no relatives there, and we told her she could call herself by our
name. She said the only reason she didn’t do that she was afraid if her father
heard of it, he would think she had lost her respect for him.”
It
may be that there was some estrangement in the Ball family, and that could be
suggested by the story of her brother Charles.
Charles
came to work for CTR as a stenographer. This is before they moved into Bible
House. He died on March 14, 1889. Notice of his death and the funeral from
CTR’s home was given in the Pittsburgh Dispatch for Saturday, March 16, 1889.
The
key records are not indexed online at this time of writing, but using the date
and area, it was possible to find the burial register for Charles with some key
information.
It
runs across two pages in the register.
The
first page gives his name: Charles Ball. His color: ditto, i.e. white. His sex:
male. His age at death: 22 (This is actually an error; he was still 21 at the
time). Married or single: single. Occupation: stenographer. Date of death:
March 14. Cause of death: consumption. Date
of certificate: March 15.
The
second page gives his birthplace: Buffalo, N(ew) Y(ork). His last residence and time of residence therein: on March 10
at Clifton Avenue (the Russells’ home) and nine months. His previous
residence: Buffalo, N.Y. Place and date
of interment: Uniondale and March 17. And finally the name and residence of the
physician signing the death certificate and the name and residence of the
undertaker.
So
we note that Charles had been living with the Russells at Clifton Avenue for the
last nine months, and prior to that had been in Buffalo. So doing the math,
Charles came to Pittsburgh around June-July of 1888. At some point after that,
his sister wrote asking if she could come as well? So Rose came, Charles died, Rose
stayed on.
The
thought that there might have been some family estrangement is suggested by
what happened with Charles. When he became ill he did not go back home to
Buffalo. When he died, his body was not sent back to Buffalo. He did not leave a
will, so his personal effects and affairs were sorted out by CTR who, rather
than a family member, was granted letters of administration.
Charles Ball was buried in Pittsburgh, in the Union Dale cemetery. For an
unknown young man his gravestone is really quite impressive. (Photograph
reproduced with permission).
The
motif at the top could well be a cross and crown before it was vandalised. And
if so, why was it vandalised? And at the bottom of the marker is a familiar
scriptural inscription, a partial quotation from Revelation 2 v.10: “Be thou
faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life.”
Charles’
stay in Pittsburgh and his substantial grave stone pose questions we cannot
answer. What is known is that sixty years later, he was still remembered. Here
is the notice of Rose’s death from an Australian newspaper, the Melbourne
Argus, for November 24, 1950.
Transcript:
HENNINGES – On November 22, Rose Ball, widow of the late Ernest Charles
Henninges, beloved sister of Lilian, Daisy, Charles
(deceased) and Richard (deceased), aged 81 years. – Blessed are the dead
who die in the Lord.
(Reprinted from Jerome History blog)