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Luella
Kimball 1854 – 1891
Not much is known about Luella
Kimball, sometimes known as Luella Rankin. Luella was the fourth child
of Holt
Kimball and Harriet Rankin, following sister Ellen J. Kimball, brother
Joseph
Kimball, and sister Emma Rankin Kimball. She was born around 1854, most
likely
in New Hampshire
where the rest of her siblings were born.
Before emigrating to Bloomington, IL,
Harriet died, leaving the children to be raised by her sister Melinda
Rankin. Melinda
despised Holt Kimball for unknown reasons, and Luella and her sister
Emma may
have been raised believing their father was dead. In her letters,
Melinda had
this to say about Holt: “I hope he will finish up his miserable
existence after
a while. He never need trouble himself about his children, they would
not go
near him. They hold him in perfect abhorrence.” Melinda was the first
Protestant missionary in Mexico
and continued the profession for the rest of her life. In excerpts from
her
letters, she wrote that she “tried to feel for them as their mother
would, if
she had lived. They are smart and interesting children, especially the
girls.”
At some point, the Rankin family lived in Haverhill,
Scioto County,
Ohio, where Luella
might have been raised
with a relative. The Kimballs and Rankins, as well as the Ela and
Rowell
families (who they had known in New Hampshire),
emigrated to Bloomington
together. It is also believed that the Rankins and Rowells were related.
Luella was a schoolteacher for some
years in her life, teaching both in Danvers
Township and Bloomington. She
boarded at the home of
George P. Ela in the 1880’s at 309 East Locust Street. Sadly,
Luella succumbed to
mental illness and was eventually taken to court by her aunt Melinda
and her
sister Ellen to be proved insane. Their first two attempts at charges
were
dismissed, but they succeeded on their third attempt after March 3,
1889, when Luella
threw carbolic acid on a lady, a girl, and a gentleman at church, just
as
Sunday School was commencing. Luella was placed in jail after the
lady’s
husband swore out a warrant. The Daily
Pantagraph said, “Her act yesterday is the result only of
aberration of the
brain, as she had no spite against those whom she chose as victims.”
Luella was
committed to Eastern Illinois State
Hospital for the Insane,
which later
became Kankakee
State Hospital.
She apparently fought the charges brought on by her aunt and sister,
bringing
witnesses in her defense.
Luella’s sisters, Ellen and Emma, were
known for their unusually strong attachment for each other. The sisters
lived
together almost all of their lives, attended Western seminary school at
Oxford, Ohio
together, and were both members of Second Presbyterian Church. The two
died
within days of each other, with Emma passing away on November 25, 1918,
and
Ellen following the next day. They became ill for several weeks during
a visit
to Decatur
to
see Emma’s son, Carl R. Dick. The Daily
Pantagraph commented on the closeness between the two sisters,
stating:
“The death of the sisters marks the culmination of a most lasting love
and
respect for each other and of two lives fraught with good deeds and
with
Christian virtues.”
Luella died of unknown causes in
April 1891. It is not known whether she died at the state hospital, but
she was
buried in Evergreen
Memorial Cemetery
in her family’s burial plot.
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