Jane
“Jennie” Buttolph
Rayburn
The family lived on In 1870, Illinois
Wesleyan University (IWU) admitted its
first female students. In 1874, Jennie
enrolled as a student there and it was probably there that she met her
future
husband, Calvin Rayburn. The couple married in
1877 when she was 19 and he was
29. He was a school administrator then,
but later obtained a law degree and eventually became a well known
attorney in The national organization
Daughters of the American
Revolution (DAR) was founded in 1890. In
1894, the Letitia Green Stevenson Chapter of DAR was founded in In 1917, the Calvin died in September
1924. Jennie’s diaries cover the years of
her widowhood
1925-1942 when she was 66-84 years of age.
The diaries record her “typical” life as a widow. Her sister, Isadora Brown, had lived with her
and Calvin and continued to be her companion after his death, so she
was not
alone in her home. Her days were filled
with routine activities such as reading the newspaper, listening to the
radio,
walking downtown for shopping, sewing, visiting with friends, reading,
writing
letters, and attending to normal household duties. Jennie became a
grandmother in 1928 with the birth of Willa
(daughter of son, Allan) She would eventually have five grandchildren. Her diaries indicate that she was a loving
and proud grandmother. In November of 1928 came
a traumatic event and one that
Jennie would record in the diary three years later as “that event the
most
tragic of my life.” Her sister Isadora
had gone across the street to visit a neighbor.
As she was crossing the street in the dark to return home,
she was
accidentally struck and killed by a passing automobile.
Jennie mourned the loss of her sister, and
from that point on would live alone in her Jennie’s lifeline to
local, national, and world events was
the radio. Like other households across
the nation, she spent hours listening to the radio and wrote of hearing
presidents’ speeches, news, music, and various programs that kept her
entertained and informed. Thus she wrote
in her diary her own opinions and commentary on happenings of the day. The stock market crash of
1929 and the resulting Depression
brought about desperate times for many people and On February 7, 1931,
Jennie became a victim of the
Depression when someone grabbed her purse and ran away with it. Luckily, she had less than $3.00 in cash, but
it was two months before she was able to recover such things as keys, a
check,
and her bank book and other items which the thief had thrown away. She related her “holdup” stories at a DAR
meeting and to other friends. Jennie died in August 3,
1942 at |
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