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Crothersville Indiana

Introducing George Thomas Applegate

Introduction Page – George Thomas Applegate

Every family has those steady, familiar presences — the kind of people who anchor a family’s story without demanding the spotlight. For our family, George Thomas Applegate was one of them.

Born in Crothersville, Indiana, in 1899, George grew up in a time when the pace of life was measured in work shifts, neighborhood news, and the changing seasons. His life carried him through early factory work, decades at Allison, and the shifting rhythms of a city that was always growing around him.

George was no stranger to life’s twists — from stepfathers to wartime draft registrations, from divorce to late-in-life marriages — yet he met each chapter with a kind of quiet perseverance. He remained rooted in Indianapolis, building a life that blended hard work, community, and family ties.

If you knew George — whether you worked alongside him, saw him at church, or shared a seat at his kitchen table — we’d love for you to add your stories here. It’s these personal memories that bring his history to life far better than census records and draft cards ever could.


📝 Share Your Memories
Use the comment box below to tell us about George — his laugh, his habits, the advice he gave, the things that made him uniquely himself. Your stories will help keep his memory alive for future generations.

Want the full story?
Visit George Thomas Applegate’s Family Page to explore his complete life timeline, from his Crothersville childhood to his final years in Indianapolis.


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Introducing Elsie Mae Applegate

Elsie Mae Applegate Tudor

27 January 1893 – 24 June 1985

From Crothersville’s quiet streets to the busy neighborhoods of Indianapolis, Elsie Mae Applegate Tudor lived a life rooted in devotion — to her family, her community, and the organizations she poured her time into. The daughter of George W. Applegate and Serilda White, Elsie grew up in a blended household, learned early the value of hard work, and carried that ethic into her marriages, her career, and her civic life.

Married first to Wilford Mann in 1912, Elsie found her lifelong partner in Orval Ray Tudor, a World War I veteran. Together, they built a steady life in Indianapolis, sharing more than 60 years of companionship. Elsie worked for L.S. Ayres & Co. for 24 years, served as deputy assessor for Washington Township for over a decade, and held leadership roles in the Order of the Eastern Star, Ladies Oriental Shrine, and the American Legion Auxiliary.

She was a woman who could manage a household with grace, work the sales floor with charm, and preside over community meetings with authority. Elsie’s life spanned 92 years — years in which she witnessed remarkable change but never lost her steadfast sense of purpose.

Explore Elsie’s full story
Visit Elsie Mae Applegate Tudor’s Family Page for a detailed look at her life, historical records, and the milestones that shaped her 92 remarkable years.


Share Your Memories

If you knew Elsie — as a friend, neighbor, co-worker, or fellow member of the many organizations she served — we’d love to hear from you. Share your memories, stories, or photos in the comments below so her legacy can continue to live on through the people who knew her best.

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Introducing John William Applegate

8 May 1891 – 14 October 1977


John William Applegate

The Man of Many Chapters | Survivor of War and Work | Keeper of Quiet Roads

Some lives are drawn in straight lines — John’s was a patchwork quilt of moves, marriages, and reinventions. Born in Crothersville, Indiana, in the spring of 1891, he grew up in a household where the door was always swinging for siblings, extended family, and visitors.

By the time the First World War arrived, John had already endured a serious hand injury but still stepped forward to serve. After his discharge, his life unfolded in restless chapters: from Indiana streets to Ohio hotels, from sales counters to bakery offices, and eventually, the Arizona desert. His five marriages marked turning points, each carrying him into a new role, a new address, a new attempt at permanence.

He was a man who kept moving — not because he lacked roots, but because he carried them with him.

Want the full story?
Head over to John William Applegate’s Family Page for a detailed, milestone-based history of his life, complete with records, photographs, and research notes.


Tell Us What You Know

The documents tell us where John lived and when he married, but they don’t tell us how he laughed, what stories he told at the dinner table, or whether he liked the desert sunsets in Arizona more than Indiana’s summer evenings.

If you knew John — or if he was part of your family’s stories — please share your memories, photographs, or anecdotes in the comments below. Every detail helps stitch together the man behind the records.

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Applegate, Edna Mae

Introducing Edna Mae Applegate

🕯️ Introduction Page: Edna Mae Applegate
Gathered in memory, shared in love.

She was born in a wintery corner of Crothersville, Indiana, and passed on in the springtime hush of Indianapolis—but the life of Edna Mae Applegate was lived in the warmth between those seasons. A daughter, a sister, a mother of six, and the steady center of a home that shifted through the decades, she is the kind of ancestor whose story is stitched into quiet gestures—the iron still warm, the front door left unlocked, the hum of someone cooking at dusk.

Married at sixteen, widowed too soon, and remembered by grandchildren who knew her simply as Mom, Mama, or Grandma, Edna’s legacy is one of everyday courage. She didn’t ask to be remarkable. But in the way she raised a family, weathered illness, and rooted herself in love through every move, she became just that.

This space is for you, fellow memory keeper.
If you knew Edna, have photos of her, or carry tales told by someone who did, please share them in the comments below. Even the smallest recollection—a favorite recipe, a holiday ritual, a sound to her laughter—adds texture to her tapestry.

Want to explore the full timeline of her life? You’ll find it here:
📜 Read Edna’s Family Page

Thank you for helping keep her story alive. After all, family history isn’t just about the past—it’s about finding our way back to one another, one memory at a time.

Warmly,
Kris

(and occasionally, Bones, when the dirt under the fingernails calls for it)

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