Minerva
Healy Lucken ~ Keeper of the family
flame
By Tami Kinney
Minerva
Healy Lucken, devoted daughter and wife, exemplified the resilient
women of the
early 20th century who experienced tragedy early in life,
accepted
it with grace and quietly carried on. Minerva’s life in Monroe – from
1909
until her death in 1997 at age 94 – mirrors the town’s growth and
development
both in population and industry. Minerva’s history also provides an
example of
the life and times of women who worked outside the home and found
fulfilment
there. Her succession of jobs shows the variety of employment options
available
to single and married woman of her generation.
Minerva’s parents
were Bartholomew and Minerva Illif Healy. They married in Minneapolis
in January
1900 and came west, settling in Tolt, Washington. Bart was a partner in
a
logging operation with John Joyce named Healy & Joyce. After that,
he ran a
logging operation of his own and owned a lumber yard in Tacoma called
Healy
Lumber Company.
Minerva’s mother took a position as a teacher in Tolt soon after they arrived, and they welcomed their first child in 1901, a daughter named Mildred. In September 1903, a second daughter arrived who was named Minerva after her mother. Next followed a stillborn boy and in 1907, twins Marjorie and Marguerite. In 1909, son Harold arrived. Minerva’s mother contracted tuberculosis (called consumption in those days) a common and deadly illness. The family moved from Tolt to Monroe in 1909, to a new two-story home, to help her recover. Minerva’s mother struggled valiantly in their new home, as she recounted in a 1989 interview.
“We moved because there was no one in Tolt to take care of my mother. Dr. Cox was here in Monroe to take care of her. Treating TB now is different, but he wanted her to get up early, go to work and stay busy all the time, which is the opposite of now. She died the next year. We were having breakfast one morning. I remember the nurse came down the hall and into the dining room and she looked at Papa and said ‘she’s gone.’ I understood immediately. I jumped up and ran up the stairs but she wasn’t quite gone because when I knelt down by the bed, she said ‘You be a good girl, won’t you?’ “
By the time Minerva’s mother died on March 11, 1910, the family had already experienced tragedy. First-born daughter Mildred passed away three months before her mother in January of 1910 and the year before, six-month-old son Harold died. Bart was left alone to raise young Minerva and the twins. He devoted his life to them and never remarried.
“Mildred
was my mother’s pride and joy.
After she died, her class from school came to the house and they stood
in the
front room next to the casket and all the children were singing.”
Despite
losing her mother and siblings, Minerva persevered, displaying the
positive
attitude and sunny disposition that was a hallmark of her personality.
She
remembers a carefree childhood of playing hide and seek with her
sisters and
neighborhood friends in the big white house on Hill Street and Bart
allowing
just about anything, as long as the children were at home.
"We
would run up and down the stairs and hide in the attic and
under the beds and ride and play with the horses, Dolly and Bill. We
climbed
all over those horses and no one ever got hurt. Marjorie beat all the
boys at
(the knife game) Mumbley Peg. I wasn’t much on that but I played
marbles a lot.
My husband picked some of our marbles out of the garden years later.” Bart
sold
his business interests in 1906 and focused on raising his three
daughters. As
the oldest, Minerva also shared this duty, doing well in school,
helping out at
home and graduating from Monroe High School with high marks in 1922.
After high
school, she attended Washington State University in Pullman for two
years.
During
breaks from college, Minerva worked for J.D. Woods in Monroe, which
became a
full-time job after college. She also worked at the Frye Lettuce Farm
in 1933,
one of the major sources of employment for Monroe residents in the
1930s.
“I
remember Elizabeth Nelson came by and
said that our friends were going to work at the lettuce farm and asked
if I
wanted to go. We earned a dime an hour. She picked me up and brought me
a pair
of boy’s overalls. We crawled around weeding and I almost wore my
trousers out
in the knees. One day, Pauline Oster came out (she did more cussing
than
speaking ordinary English) and said ‘Everybody get busy, here comes
Charlie
Frye.’ We were working like the dickens and all of a sudden along came
Charlie
Frye and I saw those shiny shoes down in front of me. He said ‘What’s
your
name?’ and I said ‘Minerva Healy.’ He said ‘You’re not Bart Healy’s
daughter?’
And I said ‘Yes, I am, Mr. Frye.’ I came home that night and asked my
father
why he didn’t tell me he knew Charlie Frye. He said he thought it was
better that
I didn’t!”
After
discovering her tie to Charlie Frye, Minerva was moved into the office
at the
lettuce farm and then went to work for the Frye’s meat packing plant in
Seattle. She lived with a family during the work week and took the bus
home to
Monroe every weekend to take care of her father and sisters. Minerva’s
work life also included teaching Works Progress Administration (WPA)
adult
education classes in “sewing science” in 1933-34, working as a
freelance seamstress
in the community, as office manager for Pictsweet Foods in the 1940s
and for
Monroe physician and surgeon Dr. Percy Cooley in the 1950s. But the job
that
most people associate with Minerva was at Dever’s Furniture store in
Monroe.
Over 40 years, she served as office manager, salesperson and became the
face of
the business to countless shoppers and local residents. She retired at
age 75.
Minerva
married Even Lucken on Sept. 1, 1940 and the couple lived at the family
home with
Bart and Marguerite. Even Lucken died in 1986 and she followed on Sept.
4,
1997. Minerva’s
family history lives on in the 1885 oak pump organ that was donated to
the
Monroe Historical Society Museum from her home. It came west with her
mother
from Minnesota and stood in the house for almost a century. The family
home at
321 Hill Street, that saw both tragedy and joy, is being restored by a
local
Monroe businesswoman intent on preserving the Healy-Lucken memories and
pioneering spirit.
Minerva’s
memory also lives on in the many Monroe residents who knew her. “Minerva was a very good friend of my
mother’s and we would go visit her at her home,” says Monroe native
Harriett
(Ohlsen) Barr. “She was a very happy person and a pillar of the
community –
always well dressed and immaculate. The house was the same way;
beautifully
kept with a lovely yard. She was a gracious lady and well-respected by
everyone.”
In
November
of 1989, Minerva was recognized as a Pioneer of Snohomish County by the
Snohomish County Centennial Committee. |
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David Abbot letter to Monroe Historical Society. 6 January 1989. Tami Kinney interview with Harriet Ohlsen Barr, January 2015. Minerva Healy and Bartholomew Healy personal papers. Amy Beavers interview with Minerva Lucken, (on CD), January 27,1989. Nellie Robertson, “Minerva Lucken House Filled with Antiques and Family Memories.” Monroe Monitor, October 1, 1986. H.L.Squibb. Letter of Recommendation for Minerva Healy to Snohomish County Centennial Committee. |
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© Tami Kinney 2015 All Rights Reserved |