Frances Cron Diary, 1913-1917

Name/Title

Frances Cron Diary, 1913-1917

Entry/Object ID

2015.18.2

Scope and Content

This is a digitized copy of a diary kept and written by Frances Cron Ridsdale, Broomfield resident, from 1913 through 1917. The diary is 88 pages long, containing details of Frances' life moving between Broomfield and Denver in the 1910s. Frances went to Barnes Business College and worked various jobs as a secretary while living in Denver, which she discussed throughout the diary. Frances also wrote how she would travel back to Broomfield on weekends to "visit home," sometimes utilizing the Denver & Interurban railroad. Trips to various parts of Denver, like Lakeside Amusement Park, are also discussed, as well as Frances' relationship with her future husband, Russell Ridsdale, whom she married in late 1917.

Collection

Permanent Collection

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Tertiary Object Term

Diary

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Journal

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Book

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Other Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

LOC Thesaurus for Graphic Materials

Railroad travel, Secretaries, Education, Business education, Dating (Social custom), Amusement parks, Entertainment, Friendship

Search Terms

Denver & Interurban Railroad, Crescent Grange, Denver

Archive Details

Creator

Frances Cron

Date(s) of Creation

1913 - 1917

Archive Size/Extent

88 diary pages. 180 jpeg files (master and access copies of pages), 1 pdf file (access copy), 2 word documents (transcriptions). Approximately 1.3 gigabytes total.

Archive Notes

Date(s) Created: March 2nd, 1913 through September 14th, 1917 Date(s): 1913-1917 Copy/Orig/Other: Scan (JPEG, PDF, etc)

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Frances Cron

Person or Organization

Brown, William

Provenance

Notes

Admin or Biographical History: Frances Cron was born in Pennsylvania in 1888. She first came to Broomfield in 1893 at age four with her mother, Harriet "Hattie" Burton Cron, who was pregnant with Frances' brother Thomas Cron. Harriet had just left her husband to come live with her parents, Thomas and Sarah Burton, who were neighbors to homesteading farmer William Brown. William and Harriet married three years later in 1896, and had four daughters. By 1900, however, tragedy struck the family. Millie, William and Harriet's first daughter, died at age three, with Thomas Cron dying at age six; Harriet passed away from complications during the birth of daughter Elizabeth, who passed away six months after Harriet. This left William Brown to care for Frances Cron and her two sisters, Ellenor and Blanche Brown, while also keeping after a ranch and working as Broomfield's town constable. Frances looked after her sisters at home while her father worked. William remarried in 1914, taking Amie Collum as his wife. Amie was related to the Browns' neighbors, William, Rosella, and Annie Burgess, whom Frances was very close to. Frances - who had an eighth grade education from schools in Broomfield - then decided to continue her education at Barnes Business College in Denver. Utilizing the Denver and Interurban passenger lines on the Kite Route, she later worked as a secretary at various Denver businesses. In 1917, Frances married her husband, Russell Ridsdale. They had four children. The family ultimately moved to Boulder, where Russell supported the family through his own horse tack shop and store awning design business. In her old age, Frances spent time writing and collecting poetry and rhymes. Frances passed away in 1970. Sources: Pettem, Silvia. Broomfield: Changes Through Time. Longmont, Colorado: The Book Lode, 2001. Turner, Carol. "On History: A glimpse into the good life of an early Broomfielder." Broomfield Enterprise (March 3, 2012): available from <http://www.broomfieldenterprise.com/ci_20089971>; accessed November 25, 2015. Custodial History: Frances Cron kept and wrote in two diaries from 1910 until 1917, when she married her husband, Russell Ridsdale. Both diaries, as well as a collection of Frances' photographs and poems, were eventually passed on to one of Frances' daughters, Janet Ridsdale Justice-Waddington. Janet donated the poems and digital scans of the journals and photographs to the Broomfield Depot Museum in 2015.