I love Black Sheep ancestors and relatives because they show up in the records more often. Before researching my Grandmother Dorothy Mason-Kapple's family I didn't know anything about the origins of the paternal side of her family? I began tracing the Mason family from scratch a little over 20 years ago.
I didn't even know what the name of my Grandmother Dorothy's father was? When I located a marriage record for her parents I then discovered his first name was Fred. From there I was able to locate Census records for his parents' household going back to the 1870's.
I found two children I couldn't place in his widowed Mother Mary Owens-Mason's household in 1900 and 1910. A female name Vera Mason and male named Claude Mason were listed in 1900 as children of Mary E. Mason. I didn't believe that to be correct because of their ages. In 1910 they were listed as Grandchildren which seemed to be more realistic. I couldn't identify whose children they were however. I had thought maybe they were illegitimate children of a daughter because sometimes families covered up illegitimate children by claiming they were the children of their Grandparents.
It was only last year that I discovered Vera and Claude were half siblings of my Grandmother Dorothy. I didn't know my Grandmother's father had been married before. His first wife died young. In 1900 Fred lived in his mother's household with his children. By 1910 he had married my Great-Grandmother Helen Mullen. His children with his first wife didn't live with this second family.
My Great-Great Uncle Claude Sylvester Mason turned out to be a black sheep often recorded in newspapers and legal system records. The only family member he seemed to stay in touch with throughout his life was his sister Vera.
Below is Claude Sylvester Mason's baptismal record from 1898. Oddly his first name Claude was not recorded on it?
Vera continued to live with her grandmother. Claude was listed with his Grandmother in 1910 but actually lived in the Chicago Parental School, which was a Reform School for truants and incorrigible children.
One positive thing you can say about this Reform School is it was probably the only integrated school in Chicago at the time. The kids farmed around the facility. The school was run like a military school with children wearing military uniforms and marching around the school grounds. I don't know how long Claude spent in Reform School in Chicago? He spent time there at the age of 11 according to the Census.
Claude's next brush with the legal system is when he kited checks as a teenager. According to newspaper accounts Claude Mason and accomplice were arrested in Ohio for kiting checks on a crime spree from Chicago to Ohio. Claude had a Great-Uncle who spent some time at a soldier's home in Ohio. Not sure if he went to Ohio to see him? According to newspaper accounts Claude was 19 years old. Actually he was only 17 years old. One article stated his father was a paint dealer which was somewhat accurate. Actually Fred Mason was a painter. According to Claude the boys couldn't afford to live "the high life" in Chicago and that's what prompted the crime spree. He was sentenced to a year in the Ohio State Reformatory where he may have picked up the vocation of Electrician. In 1918 when he registered for the draft his occupation was Electrician.
After spending a year in the Ohio State Reformatory Claude was in trouble again with the law in 1918. A reformatory didn't reform him this time either. He was arrested for robbery at the National Tea company where he was working. A letter from his sister Vera was intercepted by the Police who were then able to track him down and arrest him.
A few years later Claude is in trouble again. This time he and two others robbed a man on " Lovers' Lane" in Chicago in October of 1921. They were nicknamed the "Lovers' Lane Bandits".
According to a description from the San Quentin records Claude had abdominal scars from operations.
I was happy to find a mug-shot of him with his San Quentin records at Ancestry.com. Although I was saddened to see what a broken man he appeared to be.
Claude died in 1946, at age 47, soon after his parole from San Quentin. He died in Los Angeles County General Hospital which was a public hospital mainly serving the poor. Patients were generally housed in overcrowded wards.
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