Arthur Clyde MINK

Male 1893 - 1980  (87 years)


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  • Name Arthur Clyde MINK  [1
    Birth 7 Jun 1893  Elgin, Kane Co., IL Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Death Oct 1980  [1
    Person ID I9310  Hole
    Last Modified 3 Oct 1997 

    Father James Vantine MINK,   b. 26 Jun 1852   d. 17 Nov 1931 (Age 79 years) 
    Mother Grace Hamilton TODD,   b. 28 Aug 1857, Dundee Twp., Kane Co., IL Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 15 Jan 1945, Pasadena, CA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 87 years) 
    Marriage 18 May 1878  [1
    Family ID F4034  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Children 
     1. James Vantine MINK
    Family ID F4038  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 16 Nov 2011 

  • Notes 
    • The following is part of a letter from James Vantine Mink III dated June 1996. 'My father was born in Elgin, IL, the son of James Vantine Mink and Grace Todd Mink. He attended Elgin Public Schools and was graduated from Elgin High School. (class of 1910) After graduation he spent time in Michigan and adjoining areas working on pipe line construction projects. He responded to an advertizement placed in the Elgin Courier News by my mother, Harriet Burlingame, who had recently divorced Henry Dakin and was searching for a foreman to help her run the ranch she had received from Mr. Dakin. The ranch was located near Miles City Montana, and my father went there to help manage this cattle ranch. He also filed a homestead claim on a parcel of neighboring property which he had intended to improve with a dwelling, well, etc. During the earlier period of U.S. involvement in World War I, he had an agricultural deferment. However, in 1917 he joined the U.S. Army and was married to my Mother Harriet Burlingame Mink. When my father left the Army, they sold the ranch and purchased a farm near Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin. Their son James Vantine Mink III was born there in 1923 and in 1924 they sold the farm and moved to South Pasadena, California, where my mother's mother, Amelia Winchester Burlingame was living with my mother's sister, Anna Mary Burlingame, and Richard Burlingame Dakin, my mother's son by her first husband, Henry Dakin. Richard had remained on the ranch in Montana until of high school age and then went to Elgin for his high school years. After finishing high school he came to South Pasadena with Ameila and Anna Burlingame and obtained a position with the South Pasadena Branch of the Security First National Bank at Fair Oaks Ave. and Mission Street. Also living in South Pasadena at that time were Dale Tussing and Hattie-Belle (Vale) Tussing, her mother, Grandma Vale, and her husband, Dale Tussing, together with three of Dale Tussing's nieces, Frances, Virginia and Shirley Tussing. Dale Tussing was a Vice President of the Security First National Bank and worked in the Los Angeles offices. He was able to get a position in the bank for Richard Dakin, as mentioned, and for my father at the Broadway & Colorado Branch in Pasadena. During this period, family and social life was centered around these people. Hattie-Belle was a childhood friend of my mother's and of the Burlingame family in Elgin. Also at this time my father's parents and his sister, Gladys M. Mink visited the family during the winters and staid at the Burlington Hotel Apartments in Los Angeles. James Vantine Mink II, dad's youngest brother, came out (c.1933) and staid near him in an apartment on Fair Oaks Ave. and Foothill Blvd. Shortly he married Azalea Presley and Richard B. Dankin married Frances S. Tussing. They had one son, Richard Bryant Dakin. During the Great Depression, the Security First National Bank foreclosed on a great amount of property all over Southern California and it was necessary to create Real Estate Offices at the main offices and at certain branches. Dad became Assistant, and subsequently, Manager of the Pasadena office, Marengo and Colorado Streets. In the early 30's there was a great deal of vacant property, buildings, houses, offices, etc. Dad's job was to manage these properties which were scatered throughout Pasadena, South Pasadena, Arcadia, Monrovia, Baldwin Park, etc. I recall he was able to get vacant offices in the buildings on Colorado Street the bank owned, so the family, including Dad's mother and sister Gladys, were able to see a number of the Tournament of Roses New Year's Parades in grand style durning the early 30's. Another relative that was living in an apartment hotel in Los Angeles area was Jenny McPherson. I believe she was my father's aunt, my great aunt, Grace Todd Mink's sister. Aunt Jenny had a son Malcolm McPherson. At the time I was taken to see aunt Jane (Jenny) she was blind and had a nurse by the name of Dora. As the Depression eased off and the bank sold off a great deal of its foreclosures, all its property was administered from the head office in Los Angeles and Dad was put in charge. He obtained a California Real Estate Broker's License and went into the real estate business for the rest of his career. The exception was during World War II when Dad took a defense job with the Jet Propulsion Labratories in Pasadena. While in the real estate business in Pasadena, Dad was affiliated with the firm of C.J. McCormmack & Company. In 1936, Anna M. Burlingame built a home at 361 South Greenwood Ave., Pasadena, near the Huntington Library. At this time Harriet Mink's great aunt Phoebe Ann Burlingame of Adams, MA, passed on, and Harriet and her sister Anna shared in the estate. They brought back to Pasadena a great amount of fine antique furniture which was used to furnish the new home and to this was added furnishings from the house of James Vantine Mink, 521 Douglas Ave., Elgin, Illinois, when Grace Todd Mink passed away in 1945. During these years the family and social life revolved around Elgin friends who came to live in Southern California. The annual Elgin Picnic, held in one of the region's parks, was a very special social event not to be missed. In 1949 the residence in Pasadena was sold and another purchased in Saratoga, CA. Dad entered the real estate in Los Gatos, CA. In 1952 Anna M. Burlingame died and the residence in Saratoga was sold. Mother and Dad continued to live in Los Gatos until they moved to Glendale. Richard B. Dankin divorced Frances (Tussing), his first wife about 1952 and in that year married Colette Johnson. Harriet B. Mink died in 1967. For the first year after her death Dad lived with his sister. Anne Springer in Carlsbad, CA, but returned to Glendale where he lived until 1975 when he moved to 8070 Selma Ave. to live with his son, James Vantine Mink III. He lived there until his death in 1980 at 87 years. Arthur Clyde Mink and Harriet Burlingame Mink are burried in the Winchester Lot, Bluff City Cemetery, Elgin, Illinois. Clyde Mink was very active in the American Institute of Banking and was for a time President of the Pasadena, CA, Chapter. As such he attended the 1932 AIB Convention in Chicago. While there he went to the 1932 Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago and visited in Elgin. [1]

  • Sources 
    1. [S143] GEDCOM File I:\TMGFILES\ALMINK.


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