September
22, 2005
Louis
Rose Society for the Preservation of Jewish History
Letter to the Voice of San Diego
The Loquacious Louis Rose
Mr. Will Carless, Staff Writer, Voice of San
Diego:
Thank you for a comprehensive and well-written story
about Louis Rose Point. We have put a link to it up on our website and
hope that it will introduce some of our readers around the Jewish world to
your fine online publication.
My dear friend Shimon
Camiel must think Louis Rose was "cranky" because of the
historic photo of Rose, who appears to be scowling. My guess is that the
photographer had been fussing with his lenses and his flash powder, and then
his lights, and caught Rose the moment his patience wore thin.
Personally, I think of Rose
as someone who probably was quite loquacious. He was elected and
reelected to various public offices; he loved his little dog Pat and used
to delight the townspeople when Pat would hide under Chili, Rose's pet
terrapin, a tortoise that was so big children could ride on its back.
Moreover, Rose was something of a romantic. One of his wedding
gifts to his second wife, Mathilde, was the Pear Garden in Old Town,
which was associated with San Diego's most famous love story—Josefa
Carrillo galloping away at night to meet her lover Henry Fitch to sail away
with him to Chile. Rose also was perhaps the first women's liberationist
in San Diego: he gave free lots in Roseville to various women in their own
names, rather than in their husbands', as a sign of his esteem for them.
My conjecture is that over the years that he lived alone, many of them invited
him to their homes for home-cooked meals and this was the gallant Rose's way
to repay their kindness.
At the gathering on Sunday, we will perhaps
get an opportunity to see what a smiling Louis Rose would have looked like.
I recently received a telephone call from Gerry Rose of Oceanside, who said he
dropped my book in surprise when he looked closely at the picture of Louis
Rose on its cover. The resemblance to his father, Harry, who lives in
Florida, was remarkably strong. Gerry Rose suspects that Louis Rose must
be related somehow--a cousin, most likely--and is hoping to search through
German genealogical records to see if he can make the link. But in the
meantime, Harry Rose is coming for a visit to San Diego County and Gerry
says he will bring him to the picnic. Also on hand will be Harry
Goldenberg, a San Diego resident who portrays Louis Rose as a docent for Old
Town San Diego State Park. We'll even have the "Louis Rose," a
tour bus so named by Old Town Trolley, in honor of the pioneer. So
many Roses will bloom at the event.
Again, I thank you for the
story.
Don Harrison