This is the only picture of Hubbard Keen that I know of.
Here he is selling tomatoes(?) from the back of his pickup truck in Centerville, Delaware sometime in the 1920s.
Hubbard was my Grandfather Keen's older brother, son of Walter Hamilton Keen and Henrietta.
Uncle Jack Keen recently rather incidentally shared in an email;
"Uncle Hubbard was Dad's oder brother. He would come to our home at Thanksgiving & stay till New Yr. Bring turkey goose plus other produce.I played pinocle with him during Xmas holidays.He was an advanced agent for the Circus, might have been Ringling Bros. & baramun/Bailey circus. He had some great stories."
All we heard about Hubbard while we were growing up was this condensed tale:
Hubbard went out with her on Wednesday;
His father married her on Friday;
Hubbard went West and raised goats.
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EDIT: Well, shoot. I just looked up the marriage record. Louisa and Walter H were married on April 25, 1900, which was a Wednesday. You'll just have to suspend that knowledge now, and go on with the story as traditionally told.
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When going through my father's papers, I came across a badly written composition for college freshman English class that told the rest of the story - at least as Newlin knew it.
Here is a 'warts and all' transcription of that paper - complete with the misspelling of both Hubbard and Louisa.
Biography
of Uncle Hubbert
Uncle Hubbert was born in
Wilmington about the year 1886 – the first of three children. His
father was a preacher by gift , and a cabinet maker by trade.
Because of limited finances, Hubbert quit school and took up the
trade of tin-smith and metal-worker. His mother died just after his
fifteenth birthday, and because his father could not afford a
housekeeper the neighbors helped him and his father keep house.
After several months an
attractive young lady of sixteen years, Miss Louise Hazelhurst,
offered to be housekeeper for her room and board. She had left her
own home because she did not get along well with her step-mother.
She was welcomed to the job, and the family returned to their duties.
Uncle Hubbert, between the
age of fifteen and sixteen was very nearly six feet tall, weighed
about 170 pounds, and was very neat and manly in appearance. His
character was that of nearly all preachers' sons of his time – he
was a goody-goody at home and when he was in the presence of his
father. The only bad habits he had were smoking and playing cards –
the influence of the masters of his trade.
Uncle Hubbert had fallen
in love with Louise, but this was not apparent about the house. They
had dates, but they never left or returned to the house together.
They nearly always met in Shellpot park for their little escapades.
The love birds got to a point, on Wednesday evening, where he asked
her to marry him. She consented, and they planned to elope the
following Saturday. Time during the next two days passed slowly for
Uncle Hubbert, as he had everything planned for the elopement on
Saturday.
He was planning his life
together with Louise. Friday night when he got home from work he got
the shock of his life – he found that his father had married Louise
in the afternoon. Saturday, after forcing himself to congratulate
his father, he took his belongings and went to work, but he did not
return.
With an “I don't care
what happens” attitude, he headed north until he arrived at
Philadelphia. Here he lived in a boarding home, and worked as a
trolley car motor-man. During his wanderings at night he happened
on a gambling joint. This was just the type of place he was looking
for to make him forget his troubles. Being a good card player, he
went home that evening with a good week salary obtained within a few
hours. This continued for about a week, and then he quit his work
and got a job playing cards for the gambling house. This environment
just added to his disgust for women and what was right.
One night when he was more
depressed than usual he indulged in the drinking of alcohol for the
first time. When he got home early the following morning the
boarding mistress was waiting for him because she had developed an
interest in him, and was anxious about his safety.
She had found out where he
was working nights and she could tell from his manner that he was not
the type of young man to be in such places. That morning she managed
to get him upstairs. He then related to her the story of what had
happened at home and gave that as an excuse for being in his present
condition. Emma, the boarding mistress, felt sorry for him and
suggested that he travel to forget his troubles.
Soon he was bumming his
way to California – only spending his money when his hard luck
story for a meal didn't work. By the time he got to California, he
was a pretty good judge of character because of his contacts with all
classes of people. In California he joined the J.L.Barnes circus as
a member of the lighting squad. Enthused about his work and pleased
with himself, he wrote a letter to Emma thanking her for her kind
advice and motherly interest. This letter started quite a
correspondence between them. Years passed by and meanwhile Emma had
left her husband and was following Uncle Hubbert from town to town.
He had advanced from lighting squad to and advance advertising agent,
and he made arrangements in the various towns before the circus
arrived.
After ten years of service
Uncle Hubbert was finally persuaded by Emma to leave the circus and
to settle down in California on a goat farm with her.
The years with the circus
had made him a shrewd businessman and a good conversationalist. It
also created within him a strong desire to wander and gave him
further opportunities to study character. Emma's influence, on the
other hand, tended to steady him. He stopped gambling and playing
cards, and for a while he gave up his wanderings. He was, however,
still restless, and he soon became tired of California. They moved
about from place to place – never staying long in one town.
At the present time they
are living in a small town where they have lived for two years.