“Bothered by Swamps of Proposal Letters” from the April 9, 1914, issue
of The Day Book, Chicago
Boston, April 9—Swamped by the proposals of marriage by both
mail and telephone, Helen Cudahy, daughter of the millionaire Chicago packer,
who by choice has become a probationary nurse in a hospital here, today was
practically a prisoner through her efforts to avoid being wed yea or nay.
“Will-you-marry-me” letters come in floods by every mail,
and Boston swains are energetically using the telephone that Miss Cudahy will
not answer a call until she knows that some admirer is not trying to whisper
sweet nothings at the other end of the wire.
“Miss Helen Cudahy Rebels” from the Cornell Daily Sun, Sunday, April 20, 1914
Miss Helen Cudahy, daughter of Patrick Cudahy, millionaire,
came from the west to learn nursing at the Massachusetts General Hospital, but
decided not to stay.
Her reason is given in her own words: “I thought training in
a hospital meant taking care of patients. I find it is three-fourths housework
and drudgery.”
“Granddaughter of Packer Aids Poor” from The Day Book, Dec. 12, 1914
Another of the “Cudahy girls” has turned her attention from
society to charity. Like her cousin, Miss Helen Cudahy, who became a trained
nurse, Miss Alice Cudahy, granddaughter of the late Michael Cudahy, pioneer
pork packer and multimillionaire, gives more time to charity than she does to
society.
Miss Cudahy’s pet charity in Chicago is the
lying-in-hospital, a refuge for poor women; with the aid of several other society
young women she has planned a Christmas benefit for the hospital.
“American Girl Kills Herself” from the Reading Eagle, Oct. 27, 1917
Paris, Oct. 27—Miss Helen Cudahy, daughter of Patrick
Cudahy, the Milwaukee meat packer, committed suicide in midocean on Oct. 19,
according to the army edition of the Chicago Tribune.
Fear of submarines is believed to have been the motive for
her act, the newspaper says. According to this account Miss Cudahy, who was
coming to France on a Red Cross mission, appeared to be cheerful in the early
days of the voyage, but when the submarine zone was approached and a convoy met
the steamer on which she was a passenger, she remained in her cabin.
A friend who went to her cabin on the night of Oct. 19 found
the room empty, the port hole open,and this hurriedly written note:
“It is all for best. Keep as much as possible from father
and mother. Notify my brother Michael.”
"Helen Cudahy Left Estate to Charity" from the March 8, 1920, issue of
The Milwaukee Journal
The final decree in the estate of Helen M. Cudahy has been
filed by Judge John C. Karel of the county court. Miss Cudahy was drowned Oct.
19, 1917.
The annual cash income of the estate totals $10,863.10, and
is ordered equally divided among the Associated Charities, the Milwaukee
Children’s Hospital and the Free Medical Dispensary of Marquette university.
The income from 1,000 shares of stock in the Patrick Cudahy Family Co. is left
in trust to the First Wisconsin Trust Co. to be administered for the three beneficiaries.
The balance of the estate is to be distributed under direction of the Milwaukee
Foundation, a charitable fund.
Miss Cudahy left personal property valued at
approximately $50,000. Michael Cudahy, her brother, was named executor by the
will, but declined to act by reason of service in the army. Patrick Cudahy, the
father, was then named as executor, but upon his death, July 23, 1919, John
Cudahy, another brother, was named administrator.
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