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Lydia Rogers was unique in the St.
Louis Park community – a married woman/divorcee/widow who
ran her own business and was accepted and respected by
everyone. Everything she did served the community, whether
it be by publishing directories, renewing license plates, or
maybe just being that one notary public who was available in
the middle of the night.
Lidia Reiter was born on July 7, 1899 in Ziradov, Poland, a
fact that few people knew until her death. When she came to
Minneapolis is unclear. She married first husband Alcide Camile
“Butch” Demeules from Minneapolis on January 11, 1922 in
Minneapolis. With Butch, Lydia had her first two children.
Yvonne Jeannette Demeules was born in about 1922 and
graduated from high school in 1940. She informally changed
her name to Mitzi Rogers in 1925 and changed it legally when
she went into the Marines. She served in California and
Hawaii during the war, and worked as a court reporter during
war crimes proceedings in Heidelberg, where she met her
husband, Balthazar Hubertus “Pinky” Pinckaers, who was
Dutch. They married on July 2, 1947 in Munich.
Mitzi died on October 14, 2005.
Robert Sherwood Rogers was born in about 1924 and graduated
in 1942. He served on a submarine as an electrical engineer
during the war, and moved his family to California in 1960.
He also married a European, Maria from Germany. Robert died
in 1997.
Lydia and Butch divorced in February 1925; Butch died on
November 30, 1938 of cirrhosis of the liver.
It was in 1925 that Lydia first came to St. Louis Park from
Osseo, and also the year she married Bishop McClure Rogers,
on August 29. Rogers ran a sign painting business from their
home after his business burned down. They had a daughter,
Caroll Lou, who was born on August 6, 1927. She married Joe
Fisher, who died in 1977. They had five children and
divorced some time after 1962. Caroll Lou died on January
16, 2002.
From 1925 to 1936, we think the Rogers family lived at 4150
Brookside, although another source gives the house number as
4143, and the year as 1921. (Keep in mind that house numbers
on Brookside Ave. during that time were rather fluid.) From
1936 to 1947, Lydia lived at 4069 Alabama Ave. And from 1947
to 1978, Lydia lived at her new place of business, 4901
Excelsior Blvd. (undated at right, below in 2000). This building was specifically built for
commercial and residential use.

Lydia and Bishop Rogers created the first Village directory
in 1933-34. The project started when FDR wanted a list of
the unemployed in preparation for the WPA. The Village chose
the Rogers to take the census, and they went door-to-door
gathering the information. They reportedly netted only $10
from their first directory. When Bishop died after a fall on
December 12, 1938, Lydia continued to publish the
directories until 1959.
Lydia Rogers was extraordinarily active in the community.
From 1938 she was the only female member of the
Business Men’s Association,
and up to 1948 she acted as Secretary and Treasurer. During
the War she was a member of the St. Louis Park Commodity
Allocation Board. She was also a member of the Business and
Professional Women’s Association of Minneapolis.
In addition to producing directories, which would grow
exponentially during Park’s tremendous growth, her
professional services included maps, mimeographing, mailing
lists, typing, and printing. She was a notary public, and
from 1948 to 1978 she was a State agent for drivers licenses
and automobile transfers. Before the Dispatch was launched
in 1941, she also wrote a column about Park news in Hopkins'
Hennepin County Review.
She advertised that her services as a notary public were
available 24 hours a day, and was often roused out of bed to
serve a customer in her night clothes. She also took in
roomers in this small house/office. She is remembered as a
generous, helpful person (and a chain smoker, surrounded by
ashtrays).
Lydia Rogers died on August 8, 1987 of a
stroke/hypertension. Although her last home was in
Bloomington, we can be sure that she always had St. Louis
Park in her heart. She made tremendous contributions to the
community, and will always remain part of our city’s legacy.
See also Directories.

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