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'A gracious lady,' Frances Rose, 100

By BETSY BOLGER-PAULET
Published April 13, 2005


CLEARWATER - Frances "Nana" Rose, 100, of Clearwater, who moved to St. Petersburg in 1910 to join family who settled here in the late 1800s, died Friday (April 8, 2005) at Bayview Gardens. She had lived there since 2001 in one of the independent residence units until April 2002, when she moved into the assisted living tower.

Bayview's director, Judy Cunningham, remembered Rose as a popular resident. "She was a gracious lady - I don't know how else to describe her - meticulous and very charming," Cunningham said. "We are all going to miss her."

During the early 1990s, while living in St. Petersburg, she developed a lasting relationship with Mayor Rick Baker, who even took time out from his mayoral duties to help celebrate her milestone birthday last July.

The mayor fondly recalls Mrs. Rose, who was also a neighbor. Baker and his family lived only a block from Mrs. Rose in northeast St. Petersburg and would often visit her with his little girls.

"We'll miss her. I've known her for a number of years. My children liked to play cards at her house, fish and other games, and she was always sweet to them. Though her hearing wasn't good, she was very smart. I used a lot of what she told me in my book."

Their friendship started while Baker was writing From Mangroves to Major League, a chronicle of St. Petersburg from prehistory to 2000.

While he was researching the World War I history of the USS Tampa, Mrs. Rose's name came up as a source of information. The USS Tampa sailed out of St. Petersburg to lead a convoy in the English Channel. It was lost at sea and neither ship nor bodies were ever found. Among the many sailors aboard was her brother, Harold Myers, who had enlisted in the Coast Guard when the war broke out.

Baker discovered that not only did Mrs. Rose know details and have photos of some of the sailors who disappeared in the tragedy, she was a trove of information about St. Petersburg.

Baker was also instrumental in helping Myers get a posthumous Purple Heart.

A student of astrology, she was a teacher and lecturer at the Astrology Society in Washington, D.C.

She regularly attended conventions of the national astrological group and was the leader of a local astrology club. She helped found the country's first American War Mothers Club and was president of the St. Petersburg chapter in 1960. She was also active with the Democratic Women's Club of Florida.

Mrs. Rose gave more than 3,000 volunteer hours to VA Medical Center at Bay Pines and more than 7,000 hours to Bayfront Medical Center. She also volunteered in Hillsborough County, logging 1,100 hours for veterans in the Tampa Veterans Hospital (now the James A. Haley VA Medical Center). The American Red Cross awarded Mrs. Rose a 25-year pin for her work as a Gray Lady.

She depended on her astrological charts for guidance: She mapped out routes very carefully and often said that in more than three decades of travel, the group never had car trouble or an accident. Rain or shine, the women would visit every place they thought might be interesting, eating their lunches along the side of the road, playing canasta, checking out the local sights and shopping in stores and malls.

[Last modified April 13, 2005, 01:29:17]


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