






The Ridge Historical Society
Part 13 – The Hofer Sisters – Conclusion
By Carol Flynn
By 1920, after having lived on the Ridge for about twenty-five years, the Hofer family had departed from the Beverly area. Some of the sisters stayed in Chicago, and some relocated to other states. They continued active careers for many more years.
Oldest sister Mari Ruef Hofer was recorded as living with her sister Andrea’s family in Hyde Park on the 1920 U.S. Census. By the late 1920s, she had relocated to Santa Monica, California, where her youngest sister Elsa Hofer Schreiber and Elsa’s family lived.
Mari died in 1929 at the age of 71 and was buried in Santa Monica.
The Oakland, California, Tribune noted at the time that Mari had been a faculty member at the University of California, Berkeley and in the summer of 1929 had presented pageants in the university’s Greek theater. She had just started the Greek Art Club of Berkeley.
Mari had continued to write and adapt music and folk dances for use in education and recreation programs. In 1926, she published “Christmas in Peasant France,” a Christmas play, and “Festival and Civic Plays from Greek and Roman Tales.” In 1927, she published “Camp Recreations and Pageants.”
Second sister Bertha Hofer Hegner lived in West Chicago, and upon her death in 1937 at the age of 75, was buried in Graceland Cemetery on Chicago’s north side.
Bertha was the President of both the Pestalozzi-Froebel Teachers College and the Columbia College of Expression until her retirement in 1936.
Bertha developed new education programs throughout her career. One of her later accomplishments was detailed in a 1933 Chicago Tribune article which is attached to this post. She developed and administered a kindergarten, grade school, and playground in the Marshall Field Garden Apartments, a housing development directed by Marshall Field III of the department store family to provide affordable housing and to spur development in the surrounding areas. The apartments, located at 1400 North Sedgewick Street in Old Town, are still in use today as subsidized housing.
Amalie Hofer Jerome, the third sister, and her husband Frank, were living in Hyde Park in 1920. After her husband died in 1933, she moved to their summer house in Michigan. She died in 1941 at the age of 78, and was buried in Mount Hope Cemetery on 115th Street on the Ridge, where her husband was also buried. She is the only Hofer sister to be buried on the Ridge.
Amalie adapted her father’s diary into a biography, and in 1939 published “My Century – The Story of Andreas Franz Hofer.” The book was reviewed by newspapers around the country. The Shreveport Journal in Louisiana gave a poignant review of the book that is attached to the post.
Andrea Hofer Proudfoot also stayed in Chicago, living in Hyde Park. Later, she and her husband Frederick apparently had homes in both Iowa, where Andrea grew up, and in Chicago. They both died in Chicago and were buried in McGregor, Iowa. Andrea was the last of the Hofer sisters, dying in 1949, at the age of 83.
Andrea was always a poet at heart. In 1919, she published a book of poetry called “Trolley Lines, Jotted Down Coming and Going.” It was called “Cubist verse” by Reedy’s Mirror, a literary journal of the day. Cubist writing took its cues from artists like Picasso during the Cubism period of the early 1900s. The objective observation of the external world was replaced by the “stream of consciousness” inner workings of the mind. One review said of Andrea’s work that it was “the new poetry but one can understand it.”
Andrea was president of the Poetry Lovers of America, and a member of the Dill Pickle Club, an unconventional Chicago social club that fostered free speech and good conversation for uninhibited people. “The Pickle” was Chicago’s answer to the “Bohemian” clubs of Greenwich Village in New York City. Andrea was instrumental in raising the money to build a clubhouse for the group on the near north side.
Elsa Hofer Schreiber and her artist husband George and their children moved to the west coast, first to Salem, Oregon, where several of the Hofer brothers lived, and by 1920 they were settled in Santa Monica, California, where George became known in the California arts scene.
Elsa died in 1942 at age 73 while at a daughter’s house in Battle Creek, Michigan. Her death certificate records she was cremated at Graceland Cemetery in Chicago, and burial records report she was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in Santa Monica.
Elsa had participated in numerous professional activities with her sisters and had run the school she and Andrea started in Beverly, but she was also very home- and family-oriented, a pattern set by her own mother, who lived with Elsa in her final years. Most of the later stories about Elsa revolve around her family.
In 1923, a double wedding took place at the Schreiber house the day after Christmas. Daughter Madelaine and son Armin married their respective fiancés in a gala ceremony with holly and poinsettia as the backdrop, and their brothers and sister in attendance. The following week, at New Year’s, a reception for the newlyweds was held at the Schreiber house.
In 1927, daughter Elizabeth was married in Santa Monica. The announcement is attached to this post. As no pictures of Elsa as an adult have been located so far, this picture of her daughter gives a clue as to her possible appearance.
In 1928, tragedy struck Elsa’s family when their youngest child, George L. Schreiber, Jr., died just as he was graduating from the University of California, Berkeley. The cause of death was attributed to ptomaine poisoning.
Father Andreas Franz Xavier Hofer died in 1904 in Beverly and was originally buried in Mount Hope Cemetery in Chicago. Mother Mari Ruef Hofer relocated with youngest daughter Elsa. Mari died in Santa Monica, California, in 1918, and was buried there in Woodlawn Cemetery. Her husband’s remains were relocated from Chicago to that cemetery to be buried with her.
Sons Frank and Andrew were buried in Salem, Oregon, and son Ernest in Portland, Oregon.
This concludes the series on the Hofer family who called Beverly home. Truly, this family personified the spirit of the Progressive Era.
