(Continued from Part 1)
Lucretia Osborn McKleroy: “The Most Interesting Woman in the World… you’ve never heard of” by J.Macon King
California, Family, Happiness and Tragedy


Relocated to Monterey with her husband’s appointment to Fort Ord, the young couple would post-war move to San Francisco. William McKleroy used his family banking savvy to purchase the city’s real estate for the baby boom. Despite his size, William was an agile and graceful skier and ice skater.


In the fifties, the charming couple held, and were invited to, the increasingly popular social cocktail parties. A bizarre kidnapping thrust their group in to the limelight. Friends with Fred Cox, Frog Lake owner Lawrence Smith, the McKleroys spent several weekends at parties at the Frog Lake stone cabin. (Near Truckee, it is now part of Truckee Donner Land Trust, site of the 2026 deadly avalanche at Perry Peak, Castle Peak,) Frog Lake would make three SF Chronicle headlines. In a Wild-West-type tale, their friend Fred Cox, Smith and caretaker Walter Taylor were held at shotgun point and kidnapped to a neighboring ranch, over a property dispute. Despite shots fired, no one was injured and the captives were eventually released. The McKleroys and friends would later make a satire short film of the event on site at Frog Lake, called “The Ballad of Frog Lake.” The MillValleyLit editors were able to view this film and the Chronicle newspapers. See link to Tahoe Quarterly below.***

The early sixties found the McKleroys becoming key supporters and public relations ambassadors for the development of Lake Tahoe area Alpine Meadows ski resort (now with Squaw Valley known as Palisades). The McKleroy five children were also avid skiers and often local Ski Club and NASTAR race winners. The cabin they built in 1962 of incense pecky cedar and knotty pine (from a kit!) still stands, among the modern million dollar mansions, as the oldest cabin in Alpine Meadows estates.
The Haight Ashbury hippies and burgeoning music scene had its effect on San Francisco locals and their children. Their only daughter, Lucretia VIII turned into a teen in the early 70’s and temptations were aplenty. The Haight, Winterland and The Fillmore beckoned. Older siblings of her and friends in this heady environment made growing up easier but quicker. Despite William’s military background and Lucretia’s societal upbringing they were open to change. William would sometimes sport a Nehru shirt, love beads and a long wig over his bald head to shock his son’s dates. Lucretia expressed her sympathies for the peace, love and politics cause in her song\poem, “The Angry Young Man” viewable at her poetry link below, and others.
In 1969 the couple traveled to Russia (Soviet Union) with eleven-year-old daughter, Lucretia IX. The daughter showed a young Red Army soldier on the train her history book with a section on Russia with photos of the Kremlin. He was incredulous that Americans would study them and have such photos. The girl became quite ill there and was hospitalized. Despite the Russian advances with Sputnik and the space race, their medical system, including “cupping” almost lost the girl.
Lucretia and her husband were well-known for their large Christmas parties at their long-time Bermuda pink Pacific Heights home. Their activities were mentioned in Chronicle Herb Caen columns and Social Scene pages, and friends included actor Vincent Price. Yet, were as approachable and friendly in Trader Vic’s as well as Hippo Burger. All seemed a perfect life.


Double tragedies would befall the happy family. First, the sudden death of their charismatic second son, Harry, on Christmas night,1968. Harry driving, with two of his three brothers attempted to beat the storm for fresh powder up treacherous old Highway 80 to Alpine Meadows. The Rambler wagon was filled with new Christmas-present skis. The car slid off the road near Colfax, the roll-over down the bank pinning and crushing Harry, yet miraculously sparing the other brothers, despite one through the windshield and the other somehow flew through the sunroof. In a reoccurred theme, Harry died in brother Bruce’s arms, and sister Lucretia was ten years old. This accident scarred the family for years in more than one way, especially as they had to drive past the crash site every time on the drive to Tahoe. In the following days, Harry’s spirit appeared to the family in a number of ways, and his green eyes appeared in a secret seance held by his little sister and her friends.
A few years later in 1974, husband and father William had a fatal heart attack while playing tennis. Young Lucretia IX (age sixteen), like her mother before her, was suddenly with one parent. Lucretia VIII became the matriarch of the well-known McKleroy family while maintaining her family’s prominent standing within New York and California high society.

She passed on 12 March 1994 at her home at the age of 77 with a memorial held at Grace Cathedral. She is at rest alongside her beloved husband and son at Trail’s End cemetery in Tahoe City, CA.




*** Frog Lake kidnap story: https://tahoequarterly.com/mountain-home-awards-2021/frog-lakes-forgotten-past






This article was based on numerous conversations with Lucretia Perry Osborn McKleroy, four of her children, plus friends. Also conversation with best-selling novelist TC Boyle, who lived in the Castle Rock Gate House for some time, its long-time caretaker, Chip Marks, and independent research. Interview with McKleroy’s good friend, the late Merritt Cutten provided his and Betty Cutten’s experience at Frog Lake. Thanks to Kaye McKleroy for the bound poetry edition of Lucretia from which select poems were published here. A special thanks to the lovely Lucretia (IX) Perry McKleroy for whom without this piece would not have occurred. Much appreciation and love to the entire McKleroy family. JMK
Read Lucretia Osborn McKleroy poetry sampler here
END
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