Gus Kelley was born in 1882 in Huron Township
to Charles E. and Charlotte Kelley. His father’s ancestry was Irish, and his
mother’s side was English. In 1901, he married Jane Margaret Hinde. Gus was a
farmer for most of his life, and he was an active member of the Huron Grange.
During the fall of 1924, he ran for Erie County Commissioner. This advertisement appeared in the Sandusky
Star Journal of November 1, 1924:
In 1925, Gus Kelley was elected to serve as an Erie County
Commissioner. He held that office until January 1933. Later in 1933, after the
death of Fred Powers, Mr. Kelley was appointed to serve again as Erie County
Commissioner until 1936. In that year, he ran for the General Assembly of
the state of Ohio.
He began his term as Ohio State Representative in January of 1937 and served in the General Assembly for four years. Some of the issues with which he
was involved as a Representative were the development of state parks along the lake front, pensions
for senior citizens, and the change of authority of the Ohio Soldiers’ and
Sailors’ Home being switched from the Welfare Department to the Adjutant
General’s Office.
In May of 1930, a news article in the Sandusky Star Journal reported that when the Sandusky Studebakers
played the Red Caps of Wakeman, former major league ball player George (Jerry) Upp was to throw out the first pitch, and Gus Kelley was to catch the ball.
Gus Kelley died on January 29, 1964, at his home on East Perkins Avenue.
He was survived by his three sons. Mrs. Kelley had died in 1962. Funeral
services for Gus Kelley were held at the Charles J. Andres Sons’ Funeral Home,
and burial was in Oakland
Cemetery.
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