Family History #1: 19-Teens, 1920s, Vaudeville. Joseph And Roxy LaRocca. Peoria. Virginia & Josephine Young. SLC. The Great Depression. Oakland. Meet Jane Harker #1. Warner Bros.

Roxy LaRocca is Diana Cotterell /Paige Young’s great uncle. He was famous for his harp act and toured the Vaudeville circuit. Roxy used this as his passport photo.

Family Background In Vaudeville:

Census records, military records and local directories show that Joseph Ned LaRocca, Diana Cotterell’s grandfather, was born in 1894 in Peoria, Illinois and grew up there.

Known as “Ned,” Joseph Ned LaRocca was a harpist in a family of several musician brothers, and one sister named Kathryn.

His father was Salvatore LaRocca. “Sal” a harpist from Italy who settled in Chicago. He raised a family in Peoria with Rose Ann, born Dunufrio.

According to Find a Grave website, the couple moved to Peoria when Salvatore was offered the leadership of a local Italian band: Marino’s:

Emigrated in 1872. Married Anna Rosalia Denufrio in 21 Dec 1879 in Cook Co, IL. In 1900, this family lived in Peoria. The children included: Roxie (1886), Katie (1890), Frank (1893), Joseph (1895), Nickolas (1897), and Paul (1899). Listed in Peoria City Directory by 1892. He was a musician, specifically, a harpist in Marino’s Italian Orchestra. It’s hard to read the marker, but Anna is listed as his widow in the 1907 Peoria City Directory. Anna and most of his children are buried at St. Mary’s Cemetery in West Peoria. Find a Grave.

Salvatore LaRocca, died at age 52 in 1906, according to records from Peoria listed on ancestry.com.

I have found a few articles about the band Marino’s Italian Band. UPDATE SOON. Salvatore.

Daily Review Atlas Monmouth, Illinois. Oct. 7th, 1898 Marino’s Italian Orchestra played in several Illinois towns. This advertisement if for E.B. Colwell of Monmouth. Dry Goods Stores a the prototype for later Department Store.
As of 2025, the traditional department store is on it’s way out. Mostly, anyway.

High School commencement ceremonies at an opera house in Mackinaw, Illinois. Marino’s Italian Orchestra from Peoria provides music.

The Weekly Pantagraph, Bloomington Illinois. May 21, 1897

According to the 1910 census

Ned and his brothers were living in Chicago with their widowed mother Anna, at 1245 Ohio St.

Ned LaRocca’s profession is listed as musician and age is 16 yrs.

His older brothers were also listed as musicians and the one sister Kathryn, a telephone operator.

The family returned to Peoria at some point.

Roxy LaRocca, the oldest La Rocca brother, was the family’s most commercially successful brother.

December 20, 1915 Bangor, Maine. Vaudeville was still a popular entertainment form this year.

Roxy was a famous-at-the-time Vaudeville harpist, known affectionately as the Wizard of the Harp.

He had several other monikers during his long career on stage. Roxy’s name made it across the nation when he broke a record for longest harp playing.

Edmonton Journal May 18, 1929.

May 25, 1923. Middlebury, Vermont Register.

The Spokane Press May 25, 1929 Roxy LaRocca
The Dayton Herald praises Roxy LaRocca’s harp performance on May 7, 1928

The LaRocca brothers were all musicians. Roxy and younger brother Ned were harpists.

Roxy and Ned both toured with major vaudeville circuits like Orpheum and Pantages in the 19-teens and 1920s.

Yet, none of the LaRocca brothers became quite as well known as Roxy.

Florida Times-Union Aug. 28, 1911 Roxy on the the prestigious Orpheum Vaudeville Circuit.

Ned La Rocca

is Diana Cotterell/Paige Young’s grandfather and younger brother of Roxy.

Ned’s instrument is the harp, just like brother Roxy and father, Salvatore, Ned often used the professional name Ned Argo or just plain Argo.

Richmond, CA. Apr. 25, 1925. Ned Argo performs with the Max Bradfield Versatile Band based in Oakland and San Francisco. Very little information on this band. Ned and Virginia lived in Oakland, Ca. in 1927-28.

Sacramento Bee Oct. 3, 1925 For the most part, Joseph Ned LaRocca used the moniker Ned Argo, in his Vaudeville act.

Vaudeville was beginning to slide as a popular mass-media entertainment form. “Moving pictures” and Radio continued to chip away at the popularity of Vaudeville.

Vallejo Evening News Apr. 9, 1925 Article tell about Ned Argo, joining the Max Bradfield Band. and and live radio broadcasting from the Vallejo theatre! Ned was part of the radio revolution with broadcasting live music to the public.

Ned was to have a future in performing with his harp for radio broadcasts in Los Angeles. More on this later.

RCA Corp. did a study in 1925 and found that 19% of homes had a radio. In 1930, it was 40%.

Virginia Young, Diana Cotterell aka Paige Young’s Grandmother born in Salt Lake City. She toured Vaudeville with a successful musical play “The Wrong Bird,” a local SLC production. This production was first performed a few years after Virginia’s mother died. SLC Tribune Mar. 28, 1915. Virginia was 17-18 here. Virginia and Ned met during a tour of the Wrong Bird. Ned was on the bill with his harp act.

Part of the Salt Lake City drama and music community, Virginia and her sister Josephine were touring Vaudeville performers while still teenagers. (Not uncommon at the time.)

The sisters’ mother was named Josephine Young.

She died when her daughters Virginia and Josephine were in their early teens.

May 10, 1912 Salt Lake Tribune. Daughter Virginia was 14-15 years old. Father Albert is listed here as the “state veterinarian.” Listed as a prison doctor in other sources.
1912, SLC newspaper. Mother of Viginia and Josephine Young dies suddenly. Josephine Young, (the elder’s) mother was Emily Partridge Young. The 1910 census shows the family living at 503 8th Ave. in Salt Lake City. This building has been demolished.

Virginia and Josephine’s grandfather was Brigham Young, head of the Mormon church aka LDS.

The girls’ grandmother was one of his many wives: Emily Partridge Young.

If you google Emily Partridge Young, you will see that she and her sister Eliza hold a significant place in LDS history.

The sisters were among the first “plural wives” of founder Joseph Smith.

Part #1 Obituary for the mother of Diana/Paige’s grandmother Virginia Young. Kansas City Journal Dec. 24, 1899. Emily Dow Partridge Young.
Part #2 of above article. If you can understand the last 1/4 of the article, please explain to me.

These are the youngest two daughters of Josephine and Albert Carrington Young: Josephine and Virginia. They were the 2 youngest of 4 older siblings in the family.

Who survived to adulthood that is.

(From a Mormon genealogy website.)

Marriage in 1915 Paige Young’s maternal grandparents.

Virginia and Joseph Ned LaRocca marry.

The musical play The Wrong Bird was written by Margaret Whitney, part of the theater and music circles in SLC. Whitney was noted as a successful “girl composer,” by several news articles at the time. The homestate Utah newspapers offered generous coverage to Whitney’s career and The Wrong Bird. Pantages picked up the musical play and the SLC based troupe toured on the circuit of Pantages owned theatres

Virginia Young and Ned Argo are both on this Pantages bill. His harp act toured with The Wrong Bird. Local Pantages Playhouse in Salt Lake City.

Salt Lake Herald Apr. 1, 1915

The married couple form a vaudeville act. They tour the US in the late 19teens. They perform through most, if not all, of the 1920s. Ned continues to use the name Ned Argo or Argo. Virginia uses several different names. Jean Virginia is one. Verjenia is another.

Article about Wrong Bird star, Josephine Young. S

Excellent “newsy” and flattering article about Josephine Young, sister of Virginia. Salt Lake Herald, May 5, 1918. Sister Virginia Young and her brother-in-law Ned Argo mentioned . Josephine would be married to George Truman Harker in about a year and perform with Virginia and brother-in-law Ned, in an act together.

From Mormon family website. Virginia Young in 1929 it’s dated by the family.

Joseph N and Virginia LaRocca are listed in the 1917 and 1918 and 1923 Peoria, Ill. directory.

1917 Peoria directory lists under LaRocca: Annie, Frank and Rose, Joe and Virginia, Nick, Paul, Roxy and Emma, all at 205 Martin St. ancestry.com

1922 Peoria directory lists Anna, widow, Paul, Roxie (no Emma) Ned and Virginia, Frank and Rose. ancestry.com

Sometimes Virginia’s sister and fellow vaudeville player Josephine, is part of the act. The girls went by the name “The Virginia Sisters.” This is seen in the ad below from the Salt Lake City Tribune. It is from Oct. 1, 1919.

June 30, 1917 Goodwin’s Weekly SLC.

Virginia was married by now and singing in a vaudeville act with her husband Ned, not named here.

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Newspaper clipping discussing a performance featuring Ned Argo and the Virginia Sisters, highlighting the harp playing and vocal qualities of the performers.
Long Beach Telegram review of Ned and the Virginia Sisters. Sept. 24, 1919
Advertisement for Pantages Vaudeville featuring multiple acts including Ned Argo and the Young Sisters, along with details about showtimes and ticket prices.
Salt Lake City Herald. Oct 1, 1919. Hometown of the Young sisters. On the Pantages Circuit.

Scanned excerpt from a newspaper review discussing a performance by Ned Argo and the Virginia Sisters, highlighting their musical act.
June 6, 1919 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Canada. Reporter giving the most “negative” review of the Argo/Sisters act I have read so far.

Saskatoon Daily Star June 6, 1916

Below we see Ned Argo and the Virgina Sisters play the Pantages in LA.

D.W. Griffith will be introducing his film Broken Blossoms and you will need a ticket!

Look at the few lines at the very end of the ad. 1919. ^^^^^^^^^^^^”dainty dancing and musical numbers.”

Los Angeles Daily Times Sept. 15, 1919 Wedding notice for Josephine Young and George Harker, married backstage at LA’s famous Pantages theater. Josephine is Diana/Paige’s great aunt; the sister of her Grandmother Virginia, who inspired Paige’s chosen surname of Young.
From the Mormon Family genealogy website.

1920 approx. Josephine Young quit touring with her sister and brother-in-law and moved to San Francisco with her husband George Truman Harker.

They started a family there: Jack Truman Harker born in 1921, and a daughter, Mary Jane, in 1923 .

In the 1920 Federal Census, Virginia is listed as living in Peoria, Illinois with her husband and his family. Her occupation is listed as “Actress on stage.”

Virginia would gave birth to Donna Virginia LaRocca, 1921 in Peoria, Ill.

The whole LaRocca family including in-law Virginia, living together in 1923 in Peoria, Illinois, home base for the LaRoccas.

Her sister Josephine Young Harker is across the country in San Francisco. She gave birth this year to Mary Jane Harker. She had given birth to son Jack Truman Harker in 1921. I’m not sure where right now.

Frank & Rose, another in-law, would soon move to nearby Decatur for Frank’s employment at the Avon Theatre.

<<<<<<from a directory found on ancestry.com

Anna, the matriarch, is listed as a “widow of Salvatore.” J

Ned and Virginia continued to tour Vaudeville throughout the 1920s.

As you have seen.

I don’t know if they brought their young daughter, Donna, along on the tour. She might have stayed in Peoria with Grandma Anna LaRocca.

The couple had a stop over in 1926-1928 in Oakland, California as seen by directories on ancestry.com

Should read Santa Clara St.
1928 Oakland, California directory. See the name Biogio LaRocca, he may have been family. He’s also listed in LA phone books along with Ned and Virginia.

1928 Voter’s registration, Oakland California. Joseph is incorrectly listed where his wife Virginia should be written, he is the one who “declined.” Virginia still identified as a Democrat at this time.

Charlotte Observer June 27, 1929. With an act called “From Peoria.”

Ned & Virginia are listed in the 1930 census as living in Peoria, Ill. The family was only a few years away from permanently relocating to Los Angeles.

Vaudeville would soon be dead.

Mount Vernon Argus April 20, 1929

Another ad featuring “From Peoria”: An Act with the theme of middle-America i.e. Ned Argo’s hometown.

As we’ve seen, the couple was living in Oakland, California for two years in the late 1920s.

Yet they can lay claim to being from Peoria, Ned’s hometown, and play this up for their latest Vaudeville act.

1930 Census Marinellos and LaRocca, cousins Mildred and Donna V. are listed next door to each other in the family home on Martin in Peoria. Looks like the Marinellos are sharing 208 Martin with another family. Ned, “Jeanette” and Donna Vey are lodgers at the home of a Lena Buckley. Previous census and directories show the LaRoccas only, listed in this address home.

It appears like they were renting their own home in 1930, just months after the 1929 stock market crash that resulted in the Great Depression.

After Vaudeville died out in the early 1930s, the Great Depression was already in full swing.

Roxy LaRocca retired at this time to the LaRocca family hometown of Peoria, Illinois, where he started a magazine stand. He later became involved in local politics.

Frank and Rose, Ned and Virginia, moved to LA during the Depression early/mid 1930s. See much more information about this in the next chapter……..

Her career there lasted for only about 2 years.

Please see my next chapter Family History #2 for an in-depth history. It includes the move to Los Angeles in the 1930s. It also covers Radio City from 1938 through the 1940s.

There is also much more on Jane Harker, model/starlet. She worked with some of Hollywood’s biggest stars during her brief career at Warner Brothers studio.

Jane appears in an obscure Noir film: The Unfaithful starring Ann Sheridan. Also starring Angels Flight, one of the last remaining relics of Bunker Hill in Los Angeles. This film has been shown on TCM a few times.

Jane is credited on imdb as the “red-headed snob” in Humoresque starring Joan Crawford and John Garfield.

Harker had small parts in movies with stars such as Joan Crawford, Ann Sheridan, John Garfield, Bette Davis, Jack Carson, Errol Flynn, Eleanor Parker and more.

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