Florence Molloy And Mabel MacLeay
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Florence C. Molloy (1878 - 1951) and Mabel N. MacLeay (1883 - 1950) were American businesswomen who ran the Molloy-MacLeay taxicab company in
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(about 1916 - 1926).


Florence C. Molloy

Florence Hayden Cowie Molloy was born in November 1878 in
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to William Cowie of
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and Sarah H. Cowie of New York. She had at least one sister, Isabella Brillinger (née Cowie). Florence's father William was at one time the mayor of Syracuse. On February 5, 1908, Florence Cowie married Thomas J. Molloy (1877 - death date unknown) in Syracuse, New York and they subsequently had two daughters: Mary (1909 - death date unknown) and Jane Molloy (1911 - death date unknown). Florence and Thomas raised mules on the Molloy family farm in
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until 1912. In 1914 he transferred his interest in the property to Florence. She sold the property in 1920, but continued to hold the mortgage, and in 1935 she foreclosed on the buyer. In 1942 she sold the property to the U.S. government to build Mattydale Army Air Base, now Hancock Field. The timing of the end of Florence's and Thomas's relationship is unclear. By 1918, Florence Molloy had moved with her daughters to Boulder, CO and was operating the Molloy-MacLeay taxicab company with Mabel N. MacLeay. The 1920 United States Census listed Florence as divorced, but the 1940 U.S. Census listed her as widowed.


Mabel N. MacLeay

Mabel Nye MacLeay was born in 1883 in
Pendleton, Oregon Pendleton is a city and the county seat of Umatilla County, Oregon. The population was 17,107 at the time of the 2020 census, which includes approximately 1,600 people who are incarcerated at Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution. Pendleton ...
. Little is known of Mabel's early life. Mabel married Lachlan MacLeay in 1903 and they had a son Donald MacLeay (December 27, 1909 - October 18, 1994) while residing in
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. By 1915, the MacLeays were residents of Syracuse, NY where Lachlan was serving as the Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce. Similar to Florence and Thomas, the end of Mabel's and Lachlan's relationship is unclear. In 1920, Mabel was noted in the U.S. Census as married, but living in Boulder, not with Lachlan, and operating the taxi company. The 1930 Census lists MacLeay as divorced and living with Malloy in the historic Squires-Tourellot house at 1019 Spruce Street, Boulder, CO, which also happens to be the oldest remaining house in Boulder, and working as a resort manager, but in 1940, she is listed as widowed.


Molloy-MacLeay Taxicab Company


Early years

Malloy and MacLeay met in Syracuse before relocating to Boulder in 1916 and starting their taxi service. Based on personal accounts, the women were opposites with Molloy being over six feet tall and, “a great big masculine woman,” and MacLeay being petite and ladylike. The service began sometime during the years of
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when the man operating the only service in Boulder, CO was drafted. The service started with a single five passenger
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8 which Molloy used to drive friends. However, the business began to grow during the
1918 Spanish flu The 1918–1920 influenza pandemic, commonly known by the misnomer Spanish flu or as the Great Influenza epidemic, was an exceptionally deadly global influenza pandemic caused by the H1N1 influenza A virus. The earliest documented case was ...
when the company volunteered with the
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to transport medical professionals and supplies to the mountain towns and serve in funeral processions. During the epidemic, the 38-year-old Molloy was called on to fill in for an undertaker when his hearse could not traverse the mountain roads to pick up a flu victim. She initially refused, saying her car was out of order, but the undertaker demanded she, “Take it to the garage and get another car!” This was a turning point in the business as the job showed Molloy that no trip was too difficult to handle. The service expanded from driving friends to providing scenic tours to clients using an additional seven-passenger
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. The charge was $7.00 per day per passenger for a round trip to Estes Park from Boulder or a circular route from Boulder to Nederland, Rollinsville,
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, Lookout Mountain, and back to Boulder. They drove with the idea that sightseeing trips should be leisurely and not hurried. To further increase their clientele, the women expanded into city transportation and added a third car (a
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) as well as a male driver. Eventually the company expanded to eight cars.


Peak years

By 1922, the Molloy-MacLeay taxicab company was operating from the Hotel Boulderado and rides across Boulder cost ¢25. The service was operating during
Prohibition in the United States In the United States from 1920 to 1933, a Constitution of the United States, nationwide constitutional law prohibition, prohibited the production, importation, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages. The alcohol industry was curtai ...
and the women would not pick up intoxicated passengers or transport liquor. The service catered to a variety of clientele, but became the go to driving service for the female students of the
University of Colorado at Boulder The University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder, CU, or Colorado) is a public research university in Boulder, Colorado. Founded in 1876, five months before Colorado became a state, it is the flagship university of the University of Colorado sys ...
. The students’ parents would hire Molloy and MacLeay to act as both drivers and chaperones, especially as Molloy and MacLeay were much less expensive than the usual driver plus chaperone for longer trips. In a 1986 interview with one of the service's patrons, CU student Helen Carpenter, Carpenter said, “My gang of girls went everywhere with Mrs. Molloy. She took us to football games and to Estes Park for dinner." Additionally, the service was used by Jean Sherwood's “bluebirds,” working women from Chicago who vacationed at Bluebird Cottage in Boulder through the Bluebird Association (or Chicago Holiday Association). Malloy and MacLeay were also a favorite for funerals and received referrals from a local doctor. Two of their high-profile patrons were attorney Clarence Darrow and opera singer Madame Ernestine Schumann-Heink. Upon hearing the fare for her trip, Madame Schumann-Heink declared, “You deserve more. Your charge is so reasonable! Everywhere else, they try to hold me up. I am glad to help a sister,” and then paid $5.00. According to Molloy and MacLeay, “taxi driving is a safe and sane occupation for any woman who has coolness, courage, and a thorough knowledge of how to operate a car." Despite their success, Molloy and MacLeay had to overcome the prejudiced opinion that women are not good drivers. Both women maintained “100 percent records” and only experienced two breakdowns in the 1921 season. They were noted for, “keeping their cars in such shape that breakdowns don’t occur."


Opposition and sale

During the peak years of Molloy's and MacLeay's service, theirs was not the only taxi business in town and the success of their business led to upset among the male taxi drivers in Boulder. This discord only increased in 1926 when Molloy and MacLeay obtained a contract with
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for the exclusive rights to solicit passengers from the Colorado & Southern Railway passenger trains at the Boulder depot. The other taxi owners in Boulder subsequently lobbied for the passage of strict solicitation regulations, which became city ordinance 1169. In June 1926, three taxi drivers, E.W. O’Neal, Ray Hall, and Seth Armstead filed a complaint against Molloy and MacLeay claiming they had violated the new city ordinance by soliciting business at the Union station platform. Malloy pleaded not guilty, and was supported by the station agent, J.P. Colstadt, and the secretary-manager of Bluebird Cottage, Emma Tracy, who said that though Molloy-MacLeay taxi has a contract with the Bluebirds, Bluebirds were not compelled to use the service. Nonetheless, Judge Linda Lee ordered the Molloy-MacLeay taxi stand removed from the station. According to letters written by Molloy and MacLeay to friends in Syracuse, NY, the women were also receiving threats from the
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calling for them to close their business. As a result of the regulations, litigation, and threats, the Daily Camera announced on June 19, 1926, that Molloy and MacLeay had sold the Molloy-MacLeay taxicab company to the Yellow Cab company, but would continue Molloy Scenic Tours outside of Boulder city limits and continue a one-year lease to the Bluebirds.


Double M Ranch

After the closure of the taxi service, the women opened the Double M dude ranch (or M&M ranch, then Trojan Ranch, and now the Colorado Mountain Ranch) in
Gold Hill, CO Gold Hill is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place (CDP) located in and governed by Boulder County, Colorado, United States. The CDP is a part of the Boulder, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population of the Gold Hill ...
. The
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described the Double M as offering, “all the attractions of the open spaces of the West sufficiently tempered with luxuries to meet the requirement of Easterners." The ranch operated until
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when it was sold in 1941 and Molloy and MacLeay relocated to Sunset Ranch at 2801 Baseline Road. They then sold Sunset Ranch in 1945 to move to the Loyal King home at 1200 28th St.


Death

Mable MacLeay died in 1950 and Florence Molloy died in 1951.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Molloy, Florence and Mabel Macleay People from Boulder, Colorado American taxi drivers