A Whole Lotta Family - Person Sheet
A Whole Lotta Family - Person Sheet
NameIrene C Crouse 13
Birth2 Mar 1920, Cainsville, Harrison Co, Missouri13,11
Death29 Jun 2020, Kansas City, Jackson Co, Missouri13,11 Age: 100
BurialCalvary Cemetery, Kansas City, Jackson Co, Missouri2135
FatherCalvin Crouse (1892-1965)
MotherMae Gertrude Hagan (1896-1972)
Spouses
Birth13 Apr 1914, Kansas City, Jackson Co, Missouri
Death10 Feb 1970, Cannon City, Fremont Co, Colorado Age: 55
BurialCalvary Cemetery, Kansas City, Jackson Co, Missouri11
ReligionCatholic
FatherHarry Lawrence Dierks (1882-1941)
Marriage6 May 1942, Kansas City, Jackson Co, Missouri11
Notes for Irene C Crouse
Twins, Irene Crouse Dierks and Orlene Crouse Johnson, daughters of Calvin and Mae (Hagan) Crouse, son of Henry Crouse, son of Calvin and Christena (Greenwood) Crouse, who is the son of Martin and Susannah (Waggoner)Crouse.
Irene and Orlene were born in 1920. While in their teens, they began singing on the radio in Shenandoah, IA. They later sang on the radio in St Joseph, MO and moved on to Kansas City, MO with their radio singing. While singing in Kansas City, MO they had a contest for their singing names. The names "Kit & Kay" were chosen. Orlene died in 2005.
In 1938, just shy of their 18th birthdays and about 100 miles south of their Cainsville, Missouri, farm, twins Irene and Orlene Crouse found themselves in Kansas City, with five-year contracts and radio stardom.
Just a few years earlier, Irene and Orlene, then 14-year-old identical twins, along with their two older sisters, had been hired by station KMA in Shenandoah, Iowa, to perform on its early morning "Country School" show. After the older sisters left to start families, the younger girls continued as the Crouse Twins, eventually moving to KFNF, also in Shenandoah, and then to KFEQ, in St. Joseph, Missouri.
The Crouse sisters quartet first gained fame playing the barn dances and county fairs around their hometown. As a duet, with Orlene on guitar and Irene on mandolin, and both providing sweet cowgirl harmonies, the twins were an instant radio hit, attracting fans throughout the Midwest. One admirer was KMBC founder Arthur B. Church, who tried to lure them from St. Joseph Kansas City with ever more lucrative contracts. However, leery of the big city, the twins turned down repeated offers from KMBC, and the station (mistaking the twins' hesitance for a salary dispute) kept upping its offers. With the offers finally too good to refuse, the sisters signed with KMBC In 1938, just in time to play the inaugural "Brush Creek Follies" that September.
Believing its new singing stars needed a more colorful title, the station sponsored a contest to rename the Crouse twins. A young fan in the rural outer reaches of the KMBC listening area won with her suggestion: "Kit and Kay." An instant hit, Kit and Kay also starred on the "Early Bird Jamboree" each morning and the "Dinner Bell Roundup" at noon, which aired nationally over CBS, with the Oklahoma Wranglers and Colorado Pete. The twins' popularity took them throughout the Midwest, touring with Colorado Pete, the Oklahoma Wranglers, and others, playing fairs, festivals, between features at local theaters, promoting their sponsor, International Harvester, and even leading the American Royal parade (shown below) through downtown Kansas City on twin ponies. Over the next several years, Kit and Kay became the region's radio sweethearts and fan favorites until leaving in the mid '40s to start their own families.
Last Modified 5 Jun 2022Created 4 Nov 2025 using Reunion for Macintosh
Feb 2025