Rosalie Davis broke ground for herself in the old boys' club. She fixed cars, drove school buses and took her children camping and fishing during her time off. She provided for her nine children and held her family together with her love and her cooking.
Davis was strict, but only because she cared, and everyone respected her for it, relatives say. Her grandchildren would put away their phones and pull up their pants when she was around. And the children on her school bus knew not to get too rowdy.
The strong-willed matriarch, a Minneapolis resident, died of kidney failure March 23. She was 78.
"She loved her family and would do anything for us," said her daughter, Mary Davis. "She was just remarkable."
Davis grew up in Missouri, where she married Albert Davis. Her husband worked on the construction team that built the St. Louis Gateway Arch.
In Missouri, Davis sold junk to feed her family. "When we lived in St. Louis we might have ate late, but we always were fed," said her oldest daughter, Sheila White.
Davis moved from Missouri to Minnesota in 1971 with her children. The divorced single mom went to trade school and learned how to become a mechanic and to weld. She was hired as a mechanic for Sears Roebuck and Co. Whenever someone in the family needed their car fixed, they came to Davis.
Her son Albert Davis Jr. said his mother taught him how to fix cars.