Notes


Note    N6235         Index
Heman worked in a saw mill in Brighton.

Notes


Note    N6238         Index
Stephen and Phebe moved from Randolph, NH, to Casco, ME, in 1816.

Notes


Note    N6242         Index
Benjamin was a shoemaker in Upton, Maine.

Notes


Note    N6244         Index
Merton worked as an Insepctor in the watch factory in Waltham, Massachusetts. Sarah went by her nickname "Sadie."

Notes


Note    N6245         Index
Charles worked for a number of years as a shoe salesman in the Boston area. He died from tuberculosis.

Notes


Note    N6247         Index
Lewis was a farmer in Oxford, Maine.

Notes


Note    N6250         Index
Luckily, Elmer was not at home that afternoon in May when his father attacked the family. He was in Manchester, visiting with his uncle, Virgil.
 Elmer was a blacksmith at the time he and Addie were married. Later, he operated a grocery store in Strafford, New Hampshire. Addie was a teacher. After Elmer's mother, Sarah, died in 1911, Elmer and Addie took in two of his brother Ernest's boys, Harry and Raymond. Sarah had been caring for them, following Ernest's divorce from Rosabelle. Later, the other son, Joseph, joined them in Strafford.


Notes


Note    N6251         Index
Fred was a farmer in Belgrade.

Notes


Note    N6252         Index
Wilson worked as janitor at a Post Office in Lynn, Massachusetts.

Notes


Note    N6253         Index
Very likely, Herbert went to California. He is probably the "Hubert D. Scribner" listed in the 1900 Census of San Francisco with wife, Alys (b. April 1872) and children: Arvilla, Marjorie and Dudley (NARA Microcopy T623, Roll 105, Vol. 33, E.D. 214, Page 326A, Dwelling 215, Family 257). The 1900 San Francisco City Directory lists a Herbert D. Scribner, agent for Westinghouse Electric Co.

Notes


Note    N6255         Index
Josiah was a farmer in Rome.Joseph was a teacher at Maine Wesleyan Seminary at Kent's Hill.

Notes


Note    N6256         Index
Josiah was a farmer.

 The following appears to relate to Josiah:
 In January 1851, the "Lewiston Journal" printed the report, given by a Mr. B. Allen in Rome, that a Mr. Scribner of Mt. Vernon had drowned in Long Pond near Chandler's Mills in Belgrade. A letter from Mr. Scribner, dated 9 January, said: "I take pleasure informing you that I don't believe one word of the above statement so far as it relates to myself nor can I make any one else believe it ... Mr. Allen was drowned on Sun." (ABSTRACTS OF DEATH NOTICES (1833-1852) AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS ARTICLES (1833-1924) FROM THE "MAINE FARMER" [op. cit.], 311).

Notes


Note    N6265         Index
Milton was a farmer in Searsport. He and Dorothy divorced 23 January 1958 (DIVORCE INDEX, Maine State Archives Microfilm).
 Milton's second wife, Virginia, attended Coburn Classical Institute in Waterville, and Bryant and Stratton Business College in Boston. She was a Worthy Matron of the Antioch Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star in Unity, and was an active member and Organist of the Unity Union Church. The couple owned racehorses for many years. They lived in Florida from 1977 to his death in 1987.