Notes
Note N11035 Index
George was a farmer in Bethel, Maine.
Notes
Note N11039 Index
Frederick worked as a cashier in a railway office in Los Angeles.
Notes
Note N11045 Index
Leon worked on the railroad.
Notes
Note N11046 Index
Calvin worked for an electronics firm in Waterford, Connecticut.
Notes
Note N11048 Index
Walter was a farmer in Center Conway, New Hampshire.
Notes
Note N11052 Index
Elliott worked at various occupations. In 1900, he was farming in Marion, Ohio. He and the family moved to Santa Monica, California, between 1905-1910. In 1910, he was a street car motorman in Santa Monica. In 1920, he was a foreman at an iron foundry in Torrance, California.
Elliott and Rosilla divorced between 1910-1920. In 1920, she was living in Venice, California, working in a laundry. With her was 14-year-old Elwood.
Notes
Note N11060 Index
James was a house painter. He and Britta divorced sometime before 1930.
Notes
Note N11063 Index
In 1920, Harley was a foreman in a street car barn in santa Monica. In 1930, he was a mechanic for an electric company in Los Angeles.
Notes
Note N11066 Index
In 1930, Myrven was the manager of a Western Auto store in Los Angeles (1930 Census of Los Angeles: T626, Roll 159, E.D. 19-628, Page 169B).
Notes
Note N11069 Index
George was an interior decorator in Battle Creek Michigan (1920) and Pasadena, California (1930),
Notes
Note N11074 Index
Frank was a machinist for the Grand Trunk Railroad.
Notes
Note N11082 Index
William was a sawmill worker in Stratford, New Hampshire. By 1930, he had moved across the state line to Bloomfield, Vermont, where he worked as a carpenter..
In his book, THE HAPGOOD FAMILY, DESCENDANTS OF SHADRACH [op.cit.], pp. 141-142, Warren Hapgood states that William Jesse Ormsby was born 4 January 1845 in Guildhall, Vermont, the son of Joseph and Mary Jane Ormsby. Information contained in several censuses seems to indicate that that published information is incorrect. Although Joseph Ormsby was apparently born in Guildhall, Vermont, there is no 1850 Census entry for him and Mary Jane. In the 1860 Census of Guildhall, Joseph and Mary Jane are shown with 5 children, ranging in age from 8 to 1, but none is named William. Then, in the 1870 Census of Granby, Vermont (M593-1619, Page 61), with Joseph and Mary Jane is a son, William J., aged 6. In the 1900 Census of Columbia, New Hampshire [op.cit.], we find William and Harriet Hapgood's son-in-law, William J. Ormsby, born January 1866, living with them. The 1910 Census of Stratford, New Hampshire (T624-861, E.D. 69, Page 196B), shows William J. Ormsby, aged 45, married for the second time, about 1907, to Flora Burnelle.
Notes
Note N11085 Index
Durward was a farmer in Colebrook, New Hampshire. In some records, his name is spelled "Durwood." In others, it is "Durward."