Notes


Note    N16755         Index
Following the death of their mother, Abbie, Ethel and brother Ferdinand lived with their uncle (Abbie's brother), John Henry Durant, and his wife, Minnie, in Newbury, Orange County, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N16756         Index
Following the death of their mother, Abbie, Ferdinand and sister Ethel lived with their uncle (Abbie's brother), John Henry Durant, and his wife, Minnie, in Newbury, Orange County, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N16759         Index
In 1930, Gay was living in Clarks Summit, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, working as an automobile repairman. The census entry indicates that he had been married for 10 years, but no spouse is named. (T626, Roll 2048, E.D. 35-120, Page 236A).

Notes


Note    N16787         Index
Scribner enlisted in Co. H, 5th New Hampshire Infantry on 14 October 1861. This is the unit that is remembered as having sustained the greatest losses of any Union Army unit in the Civil War. One of those losses was that of Scribner, who was killed in action at the Battle of Sailor's Creek, near Deatonville, Amelia County, Virginia. There is a State Park at the site of that battle.
 Scribner enlisted as a Private, was promoted to Full Corporal on 7 March 1863, but, for some reason, was reduced in rank to Full Private one month later, on 16 April 1863. He reenlisted on 1 January 1864, then was wounded in action at Petersburg, Virginia, on 17 June 1864. On 6 April 1865, he was killed.

Notes


Note    N16788         Index
On 23 October 1861, George enlisted as a Private in Co. H, 5th New Hampshire Infantry Regiment (the same Company and Regiment that his brother, Scribner, joined a week earlier). He served his entire first enlistment as a Private, then reenlisted on 19 February 1864. Promotions came rapidley: Full Corporal on 24 October 1864, Full Sergeant on 6 April 1865, and (after being transferred to Co. D of the 25th New Hampshire) Full Lieutenant 2nd Class on 1 May 1865. That was the rank at which he was discharged on 28 June 1865 at Alexandria, Virginia.
 His civilian trade was shoe cutter.

Notes


Note    N16796         Index
Robert was a carpenter in Chelsea, Massachusetts.

Notes


Note    N16798         Index
Robert was a printer, working in printshops in Somerville (1910), Everett (1920) and Revere (1930), Massachusetts.

Notes


Note    N16800         Index
Arthur was a hardware salesman in Boston and Medford, Massachusetts.

Notes


Note    N16803         Index
Clyde was an Insurance Investigator.

Notes


Note    N16804         Index
Dorothy worked as a typist for an insurance company.

Notes


Note    N16810         Index
Edgar was a millwright, working for a canning factory in Portland, Maine.

Notes


Note    N16818         Index
Earl was a farmer in Norway, Maine.

Notes


Note    N16832         Index
Arthur was a farmer in Sloan, Iowa (1910), Fairview, Minnesota (1920 and 1930), and Douglas County, Minnesota.

Notes


Note    N16833         Index
Clifton was a house carpenter in Norwich, Vermont. In 1917, he was working as a janitor at Dartmouth College in Hanover, NH.