Notes


Note    N17259         Index
Eugene was a farmer.

Notes


Note    N17262         Index
Dell was a farmer in Kankakee County, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N17273         Index
Levi served almost 2 years in the Civil War. He enlisted on 6 February 1864 as a Private in Co. K, 39th Illinois Infantry Regiment, promoted to Full Corporal, then mustered out on 6 Dece,ber 1865 in Norfolk, Virginia.

Notes


Note    N17277         Index
Emerson was a carpenter.

Notes


Note    N17278         Index
Harry operated a lumber company in Millington, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N17279         Index
Warren was a farmer.

Notes


Note    N17280         Index
Lester was a farmer in Kankakee County, Illinois (1910) and Jackson County, Minnesota (1920, 1930).

Notes


Note    N17324         Index
Arthur was a house painter in Sandwich, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N17332         Index
Charles was a farmer in Fox Township, Kendall County, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N17334         Index
In Census entries, Pliny lists his occupation as "Inventor."

Notes


Note    N17338         Index
Mayo was a farmer in Norton Township, Kankakee County, Illinois (1910) and Fairfield Township, Shiawasee County, Michigan (1920). .In 1930, he was living in Lansing, Michigan, working at a dairy as a butter packer. He was no longer married.

Notes


Note    N17346         Index
Ellery was a factory worker in Sandwich, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N17351         Index
Helen immigrated to America in 1895 and became a naturalized citizen. She was a schoolteacher prior to her marriage to Albert.

Notes


Note    N17356         Index
George was a house carpenter in Marshalltown, Iowa (1910), and a farmer in Middletown, Pennsylvania (1920) and in Blairstown, New Jersey (1930).

Notes


Note    N17371         Index
Walter enlisted as a Corporal in Co. G, 4th Vermont Infantry Regiment, on 22 August 1861. That unit took part in several battles, including Antietam, Fredricksburg, Gettysburg, The Wilderness Campaign, Marye's Heights, Cold Harbor and Petersburg. On 23 June 1864, during the Battle of Weldon Railroad, he was taken prisoner. For 9 months, he was imprisoned at Andersonville, Georgia. From all that is known about the inhumane conditions at that prison, Walter was most fortunate to survive. He was released on 28 April 1865, and was mustered out of the Army on 23 May 1865.
 Walter farmed in Middlesex, Vermont, for several years after the War. By 1880, he and Jennie had moved to Haverhill, Massachusetts, where they worked in a shoe factory. They had no children.
 Jennie died (or they separated) prior to 1889, when he married his second wife, Mary. They had no children.