Notes


Note    N6421         Index
Jennifer is a Veterinary Technician at Animal Hospital of the High Country in Colorado.

Notes


Note    N6423         Index
Henry and Ina worked in the woolen mill in Oxford, Maine. He was a wool spinner. She was a wool weaver.

Notes


Note    N6435         Index
Percy was a farmer in Cornish, Maine. His life was cut short by acute alcoholism.

Notes


Note    N6441         Index
Alpheus was a Methodist minister in Tamworth, New Hampshire, and in Bolster's Mills, Maine.

Notes


Note    N6447         Index
James was a carpenter, and merchant.

Notes


Note    N6449         Index
Alexander was a Ship's Captain. He captained the schooner "Henrietta," which was named for his wife. The schooner hauled lumber up and down the Maine coast for the Eaton Family of Calais, Maine. The "Henrietta" was shipwrecked twice, the second time being so disastrous that the Morrisons gave up sailing. Capt. Morrison's son, Ralph Scotney Morrison, sailed with his father, and relates the story of the shipwreck. He said that the schooner's masts were broken off and washed over the side. Some of the men (hardened sailors though they were) lashed themselves to the stumps of the masts to keep from being washed overboard, and prayed for their safety. The men were rescued by the Coast Guard.

 Alexander died from heart disease.

Notes


Note    N6456         Index
Jackie was raised by her grandparents, Claude and Belle Scribner. She worked for the Simond Saw and Steel Company for several years in Massachusetts, then in New Jersey (where she met Dick Kapps). She died in Lincoln, Maine, following a lengthy stay in a nursing home after an injury.

Notes


Note    N6457         Index
Ethel was a stenographer.

Notes


Note    N6460         Index
Fred was a carpenter.

Notes


Note    N6463         Index
John worked in a sawmill.

Notes


Note    N6465         Index
Joseph died from diabetes.

Notes


Note    N6466         Index
Emery was a steamfitter.

Notes


Note    N6467         Index
Everett was a landscape gardener in Portland. He and his first wife, Florence, divorced in 1935 (DIVORCE INDEX, Maine State Archives Microfilm).


Notes


Note    N6468         Index
Willard was a dairy farmer. In later years, he worked as an attendant at a Standard Oil service station in South Portland. He and Pauline divorced in 1945 (DIVORCE RECORDS, Maine State Archives Microfilm, Vol. 27, Page 297).

Notes


Note    N6469         Index
Ralph and Vivian were employed at the American Can Manufacturing Company in Portland.