Notes


Note    N8923         Index
Frank was a silver miner for a number of years. In 1930, he gives his occupation as "wood hauler."

Notes


Note    N8925         Index
James was a miner. After his death, Edna Mae married a Mr. Moore.

Notes


Note    N8927         Index
In 1920, William says that he worked as a "salesman" at a pool hall. A more interesting job title is given in the 1930 Census, where he says he was a "Chauffeur" of an ore truck.

Notes


Note    N8930         Index
Charlie was a copper miner.
 Selma's parents were both born in Norway. She was marrying for the second time. Her first marriage (about 1912, when she was 16) was to Harry Drake. They had two children: Ruby (born in 1914) and June (born in 1920). See the 1920 Census of Pittsmont, Silver Bow, Montana (T625, Roll 977, E.D. 249, Page 6A).

Notes


Note    N8931         Index
Percy was a silver miner. He never married.

Notes


Note    N8932         Index
Harold was a miner.

Notes


Note    N8940         Index
William was a copper miner.

Notes


Note    N8947         Index
Thanks to John D. McMullen for the information on this family.

 Frank, a cattle rancher, was the proprietor of one of the most valuable estates in Madison County, and one of the more prosperous men of the area. He, with his parents and siblings, moved from Indiana to Nebraska in 1883. His father, Augustus Franklin Tannehill, had purchased a 320-acre farm, once known as the B.E. Reed homestead.
 Frank and Lucretia had a total of 7 children.

Notes


Note    N8949         Index
Many thanks to Donald Paul Hines for the information about this family.
 Samuel was a barber. He and Harriet lived in Hartford, Connecticut, Murphys (Calaveras County) California, and Oakland. They had a total of 9 children.

Notes


Note    N8951         Index
John Henry was a farmer in Nyack, New York.

Notes


Note    N8965         Index
In 1920, Nellie was a saleslady in a Spokane music store. She had been married previous to her marriage to Elisha. With them in 1920 was her son from that earlier marriage, Arthur E. Guerin, who had been born about 1901 in Washington State. In 1930, she and her 18-year-old son Charles were living with her widowed mother, Elizabeth Somers, in San Diego, California. Nellie was working in a department store (NARA Microcopy T626, Roll 192, E.D. 37-96, Page 127A, Dwelling 355, Family 410). We do not know where Elisha was in 1930.

Notes


Note    N8967         Index
Ethel was a schoolteacher.

Notes


Note    N8969         Index
According to the 1930 Census of Omak, Washington [op.cit.], Lois was the adopted daughter of Clarence Scribner.

Notes


Note    N8971         Index
Charles was a blacksmith in Paris, Maine. Florence was his second wife.