Notes
Note N11259 Index
Gloria worked at Great Oaks Camp in Otisfield for many years. She was a member of the Presbyterian Church in Bridgton.
Notes
Note N11261 Index
William was a house painter in Caribou, Waterville and Bath, Maine.
Notes
Note N11262 Index
Charles was deferred from military service because of a lame leg, caused by food poisoning. In 1930, he was working as a motor engineer for a railroad in Fairfield, Maine.
Notes
Note N11264 Index
By 1930, Florence and Francis had divorced. That year, she was employed as a cook for the family of Alexander Gordon, a banker in Portland, Maine (1930 Census of Portland: T626, Roll 831, E.D. 3-53).
Notes
Note N11280 Index
In 1910, Tena was working as a waitress in a boarding house in Rumford, Maine.
Notes
Note N11283 Index
In 1930, Ray was a radio salesman in Escanaba, Michigan.
Notes
Note N11287 Index
Henry was inducted into the U.S. Army on 29 July 1918 at South Paris, Maine. He served in the 326th Service Battalion of the Quartermaster Corps as a Private, then was promoted to Sergeant on 28 September 1918. He served overseas from 10 October 1918 to 27 June 1919, and was honorably discharged on 8 July 1919.
Notes
Note N11288 Index
Frances attended the State Teachers Colleges in Gorham and Farmington. She taught at Lovell, Gilead and Newry. She was a member of the Bethel Congregational Church.
Notes
Note N11289 Index
Clarence was an auto mechanic.
Notes
Note N11295 Index
John was living in Gray, Maine, at the time of his death.
Notes
Note N11297 Index
Henry was a millworker. He and Esther separated before 1910; he remained in Casco, she went to live with Llewella in Somerville, Massachusetts.
Notes
Note N11298 Index
On 5 June 1917, Harry registered for the World War I Draft in Musselshell County, Montana. In 1930, he was still single and working as a farm laborer in Clear Creek, Carbon County, Montana (T626, Roll 1252, E.D. 5, Page 190B).
Notes
Note N11302 Index
Gerald was an electrician. Apparently, he preferred to be known by his middle name.
Notes
Note N11310 Index
Ruth graduated from the University of Maine at Farmington in 1976 with a B.S. in Education. She taught in Lovell, Bridgton, Cornville, Lubec and Newry. After a number of years as a teacher, she became a nurse, and worked as a nurse in the Skowhegan-Waterville area, retiring in 1984.
Among the groups to which she belonged are the VFW Auxiliary, Daughters of The American Revolution (DAR), Maine State Teachers' Retirement Association, and she was an active member of the Federated Church of Skowhegan.