Notes


Note    N11385         Index
At the time of his registering for the World War I Draft, Frank was employed as a brakeman for the Maine Central Railroad. By 1930, Frank was a farmer in Maidstone, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N11390         Index
Earle was a farmer in Stratford, New Hampshire.

Notes


Note    N11399         Index
In 1930, Charles was a dairyman in Pampa, Texas.

Notes


Note    N11400         Index
We learn Caroline's correct last name from the Texas Birth Index records. The entries for son Richard and daughter Hazel both give their mother's last name as Carrie B. Hunter.

Notes


Note    N11402         Index
Richard was a First Sergeant in the U.S. Army. He served during World War II, the Korean Conflict, and the Vietnam War. He is buried in the Ft. Bliss National Cemetery, Texas.

Notes


Note    N11407         Index
Harold operated a grocery store in Lyndon Center, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N11415         Index
As a young man, George was a farmer in Stratford, New Hamsphire. He and Amy moved to Albequerque, New Mexico, between 1910 - 1917, perhaps for health reasons, since George lists no occupation in 1920 and 1930 Censuses of Albuquerque. Amy worked as a dressmaker. They had no children. H

Notes


Note    N11427         Index
In 1920, Henry worked as a clerk in a hardware store in Mechanic Falls, Maine. In 1930, he was working as a shipping clerk in the paper mill in Mechanic Falls.

Notes


Note    N11432         Index
Henry became a naturalized American citizen in 1894.

Notes


Note    N11434         Index
Frank was an electrician in a paper mill in Berlin, New Hampshire.

Notes


Note    N11447         Index
Albert was a brakeman for the Grand Trunk Railroad.

Notes


Note    N11453         Index
Myron was the manager of his father's grocery store in Bethel, Maine.

Notes


Note    N11461         Index
William worked as a salesman in hardware stores in Portland and Rumford, Maine.

Notes


Note    N11493         Index
Charles was a railroad conductor.

Notes


Note    N11508         Index
John was a construction expert. He was widely recognized for his reconstruction work in Tokyo, Japan, following an earthquake and fire in 1923. Two of his major achievements in Japan were in erecting the Japanese General Electric Company building and the Mitsui Bank building (which, at the time, was the largest structure in the world used exclusively for banking purposes). Later, in Washington, DC, he oversaw the construction of buildings for the U.S. Department of Labor and the Interstate Commerce Commission.