Notes


Note    N15763         Index
Albert was an electrician in Detroit.

Notes


Note    N15764         Index
George worked for the Street Railway in Detroit.

Notes


Note    N15765         Index
Jesse was a farmer in Greenville, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N15793         Index
James owned a furniture store in Greenville, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N15802         Index
Elbert owned a notions shop in Greenville, Illinois.

Notes


Note    N15803         Index
Joseph was a hotel clerk in Greenville (1910), and in Salt Lake City, Utah (1920). By 1930, he was proprietor of a hotel in Los Angeles, California (T626, Roll 139, E.D. 19-158, Page 170A). At that time, he had been married for 3 years to an unnamed 20-year-old woman, who was born in Utah.

Notes


Note    N15811         Index
In 1910, Ernest and Vera were living in East St. Louis, where he was a cook in a boarding house (T624, Roll 322, E.D. 126, Page 110A).

Notes


Note    N15837         Index
George was a Medical Doctor. Among the places he practiced medicine were Stockton, Rocks County, Kansas (1900) and Raton, Colfax County, New Mexico (1910, 1920).

Notes


Note    N15840         Index
In the 1900 Census of Phillips, Colorado, where he and Marcia (listed as "Martha") were living with their son, George, Llewellyn gave his occupation as " auctioneer." From the information given in that Census entry, a theory can be developed that says Llewellyn and Marcia lived in Canada (possibly Ontario Province) for several years before moving to South Dakota, where George met and married Lettie. Then, in the 1890's, they moved on to Colorado.

Notes


Note    N15842         Index
George was farmer in Phillips County, Colorado.

Notes


Note    N15845         Index
Reuben was a farmer in Charleston, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N15853         Index
Sylvester farmed with his father, James L. Blake, for many years. After his father's death(1900- 1910), Sylvester and Hattie opened a general store in Morgan.

Notes


Note    N15854         Index
Joseph is mentioned on Page 1303 of the HISTORY OF THE WESTERN RESERVE [op.cit.], as follows:
       Joseph is said to have been "a comparatively early settler of this part of the state. Leaving his New England home about 1834, Joseph Scribner started westward with his family, journeying overland with teams, at the end of twenty-two days arriving in Leroy township. Taking up a tract of land that was still in its virgin wildness, he cleared and improved a homestead, on which he was engaged in tilling the soil until his death, April 20, 1861, at the age of sixty-four years. His wife, whose maiden name was Judith Stevens, survived him, passing away in 1878, aged seventy-five years."

Notes


Note    N15855         Index
On 12 August 1861, Alonzo enlisted as a Private in Co. D, 5th Vermont Infantry Regiment at Hyde Park. Along with other verterans, he re-enlisted on 15 December 1863. On 29 June 1865 at Munson's Hill, Virginia, he was mustered out, having served almost 4 years without sustaining any injuries He was most fortunate to survive, because the 5th Vermont suffered severe losses. Its greatset loss was on 29 June 1862 at Sawyer's Station in Virginia. During a 30 minute period, the 5th Vermont suffered the greatest loss of any Vermont regiment in any one battle, losing 188 men. Then, in June of 1864 at Petersburg, the 5th Vermont lost 349 men. Among the other battles in which that regiment took part were Fredericksburg, Cold Harbor, the Wilderness Campaign, Spottsylvania and Gettysburg.