Notes
Note N20377 Index
Herbert was a fireman for the famous Boston & Maine Railroad.
Notes
Note N20378 Index
Ernest drove a truck for the Vermont State Highway Department.
Notes
Note N20379 Index
Robert worked as a truck driver for a garage company in Springfield, Vermont, in 1930.
Notes
Note N20383 Index
Walter was a fireman for the legendary Boston & Maine Railroad. They lived in Worcester, Massachusetts, and had no children.
Notes
Note N20384 Index
Walter lived in Worcester, Massachusetts, for a few years with his brother, Herbert, and sister, Eunice, and her husband, Walter Baker. He worked as a motorman for the renowned Boston & Maine Railroad. By 1930, he and Viola were living in Springfield, Vermont, with his mother and her second husband, George Blake. In Springfield, Walter drove a truck for a garage company.
Notes
Note N20390 Index
Arnold worked for the Vermont State Highway Department in Springfield (1930).
Notes
Note N20402 Index
Earl was a traveling aslesman for a wholesale grocery firm in Crookston, Minnesota.
Notes
Note N20404 Index
Jacob emigrated to America from England in 1864 and became a naturalized citizen.
Notes
Note N20405 Index
Ellen emigrated to America from Canada in 1881.
Notes
Note N20413 Index
On 21 May 1861, George enlisted as a Private in Co. E, 2nd New Hampshire Infantry Regiment. He died from disease in Washington, DC, on 2 December 1862 (AMERICAN CIVIL WAR SOLDIERS. Ancestry.com).
Notes
Note N20443 Index
When he registered for the World War I Draft (12 Sepetmber 1918) and into the early 1920's, Fred was the Superintendent of a Utah Idaho Sugar Company sugar factory in Sandy, Salt Lake County, Utah. Before 1930, they moved to Idaho Falls, Bonneville County, Idaho, where he owned a hardware store.
Notes
Note N20444 Index
Ralph was a janitor of a bank block in Bellingham, Washington (1910), and a farmer in Nampa, Idaho (1920). In 1930, living in Yachats, Lincoln County, Oregon, Martha was the proprietor of a boarding house (1930 Yachats Census: T626, Roll 1944, E.D. 21, Page 207A).
Notes
Note N20445 Index
Jerry was a farmer in Troy Towship, Reno County, Kansas (1900), a shingle mill worker in Concrete, Skagit County, Washington (1910), and a lumber merchant in Concrete (1920). In 1930, they were living in Port Angeles, Clallam County, Washington, where he operated a lumber yard.
They adopted Douglas, who appears as their 9-year-old son in the 1930 Census.
Notes
Note N20446 Index
Harry was the 1900 Census Enumerator for Clear Creek Township, Sevier County, Arkansas. He and Kate married there in 1900, then, by 1907, had moved to Avoca Township, Pottawatomie County, Oklahhoma, where they farmed for many years thereafter. In 1930, Harry and Kate were living in Lexington, Cleveland County, Oklahoma.
Even though he was born in 1875 (and admits it on his World War I Darft Registration Record), in the several Censuses, Harry states his age as though he were born in 1877 or 1878.