Notes
Note N22567 Index
Osborn was a physician in Kaukauna, Outagamie County, Wisconsin. From the Census Records concerning him, it appears that Clara must have died before 1875, which is the year Osborn married Sarah (Hale) Clark.
Notes
Note N22568 Index
Hugh was a cattle merchant in Parsonsfield, Maine.
Notes
Note N22569 Index
Annah was a great-great-great-granddaughter of Thomas Parsons, Esq.
Notes
Note N22572 Index
Samuel was a tinsmith in Parsonsfield, Maine (1880). In 1900, he lists his occuipation as "baggage master." At the time, he was employed by the B&O Railroad. By 1920, he'd gone into farming.
Notes
Note N22573 Index
David was a farmer in Parsonsfield, Maine. He and Myra were divorced before 1900. After the separation, Myra and the boys went to live with her mother in Limerick.
Notes
Note N22583 Index
George enlisted as a Private in Co. E, 9th Maine Infanytry Regiment, on 22 September 1861. He was promoted to Full Corporal in 1863, then re-enlisted on 1 January 1864. He was taken prisoner at Chaffin's Farm, Virginia, on 29 September 1864, and died in a Confederate prison camp on 9 April 1865. He is buried in Cornish.
The 9th Maine spent the early part of its involvement in the war in the southern states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. In 1864, it was transferred to the Army of the Potomac and fought in such battles as Drewry's Bluff, Bermuda Hundred, Cold Harbor, Petersburg and Chaffin's Farm. In 1865, the unit returned to North Carolina, where it remained until 13 July 1865, when it was mustered out and proceeded to Augusta, Maine, where the remaining members of the unit were paid and discharged.
Notes
Note N22584 Index
Gilman was a professional photographer. He lived in several states, including Maine, Colorado (1880), Idaho (1900), Utah (1910) and California. He was married at least five times, according to his listing in the 1910 Census of Salt Lake City (T624, Roll 1607, E.D. 145, Page 216A).
Notes
Note N22589 Index
For the first years of his marriage to Jessie, Milton worked their farm in Cornish. For whatever reason, sometime after 1880, he decided to pursue a career as a photographer (as did his brother, Gilman). In 1900, we find him in Seattle, Washington, married to Mina (maiden name unknown). Living with them is her 16-year-old son from her first marriage, Harry Broffle, also born in New York state.
He was back on the farm in Cornish by 1910.
Notes
Note N22592 Index
By 1930, George had moved out of Cornish and was living in Scarborough, Cumberland County, Maine, where he was operating a dairy farm.
Notes
Note N22595 Index
David was a grain merchant in Cornish, Maine. He and Ina divorced and had no children.
Notes
Note N22598 Index
Vincent was an engineer for the Los Angeles Fire Department.
Notes
Note N22602 Index
Gordon was a farmer in Caribou, Maine. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1901.
Gordon served in the U.S. Army during World War I, as a Private in Co. E, 20th Battalion of Army Engineers. He was overseas 26 February 1918 - 1 June 1919, and was honorably discharged on 11 June 1919 (MAINE MILITARY MEN, 1917-1918. Ancestry.com).