Notes
Note N26070 Index
In 1900, Dale was a stonecutter in Barre, Vermont. That position led him to the position of Superintendent of a granite business in Salisbury, North Carolina, and (by 1930), a position with a monument company in Hartford, Connecticut.
Notes
Note N26072 Index
Apparently, Edmund worked with Dora's brother, Dale, at the granite company in Barre, Vermont. Edmund and Dora moved on to New Jersey (by 1910) and Maryland (for a few years). When Dale moved to North Carolina to take on a new position with a granite company in Salisbury, Edmund and Dora rejoined him there.
Notes
Note N26074 Index
John was a farmer in Hawley Township, Clay County, Minnesota.
Notes
Note N26075 Index
While the family lived in Barre, Vermont, in the early 1900's, Helen taught school in Barre. By 1920, she had moved to Richmond, Virginia, where she pursued a nursing career. In 1920, she was a student nurse at Sheltering Arms Free Hospital in Richmond (1920 Census: T625, Roll 1911, E.D. 152, Page 75A). She stayed in Richmond after graduating, and worked as a nurse there.
Notes
Note N26081 Index
Fred served in the U.S. Coast Guard.
Notes
Note N26102 Index
Nehemiah was a boot and shoe maker in Prospect, Maine.
The excellent history of the Mudgett family, THOMAS MUDGETT OF SALISBURY, MASSAVCHUSETTS AND HIS DESCENDANTS [op.cit.], is mistaken regarding Nehemiah's daughter, Rosilla. On page 81, it is said that Nehemiah's second wife was named Rosilla. This mistake is apparently based upon the 1860 Census of Prospect, Maine [op.cit.], which is also mistaken regarding Rosilla. On the Census Page listing Nehemiah's family, Rosilla and her mother, Mary Jane, are confused. Rosilla is listed as being age 42 and Nehemiah's wife. Mary Jane is listed as being 22 and the wife of Henry D. Harriman (Rosilla's husband who was living with Nehemiah and family that year). With them were Henry and Rosilla's two children, Albert and Grace.
Notes
Note N26109 Index
George was a stonecutter in Belfast, Maine.
Notes
Note N26117 Index
In 1910, Eveline and her sons were living in Belfast, Maine. She worked as a canvasser (1910 Census of Belfast: T624, Roll 546, E.D. 243, Page 38A). She and Albert moved to Boston a few years later. In 1920, she was working for a corset company there (1920 Census of Boston: T625, Roll 741, E.D. 586, Page 118B).
Notes
Note N26119 Index
Albert was employed as a salesman in a furniture store in Belfast, Maine (1910). By 1920, he and brother Frank were partners in the Greater Boston Real Estate Corporation. That enterprise didn't last long, because, by 1930, Albert was a salesman for a soap factory in Watertown, Massachusetts. He was living in Belmont, Massachusetts, in 1942.
Notes
Note N26120 Index
With brother Albert, Frank ran a real estate business, the Greater Boston Real Estate Corporation, in Boston for a few years. By 1930, he had his own laundry business in Somerville.
Notes
Note N26127 Index
Andrew served in the Civil War from 23 March 1864-24 June 1865 as a Corporal in the Coast Guards Infantry, stationed at Portland, Maine.
Notes
Note N26129 Index
Abraham was a ship's carpenter and farmer.