Notes


Note    N1854         Index
William had a large farm in East Stratford, Coos County, New Hampshire. Also, he manufactured and sold lumber extensively. He was regarded as "an energetic and enterprising man" (THE HAPGOOD FAMILY [op.cit], 139). William died of pneumonia.

Notes


Note    N1859         Index
Albert served in the Civil War as a Private in the 7th Maine Light Artillery Battery, enlisting 30 December 1863 and being discharged 21 June 1865. Among the battles this unit was engaged in were Spotsylvania Court House, Cold Harbor and Petersburg, Virginia.
 His civilian occupation was railroad conductor.

Notes


Note    N1863         Index
Ebenezer worked as a turner in dowel mills in Maine and New Hampshire. During the Civil War, he had served as a Private in Co. H of the 1st New Hampshire Infantry Regiment. He filed for a Civil War Pension on 26 May 1885, according to the GENERAL INDEX OF CIVIL WAR PENSION FILES, 1861-1934 (op. cit.).
 Ebenezer and his first wife, Irene, divorced sometime before 11 July 1867, the date she married her second husband, Cyrus Edward Hurd.
 Ebenezer and his third wife, Mary, divorced 6 May 1892 in Oxford County Court (DIVORCE RECORDS, Maine State Archives Microfilm Roll 1, Vol. 1, Page 22).

Notes


Note    N1864         Index
After Susannah died in 1892, Amos married her widowed sister, Lucinda. They were living in Worcester, Massachusetts, at the time of the 1900 Census. He died from prostrate disease.

Notes


Note    N1866         Index
After Rebecca died, Daniel re-married about 1863. He and his second wife, Mary (Wheeler), had 8 children. Daniel and his two wives are buried in the West Bethel Cemetery.

Notes


Note    N1867         Index
In 1900, Lydia was living with Wallace in Yarmouth, ME.

Notes


Note    N1871         Index
Lucinda's death was caused by chronic gastritis.

Notes


Note    N1873         Index
Daniel was a farmer. He died from uremic poisoning.

Notes


Note    N1876         Index
James was a farmer in Gilead.

Notes


Note    N1879         Index
William worked in Berlin, New Hampshire, as a painter and, after moving there after 1880, as an Insurance Adjuster in Boston. While in Berlin and Boston, he was known as Eugene W. Scribner.

Notes


Note    N1881         Index
Adelbert was a millworker and farmer. For many years, Caroline (who was referred to as "Carrie") worked in the spool mill of J.P. Skillings. She is remembered as being "an expert work-woman" (Carrie Scribner Obituary, "The Norway Advertiser," Norway, Maine, 3 October 1919, page 5, column 3).

Notes


Note    N1882         Index
Herbert was a sawyer in lumber mills in Maine, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
 For several years in the early 1900's, Josephine and her sister, Caroline Hayes, operated a Boarding Home (known as The Lowder) at 303 Hammond Street in Bangor. In addition to themselves and Josephine's children, Herbert and Anastasia, there were 22 boarders and 7 employees living there. One of the boarders (in 1910, at least) was Fred R. Coy, son of John J. and Clara B. (Scribner) Coy. Clara and Herbert were 4th cousins.

Notes


Note    N1883         Index
Frank was a machinist in a shoe factory in Newburyport, Massachusetts. He never married.