Notes


Note    N20196         Index
Samuel emigrated from Canada to America in 1889. He worked as a produce salesman.

Notes


Note    N20197         Index
After Melvin's death, Mary raised the children on her own, supporting herself as a landlord. She is listed in the 1954 Hartford City Directory. She lived with Dorothy for many years.

Notes


Note    N20202         Index
Horace was a tinsmith by trade. He was an apprentice of S.S. Hersey in Farmington, Maine, in 1860 (Census: M653, Roll 435, Page 67).
 On 8 September 1862, at that time a resident of New Bedford, Massachusetts, he enlisted as a Private in Co. D, 47th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. His enlistment was short, as he was mustered out on 1 September 1863 at Readville, Massachusetts.
    We have not discovered any further record of Horace.

Notes


Note    N20203         Index
Charles was a house painter in Fitchburg, Worcester County, Massachusetts (1870). Before 1875, they moved to Hopkinton, Merrimack County, New Hampshire, where they owned a farm.

Notes


Note    N20205         Index
In 1870, John, Emma and Mary (along with John's parents) were living and farming in Gilmanton, Buffalo County, Wisconsin. However, in 1880, John was living in Nelson, a town about 15 miles from Gilmanton, while Emma and May were living with John's widowed mother, Zilpha, in Gilmanton.

Notes


Note    N20207         Index
Emma spent her last years living at the Soldiers' Widows Home in Maywood Village, a suburb of Chicago.

Notes


Note    N20210         Index
In 1910, May worked as a clerk in a telegraph office in Chicago.

Notes


Note    N20211         Index
James awsa a railroad fireman. He and May divorced before 1910. That year, he was living in Granville, Wisconsin, while May and Irene were living with May's mother, Emma Scribner, in Chicago.
 In 1930, James was living at the National Military Home in Los Angeles.

Notes


Note    N20214         Index
Charles was a New Hampshire State Trooper for a few years. By 1920, he was employed by the Town of Franklin. Then, in 1930, he and son Harry were living in Unity, New Hampshire, with Charles' mother and his sister, Carrie, and her children. There, he and Harry worked in a saw mill.

Notes


Note    N20221         Index
Albert was a farmer and saw mill worker in Unity and Lempster, New Hampshire.

Notes


Note    N20226         Index
Orson was a railroad worker.

Notes


Note    N20227         Index
In 1900, 2-year-old Evelyn was a ward of Mrs. Phoebe A. Hooker, 3 Oak Street, Medford, a widow with 3 children of her own (Census: T623, Roll 663, E.D. 871, Page 120A).

Notes


Note    N20229         Index
Dorothy was an artist, employed by the Symphony Society of Greater Hartford. She never married. Dorothy cared for her mother until Mary died 1954-1960.

Notes


Note    N20231         Index
Miles attended Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. After graduation, he began working for the Berkshire Mill Supply Company in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Over the years, he rose from being an office clerk to President of the company The company specialized in producing items for mills, such as wood and metal working machines, lubricants, belting, rubber goods, etc.