Notes


Note    N25293         Index
Charley was a garage mechanic in Troy [1910], China [1920] and Moscow [1930], Maine.

Notes


Note    N25304         Index
Josephine spent her last years living at the Lawrence Home for Aged People in Lawrence, Massachusetts.

Notes


Note    N25320         Index
Timothy, a poultry farmer, was the Enumerator of the 1900 Census of Winterport, Maine. He and Geneva had no children.

Notes


Note    N25324         Index
Elvena was a dressmaker. She never married.

Notes


Note    N25326         Index
Hulbert worked for his brother, Wilbur, as superintendent of Wilbur's sawmill in Kingman, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25328         Index
Wilbur owned a lumber mill in Kingman, Maine. His wife (name unknown) died before 1900. In 1920, he was living in a hotel in Bangor, Maine.
 In the early 1990's, Wilbur adopted Adella Doble, who was born in October 1888 to Russell and Minnie Kyle Doble. Minnie died 30 December 1891, Russell died 28 February 1892, in Kingman, Maine. Adella married Charles W. Clay of Lincoln, Maine, 17 October 1911.

Notes


Note    N25330         Index
Charles was a blacksmith in Prospect and Stockton, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25337         Index
Isaac was a blacksmith in Stockton, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25344         Index
Roland attended Boston College, and served in the U.S. Mavy during World War II. For 28 years, he was a food broker for the Arthur G. Curran Co., covering Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. For 8 years, he worked as a field accountant for Kamyr Installations of Glens Falls, New York, prior to retiring in 1986. He was also a part-time police chief in Mont Vernon, New Hampshire, for 20 years, and, for 4 years, served in the New Hampshire State Legislature.

Notes


Note    N25353         Index
Edward was a stonecutter in Prospect, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25357         Index
Fred was a blacksmith in Prospect and Ellsworth, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25362         Index
Willard was a partner in a shipbuilding business in Stockton Springs, Maine, with his sons-in-law George Libby and Andrew Griffin. After three years in business (1864), they had launched 2 vessels. That year, Willard retired and turned his share of the business over to Alvah. The firm was then known as Mudgett, Libby & Griffin. By 1871, they had launched 12 large vessels.

Notes


Note    N25363         Index
John was a ship builder, a partner in the firm Colcord, Mudgett & Co., which built 9 vessels between 1857-1868. After the firm closed, John worked in the dry goods business.

Notes


Note    N25370         Index
Fitz was a farmer in Jackson and Brooks, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25371         Index
David was a banker and stock broker in Brooklyn, New York. He and Abbie moved there in the early 1860's. He served as Mayor of Brooklyn for a few years.