Notes
Note N25372 Index
John was a farmer in Jackson, Maine.
Notes
Note N25374 Index
In 1870, Napoleon was living with brother David in Brooklyn. He worked there as a banker. He was back in Jackson, Maine, in 1900. Later, he moved to Washington, DC, where he worked as a waiter in a restaurant. He never married.
Notes
Note N25379 Index
Henry was a stock broker in Richmond, New York, in 1900. By 1910, he was operating a farm in South Windsor (Hartford County), Connecticut. He appears in the 1910 Censuses of both South Windsor Twp., Connecticut, and Richmond, New York, where he is listed with his wife and children (perhaps he had a farm in Connecticut and sold his produce in Richmond). He moved to Vernon Center, Connecticut, before 1920.
Notes
Note N25381 Index
Charles was a banker in New York City.
Notes
Note N25382 Index
In 1900, Alvin was a superintendent of parks in Brooklyn. By 1910, he and family had relocated to Portland, Oregon, where he worked as secretary for a dry-cleaning company. According to the 1920 Census of Brooklyn, Louise and Virginia had returned from Oregon to Brooklyn, where they were living with Louise's mother. As yet, we have no record of Alvin's death, or whether he had returned to Brooklyn from Oregon, as well. Louise was a widow when she died, so Alvin would have died before 1971.
Notes
Note N25383 Index
Edgar, a graduate of Harvard University, was a stock broker and member of the New York Stock Exchange. He was Governor of the NYSE until his retirement in 1929.
He and Margaret summered in Manchester, Vermont, for several years. In the early 1940's, they moved there permanently. She died in 1947.
Notes
Note N25405 Index
Irving was in the Import-Export business.
Notes
Note N25419 Index
Townsend was a college professor and author. He earned his Ph.D at Yale University in 1933, where he subsequently taught in the English department 1924-1931. He went on to teach at Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, where he was an assistant professor of English 1931-1940, and associate professor 1940-1943, on leave 1943-1948, and full professor 1948-1953. From 1951-1956, he was the Executive Director of the Center for Information on America in Washington, and was the Center's President 1956-1987.
He was the author of three books: EMERSON AND SOME ENGLISHMEN (1935); JANE WELSH CARLYLE (1939); and CONCORD: AMERICAN TOWN (1947). He also published several essays.
Notes
Note N25429 Index
David, Ethel and their daughters moved to Hartford, Connecticut, between 1914-1918. He was employed there as a typewriter assembler. By 1930, they had moved to Manchester, where he had a carpentry business and Ethel was a public schoolteacher.
Notes
Note N25430 Index
Henry was a professor at Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin.
Notes
Note N25439 Index
A graduate of Philips Exeter Academy, he earned his PhD. in Anthroplogy at Harvard University in 1960. From 1964 to 2000, he was Professor of Anthropology at California Institute of Technology.
Notes
Note N25448 Index
Anson was a merchant (1910), farmer (1920), and railroad station agent (1930) in Knox, Maine.