Notes


Note    N25838         Index
As was his father, Raymond was a druggist in Minneapolis.

Notes


Note    N25844         Index
Granville farmed in Sherman, Aroostook County, before moving (prior to 1920) to Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25848         Index
Frank was killed while working at a sawmill in Island Falls, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25852         Index
Albinus was a farmer in Sherman, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25860         Index
Newton was a machinist at a cement plant in Rockland, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25862         Index
Charles was a farmer in Sherman, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25888         Index
Ernest's life ended tragically, when he committed suicide.

Notes


Note    N25892         Index
Stanley was a dairy farmer in Sangerville, Maine.

Notes


Note    N25895         Index
George worked as a dispatcher for the world-renowned Bangor & Aroostook Railroad.

Notes


Note    N25903         Index
Alvah was the senior member of the shipbuilding firm begun by his father. In the few years the firm was in business (1864-1871), they built 12 large vessels. After the firm closed, Alvah and Olivia moved to Brooklyn, New York, where he was in business as a ship broker.
 After Alvah died, Olivia moved out to San Diego, California, joining sisters-in-law Aurilla and Marietta there.

Notes


Note    N25908         Index
Andrew was a Master Mariner. For few years, he was involved with the shipbuilding firm Mudgett, Libby & Griffin in Stockton Springs, Maine. In 1880, he was in Washoe, Nevada, in the mining business. That year, Aurilla and young Alvah were living in Minneapolis with her sister, Marietta, Marietta's husband, George Libby, and their family. Andrew and Aurilla lived out their remaining years together in San Diego.

Notes


Note    N25914         Index
Alvah was a building contractor in Minneapolis.

Notes


Note    N25916         Index
Charles worked as Secretary of a Gas Company in Minneapolis.

Notes


Note    N25920         Index
Willard was an accountant and statistician at the home office of American Telephone & Telegraph Company ("Ma Bell") in New York City.

Notes


Note    N25923         Index
David was an electrical engineer, employed by the Philco Corporation. He was a civilian serving with the U.S. Navy in World War II, and died in Ireland. He is buried in Cambridge, England. He and Cecyl had no children.

Notes


Note    N25929         Index
In 1917 (when he registered for the World War I Draft), Herman was Secretary of the YMCA in Lansing, Michigan. By 1920, he and his family were living in Kansas City, Missouri, where he was employed as a salesman. His first wife, Lillian, died between 1920-1924. They had two children, Lillian and David.