Matches 14,101 to 14,110 of 23,510
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| 14101 |
Living at home with her widowed mother and two of her brothers in the 1900 census.
Refrerred to as Josie on Amanda’s birth certificate.
ELLINGBOE, JOHANNA
CertID# 1945-MN-013464
Date of Birth: not indexed
Place of Birth: not indexed
Mother Maiden Name: not indexed
Date of Death: 06/06/1945
County of Death: RICE | SVIEN, Johanna (I6641)
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| 14102 |
Living at home with his parents and siblings in Lisbon Twp in the 1875 Minnesota census. | LEE, Martin Halvordsen (I12094)
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| 14103 |
Living at home with his parents and siblings in the 1930 census. He was a clerk in a grocery store.
He was a Sergeant in the U.S. Army. Presumably, he was killed in action in World War II. | HANSON, Arnold Herman (I10695)
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| 14104 |
Living at home with his parents and younger siblings in the 1870 census. He already had an occupation: shingle packer.
In the 1895 state census, he and Ellen and their children lived at 110 5th Street North in Minneapolis. Bernard was a railroad agent.
In the 1900 census, he was Bernard Mousso. His occupation was express agent.
He’s a widower in the 1920 census. He’s a deputy sheriff for the county.
His death certificate says he was deputy sheriff and his address was 5016 Newton, the same address as the informant, Mrs. C. R. Brown. He was a widower of Mary. (Ellen was his second wife so it is likely that Mrs. Brown is one of the daughters of Mary Gavin and Barney.)
He died of arteriosclerosis. | MOUSSEAU, Bernard (Barney) (I5271)
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| 14105 |
Living at home with his parents at 139 E. Delos in the 1904 city directory. Shown as Frederick E., stenographer Joint Ry Office.
In the 1910 census Fred, 24, and Emily, 23, were living in Dickinson, North Dakota. They had no children but did have four lodgers living with them on 3rd Avenue West. Fred was a bookkeeper at the electric plant.
An article in the July 11, 1914, Grand Forks Herald describes him as F. E. Deiters, general sales agent for the Dakota Lignite Mines Co.
Registered for the draft on September 12, 1918, in Dickinson, North Dakota, where he was a coal miner for the Dakota Lignite Mines. He and his wife Emily lived at 319 5th Avenue in Dickinson. He was described as tall and stout with blue eyes and light hair.
He and his wife and four children live in Dickinson in the 1925 North Dakota state census.
The family is still in Dickinson in the 1930 census. All four children are still at home. Fred is a manager at an oil company.
In the 1940 census, Fred Sr., his wife Emily, and their son Fred Jr. live in Dickinson. Fred Sr. is the proprietor of an oil company. Fred Jr. is a bookkeeper for that oil company. Fred Jr. and his mother are high school graduates. Fred Sr. was educated through the 6th grade. | DEITERS, Frederick Edward (I8208)
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| 14106 |
Living at home with his parents in the 1900 census. | RUMERY, John (I8296)
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| 14107 |
Living at home with his parents in the 1910 census and in the 1920 census. In the 1920 census, he is shown as a “farm laborer, working out.”
He registered for the draft on June 5, 1917, in the town of Franklin. He was a single farmer employed by Soren Nundahl of Soldiers Grove. He gave his permanent address as Route 1, West Prairie, Wisconsin. He was described as short and of medium build with blue eyes and light brown hair.
In the 1930 census, he is the head of household of the farm that his mother, sister (Mabel), and brother (Tilman) also live on. | NUNDAHL, Oscar (I8373)
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| 14108 |
Living at home with his parents in the 1910 census.
He was still single when he registered for the draft in Rose Hill on June 5, 1917.
Regarding his date of death, the Dalby Database, Find A Grave, and his gravestone all show October 25th. The MHS Death Index shows October 15th. It’s more likely that the index is incorrect than the gravestone. | BLOCH, Paul H (I10511)
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| 14109 |
Living at home with his parents in the 1920 census, not listed in the 1930 census.
By May of 1926, according to an article in the Chippewa Falls newspaper, he was married with a baby.
He lived near Huron, Wisconsin, in May of 1931.
He lived in Aurora, presumably in Wisconsin, in February of 1934.
He lived in Gilman at the time of his father’s death in 1944.
Per C.T., Edward Henry Mercier died in 1982. | MERCIER, Henry (I8009)
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| 14110 |
Living at home with his parents in the 1920 census. Living at home with his mother, brother, and sister in the 1930 census.
Per Judi, Mabel, Martin, and Tilman never married and lived together on the original farm and then moved into Viroqua.
The La Crosse newspaper had an article in December of 1922 about Tillman Nundahl and Tom Tollefson crashing Tillman’s car. Tillman was fined $52.50 for driving while intoxicated.
His obit said that he had an apparent heart attack while in his car near Soldiers Grove. He was a farmer and had retired 14 years previously. | NUNDAHL, Tilman (I8375)
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