thegeneastorypages


genealogy and family history of the Carlson, Ellingboe, Everson and Johnson families of Minnesota and Wisconsin
First Name:  Last Name: 
[Advanced Search]  [Surnames]

Notes


Matches 21,181 to 21,190 of 23,510

      «Prev «1 ... 2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122 2123 ... 2351» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
21181 The 1916 birthdate is shown for him in the index of Minnesota birth certificates (in which he is “Alvin”). Other sources have said, incorrectly, 1918.

In the 1936 Faribault city directory, which includes Northfield, he is Myron Ellingboe, helper, employed by St. Olaf College and living in Ytterboe Hall.

In the 1940 census, he was living at home with his parents and brother in Northfield Twp, Rice County. He was a retail salesman of household appliances.

In the 1950 census, he and Adah, but not her son William, are living in Hutchinson, Minnesota. Myron is a district distributor of wholesale farm feed. Adah is a registered nurse anesthetist. She is employed, Myron is not.

In the 1956 directory for the St. Paul suburbs, he is a salesman for Sears. He lives in St. Paul.

Ellingboe Myron A. Faribault Daily News 17/Sep/1979 Myron A. Ellingboe, 63, of Inver Grove Heights, formerly of rural Dennison, died Friday, Sept.14, at Miller Hospital, St. Paul. The funeral service was held Sunday afternoon at Vang Lutheran Church in rural Dennison, with the Rev. Richard Mork and the Rev. Orville Wold officiating. Internment was in the church cemetery with military rites provided by the Northfield veterans organization. The deceased was a past commander of Eugene H. Truax Post No. 4393, VFW. Pallbearers were Thomas Barrett, Paul Ellingboe, Robert Falvin, William Miller, Michael Morton and Robert Zeik. Arrangements were made by the Boldt Funeral Home of Faribault. Myron Alvin Ellingboe, son of Anna (Svien) Ellingboe, was born on May 15, 1916 in rural Rice county. He married Adah Jenner on January 10, 1948, at Olivia. She preceded him in death this past May 17. Ellingboe was employed by Sears Allstate Insurance Co. He is survived by his son, William, of Fountain Valley, Calif.; two grandsons; two brothers, Arnold and Bennard Ellingboe of Dennison. 
ELLINGBOE, Myron Alvin (I3223)
 
21182 The 1920 census had her as age 9, born in Illinois. The Canadian census of 1916 says that she was born in the U.S.A.

She lived in Saskatoon at the time of her mother’s death in 1967. 
GULBRANSEN, Tabitha Helen (I34101)
 
21183 The 1920 census records a married 42 year-old Stephen P Warren living at 327 Hennepin Avenue in what appears to be a large rooming house. He is an employee of a farm, apparently. The boarding house at 327 Hennepin is the one in the census just before the one at 301 Hennepin which is the one headed by Anna E Warren.

Anna Warren’s death certificate says that she was divorced from Phillip Warren so his middle name may have been Phillip. 
WARREN, Stephen P (I14617)
 
21184 The 1927 Crosby-Ironton High School yearbook shows that Fred, then a junior, was one half of the “Kit-Kat Dutch Twins” in the play “My Spanish Sweetheart.”

He played second base for the Crosby Ironton teams in American Legion Junior Baseball in the late 1920s. The 1926 team won the state championship.

At the time of his mother’s WPS interview in June of 1937, he was a brake man at the Mahnomen mine.

In the 1939-1940 Ironton city directory, he was a laborer in the Mahnomen Mine. He and Doris lived at 219 6th.

In the 1940 census, he and Doris are shown as lodgers in the Charles Harkins home on Irene Avenue in the village of Ironton. Fred and Doris were both high school graduates. Fred worked in an iron ore mine.

He registered for the draft on 16 Oct 1940 in Brainerd. He gave his address as Ironton but that had been changed, in pencil, as 1099 17th Ave. SE in Minneapolis.

In the 1942-1943 Crosby city directory, he was still a laborer in the Mahnomen Mine. He and Doris lived at 131 SW 2nd.

In the 1944 Minneapolis city directory, he was Fred E Gustad, a welder for Hart-Carter Co. He and Doris lived at 1099 17th Avenue SE.

In the 1946 and 1948 Minneapolis city directories, he was Fred E Gustad was a carpenter. He and Doris lived at 1099 17th Avenue SE.

In September of 1946, a St. Paul judge sentenced him to 10 days in the workhouse for drunk driving.

In the 1952 and 1953 Minneapolis directories, he was still a carpenter. He and Doris lived at 1706 37th Ave N E.

In the 1956 Minneapolis city directory, Fred was a foreman. He and Doris still lived at 1706 37th Avenue N E.

In the 1957 directory, he was a superintendent.

In the spring of 1962, he was the general construction superintendent for the construction of the Capp-Towers Motor Hotel on 13th and Nicollet in Minneapolis.

His wife Doris A. was the informant for his death certificate. He was a construction superintendent for Robin Hood Construction. He died from a stroke (CVA). His usual residence was 1706 37th Avenue NE, Minneapolis. 
GUSTAD, Frederick Edward (I137)
 
21185 The 1930 census says that her childrens’ mother was born in Illinois.

She is Tracy Baker, age 17, living in Little Falls with her 50 year-old mother in the 1905 state census.

Her maiden name shown as Baker in her childrens’ birth certificates.

Shown in the 1910 census as having had two children, both still living.

Died from Spanish Flu. Died as Tracey Anderson.

On Betty Mae’s birth certificate, Theresa’s color is indicated as “dark” but it had been crossed out and replaced with “white.” On Betty Mae’s birth certificate, and on Olive’s death certificate, Theresa is born in “Buckman Twp, Minnesota.” 
BAKER, Theresa (I7764)
 
21186 the 1930 census would suggest 1892 CRIBB, Grace E (I14698)
 
21187 The 1939 Sioux Falls, South Dakota, city directory shows her and Elaine living at 115 S. Spring Avenue.

She was a 38 year-old divorcee in the 1940 census. She was a waitress in a cafe and lived with Elaine in Luverne. 
OLSON, Nell Amelia (I29470)
 
21188 The 1940 census erroneously implies that he is Herbert’s son. Eugene works as an oil truck driver.

In the 1950 census, he and Elizabeth and their son Gene T (born Oct 1949) live at 8501 24th Avenue S in Bloomington.

Kornder Eugene G. Kornder (Gene), 81 years, of Belle Plaine, died of a heart attack on Saturday morning, January 25, 2003. He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Elizabeth Kuduk Kornder; and 4 children and their families: Gene Thomas and his children Daniel, Jennifer, Jeremiah and Matthew and their mother, Rita Kornder of Belle Plaine; Nancy E. and Cdr. Richard P. Adams, U.S.N. (Ret.) of Rhode Island; Timothy E. and Lori and their daughters Alison, Andrea and Ashli of Belle Plaine. He also had a special place in his heart for his great-grand-daughter, Danika Rose. Gene is survived by one brother, John Bergman and his wife Louise of Hugo, MN. Gene grew up on the family vegetable farm on 24th Avenue in east Bloomington in the shadows of the old Met Stadium. The Kornder family has been charter members of the St. Paul Farmers' Market since 1926 when they brought their produce to market in horse-drawn wagons. Urban expansion forced Gene to relocate to Belle Plaine. He established Kornder's Berry Farm which was well-known and sought out by metro area residents every June for many, many years. At its zenith in the late seventies, the asparagus and strawberry operation encompassed 30 acres drawing customers from a 50 mile radius. During the 1960s Gene also grew acres of gladiolus for Bachmann's Floral and Greenhouses serving the metropolitan area. Various other vegetables were grown and sold through Applebaum's Grocery Stores (now Rainbow Foods). Adjusting to the changing market conditions, wholesale vegetable operations were suspended in the late eighties, and Gene then concentrated on direct retail at the St. Paul and Minneapolis Farmers' Markets. Gene and his brother-in-law, Ray Czech (the Silver Fox) of South St. Paul were widely known throughout the satellite markets and developed a large following of clientele where he was well-known for his apple-sized, great tasting radishes! Among Gene's notable customers were St. Paul Chief of Police Finney, St. Paul Mayor Norm Coleman, and Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybeck. Gene served on the following boards: the St. Paul Farmers' Market Growers' Association, the Minnesota Vegetable Growers' Association, the Minnesota Berry Growers' Association, and served as treasurer for the Belle Plaine Rural Farm Fire Association for over 20 years. In 1975, the Gene Kornder farm was selected as Scott County Conservation Farm of the year. Gene was proud to contribute vegetables annually to the St. Paul and Minneapolis Farmers' Market displays at the Minnesota State Fair. During the 1940s, Gene played baseball for the city of Bloomington in the Minnesota River Valley League as a catcher and a speedy second baseman. He love ice fishing, spending many days at Mille Lacs and teaching his grandchildren the joys of fishing. He also enjoyed playing card, especially pfeiffer with his wife and grandchildren. He relished telling the stories of trapping, hunting and fishing in the Minnesota River Valley and especially his survival while hunting during the 1941 Armistice Day Blizzard. Visitation will be Tuesday evening (TONIGHT) from 4-8 PM and Wednesday morning from 8-10:30 AM at the Kolden Funeral Home in Belle Plaine. The funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 AM Wednesday, January 29, 2003 at Our Lady of the Prairie Catholic Church in Belle Plaine with interment at St. Peter and Paul's Cemetery in Belle Plaine. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Belle Plaine Ambulance Capital Improvement Fund or Our Lady of the Prairie School. 
KORNDER, Eugene George (I19604)
 
21189 The 1940 census says he was born in Canada. DOSEY, Stanley Fred (I21206)
 
21190 The 1940 census shows a 48 year-old Peter Dostis living in Chicago. He was born in Greece and was a chef in a hotel dining room.

His obit said that he was a member of the Cooks and Pastry Cooks union. 
DOSTIS, Peter John (I13749)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122 2123 ... 2351» Next»