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Matches 8,901 to 8,910 of 23,616
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Notes |
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| 8901 |
He was a Tech5 in the U.S. Army in World War II.
In the 1950 census, he and his wife lived in Seattle. Earl worked in a warehouse for a wholesale drug company. | LINDSKOG, Earl Verner (I36352)
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| 8902 |
He was a timber cutter on Skotselv, a village in Øvre Eiker at the time that his daughter Inga Amalie was born. | Torstein Andersen (I34111)
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| 8903 |
He was a twin with Berith. | ROGN, Ole Helgesen (I34803)
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| 8904 |
He was a university teacher in Pittsburgh at the time of the 1930 census.
Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Minnesota at the time of Barbara’s birth. | SCHMID, Calvin Fisher (I5693)
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| 8905 |
He was a veteran of the World War according to the 1930 census when he and his wife and daughter lived in New Market Twp, not far from his brother Olaf.
He was living in Elko at the time of his brother Olaf’s death.
Obituary or cemetery records show him as a Private in the U.S. Army in World War I. | BERGSTROM, Hans (I11923)
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| 8906 |
He was a veteran of the World War.
In the 1940 census, the Leffingwells lived in Fridley in Anoka County, Minnesota. He did office work for a steam railroad. In 1935, the family had lived in Hennepin County. | LEFFINGWELL, Lowell (I13979)
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| 8907 |
He was a veteran of World War I. He was in the 54th Pioneer Infantry in France and Germany. | KASA, Helmer I (I11113)
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| 8908 |
He was a veteran of World War II.
In the 1950 census, he and his family lived in St. Paul. He was a meat grader for the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. | DALAGER, Paul Harold (I30571)
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| 8909 |
He was a waiter living in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in that city’s 1929 city directory.
In his petition for naturalization, dated May 2, 1938, we learn that Egon lives at 920 E. 174th Street, New York, N.Y. (Bronx). His occupation is waiter. His wife is Esther and they have a son, Egon, born 25 August 1930. A handwritten description at the top of the petition says that he was 5 feet, 8 inches tall, weighed 145 lbs., and had blue eyes and blond hair.
Egon arrived in New York from Bremen, Germany, on the S.S. Muenchen on February 26, 1927. He had been a resident of Elberfeld, Germany, but he was a citizen of Sweden. He declared his intention to become a citizen on 4 April 1935 at the southern district court of New York City.
His order of admission was dated September 1, 1938, by the U.S. District Court in New York.
In 1967 he was manager of the Wedgewood Inn at 4th Street and 18th Avenue S in St. Petersburg, Florida. | ZETTERSTROM, Egon Gustaf Arne (I14389)
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| 8910 |
He was a water main laborer in the 1940 census. He and his wife and two children lived in Cannon Falls. | SVIEN, Edward (I34157)
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