Matches 941 to 950 of 23,616
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| 941 |
according to his 1942 World War II draft registration | RYAN, Martin James (I1519)
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| 942 |
According to his birth certificate, after his birth his parents had had two children born alive and still living and one child born alive and now dead.
Duane was a barber in Brooklyn Center at the time he died. His cause of death was lung cancer. He lived at 5949 Vincent Avenue North. | TONSAGER, Duane Dale (I2095)
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| 943 |
According to his birth certificate, he was child #1, legitimate.
According to his death certificate, he died from a weak constitution. His death certificate was signed by his father so it is likely that he died at home. | SELMO, Oscar Julian (I8126)
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| 944 |
According to his birth record, he was child #5. The name Virgil Alvin was added on April 6, 1942.
He may be the “Virgil Anderson, Bellflower, California,” mentioned in Nancy Lant’s obit.
In the 1940 census, he and his wife Florence and son Duane live with or next door to his brother Kenneth in Le Sueur County, Minnesota. Like Kenneth, Virgil is a common laborer doing od jobs. Unlike Kenneth, Virgil is employed. In 1935, Virgil and Florence lived in Grant County, North Dakota. | ANDERSON, Virgil Alvin (I11397)
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| 945 |
According to his birth registration, he was the fifth child of H.B. Kilburn, a banker, and Ellis Dayton, a housewife. Both parents were born in New Brunswick.
Registered for the draft on May 29, 1917, in Plattsburg, Clinton County, New York, where he as a student candidate in the Reserve Officers Training Camp at Plattsburg. He was described as of medium height and build with brown eyes and brown hair.
George enlisted in the Army on August 14, 1917, and was a Pvt 1st Cl. He was discharged on April 5, 1918, to accept a commission as an officer. He was appointed a 2nd Lt in the Signal Corps on June 18, 1917, and was discharged for the convenience of the government on December 31, 1918. He did not serve overseas.
The Kilburns were living in St. Louis at 1202 Shawmut Place at the time of the census in April of 1930. George W., 34, born in Maine (his parents were born in English-speaking Canada), was a teacher in a private school. He is shown as the owner of a house valued at $9000. The household has a radio. His wife is Gladys E., 27. Her father was born in England. They have been married since he was 27 and she was 21. Their children, both born in Minnesota, are David G., 5, and Paul D., less than a year. Because Paul was born in Minnesota, the Kilburns must have moved to St. Louis within the past few months. George W. was a veteran of the World War.
In the 1940 census, the Kilburns lived in Dundee in Kane County, Illinois. He was a teacher at a private school and she was a registered nurse at a private school. | KILBURN, George Washington (I246)
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| 946 |
According to his daughter in Find A Grave:
Joe was born in N. Dakota. His parents Areta Johnson and Simon Simonson were divorced when Joe was younger than five years of age. Areta married Palmer Sorenson and they resided in Iowa and later in Minnesota. Joe went by Palmer's last name. As a child Joe was called 'Bud' by his family. Joe was a welder and a superintendent in a scrap yard in Los Angeles. He married Jeanne Hunt and they had four children. Jeanne died in 1958. Joe married Nina Russell in 1962. A couple of years later they divorced and soon after Joe married Evelyn (?). Joe died from heart disease during a angioplasty procedure. His daughter Kathy Jo died in 1950 due to pneumonia. Joe was a kind man with a dry sense of humor. His children loved and miss him. | SORENSON, Joel Vincent (I19541)
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| 947 |
According to his daughter, he spent one year at St. Olaf College.
In the 1930 census, he was a 20 year-old undertaker living at home at 4340 Fullerton Avenue in Chicago with his parents and siblings.
In the 1940 census, he and Ethel and Judith lived on Fullerton Avenue in Chicago in a house they owned worth $12000. John was an undertaker with his own business. Ethel was the informant for the family information. Five years earlier, Ethel had lived in New York City. Ethel had had four years of college, John had had one year of college.
He was treasurer of the board of social welfare of the North Chicago conference of the American Lutheran Church. | PEDERSEN, John Martin Jr (I14099)
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| 948 |
According to his daughter’s birth certificate, he was a farmer at Route #8, Webster. | PASEK, Frank J (I9105)
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| 949 |
according to his death certificate | FORTIER, Henry Alfred (I283)
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| 950 |
according to his death certificate | THOMPSON, Andrew T (I14490)
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