Matches 201 to 217 of 217
# | Notes | Linked to |
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201 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Hanson, Tanya Marilyn (I58)
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202 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Hick, William Thomas Jr (I61)
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203 | The death certificate listed her occupation as clerk, typist. | Johnson, Edith Othelia (I68)
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204 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Kasarda, Amy Elise (I75)
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205 | The story, as told to me, was that he had fallen down the cellar stairs as a child (6 years old sticks in my mind but it may have been at a younger age) and that he had been deaf since that time. In retrospect, I wonder if he could have had a severe ear infection or a childhood disease that left him deaf. This affected his speech as it had happened at such an early age. He was not totally deaf and could communicate although one had to speak loudly to him. Edwin always had a large vegetable garden in the back yard. I remember that he and Edith finally decided to pay someone to plow it in the spring before planting as it was so large. Behind the garden was the chicken coop. He had a lot of chickens and we always had fresh eggs and chicken every Sunday as that was Wallie's favorite dish. Edwin could fix almost anything. Edwin and Bill Hick and Tom McGrath bought a little cottage in the marsh, a long walk from the beach at the shore at Grove Beach. Then in 1946, Edwin and Bill built an oceanfront cottage that they would keep until they died. There the family would gather!! There were so many good times there! Edith and Ann did major antiquing and decorated the cottage beautifully. Someone was always visiting; there never was a dull moment. I remember that every time Sig would come with her family, she would bring so much food with her that we could have fed an army. Edwin was an avid fisherman. It was always kind of amusing that when Edwin came in from his day of fishing at the shore, all the neighbors would come over to see what he had caught. They could be out there all day and never catch as much as he did. He taught us how to dig for cohog clams to make chowder, to dig for little neck clams, to catch crabs, to go eeling at night, to row a boat, and so much more. But Carol and I still made him bait the hooks! For ma | Johnson, George Frank (I71)
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206 | Twin sister to Jennie Johnson. There is no record of a birth certificate. On Annie's death certificate, parents' ages are listed as 33 and 26. Cause of death was listed as premature birth. | Johnson, Annie (I67)
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207 | Twin to sister Annie Johnson. There is no record of a birth certificate. Jennie's death certificate has the same information as Annie's. We have searched extensively for gravesites for the twins without success. There is an old cemetery in Cromwell that we didn't even know existed. We have checked the records there also with the woman that has kept the records for eons but have had no luck. They tell us that they could have been buried in the back yard. Also in those days, people would often be offered space for a "preemie" in a family member's or friend's family plot. In that case, there would not be a headstone, nor a record. Premature births were, of course, quite common and people did not have the money to purchase a cemetery plot. | Johnson, Jennie (I73)
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208 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Fabian, Tyler Jin Tae (I207)
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209 | Walter was raised by his grandmother. | Wamester, Walter Kneiling (I135)
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210 | Was a very capable and successful teacher before her marriage. | Miller, Susan A (I445)
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211 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Quagliaroli, Wayne M (I107)
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212 | We have been unable to locate a birth certificate for my mother. They tell us that it is very possible none was filed or it was lost. Parent's ages would have been 48 and 41. | Johnson, Mildred Evelyn (I211)
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213 | When Anna died, Bill Hick bought her house. He later sold the house to the Reils. | Anna Sophia Johansdotter (I229)
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214 | When Helen died, Wallie and his two girls, Margie and Carol, moved back with his mother, Clara. That made a household consisting of Clara; her children, Wallie, Edwin, Edith, and Mildred; and her grandchildren Margie, Carol, and Marilyn. Later, Margie moved out, then Mildred died. The rest of the family group never changed except when Carol and Marilyn moved out when they married. | Johnson, Gustav Audolf Walmer (I72)
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215 | William died on his farm. | Hull, William (I542)
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216 | Witness at her Baptism was W. Foraldranse (or begins with K). | Johnson, Mildred Evelyn (I211)
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217 | Witnesses were Anders Jonsson from Lönshult, Sr. Magnus Mansson i Kalkatorp, Eva Jonsdotter i Löhult, Marta Jonsdotter i Skörea | Catharina Jonsdotter (I321)
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