Event class: census, living, married, wife, time, moved, family, united states, born, mother

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Events with high posterior probability

Theodora CormontanAfter the deaths of her brothers, Cormontan and her sister entered a home for elderly Norwegian immigrants in Decorah, Iowa in 1917.
Cornelius CowardThe 1901 census listed him as a professional cricketer, however his wife had by then died, and Coward was shown to live at 204 South Meadow Road, Preston with one servant.
Isaac SenecaAt the time of the 1930 United States Census, Seneca was listed as a blacksmith working in Ponca City, Oklahoma.
David L. DunlapIn a draft registration card completed in September 1918, Dunlap indicated that he was living in Highland Park, Michigan with his.
Gustave MayAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, he was living on Third Street in Fairview Borough in Bergen County, New Jersey, and working as a newspaper reporter.
Dwight Watson (American football)At the time of the 1880 U. S. Census, he was the seventh of nine children ranging from age 1 to age 26.
Virginia Mae BrownThe 1940 U. S. Census shows Brown to be in her third year of High School.
Nathaniel Parker WillisIn 1842, Willis employed Harriet Jacobs, an escaped slave from North Carolina, as a house servant and nanny.
Herman G. SteinerAt the time of the 1940 U. S. Census, Steiner was living with his parents in Holyoke.
F. Ambrose ClarkSince 1927, he had employed Laura Stevens at his Iroquois Farms ; she was the wife of the aeronaut A. Leo Stevens, then living in Fly Creek, NY.
Truly ShattuckAt the time of the taking of the 1920 US Census Shattuck was recorded as a house guest of Rudolph K Hynicka and his young wife Dorothy at their Los Angeles residence.
Mona Caird Caird was born in Ryde on the Isle of Wight, the older of two daughters of John Alison of Midlothian, Scotland, (who some biographies claim was the inventor of the vertical boiler), and Matilda Hector who, according to the 1871 census records, was born in Schleswig Holstein, Germany.
Stark RitchieAt the time of the 1920 Census, he lived with his grandparents, Gavin Ritchie, who was an immigrant from Scotland, and Kate, who was an immigrant from Ireland.
Charles NepeanIn the 1851 census, the family were living at 21 Bolton Street, St George Hanover Square, Westminster ; Charles was listed as'' Charles Son 2 mth.
Luke PryorOn the 1850 United States Census his occupation was recorded as'' lawyer.''
Arthur E. BairdHe claimed to be an orphan ; however, his 1918 draft card recorded him as'' living at home in Medford with his folks and attending college''.
Jack Owens (blues singer)After that time, he was raised by the Owens family with his maternal grandfather the patriarch of 8 children according to the 1910 Census, and of them, two other children officially shared the Nelson name.
Harold AveryAccording to his brother, Benjamin Ricardo Avery's, will where Charles was listed as a witness, Charles was living in Evesham with his brother Benjamin and his son William on 3 June 1943.
William Carpenter (flat Earth theorist)The 1880 U. S. federal census shows him and his wife Annie with six children aged 11-25 years whose occupations included milliner, architect, professor of music, and florist.
Alfort SmithIn 1881 Smith was living with his family as a cotton weaver at Fitzallan Street Glossop Dale.
King BaggotIn April 1910, Baggot was at home with his mother and family in St. Louis, when the U. S. Census was taken there.
Margaret Carnegie MillerMargaret Carnegie married Roswell Miller, Jr., at the Carnegie family home at 2 East 91st Street in New York on April 22, 1919 where she was given away by her father.
Paul GraenerGraener is recorded in the United Kingdom Census of 1901 as a'' musical director (theatre)'' living at 3 Poplar Grove in Hammersmith together with Maria (born in Kiel), their first two children (Heinz and Paul, aged 4 and 2) and Graener's author cousin, George.
Billy BawlfAt the time of the 1911 Canadian Census, he was married to Mary Ada Bawlf, and had 3 children, Nicholas William, Rowena Eleanor and Robert Samuel.
Skel RoachAt the time of the 1920 Census, Roach and his wife were living in Oak Park, Illinois with two daughters, Louise and Margaret.
Barnet Burns The United Kingdom Census 1841 recorded the occupants of every UK household on the night of 6 June 1841 when Barnet Burns, mariner, and Rosina Crowther, pedlar, were lodging at Vincent Street, Sculcoates, Kingston upon Hull.
Everett SweeleyIn his draft registration card signed in April 1942, Sweeley listed his residence as Twin Falls, his employer as the County of Twin Falls, and his place of employment as the County Courthouse in Twin Falls.
Brooks AdamsThe Census report also shows he married Evelyn Davis around 1890.
Harry ChidgeyBut by the 1911 census, at which time he had been married and widowed, he was able to call himself a'' professional cricketer'' on the census form.
Herbert MundinHis family moved within a short time of his birth to St Albans in Hertfordshire (the 1901 census data reveal that the family lived at St Helens Villa, Paxton Road, St Albans ; his parents William and Jane apparently naming their house after the town where they first met and where Herbert was born).
Helen BarryHer daughter, Esther E. Brandon, was born in Greenwich, Kent in the second quarter of 1855, around the time of the marriage.
Gordon E. HinesIn 1964, Hines moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan with his family, that now included three daughters, so that he could have his own Stewart-Warner sales territory.
Helen BarryBy 1881, he was living at Hanover Square, London, and she is not shown as residing with him in the 1881 census.
Santa BiondoShe immigrated to 106 Wallace Street, New Haven, Connecticut with her father Mauro, her mother Giuseppa, her sister Angela, and her brother Mauro Jr. on October 2, 1907 They were received by Santa's older brother, Domenico Biondo, who was already living at Wallace Street at that time.
Pug Cavet At the time of the 1920 United States Census, Cavet was living with his wife, May, in Tulia, Texas.
W. D. O. GreigHe is recorded in the 1901 census as living at Coptfold Hall, Margaretting in Essex with his widowed sister, Elizabeth O. Jupp and her family.
Helen GibsonCensus records for 1920 indicate that they were living separately ; Hoot Gibson listing himself as married, and Helen listing herself as widowed.
Harold Roe BartleBartle met Margaret Ann Caroline Jarvis in Lebanon, and they were married on September 26, 1923, in St. Joseph, Missouri, where his father had taken another pastorate.
Evan Evans (academic)He and his family were at home in the Master's Lodgings at Pembroke at the time of the 1881 census, looked after by six live-in servants, but his eldest son had already left home : aged only 13, William Noble Evans was a naval cadet on board HMS Dapper at Townstall near Dartmouth, Devon.
Joseph McCullochAt the time of the 1920 U. S. Census, McCulloch was living in Ypsilanti, and his occupation was identified as the'' athletic supervisor'' at a school.
Frederick WedgeBy January 1920 Wedge was employed as a clerk at the Southern Railroad, and lived in a boarding house on East 13th Street, Tucson with his wife and son.
Edward Norman HayEdward moved across to Coleraine in Ireland shortly afterwards to be cared for by aunts, although he is recorded as being in the Cottage Hospital in Faversham in the 1891 census.
George MontbardMontbard lived at 3 Augustus Square, according to the census of 1891 under the name of George Montbard.
James Leith Macbeth BainBy 1871, James Leith Bain, aged 10 years, was a scholar living with his parents and siblings at 1 Oakfield Terrace, Pitlochry.
Herbert Escott InmanIn the 1901 Census he is listed as a Baptist Minister and Author.
Frederick SchuleAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, Schule was still living in East Orange with his wife Flora.
Watson FothergillIn the 1901 census he is listed as Watson Fothergill living at 7 Mapperley Road, Nottingham.
W. E. CuleIn 1901, Cule and his wife were living at 41 Romilly Road, Canton, Cardiff, with their daughters Mabel (2) and Dilys (5 months).
Leopold StokowskiHowever, Stokowski's birth certificate (signed by J. Claxton, the registrar at the General Office, Somerset House, London, in the parish of All Souls, County of Middlesex) gives his birth on 18 April 1882, at 13 Upper Marylebone Street (now New Cavendish Street), in the Marylebone District of London.
James Faed However, with his father's death and his work at Barlay Mill virtually at an end, James, in 1846, joined his two brothers, John and Thomas, who were living at South West Circus Place in Edinburgh.
Dummy TaylorAt the time of the 1925 Iowa State Census, Taylor was living at the Iowa School for the Deaf in Lewis Township, Pottawattamie County, Iowa.
Fred BlandingHis mother was listed in the 1900 Census as a widow.
Fred A. HilleryBy 1878 Hillery was employed as a streetcar conductor for the Union Railroad Company, and he and his wife lived at the U. R. R. - owned house at 862 Eddy Street in Providence.
Andrew G. ReidAt the time of the 1930 United States Census, Reid and his wife, Helen S. Reid, were living in Waterloo with their four children, Martha (age 13), Wallace (age 10), Joseph (age 8) and Mary (age 6).
Jimmie Rodgers (country singer)In the 1900 Census for Daleville, Lauderdale County, Mississippi, Jimmie's mother, Eliza -LSB- Bozeman -RSB- Rodgers, was listed as already having had seven children, with four of them still living at that date.
Andrew Bird GlaspieAt the time of the 1930 U. S. Census, Glaspie was living in Oxford with his wife Clara and daughter Elizabeth.
O.L. RapsonAccording to the 1910 US census, Rapson is listed as living with Allen Goodart, who was the brother of Glenn Goodart, the man who would eventually replace Rapson as manager of the Grand Rapids Hotel later in his life.
Lynn BellAt the time of the 1900 U. S. Census, the family lived in Hillsdale, Michigan, and Bell was the oldest of five children -- four brothers and one sister.
Velma Wallace RaynessAccording to the Iowa census, Velma was living with her husband and her husband's parents in Ames City, Iowa in 1930.
Cora HubbardIn the 1900 census, he is in the custody of the Missouri State Penitentiary and is listed as single.
John Herbert HedleyThey resided on Michigan Avenue in Chicago, Cook, Illinois, where John Herbert Hedley, Sr. was naturalized on 3 May 1926.
Tubby MeyersAt the time of the 1930 United States Census, Meyers and his wife continued to reside in Port Huron.
Richard Logan (footballer born 1969)As of 2009, Logan is a builder and is still living in his native Barnsley in Barugh Green.
Luke PryorOn the 1840 Census 6 free blacks under the age of 10 were recorded in his father's household, as well as 1 male slave child under 10 and an older female between the ages of 55 and 100.
Max KaseAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, Kase was living with his parents and two older siblings (Benjamin and Lena) at the same address in The Bronx.
Gilbert WaterhouseAt the time of the UK 1901 national census, the family were living in East London, where Gilbert's occupation, aged 18, was given as a ship's Draughtsman.
Samuel W. ThorntonHe also conducted the 1870 census of Washington County, Iowa.
Oscar LambertAt the time of the 1930 Census, he was living in Youngstown, Ohio and working as an attorney for a steel corporation.
Jean AckerIn the 1900 census, Hattie is with Joseph and her grandparents, but no wife of Joseph is listed.
Arthur P. RobinsonAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, he was living in Plainfield with his wife Mary and three children : Ellen, John and Mary.
Fred A. HilleryWhile still employed as a conductor, by 1880 Hillery and his wife lived at another U. R. R. house at 11 Searle Street (at the corner with Sayles Street), Providence, Rhode Island.
Frederick Wedge By the beginning of April 1930 Wedge was listed as being an unmarried author, and living in the Union Mission, a two-story frame building for indigent men, at 126 South Marengo Avenue, Pasadena.
William Herbert VacherIn 1850 Vacher was listed as still resident in Canton.
Wilton S. FarnsworthAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, Farnsworth was living in Queens with his wife and two children.
Russell Pascoe During 1963, Whitty and 23-year-old Pascoe were living with three young women in a caravan at Kenwyn Caravan Park, on the outskirts of Truro, Cornwall.
Charles Cruft (showman)At the time of the United Kingdom Census 1901, Cruft was living at 325 Holloway Road, N7 with his wife Emma, his father Charles, a boarder named Albert Causfield and a servant named Alice Gregory.
Monk EastmanIn the 1900 census, Mary Eastman lived in Queens on Curtis Ave. with her daughters Elizabeth and Francine and their families.
John Herbert HedleyBy 1942, the year of the United States World War II draft registration, Hedley resided in Dayton, Ohio.
R. G. SurdamIn the 1875 Ventura County Directory, Surdam lived in Ventura and his occupation was listed as oil superintendent.
Gustave MayAt the time of the 1916 Canada Census of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, May was living in Edmonton with his wife, Florence, and their sons, Gilbert (age 10), Joseph (age 8), Gustave (age 6), and George (age 1).
John Van CottIn 1847 he, his wife, two children (their two other children died in New York), and 59-year-old mother traveled with the Daniel Spencer/Perrigrine Sessions Company, wherein John was appointed to be a'' captain of 10'' and a marshal.
Svend NMN PetersenIn 1925 the Iowa State Census finds him living Newell, Buena Vista, Iowa with his sister Helen.
Benjamin H. SouthworthAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, he was living in Schoolcraft Township with his wife.
Josephine DickinsonIn March 1998 at the age of 41, while searching for her lost geese Josephine met her husband Douglas Dickinson, a retired and widowed hill farmer.
Red SnappAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, Snapp was still living in Paris and working as a salesman in a shoe store.
Eli BowenHowever, 1860 census records demonstrate that he was living with his parents and attended school.
Eugene Turenne Gregorie The 1925 New York State Census shows that when Gregorie was 17 years old he was still living in Long Island, New York, with his parents.
Commodore Perry OwensThe census of 1910 shows Owens and his wife were residing in San Diego, California.
Thomas BramsdonIn the 1861 Census his father was described as a retail brewer living at 40 Hertford Street, Portsea and Thomas is listed as a four-year-old Scholar.
Gary GoldmanShe and her three children John Carr, Jason Carr and Joanna Carr moved with him to Dublin, Ireland in 1986.
Al Casey (jazz guitarist)While double-checking his birthdate with U. S. census records he found Albert Casey listed as being 2 and 1/2 years old in the 1920 Kentucky census that was recorded on January 9, 1920.
Fred NorcrossAt the time of the 1910 United States Census, Norcross was living in Wilkeson, Washington.
Cornelius Coward In 1881, a local census recorded Coward living at Riverside Bowling Green Inn, Preston, with his wife Ellen, aged 41.
Richard Butler (publisher)He returned to the United States in time to be listed in the 1860 census as a resident of Cincinnati, Ohio, where he worked as a printer.
Charles D. RaffertyAt the time of the 1920 United States Census, Rafferty was listed as a resident of Greenwich employed as a silk importer.
Mary-Louise HooperIn November 1944 Dr. Deissler resided at the home of his mother-in-law, 894 Longridge Road, Oakland, however Mary-Louise was not registered as living there at that time.
Henry Edwards (entomologist)In June, Edwards answered the 1880 census to report himself an England-born actor living with his English wife'' Marian'' and his Chinese servant, Gim Hing.
Edmund BlacketIn June 1841, Blacket was at the family home on Brixton Hill, when his father entered him on the census returns as'' Draper''.
Monroe SalisburyWhile he was performing in Providence, Rhode Island, in June 1900, Salisbury and his mother were staying in a hotel on Weybosset Street when the U. S. Federal Census was taken.
Harwood Greenhalgh Greenhalgh was married to Kate his occupation was as a Cotton Doubler employing 320 Women 50 Men & 8 Boys (1881) and later as a Yarn Agent and Salesman.