• [S138] Reena Bernards, Chevy Chase, Maryland, to Carl Fields, e-mail, "RE: Hannah Yowell/Yovel Segal" (transmitting information about Hannah Yowell siblings), 18 December 2007 (15:34:26); privately held by Carl Fields, Aiken, South Carolina, Computer Files (e-mails, Genealogy, or "Gene," section of Local Folders).
  • [S467] 1920 United States Census, New Jersey, Perth Amboy (ED 40), Middlesex County, p 15B (Image 778), Household 289, Isaac Bernstein; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 13 January 2008) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T625.
  • [S487] Population schedule, New York, Bronx (ED 431), Bronx County, p 1B (Image 492), Household 31, William A. Yowell; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 11 November 2006) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T625.
  • [S496] 1860 United States Census, Indiana, population schedule, Hart Township, Warrick County, 70 (968), (Image 521), Household 585, Wallace A Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 17 Janurary 2006) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication M653.
  • [S659] From: Susan Segal (Senior Editor), The Segal Family Tree, 1848-1984 (Cambridge, MA: BAFTO International [Privately Publlished], 1984):

    Harry was the fourth child of Moshe Leib and Reisel. His Hebrew name was "Yehezkiel", his nick-name was "Hatz", and his American name was "Harry". All of Harry's brothers received academic educations, but because of his middle position in the family he was drafted into the Russian Army. He and his family made many abortive attempts to avoid this - even to the extent of having all his healthy teeth extracted to weaken him and make him appear unfit - but he still passed the health examination. The next best thing that could be done was to buy him a berth in the Military Band. With no prior musical education he was given a French horn, as that seemed to be the easiest instrument to learn, and where an occasional "boom-boom" was necessary. This, at least, gave him officer's status and privilege.

    After his tour of duty he entered the family's wholesale grocery business. Immediately after his marriage on January 1, 1906 to the beautiful, aristocratic and charming Henya, they joined the mass migration of the Ziegelnietski family. They settled in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, and brought up four children there; Sarah, Ida, Israel and Ruth. After the depression they lost their dry goods business, and having always been ardent Zionists, the Hatz, Henya and the children migrated in 1934 to Palestine where the rest of the Yowell family lived. It was a rough time, and in 1937 they returned to the United States.

    Harry died at the age of 70 in 1950. Hannah made her home with the family of her youngest daughter, Ruth Bernards, until she died in 1969. (As related by their daughter, Ida Meshoulam).


    Additional observation by Carl Fields (Feb 2012): The personal recollection described above indicates the Segals lost their "dry goods business" during the depression. City directory entries indicate Harry Segal left the dry goods store operated along with his brother prior to 1920. After that he was involved in a real estate investment company, a drug company, a creamery or dairy, and last (circa 1931) a service station. If he again had a dry goods store between the service station and moving to Israel (1934), it was not recorded in Perth Amboy city directories (but none appear to have been published between 1931 and 1935).
  • [S756] "California Death Index, 1940-1997 ," database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : 4 Feb 2012), Della Minick Fields, 8 Jul 1989, Fresno County; based on "California Death Index, 1940-1997," State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics, Sacramento.
  • [S800] "California Death Index, 1940-1997 ," database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : 14 Sep 2012), Elnora Alabeth Batch, 11 Sep 1997, Kern County; based on "California Death Index, 1940-1997," State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics, Sacramento.
  • [S801] "California Death Index, 1940-1997 ," database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : 14 Sep 2012), Lenzy T Johnson, 3 Nov 1972, Fresno County; based on "California Death Index, 1940-1997," State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics, Sacramento.
  • [S824] "California Death Index, 1940-1997 ," database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : 19 Sep 2012), Diskie V Morgan, 1 May 1972, Sierra County; based on "California Death Index, 1940-1997," State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics, Sacramento.
  • [S825] "California Death Index, 1940-1997 ," database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : 19 Sep 2012), Mildred Louise Bunyard, 5 Oct 1991, Contra Costa County; based on "California Death Index, 1940-1997," State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics, Sacramento.
  • [S832] Anna Louise Kuster Palmer, Penner Cemetery (Vanzant, Douglas County, Missouri), database (with some images), Jim Tipton (and others), Find A Grave, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 19 Sep 2012), Pleasant D. Gott, Memorial No. 40280371.
  • [S833] Larua Jones Gray, Sanger Cemetery (Sanger, Fresno County, California), database (with some images), Jim Tipton (and others), Find A Grave, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 19 Sep 2012), Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Johnson Gott Theis, Memorial No. 47658237.
  • [S875] "Technion Mission to Israel," New York Times, 9 May 1955, 11; read as digital image from ProQuest Historical Newspapers, "The New York Times (1851-2009)," (http://proquest.com/hnpnewyorktimes/ : accessed 22 April 2013), 113300954, accessed via University of South Carolina Library computer system at Aiken Campus library. The actual events reported in a newspaper article may have taken place one or more days prior to date the article was published.
  • [S877] "Deaths: Kay--Leon," New York Times, 1 Oct 1960, 19; read as digital image from ProQuest Historical Newspapers, "The New York Times (1851-2009)," (http://proquest.com/hnpnewyorktimes/ : accessed 22 April 2013), 115159139, accessed via University of South Carolina Library computer system at Aiken Campus library. The actual events reported in a newspaper article may have taken place one or more days prior to date the article was published.
  • [S1077] Della (Minick) Fields grave marker, Sanger Cemetery, Sanger, ; read by Carl Fields, approximately 2005. This cemetery is located at 605 South Rainbow Avenue. Sanger is in Fresno County.
  • [S1105] The family apparently lived over the dry goods store run by members of the Segal family. The store builiding (which still existed when Carl Fields visited Perth Amboy in October 2006) has been described with several slightly different addresses, including 440 Amboy Avenue and 440-444 Amboy Avenue. When Carl visited (and photographed) the building in 2006, it appeared that 440 Amboy Avenue was a single store front in one building, while 442 and 444 were two storefronts in a single building. In 2006, each of the three storefronts contained a separate building. However, Carl is fairly sure that when he visited Constant's store in the 1950s (when Carl was a young boy) 442 and 444 where jointed together as a single building. There may have also been openings so that one could move from 442 Amboy Avenue to the building next door (440 Amboy Avenue) without going outside (Carl isn't sure). Various census information suggests the residential area above the stores was, for a time, divided into several separate apartments, possibly as many as six.
  • [S1257] Peter Golden, Quiet Diplomat: A Biography of Max M. Fisher (New York, London, Toronto: A Hertzl Press Publication, Cornwall Books, 1992). ISBN 0-8453-4846-9. This is an authorized biography, based in part, on interviews with Max Fisher. The material relating to Keystone Oil Company is from Chapters 1, 2, and 3.
  • [S1258] Phillip Applebaum, The Fishers: a Family Portrait (Detroit, Michigan: Harlo Press, 1982). ISBN 0-8453-4846-9. The material relating to Keystone Oil is primarily from Chapters 5 and 6.
  • [S1259] Carl Fields, "Notes on Leon Kay" :

    A biography of Max M. Fisher was useful in tracing the business career of Leon Kay (Kay is mentioned only briefly in the biography, but companies with which he was associated are traced in some detail). William Fisher (born Velvil Fisch in Yakshitz “White Russia,” 1888-1971) and his son Max M. Fisher (1908-2005) were business associates who played a key roles in Kay’s business life – and the accumulation of his fortune). “White Russia” (according to Wikipedia, accessed 3 June 2014) is an alternative (archaic) name for what is now (2014) the eastern portion of Belarus.

    William Fisher came to the US in June 1906. He first worked as a peddler in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, a storeowner in Salem Ohio (1909-1925), and then (with varying degrees of success) a general contractor and a carpentry contractor in Cleveland Ohio (1926-1930), with a few-month sojourn as an electrical contractor in Philadelphia (around 1928).

    Around early 1930, William Fisher and some partners, purchased a company initially named Soloray Sales and Manufacturing Company. This company had apparently failed (at least partly due to the stock market crash of 1929), but it had a plant in Detroit that manufactured lubricating oil from waste automotive motor oil. The plant was located on a small lot on Beaufait near Gratiot in Detroit. Two of William Fisher’s original partners in this venture were Louis J. Chesnow and Nathan R. Epstein. The initial investment for the Solaray purchase was a $5000 down payment. William Fisher moved to Detroit at this time. (Chesrow, a distant relative of William Fisher’s wife, lived in Detroit and had discovered Soloray looking for failed companies as possible salvage candidates.)

    Max Fisher, William’s son, graduated from Ohio State University in June 1930 (apparently with a business degree). He drove to his parent’s residence in Detroit (where they had lived only a few months). Shortly after arriving, he was hired to help dismantle and move the oil refinery equipment from the Beaufait address to a newly-purchased 4.5-acre property (a former brickyard) at Greyfriar and Northampton, near the Ford Motor Company’s Rouge Complex. After the refinery was rebuilt at the new site, Max continued to work for the company in marketing.

    The new company (using the former Soloray equipment) was apparently first incorporated as Chemo-Pure Corporation, but the name was changed to Keystone Oil Refining Company.

    It was apparently in 1930 that Leon B. Kay (then still called Leon B. Komisaruk) began to work for Keystone (or the company that was soon to be renamed Keystone). He was apparently initially hired as an electrical contractor for the reconstruction of the plant on the brickyard site. However (as a graduate chemical engineer) he became the technical expert in the operation of the refining facility (the primary investors, such as Chesnow, Epstein, and the elder Fisher, apparently had general “business” backgrounds, not technical backgrounds – although Max Fisher, also a college graduate, like Kay, a graduate of Ohio State, later took courses and consulted with experts to obtain technical knowledge concerning refineries and the oil industry). Early in Kay’s time with the company, money was short and he was paid in ownership shares in the company – at least in part.

    Max Fisher was interested in expanding the refinery operation to process crude oil (thought to have higher profit margins, if the crude could be contained from the small number of Michigan wells in operation at that time), in addition to waste oil. He did get approval from his father (and his father’s partners) to dedicate 200 barrels of the refining capacity per day to this Michigan crude oil.

    In late 1932, the refinery burned. The company obtained a $90,000 insurance settlement to rebuild the refinery. It was around this time that William Fisher bought out most of his original partners. The corporate structure of Keystone became William Fisher, president, Nathan Epstein, vice president, and Leon Kay, corporate secretary.

    Max Fisher felt the rebuilt refinery should devote more of its capacity to crude oil. However, he was unable to obtain agreement from his father (and perhaps the other Keystone officers) to do this. He, in effect, went around them by approaching a small company named Aurora Gasoline Company to build a second refinery on the Keystone property. Prior to this, Aurora (operated by Henry Wenger) had primarily been a gasoline brokerage business.

    The new refinery was set up as a joint venture between Aurora and Keystone, with Keystone’s investment being solely the land (several years later, Aurora purchased adjacent property and built storage tanks and other facilities on it). Keystone and Max Fisher each owned 25% of the equity in the joint venture. The “new” refinery was largely built from used equipment purchased from The Ohio Oil Company, which was scrapping three older small refineries in Oklahoma. Later, after the new refinery began operations, Max Fisher worked for Aurora and began to purchase equity in Aurora (perhaps trading his 25% of the interest in the joint venture for stock in Aurora).

    By the late 1930s Aurora had expanded and needed assured supplies of crude oil. Around this time, Aurora entered into an agreement with The Ohio Oil Company, where Ohio Oil guaranteed firm supplies of crude (for an appropriate price adjustment). Aurora expanded in several ways, among them, in 1947, purchasing the chain of Speedway 79 retail gasoline stations.

    Keystone also expanded in several ways, including development of an analytical laboratory (run by Leon Kay and his assistant Amos Comay) and an oil canning plant. However, the Keystone’s primary consistent (“keystone”) moneymaker through the years was apparently its 25% interest in the initial Aurora refinery. Around 1955, Aurora purchased Keystone. In 1959, The Ohio Oil Company purchased Aurora. Ohio Oil later (around 1962) changed its name to Marathon, which had formerly been the name of its retail subsidiary.

    Max Fisher later became known as a real estate investor, a Republican Party financial supporter, and a philanthropist. For a time, he owned the Fisher Building in mid-town Detroit. That building, however, was not named for him. The building had been initially financed (probably in the early 1920s) by the Fisher Brothers of Fisher Body Corporation, which later became a division of General Motors corporation. (Some details of the above corporate history seem to differ slightly from what appears in the Wikipedia article on Max Fisher, as accessed on 27 May 2014.).
  • [S1286] 1930 US Federal Census, Missouri, population schedule, Champion Township (ED 34-10) Douglas County, p 1A, Household 1 (Dwelling 1), William Cardin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields June 2014), based on NARA Microfilm Publication T626 (roll 1186, image 352, FHL microfilm roll 2340921). Ancestry.com transcriber lists ED as just 11.
  • [S1287] 1930 US Federal Census, Missouri, population schedule, McKinley Township (ED 34-16) Douglas County, p 1B, Household 13 (Dwelling 13), Lenzy T Johnson; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields June 2014), based on NARA Microfilm Publication T626 (roll 1186, image 423, FHL microfilm roll 2340921). Ancestry.com transcriber lists ED as just 11.
  • [S1289] Missouri Secretary of State, "Missouri State Library/Missouri State Archives/State Historical Society of Missouri," digital images, Missouri State Archives: Missouri Death Certificates, 1910 – 1957, (http://www.sos.mo.gov/archives/resources/deathcertificates/ : accessed by Carl Fields, July 2014), Miles Baldwin, (27 Sept 1912). State File Number 35725, Registration District 956, Primary Registation District 5394, Registered Number (Blank).

  • [S1303] "U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989," database with images, Ancestry.com, (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 20 July 2014). The Ancestry database is a collection of city directories assembeled by Ancestry.com into a single database. The particular information used here is from the Fresno California City Directory, pages 653 (Gott, image 349) and 664 (Theis, image 355). A blended family with members with two different surnames lived at 1217 Olive.
  • [S1304] Fresno, California Fresno Bee Republican, "The Repbulican" appears as part of the newspaper's title (printed on only certain pages) as a subtitle during 1944-48. Ancestry.com (digital database with images), created from microfilm images, articles relating to Vaud Leon Gott: "City News in Brief ... Cruelty is Charged" (brief notice of Vaud Leon Gott divorce filing -- it is this item that uses his middle name and the date and location of his marriage), 22 Feb 1944, page 4-A (image 4 of 14); "Colingan is Killed," 25 July 1945, page 11 (images 21 and 22 of 28 -- it is this item that provides his children's names and approximate ages); "Colinga Lists 31 Killed in World War 2," 19 Aug 1945, page 6 (no page number on image, images 11 and 12, of 84); "Bodies of Valley War Dead Are Returned Home," 28 Dec 1948, page 15 (no page number on image, image 15 of 22 -- it is this item that indictes his mother's 1948 address is Shafter CA).
  • [S1305] 1940 U. S. Census, Fresno County, Sanger, California, population schedule, Enumeration District 10-103, page 7B, Line 45, Household 165 (visited 12 April 1940), Raymond Theis -- informant was Vaud L Gott, stepson of head of household; digital image, National Archives 1940 Census, Official 1940 Census Website (http://1940census.archives.gov : accessed by Carl Fields 24 July 2014), citing National Archives microfilm publication T627, roll 205, image unknown.
  • [S1306] 1940 U. S. Census, Fresno County, Coalinga, California, population schedule, Enumeration District 10-106, page 9A, Line 18, Household 226 (visited 10 April 1940), Mirvin McIlroy -- informant was Elanore A McIlroy, wife of head of household; digital image, National Archives 1940 Census, Official 1940 Census Website (http://1940census.archives.gov : accessed by Carl Fields 24 July 2014), citing National Archives microfilm publication T627, roll 204, image unknown.
  • [S1309] Population schedule, Missouri, Bryan Township (ED 59), Douglas County, p 5B (Image 712), Line 56 Household 90, William Cardin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 24 July 2014) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T625, roll 917.
  • [S1314] 1940 U. S. Census, Sierra County, Loyalton, California, population schedule, Enumeration District 46-4, page 4B, Line 45, Household 100 (visited 6 April 1940), John Morgan -- informant was head of household; digital image, National Archives 1940 Census, Official 1940 Census Website (http://1940census.archives.gov : accessed by Carl Fields 24 July 2014), citing National Archives microfilm publication T627, roll 345, image unknown.
  • [S1454] Population schedule, New York, Gloversville (ED 13), Fulton County, p 18A (Image 287), Household 505, Line 47 Dwelling 318, Leon Konisaruk; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 15 Mar 2015) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T625, roll 1113. He is listed as a lodger, but the household that he was lodging in is somewhat uncertain, as is the street address of the dwelling where he lived. The Ancestry.com transcriber went up to the next-previously-listed head of household, who is Thomas Vill (listed on page 18A) and the street address inferred from the information on page 18A, which is 19 E. Fulton Street (based on the street name closest to Line 47 on page 18A and the next-previously-listed house number, which is "19", on Line 42 of page 18A). However, the information on page 18A (and some of the information on page 17B, starting around Line 64), SEEMS to be continuations or additions to information listed earlier for other households. If that is the case, and the dwelling and household numbers listed for Leon (and several lodgers listed near him) are intended to be linked with Household 505 in Dwelling 318, then he would have been living in the household of Abraham Carpenter, who lived at 6 High Street. To further complicate things, the address for Thomas Vill appears to be 54 (or possibly 53) North Main Street (not Fulton Street). If either of these interpretations is correct, then the list of about-70 people shown as being member of the household that Leon was living in is much too long.
  • [S1456] 1940 U. S. Census, Wayne County, Detroit, Michigan, population schedule, Enumeration District 84-832, page 14A, Line 14, Household 304 (visited 19 April 1940), Leon Kamisanik -- informant was Dorothy (Shier) Komisaruk, wife of the head of household; digital image, National Archives 1940 Census, Official 1940 Census Website (http://1940census.archives.gov : accessed by Carl Fields 15 Mar 2015), citing National Archives microfilm publication T627, roll 1864, image 1110. The street address number is from the previous page. They seem to have been living in a large apartment building.
  • [S1656] Carol Graves, Find A Grave Web Site, database (with some images), Jim Tipton (and others), Find A Grave, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 5 Nov 2016), Diskie V Morgan, Memorial No. 130394106.
  • [S1705] Mary Jo Freeman, Find A Grave Web Site, database (with some images), Jim Tipton (and others), Find A Grave, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 Feb 2017), Irera Bertha Welton Johnson Wood, Memorial No. 45413590.
  • [S1706] K Nelson, Find A Grave Web Site, database (with some images), Jim Tipton (and others), Find A Grave, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 Feb 2017), Lenzy Theodore Johnson, Memorial No. 123717161.
  • [S1708] "Cashie", Find A Grave Web Site, database (with some images), Jim Tipton (and others), Find A Grave, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 Feb 2017), Elnora Alabeth Johnson Batch, Memorial No. 71483084.
  • [S1769] "Work Progress Administration (WPA) Perronnel File, Harry Segal, Identification Number 12-7293 (Case 8864)"; National Personnel Records Center (National Archives); 1 Archives Drive, St Louis, Missouri.

    This is a file of pages sent by the National Personnel Records Center in the St. Louis branch of the US National Archives. The file consists of 16 sheets of paper that appear to have been printed from microfilm copies (a cover letter dated 10 Mar 2017, plus 15 sheets of copies of older documents from the late 1930s and early 1940s).
    The sheets were first numbered according to the order they were in when received (these handwritten page numbers are in an approximate circle). Then the sheets were renumbered according to type (cover letter, "work notice", and individual earnings record), with the sheets numbered approximately chronologically within each type (these are handwritten page numbers in an approximate rectangle).
    Brief descriptions of each page follow (according to the within-a-rectangle page numbers - general notes are listed following the brief individual page descriptions):
    1. Cover letter
    2. Notice to report to work (12 Jul 1938). Project 3972-12. Laborer, $0.50 per hour, Raritan Arsenal, Raritan Township.
    3. Notice of termination (13 July 1939). Project 6289-0-12. Perth Amboy.
    4. Notice to report to work (31 July 1939). Indicates previous termination was in error. Laborer. Project 1098-12. Donald Avenue, Perth Amboy.
    5. Notice of termination (6 Sept 1939). Project 1098-12. Foot of Lee Street, Perth Amboy. "Failed to report within 5 project working days."
    6. Notice to report to work (5 Jan 1940). Laborer. Project 6743-12. Improve Parks, Perth Amboy.
    7. Notice of termination (25 June 1941, termination effective 30 June 1941). Occupation: Watchman. Project 7977-0. "Necessary Reduction in Quota."
    8. Identical to Item 7.
    9. Individual earnings record. July 1938 to Dec 1938. Each line appears to represent two- week time period.
    10. Individual earnings record. Dec 1938 to May 1939.
    11. Individual earnings record. May 1939 to Aug 1939.
    12. Individual earnings record. Sept 1939 (only one entry on this item).
    13. Individual earnings record. Jan 1940 (only one entry on this item).
    14. Individual earnings record. Feb 1940 to Aug 1940.
    15. Individual earnings record. Aug 1940 to Apr 1941.
    16. Individual earnings record. May 1941 to June 1941. Items 15 and 16 appear to the rear and front sides of the same card (it appears the "rear side" was filled in first).
    General Notes:
    All of these items (except the cover letter) appear to originally have been less-than-full-sheet "cards" or "slips". They may have been initially been approx. 5 inches high and approx. 8 inches wide.
    Based on individual earnings records, looks like he work on (or his time was charged to) MANY different projects (more than the ones listed in the "Notices").
    He apparently had one Identification Number throughout his time in the WPA: 12-7203. He also seems to have been assigned a "Case Number" (8864). Interestingly, what appears to be his Social Security Number shows up on only one document (page 6, in rectangular-enclosed page numbers). That apparent Social Security Number is 155-03-8491.
    His initial pay rate (July 1939) was $0.50 per hour. Later (starting on rectangular page number 13, around January 1940), the number given on the Individual Earnings Record cards in the column labeled "Rate per Hour" appears to usually really be a monthly pay rate $52.80). As this is written (March 2017), the compiler does not know if this was prorated to an hourly rate. Looks like he was often assigned to work 60 hours over a two-week interval.
    Presumably, the National Archives had a series of documents someplace that provide a correspondence with project numbers and a "word description" what the project was intended to accomplish at some specific location.
    The first "Report for Work" page (Rectangular-enclosed page number 2) includes a notation that he was "formerly on Op5-13-2-293". (As of 19 March 2017), it is not clear what that notation mean. It might represent some former government employment program, or possibly some type of social welfare program.


  • [S2040] 1900 United States Census, Missouri, Clinton Township (ED 162), Douglas County, 12, Line 39, Household 211, Wallace Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 10 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T623.
  • [S2045] 1870 United States Census, Indiiana, population schedule, Lockhart Townships, Pike County, pp 3?, Line 22, digital image is extremely faded) Household 258 (Ancestry transcriber might have different value, digital image is extremely faded) Miles Baldwin (Ancestry transcriber called first name Walls; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 10 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication M593 , Roll 350.
  • [S2047] 1880 United States Census, Indiana, population schedule, Lockart Township (ED 172), Pike County, p 250/31(two numbers on sheet), Line 32, Dwelling 178 Household 192, Miles Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 10 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T9.
  • [S2048] Find a Grave, database and images (www.findagrave.com/memorial/27359571/linus-henry-baldwin : accessed 11 July 2021), memorial page for Linus Henry Baldwin (16 Oct 1852–7 Dec 1925), Find a Grave Memorial ID 27359571, citing Lee Mission Cemetery, Salem, Marion County, Oregon, USA ; Maintained by Patty C (contributor 46926671) . . Web page includes ladditional information..

  • [S2049] Find a Grave, database and images (www.findagrave.com/memorial/27359572/lorinda-jane-baldwin : accessed 11 July 2021), memorial page for Lorinda Jane Tooley Baldwin (Jan 1855–18 Dec 1929), Find a Grave Memorial ID 27359572, citing Lee Mission Cemetery, Salem, Marion County, Oregon, USA ; Maintained by Patty C (contributor 46926672). Web page includes ladditional information..

  • [S2057] "Indiana, U.S., Marriages, 1810-2001," database (no images), Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com); Original data: Indiana, Marriages, 1810-2001. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
  • [S2059] Find a Grave, database and images (www.findagrave.com/memorial/32615724/julia-ann-baldwin : accessed 11 July 2021), memorial page for Julia Ann Clark Baldwin (11 Feb 1826-29 Sep 1870), Find a Grave Memorial ID 32615724, citing Stilwell Cemetery, Pikeville, Pike County, Indiana, USA ; Maintained by Steven D. Fairweather (contributor 47287859) . Web page includes ladditional information..

  • [S2060] Find a Grave, database and images (www.findagrave.com/memorial/32615701/miles-baldwin : accessed 12 July 2021), memorial page for Miles Baldwin (11 Jan 1826-19 Nov 1887), Find a Grave Memorial ID 32615701, citing Stilwell Cemetery, Pikeville, Pike County, Indiana, USA ; Maintained by Steven D. Fairweather (contributor 47287859) . Web page includes ladditional information..

  • [S2062] "Connecticut, U. S. Town Marriage Records. pre-1870 (Barbour Collection)," database (no images), Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com), accessed 11 July 2021; Original Records: Lorraine Cook White (ed.), The Barbour Collection of Town Records, Vol. 1-55, Baltimore MD USA: Genealogical Publishing Co, 1994-2002.
  • [S2071] 1880 United States Census, Missouri, population schedule, Benton Township (ED 29), Douglas County, p 29, Line 39, Dwelling 235 (schedule seems to have some duplicate dwelliing numbers on this sheet) Household 243, Linus H Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 10 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T9.
  • [S2072] 1900 United States Census, Oregon, Yoncalla Precinct (ED 53), Douglas County, Sheet 4 (handwritten -- sheet seems to also contains a handwritten "19" on it, as well as possibly a stamped 100), Line 17, Household 80, Linus Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 13 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T623.
  • [S2073] 1910 US Census, Oregon, Myrtle Creek Pricinct (ED 88), Douglas County, 1B, Line 61, Dwelling 16 Household 16, Lorinda Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 13 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T624 (Roll 1280, ED 88, FHL Film No. 1375293.
  • [S2074] 1910 US Census, Oregon, Myrtle Creek Pricinct (ED 88), Douglas County, 13A, Line 43, Dwelling 263 Household 264, Linus H Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 13 July 2021) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T624 (Roll 1280, ED 88, FHL Film No. 1375293.
  • [S2076] 1920 United States Census, Oregon, Dixonville Precinct, (ED 143), Douglas County, p 4A, Line 19, Household 93 Dwelling 91, Linus H Baldwin; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 11 June 2020) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T625, Roll 1494.
  • [S2078] 1920 United States Census, Missouri, Clinton Township, (ED 64), Douglas County, p 8B, Line 100 (household continues onto Sheet 9A), Household 173 Dwelling 165, Jesse M; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed by Carl Fields 11 June 2020) , based on NARA Microfilm Publication T625, Roll 917.