1920 US Federal Census WY Fremont
M
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- 1920 US Federal Census WY Fremont was the son of US 1920 Census (?) and Wyoming Census (?).
- Cen-Head*: David Wyman Cyphert is head of household in the 1920 US Federal Census of Wood Street, Lander, Fremont County, Wyoming, USA enumerated as Dave Cyphert and is a 43 year old white male. He is married. He can read and write. He was born in Pennsylvania. His father was born in Pennsylvania and his mother in the USA. He is an driller in the oil industry. Enumerated with David Wyman Cyphert was Gertrude Pearl Sexton, Virginia Rae Cyphert, David Wyman Cyphert Jr, Grant Arthur Cyphert, Anthony Sexton Cyphert, Sadie Grace Cyphert and Albert Anthony Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Albert Anthony Cyphert is a 75 year old white male. He is a widower. He can read and write. He was born in Pennsylvania. His parents were born in the US. He is a partner in oil drilling. The enumeration uses the name of Albert A Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that David Wyman Cyphert Jr is a 13 year old white male. He attended school within the last year and can read and write. He was born in Wyoming. His father was born in Pennsylvania and his mother in Wyoming. The enumeration uses the name of Wyman Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Gertrude Pearl Sexton is a 38 year old white female. She is married. She was born in Wyoming. Her father was born in Wisconsin and her mother in Ohio. She can read and write. The enumeration uses the name of Gertrude Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Virginia Rae Cyphert is a 17 year old white female. She attended school within the last year. She can read and write. She was born in Wyoming. Her father was born in Pennsylvania and her mother in Wyoming. The enumeration uses the name of Virginia Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Grant Arthur Cyphert is a 11 year old white male. He attended school and can read and write. He was born in Wyoming. His father was born in Pennsylvania and his mother in Wyoming. The enumeration uses the name of Grant Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Anthony Sexton Cyphert is a 7 year old white male. He attended school last year but cannot read or write. He was born in Wyoming. His father was born in Pennsylvania and his mother in Wyoming. The enumeration uses the name of Anthony S Cyphert.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Sadie Grace Cyphert is a 6 year old white female. She attended school last year but can not read or write. She was born in Oklahoma. Her father was born in Pennsylvania and her mother in Wyoming. The enumeration uses the name of Sadie G Cyphert.1
Citations:
- [S458] David Cyphert, 3 Jan 1920 Federal Census, www.ancestry.com.
Rephael Levi De Vries1
M, b. 20 November 1808
Pop-up PedigreeFamily: Ester Van Dam b. 20 April 1818
Citations:
- [S465] MG R De Vries E Van Dam.
Ester Van Dam1
F, b. 20 April 1818
Pop-up PedigreeFamily: Rephael Levi De Vries b. 20 November 1808
Citations:
- [S465] MG R De Vries E Van Dam.
Dr Oscar B. Beer1
M, b. 27 March 1870
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- Birth*: Dr Oscar B. Beer was born on 27 March 1870.1
- He was the son of George W. Beer and Mary M Taylor.1
- Occupation*: Dr Oscar B. Beer was Doctor.1
Citations:
- [S452] Unknown compiler, 30 Jan 2002.
Blanch Beer1
F, b. December 1876
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Citations:
- [S452] Unknown compiler, 30 Jan 2002.
- [S454] 1900 Census of Upshur County West Virginia, population census, 162.
Myrtle Beer1
F, b. October 1883
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Citations:
- [S452] Unknown compiler, 30 Jan 2002.
- [S454] 1900 Census of Upshur County West Virginia, population census, 162.
Dorthea Beer1
F, b. October 1886
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Citations:
- [S452] Unknown compiler, 30 Jan 2002.
- [S454] 1900 Census of Upshur County West Virginia, population census, 162.
Mamie Beer1
F, b. August 1889
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Citations:
- [S452] Unknown compiler, 30 Jan 2002.
- [S454] 1900 Census of Upshur County West Virginia, population census, 162.
Gypsy Beer1
F, b. February 1891, d. 1925
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- Birth*: Gypsy Beer was born in February 1891.2,1
- She was the daughter of George W. Beer and Mary M Taylor.1
- Death*: Gypsy Beer died in 1925.3,1
Citations:
- [S452] Unknown compiler, 30 Jan 2002.
- [S454] 1900 Census of Upshur County West Virginia, population census, 162.
- [S455] Upshur County Genealogical Society, Heavner Cemetery Readings, 12.
Abraham Van Dam1
M
Family: Johana Moses Altman
- Ester Van Dam b. 20 Apr 18181
Citations:
- [S465] MG R De Vries E Van Dam.
Johana Moses Altman1
F
- Marriage*: Johana Moses Altman married Abraham Van Dam.1
- Married Name: Her married name was Van Dam.1
Family: Abraham Van Dam
- Ester Van Dam b. 20 Apr 18181
Citations:
- [S465] MG R De Vries E Van Dam.
Barbara Trautvetter1
F, b. 1866
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- Birth*: Barbara Trautvetter was born in 1866 at New Jersey, USA.1
- She was the daughter of Valentin Rudolf Trautvetter and Marianne Meitz.1
- (Witness) Cen-Head: The 1870 US Federal Census of 13th Ward, Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, USA listed Barbara Trautvetter in addition to Marianne Meitz, Peter Trautvetter, Margaretha Trautvetter, Catherine Trautvetter, Frank Trautvetter, George Meitz and Mary (?) in the household of Valentin Rudolf Trautvetter.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Barbara Trautvetter is a 4 year old white female. She stays at home. She was born in New Jersey and her parents are of foreign birth. The enumeration uses the name of Barbara Trautvetter.1
- (Witness) Cen-Head: The 1880 US Federal Census of 41 Lillie Street, Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, USA listed Barbara Trautvetter in addition to Marianne Meitz, Peter Trautvetter, Margaretha Trautvetter, Catherine Trautvetter and Frank Trautvetter in the household of Valentin Rudolf Trautvetter.2
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Barbara Trautvetter is a 14 year old white female. She works in the tailor shop. She was born in New Jersey, her father in Bavaria and her mother in Saxony. The enumeration uses the name of Barbara Trautvetter.2
Citations:
- [S468] Valentin Troutvetter, 6 Aug 1870 Federal Census, www.ancestry.com.
- [S550] Frank Trautvetter, 9 June 1880 Federal census, www.ancestry.com.
George Meitz1
M, b. 1810
Family: Mary (?) b. 1803
- Marianne Meitz+ b. 12 May 18361
Citations:
- [S468] Valentin Troutvetter, 6 Aug 1870 Federal Census, www.ancestry.com.
Mary (?)1
F, b. 1803
- Birth*: Mary (?) was born in 1803 at Bavaria.1
- Marriage*: Mary (?) married George Meitz circa 1830 at Bavaria.1
- Married Name: As of circa 1830,her married name was Meitz.1
- (Witness) Cen-Head: The 1870 US Federal Census of 13th Ward, Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, USA listed Mary (?) in addition to Marianne Meitz, Peter Trautvetter, Margaretha Trautvetter, Catherine Trautvetter, Barbara Trautvetter, Frank Trautvetter and George Meitz in the household of Valentin Rudolf Trautvetter.1
- Cen-Enum*: The enumeration shows that Mary (?) is a 67 year old white female. She stays at home. She was born in Bavaria and her parents are of foreign birth. The enumeration uses the name of Mary Meitz.1
Family: George Meitz b. 1810
- Marianne Meitz+ b. 12 May 18361
Citations:
- [S468] Valentin Troutvetter, 6 Aug 1870 Federal Census, www.ancestry.com.
Peter Trautvetter1
M, b. 1902
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Citations:
- [S469] Frank Troutvetter, 15 Jan 1920 Federal Census, www.ancestry.com.
Margaret Constance Helen (Helen) Blackler
F, b. 28 August 1902, d. 5 November 1981
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- Name Variation: Margaret Constance Helen (Helen) Blackler was also known as Helen Blackler.1
- Birth*: She was born on 28 August 1902 at Arnside, Cumbria, England.1,2
- She was the daughter of George Blackler and Ann (Annie) Barker.
- Death*: Margaret Constance Helen (Helen) Blackler died on 5 November 1981 at St Andrews, Fife, Scotland, at age 79.1,2
- Note: She Ref: #63 Nigel's list. Transcript of Helen Blackler's Conversation with Christopher Blackler about 1978 Note: some editing done for clarity: [ ..] added. Helen: Her [Annie Barker father was Albert Newall [Barker] and her sister [Ellen (Nellie) B arker] was born 28 February 1875. When my [Helen] mother was about 4 [1877] years old her mother died. Later her father remarried Grandma Harland, Margaret Young, as she was. She [Margaret Young] was brought up by Uncle and Aunt Bond at Yew Tree House, Leasgill because they had no children and gran's father and mother had a big family. Uncle and Aunt Bond adopted gran who was called Margaret Young. She didn't take the name of Bond. Chris: What was the name of ? Harland then? Helen: We haven't got there yet. She married my mother's father; Albert Newall Barker and she [Margaret Young] went to live in Bradford. When my mother was about 7 [1880], she was sent to school at Leasgill because there was a lady there who was so good and who had been a governess in quite well to do families. She started a little school for, you know, doctors, solicitors, well to do farmer's daughters, better than the village school. Mother [as Annie Barker] was sent to this school because she was rather delicate. It was thought good for her to live in the country. So, during the term she lived with Uncle and Aunt Bond and only went home to Bradford for holidays and soon after, they sent Auntie [as Nellie Barker] to the same school and they both lived with Uncle and Aunt Bond during the terms and went home to Bradford. Then, when my mother [Annie] was 10 her father [Albert Newall Barker] died. He had a bad chest and he used to get bronchitis and he used to spend the winter in Bournemouth, and he died in Bournemouth. [About 1883]. He was manager of a big woollen mill in Bradford. Quite well known. Chris: Do you know what date? Helen: Well, my mother was 10 and she was born in 1873, so it would be 1883, wouldn't it? And er it's not all being recorded is it? .. Are you recording or not? Chris: .. Helen: Around the time my mother's father [Albert Newall Barker] died, gran [Margaret Young ] came back to Yew Tree House to Uncle and Aunt Bond with mother and auntie, [Nellie] and they lived there. My mother was 14, about 4 years later when she went to Stornoway to live with an uncle and aunt who had a big farm just outside Stornoway, because she was still considered rather delicate and again this uncle and aunt had no family, but I am not quite sure whether they were Newalls. I think they were Newalls. Yes they were. Their name was Newall and I think that mother's own mother's maiden name must have been Newall because she had an aunt who lived near Skipton, called Aunt Adelaide, and her name was Newall. Aunt Adelaide had 3 children because they were mother's cousins. Cousin Annie, Cousin Belle, (no! 4 children) Cousin Ada and Cousin Jill. I knew them as Auntie Ada, Auntie Belle and Auntie ??? and Uncle John. They lived near Skipton in a lovely house about 4 miles out of Skip ton. Called Rockville. It had a lovely garden and conservatory. Well, mother went up to Stornoway and she had a very happy time there. There were quite a lot of other people she made friends with up there. Chris: ..??? Helen: Auntie stayed at Yew Tree House with Gran and Uncle and Auntie Bond. Uncle Bond was a tailor and he also built Yew Tree House and he made suits and things for the Grammar School at Heversham. He had a tailoring business. Well, I don't know when he died, but anyway when Auntie [Nellie] was about 18, grandmother [now Margaret Barker] remarried and she married Grandpa Harland who had a furniture and decorators business in Bradford. He used to come to Leasgill and to Westmoreland with a friend who was in the wool trade and used to come up to the farm up in the Dales, buying wool from the sheep. He brought Grandpa Harland up and he knew Uncle and Aunt Bond and brought Grandpa Harland to Yew Tree House. He met gran and fell in love with her and married her and she went back to Bradford. She was about 40, I think, when she remarried. Grandpa Harland was a widower with 10 children. They were mostly, several married, some were engaged and the only one, when I was a child , I remember when being there when I was I suppose 4, 5, 6, 7, George was there too. [Clever as he was 9 years younger than Helen!] Until Grandpa Harland died. He died when I was about 13. The only one at home and unmarried was Uncle John. He was the youngest and he was at home.. Auntie stayed at Yew Tree House and looked after Aunt Bond. Mother stayed up at Stornoway wh re she met, where she became engaged to my father [George 1870] when she was 19 because my father's father [George 1839] who had been in the Navy, Grandpa Blackler. You know? He was on the 'CONWAY' when she was a fighting frigate and he was a Lieutenant Commander in the Navy when he retired. [1898? I think]. He worked his way right up because he ran away from the farm in Devonshire, near Start Point. [I think this is Scobbiscombe Farm near Kingston]. He was one of a big family and they were yeomen. His father was a yeoman farmer, near Start Point. That means he owned his own farm. Grandpa ran away and went to sea when he was 13 or 14 [1852/3]. He worked his way up you see, from the start. Chris: ??? Helen: What? Because he was in the Navy, he was in the Crimean War. Chris: .. ??? Helen: Oh! But it wasn't a school when he was on it [HMS CONWAY]; it was a fighting ship in the Navy [HMS Nile]. Chris: Oh, I see! . So it was your father? Helen: He was on it [HMS CONWAY] when it was a school, but grandfather [George 1839] was on it when it was a battleship. Chris: HMS NILE? Helen: Yes. HMS NILE and it was in the Crimean War, I think. You know that, don't you? Yes, it must have been the Crimean War. Chris: What's that silver salver that says? Helen: Your father's got it. Because until he retired he was in the Coastguard and he was also in the several other places. Kinsale in Ireland. He was certainly in Stornoway, a very big Coastguard station. Stornoway is a very big harbour and when my mother was there the fleet used to come in and they used to come in for a few weeks in the summer, and used to have a great time. When my father had, by this time, been to CONWAY (CONWAY was a school), he left the Conway and was on a sailing ship [CYPROMENE]. Chris: What company? Helen: Halls I think - CYPROMENE - HADDON HALL? [CYPROMENE was Henry Fernie & Sons, HADDON HALL another ship, was C. E de Wolf - 10 years later!]. Chris: HADDON HALL, CYPROMENE, SPIRIT OF SCOTLAND, 3 ships? [He meant CROWN OF SCOTLAND]. Helen: And anyway he came home, you see, and met my mother [Annie], and they became engaged. Chris: Do you know any further back on the Blackler side ..? Helen: Yes, I know a little bit. Because my father's mother died when she was quite young [nee Sara Ann Ash] grandpa Blackler [George 1839] remarried so that the grandma Blackler I knew [Caroline - maiden name still unknown] wasn't my father's mother. She was his stepmother and my father had 5 sisters and one brother. Chris: All Blacklers? Helen: Yes. I see what you mean. The stepmother [Caroline] didn't have any. He remarried when he was older [date still unknown], when his stepdaughters [first I've heard of them] were in their teens or early 20s. Chris: He ran away from Devon? Helen: He [George 1839] ran away from the farm in Devon, near Start Point, and joined the Navy and he was on HMS NILE which became the CONWAY. Chris: You don't know who he married? Helen: I don't know the name of my father's mother [Sarah Ann] but I suspect it is Laen, but I am not sure [she was a generation out here] because of the Admiral, Commander Laen who was Commander of William lV's yacht, who was great great grandfather, that would be on my father's mother's side [Sarah Ann], because grandma Blackler's people were farmers near Start Point. I am not sure that they weren't cousins. But they were, she was, from a farm near Start Point. Alright? Do you want the names of the Aunts? Chris: ??? Helen: Aunt Edith was the eldest. Auntie Edith, Auntie Constance, Auntie Kate, Auntie Ethel , Auntie Cissie was the youngest, and the only one who got married. She got married; she married an Australian who was a soldier in the First War; Uncle Tas, Tasman Furze, his name, and she had 4 children. Elliott was the eldest; Elliott, Felicity Ann, Cicily Lovejoy, Rufus [sounds like!]. I wonder if Lovejoy is a family name? It's so simple, it's a Devon surname - Lovejoy. I wonder if that was it? I imagine Auntie Cissie calling one of her daughters, should imagine it was Australian and he was a farmer; a wheat farmer who lived 150 miles away from Melbourne. Then he latterly, he changed over to sheep and did extremely well with sheep. His children were all married. Elliott has a farm out there. Your father knows more about tha t family. [He didn't say much though!] And then the brother, Uncle Alfred. He went to Canada to make his fortune and nobody seems to know anything about him. He died out there as far as we know. Auntie Kate went out . And she was, she was in a sort of millionaire's family, she looked after [them]. They had 2 little boys and she looked after them. Then she became a companion, you know, to the family and when they used to have big receptions. Mrs. Brown used to get worried a long time beforehand and Aunt Kate had to act as hostess, to receive guests and that. She was with the Brown's, in New York State, and then I think she moved to somewhere else, near Chicago. In fact, she came back to the Browns when she was older. They gave her a flat in the house, in one that one of the servants's had, but had married and she died there. She came over to this country when she retired. I met her several times. In fact, she had intended to retire and stay here with the Aunts [her sisters who lived in Brentor, Devon]. Anyw y, she couldn't settle in England, she wanted to be back in the States and she never went back. I forget when she died. I could find that out. [Wish she had but at least we now know it was NY State]. Chris: Your grandfather's children. First married? Helen: There weren't any from the second. Chris: I see. Where do the Cockroft's fit in? Helen: Aunt Bond's mother was a Cockroft and she lived in Halifax [Yorkshire]. I have a sheet of notepaper with a recipe on it in Aunt Bond's recipe book and it says 'Overdene Hall, Halifax'. So, whether that's where her mother lived, I don't know, but was her name, Cockroft. Halifax, where she lived I don't know. Chris: Those silhouettes in the hall? Helen: Now, the silhouettes, one is Aunt Bond's mother and the other is her brother. Chris: They're both Cockrofts? Helen: Yes. Aunt Bond was a Miss Cockroft but I don't know what her Christian name was, I ne ver heard it because Uncle & Auntie always referred to her as Aunt Bond. Auntie did once ment ion an Aunt Abigail, in Bradford, who must have been on their mother's side, I would say. Sh e once went to see her; Abigail. Then there were the Monuels? In Stornoway. The aunt and uncle in Stornoway weren't called New all because They were English and they had a dairy farm. Then he had a brother Albert who started up the Harris Tweed trade in Stornoway. He married a nd had quite a number of children; yes1 There is still a tweed business, it's exported. It' s not the Harris Tweed you see in the shops, but its trademark is an old lady sitting at a sp inning wheel. They export it and they have offices in Paris, Montreal and New York. In fact t hey were very, very wealthy, they're Harris Tweed. Then there is one of the sons who is a doctor down in Leatherhead and another one is on the s ort of export side of the Teed business, and another one in Stornoway who's died recently. Mary Adelaide in Stornoway also, is one of the daughters, .. Chris: We come from the Devon branch of the Blacklers? Helen: Yes, definitely. Chris: Your mother from Stornoway married a Blackler from Stornoway? Helen: George Blackler, my grandfather. The eldest son was called George. Chris: They then moved down to Liverpool? Helen: Who? Chris: Your mother, where did she live after that? Helen: Oh yes! Because I was born in Arnside in Westmorland, just after Auntie [Nellie] wa s married; she lived in Arnside, until I was about 5. Father was away for a long time. He wasn't on a sailing ship then, he was in steam but he was away for a very long voyage. He went t o the Cape and Russia. He was all over the place. Away perhaps, 18 months or 2 years at sea a nd then he changed, I think. He got into a firm that went into Liverpool, whose ships were co ming into Liverpool and Auntie [Nellie] was already married to Uncle [Harry Jackson], and i n Liverpool, in Crosby. Chris: Auntie Nellie & Uncle Harry were friends with your father? Helen: They were both on the same sailing ship [Cypromene] as apprentices and maybe he was at mother's wedding, I don't know. Maybe. Anyway he met Auntie. Chris: then Auntie Nellie moved back to Leasgill? Helen: Yes, when Uncle retired, when Uncle Chris: Well, who had the house? Helen: I've missed a whole chunk out. When Grandpa Harland died, when I was about 12 [c1914], about a year later Gran moved back to Yew Tree House because it had been left to her. Aunt Bond lived till she was over 90 and Au ntie [Nellie] looked after her after Gran was married and she stayed with her. Then when she died she went to Bradford to where Gran was .. you know, Grandma Harland. She stayed there till she got married about 1908, I think. When Grandpa Harland died about a year later [doesn't tie in with dates above!] she went back to Yew Tree House. She'd had it let, you see, it had been let to people, let unfurnished. She went back and lived there and we started going there for holidays, and when she died the house and cottage were left to Auntie [Nellie]. Auntie went into it then. Then when Uncle [Harry] was about to retire (he should have retired when the War broke out, the 2nd war but they asked him to stay on. He was out in New Zealand anyway at the time and they asked him to stay on. When the War broke out, you see. You know, people were being evacuated and empty houses were being commandeered and the house was empty. She was having it decorated and she went to live in it, just after the War broke out. They got it decorated and electric light put in. She went to live there. Uncle then wasn't properly retired for some years; they kept him on as relief Captain when ships came in. He made several, quite a number of voyages, and then when they made him a relief Captain he would take the ship into drydock and out of drydock and take it round to Liverpool, London and Glasgow, or something. Chris: That was White Star Line? Helen: No, it was Shaw Savill. Chris: Where was White Star Line then? Helen: He was in White Star Line but before it was taken over by Cunard. He was offered a chance to go into Shaw Savill and he went. He was in Shaw Savill, they were running out to New Zealand, you see. Chris: They just had one son, Edward, did they? Helen: Two. Henry died when he was 10. He was the eldest. From appendicitis. He got over the operation but got pneumonia afterwards, collapsed and died. Edward was about a year younger . Henry was a year younger than I was. Chris: Switching back to our side, you were born then there was someone born between you and Dad? Helen: Yes here was. There was a little boy, yes when I was about 4 [1906]. Chris: [What was his name?] Helen: I don't know. I don't know at all. Never heard what his name was. He only lived for two or three days, I think. He wasn't given a name. I never heard him mentioned by name. How did you know that? Chris: Dad. Said there was. That's about the lot then? Notes. I have added punctuation, omitted some ums and ers. I have added comments for clarity thus [..]. Uncle & Aunt Bond were not relatives. It is the old fashioned way of naming adults for children. I, Tony Blackler, have a Bible inscribed 'Annie Barker from Aunt Bond 1887'. I have another Bible inscribed ' Albert Newall & Margaret Jane Elizabeth Barker, from, Rev' d T. M. Gilbert, December 1879. Lay hold on Eternal Life'. I presume this was a wedding gift . Tony Blackler, 6 February, 2001[Blackler Family from 1702[1]..FTW]
- Address*: Margaret Constance Helen (Helen) Blackler lived at an unknown place ; 11 Queen's Gardens.
Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Edith Eliza Elliott Blackler1,2
F, b. 1867, d. 2 January 1916
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Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Alfred J Blackler1,2
M, b. 1880
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- Birth*: Alfred J Blackler was born in 1880 at Chivelstone, Devon, England.1,2
- He was the son of George Blackler and Sarah Ann Ash.
- Death*: Alfred J Blackler died at USA.1,2
- Note*: He Emmigrated to Canada Ref: # 43 Nigel's list. Emigrated to USA or Canada about 1900 with Kate. Alfred emmigrated to Canada Alfred emmigrated to Canada Alfred emmigrated to Canada Alfred emmigrated to Canada[Blackler Family from 1702[1].FTW] 1 _FA1 2 PLAC Emmigrated to Canada Emigrated to USA or Canada about 1900 with Kate.[Ann Cara's ancestors[1].FTW] 1 _FA1 2 PLAC Emmigrated to Canada Emigrated to USA or Canada about 1900 with Kate.
Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Constance Emily Fuge Blackler1,2
F, b. 1875
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Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Ethel W Blackler1,2
F, b. 1877
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Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Katherine Blackler
F, b. 1869
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- Birth*: Katherine Blackler was born in 1869 at Plymouth, Devon, England.1,2
- She was the daughter of George Blackler and Sarah Ann Ash.
- Note*: Katherine Blackler She emigrated to Canada/USA with Alfred. From search of Ellis Island site, Kate arrived in New York on 21/10/1911 on the ship Campania out of Liverpool, England. She listed her address as with a friend Col F.L. Brown of Dobbs Ferry, NY. Apparently she worked as a governess or companion to the Brown family, looking after their two children and hostessing their parties when Mrs Brown got too stressed with the arrangements. She may have moved to Chicago or thereabouts for some time and then came back to the Browns later on. She was given a flat in the Browns house where she lived until she died [ref Tony's transcript of conversation with Helen Blackler abt 1978].
- Note: She Ref: #39 Nigel's notes. Other Address 6 East 84th Street New York City She emigrated to Canada/USA with Alfred. From search of Ellis Island site, Kate arrived in New York on 21/10/1911 on the ship CAMPANIA out of Liverpool, England. She listed her address as with a friend Col F.L. Brown of Dobb's Ferry, NY. Apparently she worked as a governess or companion to the Brown family, looking after their two children and hostessing their parties when Mrs Brown got too stressed with the arrangements. She may have moved to Chicago or thereabouts for some time and then came back to the Browns later on. She was given a flat in the Browns house where she lived until she died. She also arrived in New York on November 14 1915 on the ship NIEUW AMSTERDAM. Staying with the Browns and listed as a secretary. [ref Tony's transcript of Christopher's conversation with Helen Blackler abt 1978] Arrived New York 22 Sept 1924 on ss ADRIATIC. NOK given as sister C. Blackler, 50 Alexandra Road, Great Crosby, Liverpool (a known address - George Blackler etc.). She gave her age as 44.
Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Cecily Ida Elliott Blackler1,2
F, b. 31 March 1882, d. 1969
Pop-up PedigreeFamily: Arthur Tasman Phelps Furze b. 19 April 1889, d. 28 August 1959
- Elliott Phelps Furze+ b. 8 Mar 1920, d. 29 Dec 1999
- Felicity Ann Furze b. 18 Aug 1921, d. Unknown
- Prudence Mary Furze b. 24 Apr 1923, d. 18 Jun 1989
Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Arthur Tasman Phelps Furze1,2
M, b. 19 April 1889, d. 28 August 1959
Pop-up PedigreeFamily: Cecily Ida Elliott Blackler b. 31 March 1882, d. 1969
- Elliott Phelps Furze+ b. 8 Mar 1920, d. 29 Dec 1999
- Felicity Ann Furze b. 18 Aug 1921, d. Unknown
- Prudence Mary Furze b. 24 Apr 1923, d. 18 Jun 1989
Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.
- [S570] Ann Cara, 20 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 20 Aug 2002.
Prudence Mary Furze1
F, b. 24 April 1923, d. 18 June 1989
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Citations:
- [S566] Nigel Blackler, 16 Aug 2002, Date of Import: 16 Aug 2002.