Pitard.net - Buffalo Family
Notes
Matches 1,751 to 1,963 of 1,963
# | Notes | Linked to |
---|---|---|
1751 | Relationship to Head: Son; aged 24, born in US; living in parents' household | Vogt, Arthur W. (I813)
|
1752 | Relationship to Head: Son; aged 31, born in U.S.; in his parents' household | Vogt, Leon (I817)
|
1753 | Relationship to Head: Son; aged 42, born in United States; butcher | Clark, James (I978)
|
1754 | Relationship to Head: Wife | McCormick, Mary (I741)
|
1755 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Bisantz, Mary Elizabeth (I768)
|
1756 | Relationship to Head: Wife | McNamara, Delia (I788)
|
1757 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Tobin, Sarah M. "Sadie" (I897)
|
1758 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Clark, Elizabeth "Libbie" (I985)
|
1759 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Clark, Martha (I986)
|
1760 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Okoski, Ida (I1035)
|
1761 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Buckley, Adeline (I1079)
|
1762 | Relationship to Head: Wife | O’Hara, Alice (I1137)
|
1763 | Relationship to Head: Wife | Flanigan, Charlotte (I1226)
|
1764 | Relationship to Head: Wife; aged 69, born in New York | Bisantz, Bridget (I766)
|
1765 | Relative Relation to Head of Household: Wife | Tobin, John Louis "Jack" (I895)
|
1766 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Tobin, Thomas Alfred (I722)
|
1767 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Anthony Edward Jr. (I739)
|
1768 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Anthony Edward Jr. (I739)
|
1769 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Kraft, Maria Magdalena "Mary" (I759)
|
1770 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Dominic "Daniel" (I765)
|
1771 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Catherine M. (I767)
|
1772 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Mary Elizabeth (I768)
|
1773 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Mary Ann (I770)
|
1774 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Mary Ann (I770)
|
1775 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Mary Magdalena (I772)
|
1776 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Mary Magdalena (I772)
|
1777 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | McCormick, Thomas (I796)
|
1778 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | McCormick, Catharine (I798)
|
1779 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | McCormick, Edward (I799)
|
1780 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Doll, George Julius (I802)
|
1781 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Vogt, Peter Adam (I811)
|
1782 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Denzinger, William (I830)
|
1783 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Denzinger, Julius (I831)
|
1784 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Denzinger, Olivia (I832)
|
1785 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Denzinger, Charles (I833)
|
1786 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Doll, Ida Magdalena (I843)
|
1787 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Wassmer, Mary (I848)
|
1788 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Bisantz, Barbara (I875)
|
1789 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Fredericka (I903)
|
1790 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Moser, Christian (I904)
|
1791 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Stephan, Francis Joseph (I988)
|
1792 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Stephan, Levina (I989)
|
1793 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Stephan, Rosa (I990)
|
1794 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo | Stephan, Amalia (I991)
|
1795 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo. On page 202, line 20; age is 21, born in “New York” | Ramé, Margaret Victoria (I852)
|
1796 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 1 (census taken June 28th) | Willman, Joseph (I829)
|
1797 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 10 | Jordan, Richard (I937)
|
1798 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 10 | Valiquette, Joseph (I1026)
|
1799 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 11, born in New York; father and mother of foreign birth | Moser, Fredericka (I958)
|
1800 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 12 | Jordan, William (I742)
|
1801 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 12 | Valiquette, Moses William (I1021)
|
1802 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 12, born in Ireland | McCormick, Lawrence (I797)
|
1803 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 13 | Jordan, Catherine (I934)
|
1804 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 13, born in New York, with her brother-in-law Michael Moran as head of household. | McCormick, Mary (I741)
|
1805 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 14 | Jordan, Joseph (I938)
|
1806 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 15, “apprentice to gardener” | Valiquette, Peter (I738)
|
1807 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 17, born in Ireland; waiter. He is living in the "Mansion House," which seems to be a large boarding house. | Collins, Anthony (I1136)
|
1808 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 17, schoolteacher | Jordan, Mary E. "Aunt Mayme" (I935)
|
1809 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 17; dress maker | Valiquette, Josephine (I1012)
|
1810 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 2/12 (census taken June 28th) | Willman, Julie (I827)
|
1811 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 29, born in New York; tinsmith | Vogt, Peter Adam (I811)
|
1812 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 3 | Willman, Mary Eleanor (I826)
|
1813 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 3, born in Buffalo | Jordan, William (I742)
|
1814 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 3, born in New York | McCormick, Mary (I741)
|
1815 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 30 | Bisantz, Catherine M. (I767)
|
1816 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 32, born in New York. As "Richet" | Bisantz, Bridget (I766)
|
1817 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 38, “Teamster” | Willman, Anthony (I822)
|
1818 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 40, born in Ireland | Duhaney, Honora (I795)
|
1819 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 40, “labourer” | McCormick, Philip (I794)
|
1820 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 41, clerk, born in Ireland; real estate 6,000; pers. estate 200.00. | Jordan, Matthew (I929)
|
1821 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 42; born in Ireland | Collins, Mary "Bridget" (I930)
|
1822 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 45, born in Canada | Terrien, Martine “Martha” (I776)
|
1823 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 47, carpenter (on page 17) | Valiquette, Octave "James" (I775)
|
1824 | Residence Post Office: Buffalo; aged 50, born in Ireland; “tally man” | Jordan, Matthew (I929)
|
1825 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Bisantz, Johann (I866)
|
1826 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Bisantz, Johann (I866)
|
1827 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Laprelle, Magdalena (I877)
|
1828 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Laprelle, Magdalena (I877)
|
1829 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Bisantz, John (I879)
|
1830 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Bisantz, Frank J. (I882)
|
1831 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Bisantz, Frank J. (I882)
|
1832 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Biesanz, Michael (I883)
|
1833 | Residence Post Office: Dubuque | Bisantz, Charles (I884)
|
1834 | Residence Post Office: Mumford | Nichols, William "Will" (I1074)
|
1835 | Residence Post Office: Mumford | Nichols, Catherine (I1075)
|
1836 | Residence Post Office: Mumford | Nichols, David (I1076)
|
1837 | Residence Post Office: Mumford | Nichols, Catherine (I1239)
|
1838 | Residence Post Office: Mumford | Nicholas, Elizabeth (I1240)
|
1839 | Residence Post Office: Mumford | Nichols, Charles (I1241)
|
1840 | Residence Post Office: North Buffalo | Mary (I1107)
|
1841 | Residence Post Office: North Buffalo | Clare, Peter (I1108)
|
1842 | Residence Post Office: North Buffalo; aged 50, housekeeper, born in France | Rusch, Victoria (I762)
|
1843 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Joseph (I1055)
|
1844 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Frank (I1066)
|
1845 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Emma (I1067)
|
1846 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Philipine (I1190)
|
1847 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Magdalene (I1191)
|
1848 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Frank (I1192)
|
1849 | Residence Post Office: Rochester | Reinhardt, Dominia (I1193)
|
1850 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 12; born in New York, both parents of foreign birth | Clark, Bridget (I981)
|
1851 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 16; born in New York, both parents of foreign birth | Clark, Jane Honora "Jenny" (I737)
|
1852 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 2; born in New York, both parents of foreign birth | Clark, Elizabeth "Libbie" (I985)
|
1853 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 36; born in Ireland as with both parents | Catharine (I777)
|
1854 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 4; born in New York, both parents of foreign birth | Clark, Anna (I983)
|
1855 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 50; laborer; value of real estate $250; no personal estate given | Clark, James (I778)
|
1856 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 6; born in New York, both parents of foreign birth | Clark, Peter (I979)
|
1857 | Residence Post Office: Scottsville; aged 8; born in New York, both parents of foreign birth | Clark, James (I978)
|
1858 | Residence Post Office: Suspension Bridge; aged 2, born in New York | Collins, Henry (I544)
|
1859 | Residence Post Office: Suspension Bridge; aged 26, born in Ireland; keeps house; father and mother of foreign birth | O’Hara, Alice (I1137)
|
1860 | Residence Post Office: Suspension Bridge; aged 26, born in Ireland; policeman R.R.; father and mother of foreign birth | Collins, Anthony (I1136)
|
1861 | Residence Post Office: Suspension Bridge; aged 4/12, born in New York | Collins, James Joseph “Jimmy” (I535)
|
1862 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Ramé, Mary Sophia Louisa "Sophia" (I856)
|
1863 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Francis "Frank" Joseph (I1041)
|
1864 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Mary Sophia (I1043)
|
1865 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Frank John (I1044)
|
1866 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Joseph (I1046)
|
1867 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Julia (I1047)
|
1868 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Louisa (I1049)
|
1869 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Rose (I1050)
|
1870 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Mary (I1107)
|
1871 | Residence Post Office: Williamsville | Clare, Peter (I1108)
|
1872 | Richard is on the 1870 census as aged 10, but not on the 1880 census; he may have moved out. | Jordan, Richard (I937)
|
1873 | Section AA, Lot 438, Grave 5 | Tobin, Sarah Johanna (I923)
|
1874 | Section G, Lot 61, Grave 2 | Tobin, Catherine (I924)
|
1875 | Section H, Row 6 | Tobin, Thomas (I901)
|
1876 | Section Q, Lot 14, Grave 13 | Tobin, Thomas Alfred (I722)
|
1877 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I9)
|
1878 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I8)
|
1879 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I7)
|
1880 | She apparently lived, as a washerwoman, until over 102 years. | Joyce, Anna (I780)
|
1881 | She appears in the 1869 Buffalo City Directory as “Bisantz, Mary M. wid. h. Genesee n. toll-gate.” She is in the 1860 census, after her husband died, as the head of the household. With her are living Magdalena (21), Catherine (19), Mary Anna (15), Anthony (13), and Dominicus (11). This is confusing, as some of these names are not on the 1850 census; I’ve recorded them all. There are other Krafts buried at the French and German Cemetery; I just don’t know whether they are related or not: Kraft, Amelia, A. b: 27 Dec 1846 d: 01 Jul 1895 Kraft, Blasius d: 12 Dec 1888 Aged 55Yrs 8Mo 24Da Kraft, E. Genevieve b: 20 Dec 1855 d: 30 May 1884 Kraft, Elizabeth d: 25 Feb 1873 Aged 41Yrs 1Mo Kraft, Francis J. b: 18 May 1821 d: 16 Mar 1898 Kraft, Josephine M. b: 05 Oct 1851 d: 01 Dec 1853 Kraft, Philip C. b: 1884 d: 1925 Our Son Kraft, Raymond H. b: 1915 d: 1987 In the 1850 NYState census, an Anthony Kraft and wife Mary Steffen Kraft were living in the 7th Ward with children Louis, Charles, Mary, and Margaret, all born in the 1840s. | Kraft, Maria Magdalena "Mary" (I759)
|
1882 | She appears on the 1910 Pennsylvania Miracode Index for McKees Rocks; this is clearly the same family that appears on the 1920 Houston census, though she and her sister Gertrude are no longer living with them. According to her death certificate, she had lived in Houston for 57 years. It says 1895 for birth, but this must be an error for 1895. | Valiquette, Florence A. (I975)
|
1883 | She died at 5:30 am, in her sleep. | Bisantz, Sister Martha Anne G.N.S.H. (I718)
|
1884 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I226)
|
1885 | She doesn’t appear on either the 1920 or the 1930 census with her parents, since she was married before 1920. | Battista, Margaret "Maggie" (I248)
|
1886 | She got married, and was living in New York. | Farnes, Helena (I368)
|
1887 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I69)
|
1888 | She is living with her husband and parents in the 1910 and 1920 censuses in Altoona. | Books, Katharine “Kit” Blanche (I954)
|
1889 | She is living with just her brotehr Thomas in the household of Jane Clinton, aged 58 | Tobin, Sarah Johanna (I923)
|
1890 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I105)
|
1891 | She is not in the 1880 cens with her mother and younger siblings, so she had either married or died by 1880. By the estimated immigration date from that census, she would have been born in Baden-Württemberg. In 1870, though, she is born in New York. | Moser, Fredericka (I958)
|
1892 | She is “Elizabeth” on the 1880 census, but the family must be the same; aside from her husband’s name, known from family notes, both of her parents are listed as being born in Alsace. | Bisantz, Mary Elizabeth (I768)
|
1893 | She married Mike Lacino during WW1; he was in the army. She apparently would not come to the US until her parents died. Judging by the censuses, this seems to have been between 1930 and 1935. There is an immigration record of her arriving on 21 May 1936; this says that she is American, and naturialized by marriage. I’m not sure, then, that this was her first trip over. She was nicknamed Zi, and lived with the Pozzuto family (as in the 1940 census). She was apparently a member of Jehovah’s Witnesses. | Palermo, Dorothea (I257)
|
1894 | She married Mike Lacino during WW1; he was in the army. She apparently would not come to the US until her parents died. Judging by the censuses, this seems to have been between 1930 and 1935. There is an immigration record of her arriving on 21 May 1936; this says that she is American, and naturialized by marriage. I’m not sure, then, that this was her first trip over. She was nicknamed Zi, and lived with the Pozzuto family (as in the 1940 census). She was apparently a member of Jehovah’s Witnesses. | Palermo, Dorothea (I257)
|
1895 | She must be the Mrs. A. Davis on her mother’s obituary notice. | Tobin, Ann (I927)
|
1896 | She must be the “Mrs. Ellen Freer” on her mother’s obituary notice. | Tobin, Ellen (I926)
|
1897 | She never married. Her birth date on the 1920 AND 1930 censuses places her as born around 1914; this seems at odds with SSN# data (January 14, 1911), but too consistent to ignore. | Palermo, Theresa (I264)
|
1898 | She took her first communion on 5 May 1864. This was at Holy Angels. In the 1855 census she is 3 and brother Thomas is 1—two years older. In the 1865 census she is she is 8 and Thomas is 11—now, three years younger. Thomas’s dates jibe with later censuses, but she doesn’t seem to appear later. In the 1900 census she as “Sarah Abrams,” born Feb. 1854, is living with her mother Mary Tobin and Grandmother Anna Tobin? This Feb. 1854 is not possible next to her brother’s June 1854 birth date. | Tobin, Sarah Johanna (I923)
|
1899 | She was 34, and was 23 when she was married (same age as her husband); she was born in New York, but but parents were born in Germany (as with her husband) | Anna (I76)
|
1900 | She was 4/12 on the 1910 census, taken in April. | Palermo, Felicia A. "Fanny" (I214)
|
1901 | She was 44, and had been born in New York. | Anna (I76)
|
1902 | She was an only child. | Valiquette, Martha Anne (I731)
|
1903 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I222)
|
1904 | She was Carmine’s first wife. She had a child born in January, and then twins born in December. She died from complications in childbirth, and all of the children were dead within a few months of her death as well. (first of measles; then flu). So, her husband went back to Italy to get a new wife. | Alaria, Carmela (I230)
|
1905 | She was Hungarian. | Sigeti, Marie I. (I294)
|
1906 | She was living in Le Roy, New York at her sister Jennie’s death in 1924. | Clark, Elizabeth "Libbie" (I985)
|
1907 | She was named after her grandmother. She and her two children lived downstairs from her sister Felicia (“Nana”) and her family when the two families were raising their children in South Buffalo. | Palermo, Felicia A. "Fanny" (I214)
|
1908 | She was very outgoing, and was a legal aide for immigrant Italians, since she could understand both Italian and English. In the 1920 census she and her husband with their children are living in the same house as her parents and their younger children, at 259 Seneca St. in Buffalo--13 people in all, under one roof. | Battista, Rosina "Rose" (I255)
|
1909 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I97)
|
1910 | SSN Death index | Cusati, Carmela "Camille" (I119)
|
1911 | SSN Death index | Cusati, Carmela "Camille" (I119)
|
1912 | Steinsoultz is near the connection among France, Switzerland, and Germany. This is the Upper Rhine (Haut-Rhin) region (that is, southern Rhine, away from the ocean), in the Alsace. Family history has him emigrating from Alsace in 1813. This is possible, but I’ve found a much later date on two immigrant reacords. Passenger and Immigration Index, 1500s-1900s Place: New York Year: 1839 Primary immigrant: Bisantz, Pierre Permanent entry number: 227720 Source publication code: 8123.10 Source publication page number: 22 Source publication: Schrader-Muggenthaler, Cornelia, The Alsace Emigration Book, vol. 1 (Apollo, PA: Closson Press, 1989). Source annotation: Date of emigration with intended destination. Author used several sources; although most of the entries were extracted from the Alsace Emigration index, a microfilmed card file which is among the holdings of the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. Year and place of birth and occupation are also provided. Passenger and Immigration Index, 1500s-1900s Place: New York, NY Year: 1839 Age: 40 Primary immigrant: Bisantz, Pierre Permanent entry number: 1118132 Source publication code: 8588 Source publication page number: 8 Source publication: SMITH, CLIFFORD NEAL. Emigrants from France (Haut-Rhin Departement) to America, Part 1: 1837-1844. (French-American Genealogical Research Monograph, 2, pt. 1.) McNeal, Ariz.: Westland Publications, 1986. 36p. According to a post on Ancestry.com that refers to Schrader-Muggenthaler, a passport was issued on Dec. 21, 1839 to Pierre Bisantz, a 40 year old teacher from Steinsoulz, for travel from Colmar to New York. Note that he may have traveled back and forth. Probably he and his wife both died in the cholera epidemic in the summer of 1849. | Bisantz, Pierre Jacques "Peter" (I763)
|
1913 | The 1867 Buffalo directory lists an “Anthony Rame, Farmer” that might be him, living at “Bird Road n. Del.” Page: page 349 col. 2 | Ramé, Anthony (I857)
|
1914 | the 1880 census for her son says Germany; 1860 says France | Doll, Catherine (I801)
|
1915 | The 1915 New York State census says that he was lived in the US for 30 years, and was a US Citizen—so, had immigrated in 1885, according to this. In this 1915 census he is living with Antonio Palermo’s family and Serafino Palermo’s family—19 people all under one roof. The 1920 census records his year of immigration as 1885, that he is naturalized, and the date of naturalization as 1896. In 1890 an Angelo Battista, “peasant,” immigrated from Italy on 27 May on the ship Birmania. He was aged 39, so by age this may have been him, but no other information is evident that might confirm this. An Angelo Battista, aged 61, arrived on May 21, 1911, aged 61; he is described as an American citizen. The age is clearly close enough to have been him on a return trip. There is also an Angelo Battista about the same age—born abt. 1850—from Caccavone (?) in Italy who comes through Ellis Island several times (1894, 1898, 1911), and lives with his family in Canton, Ohio. His wife, Mary, died before 1910, according to the census. This won’t be the same person, but a relative, maybe? He was in any event living in Buffalo, according to Directories, by abt. 1903. Where were he and his family in the 1900 census? In the 1920 census he and his wife with their younger children are living in the same house as his daughter Rose’s family, at 259 Seneca St. in Buffalo—13 people in all, under one roof. The 1938 Buffalo City Directory lists Angelo Battista, with wife “Tresa,” living at 51 Myrtle. At the same address are Carmela, and George (as “lab,” or “laborer”). | Battista, Angelo Domenico (I221)
|
1916 | The certificate was witnessed by Emily Wolter, who would be her niece, her sister Anna’s daughter. | Gurrell, Elizabeth (I484)
|
1917 | The date and place are according to 50th and 70th anniversary notes in papers | Family: Alphonse Caldiero / Carmela "Camille" Cusati (F107)
|
1918 | The entry on the 1880 census must be this family, in part because of the names, but also because both of his wife’s parents were born in Alsace. | Denzinger, William (I830)
|
1919 | The first migration record that matches Pasquale’s brother Alphonse’s age is in 1901, aboard the “S.S. Patria,” arriving in NYC from Naples on 25 June 1901. He was 18, and Alphonse would have turned 19 that year. He was unmarried, but was from S. Valentino. The key here is that he has a relation listed, “Pasquale” Caldieri. In 1907, Alphonse Caldiero, arriving from Naples aboard the “Neckar” on 1 June, is from S. Valentino and traveling to Buffalo. He says that his brother Pasquale lives there. (There is another record of an Alfonso Caldiero arriving on the Roma from Naples on 21 April 1907, but this entry is lined out, with no data, so perhaps this is an error.) The year 1909 shows a Pasquale Caldiero immigrating from Naples on 7 Aug. aboard the “Principe of Piemonte”. He was from Valentino, and was married (to Lena Palamonty?), and was heading for Jersey City. In 1910 a Vincenzo Caldieri from S. Valentino immigrated on the “S.S. Venezia” from Naples on 26 April. He was going to Brooklyn, and married to Luisa Guisa. A more likely possibility is in 1911. Pasquale Caldieri, from S. Valentino, arrived on the “Duca Degli Abruzzi” from Naples on 22 November. He was a barber, traveling to Buffalo, and his father’s name was Carmine. No Pasquale seems to appear in the 1910 U.S. or 1915 N.Y. State censuses. A Pasquale Caldiero does appear, however, buried in Cheektowaga, born in 1875 and died in 1917. This Pasquale, then, is likely to be the father of the two children, Mary and Carmine, who were taken in by the family. Family history says that two cousins of Alphonse’s children were taken in because their parents had died; one was sent to one house, and one to another. In 1930 Mary and Carmine appear with this family; if this pair is them, maybe they had started to live together again by then. Page: http:&|;&|;www.findagrave.com&|;cgi-bin&|;fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=157625365 | Caldiero, Pasquale (I342)
|
1920 | The first migration record that matches Pasquale’s brother Alphonse’s age is in 1901, aboard the “S.S. Patria,” arriving in NYC from Naples on 25 June 1901. He was 18, and Alphonse would have turned 19 that year. He was unmarried, but was from S. Valentino. The key here is that he has a relation listed, “Pasquale” Caldieri. In 1907, Alphonse Caldiero, arriving from Naples aboard the “Neckar” on 1 June, is from S. Valentino and traveling to Buffalo. He says that his brother Pasquale lives there. (There is another record of an Alfonso Caldiero arriving on the Roma from Naples on 21 April 1907, but this entry is lined out, with no data, so perhaps this is an error.) The year 1909 shows a Pasquale Caldiero immigrating from Naples on 7 Aug. aboard the Principe of Piemonte. He is from Valentino, and is married (to Lena Palamonty?), and is heading for Jersey City. In 1910 a Vincenzo Caldieri from S. Valentino immigrated on the “S.S. Venezia” from Naples on 26 April. He was going to Brooklyn, and married to Luisa Guisa. A more likely possibility is in 1911. Pasquale Caldieri, from S. Valentino, arrived on the “Duca Degli Abruzzi” from Naples on 22 November. He was a barber, traveling to Buffalo, and his father’s name was Carmine. No Pasquale seems to appear in the 1910 U.S. or 1915 N.Y. State censuses. A Pasquale Caldiero does appear, however, buried in Cheektowaga, born in 1875, who died in 1917. This Pasquale, then, is likely to be the father of the two children, Mary and Carmine, who were taken in by the family. Family history says that two cousins of Alphonse’s children were taken in because their parents had died; one was sent to one house, and one to another. In 1930 Mary and Carmine appear with this family; if this pair is them, maybe they had started to live together again by then. | Caldiero, Pasquale (I342)
|
1921 | The last name is from the 1900 census, where his wife is "Sarah Abrams." | Abrams, Samuel (I928)
|
1922 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I88)
|
1923 | The name is also "Resch" and "Rush" in records. I assume she immigrated. She must have been in the US, and married to Ramé, by the mid-1830s. According to the the St. Louis Catholic Church Archivist: 21 June 1836 Antonius Ram, son of Ludovicus (Ludwig or Louis) and Maria Francesca Claire and Victoria Rusch, daughter of Joseph and Maria Gangloff marriage performed by Fr. Alexander Pax, no witnesses given. On the 1850 census, as "Victoria Rohm," she is living with an "M. Rush," male aged 67, born in France. Is this an error for her mother? Or another older relation? I see no "Rush" or "Rusch" in city directories around that year. Also, no husband is listed as living with her, and she has no profession either. There is no "Rame," or an Anthony with a close last name, in the Buffalo city "commercial advertiser" directories between 1849 and 1859 This following might be her; the age matches, at least. If so, she was married after she arrived: Name: Victoria Riess Arrival Date: Jul 5, 1842 Age: 28 Gender: F Port of Arrival: New York Port of Departure: Havre Place of Origin: France Ship: Condor Family Identification: 30093740 Microfilm Serial Number: M237 Microfilm Roll Number: 49 On the 1880 census she is living with “daughter” Luise Bisantz, aged 37; and “son” Anton Bisantz”, aged 5. This must be Mary Louisa and Anthony; her daughter’s husband, Anthony Bisantz Jr., had died in 1875, and so after this they all moved in together. She and her parents were born in Alsace, and her daughter was born in New York, and so with her grandson. The children were born in “New York” State according to the 1900 census. | Rusch, Victoria (I762)
|
1924 | The notary gives the date of the marriage contract as 1 Sept. 1845. | Family: Octave "James" Valiquette / Martine “Martha” Terrien (F251)
|
1925 | The podcast attached as a source is about him, recorded by his nephew Jerry Bisantz. | Lee, Jimmy (I1007)
|
1926 | the youngest sibling | Cuoco, Angelo (I280)
|
1927 | The “son-in-law” in this household in the 1920 census I assume is her husband, just because the age similarity is closest to Annette. | Valiquette, Annette R. (I1022)
|
1928 | Their son Lawrence's 1848 birth record puts the family in Gortnahoe, in Co. Tipperary, Ireland, before their migration. According to the 1860 census, their son Lawrence, aged 12, was born in Ireland, but their daughter Catherine, age 8, was born in New York; this gives a window between 1848 and 1852 when they must have emigrated. This makes it likely that this family left Ireland to avoid the potato famine, which struck in the late 1840s. He was a Capt. in the NY 77th Regiment during the Civil War. His spouse Honora filed a pension claim on 10 Oct. 1864. No Philip McCormick appears in unit rosters, however, and the only McCormick in the Regiment survived the war. | McCormick, Philip (I794)
|
1929 | Their son Lawrence's 1848 birth record puts the family in Gortnahoe, in Co. Tipperary, Ireland, before their migration. According to the 1860 census, their son Lawrence, aged 12, was born in Ireland, but their daughter Catherine, age 8, was born in New York; this gives a window between 1848 and 1852 when they must have emigrated. This makes it likely that this family left Ireland to avoid the potato famine, which struck in the late 1840s. | Duhaney, Honora (I795)
|
1930 | There are two Forest Park cemeteries near houston; I don't know which one it is. | Thompson, Kathleen Frances (I1025)
|
1931 | There is a 25 Nov. 1663 notarial record of a marriage between "Jean de Niaux" and "Helène Dodin." No parents are named. There is a Jan. 1664 marriage in Notre-Dame, Montreal, between Jean Deniau (son of Pierre and Jeanette Baudet of Nantes) and Helene Daudin (daughter of Isaac and Anne ?Jainet). Some of the same witnesses appear in both: Nichols Millet, Isaac Dodin, P. Gudoys. I assume they are the same couple. Both died on the same day. | Duneau, Jean (I210)
|
1932 | There is a 25 Nov. 1663 notarial record of a marriage between "Jean de Niaux" and "Helène Dodin." No parents are named. There is a Jan. 1664 marriage in Notre-Dame, Montreal, between Jean Deniau (son of Pierre and Jeanette Baudet of Nantes) and Helene Daudin (daughter of Isaac and Anne ?Jainet). Some of the same witnesses appear in both: Nichols Millet, Isaac Dodin, P. Gudoys. I assume they are the same couple. Both died on the same day. | Daudin, Helène (I288)
|
1933 | There is a baby picture of him looking at a fishbowl. | Clark, William J. "Bill" (I1080)
|
1934 | There is a baptism in Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatière, Québec, Canada in October of 1767 of Marie Madelaine Lagace, daughter of Jean Marie Lagace and Marie Madelaine LeClerc. Possible. She is named on her son Toussaint’s marriage record as from “the parish of Montreal.” | Lagacé, Marie Magdelaine Meunier dite (I1169)
|
1935 | There is a Frank Lee on the Buffalo Census (1880, page 17, supervisors dist. 11, enum. dist. 155), aged 37, married to Ann, aged 34, with children Mary (14), Nelly (12), Joseph (9), Frank (7), Margaret (5), and Peter (1). He was a blacksmith. Philip Larkins, the father (65) is living with them, so this might not be the same family. | Lee, Francis (I1005)
|
1936 | There is a typo on her death certificate. It says that her father's name was "Richard Murray Valiquette," born in Ireland. Valiquette was her husband's name. It should be "Richard Murray Thompson." The birth record for her child born in 1883 in Cleveland says that she was born in the U.S. | Thompson, Kathleen Frances (I1025)
|
1937 | There is no record of her on the 1920 census, but she appears as a daughter on the 1930 census, aged 17. She traveled to Italy with Alphonse in 1950. She is not a daughter of Alphonse, but a cousin, the daughter of a sibling of Alphonse. She and a sister were taken in by family, she by Alphonse, and her sister by another sibling. | Caldiero, Mary R. (I341)
|
1938 | They lived at 554 Fargo Ave. in a photo taken abt. 1888; later, they lived at 720 Amherst, near Elmwood Ave., all in Rochester or Scottsville. | McMullen, James "Jim" W. (I1068)
|
1939 | This couple adopted a son. He and his brother Jack moved to and lived in Altoon, PA for most of their lives; presumably they lived there to work on the railroad hub there. | Tobin, William (I896)
|
1940 | This family also appears on rootsweb, though the e-mail contact was dead. | Bouquard, John (I1017)
|
1941 | This family also appears on rootsweb, though the e-mail contact was dead. | Benzel, Henrietta (I1123)
|
1942 | This family was from Rochester. He was, possibly, Joe? (though Frank or Willie are other names I see). | Reinhardt, Joseph (I1055)
|
1943 | This gives her address. | Mary Ellen (I902)
|
1944 | This is his enlistment date. | Jenczka, Richard Ronald (I212)
|
1945 | This is now Holy Cross Cemetery. | Jordan, Matthew (I929)
|
1946 | This is probably her. The entry only gives the date, place (Buffalo), and “Battista, Sex F” | Raimondo, Theresa (I220)
|
1947 | This name appears on the 1910 census. | Palermo, Fannie (I262)
|
1948 | This name is NOT vey clear on her daughter’s marriage record. | Lebeau, Marie Josephe (I668)
|
1949 | This name is on the Martha Valiquette tree and the 1880 census. | Fries, Charles (I994)
|
1950 | Unknown except for his presence in the Valiquette brothers picture; he seems to be one of the older ones? Even so, he would be present in the 1850 census? | Valiquette, Octave (I1091)
|
1951 | unmarried. He joined a religious order, the Brothers of Our Lady of Lourdes, in Belgium. His passport application says that his father is James O. Valiquette. He was traveling to Holland in 1919. He asked that the passport be sent to an address in Seattle, WA. | Valiquette, John (I1037)
|
1952 | unmarried; joined a religious order in Belgium? | Valiquette, John (I1037)
|
1953 | was a firefighter. | Burke, Joseph T. (I496)
|
1954 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I164)
|
1955 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I104)
|
1956 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I381)
|
1957 | with his wife Bridget and his son John (aged 2). He was a sailor, aged 27 | Jordan, Matthew (I929)
|
1958 | written in a small superscript above a scratched out entry. | Cusati, Carmela "Camille" (I119)
|
1959 | year is on gravestone | Vaccaro, Angelo (I296)
|
1960 | “Campobosso” on his WW1 draft registration | Licino, Michael "Mike" (I260)
|
1961 | “M.M.”; aged 35, born in France | Kraft, Maria Magdalena "Mary" (I759)
|
1962 | “Mary” on the 1850 census. Photo from: http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/r/a/Margaret-A-Gray/PHOTO/0005photo.html | Laprelle, Magdalena (I877)
|
1963 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I757)
|