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FIRST GENERATION
1. Audrey Susan Lee was
born on Jan 6 1943 in St. Louis, Missouri - Christian Hospital.
(1)(2)
(3) She resided between 1945 and 1948 in Cottage Avenue, St. Louis,
Missouri. She resided between 1948 and 1955 in 4735 Cupples Avenue, St. Louis,
Missouri. She resided between 1955 and 1962 in 1514 College Avenue East St.
Louis, Illinois. She School in Jan 1960 in East St. Louis Senior High School-Graduated.
(4) She resided between 1964 and 1978 in 8809
Bermuda Caseyville, Illinois. She resided between 1979 and 1991 in 44 Duke Drive
Maryville, Illinois. She was a on Jan 8 1979 in Payroll Department Schnuck Markets.
(2)(3)
She Divorced on Aug 23 1991 in Divorced ...Madison County...Illinois. She
resided on Oct 1 1997 in 2096 Riverbend Road, St. Clair, Missouri 63077.
(2)(3)
She was in Lutheran.(5)
(2)(3) She Birth Records in
Birth Certificate in St. Louis, Missouri.(2)
(3) She was baptized in Baptised
& Confirmed: Immanuel Luteran Church-St. Louis, Missouri..
(2)(3) She has reference number
1. Born in Christian Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri
Christian Hospital at 4411 North Newstead Avenue, later known as the Christian
Medical Center, was founded in 1903 by Mrs. Fannie H. S. Ayars, who was affiliated
with the First Christian Church. The hospital was organized to provide medical
care for residents of a Mother's and Babies' Home founded by Mrs. Ayars four
years previously. These institutions were both located in an old brick residence
at 2821 Lawton Avenue. After meeting many early problems, the hospital moved
to larger quarters at 2949 North Euclid in 1907 and moved again in 1910 to the
old Centenary Hospital building at 2945 Lawton. In 1914, the institution occupied
its own building for the first time, in a former sanitarium at 3540 North Grand
Boulevard. The building on North Newstead was completed in 1924, with an addition
erected in 1962. In 1968, in line with the movement of urban decentralization,
a branch hospital, Christian Northwest, was opened in St. LouisCounty. Another
county branch, Christian Northeast, was opened in 1976. The name of the building
on North Newstead Avenue was changed in 1974. It is now owned by the Central
Medical Center which plans to rehabilitate it as an acute care hospital.
School Record:
Went to Immanuel Lutheran School on Marcus and Lexington from Kindergarten through
7th grade.
Immanuel Lutheran Church, at Marcus and Lexington Avenues was formed in 1847
as an offshoot from Trinity Church. Its first church was erected in the next
year at Eleventh Street and Franklin Avenue. In 1865, the original frame Immanuel
Church was destroyed by fire and three years later their second edifice was dedicated
at 16th and Morgan Streets. This was a brick Gothic building with a 200 foot
high spire. Encroachments of business in the neighborhood made a westward move
necessary by 1919. A chapel was built at the present site on the grounds of the
Western Lutheran Cemetery and dedicated on July 25, 1920. The present church
was completed in 1928 and is a clerestory type dominated by a massive tower.
Immanuel School was started in 1844 at Seventh and Cole Streets and later met
in the Franklin Avenue church's basement and also had its own building at the
Morgan Street location. Western Lutheran Cemetery, adjacent to the present church,
was originally laid out in 1863.
Moved to Illinois and went to Clark Jr. High School in East St. Louis. Skipped
the first part of 8th grade, and went there through 9th grade.
Completed 10th through 12th grades at East St. Louis High School, graduated in
January 1960.
Employed by New York Life Central Service Center on 13th and Locust right after
High School in 1960 through 1961. Company moved offices to Kansas City, Missouri.
Employed by Swift & Company AgriChem Division in National City 1961 through
1962.
Employed by K-Mart on Collinsville Road 1973 through 1978. Worked in the Office,
Advertising, and Accounting.
Employed by Schnuck Markets on January 8, 1978. Customer Service Manager in
the Illinois Stores. Management Training in mid 1980's. Training Specialist
in the Training Department in the 1980's, Human Resource Department and currently
in the Payroll Department.
HOW MANY ANCESTERS DO YOU HAVE?
"Every person has two immediate parents, four ancestors in the second degree,
eight in the third, and so the pedigree ascends, doubling at every step, tillIndiana
the twentieth (twenty-first*) generation, he has no fewer than 1,048,576 ancestors;
and in the thirtieth, (thirty-first,*) 1,073,741,824, a number which exceeds
the present population of the globe."
The above statement would be correct, provided there had been no intermarriages
among a person's ancestors to the 21st and 31 generations.
But, a single intermarriage in the fourth geneation, may make the number of ancestors
in the next, and all succeeding generations, an eighth less; while one in the
third generation may reduce it a quarter. Where intermarriages occur frequently,
as they generally do among families that have long been located in one neighborhood,
the number of one's ancesters is lessened very materially thereby.
If we should carry our calculation back to our first parents, what an infinite
number of ancestors in that generation, we should be supposed to have had; and
yet, there really would be but two of them.
*These generations are the twenty-first and thirty-first, as usually reckoned,
counting the person himself the first generation, his parents the second, and
so on; but they are really the twentieth and thirtieth generations of one's ancesters.
"
(From an article stuck in the book, EARLY SETTLERS OF ESSEX AND OLD NORFOLK,
ca. 1852, author unknown)
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