bullet Louis Winfield Allan was born on 13 Jul 1901 in Everett [Snohomish County] Washington. He died on 29 Aug 1989 in Seattle [King County] Washington. In 1927 Louis and Marian Allan lived at 1902-24 Avenue S (Rainier Valley). Grandpa was listed as a "laborer" in the Polk's Seattle Directory of 1927

Louis used to drive for Buchanan Freight in Yakima (horses, not truck). Mr. Buchanan is in his 90's.
Now Buchanan Auto Freight March 13, 1979 from Mom and Auntie Max

personal interview on tape recorded by Janna Potts

I was born in Everett, Washington on July 13, 1901. My father was Charles Lovejoy Allan and my mother was Minnie Mabel Triplett. I had an older brother, Howard David Allan, born October 19, 1899 and one younger brother, John Edward Allan, born July 19, 1906. Years later my Mom & Dad adopted Merilyn Naomi born November 18, 1922.
I was 6 months old when we moved from Everett to Seattle. We stayed in Seattle until 1910...until just after the A.Y.P.E. (Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition). Then we moved to Yakima, Washington. The Union Pacific Railway had transferred Dad to run an electric locomotive they had installed there.
In Yakima I attended Columbia Grade School. That's where I met Marian Anderson. She had just come over from Seattle. She walked into the room, made a little curtsey, and I said "There's my girl! That was in the 4th grade!
About 1917 (1914?) Dad decided we'd move back to Seattle and we settled in Ballard. Dad went to work for the Grand Union T.(?) Company on a route. I remember Uncle Harrison (Bridge) and some of the others telling Dad he was a fool for working that kind of a deal when he could work at the shipyards. Well, about all Dad knew was mining and streetcars, but finally they did talk him into it. He worked at the Allen Shipyard for awhile with Uncle Harrison, but it wasn't long before he was back on the streetcars again. At that time, the city of Seattle owned the streetcar line that ran from Burien to Ballard.
When I was thirteen I got my first steady job. I went to work at the Stimpson Mill in Ballard. That was just before World War I. I ran the "live rollers" out at Ballard. My uncles, Harrison and Will (Bridge) were the millwrights and they got me a job on the head saw, the big saw at the mill.
After that I had a job at the Allen Shipyard in Ballard. While I was working there, I volunteered to serve in the Army. They turned me down because I was too young and was doing "war work" in the shipyard. I worked at the Meechum-Babcock Shipyard around that same time.
When things slowed down in the shipyard, I went to work in a shingle mill with my uncle, Frank (Bridge).
When I was wighteen I married Marian Catherine Anderson. ( 29 August, 1919). We were married in Vancouver, B.C., Canada. A few months later I got rheumatism and lost several months of work. I had been working at a lumber yard in Ballard, next to where Mom & Dad lived on 57th Street, when I got sick. When I was well again I went back to the shipyards. I worked at Patterson-McDonald on the Duwamish River, as a ship's caulker, at Todd Shipyard on Harbor Island Eagle Harbor in Winslow.
When I worked at Eagle Harbor I rode back and forth on the ferries and was paid a "dead hour". We were the first men that I know of to get paid "travel time".
Up until 1920 I had worked mostly in the mills and the shipyards, but things were tightening up then after the war.
Marian and I had been married a year the summer of 1920 when we moved to winslow to milk cows for an old Dutchman. The farm was about 4 miles out of Winslow. I milked cows with the Dutchman's son in the morning, separated the milk and the old man delivered the milk.
In the afternoon I worked in the field picking raspberries. I didn't like it much because I'd done it as a kid. The Dutchman's wife and his mother picked the berries, too. His mother was eighty-five years old and weighed about ninety pounds. She lived alone in the old homestead place and packed her own bark (for her fire). She lived right in the kitchen.
Once I was taking berries down to the ferry at Winslow and the old woman was walking the four miles to town. I wanted to give her a ride but she wouldn't get into the car. Her son could never get her to ride either. In fact, they wanted her to come down and live with them, but she never would.
In September we moved back to Seattle so Marian would be around someone she knew when Wayne was to be born (their 1st child). Wayne Lovejoy Allan was born September 28, 1920 in Seattle, Washington.
It was hard to find steady work but I did haul fuel for Ballard Feed and Fuel and also for Pacific Coast Coal Company. After that we lived in South Park for awhile and I went to work for Seattle Pack. Company.
Eventually (1929?) we moved to Rainier Valley and I did road construction work and was out of town a lot. I remember working for Jay L. Smith Construction Company down in South Bend. It must have been summertime because we took the kids with us. (Wayne, Maxine, Virginia and Lois)
We roomed with the old lady who owned the house. On the job in South Bend they had a truck called a "man-killer". It had iron wheels on the front and "cats" on the back end of it. It was the only piece of equipment that could get out on the fill-dirt without getting bogged down.
I worked that job all summer until the rainy season when it was impossible to work the equipment any longer. Even the "man-killer" would get bogged down.
Right around the same time, I worked for "Redmond & Fairchild" of Yakima. We did work up on Steven's Pass.

THE DEPRESSION

I was working at the Bremerton Shipyard when the Depression hit. I had to leave a job on the 23 day of December, two days before Christmas! After that, I found a job in the shipyard for awhile. In those days, if you got three or four days work you were damn lucky!
When the banks went broke in January, 1929 (1930?) I was working for Halleran Bros. Construction Co. in Oroville, Washington, up in Okanogan country. We were stationed at a ranch and I remember particularly a young kid with his wife and baby. He wasn't getting paid wages but at least he had a place to live.
The kid and I went to hunt a deer one morning for food. We took off up in the snow, but came back with nothing.
On that job for Halleran Bros. we built a road from Tanasket to Republic. It was the middle of winter and the trucks were frozen every morning. We used lanterns to keep the rear ends from freezing so the wheels could turn.
Most of the trucks were older, 45 models, but we had one 58 electric start that we kept inside and running.
I worked that job until the middle of the summer of 1929 (1930?). Then back to the shipyards. Work there broke off pretty fast. The demand for ships was over and there just wasn't enough work to keep going. The shipyard shutdown.
I remember a time in the yards when only the Norwegians could get a job as a ship's caulker. Most of them had been ship's carpenters on the Norwegian fishing boats. As a carpenter they had done the caulking on those boats. Many of them came to the shipyard to be hired as caulkers. They stuck together and when the fishermen needed a job done, you knew how to talk Norwegian or you didn't go to work! That's the way it was. It was the same way in Ballard. You didn't live out there unless you could eat raw herring!
I worked for Argo Blower on East Marginal Way in Seattle in 1934. I worked there for about four years.

THE ACCIDENT
September 22, 1935

I'd been out working that day, hauling fuel, and I'd gotten soaking wet. I came back home and felt like I was going to get a cold so I went to bed. Later, some friends came over. They had been working over on the Grand Coulee Dam. It had gotten too cold to work, so they came over here and got themselves all "canned up" higher than $7,000 on wine. They wanted us to go out with them. Neither one of us cared about going out that night. Marian was baking a cake for "Pookie's" (Lois) birthday the next day and I was in bed. We finally said we'd go, but just someplace close. We went to a place on Genessee Street in Rainier Valley but the people we were with didn't like that place very well so we left Rainier Valley and went to 15th first and then to 85th and Greenwood in the North End of Seattle.
One of the guys we ere with got into an argument with some kids he knew and so we left. We had just left 85th and Greenwood and had gotten as far as 3rd Avenue NW. After crossing 3rd, the truck we were in collided with a switch engine. Marian was killed in that crash along with two others. Two more had but slight chances of recovery. The driver survived, but was badly scarred, and my own leg was hurt bad. Marian was only 32 years old when that happened and I was 34.
About three years later I was working for Puget Dredge and Drydock in the sheet-metal trade. It was right around that time I met Mom (Hattie May Boyce). I was thirty-seven. We were married June 2, 1938 in Olympia, Washington.
I worked the sheet-metal trade until about 1942 and then I drove the city buses. I remember I was driving bus when we lived on "Mud Island". My first run was from Ballard to Laurelhurst. Then I transferred over to the Jefferson Park Station. I had also worked East Cherry Street, East Madison and Atlantic Streets. Except for a few school trips and things like that I worked the trolleys most. I did drive the diesels for awhile from South Park to 85th.
I liked working #18 best. It was a trolley from Fauntleroy to Ballard.
In 1952, ten years later, I went back into the sheet-metal trade and retired from that trade in 1962.



status job place approximate year

single Stimpson Mill Ballard 1914
single Allen Shipyard 1917
single Meechum-Babcock Shipyard Ballard
single shingle mill (w/his uncle Frank)
married wood yard on 57th Ballard 1920
married Patterson-McDonald Seattle (Duwamish)
married Todd's Shipyard Seattle (Harbor Island)
married Eagle Harbor Winslow
expecting old Dutchman Winslow 1920
girls Ballard Feed & Fuel Ballard
born Seattle Pack. Co. Seattle
Jay L. Smith Const. South Bend (summer?)1928
Redmond & Fairchild Yakima
Bremerton Naval Shipyard Bremerton 1929
shipyards Seattle 1929
Halleran Bros. Oroville 1929
packing house
Pacific Coast Coal Seattle before depression
Argo Blower Seattle 1934
hauling fuel 1935
Puget Sound Dredge & Drydock Seattle (sheet metal) 1938(?)-42
Bus Driver Seattle 1942-1952
sheet metal Seattle 1952-1962

retired

FISHING TRIPS

The best fishing trips we had were when we went with George and Flo Walkup 20 miles up the Antrat River. We started fishing at the lower end and, eventually, reach the upper end.
George liked to compete when we went fishing. We'd go down to the river together. George would keep anything you could put in the basket as a fish, but I didn't like to keep anything but trout. We had a lot of fun- got awful wet a lot of times!
On the Antrat, we were way up at this place that was real pretty. Ten miles up there was a store and a mill and the next ten miles was right up at the head of the river.
On one trip, I got a kick out of the time we met these people and Mom (May) took care of their little baby. That was one of the nice trips and one of the incidents that I likeso well over there, when we took care of that little guy. His parents were strangers from down in Oklahoma. The baby was only two or three weeks old and they didn't even have a tent and it was cold. I remember it had been raining. The guy had been at another river with his family, west of there, so that would possibly have been over in Leavenworth or somewhere over in that area. Anyhow, he couldn't catch any fish, so he had come over here. He said: "There's no fish in this damn river!". I said: "There's fish alright! I bet in half an hour I can have six fish". He said: "I'll dare you." So I went out there and there was a kind of pool. Well, I thought, I'll never catch any fish in there. It was right near camp and everyone had a line in there. Well, darned if I didn't catch some fish. It made him so mad he went and got his fishing pole, so I moved down river a little.Well, that guy started down that river and you'd have thought he was a duck! He just thought he could go as fast as he wanted to but wouldn't let you get ahead of him. So I just layed back a little and all he did was scare the fish so they'd come back upstream and I caught all the fish.


Louis had typhoid fever when he was 11 or 12. He was also hit by a train and knocked off a trestle when he was 11 or 12

Allan family came from Ayreshire, Scotland (Point of Ayre[?], Isle of Man, Scotland)

Went to Colorado around 1923 with a former co-worker. Not to see relatives or anything...just went. Picked up odd jobs here and there.














Parents: Charles Lovejoy Allan and Minnie Mabel Triplett.

He was married to Marian Catherine Anderson on 29 Aug 1919 in Vancouver [British Columbia] Canada. Children were: Maxine Mavis Allan, Virginia Catherine Allan, Lois Marian Allan.

He was married to Hattie May Boyce on 2 Jun 1938 in Olympia (Thurston County) Washington.


bullet Lynn Allan Parents: Gene Charles Olson.


bullet Marcy Allan Parents: Wayne Lovejoy Allan and Lillian Comer.


bullet Maxine Mavis Allan was born on 18 Nov 1922 in Seattle [King County] Washington. She died on 12 Jan 1998 in Tacoma [Pierce County] Washington. She was christened on 16 Jan 1998 in Died of pancreatic cancer.. born at Ballard General Hospital Parents: Louis Winfield Allan and Marian Catherine Anderson.

Children were: Jeanne Marie Dunn.

She was married to Robert Charles Edelbrock on 16 May 1942 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Children were: Robert Charles , Jr. Edelbrock.

She was married to Alex , Jr. Steckler on 25 Jun 1955 in Seattle [King County] Washington. She was divorced from Alex , Jr. Steckler. Children were: James Frank Steckler, Mary Katherine Steckler, William Henry Steckler , Beverly Ann Steckler, John Henry Steckler.

She was married to Ivan H. Pedersen on 17 Mar 1987 in Tacoma (Pierce County) Washington.


bullet Merilyn Naomi Allan was born on 18 Nov 1922 in Seattle [King County] Washington. It is believed that Charles Lovejoy Allan is the biological father of Merilyn Naomi Allan Thompson as well as her adoptive parent. We do know that Minnie Mabel Triplett Allan raised Merilynm as her own child. It was a huge family secret that Merilyn was adopted until she told people to quit whispering about it because she had known for years she was adopted. She was probably in her mid-40's or 50's at the time of this disclosure.

born at Ballard General Hospital.
married at Bethany Baptist Church in Ballard, Washington (Seattle[King County]Washington]. Parents: Charles Lovejoy Allan and Minnie Mabel Triplett.

She was married to Robert E. Thompson on 28 Aug 1942 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Children were: Bert Allan Thompson, Daniel Robert Thompson.


bullet Michael Allan was born on 17 Jun 1948. Parents: John Edward Allan and Gladys Phillips.


bullet Minnie Mabel Allan was born on 15 Sep 1944. Parents: Howard Allan and (Edith).


bulletNancy Ann Allan. Parents: Wayne Lovejoy Allan.

Children were: Angela Geehan.

Children were: Joseph Svaboda.


bulletRoger Louis Allan was born in 1943. Parents: Wayne Lovejoy Allan and Lillian Comer.

Children were: JoAnne Allan, Craig Allan.


bulletTravis Allan. Parents: Craig Allan.


bulletTrevor Scott Allan was born on 22 Oct 1991. Parents: Craig Allan.


bullet Virginia Catherine Allan was born on 10 Jul 1924 in Seattle [King County] Washington. raised Baptist for many years...converted to Catholicism as an adult

married by (?) L. Martin of 1732 N. 97th, Seattle, Wa.
married at 8:45 p.m. in Bethany Baptist church. witnesses were Louis W. Allan and George Harold Munday. Attendants were: (best man), Lois Allan (maid of honor) and (flower girl)
Divorced from Junior Harold Munday on
September 20, 1951. Seattle[King County} Washington

Born July 10, 1924
first school: Beacon Hill Elementary-kindergarten through 3 grade. Then living at 2006 Plum Street (Rainier Valley)
second school: Lake Forest Park- (1933-34) 4th grade only. had scarlet fever that year
third school: Beacon Hill Elementary-5 and 6 grade...had moved back to the house on Plum Street
Mother died in truck/train collision when she had just started 6th grade-September 22, 1935
fourth school: John B. Allen-6th grade- Family moved to 6737 Sycamore in north Seattle
fifth school: James Monroe- 7th grade-still lived on Sycamore Street
sixth school: Cleveland Junior-Senior High School (8-12 grades). Family had moved to 1023 Holden Street in South Seattle (Mud Island). She lived there until she married on June 19, 1942.
Memories:
Remembers trip tp Yakima over the Pass-road only wide enough for 1 car
Remembers Airport Way-was like a roller coaster-people would drive it on Sunday for fun-called it the "Whoopee Road"
Memories of her mother:
"fairy" soap...because it floated (Ivory) and lathered more
"fairy" dresses were special ruffly dresses made alike for the 3 girls
birthday cakes: her mother always baked them the night before and hid them on a shelf behind a clean white dishtowel hung over the shelf edge
Christmas was always at their house. Uncle Ed was Santa Claus and had Swedish bells-kids got scared. Auntie Max would hide under the table afraid Santa would find her.
She remembers being at Kitsap Lake one summer (caretakers?)

The house on Sycamore Street was Aunt Ella's (Maternal aunt of Louis Winfield Allan)...sister to Minnie Mabel Triplett Allan. She did not live in the house with them. The house was near Woodland Park and Mom remembers many days spent at the Park. Auntie Gladys and Uncle Ed (Edward Allan, Louis' brother) helped take care of the kids. Parents: Louis Winfield Allan and Marian Catherine Anderson.

She was married to Junior Harold Munday on 19 Jun 1942 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Children were: William Louis Munday , Janna Lee Munday, Loretta Jean Munday.

She was married to Gregory Steckler on 31 Dec 1952 in Seattle [King County] Washington.


bullet Wayne A. Allan was born on 4 Jul 1944 in Seattle [King] Washington. Parents: Wayne Lovejoy Allan and Lillian Comer.

Children were: Christina Allan, Jennifer Allan, Bradley Allan.

He was married to (Eileen) in Seattle [King County] Washington.


bullet Wayne Lovejoy Allan was born on 28 Sep 1920 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Parents: .

Children were: Nancy Ann Allan.

He was married to Lillian Comer on 9 Aug 1940 in Seattle [King] Washington. Children were: Roger Louis Allan , Marcy Allan, Wayne A. Allan .


bullet Emma Jane Allden was born in Kingston upon Thames. Parents: Keith Allden and Jane Elizabeth Green.


bullet Keith Allden was born in England.

He was married to Jane Elizabeth Green in London, England. Children were: Emma Jane Allden.


bullet Allen

He was married to Shiela LaRue in Mineral Wells, Texas.


bullet Cole Dallie Allen was born on 27 Jan. Parents: William Dallie Allen and JoAnne Allan.


bullet William Dallie Allen

He was married to JoAnne Allan in Renton [King County] Washington. Children were: Cole Dallie Allen.


bullet Mildred Alley Mildred had a son named Roy from a previous marriage.. Believe she also raised a nephew Jack. Parents: Grace Ingram .


bulletJames Alsbury.


bulletDavid Amado.

He was married to Jacquelene Rose Agtuca on 11 Jun 1994 in Berkeley, California.


bullet Robert Ambrose

He was married to Tami Lynn Kubik on 4 May 1995.


bullet Brita Andersdotter was born in 1706. She died in 1773.

Children were: Bortas Anders Persson.


bulletAlex [Axel] Anderson was born on 28 Nov 1860 in Stockholm, Sweden. He died on 6 Jan 1944 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Axel Anderson owned a home at 1902-24 Ave. So and Holgate St circa 1920
He later sold the house to His grandson and his wife (Wayne Lovejoy Allan and Lillian Comer Allan
Louis Allan and Marian Anderson Allan also lived in this house for a time when they were first married.
Axel Anderson greased the streetcar tracks from Jackson St. to Rose St.
he was up at 4 for breakfast and got home about 1 or 2 p.m. Carried a bucket of grease to grease the tracts for the streetcars. He would have his dinner with his daughter and son-in-law (Marian and Louis) and their family.
He had a glass eye (left?) which his daughter would remove, cleanse carefully and help him put it back in place. He lost his eye while working for the Seattle Municipal Railway greasing the streetcar tracks.
"Grandpa" Anderson was a wonderful man with a Swedish accent. He loved to buy things for his only daughter, Marian. She had one of the first "easy spin" washing machines. He also bought her a "mangle iron", an electric sewing machine and a piano. She loved to play the piano.

Alex (Axel) Anderson came from Stockholm, Sweden with his friend Axel (Alex) Carlson. Their passports were mixed up at point of immigration so Alex became Axel and Axel became Alex.
Alex Anderson and Axel Carlson remained close friends and even stayed in the same house. They both married Bennett sisters: Alex Anderson married Lulu Bennett and Axel Carlson married Mollie Bennett. There were two more Bennett girls that lived near them in Seattle. Virginia Allan Steckler knew them as Aunt Hettie and Aunt Martha. There may have been another Bennett girl, Jessie, and a brother, Charles.

Alex Anderson may have come to the United States by ship through the St. Lawrence Waterway and then west by land. He was 14 when he came to America circa 1874. Possible sibling? Augusta (Frederickson]. Alex Anderson worked in a brickyard when he first came to Seattle. Later he moved to Yakima and had his own fruit drying company (plums and prunes). He returned to Seattle and worked for Stone & Webster as caretaker of the freight shed. He was the shipping clerk. Stone & Webster was located at 7th & Olive. This was around 1909-1910. He walked to work and back every day from his home at 2006 Plum Street in the south end of Seattle. He stayed with Stone & Webster until they sold out. He then went to work for the Rainier Valley Streetcar Line. He walked from Rainier Valley to Renton greasing the track switches. The city of Seattle bought the R.V. S. C. Line and transferred him to Seattle City Light Co. He also pumped the old style "bicycle car" from Yakima to Seattle on the railroad track. According to his grand-daughter, Maxine, he worked until he was 83 and had saved quite a bit of money.

Alex Anderson met Lulu Bennett in Seattle. He knew Charles Allan when both worked at Stone & Webster but Louis Allan didn't know his father and future father-in-law knew each other until later.
Stone & Webster used to haul freight by streetcar at night. Alex Anderson had charge of the shed where they kept this freight. He was the shipping clerk. On the Rainier Valley Street Car Line he worked from the end of the line on Stewart Street out to Renton and back. The tracks ran along Lake Washington. "He was just as much an institution there as the streetcars" says Louis Allan. "They couldn't run without 'Grandpa' Anderson being there."

Alex Anderson's parents lived on a large lake just outside Stockholm, Sweden. His older sisters taught him everything they learned Parents: Carl Johann Anderson and Christina Sandberg.

He was married to Lulu M. Bennett about 1897 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Children were: Marian Catherine Anderson, Freedolf Anderson.


bullet Anna Burtus Anderson was born on 29 Apr 1864 in Mora, Sweden. She died on 12 Feb 1933. Parents: Burtus Anders Anderson and Mait Olsdotter.

She was married to Ludwig (Louis) Ziemer on 24 Feb 1884. Children were: Nara May Ziemer .


bullet Burtus Anders Anderson was born in 1837. He died in 1873. Parents: Burtus Anders Persson and Anna Olsdotter.

Children were: Anna Burtus Anderson.


bulletCarl Johann Anderson was born in Sweden. He died in Sweden.

Children were: Alex [Axel] Anderson.


bulletChristopher Dion Anderson was born on 26 May 1995. Parents: Melissa Sue Anderson.


bullet Douglas Carl Anderson was born on 8 Jun 1937. He died on 27 Oct 1988.

He was married to Judith Lynn Vanderlip on 4 Feb 1974. Children were: Rebecca Lynn Anderson, Melissa Sue Anderson.


bullet Freedolf Anderson was born about 1899. Parents: Alex [Axel] Anderson and Lulu M. Bennett.


bullet Jeff Anderson

He was married to Stacy Lynn Edelbrock on 23 Aug 1985 in Montlake Terrace, WA.


bullet Marian Catherine Anderson was born on 22 Nov 1902 in Seattle [King County] Washington. She died on 22 Sep 1935 in Seattle [King County] Washington. Parents: Alex [Axel] Anderson and Lulu M. Bennett.

She was married to Louis Winfield Allan on 29 Aug 1919 in Vancouver [British Columbia] Canada. Children were: Maxine Mavis Allan, Virginia Catherine Allan, Lois Marian Allan.


bullet Marian J. Anderson was born on 22 Nov 1902 in Seattle [King] Washington. She died on 22 Sep 1935 in Seattle [King] Washington.


bullet Melissa Sue Anderson was born on 21 May 1978 in Mt. Vernon, WA. Parents: Douglas Carl Anderson and Judith Lynn Vanderlip .

Children were: Christopher Dion Anderson.


bulletRebecca Lynn Anderson was born on 25 May 1976 in Everett, WA. Parents: Douglas Carl Anderson and Judith Lynn Vanderlip .

She was married to Justin Scott Sherrett on 28 Dec 1994. Children were: Katelynn Marie Sherrett , Scott Jeffrey Sherrett, Nathaniel James Sherrett.


bullet Bortas Per Andersson was born in 1703. Parents: Bortas Anders Persson and Kerstin Ersdotter.

Children were: Bortas Anders Persson.


bulletBurtus Per Andersson was born in 1770. He died in 1851. Parents: Bortas Anders Persson and Anna Mattsdotter.

Children were: Burtus Anders Persson.


bulletGunhild Andersson was born on 17 Aug 1948 in Sollefteå.

She was married to Lutz Edelbrock on 16 May 1970 in Katrineholm. Children were: Jörgen Edelbrock, Jonny Edelbrock.


bullet Maude Anthony


bulletSylvia Lucrecia Aquilar was born on 24 Jan 1955 in Guatamala City, Guatamala, Central America.

She was married to Richard Michael Montosa on 16 Feb 1972 in Daly City [San Mateo} California. Children were: Richard Michael , Jr. Montosa, Angeleic Teresa Montosa .


bullet Celia E. Archambault


bulletBaird .

Children were: Scott Brian Baird.


bulletScott Brian Baird was born on 9 Feb 1979. Parents: Baird and Gail Ann Harrison.


bullet Barbara Jean Baker was born on 27 Aug 1942 in Amarillo, TX.

She was married to Robert Charles , Jr. Edelbrock on 28 Oct 1972 in Seattle, Washington.


bullet Baldwin


bulletBallou .


bulletDean Barker was born on 1 Mar 1964.

He was married to Cynthia Marie Edelbrock on 1 May 1993 in Brea, CA.


bullet Josie Barry was born in Jan 1875. Parents: Patrick Barry and Mary Sullivan.


bullet Katherine A. Barry was born on 13 Sep 1872. She died on 30 Oct 1894. Parents: Patrick Barry and Mary Sullivan.

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