Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Joseph S Morrill and Pauline (couple 22)

[Scott's maternal GGGrandparents]
[Jean Macdonald > Harrie E. Macdonald > Gertrude Morrill > couple 22]

Joseph S Morrill
BIRTH: about 1832, Canada
DEATH:after 1910, Bangor, Penobscot, Maine

Pauline
BIRTH: 1832
DEATH: 1879


*Due to the limited information about Joseph Morrill and his three marriages, the data presented here is relatively brief.  Immigration from other countries is sometimes a road-block to family history research!

Immigration to the United States: 1846/1849
Marriage to Pauline: about 1852

Children of Joseph Morrill and Pauline:
1. Mary E (1853-1864)
2. Pauline (1856-??) m. 1875 Gideon Varnum
3. Susan (1857-after 1870)
4. Joseph (1860-before 1870)
5. Matilda Agatha (1863-1943) m 1882 Henry Havelock Tweeddale (1857-??)
6. Evangelist Joseph (1867-1939) m 1889 Rose M Barnard (1863-1907) m2. 1908 Eloine Marion Reid (1894-1980)
7. Agnes (1870-??) 
8. Isabella (1871-??) m. 1893 Herbert G Kenney (1871-1904)
9. Gertrude (1874-1952) m 1894 Harry Eugene MacDonald (1870-1930)

Children 1,2,3,4 on 1860 Census, Brewer Maine.
Children 3,5,6,7 listed on 1870 Census, Bangor, Maine
Children 5-9 Listed on 1880 Census. Bangor, Maine
from here.

Second Marriage
Pauline passed away in 1879, and Joseph remarried Margaret E (poss Marriage around 1880), an Irish woman whose first husband (Patrick Moran, b. 1820, Ireland) had passed away a decade before.  She brought to the marriage her daughter Anne Agnes Moran (1856-??).  Patrick and Margaret had had a son, Michael (1852-1864), pass away at age 11.

Third Marriage
1900: Bangor, Penobscot
Carriage Manufacturer, born in Canada, married to Sarah since about 1891, a Mainer with French Canadian parents. Sarah is listed as not having any children (biological) of her own.
Haymarket Square, Bangor, Maine, from here.

1910: Bangor
Joseph and Sarah E at  102 Oak Street, Bangor.  Lists 1846 Immigration for Joseph.

Joseph Passed away sometime before 1920, as did Sarah.

History of Bangor.
Bangor's 1911 Fire.
On carriage-making, and specifically carriages in Bangor.
Mutual Store.

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