Joseph M. Burdock [Burdick], 1870 U.S. census, Chicago, Cook Co., Ill., Ward 14, p. 582, dwelling 1455, family 1657: FIRE INS. AGENT.
Robert G. Turk, 1920 U.S. census, Binghamton, Broome Co., N.Y., Ward 3, Enum. Dist. 18, sheet 8B, dwelling 167, family 230: FOREMAN CITY STABLES.
What's your most doomed occupational find?
In other reading . . .
. . . the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society's blog takes a look at haunting forms of decease in old New York.
. . . those who appreciate the Napoleonic Era nautical-historical novels of Patrick O'Brian may want to check out a New-York-based novel set half a century earlier. One reviewer called Francis Spufford's Golden Hill "the best eighteenth-century novel since the eighteenth century."
. . . if you'd like to have a long leisurely dinner with a historian who knows all about what went on in the US between 1815 (end of the War of 1812) and 1848 (end of the Mexican War), you're out of luck. But you can read the book What Hath God Wrought by Daniel Walker Howe.
Monday, October 30, 2017
Census entries that have "DOOM" written all over them, and some good reading
Posted by Harold Henderson at 10:30 AM
Labels: Binghamton NY, Burdick family, censuses, Chicago, Daniel Walker Howe, Francis Spufford, Golden Hill, New York City, occupations, Turk family, What Hath God Wrought
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