Descendants of William Carpenter of Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony, now part of Bristol County, MA

Notes


9911. Charles Paine Carpenter

Resided in St. Johnsbury, VT  He held the office of postmaster
for several years.  He is now (1898) in trade in the tin business.2  SOUR S203 3  TEXT pg 498

CENSUS:  1880 US Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Charles P CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   37   VERMONT   Post Master   VT.   VT.
Elizabeth J. CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   35   VERMONT   Keeping House   MASS   VT.
Horace CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   6   VERMONT      VT.   VT.
Horace CARPENTER   FatherL   W   Male   W   69   MASS   House Builder   MASS   MASS
Martha CEAL   Other   S   Female   W   45   CANADA   Servant   IRELAND   IRELAND
Sarah M. TOWN   Other   S   Female   W   29   VERMONT   School Teacher   VT.   VT.
Laura C KIMBALL   Other   S   Female   W   38   VERMONT   School Teacher   VT.   VT.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place St. Johnsbury, Caledonia, Vermont
 Family History Library Film   1255342
 NA Film Number   T9-1342
 Page Number   167D


9912. Col. George Nathaniel Carpenter

BIRTH:  26 Jan 1840 per the Carpenter Memorial and 26 Nov 1840 the note below.
CENSUS:  1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
George M. CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   40   VT   Life Ins. Agent   VT   VT
Agnes W. CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   37   MA   Keeps House   MA   MA
Hattie E. CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   13   WI   At School   VT   MA
Edward CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   10   IL   At School   VT   MA
Alice CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   7   IL      VT   MA
Rebecca J. LINTON   Other   S   Female   W   21   IRE   Servant   IRE   IRE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Brookline, Norfolk, Massachusetts
 Family History Library Film   1254548
 NA Film Number   T9-0548
 Page Number   382D

http://www.rockvillemama.com/washington/carpentergeorgen.txt
Washington
CARPENTER, George N.

Men of Vermont: Illustrated Biographical History of Vermonters & Sons of
Vermont. Ullery. Brattleboro: Transcript Publishing Company, 1894, part III,
page 5 of 20 unpaginated leaves

George N. CARPENTER, of Brookline [Norfolk County], Massachusetts, was born
26 November 1840 in Northfield [Washington County, Vermont], his father being
Judge CARPENTER, one of the prominent men of Washington County in his time
and for several years judge of probate. Col. CARPENTER was educated at the
Northfield and Phillips Andover Academies and at the University of Vermont,
from which he graduated in 1861. At college he was class president in his
senior year, secretary and vice president of the Phi Sigma Nu society and a
member of the Delta Psi fraternity. At the breaking out of the war he
enlisted in the Eighth Vermont Regiment, rising to the rank of captain,
receiving later a commission as captain of U. S. Volunteers from President
Lincoln. His title of colonel came through the appointment of aid-de-camp on
the staff of Governor DILLLINGHAM of Vermont.

In 1866 Col. CARPENTER left Vermont and became a resident of Milwaukee
[Milwaukee County, Wisconsin], where for a year he filled an editorial
position on the "Daily Wisconsin," at the same time serving the "New York
Tribune" as its Western correspondent. Giving up journalism in 1867, he
entered the insurance business, remaining in the West until 1874, when he
returned East, locating in New York. Three years later he went to Boston
[Suffolk County] and has since been conspicuously identified with the
insurance interests of Boston and Massachusetts. He is widely known as the
manager of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company and also as an
entertaining and thoroughly posted speaker on insurance topics. He has held
many positions of honor and trust; has been, in turn, secretary, vice
president and president of the Boston Life Underwriters' Association; first
president of the National Association of Life Underwriters (was one of the
founders and now a life member of the executive committee); was interested in
the formation of the Vermont Association of Boston (was a member of the
Executive committee and its treasurer for six years); has been vice president
and president of the Vermont Veteran Association of Boston; and is a member
of the military order of the Loyal Legion and Grand Army of the Republic.

On 27 April 1866 at Amherst [Hampshire County], Massachusetts, Col. [George
N.] CARPENTER was married to [Miss?] Agnes WILLIAMS, and three children are
the result of the union: Edward H., a graduate of Harvard in 1893; and two
daughters. Col. CARPENTER is a Republican; has been chairman, Brookline
Republican town committee and president, Republican club of Brookline; now a
member of the election committee of the Republican Club of Massachusetts;
has been a member of the Republican state committee (treasurer of the
committee in 1893 and 1894); represented Brooline in the Massachusetts
Legislature 1887-1891; was on committees on insurance (chairman) and federal
relations; is president of Brookline Civil Service Association; for many years
was a trustee of Norwich University, Northfield; now a member of the school
committee of Brookline.

Submitted by Cathy Kubly


9920. Matthew Hale Carpenter

Number 4833 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 499.
Family on page 666 (#1225).  A lawyer and served in the senate in 1869.
Extensive notes on pages 500 to 506.

BIRTH: He was born and baptised "Merritt Hammond" but he didn't like the name
so he changed it.

BOOK:- GENEALOGY: Carpenter and Allied Families by Miss Annie L. Carpenter,
The American Historical Society, Inc., NY, published in 1936. Page 31
He was a U.S. Senator.

SEE: Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. 2, page 512, by Allen Johnson.
He is listed as a lawyer, and senator (Rep.).   Much detailed information
there.

Newspaper: "The Evening News." Dated Detroit, Saturday, August 23, 1873.
It states:
"The New York Tribune, in response to the Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, on the
Senator Carpenter scandal, says that the Tribune makes no charges that can
not be substantiated, and hopes that if Mr. Carpenter has been aggrieved by
anything that has appeared in its columns he will resort to his remedy at
law; and the Tribune being a journal of ample pecuniary responsibility,
whatever damage a jury of his countrymen shall say he has sustained will be
promptly paid.  More than that, the Tribune will gladly pay any sum that may
be so assessed in damages to be convinced that the life and conduct of Mr.
Matt Carpenter are such as may be held up for an example, instead of a
warning to the young men of the country.  For proof of that the Tribune is
willing to pay liberally."
In another location of the same paper:
Under "POLITICAL NOTES":
"A serious attempt is being made to kill off President Grant.  The Rutland
Globe alludes to the failing health of Vice President Wilson, and his
possible death, and expresses it's horror at seeing Matt. Carpenter, as
President of the Senate, so near to the White House.  The New York Tribune
has also been studying the law of decent in the case, and shows that in the
event of Grant, Wilson and Carpenter all dying the country would have to get
along without a chief magistrate till  Congress meets in December.  Now this
speculating on the effect of men's deaths is just the way to kill them.  the
human mind is eculiar, and if the very knowledge that their decease is a
matter of discussion on every street corner is not in itself sufficient to
worry out the vital spark, there are plenty of insane Ravalliacs and Booths
in the country who would jump at the chance to gain themselves "a mission",
which the  mere suggestion afforded.  Three Presidents have died in office
within a quarter of a century.  If we were Grant we should increase our life
insurance forthwith.  By the way, Grant still lacks a week of completing the
first six months of his second term, yet the subject of his successor in 1877
is already discussed by the topic-starved public press. etc.etc.etc...
Submitted by Jan on 27 July 1999. Gumpysfarm@aol.com .


http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=C000171
Biographical Directory of the American Congress, 1774-1949
CARPENTER, Matthew Hale, 1824-1881
Senate Years of Service: 1869-1875; 1879-1881
Party: Republican; Republican
                                               Pages 950-951
Carpenter, Matthew Hale, a Senator from Wisconsin; born in Moretown,
Washington County, Vt., December 22, 1824; attended the common schools;
entered the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1843 and
remained two years; studied law in the office of Rufus Choate; was
admitted to the bar in 1847 and practiced in Boston, Mass.; moved to
Beloit, Wis., in 1848; district attorney of Rock County 1850-1854; moved
to Milwaukee in 1858; until the commencement of the Civil War belonged to
the Douglas wing of the Democratic [p.951] Party; represented the
Government in the celebrated McCardle case, and brought to trial the
validity of the reconstruction act of March 7, 1867, for the government
of the States then in rebellion, and won the case in the Supreme Court;
elected as a Republican to the United States Senate and served from March
4, 1869, to March 3, 1875; elected President pro tempore of the Senate
March 12, 1873, March 26, 1873, December 11, 1873, and December 22, 1874;
unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1875; resumed the practice of
law in Washington and in Milwaukee; again elected as a Republican to the
United States Senate and served from March 4, 1879, until his death in
Washington, D.C., February 24, 1881; interment in Forest Home Cemetery,
Milwaukee, Wis.
Bibliography
American National Biography; DAB; Deutsch, Herman J. ‘Carpenter and the Senatorial Election of 1875 in Wisconsin.’ Wisconsin Magazine of History 16 (September 1932): 26-46; Thompson, E. Bruce. Matthew Hale Carpenter, Webster of the West. Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1954.

http://www.answers.com/topic/matthew-h-carpenter
Carpenter, Matthew Hale

Matthew Hale Carpenter was born December 22, 1824, in Moretown, Vermont. He attended the U.S. Military Academy from 1843 to 1845 and was admitted to the Vermont bar in 1847. His real name was Decatur Merritt Hammond Carpenter and although he was educated in Vermont, he established his public career in Wisconsin.

In 1861 Carpenter served as judge advocate general. He participated in the U.S. Senate, serving as senator from Wisconsin during the years 1869 to 1875 and 1879 to 1881.

His legal skills were displayed in his representation of Secretary of War William W. Belknap at the latter's impeachment trial. In 1877 Carpenter acted as legal counsel to Democratic presidential candidate Samuel Tilden during an inquiry held by the electoral commission concerning the contested election results. Tilden lost to Rutherford B. Hayes by one electoral vote.

Carpenter died February 24, 1881, in Washington, D.C.

http://www.answers.com/topic/matthew-h-carpenter?method=5&linktext=Matthew%20H.%20Carpenter
Matthew Hale Carpenter, born Decatur Merritt Hammond Carpenter, (December 22, 1824 - February 24, 1881) was a member of the Republican Party who served in the United States Senate for the state of Wisconsin from 1869 - 1875 and again from 1879 - 1881.

Carpenter was born in Moretown, Vermont. He served as District Attorney of Rock County, Wisconsin, from 1850 - 1854. He was originally a member of the Democratic Party until the start of the Civil War. While in the United States Senate, he served as the President pro tempore during the 43rd Congress.Carpenter died in Washington, D.C.,while in office and was buried at Forrest Home Cemetery in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/dictionary/index.asp?action=view&term_id=2138
Carpenter, Matthew Hale [B. "Carpenter","Decatur Merritt","Hammond"] 1824 - 1881
Definition: lawyer, Senator, b. Moretown, Vt. He attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point (1843-1845), studied law under Paul Dillingham and Rufus Choate, and was admitted to the bar in 1847. In 1848 he moved to Wisconsin, settling in Beloit, where he practiced law and served several years as district attorney of Rock County. In the 1850's he changed his name to Matthew Hale Carpenter. Rising rapidly in legal and political circles, in 1856 he was one of the attorneys for William A. Barstow (q.v.) in the disputed gubernatorial election of 1855. In 1858 he moved to Milwaukee, where he conducted a brief law partnership (1858-1859) with Edward G. Ryan (q.v.). An avid Democrat, in his early career he supported Stephen A. Douglas in the election of 1860. With the outbreak of the Civil War, he became a "war Democrat" and soon joined the ranks of the Republican party. In 1869 he was selected by the Republican state legislature to succeed James R. Doolittle (q.v.) as U.S. Senator. In the Senate, Carpenter identified himself with the radical supporters of President Grant, and vigorously defended him against the criticism of Senator Charles Sumner. One of the leading figures in the Senate, Carpenter was a brilliant orator and logician, but his insistance on legalism and seeming lack of deep-rooted loyalties gave political ammunition to his enemies, who attempted to make him the symbol of reconstruction corruption. In 1874 and 1875 a large portion of the press of both parties attacked Carpenter on both political and personal grounds. At home his defense of the Credit Mobilier and the "salary grab" act, his opinion that the state Potter law was constitutional, and his support of federal regulation of railroads led to his defeat. In the legislature of 1875 a group of Republicans promoted by C. C. Washburn (q.v.), A. M. Thomson (q.v.), and J. R. Doolittle defied the dictates of the party machine and united with the Democrats to secure the election of Republican dark-horse Angus Cameron (q.v.). In 1879 Carpenter was again elected to the Senate, succeeding Timothy O. Howe (q.v.), and held this office until his death. As a lawyer, Carpenter was recognized as one of the leading constitutionalists in the nation. He argued his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1862, acquired nationwide recognition in the McCardle case (1869), and was acknowledged to be the legal advocate for reconstruction policies. His other well-known cases included the famous Slaughterhouse cases (1873), the defense of Secretary of War William W. Belknap in the impeachment proceedings of 1876, and his retention by the Democrats (1877) to present the case of presidential candidate Samuel J. Tilden to the electoral commission investigating the disputed election of 1876. Dict. Amer. Biog.;..F. A. Flower, Life of M. H. Carpenter (Madison, 1883); J. R. Berryman, ed., Bench and Bar of Wis. (2 vols., Chicago, 1898); Green Bag, 6 (1894) pp. 441-446; E. B. Usher, Wis. (8 vols., Chicago, 1914); Milwaukee Evening Wis., Feb. 24, 1881; Milwaukee Sentinel, Feb. 24, 1881; WPA field notes; E. B. Thompson, M. H. Carpenter (Madison, 1954).

[Source: Dictionary of Wisconsin biography]


9923. Cephas Warner Carpenter Col.

Number 4836 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 506.
No family listed in the above record.

BOOK:- GENEALOGY: Carpenter and Allied Families by Miss Annie L. Carpenter,
The American Historical Society, Inc., NY, published in 1936. Page 31 and 33.

He was a pioneer in the Northwest, coming to St. Paul in 1855, as a bookkeeper
for the J.C. Burbank Company.  He operated stages between St. Paul and La
Crosse, which were afterwards taken over by Blakely and Carpenter, in different
parts of Minnesota.
He was also interested in the stage coach from Bismark to Deadwood, South
Dakota, and this line was later organized in 1877 as the Northwestern Stage and
Transportation company.
During the Rebellion (Civil War) he was commisioned by President Lincoln
as a colonel of the Guards.
In the early days Col. Carpenter had much to do with the affairs at Deadwood,
and at the time of his death left huge holdings in ranch and mining properties
there to his son, Matthew Blanchard Carpenter.
He did a great deal in the advancement of mining intersts in the Black Hills of
SD.
Outside of his many interests in the field of business he was able to divert
himself widely.  He was a Mason, and a Knight Templar, and was a charter member
of the Minnesota Club.  He was very fond of hunting, fishing, riding and
driving.  He was a gentleman of the old school, very hospitable and having a
keen sence of wit and humor, all serving to make a well rounded life.
His memory will endure as belonging to the Northwest's lists of honored
pioneers.


Cynthia Elizabeth West

BOOK:- GENEALOGY: Carpenter and Allied Families by Miss Annie L. Carpenter,
The American Historical Society, Inc., NY, published in 1936. Page 33
See the WEST Family supplement in this book.


17575. Annie Isabella Carpenter

Number xxx in the Carpenter Memorial on page 499.

BOOK:- GENEALOGY: Carpenter and Allied Families by Miss Annie L. Carpenter,
The American Historical Society, Inc., NY, published in 1936. Page 33


17576. Matthew Blanchard Carpenter

Not in the Carpenter Memorial on page 506.

BOOK:- GENEALOGY: Carpenter and Allied Families by Miss Annie L. Carpenter,
The American Historical Society, Inc., NY, published in 1936. Page 33
After receiving a sound academic education in the schools of St. Paul, he went
at once into business activity, and devoted his intire time to independent
operations.  For several years he engaged as a rancher, then as a mine operator
in SD, extending the properties left him by his father, until they
were very large.
In 1914 he retired, but did not cease to keep in the works of citizenship for
which he had been everywhere well known, in centers which he touched.  It is
said that the Carpenter family accounted for as much, if not for the most, of
the Black Hills mining developemnt in the early days, as was accomplished
throughout the turn of the century.
He carried on the good name of his father, and in all ways followed in his
steps.  He belonged to the same fraternal organizations (a Mason of Knight
Templar degree), loved the same sports, and worked hard on the same enterprises
that his father had begun before him.  Both he and his father will be
remembered for their pioneer work.


9924. George Washington Irving Carpenter

Not in the Carpenter Memorial.
This family and descendancy data submitted by Richard R. Sherwin of
Tallahassee, FL in a letter dated 10 Jan 2000.  (E-Mail: risher1@aol.com)
******
Correct lineage for George Washington Irving Carpenter per JRC 1/2000:
1. GEORGE WASHINGTON IRVING 28 CARPENTER (CEPHAS Jr. 27, CEPHAS 26,
JAMES 25, EBENEZER 24, BENJAMIN 23, WILLIAM 4th (b. 1631) 22,
WILLIAM (Captain William Carpenter of Rehoboth b. 23 May 1605) 21,
WILLIAM (William of Wherwell b. 1576) 20,
(This is where the correction goes!)
Robert (Robert of Marden b. 1545) 19, William (William of Marden b. 1520) 18,
Robert (b. 1495) 17, Richard (Rev. Richard Carpenter b. 1465/70) 16,
(AND this is where it gets back on track!) WILLIAM (William of Homme b. 1440)
15, JOHN 14, JOHN 13, RICHARD 12, JOHN/JEAN 11 LE CARPENTIER, MAURICE 10
CARPENTiER, JEAN 19 LE CARPENTIER,
Siger 8, ELGAN 7 CARPENTER, AILRIC 6, Ralph 5, Godwin 4,
(Alternate Ancestry possibly through the brother of Siger with a new father,
who was once thought once to be an uncle!)
Godefroy d'Avesnes Carpentier 8, Jean Carpentier 7, Reynaud or Richard
Carpentier 6, Roger Carpentier (Sire De Gouy) 5, then Godwin 4,
New data adds the following to this ancestry ...
William 3 (b. 1067 - also called William the carpenter - confusion in the
records!),
William "the carpenter" De Melun (b. 1042) (This William was loyal to the
French Crown and his son William was an enemy to the French Crown!),
Urison De Melun (b. 995),
Herve De Melun (b. 950/955),
Josselin De Melun (b. 920).
******

Descendants of George Washington Irving Carpenter per Richard Sherwin:
Generation No. 1   (PLEASE NOTE ERROR IN LINEAGE!!!!)
1. GEORGE WASHINGTON IRVING 28 CARPENTER (CEpHAS 27, CEPHAs 26, JAmEs 25,
EBENEZER 24, BENJAMIN 23,  WILLIAM 22, WiLLIAM 21, WILLIAM 20, WilLIAM 19,
WILLIAM 18, JOHN 17, JAMES 16 I
WILLIAM 15, JOHN 14, JOHN 13, RICHARD 12, JOHn / JEAN 11 LE CARPENTiER,
MAuRicE 10 CARPENTiER, JEAN 19 LE CARPENTIER, Siger 8, ELGAN 7, CARPENTER,
AILRics, Ralph 5, Godwin 4, William "THE CARPENTER" 3 DE Melun, William 2,
Herve 1) was born 15 September
1831 in Cobourg, Ontario, Canada, and died February 1875 in Waverley,
Lancaster, NE. He married ELIZA
MARIA HOUGHTON 20 August 1862 in Barre, Washington, VT', daughter Of JONATHAN
HOUGHTON and JULIA BILL.
Children of GEORGE CARPENTER and ELIZA HOUGHTON are:
i. CHARLES29 CARPENTER, b. 1863-1 d. 1864.
ii. GEORGE HOUGHTON CARPENTER, b. 28 July 1864, IL; d. Aft. 1906.
iii. JULIA MARIA CARPENTER, b. 31 August 1870, Waverley, Lancaster, NE; d. 16
October 1915.
2. iv.  FLORENCE CARPENTER, b. 31 January 1874, Waverley, Lancaster, NE;
d. 10 May 1951, Wells River, Orange, VT.
Generation No. 2
2. FLORENCE CARPENTER was born 31 January 1874 in
Waverley, Lancaster, NE, and died 10 May 1951 in Wells River, Orange, VT 2. She
married ROSWELL HERBERT SHERWIN 2 June 1906 in Bradford, Orange, VT 3, son of
FERDINAND SHERWIN and ADELA BILL.
Child of FLORENCE CARPENTER and ROSWELL SHERWIN is:
3. i. HERBERT FERDINAND CARPENTER30 SHERWIN, b. 3 April 1907, Wells River,
Orange, VT; d. 18 December 1968, Wells River, Orange, VT.
Generation No. 3
3. HERBERT FERDINAND Carpenter
was born 3 April 1907 in Wells River, Orange, VT 4, and died 18
December 1968 in Wells River, Orange, VT. He married EMMA BERNICE GIBSON 4 July
1935 in Newbury, Orange, VT 5, daughter Of JOHN GIBSON and ALICE BADGER.
Children of HERBERT SHERWIN and EMMA GIBSON are:
i. GIBSON31 SHERWIN, b. 21 May 1936, Woodsville, Grafton, NH; d. 3 March 1938,
Newbury, Orange, VT.
ii. ROSWELL SHERWIN, b. 28 August 1937, Woodsville, Grafton, NH 6; M. MARION
CHRISTINE THOMPSON, 24 January 1965, Waverly, Polk, FL 7.
iii. ANN SHERWIN, b. 30 May 1939, Woodsville, Grafton, NH; m. JOHN Ross
THOMPSON, 21 June 1964, Wells River, Orange, VT.
Endnotes:
1. Vital Records, Town of Barre, VT, Vol. 3, page 7, George W. 1. Carpenter,
age 30, resident of Alton I IL, son of Cephas and Elvira Carpenter, married
Eliza M. Houghton, daughter of Jonathan and Julia E. Houghton, Aug 20, 1862
in Barre.
2. Vital Records, Town of Newbury, VT, Page 182, (Photostat held by
Richard Sherwin).
3. Vital Records, Town of Newbury, VT Vol. 1, page 803,
License filed in Newbury VT but they were married at home of Rose and Henry
McDuffee in Bradford VT (photostat held by Richard Sherwin).
4. Vital Records, Town of Newbury, VT, Bom at parents' home,
now 18 Main St., Wells River VT (photostat held by Richard Sherwin).
5. Vital Records, Town of Newbury, VT,
Photostat of marriage certificate held by Richard Sherwin.
6. Vital Records, Town of Haverhill, NH, Certified copy held by Richard Sherwin.
7. FL Vital Records, Certified copy held by Richard Sherwin.


17577. Charles Carpenter

Born probably in VT and probably died in IL.


9927. Loran Carpenter

CENSUS:  1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Loran CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   45   NY   Machinest   VT   NY
Mary CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   37   MA   Keeping House   MA   MA
Charles CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   13   IA   At School   NY   MA
Carrie CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   13   IA   At School   NY   MA
Arthur J. CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   8   IA   At School   NY   MA
Geo. G. CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   2   IA      NY   MA
Bradford CARPENTER   Father      Male   W   73   VT      RI   RI
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Brush Creek, Fayette, Iowa
 Family History Library Film   1254339
 NA Film Number   T9-0339
 Page Number   83A


9928. Homer Carpenter

CENSUS:  1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Homer CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   27   NY   Blacksmith   VT   NY
Emma CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   27   IA   Keeping House   NY   NY
Nellie CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   1   IA      NY   IA
Geo. AINSWORTH   Other   S   Male   W   21   IL   Lumber Dealer   NY   PA
W.H. DUNN   Other   S   Male   W   22   IL      VT   IN
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Brush Creek, Fayette, Iowa
 Family History Library Film   1254339
 NA Film Number   T9-0339
 Page Number   83A