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Elbert Nelson Carr

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Elbert Nelson Carr

Birth
Iowa, USA
Death
1933 (aged 53–54)
Burial
Bloomfield, Knox County, Nebraska, USA Add to Map
Plot
Or-6
Memorial ID
View Source
Elbert and Nancy Bumgarner Carr were married in Symore, Iowa in 1898. They then moved to South Dakota where Martha Carr Hughes was born. From South Dakota they moved to the Lindy-Bloomfield area living on the old Fry farm one mile north and west of Lindy where Arthur(Archie). Leslie and Lulu Carr Hilfiker were born. From there they went to Council Bluffs, Iowa, about 1907, where Elbert worked on the railroad. Thomas Edwin (Jack) Carr was born there. Sometime between 1907-1910 they went back to South Dakota again. He did farm work, but because of the drought he took his family back to Nebraska and settled on the old Stone place, south of the Victory Church-School area. They lived there for sometime.
Mary Elizabeth Carr, Cool (Buol Cool's wife), Henry Leon Carr and Glen Carr may have been born there. The older children attended the Victory School, District #69. Martha contacted Typhoid Fever, the cause was thought to be the stagnant water beneath the house. It is believed that the year 1916 they moved to a farm about a mile west of the Tewsville corner.
Elbert and Nancy Bumgarner Carr were married in Symore, Iowa in 1898. They then moved to South Dakota where Martha Carr Hughes was born. From South Dakota they moved to the Lindy-Bloomfield area living on the old Fry farm one mile north and west of Lindy where Arthur(Archie). Leslie and Lulu Carr Hilfiker were born. From there they went to Council Bluffs, Iowa, about 1907, where Elbert worked on the railroad. Thomas Edwin (Jack) Carr was born there. Sometime between 1907-1910 they went back to South Dakota again. He did farm work, but because of the drought he took his family back to Nebraska and settled on the old Stone place, south of the Victory Church-School area. They lived there for sometime.
Mary Elizabeth Carr, Cool (Buol Cool's wife), Henry Leon Carr and Glen Carr may have been born there. The older children attended the Victory School, District #69. Martha contacted Typhoid Fever, the cause was thought to be the stagnant water beneath the house. It is believed that the year 1916 they moved to a farm about a mile west of the Tewsville corner.


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