In 1910 he and his parents and six siblings--all but Margaret and Henry--lived on a farm they were renting in Ward 2 in Monongahela, PA. Clarence worked as a teamster in an axle works, Laken as a blacksmith in a blacksmith shop, Harry as a teamster in a planing mill, and he as a laborer in a machine shop.
In 1930 he and his wife and their four children lived in a house they owned at 701 South Topeka Street in El Dorado, KS. Their home was valued at $1600, and they did not have a radio. He worked as a driller in the oil fields.
In 1940 he and Verna and their eight children lived on a farm they were renting for five dollars a month in Empire Township, McPherson County, KS. He worked as a driller in an oil field, with an income in 1939 of $1248 for 26 weeks of work, and George worked doing soil conservation for the Civilian Conservation Corps, with an income in 1939 of $334 for 52 weeks of work.
In 1910 he and his parents and six siblings--all but Margaret and Henry--lived on a farm they were renting in Ward 2 in Monongahela, PA. Clarence worked as a teamster in an axle works, Laken as a blacksmith in a blacksmith shop, Harry as a teamster in a planing mill, and he as a laborer in a machine shop.
In 1930 he and his wife and their four children lived in a house they owned at 701 South Topeka Street in El Dorado, KS. Their home was valued at $1600, and they did not have a radio. He worked as a driller in the oil fields.
In 1940 he and Verna and their eight children lived on a farm they were renting for five dollars a month in Empire Township, McPherson County, KS. He worked as a driller in an oil field, with an income in 1939 of $1248 for 26 weeks of work, and George worked doing soil conservation for the Civilian Conservation Corps, with an income in 1939 of $334 for 52 weeks of work.
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