Margaret I TOLL

Characteristics

Type Value Date Place Sources
name Margaret I TOLL

Events

Type Date Place Sources
death about January 1965
Oak Creek Wisconsin Find persons in this place
residence
residence between 1949 and 1955
burial
Arlington Park Cemetery Find persons in this place
birth about October 1912
Brandon, Metomen, Fond du Lac Co,Wisconsin, USA Find persons in this place
census 1930
Metomen, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, USA Find persons in this place
census 1920
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, USA Find persons in this place
marriage 27. September 1941
Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA Find persons in this place

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Marriage ??spouse_en_US??Children
27. September 1941
Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Jack Frederick HUBERT

Sources

1 Toll Web Site, Margaret I Toll (Hubert)
Author: Margaret Toll
  Added via a Smart Match <p>MyHeritage family tree</p><p>Family site: Toll Web Site</p>Family tree: 531655621-1
2 U.S. City Directories, https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10705-381520557-S/jack-hubert-in-us-city-directories
Publication: MyHeritage
  Jack HubertResidence: Between 1932 and 1955 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USAAddress: 224 E MontanaSee who else lived at this addressResidence status: Rents, HomeownerSpouse (implied): Margaret&lt;span class=&quot;highlight-text&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;Marriage (implied): Between 1932 and 1949Occupation: ElectrotyperWorkplace: Gettier Electrotype CoRecords: <p>The consolidated records in this collection often tell a wider story about a person: They allow a researcher to learn when a person married or divorced, and in some cases deduce when the head of the household or their spouse died. They also help track changes in workplace or occupation and reveal when a person moved from one location to another.</p><p>City directories, like census records, contain information that helps genealogists establish residences, occupations, and relationships between individuals. The added benefit of city directories isthat they were published annually in many cities and towns throughout the United States.</p><p>MyHeritage corrected errors in the original Optical Character Recognition (OCR) scans of the directory pages, and then employed several advanced technologies, including Record Extraction, Name Entity Recognition, and Conditional Random Fields to parse the data, and correct errors in the original OCR output of the directory pages. Training a machine learning model how to parse raw free-text records into names, occupations, and addresses enabled the production of a structured, searchable index of valuable historical information. Optical Character Recognition may introduce mistakes in some records, and the use of machine learning to parse these records may create mistakes as well. Therefore, as with any genealogical record, users are encouraged to consult the original images and fix any mistakes they may find when extracting information into their family trees.</p><p>The records in this collection date back to the 1800s and are an excellent resource for creating a more informed picture of family life during the intervening years between censuses. Of particularnote is the strength of city directories in filling in the genealogical gap caused by the destruction of almost all of the 1890 U.S. Federal Census schedules. The 20-year period between the 1880 Census and the 1900 Census has long been a challenge in family history research, and city directories on MyHeritage from this period serve as an important census substitute.</p><p>City directories were first published in the U.S. in 1785, with directories from Philadelphia, New York City, Boston, and Baltimore being published before the end of the 18th century. The popularity of these directories increased tremendously in the 19th century and reached their zenith during the latter part of the 20th century.</p><p>Publishers of these directories employed local residents to canvas these cities and towns regularly to collect and update the data they included in their publications. The information collected varies somewhat by year and publisher as practices evolved. For example, by the start of the 20th century, it was common to find the names of deceased spouses listed. Some publishers even collected and published the names of recently deceased residents with their age at death and full death date. City directories were most commonly published under the name of a primary city but often contain the sameinformation for nearby smaller cities and towns.</p><p>This collection will be updated soon to include pre-1860 directories as well as a large and unique set of directories published after 1960.</p>

Unique identifier(s)

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files

Title Wilhelm, Petereit Family Tree
Description

Wilhelm Family Name is from Marzhausen, Neu-Eichenberg, Werra- Meissner-Kreis, Hessen, Deutschland and the most recent births for my 3rd grandparents in Linden, Hannover, Germany Petereit Family name is from Prussia and ending with my great grandfather in Tauroggen, Lithuania Krompholz Family name if from Salzburg, Österreich and then moved to Lithuania. Wenger, Pfieffenberger, Amaisserin, Neufang Family names are from Bad Hofgastein, Salzburg, Austria and Undberg, Salzburg, Austria and also Dorff, Salzburg, Austria

Id 67044
Upload date 2024-12-06 00:31:09.0
Submitter user's avatar Susan Knight Wilhelm visit the user's profile page
email susanwilhelm113@hotmail.com
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