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Our Family Genealogy Pages

Lucy KELLOGG
 1811 - 1865

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Generation: 1
  1. Lucy KELLOGG b. 2 May 1811, Galway, Saratoga, NY; d. 15 Oct 1865, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.

    Notes:
    LUCY,8 dau. of Ezra7, b. 2 May, 1811; m. (1) 2 May, 1838, Robert Edwin Gillett, b. 1809.

    R.E. Gillett d. Sept., 1861; was editor and publisher of the Oberlin (OH.), Evangelist; later engaged in the real estate business and founded and named the village of Tomah, WI; she m. (2) William Austin Lathrop; res. in Cleveland, OH.


    Children by first husband.
    Ruth Kellogg Gillette,9 b. 24 Feb., 1839; is a teacher in Green Bay, Wis.
    Theodore Weld Gillette,9 b. 23 Oct., 1840; m. 2 May, 1864, Laetitia
    Sophronia Powers, of Sparta, WI, dau. of S. D. Powers, b. in Ferrisburg,
    VT; was a sheep raiser in San Diego, Tex.
    Julia King Gillette,9 b. 22 Nov., 1842; m. 24 Feb., 1875, Dr. Anson
    James Adams, of Flint, MI, b. Nov., 1842, son of Oliver R.
    Adams, b. in Homer, NY, 12 July, 1815, and Harriet James, b.
    29 July, 1818; he was graduated from Williams College, and from
    the Homeopathic College of Cleveland, OH.
    Frederick Kellogg Gillette,9 b. 17 Sept., 1844; is a telegraph operator;
    res. in Garrettsville, OH.

    Lucy m. [Group Sheet]

    Lucy m. Robert Edwin GILLETT 2 May 1838, OH. Robert (son of Griswold GILLETT and Clarissa TRACY) b. 23 Jun 1809, Mesopotamia, OH; d. 28 Sep 1861, Tomah, Monroe, Wi; bur. 1861, Oak Grove Cemetary, Tomah, Monroe, WI. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 2. Ruth Kellogg GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 24 Feb 1839, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. Aft 1921.
    2. 3. Theodore Weld GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 23 Oct 1840, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. 10 Apr 1921, Bellingham, Whatcom, WA; bur. 21 Apr 1921, Bayview Cemetery, Bellingham, Whatcom, WA.
    3. 4. Julia King GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 20 Oct 1842, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. Aft 1921.
    4. 5. Fredrick Kellogg GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 17 Sep 1844, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. Aft 1921.


Generation: 2
  1. Ruth Kellogg GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (1.Lucy1) b. 24 Feb 1839, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. Aft 1921.
    Ruth m. Eleazer Holmes ELLIS 25 Apr 1881, Detroit, MI. Eleazer b. 26 Aug 1826, Preble, Brown Cty, WI; d. 1906, Green Bay, Brown, WI; bur. Woodlawn Cemetery, Green Bay, WI. [Group Sheet]

  2. Theodore Weld GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (1.Lucy1) b. 23 Oct 1840, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. 10 Apr 1921, Bellingham, Whatcom, WA; bur. 21 Apr 1921, Bayview Cemetery, Bellingham, Whatcom, WA.

    Notes:
    Search Results

    Database: Texas Census, 1820-90
    Combined Matches: 1


    Database: Civil War Service Records
    Combined Matches: 1


    Surname Given Name Middle Initial Company Unit Rank - Induction Rank - Discharge Notes Allegiance
    Gillette Theodore W. I 4 Wisconsin Cavalry. Private Com. Union


    Year Surname Given Name (s) County State Page Township or Other Info Record Type Database ID#
    1880 GILLETTE THEODORE Duval County TX 229 San Diego Fed Pop Schedule TX 1880 Federal Census Index TX28436101

    In the early years of statehood, Texas had an awful time protecting its citizens from the denizens of death roaming the countryside. If the Indians and Mexican weren’t dealing destruction on a wide scale, Anglo outlaws and bandits were. A newcomer to the western fringe could practically count on being attacked, and it took someone with a special sort of courage to propose pioneering anywhere outside the most heavily populated settlements. This was an area that was real frontier in the 1870's.


    GILLETTE, Theodore W. (d. 1921)

    Head of Fairhaven Water Company and Pioneer Good Roads Advocate Called at Age of 80.
    Theodore W. Gillette, president of the Fairhaven City Water & Power company, and one of the most public-spirited men Bellingham has ever had, died at his apartments in the Hotel Leopold at 5:15 last night at the age of 80 years, five months and twenty-one days. Mr. Gillette's death comes as a shock to his numerous friends, many of whom did not know that he was seriously ill and those closest to him understanding that he was improving, as he apparently was. The immediate cause of death was a blood clot on the brain. He had been feeling unwell since he made a strenuous automobile drive to Seattle and back, and this, says his brother, Fred K. Gillette, was the beginning of his final illness, which kept him in bed about ten days. Friends of Mr. Gillette agree that he was one of the finest characters this city has ever known and that he was one of its greatest promoters. From the beginning of his residence here, extending over a period of more than thirty years, he was identified with the city's growth. The same was true of all other places where he lived, it being his nature to be among the leaders of a community and to be one of its hardest workers.
    Came Here is 1889.

    Mr. Gillette came to Bellingham bay in 1889, after a busy life in Texas, Idaho and other places and after long service in the Civil war. He spent a very adventurous life, it being recalled by his brother that about thirty of his friends were killed by Indians, bandits, etc., in Southeastern Texas, where he spent several years as a sheep farmer.

    Mr. Gillette was born in Oberlin, O., October 20, 1840. In June, 1861, he became a volunteer in the union army, enlisting as a private in Company M, Fourth Wisconsin Mounted Infantry, and serving in that until his honorable discharge September 18, 1866. This regiment probably saw longer service than any other volunteer regiment in the Civil war. Mr. Gillette's willingness and eagerness to serve soon won him promotion. For some time he was regimental quartermaster, then brigade quartermaster and lastly lieutenant. In the midst of the war he went back home to be married and immediately thereafter returned to his regiment. His wife, Mrs. Letitia S. Gillette, died October 11, 1920.

    Good Roads Enthusiast.
    After his discharge from the army, Mr. Gillette went back home for a time. In 1872 he removed to Southeastern Texas and from there after six years of sheep farming and many adventures to Salt Lake City, where he lived a year or two, and thence to the Wood mining country in Idaho. In Ketchum he established a hardware store and became active in local affairs was elected to the board of county commissioners and held that office for two terms. Another of his activities was his origination of the water system of Ketchum, Idaho. He took a great interest in good roads and this interest was manifested later in Whatcom county and in Southern California, where for many years he spent his winters, residing in South Pasadena. Coming to Bellingham bay in 1889, he soon afterward organized the Fairhaven City Water & Power company, which owns the South Side water system and was active in the organization and affairs of the Fairhaven Electric Light company. He was president of both concerns. About fifteen years ago he sold the electric light company's property to Stone & Webster interests.
    Served on County Board.

    About 1892 Mr. Gillette was elected a member of the board of Whatcom county commissioners and two years later was re-elected. In politics he was a republican all his life, and he was enthusiastic in service to his party as he was in everything else he interested himself in. Loyalty and service, in fact, were two of his strongest characteristics, and self-sacrifice and devotion to family and friends were others.
    Mr. Gillette was a member of Fairhaven Lodge, No. 73, F. & A. M.; C. R. Apperson post No. 79, of the G. A. R.; and the Loyal Legion, an organization of officers of the Civil war, his membership in this society being held in Tacoma. He was also a member of the Kulshan club and of the Chamber of Commerce.

    The survivors are two sons, Halbert P. Gillette, of Chicago, one of the country's best known civil engineers, and Walter A. Gillette, of South Pasadena, Calif.; one brother, Fred K. Gillette, Bellingham, and two sisters, Mrs. E. H. Ellis and Mrs. Julia K. Adams, of Sacramento. Funeral services will be held at an hour to be announced by Harry O. Bingham. One son, Halbert, will be here Thursday and the other is expected.

    Expression of Regret by J. J. Donovan
    "T. W. Gillette, facing death with a smile, light of heart and brave in spirit, has passed on to join his loved ones on the other side. A gallant gentleman is gone after a long life of usefulness and honor. Truth, honor, justice were his guiding stars and he was true to them in times and places where it required the highest type of moral and physical courage. He feared neither man nor devil. He trusted and believed in god and kept His law. He has gone to his reward.
    "As a youth under twenty-one he enlisted in the Wisconsin cavalry and he served with distinction through the Civil war, leaving the service with the brevet rank of major. He fought in many hand-to-had conflicts with Confederate cavalry and was severely hurt when his horse went down in one of these battles, but he refused to retire and was on duty until the end.
    "After the war he undertook with a friend ranching in Texas. His friend was killed by Mexican raiders, his stock stolen and for the sake of his young wife and children he retired from the Southern frontier and came West.
    "As an assayer, merchant and county commissioner he had an honorable part in the development of the Wood River district of Idaho. His reminiscences of life in the mines, of the mingling of the adventurous of all ranks, were most delightful and unvalled (sic) Bret Harte in character and color.
    "Coming to Bellingham bay in 1889 with his friends, Major and Mrs. Darling, Governor and Mrs. George A. Black and others, Mr. Gillette and his family immediately became factors in the business and social life of the young city. His home and business interests have been here ever since excepting as Mrs. Gillette's failing health in recent years required her to spend her winters in Pasadena.
    "Mr. Gillette's company put in the water and electric light system for Fairhaven and he was active manager of the water system in which he took keen interest and pride until the end. As county commissioner, he gave this county loyal and valuable services during the panic times of '93. He had the vision to see the future of this county and may truly be called the father of our county road system, which R. L. Kline and others carried on and which J. B. McMillan and associates have brought near completion. Good roads, good water, good citizenship were articles of faith with him.
    "Though over eighty years old his form was erect, his eye clear and his faculties unimpaired. His wife's death last October ended many years of tireless devotion. It was a hard blow. He tried bravely to keep the old smile and undying optimism but the wound was there. Yesterday at 5 o'clock the end came quickly and painlessly. A well-spent life was ended. The brother and two sons with their families have the sympathy of the entire community."

    (From The Bellingham Herald, April 11, 1921)

    Theodore m. Letitia Sofronia POWERS 2 May 1864, Sparta, WI. Letitia b. 4 May 1843, Henrietta, Lorain, OH; d. 11 Oct 1920, Bellingham, Whatcom, WA; bur. 13 Oct 1920, Bayview Cemetery, Bellingham, Whatcom, WA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 6. Freddy K GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 7. Theodore Stanley GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 6 Jan 1868, Waverly, IA; d. 6 Jan 1868, Waverly, IA.
    3. 8. Halbert Powers GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 5 Aug 1869, Waverly, Bremer Co., IA; d. 18 Jun 1958, San Marino, Los Angeles Cty, CA.
    4. 9. Harry Kellogg GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 14 Mar 1871, Waverly, IA; d. 29 Jul 1871, Waverly, IA.
    5. 10. Walter Arthur GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 27 Dec 1875, Waverly, IA; d. 17 Aug 1957, Buddy, ID.

  3. Julia King GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (1.Lucy1) b. 20 Oct 1842, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. Aft 1921.

    Notes:
    1920 Fed Census CA, Sacramento, Sacramento has Julia (age77) as head of family and her daughter Lucy K. (age36) living with her as well as her sister Ruth K.(age81). Assume both Julia and Ruth are widows.

    Julia m. Anson J. ADAMS 24 Feb 1875, Cuyahoga, OH. Anson b. 1842, Pontiac, Oakland, MI; d. Aft 1892. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 11. Lucy K. ADAMS  Descendancy chart to this point b. Abt 1884, MI.

  4. Fredrick Kellogg GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (1.Lucy1) b. 17 Sep 1844, Oberlin, Lorain, OH; d. Aft 1921.

    Notes:
    1910 census WA, Whatcom, Bellingham, 6th ward

    Fredrick m. Louisa AVERY Louisa b. 5 Mar 1839, Bethany, PA. [Group Sheet]


Generation: 3
  1. Freddy K GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1)
  2. Theodore Stanley GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 6 Jan 1868, Waverly, IA; d. 6 Jan 1868, Waverly, IA.
  3. Halbert Powers GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 5 Aug 1869, Waverly, Bremer Co., IA; d. 18 Jun 1958, San Marino, Los Angeles Cty, CA.

    Notes:
    Halbert Powers Gillette and Julia Washburn Scranton were divorced.



    WHO WAS WHO IN AMERICA VOL III 1951-1960

    GILLETTE, Halbert Powers, Editor, engineer
    b Waverly, IA Aug 5, 1860 Theodore Weld and Laetitia S. (Powers)

    Graduated Hammond Hall Academy, Salt Lake City, 1886; E.M. School of Mines, Columbia University 1892. Assistant NY state engineer 1896-1898; contractor 1898-1902; Associate editor, 1903-1905 Engineering News; President Gillette Publishing company; Chief engineer of the Washington Railroad Commission 1906-1907.

    Member American Society of Consulting Engineers.

    Author:
    Economics of Road Construction, 1901
    Earthwork and Its Cost, 1903
    Handbook of Rock Excavation - Methods and Cost, 1904
    Handbook of Cost Data, 1905
    Concrete Construction - Methods and Cost (w/Charles S. Hill), 1908
    Cost Keeping and Management Engineering (w/Richard T. Dana), 1909
    Handbook of Clearing and Grubbing, 1917
    Handbook of Electrical and Mechanical Cost Data (w/Richard T. Dana), 1918
    Handbook of Construction Cost, 1922
    Road and Street Construction (w/J.C. Black), 1940
    ...also many articles on weather, climate and geological cycles, 1928-1948.

    Editor Roads and Streets

    Home: 1125 Oak Grove Avenue
    San Marino, CA

    d June 18, 1958.


    Other books written by HP:
    Gillette and Dana - Handbook of Construction Plant
    Gillette and Thomas - Handbook of Road Construction; Methods and Cost



    THEOSOPHY, Vol. 32, No. 2, December, 1943
    (Pages 77-80; Size: 13K)
    (Number 97 of a 103-part series)
    SCIENCE AND THE SECRET DOCTRINE

    ELECTRONIC "CYCLES"

    FOR many years Mr. Halbert P. Gillette, of the Gillette Publishing Co., specializing in engineering books and periodicals, has made an intensive study of weather cycles. In the beginning his theories made such bizarre reading from the point of view of scientists, that little attention seems to have been paid to them. Essentially, they were based on theories of interflow of electrons between the earth, the sun, and the other planets. The real nature of electrons, and their ubiquity, now being better recognized, his ideas fall more into line with the thought of the day.(1)

    Mr. Gillette has sought to tie up his theories to the clay varves, or seasonal layers, in lake deposits. Among the most important of the cycles discovered, is one of approximately 605 years, subdivided into three equal periods of less importance. This is equal to 51 orbital periods of Jupiter. He believes that it represents the orbital period of Pickering's undiscovered "Planet P." Pickering's estimate of this orbital period was 656 years.

    Gillette claims that whenever a planet is in solar longitude either of 108 or 288 degrees, it causes a peak of a rainfall cycle, whether evidenced by rainfall records, tree rings, or varves. Such peaks coincide with sunspot maxima. In addition to the major cycle produced by each planet, it causes harmonic sub-cycles of 1/3, 1/9, 1/27 of the length of the major one, etc. The great maxima and minima of rainfall, of course, come when peaks and depressions of cycles and subcycles coincide. According to Gillette we are progressing toward a period of great drought whose apex will be 1984. Volcanic upheavals and compass variations appear to have cycles closely coinciding with the major rain cycles, he says. This coincidence of cycles is of vast importance in the occult side of nature; as is well known to Theosophists, the years 1897-98 signalized a coincidence of cycles, the longest of which was about 5,000 years, of such intensity that the entire world order was upset by it.

    Gillette goes rather far into an attempted correlation between human affairs and rain cycles, tracing the upheavals around the fall of Rome to an 1815-year rainfall cycle whose minimum fell in 774 A.D. From this he reasons that we are not likely to have a "Dark Age" of that nature again until about 2590. Certainly five or six hundred years more will see the extinction of most of the nations of the world as it is today. It is interesting to note that 14 of the 1815-year cycles would make 25,410 years, or within about 400 years of the great sidereal period of 25,868 years which signalizes world catastrophes and the ending of sub-race cycles. Gillette notes the probability of a major climatic cycle of that length. Another long cycle which he points out as recorded in the stones is of about 4,000,000 years; 4,320,000 is the Maha Yuga or summation of the "Four Ages," in Theosophy!

    One of the most important correlations discovered by Gillette is evidence of a circulation of electrons between the sun and the planets, with the poles of the earth acting as receiving centers. Every 24 hours, at the time when the north magnetic pole of the earth is directed most toward the sun, the earth's surface becomes most charged with electrons.(2) An additional evidence is the diurnal tide in the air, too great to be accounted for by gravitation, but which Gillette ascribes to the electronic magnetization of the oxygen in the air. This interflow constitutes the mechanism of the influence of the sun and planets upon the weather of the earth.

    Gillette remarks:

    It may seem incredible that a climatic cycle of great amplitude could be caused by a planet that is at a vast distance from the sun and earth. But if the cause is basically electronic, great distance is not necessarily a bar to great effects. We are so accustomed to regard astronomical effects as being mainly of gravitational origin that we are prone to think that increased distance from the sun necessarily causes reduced effects. But picture a stream of spiralling electrons moving from the sun toward a planet that attracts the electrons because it has an opposite magnetic field, and ask yourself why those electrons should become fewer the farther they travel.... It is possible that an electron-vortex between sun and planet may gain rather than lose ... because galactic electrons may be drawn into the vortex by magnetic attraction.

    Now far be it from us to encourage the practice of astrology; but we have here a rebuttal to one of the stock arguments against astrology -- that planetary bodies cannot affect one another strongly because of distance. Moreover, if we consider the vital effect of weather upon human affairs, and the direct biological and psychic effects of changing electric and magnetic conditions of the earth upon human beings, we have here a basis for a biological astrology of considerable possibilities. Or, let us say, for new sciences of astro-biology and astro-psychology.
    It would not have been Hermes, however, who would have considered these sciences "new." As repeated in The Secret Doctrine, the Book of Hermes says:

    The creation of Life by the Sun is as continuous as his light; nothing arrests or limits it. Around him, like an army of Satellites, are innumerable choirs of genii.... They fulfil the will of the gods (Karma) by means of storms, tempests, transitions of fire and earthquakes; likewise by famines and wars, for the punishment of impiety.... It is the Sun who preserves and nourishes all creatures; and even as the Ideal World which environs the sensible world fills this last with the plenitude and universal variety of forms, so also the Sun, enfolding all in his light, accomplishes everywhere the birth and development of creatures.... All these Genii preside over mundane affairs, they shake and overthrow the constitution of States and of individuals; they imprint their likeness on our Souls, they are present in our nerves, our marrow, our veins, our arteries, and our very brain-substance .... (I, 294.)

    Mr. Gillette borders on another "occult" subject with the following remark:

    An unexpected by-product of this galactic electron theory is an explanation of the sun's radiant energy. If the sun is bombarded by electrons moving in and adjacent to its orbit, it must be heated by their impacts. Let the velocity of the electrons approach that of light, let their number be sufficiently great, and it follows that the sun must become white-hot under their hammering.

    If we hold, as theosophists, that every "electron" (a highly metaphysical entity, by the way) has its own seven principles, then we must recognize that the measurable physical interchange of electrons between planetary bodies carries correlations that are mental, psychic, and spiritual as well.
    These are matters suggestive in view of the theosophical teaching about the sun's nature and function. In her first book, Madame Blavatsky showed that the sun is not incandescent:

    ...the materialists ... will some day find that that which causes the numberless cosmic forces to manifest themselves in eternal correlation is but a divine electricity, or rather galvanism, and that the sun is but one of the myriad magnets disseminated through space -- a reflector -- as General Pleasonton has it. That the sun has no more heat in it than the moon or the space-crowding host of sparkling stars. That there is no gravitation in the Newtonian sense, but only magnetic attraction and repulsion; and that it is by their magnetism that the planets of the solar system have their motions regulated in their respective orbits by the still more powerful magnetism of the sun, not by their weight or gravitation. (Isis Unveiled, I, 270-1.)
    In 1883, she wrote, "The fact is that ordinary science makes at once too much and too little of the Sun, as the store-house of force for the solar system, -- too much in so far as the heat of planets has a great deal to do with another influence quite distinct from the Sun, an influence which will not be thoroughly understood till more is known than at present about the correlations of heat and magnetism, and of the magnetic, meteoric dust, with which inter-planetary space is pervaded." (THEOSOPHY II, 448, fn.)
    In answering questions on the Stanzas in The Secret Doctrine, H.P.B. described the Sun as follows:

    The Sun we see, gives nothing of itself, because it is a reflection; a bundle of electro-magnetic forces, one of the countless milliards of "Knots of Fohat." ... The Sun has but one distinct function; it gives the impulse of life to all that breathes and lives under its light. (Transactions, pp. 116-7.)
    Mr. Gillette brings evidence for another important and somewhat Theosophical tenet, when he says:
    Coming back to the fact that planets cause sun-spots when they are in one of two longitudes 180 degrees apart, I can conceive of but one cause, namely that in those longitudes both planet and sun are in the center of a stream of galactic electrons. Since these longitudes, namely 108 and 288 degrees, are quite near the estimated orbit of the sun, I infer that the orbit has those longitudes. By spectroscopic observation ... astronomers have found that the sun is moving toward the star Vega whose longitude is about 284 degrees. Great exactitude as to direction of the sun's motion is not attainable by the spectroscopic method.
    If Mr. Gillette is even partly right, great physical changes must occur as the Sun moves through space, simply because of these electron streams. What of the many yet undiscovered streams of other energies that must be intersected as the solar system proceeds "into newer spaces of the cosmos"?

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------
    TWO (2) FOOTNOTES LISTED BELOW:
    (1) Roads and Streets, November, 1941.
    (2) Discovered by Mauchly in 1920.


    Dr. Halbert P. Gillette, a noted engineer and astronomer, who has spent many years upon the study of major weather cycles, found many different ones in the study of clay layers and other results of rainfall -- including tree growths. He ascribed these effects to unknown planets, one of them having an orbit of 221,600 years, and so down to one of 316.7 years.(3)

    (3) Engineering and Contracting, November, 1930.

    Halbert m. Julia Washburn SCRANTON 28 Apr 1897, Philadelphia, PA. Julia b. 26 Oct 1869, Litchfield, CT; d. 1963. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 12. Edward Scranton GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 3 Feb 1898, Philadelphia, PA; d. 3 Aug 1988, Lake Forest, Lake, IL.
    2. 13. Louise GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 1899, Rochester, NY; d. 2 Feb 1998, Granite Farms Estates, PA.

    Halbert m. Winifred ESSERY 1918. Winifred b. 31 Mar 1885, San Antonio, Bexar, TX; d. 21 Sep 1973, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA. [Group Sheet]

  4. Harry Kellogg GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 14 Mar 1871, Waverly, IA; d. 29 Jul 1871, Waverly, IA.
  5. Walter Arthur GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 27 Dec 1875, Waverly, IA; d. 17 Aug 1957, Buddy, ID.
    Walter m. Louise Margaret SEELIG 14 Oct 1903, Montclaire, NJ. Louise b. 1882, NY; d. Apr 1944. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 14. Infant GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 15. Ruth Louise (Peg) GILLETTE  Descendancy chart to this point b. 2 Dec 1912, South Pasadena, CA; d. 2 Oct 1965, Ketchum, Blaine Cty, ID.

  6. Lucy K. ADAMS Descendancy chart to this point (4.Julia2, 1.Lucy1) b. Abt 1884, MI.

Generation: 4
  1. Edward Scranton GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (8.Halbert3, 3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 3 Feb 1898, Philadelphia, PA; d. 3 Aug 1988, Lake Forest, Lake, IL.
    Edward m. 14 Jul 1921, Schnectedy, Schnectedy, NY. [Group Sheet]

  2. Louise GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (8.Halbert3, 3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 1899, Rochester, NY; d. 2 Feb 1998, Granite Farms Estates, PA.
    Louise m. 1922, Philadelphia, PA. [Group Sheet]

  3. Infant GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (10.Walter3, 3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1)
  4. Ruth Louise (Peg) GILLETTE Descendancy chart to this point (10.Walter3, 3.Theodore2, 1.Lucy1) b. 2 Dec 1912, South Pasadena, CA; d. 2 Oct 1965, Ketchum, Blaine Cty, ID.
    Ruth m. 18 Oct 1944, Dillon, Byrnd Cty, MT. [Group Sheet]


  
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