Abraham Thomas Haskell and his two wives had no children.
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Patent 737620 - Abram T. Haskell - Machine for molding and pressing into shape moldable material
32443. Ferdinand Wordell Haskell
Ferdinand Haskell was a stonecutter.
1940_CENSUS: Year: 1940; Census Place: Freetown, Bristol, Massachusetts; Roll: T627_1572; Page: 7A; Enumeration District: 3-63
The History of Acushnet Massachusetts states that he was Road Commissioner for the years 1890, 1893, and 1896. In 1898 he was the only Commissioner and in 1900- 1903 he was called Superintendent of Roads. In 1905 he saw the first installation of the macadam road (The method simplified what had been considered state of the art at that point. Single-sized aggregate layers of small stones, with a coating of binder as a cementing agent, are mixed in an open-structured roadway) in that town. He was also on the Committee to repair the local cemetery in 1892.
Old Colony Memorial Newspaper
November 30, 1917Frank M. Holmes, a native Plymouthean and veteran of the Civil War, died last week Thursday in the Jordan Hospital after an illness which had been sapping his strength for a long period.
He was a son of Allen and Hannah (Churchill) Holmes, and was 71 years of age.
He was a member of E Co., 6th Massachusetts Infantry, enlisting in July 1864, and saw service at
Arlington Heights, Va. After the war he returned to this town and established himself in an ice cream and oyster business in Masonic building, corner of Main and Middle streets, and later enlarged to a full grown restaurant, carrying it on successfully for a long term of years, and eventually disposing of it to a Wareham party. He was a member of Collingwood Post 76, G. A. R., and held various offices in it from Commander down the list, proving efficient in whatever capacity he was placed. He was also a member of A. M. Harrison Council, No. 16, O. U. A. M.He was twice married, first to Miss Elizabeth Haskell, and second to Mary Stevens. He leaves two
children, Frank J. Holmes of New York, and Mrs. Loomis R. Grant of Plymouth, besides a sister Mrs. Susan Mason of Boston.
Archibald G. Haskell was a carpenter.
32461. Charles Curtis Ellis Haskell
Patent 866276 - Charles C. Haskell - Trousers guard
Patent 871503 - Charles C. Haskell - Pipe
Find-a-Grave
Rhoda Moore Haskell, 85, formerly of Leverett, died Wednesday in Worcester after a long illness. She was born in Leverett Sept. 3, 1889, the sixth child in a family of 10, the daughter of Charles C. and Ida (Marvel) Moore.
She graduated from Amherst High School in 1907, attended Smith College [and graduated in 1911], taught school in New Salem, South Williamstown and Cedarville, and then married Charles L. Haskell on Aug. 18, 1915. She was employed at Worcester State Mutual Insurance Company for 34 years, retiring in 1954.
Survivors besides her husband are four sisters, Mrs. Mildred L. Rice of Leverett, Mrs. Raymond H. Field, Oakham, Mrs. Hazel G. Hobart and Mrs. Ida S. Gustin, both of North Amherst; and by several nephews and nieces.
Name: Curtis R Haskell
Death Age: 70
Birth Date: 27 Jun 1895
Service Start Date: 25 Jul 1917
Service End Date: 28 Apr 1919
Death Date: 17 May 1966
Interment Date: 20 May 1966
Cemetery Address: 1300 Sneath Lane San Bruno, CA 94066
Cemetery: Golden Gate National Cemetery
Interment Place: California
Plot: SECTION P SITE 1575
Notes: PFC US ARMY WORLD WAR I