Marriage Place Wallasey, St Joseph's Catholic Church, Seacombe, Cheshire, England.
Worked as a steward on the White Star Line from at least 1912 until he came to the U.S
on Dec 11, 1922, from Liverpool, England, on the Celtic and arrived at Ellis Island.
The 1922 UK Census (taken in the summer of 1921) shows him living at 69 Northbrook Road, Wallasey, a small enclave across the River Mersey from Liverpool. Like much of England after WWI, he was out of work, but listed his occupation as Ship Steward for the White Star Line.
He was a valet to a wealthy gentleman he met at sea as a steward and who subsequently recruited him to work in America. He lived at 15 Lexington Ave. in Manhattan until he moved to Rochelle Park, NJ. He had four sons: Thomas, Patrick, Edward and Peter.
Marriage Place Wallasey, St Joseph's Catholic Church, Seacombe, Cheshire, England.
Worked as a steward on the White Star Line from at least 1912 until he came to the U.S
on Dec 11, 1922, from Liverpool, England, on the Celtic and arrived at Ellis Island.
The 1922 UK Census (taken in the summer of 1921) shows him living at 69 Northbrook Road, Wallasey, a small enclave across the River Mersey from Liverpool. Like much of England after WWI, he was out of work, but listed his occupation as Ship Steward for the White Star Line.
He was a valet to a wealthy gentleman he met at sea as a steward and who subsequently recruited him to work in America. He lived at 15 Lexington Ave. in Manhattan until he moved to Rochelle Park, NJ. He had four sons: Thomas, Patrick, Edward and Peter.
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