In 1900, the Pinaults were living in Omaha, Nebraska. The 1900 US Census lists
F. Pinault, 44, head His parents were both born on Prince Edward Island, Canada
Marie A. Pinault, 22
Philomena E. Pinault, 19
Josephine Pinault, 14
In February, 1912, Anthony Arnold Beckman, 25, married Josephine A. Pinault, 24, in Omaha, Nebraska
In 1920, Josephine and Anthony were living at 2118 South 34th, Omaha, Nebraska. Josephine was caring for their two small children and making sure all was right for their roomers. Anthony was a clerk at the post office.
The 1920 US Census lists:
Anthony Beckman, 35, head, b. NE, post office clerk
Josephine Beckman,33, wife, b. ND
Richard Beckman, 7, son, b. NE
Mary Beth Beckman, 1 yr 4 mos, dau., b. NE
C.D. Yerion, 48, roomer,b. IL, bookkeeper at an office
Nellie C. Yerion, 40, roomer,b. 40, forelady for printing co.
In 1940, the Beckmans were living at the same house. They no longer took in roomers. The 1940 Census showed the level of education attained by each resident. Josephine herself only went through 8th grade, but Anthony was a 4-year college graduate, son Richard had 6 years of college (so some graduate school), and daughter Mary Beth had 2 years of college.
The 1940 US Census lists:
Anthony, 55, head, mailman for US Post Office
Josephine, 53, wife
Richard J. 26, son, abstractor, realtor
Mary Beth 21, dau, sec'y law office
The 1942 Omaha City Directory lists Anthony, Josephine and Richard at 2118 South 34th. Anthony was now working as a mailman. Richard had formed a partnership with Edith K Beckman: Beckman and Beckman, Abstracts and Titles, with offices at 203 Keeline Building in Omaha. Edith was a lawyer, and lived at 814 South 29th in Omaha.
Josephine's last mailing address was in Santa Fe, NM, but she entered eternity in Placerville, California.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sources: Omaha Archdiocese cemetery records; Greater Omaha Genealogical Society; National Archives Note: the actual image for the 1900 Census was from the wrong page, in the National Archives online. The transcription of the image was all there was to see
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In 1900, the Pinaults were living in Omaha, Nebraska. The 1900 US Census lists
F. Pinault, 44, head His parents were both born on Prince Edward Island, Canada
Marie A. Pinault, 22
Philomena E. Pinault, 19
Josephine Pinault, 14
In February, 1912, Anthony Arnold Beckman, 25, married Josephine A. Pinault, 24, in Omaha, Nebraska
In 1920, Josephine and Anthony were living at 2118 South 34th, Omaha, Nebraska. Josephine was caring for their two small children and making sure all was right for their roomers. Anthony was a clerk at the post office.
The 1920 US Census lists:
Anthony Beckman, 35, head, b. NE, post office clerk
Josephine Beckman,33, wife, b. ND
Richard Beckman, 7, son, b. NE
Mary Beth Beckman, 1 yr 4 mos, dau., b. NE
C.D. Yerion, 48, roomer,b. IL, bookkeeper at an office
Nellie C. Yerion, 40, roomer,b. 40, forelady for printing co.
In 1940, the Beckmans were living at the same house. They no longer took in roomers. The 1940 Census showed the level of education attained by each resident. Josephine herself only went through 8th grade, but Anthony was a 4-year college graduate, son Richard had 6 years of college (so some graduate school), and daughter Mary Beth had 2 years of college.
The 1940 US Census lists:
Anthony, 55, head, mailman for US Post Office
Josephine, 53, wife
Richard J. 26, son, abstractor, realtor
Mary Beth 21, dau, sec'y law office
The 1942 Omaha City Directory lists Anthony, Josephine and Richard at 2118 South 34th. Anthony was now working as a mailman. Richard had formed a partnership with Edith K Beckman: Beckman and Beckman, Abstracts and Titles, with offices at 203 Keeline Building in Omaha. Edith was a lawyer, and lived at 814 South 29th in Omaha.
Josephine's last mailing address was in Santa Fe, NM, but she entered eternity in Placerville, California.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sources: Omaha Archdiocese cemetery records; Greater Omaha Genealogical Society; National Archives Note: the actual image for the 1900 Census was from the wrong page, in the National Archives online. The transcription of the image was all there was to see
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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