George and Anna children:
1. Anna b 1890 Iowa
2. Lottie b. 1891 Minnesota
3. Cindie b. 1894 Minnesota
4. Ernest b. 1895 Minnesota
5. Nellie b. 1898 Minnesota
6. Ruth b. 1899 Minnesota
7. Benjamin b. 1901 Minnesota
8. Frank b. 1903 Minnesota
By 1910, the family was living in Roseburg, Oregon per the Federal Census.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1919, she married Charles Henry Craig in Roseburg, Oregon. They moved near Baker, Oregon. After he died, she moved back to Douglas County, Oregon.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1931, she married Matthew Adams in Roseburg, Oregon
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggested edit:
Concerning the Ondrák surname in the Bohemian parish archives, The names Ondrák and Vondrák are patronymic variations of the same Slavic language given name Ondřej (from Saint Andrew, the apostle).
Ondřej - Ondrák is more formal/literary, Vondřej - Vondrák is more colloquial. Adding the "Vo" (or "Wo") sound allows the spoken word to flow when first name ends in a vowel sound. The two variations were used interchangeably across many village archives, along with the use of both "V" or "W" in the colloquial variant.
By Contributor: Steven Vondrak (50174193)
George and Anna children:
1. Anna b 1890 Iowa
2. Lottie b. 1891 Minnesota
3. Cindie b. 1894 Minnesota
4. Ernest b. 1895 Minnesota
5. Nellie b. 1898 Minnesota
6. Ruth b. 1899 Minnesota
7. Benjamin b. 1901 Minnesota
8. Frank b. 1903 Minnesota
By 1910, the family was living in Roseburg, Oregon per the Federal Census.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1919, she married Charles Henry Craig in Roseburg, Oregon. They moved near Baker, Oregon. After he died, she moved back to Douglas County, Oregon.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1931, she married Matthew Adams in Roseburg, Oregon
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggested edit:
Concerning the Ondrák surname in the Bohemian parish archives, The names Ondrák and Vondrák are patronymic variations of the same Slavic language given name Ondřej (from Saint Andrew, the apostle).
Ondřej - Ondrák is more formal/literary, Vondřej - Vondrák is more colloquial. Adding the "Vo" (or "Wo") sound allows the spoken word to flow when first name ends in a vowel sound. The two variations were used interchangeably across many village archives, along with the use of both "V" or "W" in the colloquial variant.
By Contributor: Steven Vondrak (50174193)
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