Mary Redden was born in 1898 in Gypsum, Kansas to Warren Redden and Rebecca Davison.[1] Her father was a farmer and her mother was a homemaker. Mary had an older brother, Lloyd, and an older sister, Enid.[2] When her brother married and took over the farm, Mary moved with her mother and sister to Manhattan, Kansas where her mother had a boarding house. After her father died in 1919, Mary moved with her mother to Long Beach, California.
Mary passed away in 1988 at Austin Nursing Home in Seattle Washington. [3]
Sources
↑ Certified copy of delayed birth certificate. Topeka, KS. 20 Sept 1943. 85-1364.
↑ Certificate of Death: Mary Ann Redman. Filed 14 Dec 1988. State of Washington, Dept. of Social and Health Services, Div. of Health, Local File No. 19802 [photo copy smudged], State File No. 146-8. Informant: Robert Redman [son of deceased], Seattle, Wash.
See also:
The 1940 US census lists the children of Mary Redman: "United States Census, 1940," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K93L-4MM : accessed 17 Jan 2014), Mary Redman in household of Gordon Redman, Area G, Spokane, Spokane City, Spokane, Washington, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 41-80, sheet 2A, family 27, NARA digital publication of T627, roll 4387.
Only the Trusted List can access the following:
Mary's formal name
full middle name (A.)
exact birthdate
birth location
exact deathdate
death location
images (1)
private siblings' names
private children's names (2)
spouse's name and marriage information
For access to Mary Redman's full information you must be on the Trusted List. Please login.
Is Mary your relative? Please don't go away! Login to collaborate or comment, or contact
the profile manager, or ask our community of genealogists a question.
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Mary by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Mary: