Location: [unknown]
Biography
Phillip Tramblay was born in 1881 in Dodgeville, Rhode Island, United States. (see Research Notes) [1]He is the son of Gobert Tramblay of Canada and Salome Levesque of Lynn, Massachusetts, born in Canada.[1][2][3]
Phillippe (age 22), son of Gobert Tramblay & Salome Levesque, married Sarah Jane Francies Murphy (age 19y) on 10 Oct 1903 in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States.[2]
Phillip Trombly (24), married head of household, was living in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island at the time of the 1905 Rhode Island census.[3]
Sarah (age 19), daughter of John E. Murphy & Mary Garant, married Phillippe Tramblay (age 22) on 10 Oct 1903 in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States.[4]
A daughter, Eva May Trombley was born in Sep 1908, in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island to Phillippe and Jenny.[1]Eva was mentioned on a memorial in Saint John the Baptist Cemetery, Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States with a death date of 19 October 1910.[5]
The 1910 Census enumerated on 29 Apr 1910, lists Philip, age 29, as the Head of the household. They are residing in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States.[1] The household included:
- Philip Trombly 29, Head, Rhode Island, Spinner, Textile Mill
- Jennie Trombly 25, wife, Rhode Island, Spinner, Textile Mill
- Eva Trombly 1, (20 months old), Rhode Island, daughter
- Celme Trombly 69, mother, Canada (speaks French), widow
Philip's and Jenny's daughter Eva May Trombley died on 19 October 1910 in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States.[6]
Jennie and Phillippe were the parents of Mary E. Trombley born in 1913, Rhode Island.[7]The household included: Jennie Trombley 45, Head; daughter Mary E Trombley 17, and boarder Alfred Lafarriere 41.
Philippe, age 31 years, 11 months, and 9 days, died on 19 Sep 1919 in Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States.[8]
Research Notes
- Dodgeville is actually in present-day Attleboro, MA. It was the mill town that sprung up around the Dodgeville Mill. The Dodgeville Mill building still exists and is 200 years old.
Sources
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