Changes

Alexander Hume Rule

12 bytes removed, 05:27, 7 March 2024
Children
=Children=
* Carrie Clarke Rule Kingsbury (b. 1872 Hawick, Scot. - d. 1953 Toledo, OH) Husband (1905 Des Moines, IA): Clarence Thrall Kingsbury (b. 1881 Dunlap, Harrison, IA - d. 1967 Coventry, Tolland, CT), son of Arthur Preston Kingsbury (b. 1855 Coventry, Tolland, [[Connecticut|CT]]) & Carrie Thrall Kingsbury (m. 1880 Dunlap, IA). In 1900, Carrie was employed as a schoolteacher in Des Moines. No children.
* [[John Frederick Rule]] (b. 1874 Vinton, [[Iowa|IA]] - d. 1962 Toledo, [[Ohio|OH]]). Wife (1906 @ Sarah "Sadie" Allen Rule (b. 1885 Wilmington, New Castle, [[Delaware|DE]] - d. 1920 Toledo, OH), daughter of Thomas William Allen (b. 1861 [[England|Eng.]] - d. 1931 Drexel Hill, Delaware, [[Pennsylvania|PA]]) & Charlotte Elizabeth Geake Allen (b. 1857 Kingston, Frontenac, ON - d. 1924 Drexel Hill, PA). Charlotte was a daughter of Martin Thomas Geake (b. 1827 Launcells, Cornwall, Eng. - d. 1894 Fort Wayne, Allen, [[Indiana|IN]]) & Sarah Hill Geake (b. 1823 Bristol, Eng.; emig. 1874; d. 1902 Fort Wayne, IN). The Hill family was CoE +1822-1845+. The Geake family were longtime stonework contractors in Fort Wayne. In 1900, John Rule resided in Washington, D.C., working as an assistant engineer for the government. By 1907, in New York City. In 1910, he was lived in Yonkers, NY, a patent attorney for an elevator company in Yonkers. By 1917, he lived in Toledo, Ohio working as a patent attorney for the Owens Bottle Machine Co., owned by Michael Owens, who in 1903 invented the world's first automated glass-forming machine, which by 1920 "produced more bottles in an hour than a team of human glassblowers could produce in a day", as per the [https://www.cmog.org/article/fabulous-monster-owens-bottle-machine Corning Museum of Glass]. In 1913, the National Child Labor Committee of New York City said that "the rapid introduction of the automatic machine did more to eliminate child labor than they had been able to do through legislation", as per an article via [https://www.asme.org/about-asme/engineering-history/landmarks/86-owens-ar-bottle-machine The American Society of Mechanical Engineers].
** Ralph Gordon Rule (b. 1907 NYC, NY - d. 1984 Toledo, OH). In the early 1940's, Ralph was employed for AP Parts in Toledo, now known as Faurecia Exhaust, a company of [https://www.faurecia.com/en Forvia], purported to be the world's 7th largest automotive supplier. In the 1940's-1950's, he served as their president. Wife (1936): Phoebe Margaret Walford Rule (b. 1905 Westmont, [[Quebec|QC]] - d. 1996 Templeton, CA). Phoebe relocated to Salida, [[Colorado|CO]] after Ralph's passing, then in 1995 to Templeton, CA. Her brother was Dr. Wallace Walford (Perth, ON). Phoebe supported [https://tgrm.org/ Toledo Gospel Rescue Mission].
*** Elaine Rule MacNab. Husband: David MacNab.
*** Louise Rule Woehl. Husband: Dan Woehl
*** Jean Rule Allan. Husband: Frank Allan
** Elmer Rule
==J==
* [[John Frederick Rule]] (b. 1874 Vinton, [[Iowa|IA]] - d. 1962 Toledo, [[Ohio|OH]]). Wife (1906 @ Sarah "Sadie" Allen Rule (b. 1885 Wilmington, New Castle, [[Delaware|DE]] - d. 1920 Toledo, OH), daughter of Thomas William Allen (b. 1861 [[England|Eng.]] - d. 1931 Drexel Hill, Delaware, [[Pennsylvania|PA]]) & Charlotte Elizabeth Geake Allen (b. 1857 Kingston, Frontenac, ON - d. 1924 Drexel Hill, PA). Charlotte was a daughter of Martin Thomas Geake (b. 1827 Launcells, Cornwall, Eng. - d. 1894 Fort Wayne, Allen, [[Indiana|IN]]) & Sarah Hill Geake (b. 1823 Bristol, Eng.; emig. 1874; d. 1902 Fort Wayne, IN). The Hill family was CoE +1822-1845+. The Geake family were longtime stonework contractors in Fort Wayne. In 1900, John Rule resided in Washington, D.C., working as an assistant engineer for the government. By 1907, in New York City. In 1910, he was lived in Yonkers, NY, a patent attorney for an elevator company in Yonkers. By 1917, he lived in Toledo, Ohio working as a patent attorney for the Owens Bottle Machine Co., owned by Michael Owens, who in 1903 invented the world's first automated glass-forming machine, which by 1920 "produced more bottles in an hour than a team of human glassblowers could produce in a day", as per the [https://www.cmog.org/article/fabulous-monster-owens-bottle-machine Corning Museum of Glass]. In 1913, the National Child Labor Committee of New York City said that "the rapid introduction of the automatic machine did more to eliminate child labor than they had been able to do through legislation", as per an article via [https://www.asme.org/about-asme/engineering-history/landmarks/86-owens-ar-bottle-machine The American Society of Mechanical Engineers].
** Ralph Gordon Rule (b. 1907 NYC, NY - d. 1984 Toledo, OH). In the early 1940's, Ralph was employed for AP Parts in Toledo, now known as Faurecia Exhaust, a company of [https://www.faurecia.com/en Forvia], purported to be the world's 7th largest automotive supplier. In the 1940's-1950's, he served as their president. Wife (1936): Phoebe Margaret Walford Rule (b. 1905 Westmont, [[Quebec|QC]] - d. 1996 Templeton, CA). Phoebe relocated to Salida, [[Colorado|CO]] after Ralph's passing, then in 1995 to Templeton, CA. Her brother was Dr. Wallace Walford (Perth, ON). Phoebe supported [https://tgrm.org/ Toledo Gospel Rescue Mission].
*** Elaine Rule MacNab. Husband: David MacNab.
*** Louise Rule Woehl. Husband: Dan Woehl
*** Jean Rule Allan. Husband: Frank Allan
** Elmer Rule
 
 
 
==K==
* Jean Hume Rule Baridon (b. 1876 Vinton, Benton, IA - d. 1960 Des Moines, IA). Husband (1905 @ Des Moines, IA): Paul Coffarell Baridon (b. 1878 Bobbio Pellice, Torino, Italy - d. 1957 [[Maryland|MD]]), son of Paul Baridon (1842-1889 Bobbio Pellice, Italy) & Susanne Caffarel de Joseph Baridon (b. 1847 Bobbio Pellice, Italy - d. 1920 Des Moines, IA).
** Richard Clarke Baridon (b. 1906 Des Moines, IA - d. 1986 Chevy Chase, Montgomery, MD). Wife (1930 @ Logan, [[Oklahoma|OK]]): Juanita A. Ayers Baridon (b. 1908 Afton, Ottawa, OK - d. 1966 Bethesda, Montgomery, MD), daughter of Frank Marshall S. Ayers (b. 1872 Lincoln, Lancaster, [[Nebraska|NE]] - d. 1922 San Antonio, [[Texas|TX]]) & Mary "Mollie" Elizabeth Griggs Ayers (1870-1936 Nashville, Davidson, [[Tennessee|TN]]).