Advertisement

Blas Celerino Guerrero

Advertisement

Blas Celerino Guerrero

Birth
Mexico
Death
25 Jan 1923 (aged 62)
San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, USA
Burial
Colma, San Mateo County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
M 18 g46 - No headstone
Memorial ID
View Source
las Celerino Guerrero, born February 1860 in Mexico, came to the U.S. in 1889 at age 28 and worked as a tailor. He became a U.S. citizen in San José on January 4, 1906. Blas was a widower when he arrived in California and brought with him his son, Frederick Arthur Guerrero, born 1879, who married Antonia Maria Bernal of San Jose in 1901.

Blas C. Guerrero married Jesus R. Bellamy on February 11, 1893 in Halls Valley, San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. Witnesses are the bride’s relatives Antonio Bernal and Rufina Bernal, both of Halls Valley. Blas gave his age as 40, born February 1860 in Mexico on the 1900 census in Santa Clara Co., CA. He stated he immigrated to the United States in 1889, occupation tailor and his parents were both born in Mexico.

He married his wife Rebecca Jesus Guerrero in 1893 and their children were all born in California. Blas and Rebecca were parents of eleven children, eight of whom survived, Virginia Edna (Guerrero) Bernal b. 1894, Wilford Blas Guerrero b. 1896, Isabelle R. Guerrero b. 1897, Josephine Rebecca (Guerrero) Goldston b. 1899, Edmond Carlo Guerrero b. 1902, Genevieve G. b. 1904, Lenora Grace (Guerrero) Maul b. 1905 and Arnold G. Guerrero b. 1907.

In 1910, Rebecca, 35, was living in San José with her children. Her husband, Blas Guerrero is not listed in the household, for he was in Los Angeles, the owner/operator of a tailor shop along with his brother Antonio Guerrero and is sending his earnings back home to his family in San José. In the 1920 Census, Blas, age 60, is living alone in San Francisco, the owner-operator of a tailor shop and listed as a widower.

Blas Celerino Guerrero died January 25, 1923, at age 62, in San Francisco, California (CA Death Index) and is buried at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery, Colma, San Mateo County, California.

Biography 2019 by Allen Rountree and Patricia Howe
las Celerino Guerrero, born February 1860 in Mexico, came to the U.S. in 1889 at age 28 and worked as a tailor. He became a U.S. citizen in San José on January 4, 1906. Blas was a widower when he arrived in California and brought with him his son, Frederick Arthur Guerrero, born 1879, who married Antonia Maria Bernal of San Jose in 1901.

Blas C. Guerrero married Jesus R. Bellamy on February 11, 1893 in Halls Valley, San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. Witnesses are the bride’s relatives Antonio Bernal and Rufina Bernal, both of Halls Valley. Blas gave his age as 40, born February 1860 in Mexico on the 1900 census in Santa Clara Co., CA. He stated he immigrated to the United States in 1889, occupation tailor and his parents were both born in Mexico.

He married his wife Rebecca Jesus Guerrero in 1893 and their children were all born in California. Blas and Rebecca were parents of eleven children, eight of whom survived, Virginia Edna (Guerrero) Bernal b. 1894, Wilford Blas Guerrero b. 1896, Isabelle R. Guerrero b. 1897, Josephine Rebecca (Guerrero) Goldston b. 1899, Edmond Carlo Guerrero b. 1902, Genevieve G. b. 1904, Lenora Grace (Guerrero) Maul b. 1905 and Arnold G. Guerrero b. 1907.

In 1910, Rebecca, 35, was living in San José with her children. Her husband, Blas Guerrero is not listed in the household, for he was in Los Angeles, the owner/operator of a tailor shop along with his brother Antonio Guerrero and is sending his earnings back home to his family in San José. In the 1920 Census, Blas, age 60, is living alone in San Francisco, the owner-operator of a tailor shop and listed as a widower.

Blas Celerino Guerrero died January 25, 1923, at age 62, in San Francisco, California (CA Death Index) and is buried at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery, Colma, San Mateo County, California.

Biography 2019 by Allen Rountree and Patricia Howe

Gravesite Details

Date May Be Interment



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement