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George Wilbur Cramer

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George Wilbur Cramer

Birth
Death
28 Feb 1978 (aged 78)
Ebensburg, Cambria County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Southmont, Cambria County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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In 1900 he, his parents, his four siblings, and three roomers lived in a house they were renting at 622 Main Street in Johnstown, PA. His father worked as a mail carrier.

In 1910 he, his father, his four siblings, his maternal grandmother, and two lodgers lived in a house at 118 Erie Street in Westmont, PA. His father worked as a mail carrier doing city delivery, and Ethel as a cashier in a clothing store.

In 1920 he, his father, sister Ella, and nieces Mary and Janet Geist lived in a house they owned, mortgage free, on Second Avenue in Westmont. His father worked as a mail carrier and he as a laborer in a sheet metal factory.

In 1940 he, his father, sister Ella, and niece Janet Bricker, her husband, and their son lived there. (It is shown as 522 on the census record.) Their home was valued at only $6500 after the Great Depression. He worked as a sign painter for an advertising company, with an income in 1939 of $850 for 35 weeks of work, and James Bricker as a driller in a steel mill, with an income in 1939 of $450 for 26 weeks of work.
In 1900 he, his parents, his four siblings, and three roomers lived in a house they were renting at 622 Main Street in Johnstown, PA. His father worked as a mail carrier.

In 1910 he, his father, his four siblings, his maternal grandmother, and two lodgers lived in a house at 118 Erie Street in Westmont, PA. His father worked as a mail carrier doing city delivery, and Ethel as a cashier in a clothing store.

In 1920 he, his father, sister Ella, and nieces Mary and Janet Geist lived in a house they owned, mortgage free, on Second Avenue in Westmont. His father worked as a mail carrier and he as a laborer in a sheet metal factory.

In 1940 he, his father, sister Ella, and niece Janet Bricker, her husband, and their son lived there. (It is shown as 522 on the census record.) Their home was valued at only $6500 after the Great Depression. He worked as a sign painter for an advertising company, with an income in 1939 of $850 for 35 weeks of work, and James Bricker as a driller in a steel mill, with an income in 1939 of $450 for 26 weeks of work.


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