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Joseph Jerome Zehren

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Joseph Jerome Zehren

Birth
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
14 Dec 1955 (aged 78)
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Cheltenham Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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His middle name has alternately been listed as John, Jerome and Myles. His son, Joseph Myles Zehren, has sometimes been referred to as "junior," which would imply that this Joseph's middle name was Myles. However, Myles was the name of Delia's brother, so it's possible that the younger Joseph was given the middle name for his uncle, not his father and others just assumed he was a junior. On Joseph Myles' delayed birth record, his father's name is listed as Joseph Jerome Zehren.

He died suddenly on Dec. 14, 1955, according to his death notice published in the Philadelphia Inquirer.

He married Delia, the daughter of Myles and Mary Qualter (sometimes shows as Qualters) and they had at least five children together: Joseph John Jr., Anne Marie, Julia, Margaret (who married Charles C. Weaver) and Helen Elizabeth.

According to the 1900 census he was a baker. His WWI draft card said he was a ship's carpenter.
His middle name has alternately been listed as John, Jerome and Myles. His son, Joseph Myles Zehren, has sometimes been referred to as "junior," which would imply that this Joseph's middle name was Myles. However, Myles was the name of Delia's brother, so it's possible that the younger Joseph was given the middle name for his uncle, not his father and others just assumed he was a junior. On Joseph Myles' delayed birth record, his father's name is listed as Joseph Jerome Zehren.

He died suddenly on Dec. 14, 1955, according to his death notice published in the Philadelphia Inquirer.

He married Delia, the daughter of Myles and Mary Qualter (sometimes shows as Qualters) and they had at least five children together: Joseph John Jr., Anne Marie, Julia, Margaret (who married Charles C. Weaver) and Helen Elizabeth.

According to the 1900 census he was a baker. His WWI draft card said he was a ship's carpenter.


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