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- BIRTH: The Snow Family, Boston Transcript, Note 2685 pt I; Valiant in the Faith, p 642
MARRIAGE: Valiant in the Faith, p. 642. Says they had many children but only names Susan Fenner.
1850 CENSUS: Cumberland, Providence, Rhode Island, FHL Film #044809, enumerated 13 Aug 1850, page 144, line 10, dwelling 535, family 710, lists Levi M. Snow, 47, M, carpenter, real estate 2500, born Vermont; Lydia A. Snow, 37, F, born Rhode Island; Andrew J. Snow, 16, M, born Rhode Island, attended school; Susan F. Snow, 2, F, born Rhode Island.
1860 CENSUS: Cumberland, Providence, Rhode Island, FHL Film #805205, enumerated 20 Jun 1860, page 88, line 8, dwelling 364, family 498, lists Mason Snow, 57, M, carpenter, real estate 2400, personal estate 4000, born Vermont; Lydia A. Snow, 47, F, born Rhode Island; Susan Snow, 13, F, born Rhode Island, attended school; Elizabeth Snow, 7, F, born Rhode Island.
1870 CENSUS: Woonsocket, Providence, Rhode Island, FHL Film #552973, enumerated 16 Jun 1870, page 75, line 7, dwelling 227, family 368, lists Lydia A. Snow, 58, F, keeping house, real estate 5000, personal estate 4700, born Rhode Island; Susan F. Snow, 22, F, school teacher, born Rhode Island; Lizzie Snow, 16, F, attending school, born Rhode Island. They are living in the same dwelling with George W.S. Haskell (?) or Howlett (?) family.
DEATH: Valiant in the Faith, p 642
LEVI MASON SNOW (7)
Uncle Levi Mason moved from St. Johnsbury, Vermont to Woonsocket, Rhode Island. He was at Woonsocket by 1840. He and his wife, Lydia Aldrich, had three children, Susan, Frank, and a daughter whose name I was unable to learn. Frank had one son. Susan married a man by the name of Whipple and had no children. She lived at Diamond Hill, Rhode Island. She taught school and became an officer in the National Education Association. After Uncle Erastus made his last visit to Woonsocket, I can find no trace of Uncle Levi Mason's family until 1900. Then Uncles William J. and Edward H. Snow called on Susan while they were on a mission in the Eastern States. They found her very much worried about the Snow family name. She said that Uncle Shipley had no children and that her own father had one son only, who in turn had one son. She was afraid that the Snow name was going to die out entirely. When she learned that her father's five brothers, Willard, Zerubbabel, William, Erastus, and Charles V. together had 48 sons, she calmed her fears, In 1915 she came to Utah and visited her relatives here. I was unable to learn more of that family after that date.
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