Joseph Warren
HALL II
(b.
August 28, 1802
,
Nobleboro, Massachusetts (District of Maine)
d.
December 1, 1876
,
Orneville, Maine, USA
)
Age: 74
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HALL II Family Tree – Connecting the Past to the Present!
Joseph Warren HALL II was born August 28, 1802 in Nobleboro, Massachusetts (District of Maine)
Joseph Warren HALL II was the child of Joseph Warren HALL I and Elizabeth WHITEHOUSE and the grandchild of: (paternal) Levi HALL and Jane JONES (maternal) Jacob WHITEHOUSE and Dorothy BRYANTSpouse(s)/Partner(s) and Child(ren):
Joseph Warren married Eliza Jane WALTZ August 30, 1823 in Jefferson, Maine, USA . The couple had (at least) 12 children.
Eliza Jane WALTZ was born March 11, 1807 in Nobleboro, Maine, USA (Nobleborough). Eliza Jane died June 21, 1881 in Orneville, Maine, USA. Eliza Jane was the child of Benjamin, Sr. WALTZ and Mary EUGLEY.
Joseph Warren HALL II died December 1, 1876 in Orneville, Maine, USA.
Details of the family tree of Joseph appear below.
Occupation
Joseph Warren HALL II was a Farmer & Blacksmith.
A forgeron, or blacksmith, was primarily a craftsman of wrought iron on the anvil. Protecting himself with a thick leather apron, he used a bellows (first made of leather, then wood and finally metal) to push the air that fuelled the coal fire of the forge, a type of cast iron table where the iron was reddened... Using pliers of various sizes to hold the hot iron, the blacksmith would then give it a specific shape with the help of different hammers. The blacksmith made farm instruments, vehicle accessories and even schooners, cemetery crosses, steel bandages, hooks for hay bales, etc.
Source: tfcq.ca
Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
Joseph Warren HALL II was a Farmer & Blacksmith.
A forgeron, or blacksmith, was primarily a craftsman of wrought iron on the anvil. Protecting himself with a thick leather apron, he used a bellows (first made of leather, then wood and finally metal) to push the air that fuelled the coal fire of the forge, a type of cast iron table where the iron was reddened... Using pliers of various sizes to hold the hot iron, the blacksmith would then give it a specific shape with the help of different hammers. The blacksmith made farm instruments, vehicle accessories and even schooners, cemetery crosses, steel bandages, hooks for hay bales, etc.
Source: tfcq.ca
Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
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