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Axel/Alexander Nelson var født 31 /7-1877.

 

 

Finner ham her:

 

Alexander Nelson
United States World War I Draft Registration Cards

Name Alexander Nelson Event Type Draft Registration Event Date 1917-1918 Event Place Cook County no 3, Illinois, United States Gender Male Nationality United States Birth Date 31 Jul 1877 Birthplace , ,

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6D9-9JZ

 

Han oppgir navnet på Rose Ester Nelson (Det er vel kona Rose Populorum)

View the original document. 

 

 

Tror ikke det kan være noen tvil om at det er riktige familie som er funnet i Illinois.

 

 

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När och hur försvinner Carl August far i familjen

Axel nämner ju inte fadern när modern dör #22

 

Hälsning Per Nilsson

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I Census 1900 sto kona til Carl August som gift,mens hun ved død i 1912  sto som  enke.

 

 

Katie Nelson
United States Census, 1900
Name Katie Nelson Event Type Census Event Year 1900 Event Place Precinct 18 Chicago city Ward 14, Cook, Illinois, United States Gender Female Age 54 Marital Status Married Race White Race (Original) W Relationship to Head of Household Head Relationship to Head of Household (Original) Head Number of Living Children 5 Years Married 27 Birth Date Jan 1846 Birthplace Sweden Marriage Year (Estimated) 1873 Immigration Year 1883 Father's Birthplace Sweden Mother's Birthplace Sweden Mother of how many children 5
HOUSEHOLD ROLE GENDER AGE BIRTHPLACE Katie Nelson Head F 54 Sweden Nels Nelson Son M 27 Sweden John Nelson Son M 26 Sweden Aleck Nelson Son M 24 Sweden Anna Nelson Daughter F 17 Sweden Mary Nelson Daughter F 13 Illinois

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MS3K-9RS

 

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Katherine Nelson
Illinois, Cook County Deaths

Name Katherine Nelson Event Type Death Event Date 19 Mar 1912 Event Place , Cook, Illinois, United States Address 4441 Fulton St.Gender Female Age 68 Marital Status Widowed Ethnicity American Race White Occupation Housewife Birth Date 26 Jan 1844Birthplace Sweden Burial Date 23 Mar 1912 Cemetery Rose Hill Father's Name Nels Brask Father's Birthplace Sweden Mother's NameKatherine Brask Mother's Birthplace Sweden Record Number 93 Source Reference 8262

https://familysearch...03/1:1:N7JR-YFF

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Kanskje din Carl August med døtrene Anna og Marie i 1910? :rolleyes:




C A Nelson
United States Census, 1910Name C A Nelson Event Type Census Event Date 1910 Event Place Chicago Ward 13, Cook, Illinois, United States Gender Female Age 66 Marital Status Widowed Race White Race (Original) White Relationship to Head of Household Head Relationship to Head of Household (Original) Head Birth Year (Estimated) 1844 Birthplace Sweden Immigration Year 1881 Father's Birthplace Sweden Mother's Birthplace Sweden Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 2

HOUSEHOLD ROLE GENDER AGE BIRTHPLACE

C A NelsonHead F 66 Sweden

Anna NelsonDaughter F 28 Sweden

Marie NelsonDaughter F 23 Illinois

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MKCL-CFZ

View the original document.

Men denne C. A. Nelson står med status Widowed i Census 1910.Feil opplysning? :rolleyes:
Men fødested,ca fødselsår og ca immigrasjonsår stemmer på C. A. og datteren Anna,samt at datteren Marie er født i Illinois i 1887.


Fødselsårene på døtrene Anna og Marie stemmer overens med den familien vi har funnet..Får prøve å finne ut hvor kona var i 1910.
(Kanskje på institusjon?)

Syns det står "Forelady Department Store "på Anna .På Marie står det "Office Work ...." (Greier ikke å tyde alt som står der )

 

Anna Nelson
United States Census, 1910Name Anna Nelson Event Type Census Event Date 1910 Event Place Chicago Ward 13, Cook, Illinois, United States Gender Female Age 28 Marital Status Single Race White Race (Original) White Relationship to Head of Household Daughter Relationship to Head of Household (Original) Daughter Birth Year (Estimated) 1882 Birthplace Sweden Father's Birthplace Sweden Mother's Birthplace Sweden Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 2

HOUSEHOLD ROLE GENDER AGE BIRTHPLACE

C A NelsonHead F 66 Sweden

Anna NelsonDaughter F 28 Sweden

Marie NelsonDaughter F 23 Illinois

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MKCL-CF8


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Marie Nelson
United States Census, 1910Name Marie Nelson Event Type Census Event Date 1910 Event Place Chicago Ward 13, Cook, Illinois, United States Gender Female Age 23 Marital Status Single Race White Race (Original) White Relationship to Head of Household Daughter Relationship to Head of Household (Original) Daughter Birth Year (Estimated) 1887 Birthplace Illinois Father's Birthplace Sweden Mother's Birthplace Sweden Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 2

HOUSEHOLD ROLE GENDER AGE BIRTHPLACE C A Nelson Head F 66 Sweden Anna Nelson Daughter F 28 Sweden Marie Nelson Daughter F 23 Illinois
https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MKCL-CFD

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Hvis Carl August døde FØR kona kan det kanskje være denne?

 

Men hvem var i så fall informanten Chas Nelson?

 

Chas Nelson
Illinois, Cook County Deaths

Name Chas Nelson Event Type Death Event Date 21 Mar 1910 Event Place Chicago, Cook, Illinois, United States Address 691 Milwauke Ave Gender Male Age 65 Marital Status Married Race White Occupation Labor Birth Year (Estimated) 1845 Birthplace , , Sweden Funeral Home L C Borland Burial Date 30 Mar 1910 Burial Place , , Illinois Cemetery P and S

Informant's Name Chas Nelson Source Reference 8721

 

 

ILLINOIS, COOK COUNTY DEATHS, 1878-1994

GS Film Number 001239852

Digital Folder Number 004004702

Image Number

00469

 

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2MQ-F8MQ

 

Er høyst usikker på denne!

 
 
 

 

 

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Katie Nelson
United States Census, 1900
Name Katie Nelson Event Type Census Event Year 1900 Event Place Precinct 18 Chicago city Ward 14, Cook, Illinois, United States Gender Female Age 54 Marital Status Married Race White Race (Original) W Relationship to Head of Household Head Relationship to Head of Household (Original) Head Number of Living Children 5 Years Married 27 Birth Date Jan 1846 Birthplace Sweden Marriage Year (Estimated) 1873 Immigration Year 1883 Father's Birthplace Sweden Mother's Birthplace Sweden Mother of how many children 5
HOUSEHOLD ROLE GENDER AGE BIRTHPLACE

 

Katie Nelson

Head F 54 Sweden

 

Nels Nelson

Son M 27 Sweden

 

John Nelson

Son M 26 Sweden

 

Aleck Nelson

Son M 24 Sweden

 

Anna Nelson

Daughter F 17 Sweden

 

Mary Nelson

Daughter F 13 Illinois

 

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MS3K-9RS

 

Nels (Nils Gustav,født 6 jan 1873) og John (Johan August,født 1 sept 1875) har jeg ikke funnet etter Census 1900.

Hvor ble det av dem,tro?

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Og da er dette ektemannen til Jeanette sin søster ,Harriet R Nelson

 

 

 

Dudley W. Morton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Mush Morton

Dudley Walker "Mush" Morton (July 17, 1907 – October 11, 1943) was a submarine commander of the United States Navyduring World War II. He was commander of USS Wahoo (SS-238) during its third through seventh patrols. Wahoo was one of the most-celebrated submarines of World War II, sinking at least 19 Japanese ships, more than any other submarine of the time.[1] Morton and Wahoo disappeared in 1943 during a patrol near La Perouse Strait, and he was ultimately declared deceased three years later.

A native of Owensboro, Kentucky, Morton graduated from the Naval Academy in 1930. There he received the nickname "Mushmouth", after a character in the cartoon strip Moon Mullins whose large square jaw and prominent mouth resembled Morton's. The nickname was shortened to "Mush", by which he was known for much of his life.[citation needed]

Career[edit]

Prior to the beginning of World War II, he served in the USS Saratoga (CV-3)USS Chicago (CA-29)USS Canopus (AS-9),USS Fairfax (DD-93), and the submarines USS R-5 (SS-82) and USS S-37 (SS-142).

Promoted to Commander October 15, 1942, he was in nominal command of USS Dolphin (SS-169) while it underwent extended repairs at Pearl Harbor. He was relieved to make a war patrol in USS Wahoo (SS-238) between November 8 and December 26 as prospective commanding officer, a supernumerary position to prepare him for command of a fleet boat. Morton took command of Wahoo on December 31 in Brisbane, Australia. Between January 26, 1943 and October 11, he carried out four offensive patrols, during which Wahoo was responsible for sinking 19 cargo and transport ships for a combined total of 55,000 tons.

During Wahoo's third war patrol, Morton was responsible for an incident which resulted in shipwrecked soldiers in about twenty lifeboats[2] of sunken Japanese transport Bunyo Maru[3] being fired on while in the water. The transport was torpedoed by Wahoo on 26 January 1943. Morton was responsible for ordering the machine gunning of the shipwrecked survivors, in the water, including British Indian POWs.[4][5][6] Morton's executive officer, Richard O'Kane, who was on Wahoo's bridge when the incident took place, likened it to attacks on small craft made during the Dunkirk evacuation, and for the same reason: to prevent the enemy from recovering a body of troops that would shortly fight again.[7] However, the Hague Convention of 1907 bans the killing of shipwreck survivors under any circumstances.[8]

Controversy still attaches to this action, since survivors in the water may have been deliberately targeted. Vice Admiral Charles A. Lockwood, the contemporary COMSUBPAC, (who was not present at the incident) asserts survivors were army troops and turned machinegun and rifle fire on Wahoo while she maneuvered on the surface, and such resistance was common in submarine warfare.[9]O'Kane stated fire from Wahoo was intended to force the troops to abandon their boats and no troops were deliberately targeted.[10] Later historian Clay Blair states Morton opened fire first and the shipwrecked returned fire with handguns.[11]

Whatever the case, Morton and O'Kane had misidentified the survivors as Japanese. In fact, they were mainly Indian POWs of 2nd Battalion, 16th Punjab Regiment, plus escorting forces from the Japanese 26th Field Ordnance Depot.[12] Of 1,126 men aboard Bunyo Maru, 195 Indians and 87 Japanese died in all, including those killed in the initial sinking.

Unlike German submariner Heinz-Wilhelm Eck, who was executed as a war criminal for ordering the killing of civilian shipwreck survivors, Morton did not face any criminal liability for his alleged actions. O'Kane believed this event prevented Morton from being awarded the Medal of Honor.[13]

After three arduous war patrols, Morton was given the highly dangerous assignment of penetrating the Sea of Japan. Commander Morton was reported missing in action in December, when his submarine was presumed lost. After the war, it was determined from Japanese records that, on October 11, in the time frame in which the Wahoo was expected to exit through La Perouse Strait, an antisubmarine aircraft found a surfaced submarine and attacked, dropping three depth charges.[14]

Declared deceased on January 7, 1946, Morton had been awarded the Navy Cross, three gold stars in lieu of a second, third, and fourth Navy Cross, and the Army Distinguished Service Cross.

World War II Summary[edit]

 

Summary of CDR Dudley W. Morton's USS R-5 (SS-82) and USS Wahoo (SS-238) War Patrols   Departing From Date Days Wartime Credit

Ships/Tonnage JANAC[15] Credit

Ships/Tonnage Patrol Area R-5-1 Atlantic 1942 ? zero/zero[16] zero/zero Atlantic Wahoo-3 Brisbane, Australia January 1943 23 5/31,900[17] 3/11,348[18] -->Pearl Harbor Wahoo-4 Pearl Harbor, TH February 1943 42 8/36,700[19] 9/19,530[18] East China Sea Wahoo-5 Pearl Harbor, TH April 1943 26 3/24,700[20] 3/10,376[18] Empire Wahoo-6 Pearl Harbor, TH August 1943 27 zero/zero[21] zero/zero[18] Empire Wahoo-7 Pearl Harbor, TH September 1943 lost 1/7,100[22] 4/13,429[18] Empire

 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mush_Morton

 

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Mush Morton and the crew of the Wahoo, War Criminals? 

by David L. Johnston 

http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/wwii/articles/usswahoo.aspx

 

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http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=2670734&page=1

 

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Commander Dudley Walker Morton 

July 17, 1907 - October 11, 1943

Dudley Walker Morton was born in Owensboro, Kentucky on July 17, 1907 to Mr. and Mrs. William Dix Morton.  He attended the Miami High School, Miami, Florida and entered the U.S. Naval Academy as a Midshipman from the Fourth Florida District in 1926.  He was on the Varsity Football Team and Varsity Wrestling Squad all four years and was variously called "Mush", "Mushmouth" and "Dud" by his classmates.  Graduated and commissioned Ensign on June 5, 1930, he subsequently advanced to the rank of Commander.

After graduation he was ordered to the USS SARATOGA for passage to the West Coast where he had duty in connection with the fitting out of the USS CHICAGO at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard.  He served in her from ship's commissioning on March 9, 1931 until June, 1933 when he reported to the Submarine Base, New London, Connecticut for instruction.  Upon completion of that course in December, 1933 he was ordered to the Asiatic Station where he served in the USS CANOPUS and later in the USS S-37, flagship of Submarine Division Ten until January 1937.

He returned to the United States via Europe and Siberia and was stationed in the Navy Yard, Philadelphia from February 1937 until May 1939 when he joined USS FAIRFAX and served as her Executive Officer until June, 1940.  He next refitted the USS R-5 and commanded her until April, 1942.  He was attached to the Submarine Base, New London, Connecticut in May and in June 1942 was ordered to Submarine Squadron Four for duty as a Prospective Commanding Officer.  Ordered to the USS WAHOO, he joined her on November 2, 1942.  Following participation in her Second War Patrol, he assumed command on December 31, 1942.  Following four war patrols as Commanding Officer of the WAHOO he was reported Missing In Action when that submarine was reported overdue and presumed to be lost on November 1, 1943 in the Sea of Japan, Asiatic Area.  He was later declared dead, presumptive January 7, 1946.

Commander Morton was awarded the Navy Cross, three Gold Stars in lieu of a second, third and fourth Navy Cross and the Army Distinguished Service Cross.  In addition to these decorations, Commander Morton received the American Defense Service Medal, Fleet Clasp; the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal; and was entitled to the World War II Victory Medal; and the Purple Heart Medal.  The Navy officially credited him as the second highest scoring submarine commander of World War II (tied with Captain Slade D. Cutter).

Commander Morton was survived by his wife Harriet and their two children, Douglas N. Morton and Edwina R. Morton.

http://www.warfish.com/dwm.html

 

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https://books.google.no/books?id=fjGRZpAjFcEC&pg=PT44&lpg=PT44&dq=Edwina+R+Morton+married&source=bl&ots=dkeDS6sALz&sig=7FguoZ5TibmaonnnRtPOakq3CsY&hl=en&sa=X&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false

 

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Harriet Morton
United States Census, 1940
Name Harriet Morton Event Type Census Event Date 1940 Event Place Area A, Norfolk, Norfolk City Voting Precinct 26, Norfolk City, Virginia, United States Gender Female Age 27 Marital Status Married Race (Original) White Race White Relationship to Head of Household (Original) Wife Relationship to Head of Household Wife Birthplace Illinois Birth Year (Estimated) 1913 Last Place of Residence Tsing Toa, China
HOUSEHOLD ROLE GENDER AGE BIRTHPLACE

 

Dudley W Morton

Head M 32 Kentucky

 

Harriet Morton

Wife F 27 Illinois

 

Douglas Morton

Son M 0 Virginia

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VTMQ-L68

 

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Harriet Morton
New York, New York Passenger and Crew Lists, 1909

Name Harriet Morton Event Type Immigration Event Date 1937 Event Place New York, New York, United States Gender Female Age 24 Birth Year (Estimated) 1913 Birthplace Chicago Ill Ship Name Washington

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:24KJ-CS2

 

 

Harriet ankom New York sammen med Jarmila Morton,28,og Dudley Morton 30.

View the original document. 

 

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Douglas N. Morton (Private). Parents: Dudley Walker Morton and Harriet Rose Nelson.

 

bullet.gif Dudley Walker Morton was born on 17 Jul 1907. He died on 11 Oct 1943 in La Perouse Straits, near Japan.. 

 

Comdr. Dudley "Mush" Morton was commander of the submarine "Wahoo" during World War II. There is an excellent story of the feats of the Wahoo and Cdr. Morton in the May 1958 issue of Argosy magazine. A copy of that article is in the Morton file. A monument was erected to his honor in Owensboro, Kentucky, and dedicated on October 7, 1994. The "Wahoo" sank 28 Japanese ships, a number that was only surpassed by the "Tang." Commander Morton went down with his ship in the La Perouse Straits on October 11, 1943, the result of an aerial bomb. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross. 

 

In 1995, both American and Japanese navy veterans of World War II joined together in a rare alliance to honor the submarine USS Wahoo. Representatives of the one-time enemies erected a peace monument near Cape Soya, Japan where the submarine was sunk and destroyed. Dedication ceremonies were held Sept. 9 at the Nikko Hotel in Wakkanai, Japan. Unveiling of the memorial took place atop the Cape, 10 miles east of the city and only 12 miles from the Wahoo's current berth beneath the waters. Parents: William Dix Morton and Elizabeth Rebecca Rowe.

He was married to Harriet Rose Nelson in 1935. Children were: Douglas N. Morton , Edwina Rowe Morton.

 

bullet.gif Edwina Rowe Morton (Private). Parents: Dudley Walker Morton and Harriet Rose Nelson.

She was married to Botts.

 

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~roweroots/d37.htm

 

 

Doug Morton Memorial Day Article

Author: PaulC | Posted at: 12:37 PM | Filed Under: AWONDoug MortonMush MortonUSS Wahoo |

Kenneth G. Kraetzer of http://www.legionpost50ny.com recently sent me this very interesting article on Doug Morton. This past Memorial Day he also told Wahoo's story to a radio station. Keep up the great work, Ken!

 

May 25, 2008

 

Ex-Westchester resident comes to terms with hero father's death

 

Phil Reisman

Journal News columnist

 

Doug Morton has a personal memorial day that he observes every year without ritual.

"It's the day the Wahoo went down," he said from his home in Englewood, Colo.

The USS Wahoo was the legendary World War II submarine commanded by Morton's father, Cmdr. Dudley W. Morton, that was sunk in the Soya (La Perouse) Strait between Hokkaido, Japan, and Sakhalin, Russia, on Oct. 11, 1943.

 

Morton was a genuine hero in the darkest days of the war when heroes were sorely needed to bolster morale on the home front. Over the course of four patrols covering 11 months, the Wahoo, under Morton's command, was credited with sinking 19 Japanese ships totaling 55,500 tons. In one 23-hour period, the sub destroyed an entire enemy convoy.

 

Known as a "daredevil skipper" and an "undersea ace," Morton was awarded four Navy Crosses, the fourth posthumously.

 

Morton looked and acted the part of a hero. He was a strapping 6-footer, a wrestling champ at the U.S. Naval Academy.

 

People sought his autograph. His exploits were splashed on the front pages of newspapers all over the country. He did radio interviews and gave talks at schools.

When he died, he was only in his mid-30s, and the sad, undeniable fact is that at the time of his death the public knew "Mush" Morton better than his own son did.

"When he was lost, I was 4," said Doug Morton, who is 68 now and has only a single, dim memory of his father.

 

"It's just absolutely the vaguest," he said. "He was on a coast-to-coast radio program, and I think I remember sitting in this auditorium and he was up there being interviewed. But you know that may be stretching it."

 

Morton's picture of his father is mostly painted in broad strokes from the stories and memories given to him over the years by his mother, uncles and grandmother. There's a scrapbook, too. And at least two or three books about the Wahoo have helped fill in some of the blanks.

 

One time a man, who had served under his father, came up to Morton and said, "Just looking at you, I know who you are." So he has that as well - his dad's looks.

But Doug Morton's grown son bears an even uncannier resemblance to the submarine skipper. Named Dudley after his grandfather, he is about the same age his grandfather was when the Wahoo embarked on its last mission.

 

It's an astonishing fact that more than a million American fathers served in World War II. More astonishing is that 183,000 children were left fatherless, according to the American WWII Orphans Network, or AWON.

 

Children from that era are often referred to as members of the so-called "Silent Generation." But those whose fathers never came home comprise a poignant subgroup - the silent sufferers.

 

There were no support groups for them, no process of intervention to soothe the pain of grief.

 

"You didn't talk about it," Morton said. "My mother didn't talk about it."

In 1944, the widowed Harriet Morton moved from Los Angeles to Eastchester to live near her sister. Five years later, she married Bob Bradford, an Army veteran who had fought in the Philippines and periodically suffered from the symptoms of malaria. The family moved to Pelham, where Doug Morton and his sister attended public schools.

Morton loved his stepfather, who died in 1960, but he never got over the loss of the father he never knew. It gnawed at him day and night. He would dream of his father and sometimes wake up crying.

 

Worse, he would go through dark periods that began around September in the weeks leading up to the anniversary of the Wahoo's sinking.

 

"I didn't know why," he recalled. "I'd just blow. It lasted my whole life."

Therapy helped him understand what was going in inside his head, but it didn't lighten an enormous burden of grief. It was especially difficult for him to talk about his father and his service on the Wahoo.

 

Once he gave a talk to a service group and barely got through it. Afterward, a man came up to him and told him he hadn't even been born when his father was killed on Okinawa.

 

"He said he never told anyone before, but he felt he could talk to me," Morton said.

Then an amazing thing happened. You could even call it a miracle. The wreckage of the long lost Wahoo was found lying in 213 feet of water. Japanese fishermen knew where it was and reported snagging their nets in the hulk, but the sub wasn't officially discovered until a Russian dive team photographed it in July 2006.

 

The Wahoo will remain in its final resting place in keeping with Navy tradition for sailors lost at sea. It is a fitting grave for Morton's father and the 77 other men who served aboard the sub.

 

But what's more important to Doug Morton is this: Last year, on Oct. 11, a special memorial service was held in Pearl Harbor to honor the sailors of the Wahoo.

Morton said the service calmed him down in a way he never expected. It brought closure. In the past, he couldn't give interviews about his father without paying a psychic price for it afterward. That is no longer the case.

 

"It really got me past all that grief, a lifetime of grief," he said. "That ceremony did it. It really did it."

 

Morton said he has always been a supporter of the military.

 

"But whenever I see people getting killed, I don't care who they are, bad guys, good guys or whatever, I immediately think about the kids who are left behind."

 

Morton was left behind on Oct. 11, 1943. Only now is he beginning to catch up.

 

http://www.lohud.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080525/COLUMNIST/805250357/1010/COLUMNIST08

http://war-fish.blogspot.no/2008/06/doug-morton-memorial-day-article.html

 

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Commander MORTON’s widow, the former Harriet Nelson, is now Mrs. Robert V. Bradford of Pelham, New York.  children, Douglas N. Morton and Edwina R.Morton.

   (Editor’s note: Edwina R. Morton was present at  the commissioning of USS MORTON in                Charleston in May 1959. This article was taken from the commissioning brochure.)

http://ussmortondd948.org/newsletter.html

 

Da er vel dette Harriet sin ektemann nr 2:

 

Robert V Bradford
New York State Health Department, Genealogical Research Death Index
Name Robert V Bradford Event Type Death Event Date 04 Apr 1961 Event Place Pelham, Pelham, Westchester, New York Gender Male Age 50 Birth Year (Estimated) 1911 Death Year 1961 File Number 30702

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2CHF-2QN

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