Eva Pauline Alexander

Brief Life History of Eva Pauline

When Eva Pauline Alexander was born on 4 July 1918, in Chandler, Ohio Township, Warrick, Indiana, United States, her father, Charles Raymond Alexander, was 28 and her mother, Irene Margaret Batey, was 24. She married Fred Stockton Kiser on 16 February 1940, in Caldwell, Canyon, Idaho, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 daughters. She lived in Emmett, Ada, Idaho, United States in 1930 and Jerome, Idaho, United States in 2007. She died on 11 May 2007, in Twin Falls, Twin Falls, Idaho, United States, at the age of 88, and was buried in Jerome, Jerome, Idaho, United States.

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Family Time Line

Fred Stockton Kiser
1913–2007
Eva Pauline Alexander
1918–2007
Marriage: 16 February 1940
Barbara Kiser
1942–2013
Dixie Littleton
1944–2009

Sources (22)

  • E Pauline Alexander in household of Charles R Alexander, "United States Census, 1930"
  • Legacy NFS Source: Eva Pauline Alexander - Government record: birth-name: Eva Pauline Alexander
  • Pauline Kiser, "United States Social Security Death Index"

Spouse and Children

World Events (8)

1919 · The Eighteenth Amendment

The Eighteenth Amendment established a prohibition on all intoxicating liquors in the United States. As a result of the Amendment, the Prohibition made way for bootlegging and speakeasies becoming popular in many areas. The Eighteenth Amendment was then repealed by the Twenty-first Amendment. Making it the first and only amendment that has been repealed.

1919

Historical Boundaries: 1919: Jerome, Idaho, United States

1942 · The Japanese American internment

Caused by the tensions between the United States and the Empire of Japan, the internment of Japanese Americans caused many to be forced out of their homes and forcibly relocated into concentration camps in the western states. More than 110,000 Japanese Americans were forced into these camps in fear that some of them were spies for Japan.

Name Meaning

Scottish, English, German, and Dutch: from the personal name Alexander, classical Greek Alexandros, which probably originally meant ‘repulser of men (i.e. of the enemy)’, from alexein ‘to repel’ + andros, genitive of anēr ‘man’. Its popularity in the Middle Ages was due mainly to the Macedonian conqueror, Alexander the Great (356–323 BC ) - or rather to the hero of the mythical versions of his exploits that gained currency in the so-called Alexander Romances. The name was also borne by various early Christian saints, including a patriarch of Alexandria (c. 250–326 AD ), whose main achievement was condemning the Arian heresy. The Gaelic form of the personal name is Alasdair, which has given rise to a number of Scottish and Irish patronymics, for example McAllister . Alexander is a common personal name in Scotland, often representing an Anglicized form of the Gaelic name. In North America, the English form of the surname has absorbed cognates from other languages, e.g. Spanish Alejandro , Italian Alessandro , Arabic or Assyrian/Chaldean Iskandar and Iskander , and their derivatives, e.g. Greek patronymic Alexandropoulos.

Jewish: from the adopted personal name Alexander (see 1 above) or shortened from the eastern Ashkenazic (originally Slavic) patronymics Aleksandrovich or Alexandrowicz.

History: A number of Scotch-Irish families of this name landed at New York in the early 18th century. By 1746, six of them were established in NC. Others came in through Philadelphia, for example Archibald Alexander, who came from Londonderry in northern Ireland in 1736 and established himself in VA. — The Revolutionary general William Alexander (1726–83) was always known as ‘Lord Sterling’ to his compatriots, although his claim to the title was denied by the College of Arms in London. His father, James Alexander, was a Jacobite who had fled to New York after the failure of the Jacobite rising in 1715. The claim to the title arose in connection with their ancestor Sir William Alexander, a courtier and poet at the court of King James VI of Scotland (James I of England), who created him Earl of Stirling in 1633.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

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