Marguerite Marion Guillemin

Brief Life History of Marguerite Marion

When Marguerite Marion Guillemin was born on 19 February 1898, in Rail Road Flat, Calaveras, California, United States, her father, John Baptiste Guillemin, was 49 and her mother, Louise Cecelia Marguerite Guillemin, was 28. She married Joseph Ernest Roseberry on 20 April 1917, in Garfield, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 5 daughters. She lived in Madera, California, United States in 1935 and Bramwell Election Precinct, Gem, Idaho, United States in 1940. She died on 19 April 1986, in Madera, Madera, California, United States, at the age of 88, and was buried in Mariposa, Mariposa, California, United States.

Photos and Memories (1)

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Family Time Line

Joseph Ernest Roseberry
1892–1978
Marguerite Marion Guillemin
1898–1986
Marriage: 20 April 1917
Josephine Marguerite Roseberry
1918–2009
Frances Earnest "Frank" Roesbery
1919–2013
Robert George Roesbery
1921–2014
Maurine Elizabeth Roesberry
1923–
June Alice Roesberry
1925–2009
Geneva Virginia Roesberry
1927–2022
Jeanette Doris Roesbery
1932–2009

Sources (16)

  • Marguerite Roseburg in household of Joseph Roseburg, "United States Census, 1920"
  • Marguerite Roesbery, "United States, GenealogyBank Obituaries, Births, and Marriages, 1980-2015"
  • Marguerite Marian Roesberry, "California Death Index, 1940-1997"

World Events (8)

1900 · Gold for Cash!

This Act set a price at which gold could be traded for paper money.

1915

Historical Boundaries: 1915: Gem, Idaho, United States

1923 · The President Dies of a Heart Attack

Warrant G. Harding died of a heart attack in the Palace hotel in San Francisco.

Name Meaning

form of Margaret , also used in the English-speaking world, where its use has been reinforced by the fact that the name was adopted in the 19th century for a garden flower, a large cultivated variety of daisy. Margaret was earlier used in English as a dialect word denoting the ox-eye daisy, and the French equivalent was borrowed into English just in time to catch the vogue for deriving girls' names from vocabulary words denoting flowers. See also Daisy .

Dictionary of First Names © Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges 1990, 2003, 2006.

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