When Joseph Milton Street was born on 2 June 1866, in Sholts Township, Martin, Indiana, United States, his father, George Scott Street, was 50 and his mother, Anna Catherine Haller, was 48. He married Elizabeth B. White on 14 August 1889, in Washington, Daviess, Indiana, United States. They were the parents of at least 8 sons and 2 daughters. He lived in Como, New Madrid, Missouri, United States in 1910 and Portage Township, New Madrid, Missouri, United States in 1930. He died on 31 March 1934, in Anderson Township, New Madrid, Missouri, United States, at the age of 67, and was buried in Stanfield Cemetery, Freeborn Township, Dunklin, Missouri, United States.
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This Act was to restrict the power of the President removing certain office holders without approval of the Senate. It denies the President the power to remove any executive officer who had been appointed by the president with the advice and consent of the Senate, unless the Senate approved the removal during the next full session of Congress. The Amendment was later repealed.
Historical Boundaries: 1879: New Madrid, Missouri, United States
Statue of Liberty is dedicated.
English: from Middle English stret(e) ‘street, Roman road’ (Old English strǣt). The surname may be topographic, for someone who lived in the main street of a village or town or by a Roman road, or habitational, from a place so named, such as Street (Kent, Herefordshire, Somerset), Street on the Fosse (Somerset), Strete in Blackawton (Devon), Strete Raleigh in Whimple (Devon), or Streat (Sussex). In the Middle Ages the word at first denoted a Roman road but later also came to denote the main street in a town or village.
Americanized form (translation into English) of Jewish (Ashkenazic) Strasser and a number of other surnames with similar meaning.
Americanized form of Jewish (from Morocco) Chetrit: perhaps from the Arabic verbal root shṭr ‘to become skillful, dexterous, astute’. The exact origin of the suffix –it is unclear.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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