Carrie Blanche Rose

Brief Life History of Carrie Blanche

When Carrie Blanche Rose was born on 21 November 1889, in San Jose, Santa Clara, California, United States, her father, George C Rose, was 29 and her mother, Minnie Belle Slinkard, was 21. She married Elmer Simeon Hunting on 13 December 1906. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 3 daughters. She lived in San Benito, California, United States in 1935 and Hollister Judicial Township, San Benito, California, United States in 1940. She died on 2 November 1979, in Contra Costa, California, United States, at the age of 89.

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Family Time Line

Elmer Simeon Hunting
1886–1930
Carrie Blanche Rose
1889–1979
Marriage: 13 December 1906
Frances Rose Hunting
1910–1912
Merlyn Elmer Hunting
1911–1975
Evelyn Thelma Hunting
1913–1973
Annabelle Blanche Hunting
1914–2011
Charles Edwin Hunting
1916–2007
George Simeon Hunting
1917–1960
Frederick Lawrence Hunting
1918–1962
Harold Howard Hunting
1922–2013

Sources (20)

  • Carrie B Evertsen in household of Jalmar Evertsen, "United States Census, 1940"
  • Legacy NFS Source: Carrie Blanche Rose - birth-name: Carrie Blanche Rose
  • Carrie Blanche Evertsen, "California Death Index, 1940-1997"

World Events (8)

1890 · The Sherman Antitrust Act

This Act tried to prevent the raising of prices by restricting trade. The purpose of the Act was to preserve a competitive marketplace to protect consumers from abuse.

1891 · Angel Island Serves as Quarantine Station

Angel Island served as a quarantine station for those diagnosed with bubonic plague beginning in 1891. A quarantine station was built on the island which was funded by the federal government at the cost of $98,000. The disease spread to port cities around the world, including the San Francisco Bay Area, during the third bubonic plague pandemic, which lasted through 1909.

1913 · The Sixteenth Amendment

The Sixteenth Amendment allows Congress to collect an income tax without dividing it among the states based on population.

Name Meaning

English, Scottish, French, Walloon, Danish, and German: from the name of the flower, Middle English, Old French, Middle High German rose (from Latin rosa), in various applications. In part, it is a topographic name for someone who lived at a place where wild roses grew, or a topographic or habitational name referring to a house bearing the sign of the rose. It is also found, especially in Europe, as a nickname for a man with a ‘rosy’ complexion (compare 4 below). In North America, the English form of the surname has absorbed cognates and similar-sounding names from other languages, e.g. Hungarian Rózsa (see Rozsa ), Slovak Róža and Czech Roza . Compare 6 below and French Larose 2.

English: from the Middle English female personal name Rohese, Roese, later Rose, Royse (ancient Germanic Hrodohaidis, Rothaid, composed of the elements hrōd ‘fame, renown’ + haid(is) ‘kind, sort’).

English and Scottish: variant of Ross .

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

Possible Related Names

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