When Edward Spackman Hall was born on 13 July 1881, in Sugar House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, his father, John Hall, was 32 and his mother, Naomi Emma Spackman, was 24. He married Anna Sarah Helena Carlsson on 4 October 1905, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 4 daughters. He lived in Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States in 1920 and Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States in 1928. In 1940, at the age of 59, his occupation is listed as age 59; meat cutter at meat market; married to leah, (age 58) in Pasadena, Los Angeles, California, United States. He died on 5 March 1953, in Pasadena, Los Angeles, California, United States, at the age of 71, and was buried in Pasadena, Los Angeles, California, United States.
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A federal law prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers. The Act was the first law to prevent all members of a national group from immigrating to the United States.
Weber comes from John Henry Weber, an early fur trader. The university opened for students on January 7, 1889. By the late 1920's, the college was in financial difficulty and the Utah Legislature passed a law allowing the purchase of both Weber College and Snow College from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In 1954 the college moved from downtown Ogden the southeast bench area of the city where it resides currently.
This Act set a price at which gold could be traded for paper money.
English, Scottish, Irish, German, Norwegian, and Danish: from Middle English hall (Old English heall), Middle High German halle, Old Norse hǫll all meaning ‘hall’ (a spacious residence), hence a topographic name for someone who lived in or near a hall or an occupational name for a servant employed at a hall. In some cases it may be a habitational name from any of the places called with this word, which in some parts of Germany and Austria in the Middle Ages also denoted a salt mine. Hall is one of the commonest and most widely distributed of English surnames, bearing witness to the importance of the hall as a feature of the medieval village. The English surname has been established in Ireland since the 14th century, and, according to MacLysaght, has become numerous in Ulster since the 17th century.
Swedish: ornamental or topographic name from hall ‘hall’ (a spacious residence), or a habitational name from a placename containing the element hall ‘rock’ (from Old Norse hallr).
Chinese: variant Romanization of the surnames 何 and 賀, see He 1 and 2.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
Possible Related Names(The Journal of) Mrs. Annie W. Wilkinson Papeete, …
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