When Noal H Black was born on 19 December 1916, in Ferron, Emery, Utah, United States, his father, Herman Black, was 23 and his mother, Emily Jane Brindley, was 18. He married Elise Voelker on 28 June 1969, in Tijuana, Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. He lived in Antimony Election Precinct, Garfield, Utah, United States for about 5 years and Antimony, Garfield, Utah, United States in 2000. He registered for military service in 1942. He died on 19 November 2000, in Orem, Utah, Utah, United States, at the age of 83, and was buried in Antimony Cemetery, Antimony, Garfield, Utah, United States.
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U.S. intervenes in World War I, rejects membership of League of Nations.
The Chapman Branch Library is a Carnegie library that was built in 1918 and is now is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Japanese attack Pearl Harbor.
English and Scottish: chiefly from Middle English blak(e) ‘black’ (Old English blæc, blaca), a nickname given from the earliest times to a swarthy or dark-haired man. However, Middle English blac also meant ‘pale, wan’, a reflex of Old English blāc ‘pale, white’ with a shortened vowel. Compare Blatch and Blick . With rare exceptions it is impossible to disambiguate these antithetical senses in Middle English surnames. The same difficulty arises with Blake and Block .
Scottish: in Gaelic-speaking areas this name was adopted as a translation of the epithet dubh ‘dark, black-(haired)’, or of various other names based on Gaelic dubh ‘black’, see Duff .
Americanized form (translation into English) of various European surnames directly or indirectly derived from the adjective meaning ‘black, dark’, for example German and Jewish Schwarz and Slavic surnames beginning with Čern-, Chern- (see Chern and Cherne ), Chorn-, Crn- or Czern-.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
Possible Related NamesHERMAN'S EARLY YEARS Herman Black was born 13 October 1893 in Antimony, Garfield County, Utah, USA, to William Black (28 November 1863 - 10 February 1937) and Matilda Emily King (10 April 1863 - 8 Jun …
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