Ernest Allgood Bailey

Brief Life History of Ernest Allgood

When Ernest Allgood Bailey was born on 31 August 1903, in Nephi, Juab, Utah, United States, his father, Langley Allgood Bailey Jr, was 37 and his mother, Madaline Elva Bigler, was 22. He married Hazel Aagard on 10 November 1937, in Manti, Sanpete, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 3 sons. He lived in Nephi Election Precinct, Juab, Utah, United States in 1940 and Sanpete, Utah, United States in 1950. He died on 13 May 1981, in Fountain Green, Sanpete, Utah, United States, at the age of 77, and was buried in Fountain Green Cemetery, Fountain Green, Sanpete, Utah, United States.

Photos and Memories (11)

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Family Time Line

Ernest Allgood Bailey
1903–1981
Hazel Aagard
1908–2004
Marriage: 10 November 1937
Paul Aagard Bailey
1942–1988
Noel Pyper Bailey
1943–2024
Warren Earl Bailey
1950–2022

Sources (37)

  • Ernest A Bailey, "United States 1950 Census"
  • Unknown, "Utah, County Birth and Death Records,1892-1951"
  • Mr. Ernest A Bailey, "Utah, County Marriages, 1887-1937"

World Events (8)

1904

St. Louis, Missouri, United States hosts Summer Olympic Games.

1914

New Zealand occupies Western Samoa during World War I and continues to administer it after the war by virtue of a League of Nations mandate (and a United Nations mandate after World War II).

1927

Charles Lindbergh makes the first solo nonstop transatlantic flight in his plane The Spirit of St. Louis.

Name Meaning

English: status name for a steward or official, from Middle English bailli ‘manager, administrator’ (Old French baillis, from Late Latin baiulivus, an adjectival derivative of baiulus ‘attendant, carrier, porter’).

English: habitational name from Bailey in Little Mitton, Lancashire, named with Old English beg ‘berry’ + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.

English: occasionally a topographic name for someone who lived by the outer wall of a castle, from Middle English (Old French) bailli ‘outer courtyard of a castle’ (Old French bail(le) ‘enclosure’, a derivative of bailer ‘to enclose’). This term became a placename in its own right, denoting a district beside a fortification or wall, as in the case of the Old Bailey in London, which formed part of the early medieval outer wall of the city.

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

Possible Related Names

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