Report: individuals with associated notes

         Description: personen met geassocieerde notities


Matches 44901 to 44950 of 49022  » Comma-delimited CSV file

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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
44901 I34042  Trullinger  Johannes  Mar 1778  16 Sep 1822  Gordon Drollinger and I are in agreement that Johannes Trullinger (married to Barbara Brunnern) could very well be Johan Mark Drollinger, son of Peter and Sophia Drollinger. Hannah Trullinger, sister of Johan Mark Drollinger, was living with Hannah Levering-Wunder in the 1860 Census as a further connection. (DHD 23 Mar 2014)

Originally listed as Johan Mark but with no supporting data. A relook at material done for Priscilla Stone Sharp by a researcher (hard copy sent to me by Priscilla) lists a John Drollinger born Mar 1778, sponsors Andrew Trumbore and Louisa, Indianfield Lutheran Church. Changed Johan Mark to Johan based on this data. Estate file of Peter lists a John who is probably this Johan who is a brother of Hannah Trullinger who was residing with the Levering family 1860 census. So that would tend to point towards Johan (Mark sic) being Johannes Trullinger who Married Barbara Brunnern, both being from Germantown. GLD 2014 
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44902 I34042  Trullinger  Johannes  Mar 1778  16 Sep 1822  Burial: Ivy Hill Cemetery
Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA 
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44903 I34042  Trullinger  Johannes  Mar 1778  16 Sep 1822  We know Peter Drollinger of Franconia (now Philadelphia) spelled his name as Drollinger. His son Andreas or Andrew was a Drollinger who was variously recorded as Trollinger and signed his name to the probate of Peter record as Trollinger. His marriage record was as Drollinger. Andrew's children found in the records of St Michael's Evangelical Luthern Church Germantown (also now part of Philadelphia) went to spelling the surname Drollinger, Trollinger and Trullinger. This is confusing to say the least and future researchers need to be aware of this spelling quirk.  tree1 
44904 I18519  Trullinger  John      John and Hiram may have been twins and possibly baptized together on 28 Mar 1834 about a month after their births. John may have died prior to the 1850 Census which would explain his absence therein.
 
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44905 I19949  Trullinger  John      Email
from: Tom Mindrum tmindrum@gmail.com
to: Dave Drollinger
date: Thu, Jan 19, 2012 at 12:30 PM
subject: Re: Charles Francis "Frank" Trullinger
Dave,
Sorry but I have no further information about Frank Trullinger other than what is on my website.
The daughter of Josiah Howell and Julia "Fannie" Dauchy was Lena Leota Howell, b. 21 Mar 1882, but that is on my website as well.
As you can see, my source on Frank thought that his father's name might be John, but she had no evidence of this.
Good luck with your search. 
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44906 I18519  Trullinger  John      Ancestry.com
St. Luke Church, Danville, Ohio
St. Luke's Records 1829-early 1900's
Register of Baptisms, 1892-1900
St. Luke's Records
28 Mar 1834
John Trullinger s/o George Trullinger & Honora Durbin.
Sps (Sponsors): Benjamin & Rosanna Durbin  
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44907 I19698  Trullinger  John  Abt 1812  16 Jan 1894  New Jersey, Deaths and Burials Index, 1798-1971
Name: John Trullinger
Birth Date: abt 1812
Birth Place: United States
Death Date: 16 Jan 1894
Death Place: Camden City, Camden, New Jersey
Death Age: 82 years 10 months
Occupation: Shoe Mk'R
Marital Status: Widowed
Gender: Male
Father Birth Place: United States
Mother Birth Place: United States
FHL Film Number: 589798 
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44908 I19340               
44909 I16736  Trullinger  John Andrew Schultz  11 Mar 1825  11 Mar 1907  based on 27 Feb 1939 letter to Violet Trullinger Farragut Iowa from Martha Trullinger Harrisburg PA

except in one bed room over the entry which I give and bequeath to my son John A S Trullinger. Item I give and bequesth to my son John A S Trullinger the other half of the above lot of ground running from Front Street to River Alley in the Borough of Harrisburg.

Name: John Trullinger Home in 1880: East Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania Age: 55 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1825 Birthplace: Pennsylvania Relation to Head of Household: Self (Head) Father's birthplace: Pennsylvania Mother's birthplace: Pennsylvania Occupation: Blacksmith Marital Status: Widower Race: White Gender: Male
Household Members:
Name Age
John Trullinger 55
Marien A. Trullinger 25 dau
Emma G. Snoddy 46 housekeeper

Name: John Trullinger Birth Year: abt 1825 Age in 1870: 45 Birthplace: Pennsylvania Home in 1870: Lower Paxton, Dauphin, Pennsylvania Gender: Male
Household Members:
Name Age
John Trullinger 45 blacksmith
Caroline Trullinger 42
Manon Trullinger 16
Alice Trullinger 13
Filmor Trullinger 11

Name: John Trullinger Age in 1860: 35 Birth Year: abt 1825 Birthplace: Pennsylvania Home in 1860: Harrisburg Ward 1, Dauphin, Pennsylvania Gender: Male Post Office: Harrisburg
Household Members:
Name Age
John Trullinger 35 blacksmith
Caroline Trullinger 32
Clemens Trullinger 10
Marion Trullinger 6
Allice Trullinger 3
Filmore Trullinger 2
Submit Everet 20
W Knepley 37 engineer RR

Home in 1900: Williams, Benton, Missouri
[Cole Camp, Benton, Missouri]  
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44910 I16736  Trullinger  John Andrew Schultz  11 Mar 1825  11 Mar 1907  We know Peter Drollinger of Franconia (now Philadelphia) spelled his name as Drollinger. His son Andreas or Andrew was a Drollinger who was variously was recorded as Trollinger and signed his name to the probate of Peter record as Trollinger. His marriage record was as Drollinger. Andrew's children found in the records of St Michael's Evangelical Luthern Church Germantown (also now part of Philadelphia) went to spelling the surname drollinger, Trollinger and Trullinger. This is confusing to say the least and future researchers need to be aware of this spelling quirk.  tree1 
44911 I1374  Trullinger  John Buchanan  17 Feb 1857  23 Nov 1952  1930 United States Federal Census
about John B Trullinger
Name: John B Trullinger
Gender: Male
Birth Year: abt 1857
Birthplace: Iowa
Race: White
Home in 1930: Maryville, Nodaway, Missouri
Marital Status: Married
Relation to Head of House: Head
Spouse's Name: Clara B Trullinger
Father's Birthplace: Indiana
Mother's Birthplace: Illinois

Name: John B Erullnger
[John B Trullinger]
[John B Trullnger] Home in 1920: Maryville Ward 1, Nodaway, Missouri Age: 62 Estimated birth year: abt 1858 Birthplace: Iowa Relation to Head of House: Self (Head)
[Head] Spouse's name: Clara B Erullnger Father's Birth Place: Indiana Mother's Birth Place: Illinois Marital Status: Married Race: White Sex: Male Home owned: Own Able to read: Yes Able to Write: Yes
Household Members:
Name Age
John B Erullnger 62
Clara B Erullnger 37
Laura M Erullnger 15  
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44912 I1374  Trullinger  John Buchanan  17 Feb 1857  23 Nov 1952  John Buchanan Trullinger
Burial: Miriam Cemetery
Plot: Sec 6, Row 13, N-S, South part
Maryville, Nodaway, Missouri, USA 
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44913 I1374  Trullinger  John Buchanan  17 Feb 1857  23 Nov 1952  MO death certificate 39618  tree1 
44914 I5290  Trullinger  John Bunyon  30 Mar 1873  2 Aug 1951  John Bunyan Trullinger in the U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918
Name: John Bunyan Trullinger
Race: White
Birth Date: 30 Mar 1873
Street address: 1
Residence Place: Clackamas, Oregon, USA
Physical Build: Medium
Height: Medium
Hair Color: light Brown
Eye Color: light Blue
Relative: Maria Jane Trullinger 
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44915 I5290  Trullinger  John Bunyon  30 Mar 1873  2 Aug 1951  John B Trullinger in the Oregon, Death Index, 1898-2008
Name: John B Trullinger
Death Date: 2 Aug 1951
Death Place: Clackamas
Spouse: Fannie
Certificate: 8610

John B Trullinger in the U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007
Name: John B Trullinger
SSN: 542284139
Birth Date: 30 Mar 1873
Birth Place: Iowa
Claim Date: 22 Aug 1946
Type of Claim: Life Claim
Notes: 12 Dec 1978: Name listed as JOHN B TRULLINGER 
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44916 I5290  Trullinger  John Bunyon  30 Mar 1873  2 Aug 1951  John Bunyon Trullinger
Burial: Russellville Community Cemetery
Clackamas County, Oregon, USA

Inscription: "John B. Trullinger March 30, 1873 August2, 1951"

 
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44917 I1278  Trullinger  John Charles   29 May 1946  26 May 2013  Jay Trullinger
Janet DeVore
Posts: 60
Full Name: Janet DeVore
Jay Trullinger, Posted Sun Jun 09, 2013 9:49 am
We were stunned to see in today's Oregonian, an obituary for PMUG member Jay Trullinger. According to that, he passed away unexpectedly on May 26. We don't have any other details, but you can go to a memorial page here:
http://www.anewtradition.com/obituaries ... Trullinger

sriggins
Posts: 357
Full Name: Steve Riggins
Re: Jay Trullinger, Posted Mon Jun 10, 2013 8:09 am
This really saddens me. Jay was outspoken and helpful in changing some of my tone at the meetings, and helping with ideas for the group. I did not know him well beyond PMUG, but he will be missed.
Steve Riggins
President, PMUG

Linkedin.com
Jay Trullinger
Owner, Trullinger IT Solutions
Location
Portland, Oregon Area
Industry
Information Technology and Services
Jay Trullinger's Overview
Current Owner at Trullinger IT Solutions
Past
IT Support at Rain
IT Support at DB Professionals
IT Stuff at Pacificorp
Systems Admin. at PacifiCorp
Education
Portland State University
University of Oregon
Jay Trullinger's Experience
Owner Trullinger IT Solutions
2000 - Present (12 years)
IT Support Rain Privately Held; 1-10 employees; Marketing and Advertising industry
2006 - 2008 (2 years)
IT Support DB Professionals Public Company; 51-200 employees; China; Information Technology and Services industry
2000 - 2008 (8 years)
IT Stuff Pacificorp Privately Held; 5001-10,000 employees; Utilities industry
1968 - 2001 (33 years)
Systems Admin. PacifiCorp Privately Held; 5001-10,000 employees; Utilities industry
1967 - 2001 (34 years)
Jay Trullinger's Education
Portland State University BS, Mathematics / Computer Science
1967 - 1973
University of Oregon 1964 - 1968
Jay Trullinger's Additional Information
Groups and Associations: Portland State University Portland State University Alumni Association Tahadowa University of Oregon 
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44918 I1278  Trullinger  John Charles   29 May 1946  26 May 2013  John (Jay) Charles Trullinger
date of birth May 29 1946
date of death May 26 2013
John (Jay) Charles Trullinger was born May 29, 1946 to John D. and Geraldine Woodbury Trullinger. The Trullinger family was among Oregon's first settlers, arriving in the territory in 1848. They were instrumental in the development of Lake Oswego, Forest Grove, Astoria and Yamhill. Jay's grandfather, Frederick Leroy Trullinger, built a prominent garden products company (Lilly-Miller) which was led by three generations of Trullingers.
In Portland Jay attended Duniway and Cleveland, later University of Oregon, where he pledged the Phi Delta Theta fraternity and graduated from Portland State University with a degree in Mathematics. Growing up, his family spent many weekends and vacations boating on the Columbia and Willamette instilling Jay's love of the water and watercraft. In 1966 he joined the US Coast Guard Reserve. As an adult, Jay took many annual boating trips with friends through the US and Canadian San Juans.
Jay spent a 34-year career in IT with PP &L. After his retirement in 2000 he started Trullinger IT Solutions, a tech business solving computer problems. Jay was "The Computer Guy" and any Starbucks was his office. He enlightened lives with his general knowledge and thoughtful conversations.
He was a long-time member of MAC where he helped organize the City League Squash program. He was active in Portland Bocce League, Portland Mac User Group, and Institute of Science Engineering and Public Policy. Jay loved the time he spent with friends. Conversations over coffee or lunch would be part of any day. He embraced learning and technology. Classical music and outdoor concerts were always part of his summer enjoyment. And, Jay's dog radar was "on steroids". He never met a dog he didn't like.
Jay loved his family, extended and immediate. He is survived by his wife, Becky Botsford Trullinger, daughter, Jamie; son, Mason (Melissa) and their children Elise and Bennett; and brother Sid Woodbury.
Jay's family and friends knew him to be intelligent and kind. All who loved him will hold his memory closely.
A celebration of his life will include a dog walk and be held 10:00am, July 14th at The Fields Neighborhood Park, NW 11 and Overton.
The family asks that any contributions be made in Jay's name to your local Humane Society for rescue dogs.

John Charles "Jay" Trullinger
(Also ref obit photo of John attached to this website)
Trullinger, John 'Jay' Charles 66 May 29, 1946 May 26, 2013 John "Jay" Charles Trullinger passed away untimely on May 26, 2013, surrounded by loving family and friends. He was born on May 29, 1946 in Portland to parents John D. and Geraldine Trullinger, with siblings Jacquie LeBeck (dec) and Sid Woodbury (Palm Desert). Jay is survived by Becky Botsford Trullinger; and their children, Mason (Melissa) and Jamie; and two grandchildren, Elise and Bennett. For full obituary and memorial details see www.anewtradition.com.
Published in The Oregonian on June 9, 2013 
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44919 I19377  Trullinger  John Clark  1812    No data found to prove the existence of this person. GLD 2014  tree1 
44920 I1226  Trullinger  John Corse   29 Jul 1828  28 Apr 1901  John Corse Trullinger was probably named in honor of John Corse who was the first elected sheriff of Fountain County, Indiana, elected in 1826 and served until 1830. (Ref a copy of the newspaper article titled, "First Fountain Sheriff's Grave" attached to the record of John Corse (abt 1782-1848) in this database.)

Ancestry.com
Message Boards
Re: John Trullinger from Astoria
timgdixon
Posted: 16 Jul 2005 6:21AM
Classification: Query
John Corse Trullinger was my great, great, great grand-father. I have in my possession his Bible that was presented to him by Archibald Johnson on Feb. 23, 1848. It contains many interesting birthdates, marriages, etc. He carried this Bible on the trail west and it has been handed down over the years and ended up with my mother whose maiden name was Mary Jane Trullinger.
So the generations are:
John Corse Trullinger (her great grand-father
Thaddeus Stevens Trullinger (her grand father)
Clyde Badollett Trullinger (her father)
Mary Jane Trullinger (my mother)
Here is an interesting letter copied from within John Corse Trullinger's Bible dated Jan. 26, 1899 on West Shore Mills letter head:
"This is a correct statement the best of my memory. I was born in Fountain County, State of Indiana, July 29th 1828. My father was born in Ross County, State of Ohio, Feb. 12th, 1801. His german name was Daniel Drollinger but his first school teacher told him to write his name Daniel Trullinger. His Father came over from Germany to America in 1775 and settled in Pennsylvania. Afterwards moved into Ohio when it was a territory. My mothers maiden name was Elizabeth Johnston, her fathers name was Archibald Johnston and was born in old Virginia and was 16 years old when the Revolutionary War began and went in the Army at 18 years old and fought through the war. He had six brothers older than he and all fought through the war and lived through it. President Andrew Johnston was my mothers first cousin being the son of the next older brother of my grand father Archibald Johnston. My mother after Andrew Johnston's election to the Presedency began here in Oregon a correspondence with him and kept it up until her death. My grandmother Johnston's maiden name was Booth, was born in the State of Meriland. Afterward her family moved to the State of Virginia, where my grand father and grand mother were married. My great grand mother Booth died at the age of 104 years in the State of Indiana, Fountain County. I remember her the same as if I saw her yesterday."
Any direct descendants of this line of Trullingers out there interested in exchanging history please e-mail me.
Tim Dixon

OUR PROUD PAST, Gail J. McCormick
Gold Rush Foretold on Oregon Trail page 65
In 1848, the Trullinger family of thirteen travelled 2,000 miles on a journey that took six months to reach the Oregon Territory. Along the way, the discovery of gold in California was miraculously announced. John Corse Trullinger, then 20, related the story to the editor of the Oregonian in 1890: "I crossed the plains from Iowa to Oregon in the summer of 1848 with my father's family. The company that we travelled with from St. Joseph on the Missouri River, to Fort Hall was called Wambo's company. Captain Wambo had been in Oregon and California some years before and was a very competent man to take charge of an emigrant train. Nothing of importance transpired with us from the Missouri River to Fort Hall, with the exception of meeting Joe Meek on his mission to Washington, and the old mountain men, Eberts and Lebo."
"What we saw at the time, and with me ever since, has been a great phenomenon I shall now describe. We were camped on the Sweetwater River about twenty miles east of Independence Rock; our corral made, teams out to grass, supper over and all gathered in little groups about the corral talking the things of the day that had just passed. As usual on such occasions upon a beautiful sunset in that lovely country of blue skies in the month of June, everyone was enjoying the beautiful weather and balmy evening. This was the 20th of June 1848. It was perhaps thirty minutes after sunset when at the horizon in the southwest there began to rise up as it were a gold bronze ball. It looked about the size of a full moon. It very gently arose until it stood at what you would call the eight o'clock mark in the afternoon. There it stood still for a few minutes, then commenced to elongate each way across the horizon until it was in appearance about an inch wide. Then it commenced to crook up, and when it stopped its movement it made the word "mines". There it stood in the heavens in living letters of gold, and remained so until the darkness of the night faded it out. It stood there over three hours as plain as any sign over any store in the city of Portland, and as easily read. The comments at the time by our old fathers and ministers were varied. Some divided the word said it read mi-nes that is, we would all get out to Oregon "mines" meaning flat broke. At that time no one on the plains knew of the discovery of gold in Califonia. There was various comment on this phenomenon for some weeks, but no one could make it out. Finally when we reached Oregon City, we heard of the gold mines in California, and that solved the problem. From that day to this, I have never doubted the story of the sword that hung over Jerusalem for seven years, and that there was a great and living God that on the eve of great events does communicatee with men."

John Corse would go on to be a great promoter, inventor and politician. For eleven years he operated a flour and sawmill on Fanno Creek, near Tigard. He also engaged in farming and his was the first timothy sown in oregon. When John heard that a place called Oswego might be building an iron foundry he felt that profitable ventures would reside in that area. A donation land claim had already been filed by A.A. Durham. He had laid out a town site and named it in honor of his home town, Oswego New York. In 1865, John Corse bought the town site, improved the Durham Sawmill and renamed it Oswego Milling Company. The first iron produced west of the Rocky Mountains was cast at Oregon Iron Company in Oswego on 24 August 1867. John took the first two pigs cast and planned to use them as street markers at his Oswego town site. He next founded a business called People's Transportation Company with the dream that it would transport the abundant produce grown in the Tualatin Valley and other goods between Portland and Hillsboro. He ran an extensive towing and boating business with his seventy one foot steam scow named "Minnehaha".

In 1869, he sold his Oswego interests and moved to Forest Grove. An excerpt from "Oregon Native Son" tells us more of John's accomplishments: "Placing his children in school at Forest Grove, he went to Boston, where he built a turbine water-wheel, and going to Lowell, to Emerson's water-wheel testing works, he had his wheel tested, and succeeded in obtaining from it seventy six percent of working power. Having bought the Centerville flouring and saw mills, near Forest Grove, off Ulysses Jackson, he operated them untill 1877, when they were burned. In 1875, he bought property in Astoria, where he subsequently built the West Shore Mills, the property covering twelve acres, and containing, besides the mills, warehouses, wharves, barns and electric light station. During his experience in the lumbering business he built on the Walluskie Creek, three and one-half miles of the standard guage railway track, with fifty six pound rails, and employed about 150 men. In December 1885, he commenced the construction of an electric light plant in Astoria, from which the city is lighted. Mr. Trullinger has held various offices of public trust in Astoria and Clatsop County. He was mayor of Astoria from 1886 to 1888, and previous to that was a member of the city council. In December 1891, he was elected president of the board of police commissioners. In June 1892, he was elected by a large majority to the state legislature. He was one of the organizers of the Republican Party in Oregon in 1856."

History of the Pacific Northwest
Oregon and Washington 1889
Volume II
Page 591-610
Excerpt Page 609:
J.C. TRULLINGER. - There is scarcely a man in Oregon who has been engaged in more various, or, on the whole more successful enterprises than the man whose name appears above. With a tendency, possibly, to push his efforts a little beyond the line of safety, and to overcrowd himself with different schemes, he has nevertheless a substantial grip on property and business which proves his sagacity. If his love of making inventions and introducing improvements incline him to temerity, his career shows that he has a solid judgment which warns him when to put on the brakes. Oregon owes much to his inventiveness and energy.

His business at Astoria, Oregon, is very large. He owns the West Shore sawmills, which are now running at the rate of one million feet per month, besides a large amount of lath. He owns a large body of the finest timber land on the Wyluski, a stream some seven miles, by water, from Astoria. To this he has built and equipped a standard-guage railroad from the head of tide water, a distance of three miles. Thereby he is able to put two hundred thousand feet of logs into the boom per day. To feed the fifty or one hundred men in his mill and at the logging camp, he has bought a tide-land farm of three hundred and twenty acres, which he has diked and stocked with Jersey, Guernsey and Holstein animals, and from which he gets his supply of butter and beef. This is one of the richest farms in the country, and is easily worth twenty-five thousand dollars. Besides this extensive business, he owns, as he first introduced, the electric-light system of Astoria, furnishing the city with fifty arc lights.

In Yamhill county he also owns a farm of seven hundred and thirty-five acres, two miles west of Newburg, in the beautiful valley of the Chehalem. Last year he raised six thousand bushels of grain and a large quantitative of fruit upon that place. That business is not only sufficient for the active brain of Mr. Trullinger himself, but gives employment to his six sons, who are all adults, the youngest being seventeen. His two daughters are married. His ability to engage his own family in his extensive business is as remarkable as it is safe, and insures both his and their profit.

When we inquire into his former life, we find him in 1848 a young man crossing the plains with his father's family to Oregon; and in the following winter he and his brother found it no easy matter to get horses for going to the mines in California. His early enterprises in Oregon have been almost endless. Soon after returning from the mines on the schooner Montague, making a perilous voyage, he engaged in warehousing at Milwaukee. In 1852 he took up a claim nine miles south of Portland on the Tualatin, remaining eleven years, clearing fifty acres of brush and timber land, and putting up a flour and sawmill. He was among the first to plant an orchard and sow timothy. In 1863 he bought property at Oswego, and rebuilt the sawmill there in 1865. He laid a logging railway from the Tualatin to Sucker lake, placed a steam scow on the lake, and made a portage to connect with the Willamette. Joseph Kellogg and the People's Transportation Company co-operated, the former running a small steamer on the Tualatin river into Washington county.

In 1863, with A.A. Durham, of whom he had purchased a half interest in the townsite of Oswego, he sold four acres of land with water privileges to the iron company; and, having bought the Bishop Scott Grammar School tract, he laid off a townsite, settling as the first stake the first pig of iron run from the iron works, or indeed west of the Rocky Mountains. In 1870 he bought the famous old flour-mill at Centerville in Washington county, which was built and owned by John Jackson. He ran this until 1879, when it was burned. In 1875 he bought the forty-acre tract at Astoria owned by Alanson Hinman, and soon erected his sawmill on the splendid water-front thus secured. There he has remained, with a diversion of two years mining in Jackson county, with the results which we have already seen.

Mr. Trullinger has been active in making inventions, having seven which he has covered with patents, among the most notable of which are the "Duplex Ace", and a Turbine water-wheel. He has always been public spirited in support of schools and churches, and is fully up with the times in public maters, taking an active interest in politics, and pushing for railroad connection for Astoria. The partner of his labors and successes, Miss Hanna Boyles, became his wife July 24, 1853, and now shares the name and fame which she has done much to create.

John Corse Trullinger's personal Bible is the possession of Timothy "Tim" Dixon as of 2005. Ref record for Tim Dixon.

John Corse Trullinger helped establish the Republican Party in Oregon in 1856.

Scientific American
A Weekly Journal Of Practical Information, Art, Science, Mechanics, Chemistry, And Manufactures.
Vol. LIV. - No. 1.
New York, January 2, 1886.
June 12, 1886
Page 378
Miscellaneous Inventions
(Excerpt)
"A bucket for steamboat paddle wheels has been patented by Mosses(sp?), John C. Trullinger and Uriah B. S???(sp?), of Astoria, Oregon. The buckets around the wheel arms in the regular manner, are wedge-shaped, and have their front and rear sides so inclined as to act upon the water to slightly raise the vessel, entering and leaving the water with the least possible disturbance to its particles, and reducing the "slip" to a minimum. 
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44921 I1226  Trullinger  John Corse   29 Jul 1828  28 Apr 1901  Oregon, Biographical and Other Index Card File, 1700s-1900s
Name: John Corse Trullinger
Ethnicity: German, English, Welsh
Occupation: Farming, Lumbering, Milling
Birth Date: 29 Jul 1828
Birth Place: Fountain Co, Indiana
Marriage Date: 24 Jul 1853
Marriage Place: Oregon
Location Date: 1848
Location: Oregon, USA
Death Date: 28 Apr 1901
Spouse: Hannah Boyles 
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44922 I1226  Trullinger  John Corse   29 Jul 1828  28 Apr 1901  John Corse Trullinger
Burial: Ocean View Cemetery Plot: Grace G Lot 58 Block 40
Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA

Inscription: "John C. Trullinger 1828-1901 Pioneer Of 1848" 
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44923 I1272  Trullinger  John Daniel  10 Jan 1908  16 May 1993  Oregon, Death Index, 1898-2008
Name: John Daniel Trullinger
Age: 85
Birth Date: 10 Jan 1908
Death Date: 16 May 1993
Death Place: Multnomah
Spouse: Gerald
Certificate: 93-10862

Social Security Death Index
Name: John D. Trullinger
SSN: 540-01-3765
Last Residence: 97035 Lake Oswego, Clackamas, Oregon, United States of America
Born: 10 Jan 1908
Died: 16 May 1993
State (Year) SSN issued: Oregon (Before 1951) 
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44924 I1272  Trullinger  John Daniel  10 Jan 1908  16 May 1993  Oregon, U.S., State Births, 1842-1917
Name: John Daniel Trullinger
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 10 Jan 1908
Birth Place: Yamhill, Oregon, USA
Father: Frederick Leroy Trullinger
Mother: Grace Stewart Trullinger
Certificate Number: Df 1799 
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44925 I11580  Trullinger  John David  12 Apr 1960  13 Aug 2019  John D Trullinger
(641) 939-7271
822 10th St
Eldora, IA 50627-1324

 
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44926 I11580  Trullinger  John David  12 Apr 1960  13 Aug 2019  John David Trullinger was born April 12, 1960, to Doyle and Roxie (Ward) Trullinger of Mount Ayr, IA. He passed away August 13, 2019, at Mercy Hospital in Des Moines, IA.

John graduated from Mount Ayr High school in 1978. He went on to earn his bachelor's degree from Simpson College and was working on his Masters degree from Texas A & M. After graduation he taught school, was a police officer, and was a school principal at various locations. He went on to teach at Clarinda Academy and Boys Training School in Eldora, IA. John was a foster parent to many children and was able to keep in touch with some of them over the years.

On July 15, 2000, John married Cindy Rogue in Shenandoah, IA. He and Cindy were the owner of The Taco Lady food truck and enjoyed attending fairs, local celebrations, and many private catering opportunities and meeting lots of new people along the way.

He is survived by his wife Cindy; children Ashley (Matt) Borthwick of Georgetown, TX, David of Leander, TX, Joey (Darcy) Beltran of Shenandoah, IA, and Constance Beltran of Waco, TX; grandchildren Dillon and Conner Beltran, Ada and William Borthwick; sisters Linda (Bill) Konnath of Ankeny, IA and Ellen (David) Brand of Audubon, IA; brother Steve (Sue) Trullinger; many nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles and numerous friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents and sister-in-law Gail Trullinger.

Memorials are to Hope Lodge in Iowa City, Iowa 
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44927 I16766  Trullinger  John E.  29 Jun 1858  27 Apr 1948  John E Trullinger and Mary Susan Trullinger (brother and sister) married Catherine Hain and John Joseph Hain (sister and brother) respectively.

1930 United States Federal Census
Name: John E Trullinger
Gender: Male
Birth Year: abt 1859
Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Race: White
Home in 1930: Susquehanna, Dauphin, Pennsylvania
Map of Home: View map
Marital Status: Married
Relation to Head of House: Head
Spouse's Name: Catherine Trullinger
Father's Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Mother's Birthplace: Pennsylvania

1920 United States Federal Census
Name: John E Trullinger
Age: 61
Birth Year: abt 1859
Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Home in 1920: Susquehanna, Dauphin, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Head
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: Catherine Trullinger
Father's Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Mother's Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Able to Read: Yes
Able to Write: Yes

Commemorative Biographical Encyclopedia of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania 
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44928 I16766  Trullinger  John E.  29 Jun 1858  27 Apr 1948  Birth date from grave stone.  tree1 
44929 I16766  Trullinger  John E.  29 Jun 1858  27 Apr 1948  Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963
Name: John E Trullinger
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 89
Birth Date: 29 Jun 1858
Birth Place: Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
Death Date: 27 Apr 1948
Death Place: Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, USA
Father Name: William Trullinger
Father Birth Place: Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
Mother Name: Eliza Walker
Mother Birth Place: Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
Spouse Name: Catharine Harn
Certificate Number: 33164 
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44930 I16766  Trullinger  John E.  29 Jun 1858  27 Apr 1948  John E Trullinger
Burial: Shoops Cemetery Plot: Section 3 B
Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, USA

Inscription: "John E. Trullinger June 29. 1858 April 27. 1948" 
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44931 I13991               
44932 I18411  Trullinger  John Henry  1847  19 Dec 1881  1860 United States Federal Census
Name: John H Trullinger
Age in 1860: 13
Birth Year: abt 1847
Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Home in 1860: Philadelphia Ward 21, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Gender: Male
Post Office: Leverington

1870 United States Federal Census
Name: Henry Trullinger
Age in 1870: 23
Birth Year: abt 1847
Birthplace: Pennsylvania
Home in 1870: Philadelphia Ward 21 District 70, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Male
Post Office: Philadelphia  
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44933 I18411  Trullinger  John Henry  1847  19 Dec 1881  Birth date from 1860 census  tree1 
44934 I18411  Trullinger  John Henry  1847  19 Dec 1881  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Death Certificates Index, 1803-1915
Name: Henry Trullinger
Birth Date: abt 1847
Birth Place: Phila
Death Date: 19 Dec 1881
Death Place: Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Age at Death: 34
Burial Date: 22 Dec 1881
Burial Place: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Gender: Male
Race: White
Occupation: Papermaker
Street Address: Shipline
Cemetery: Leverington
Marital Status: Married
FHL Film Number: 1003707
burial 22 Dec 1881 Leverington Cemetery, Philadelphia, PA 
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44935 I1295  Trullinger  John Henry  29 Apr 1870  26 Aug 1960  U.S., Consular Registration Certificates, 1907 - 1918
about John M Trullinger
Name: John M Trullinger
Birth Date: 29 Apr 1870
Birth Place: Forest Grove, Oregon
Spouse: Saidee G Trullinger
Residence: 8 ave Campagne Province, Paris, France
Civil Date: 30 Dec 1908
arrived in France Mar 1894 for the purpose of studying art

I called and spoke with Liisa who is the archivist at Clatsop Historical Society in Astoria, WA. She is a very nice gal and was very helpful. She actually lives in the same house that Sherman Grant Trullinger once lived in. She did a brief genealogy on Sherman Grant Trullinger which she is photocopying for me. She is also sending me a copy of the 'Legacy of John Henry Trullinger', a publication about the life and impressionist artwork of his. The cost is $9.95. She said they have all kinds of other historical data and artifacts of the Trullinger family. I told her I would make sure to stop in and see all of it the next time I was in Astoria. She also said she would be happy to show me her home as well. Her work email address is Liisap@cumtux.org.
(David H. Drollinger 3 Feb 2012)

Was an impressionist painter who travelled abroad. His lover of 40 years was Edna Goodhue. Info by Jill Alexander. Artists of the American West, a biographical dictionary, vol III by Doris Ostrander Dawdy.

Ref the record of Raymond Lewis Trullinger (John's nephew) for more information about John in a memoir of Raymond written by Raymond's wife, Florence Wildman-Trullinger.

Louise Bryant's 1913 portrait shows the calm before the storm.
Inside two years she would scandalize Portland society by running off with firebrand reporter John Reed, first to New York, where she flirted with playwright Eugene O'Neill, then to Russia, where she and Reed covered the revolution.
In John Henry Trullinger's oil painting, Bryant leans back on the arm of a gilded chair, wearing a broad-brimmed hat and a pale, empire-waist dress. Her gaze is direct and challenging; one hand rests on a walking stick.
It's as if she's saying, "OK, try and find me."
A black-and-white photograph of the painting exists at the Oregon History Center as OHS negative No. 13358, but nobody has seen the portrait itself since the 1920s, says Janet Kreft, a Portland lawyer who's been hunting it for years - even going as far as Ireland.
Bryant's portrait is the most significant "lost" painting by Trullinger, an Oregon impressionist painter who lived from 1870 to 1960 and studied in Paris at the Academie Julian in the early 1900s. But it's far from the only one. There's no known catalog of his work, which is estimated to amount to as many as 1,000 paintings and sketches. The largest collection to surface numbered about 20 and was itself dispersed.
Trullinger grew up in Astoria in comparative luxury; his family owned the city's electric light company. Indeed, Trullinger underwrote his artistic career by selling his share in 1902, heading for Europe with his wife, Sadie, and young nephew Raymond.
He studied in France until 1910. His numerous paintings of Sadie suggest she became increasingly unhappy as time went on. The two were divorced in Portland in 1912. Trullinger moved in with a Portland woman, Edna Goodhue, in 1916, living with her until her death 41 years later.

Shows few and far between

The Clatsop County Historical Society owns only a dozen or so of Trullinger's paintings. Recent research at the museum turned up period press clippings that mention other paintings (such as "Girl With Powder Puff") unknown to his collectors.
The Astoria museum held the definitive Trullinger show in 1989. In it were 45 paintings, including his best known - "Lady With a Parasol," featuring a critical-looking Sadie - which was shown at a prestigious Paris salon in 1909.
Riding the success of that show, Trullinger returned to Portland a year later. He probably painted Bryant because she was married to his nephew Paul, a wealthy dentist.
Two years later, Louise Bryant ran off with Reed, and the pair covered the 1917 Russian Revolution firsthand. Bryant's book about the experience, "Six Months In Russia," beat Reed's "Ten Days That Shook the World" to press by several months, and she returned to Portland to wow 4,000 fans at a 1919 lecture.
After Reed's death from typhus in Moscow in 1920 and his burial at the Kremlin, Bryant married diplomat William Bullitt, the U.S. ambassador to France, and had a daughter, Anne, in 1923.
It was Anne whom Kreft tracked down in Ireland, armed with a photo of her mother's portrait: Anne had never seen it.
Though she had married a millionaire, Bryant remained determinedly bohemian, and when she hung around with Alice B. Toklas and Gertrude Stein in Paris, Bullitt divorced her by mail. She died a penniless alcoholic in 1936.
The portrait of Bryant is the holy grail for collectors.
"That's the one which would bring the big money," says Andrew Hudson, who handled a number of Trullinger paintings when he worked with art dealer Marcella Peterson.

How many are there?

The Bryant picture is only one of the puzzles that surround Trullinger's output, local experts say. For one thing, nobody knows exactly how many paintings he produced in his 90-year life span. Multnomah Village art dealer Yves Le Mettour thinks it could range between 200 and 300, but Sovereign Collection gallery owner Robert Joki suspects the total could be nearer 1,000. "A lot of people are looking for his work, but all for the right reasons," Joki says. "They're not worth a lot of money, and they're scattered all over." Indeed, the most expensive Trullinger painting ever sold - a huge picnic scene - was bought by an Ashland hotel for $20,000, Hudson recalls. Art dealer Bob Fox, who's seen about 50 Trullingers, says the Bay Area may hold a large number. He thinks wealthy Trullinger relatives might have migrated there in their later years. "If I was really looking, I'd put an ad in a San Francisco paper," he says. Trullinger's habit of painting on very coarse - almost burlap - canvas makes longevity an issue as well, Joki says: "They crack like crazy. Whatever the total, I bet 10 percent have been destroyed."
Le Mettour says Trullinger's unique position among Northwest artists rests on his style. Trullinger learned French impressionism but never adapted to American sensibilities when he returned, like the painters of the "plein-air" school, for example. His contemporaries included C.C. McKim, Clyde Leon Keller and Clara Jane Stevens. "American artists who studied in France - and there were many at the turn of the century - came back to Santa Fe, or Laguna Beach, or Old Lyme, Conn., and created their own school," Le Mettour says. "That's when the American art movement came of age. "But Trullinger stayed with the French line of thought. He was a skilled painter, but in Portland he was in a vacuum. And the last thing a rich man in Portland wanted to do in 1900 was to buy a painting by an Oregon artist," Le Mettour says. "It had to be from New York or Europe - that was chic." Trullinger's sole show at the Portland Art Museum, in 1910, was cut short after only 15 days. He was informed that he should come and get his pictures because a showing of New York artists was being mounted early.

No "lurid dauber"

An inveterate correspondent, the artist expressed his frustration in letters to The Oregonian over the years. "Is it possible for a painter to thrive in Oregon on Oregon patronage?" he wondered in a letter to the newspaper soon after his return. About 1,000 words later, after references to lurid pigment and bad taste and a complaint that close inspection of impressionist works inevitably disappointed the unenlightened, he concluded that "a lurid dauber with a designing personality and some social gifts might succeed where the true artist would fail." It would seem that Trullinger set himself up to slide gracefully into an impressionist sunset, and that's pretty much what he did, Le Mettour says, though it took another 50 years. In the interim, Trullinger taught and produced a number of landscapes that are interesting in their depiction of a Portland now gone - his 1937 view of the old St. Vincent's Hospital and Westover Terrace as a leafy cart track, for example. There are also bucolic views of Sauvie Island that could have been done yesterday. Trullinger's portraits are much more vigorous and include a number of prominent social figures, including Oregon governors, judges and their wives, reflecting his lofty social standing (his sister Isabelle was married to Gov. T.T. Geer). He also painted a couple of Works Progress Administration pictures in the 1930s, but his later years produced nothing memorable, experts say. "I think he was a little weak," Le Mettour says, with a sigh. "Some painters express strength through painting; others are good dinner guests. We all need motivation, and he didn't seem to have the drive to paint his heart out. "Trullinger didn't have to worry too much about money - the French would call him a dilettante," Le Mettour says. "He painted in oils and pastels, crayon, pencil sketches, but it's strictly local interest, he's not quite good enough to go further. His French work was much more focused. Who knows what would have happened if he'd stayed there?"

Dirty Madonna

Some of the known pictures pose fascinating questions.
Astoria collector Michael Foster has five Trullingers - two landscapes, the only known Lower Columbia River scene with a large sailing ship, a detail of the Jardins du Luxembourg. He even has Trullinger's paint box, made for him by his inventor father in 1894. And over an elaborate fireplace in his 1890s Victorian home, Foster has a beatific Madonna in a mauve gown, painted in 1906.
"This was so dirty when I got it, I didn't realize she had a halo and there was a dove in the sky," he says. "But what's really interesting is that she has Edna Goodhue's face, and Trullinger didn't live with her for another 10 years."
A similarly interesting story comes from Gearhart art collector and real estate agent Walter Daggett, who has three Trullinger landscapes - including one he picked up for $35 in an Astoria estate sale. But the picture he'd like to own eludes him. "My wife's family homesteaded around here in the 1880s," he says. "She had a great-aunt, Ethel, who had a suitor her father didn't like. He was the great love of her life and she never married - in fact, she was the postmistress in Gearhart for about 20 years. "When she died, her things went to a sister and when the sister died, they found this beautiful portrait of Ethel as a young woman in the attic - painted by Trullinger. I guess he was the suitor her father ran off."
Whatever their fame and almost-fame, both Bryant and Trullinger left this world in the same modest state: When Trullinger died at the Multnomah Hospital on Aug. 26, 1960, he was unknown and penniless. He's buried at Lincoln Memorial Park in Southeast Portland.

After employment in his family's business in Astoria, Oregon, John Trullinger began producing portraits circa 1895. In 1902 he left to pursue his art studies in England at Newlyn School in Cornwall and at the Academy of Stanhope Forbes. He then moved to Paris where he studied from 1904 to 1909 at Academie Julian, Academie de Colarossi, and Academie de la Grande Chaumiere.

His painting "Lady with a Parasol" was accepted for exhibition in the Paris Salon in 1909. Trullinger returned to Portland in 1910, opened a studio and had a brief one-man show at the Portland Art Museum the same year.

Over the years, he secured numerous commissions for portraits, painted in a strongly academic and conservative style. By contrast, his landscape work was impressionistic, disctinctive and experimental, often characterized by extensive buildup of gesso upon the canvas over which he would apply oil washes, allowing the textured gesso underneath to shine through the pigment. Sadly, this techique has contributed to cracquelure seen in many of the paintings that have survived.

Trullinger continued to paint impressionistically long past its decline as a favored mode among American artists. He was also employed as an artist for the WPA.
http://www.askart.com/askart/t/john_henry_trullinger/john_henry_trullinger.aspx 
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44936 I1295  Trullinger  John Henry  29 Apr 1870  26 Aug 1960  "Whatever their fame and almost-fame, both Bryant and Trullinger left this world in the same modest state: When Trullinger died at the Multnomah Hospital on Aug. 26, 1960, he was unknown and penniless. He's buried at Lincoln Memorial Park in Southeast Portland."  tree1 
44937 I45253  Trullinger  John Henry  Jul 1870  1871  'Jul 1870' is a calculated birth date using his burial record date of 7 Sep 1871 aged 14 months.  tree1 
44938 I45253  Trullinger  John Henry  Jul 1870  1871  Pennsylvania and New Jersey, U.S., Church and Town Records, 1669-2013
Name: John Henry Trullinger Jr
Death Age: 1
Event Type: Burial
Burial Date: 7 Sep
Burial Place: Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Denomination: Non Sectarian
Organization Name: Leverington Cemetery 
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44939 I11370  Trullinger  John Milton  23 Feb 1906  8 Apr 1998  John Milton Trullinger I knew well and last saw about 10 years ago. I didn't know, but am not surprised, that he has passed away. Do you have the date?

He was my mother's cousin and looked after my aunt in Molalla up to the time she passed away several years ago. His wife's name is Ruth Sandeen Trullinger. They have a daughter, Ardeth Woods, who also been keen on the Trullinger ancestry. I have the details for him and all his brothers and sisters if you want them.

John Milton is the son of Irving Trullinger (wife, Pearl Ellen Brown).
Irving had seven children; 5 born in Iowa and 2 in Molalla. John was
born 2/23/1906 in Mt. Ayr. Irving was the son of Milton Stone
Trullinger, my great grandfather.

Bob High email

1940 United States Federal Census
Name: John M Trullinger
Respondent: Yes
Age: 34
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1906
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birthplace: Iowa
Marital Status: Married
Relation to Head of House: Head
Home in 1940: Needy, Clackamas, Oregon
Map of Home in 1940: Needy, Clackamas, Oregon
Farm: Yes
Inferred Residence in 1935: Needy, Clackamas, Oregon
Residence in 1935: Needy
Sheet Number: 8A
Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 169
Occupation: Farming
House Owned or Rented: Rented
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 5
Attended School or College: No
Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 8th grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 42
Class of Worker: Working on own account
Weeks Worked in 1939: 52
Income: 50
Income Other Sources: Yes
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members Age Relationship
John M Trullinger 34 Head
Ruth A Trullinger 25 Wife
Ardeth R Trullinger 3 Daughter
Anna N Sander 58 Mother-in-law

U.S., World War II Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947
Name: John Milton Trullinger
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 34
Relationship to Draftee: Self (Head)
Birth Date: 23 Feb 1906
Birth Place: Mount Ayr, Iowa, USA
Residence Place: Molalla, Clackamas, Oregon, USA
Registration Date: 16 Oct 1940
Registration Place: Oregon, USA
Employer: Self
Height: 5 11
Weight: 182
Complexion: Light
Hair Color: Brown
Eye Color: Blue
Next of Kin: Ruth Anna Trullinger
Household Members Relationship
John Milton Trullinger Self (Head)
Ruth Anna Trullinger Wife 
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44940 I11370  Trullinger  John Milton  23 Feb 1906  8 Apr 1998  Oregon, Death Index, 1898-2008 about John Milton Trullinger
Name: John Milton Trullinger
Age: 92
Birth Date: 23 Feb 1906
Death Date: 8 Apr 1998
Death Place: Clackamas
Spouse: Ruth
Certificate: 98-08217

Social Security Death Index about John M. Trullinger
Name: John M. Trullinger
SSN: 544-07-7448
Last Residence: 97038 Molalla, Clackamas, Oregon, United States ofAmerica
Born: 23 Feb 1906
Died: 8 Apr 1998
State (Year) SSN issued: Oregon (Before 1951)
 
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44941 I11370  Trullinger  John Milton  23 Feb 1906  8 Apr 1998  John Milton Trullinger
Burial: Russellville Cemetery
Molalla, Clackamas, Oregon, USA 
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44942 I19552  Trullinger  John O.  31 Mar 1851  28 Apr 1933  Pennsylvania, Death Certificates
Name: John O Trullinger
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 82
Birth Date: 31 Mar 1851
Birth Place: Virginia
Death Date: 28 Apr 1933
Death Place: Pittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, USA
Father Name: Trullinger
Father Birth Place: Virginia
Mother Birth Place: Virginia
Spouse Name: Margaret B Jones
Certificate Number: 33741 
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44943 I19552  Trullinger  John O.  31 Mar 1851  28 Apr 1933  Burial: Allegheny Cemetery
Plot: Section: 39 Lot: 509
Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA

Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Allegheny Cemetery Records
Name John O Trullinger
Age 82
Birth Year (Estimated) 1851
Death Date 28 Apr 1933
Event Type Burial
Event Date 1 May 1933
Event Place Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States
Event Place (Original) Allegheny
Cemetery Allegheny 
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44944 I19552  Trullinger  John O.  31 Mar 1851  28 Apr 1933  For whatever reason, it appears that John decided to use the 'Trullinger' spelling of his name in spite of the 'Trollinger' spelling that his branch of the family tree used.

1860 United States Federal Census
Name: John Trollinger
Age in 1860: 8
Birth Year: abt 1852
Birthplace: Virginia
Home in 1860: Doddridge, Virginia
Gender: Male
Post Office: West Union

1870 United States Federal Census
Name: John O Trollinger
Age in 1870: 18
Birth Year: abt 1852
Birthplace: Maryland
Home in 1870: Central, Doddridge, West Virginia
Race: White
Gender: Male
Post Office: West Union

U.S. City Directories
Name: John O Trullinger
Residence Year: 1886
Street address: 199 Wylie av
Residence Place: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Occupation: Fireman
Publication Title: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, City Directory, 1886

1900 United States Federal Census
Name: Jno O Trullinger
Age: 49
Birth Date: Mar 1851
Birthplace: Virginia
Home in 1900: Sheraden, Allegheny, Pennsylvania [Allegheny, Pennsylvania]
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Head
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: Margaret Trullinger
Marriage Year: 1888
Years Married: 12
Father's Birthplace: Virginia
Mother's Birthplace: Virginia
Occupation: locomotive engineer
Household Members: Name Age
Jno O Trullinger 49
Margaret Trullinger 40 wife Aug 1859
Margaretta P Kline 22 neice
Emily A Kline 17 neice

U.S. City Directories
Name: John Trullinger
Gender: Male
Residence Year: 1907
Street address: 726 Berwyn av
Residence Place: Carnegie, Pennsylvania, USA
Occupation: Fireman
Spouse: Margaret Trullinger
Publication Title: Carnegie, Pennsylvania, City Directory, 1907

U.S. City Directories
Name: John O Trullinger
Residence Year: 1916
Street address: 2747 Bergman
Residence Place: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Occupation: Laborer
Publication Title: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, City Directory, 1916

1920 United States Federal Census
Name: John O Trullinger
Age: 67 [47 9/12] [67 9/12]
Birth Year: abt 1853 [abt 1872] [abt 1852]
Birthplace: Virginia
Home in 1920: Pittsburgh Ward 20, Allegheny, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Head
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: Margaret B Trullinger
Father's Birthplace: United States [United States of America]
Mother's Birthplace: United States [United States of America]
Home Owned: Own
Able to Read: Yes
Able to Write: Yes

1930 United States Federal Census
Name: John Trullinger
Birth Year: abt 1851
Birthplace: West Virginia
Home in 1930: Pittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania
Relation to Head of House: Head
Spouse's Name: Margaret Trullinger  
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44945 I11427  Trullinger  John Paul  16 Mar 1902  25 Mar 1967  Social Security Death Index about John Trullinger
Name: John Trullinger
SSN: 541-09-2971
Last Residence: 97138 Seaside, Clatsop, Oregon, United States ofAmerica
Born: 16 Mar 1902
Died: Mar 1967
State (Year) SSN issued: Oregon (Before 1951)
 
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44946 I11427  Trullinger  John Paul  16 Mar 1902  25 Mar 1967  John Paul Trullinger
Burial: Ocean View Cemetery
Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA

Inscription: "TRULLINGER John Paul 1902-1967 Florence Jane McGillivray 1902-1973" 
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44947 I11427  Trullinger  John Paul  16 Mar 1902  25 Mar 1967  Oregon, U.S., State Births, 1842-1920
Name: John Paul Trullinger
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 16 Mar 1902
Birth Place: Astoria Clatsop Oregon
Father: Thaddeus Stevens Trullinger
Mother: Georgia Trullinger
Certificate Number: 44434 21491 
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44948 I11427  Trullinger  John Paul  16 Mar 1902  25 Mar 1967  1930 United States Federal Census
Name: John P Trullinger
Birth Year: abt 1902
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age in 1930: 28
Birthplace: Oregon
Marital Status: Married
Relation to Head of House: Head
Home in 1930: Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA
Map of Home: Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon
Street Address: 8th St
Ward of City: 2 part of
House Number: 357
Dwelling Number: 19
Family Number: 20
Home Owned or Rented: Rented
Home Value: 32.50
Radio Set: No
Lives on Farm: No
Age at First Marriage: 26
Attended School: No
Able to Read and Write: Yes
Father's Birthplace: Oregon
Mother's Birthplace: Oregon
Able to Speak English: Yes
Occupation: Accountant
Industry: Fish Factory Co
Class of Worker: Wage or salary worker
Employment: Yes
Household Members Age Relationship
John P Trullinger 28 Head
Florence J Trullinger 27 Wife
Elizabeth Ann Trullinger 0 Daughter

1940 United States Federal Census
Name: John Trullinger
Age: 38
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1902
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birthplace: Oregon
Marital Status: Married
Relation to Head of House: Head
Home in 1940: Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon
Map of Home in 1940: Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon
Street: Exchange
House Number: 657
Farm: No
Inferred Residence in 1935: Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon
Residence in 1935: Astoria
Sheet Number: 1A
Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 7
Occupation: Partner Manager
Industry: Fishing Bi Products
House Owned or Rented: Owned
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 3000
Attended School or College: No
Highest Grade Completed: College, 4th year
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 60
Class of Worker: Working on own account
Weeks Worked in 1939: 52
Income: 0
Income Other Sources: Yes
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members Age Relationship
John Trullinger 38 Head
Florence Trullinger 37 Wife
Elizabeth Trullinger 10 Daughter
Thad Trullinger 73 Father 
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44949 I19459  Trullinger  John R.  1861  18 Jan 1954  John R. Trullinger
Burial: Zion Hill Cemetery Plot: Sec W, Pl-4 B-12
Deer Park, Spokane, Washington, USA

Inscription: "TRULLINGER John R. Jennie"

Zion Hill Cemetery (Trysil Cemetery)
Deer Park, Spokane County, Washington
Trullinger, Jennie, no dates, s/w John R., Sec W, Pl-2 B-12
Trullinger, John R., b. 1861, d. 1954, s/w Jennie, Sec W, Pl-4 B-12 
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44950 I19459  Trullinger  John R.  1861  18 Jan 1954  1910 United States Federal Census
about J R Trullinger
Name: J R Trullinger
Age in 1910: 46
Estimated Birth Year: 1864
Birthplace: Ohio
Relation to Head of House: Lodger
Father's Birth Place: Ohio
Mother's Birth Place: Germany
Home in 1910: Spokane Ward 2, Spokane, Washington
Marital Status: Widowed
Race: White
Gender: Male
Occupation: Confectioner (?) Laborer
Neighbors: View others on page
(Lodger) J R Trullinger 46 Ohio

U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995
Name: John R Trullinger
Gender: Male
Residence Year: 1919
Street Address: N3921 Martin
Residence Place: Spokane, Washington, USA
Spouse: Jennie Trullinger
Publication Title: Spokane, Washington, City Directory, 1919

1920 United States Federal Census
Name: J R Grullinger [J R Trullinger]
Home in 1920: Clayton, Stevens, Washington
Age: 54
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1866
Birthplace: Ohio
Relation to Head of House: Self (Head)
Spouse's Name: Jennie Grullinger
Father's Birth Place: Ohio
Mother's Birth Place: Germany
Marital Status: Married
Race: White
Sex: Male
Occupation: School Janitor
Home owned: Rent
Able to read: Yes
Able to Write: Yes
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members: Name Age
J R Grullinger [J R Trullinger] 54 Ohio
(Wife) Jennie Grullinger [Trullinger] 56 Illinois

1930 United States Federal Census
Name: John R Trullinger
Home in 1930: Clayton, Stevens, Washington
Age: 64
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1866
Birthplace: Ohio
Relation to Head of House: Head
Spouse's Name: Jannie Trullinger
Race: White
Occupation: Farmer
Age at first marriage: 24
Parents' birthplace: View image
Neighbors: View others on page
(John's) Father's Birthplace: England; Mother's Birthplace: Germany
Household Members: Name Age
John R Trullinger 64 Ohio
(Wife) Jannie [Jennie] Trullinger 64 Illinois 
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