Chute Family Notes: Notes 59-947 through 59-959
Notes
Note N947
Index
Place of death also listed as Boston, Massachusetts.
Notes
Note N59-948 Index
Notes on Ralph Arthur Chute and Eleanor May Miller Chute:
There is some confict on Ralph Arthur's years of birth and death. Birth year has also been
listed as 1922 and 1923. Son Donald Ralph reports his date of death as 23 DEC 1984, while
California Death Index records list the date of death as 23 DEC 1982.
Notes
Note N59-949 Back to Index
Back to PFC Ralph Edward Chute.
Notes on PFC Ralph Edward Chute:
Death Notice
Pfc. U.S. Marine Corps, {1160673}, Korean War-Pfc. Chute was killed in action by rocket & artillery fire on 12-10-1951 while serving as a Rifleman with Co. B of the 1st Tank Battalion, 1st Marine Division.
He is the son of Mr. & Mrs. Ralph B. Chute of 710 Mulford Street, Evanston, Illinois, and he enlisted with the Army on January 3, 1951.
Awards: Purple Heart Medal, Combat Action Ribbon, Korean Service Medal with One Service Star, United Nations Service Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Korean Presidential Unit Citation.
Service Number 1160673
Rank E2
Branch U.S. Marine Corps
Service Component Regular
Casualty Type Killed in Action
Death Record 511210
Race Unknown or Not Reported
Citizenship U.S. Citizen
Notes
Note N951 Index
They lived in Wilmot, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
"Sometime before the Revolution, probably around 1770, four brothers Marshall went to Granville, Nova Scotia, three of them
in Wilmot, the other, Anthony, at Marshalltown, Digby County. Their parentage has not been satisfactorily ascertained.
Solomon is reported to have come from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts and thence to Nova Scotia, while Anthony is reported to
have come over from Long Island, New York. William is said to have got his wife, Lydia, in Roxbury, Massachusetts, so it is
difficult to arrive at precise data to trace them. That they were brothers was always said by their children in Nova Scotia.
Notes
Note N952 Index
"Sometime before the Revolution, probably around 1770, four brothers Marshall went to Granville, Nova
Scotia, three of them in Wilmot, the other, Anthony, at Marshalltown, Digby County. Their parentage has not been
satisfactorily ascertained. Solomon is reported to have come from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts and thence to Nova Scotia,
while Anthony is reported to have come over from Long Island, New York. William is said to have got his wife, Lydia, in
Roxbury, Massachusetts, so it is difficult to arrive at precise data to trace them. That they were brothers was always said
by their children in Nova Scotia.
Notes
Note N953 Index
"Sometime before the Revolution, probably around 1770, four brothers Marshall went to Granville, Nova
Scotia, three of them in Wilmot, the other, Anthony, at Marshalltown, Digby County. Their parentage has not been
satisfactorily ascertained. Solomon is reported to have come from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts and thence to Nova Scotia,
while Anthony is reported to have come over from Long Island, New York. William is said to have got his wife, Lydia, in
Roxbury, Massachusetts, so it is difficult to arrive at precise data to trace them. That they were brothers was always said
by their children in Nova Scotia.
Notes
Note N954 Index
"Sometime before the Revolution, probably around 1770, four brothers Marshall went to Granville, Nova
Scotia, three of them in Wilmot, the other, Anthony, at Marshalltown, Digby County. Their parentage has not been
satisfactorily ascertained. Solomon is reported to have come from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts and thence to Nova Scotia,
while Anthony is reported to have come over from Long Island, New York. William is said to have got his wife, Lydia, in
Roxbury, Massachusetts, so it is difficult to arrive at precise data to trace them. That they were brothers was always
said by their children in Nova Scotia.
Notes
Note N955 Index
Died by drowning.
Notes
Note N956 Index
... which, of course, made her "Mary Merry".
Notes
Note N957 Index
Married, and drowned in the Bay of Fundy.
Notes
Note N958 Index
8 children.
Notes
Note N959 Index
2 children.
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