Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Stanley McKenzie Hudd: Birth: 24 JUL 1903 in San Francisco, California, USA. Death: 3 MAR 1981 in Carmel, Monterey County, California, USA


Sources
1. Title:   Certified Copy of an Entry of Birth, for Harry Stanley Hudd
Author:   General Register Office, London
2. Title:   Census of the United States, 1920, Index & Image from Ancestry.com
Page:   Roll T625_141; Page 3B; Enumeration Disstrict 289
Author:   Original source: National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C. T625, 2076 rolls
Publication:   Name: <http://ancestry.com>;
3. Title:   Census of the United States, 1910, Index & Image from Ancestry.com
Page:   Roll T624_100; Page 2A; Enumeration District 0225; FHL microfilm 1374113
Author:   Original source: National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C. 1910 Federal Population Census. T624, 1784 rolls
Publication:   Name: <http://ancestry.com>;
4. Title:   Census of the United States, 1920, Index & Image from Ancestry.com
Page:   Roll T625_141; Page 3B; Enumeration Disstrict 289
Author:   Original source: National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C. T625, 2076 rolls
Publication:   Name: <http://ancestry.com>;
5. Title:   Census of the United States, 1910, Index & Image from Ancestry.com
Page:   Roll T624_100; Page 2A; Enumeration District 0225; FHL microfilm 1374113
Author:   Original source: National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C. 1910 Federal Population Census. T624, 1784 rolls
Publication:   Name: <http://ancestry.com>;
6. Title:   Certified Copy of Standard Certificate of Death, for Harry Stanley Hudd
Author:   County Recorder, Alameda County, California
7. Title:   Announcement of Marriage, of Harry Stanley Hudd & Mary McKenzie
8. Title:   Certified Copy of Marriage License, for Harry Stanley Hudd & Mary McKenzie
Author:   County Recorder, Alameda County, California

Notes
a. Note:   Harry Stanley Hudd emmigrated from England first to Canada. He got scarlet fever in Montreal. This is what caused one eye to be cross-eyed. Harry met Alexander E. Richardes, also ill with scarlet fever, at the hospital in Montreal. Later, Harry and Alexander traveled together as entertainers to Vancouver, B.C., Canada and then to San Francisco.
  Mr. Richardes became a contractor. See the article about him building the first house in San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake and fire. It was at 721 Beach St. near Hyde St. Mr. Richardes laid the hardwood floors in the Anza St. House of Harry and Mary (McKenzie) Hudd. He later built himself a house in St. Francis Woods. (See article and photo.]
  Harry had a grocery store in San Francisco with George Myland, in the Mission District, at 718 Douglass St. In the 1898 San Francisco City Directory, the store is called "Judson & Myland"..
  He worked for the University Club in San Francisco from about 1899 through 1910, starting as a wineman, then assistant steward, department manager, and manager from 1907. There was lots of prejudice against the Chinese at the time, and Harry helped them by hiring them, and helping them with their immigration paperwork. He was given small presents, such as ivory and wood carvings, by those people he helped.
  After 1910 and until about 1918 Harry worked as a bill collector for Pacific Gas & Electric Company. Mr. Bosley, a lawyer for PG&E, got him the job.
  In 1918 or 1919, Harry became a superintendent of nurses at Merritt Hospital in Oakland, California, and worked there until his death in 1927.
  His first car was a 1925 Chandler.



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