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13015 Edmonton, Cleveland, Ohio |
In the continuing saga of 1940 Census adventures, my husband has become very intrigued by the idea of finding ancestors and relatives.
He had to get creative when thinking about where in Cleveland his father and mother (Edgar James
Wood and Marian Jane
McClure Wood) were living in 1940, since we don't have documentation of that year's address.
So he thought about the elementary school he attended a little later, searched for it, found a photo of it (in terrible shape), and learned from a news item that it was razed. That gave him a street address to plot on Google Maps.
Next, he traced the route he would have taken in walking to and from school, looking on the map for a
railroad underpass that was vivid in his memory. He found it, but just couldn't remember exactly which block or side of the street the house was on.
I plugged the street name into
Steve Morse's ED Finder, added two cross streets that hubby said were nearby intersections, and learned that the street straddled two EDs. That's not bad, considering that my Bronx ancestors lived on streets that straddled three or more EDs.
Then I downloaded all the images for both of the Cleveland EDs in the area of the railroad underpass, and began looking. Of course his family wasn't in the first ED. Halfway through the second ED, an hour after we began the search, we found the family at 13015 Edmonton. It was a neat little home in a quiet residential neighborhood in 1940, with broad treelawns and kids playing in the yard after school.
We went back to Google Maps and located the address (as you can see, above) and it was only one block from where hubby originally thought it might be located. The key was the railroad underpass, which is so clearly marked on Google Maps even now.
You could have rented this house for $45 in 1940, by the way :)
2022: 1950 US Census update, his family didn't live here because in 1941, they moved to their own home, where I found them easily.