Holly, my thoughts are 2-fold. First where was he/mom living when the 1920 census taker knocked on the door? Or, #2, sometimes when a child was so very sickly that it was feared they might die sooner than later, less attention was paid to it. Sounds brutal but sometimes it was so. Or maybe it was just a great big oversight. Good luck, Donna
On Tue, Jan 16, 2018 at 13:33 Holly Nelson <holly.nelson1...@gmail.com> wrote: > I have an unusual question. My father was born in 1918 (I have his birth > certificate, and mutiple corroborations of this). He appears with his > family on the 1930 and 1940 census, but is not listed on the 1920 census. > His parents are there, as well as his older brothers. > > My thoughts about how to handle this are to make an event for the 1920 > census (that is how I handle all the census reports) and note that he is > not listed on it, though parents and older siblings are. > > Is there a better way to note this apparent error? > > Holly > -- > > LegacyUserGroup mailing list > LegacyUserGroup@legacyusers.com > To manage your subscription and unsubscribe > http://legacyusers.com/mailman/listinfo/legacyusergroup_legacyusers.com > Archives at: > http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/ > -- [image: logo] *Donna Potter Phillips, Spokane WA* donna...@gmail.com // EWGSI.org // WASGS.org Tika Thinks/ EWGS / WSGS on Facebook Salt Lake Christmas Tour.com
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