|
According to the census, Mildred’s parents
were married in 1884. Her father was a fisherman. In 1900, they were living on Battery Street, which is just north of Pleasant
Street. In 1910, she is living with her paternal grandmother; and her father, now widowed, is living with his married sister
at 10 Pleasant Street, just across the road from Mildred. Mildred married Charles Hiram Knowles in 1915. He was born in Canada, and entered the US in 1903. He was living in
Machiasport, Maine in 1910. In the 1920 census, Mildred and Charles are listed living at 8 Pleasant Street, with one-year-old
son Millard. Charles, who had served in WWI, worked in a lumber mill, and Mildred worked at one of the canneries. Later in
1920, they had a son, George, who died shortly after birth. By the end of the year, they moved to South Portland, Maine, where
they had two more children, Charles (1925) and Neal (1926).
Mildred died in Portland on June 26, 1930. Charles remarried and had two more children. He died in South Portland
in 1968. Son Millard died in Tacoma, Washington in 1978. Charles died in New Jersey in 1997, and Neal died in Texas in 1983.
I contacted Millard's son, Richard Knowles, who lives in Washington State. He was unaware of the Hine photograph, and knew
very little about his grandmother.
******************************
Edited interview with Richard Knowles
(RK), grandson of Mildred Griffith. Interview conducted by Joe Manning (JM) on June 18, 2010.
JM: What did you think of the photo of
your grandmother?
RK:
My dad had one picture of her as an adult, but it was interesting to see one of her as a young girl. My wife thinks she was
very pretty.
JM: When
were you born?
RK: I
was born in Portland, Maine in 1939. It's a funny thing, and I don't remember a lot about it, but on Sunday afternoons back
in the 1940s, we would go out for a ride in the car and visit a man that my dad said was his uncle, and his last name was
Griffith. I guess he must have been my grandmother Mildred's brother. (Census records show that Mildred's brother, Elmer,
was living in Portland in 1930.)
JM:
When you were growing up, did your father tell you anything about your grandmother?
RK: The only thing he told me was that she had died, but I'm not
sure when. I don't whether they were divorced then, or if they were still married. My grandfather, Charles Knowles, Mildred's
husband, remarried, I think about 1930 or so. There were three boys: my father Millard, and his brothers, Charles and Neal.
After my grandfather remarried, he had two more children.
(After this interview, I found out that Charles and Mildred were still married when she died, and that the children
remained with their father and were raised by him and his second wife).
JM: I see that your mother was Florence Seyford. Records show that your parents married in 1939.
And then, four years later, they married again. Is that correct?
RK: Yes, that's right. They got married after I was born. I was born in September, and they got
married in October. The marriage didn't last long, and they got divorced. Then they remarried in 1943. My dad was in the Coast
Artillery then, and he was stationed in South Portland, Maine. He was there till 1945. Then he was shipped out to the Philippines.
He arrived there on VJ Day. His most dangerous assignment was driving a beer truck from one base to the other, and some Filipinos
tried to hijack it. That was the extent of his World War II experience.
He was reactivated in 1950 with a National Guard unit. We were in Georgia and New Jersey, and then Dad was shipped
to Japan. We returned to Maine for about a year and lived with my mother's sister. Then we spent two years in Japan, and then
went to Fort Lewis, Washington. Then Dad went to Germany in 1958, came back, and was assigned to Fort Sill, Oklahoma. He retired
in 1964, and moved to Tacoma, Washington, and that's where he spent the rest of his life.

|
| Published June 4, 1930. Millard's name is given incorrectly as Milton. |

|