Er ist verheiratet mit Clare L Truschel.
Sie haben geheiratet
Kind(er):
Joseph Henry Truschel | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Clare L Truschel |
Joseph H Truschel
Gender: Male
Birth: Circa 1896 - Pennsylvania, United States
Residence: 1930 - Edgewood, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, USA
Age: 34
Marital status: Married
Race: White
Language: English
Father's birth place: Pennsylvania, United States
Mother's birth place: Pennsylvania, United States
Wife: Clare L Truschel
Son: Joseph H Truschel, Jr
Census: tion to head; Name; Age; Suggested alternatives
Head; Joseph H Truschel; 34;
Wife; Clare L Truschel; 25;
Son; Joseph H Truschel, Jr; 7;
The 1930 Census determined the population of the United States to be 122,775,046. This is an increase of almost 16 percent over the 1920 Census, which reported a population of 106,021,537. This was the 15th decennial census conducted in the United States under authority granted by Article I, Section 2 of the United States Constitution. It was conducted in April 1930, except in Alaska, where it was conducted in late 1929. Until 2012 the 1930 Census is the latest available to the public, due to 72-year privacy laws. It is based on actual counts of persons living in residential structures.
Added via a Person Discovery
MyHeritage family tree
Family site: Burton Web Site
Family tree: 275540821-1
Joseph Henry Truschel
Gender: Male
Birth: July 13 1895 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Age: 21
Draft registration: 1918 - Pittsburgh City, Pennsylvania, United States
Nationality: United States
Language: English
Source: gh City no 8; M-Z
When the United States declared war on the German Empire on April 6, 1917 its standing army was comprised of approximately 100,000 men with another 115,000 in National Guard units. President Wilson immediately directed the Department of War to work to increase the army to a one million-man force. However, six weeks after war was declared only 73,000 new recruits had volunteered for military service.
Military planners and political leaders had correctly anticipated the general apathy in the nation for the war effort at its onset and almost as soon as war was declared work began in the US Congress to enact updated conscription legislation. Congress passed the Selective Service Act on May 18, 1917. This act authorized the federal government to raise a national army through compulsory enlistment.
The initial Selective Service Act required all men aged 21 to 30 to register. In August 1918, at the request of the War Department, Congress amended the law to expand the age range to include all men aged 18 to 45.
Three specific registrations were conducted:
- June 5, 1917. This first registration was for all men between the ages of 21 and 31.
- June 5, 1918. The second registration was for those who had turned 21 after June 5, 1917 and a supplemental registration included in the second registration was held on August 24, 1918, for those who turned 21 years old after June 5, 1918.
- September 12, 1918. The third, and final registration was for all men aged 18 through 45 not previously enrolled.
By the end of the First World War, some 2 million men had volunteered for military service and 2.8 million other men had been drafted. Accordingly, a draft registration does not imply that the individual ended up being drafted or that he didn’t volunteer separately.
The handwriting on the card is normally that of a registration board worker usually labeled the “registrar”. However, almost all cards contain the signature or “mark” in the handwriting of the registrant himself.