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Anton Julius Winblad II (1886-1975)
Anton Julius Winblad II
Winblad-AntonJulius 01
Sex: Male
Birth: April 5, 1886 (1886-04-05) (138 years ago)
Manhattan, New York
Death: March 27, 1975 (age 88)
123 years ago
Fontana, California
Burial: Desert Memorial Park
Father: John Edward Winblad I (1856-1914)
Mother: Salmine Sophia Pedersen (1862-1914)
Siblings: Theodora Winblad (1888)
Mary Winblad (1889)
Otto Edward Winblad (1892)
Maria Elisabeth Winblad II (1895-1987)
John Edward Winblad II (1897-1899)
Otto Perry Winblad (1902-1977)
Spouse/Partner: Eva Ariel Lattin (1892-1939)
Marriage: April 17, 1910 (age 24)
114 years ago
Farmingdale, New York
Children: Norman Edward Winblad (1911-1980)
Anthony LeRoy Winblad (1912-1970)
Earl Vincent Winblad (1916-2004)
2nd Spouse: Marguerite V. R. Schuyler (1891-1972)
2nd Marriage: January 11, 1940 (age 53)
84 years ago
Los Angeles, California
Lattin-Winblad Nicolich 01a

Anton Julius Winblad II (1886-1975) and children circa 1920-1925

Anton Julius Winblad II (1886-1975) aka Tony Winblad, aka Anthony Julius Winblad. Around 1910 he migrated to the Isle of Pines in Cuba and became the postmaster for Santa Barbara. When he returned he was a building superintendent in the Bronx, New York. Around 1939 he moved to Los Angeles, California and was a plumber at the Long Beach Naval Shipyard. (b. April 05, 1886, 540 Canal Street, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York County, New York City, New York, 10013-1304, USA - d. March 27, 1975, Fontana, San Bernardino County, California, USA) Social Security Number 562097554.

Name variations[]

  • Anton Julius Winblad II
  • Anthony Winblad
  • Anthony J. Winblad
  • Tony Winblad

Parents[]

Birth[]

He was born on April 5, 1886 at 540 Canal Street in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York County, New York City, New York, 10013-1304, USA.

Siblings[]

Jersey City, New Jersey[]

Anton was born in Greenwich Village, New York in 1886 and around 1898-1899 his family moved to Jersey City, New Jersey into a newly constructed two-family house on Wayne Street. The family appears on the 1900 United States Census living at 437 Wayne Street and Anton is "learning making candy" as his occupation at age 14. Living in the household is a boarder: Anton Pederson, born in October of 1872, and married for 4 years, immigration 1892, working as a longshoreman. It is most likely a friend of Anton, and not a relative from Farsund.

Education[]

He dropped out of school after completing the 8th grade according to the 1940 United States Census.

Suicide of fiancé[]

Jersey Journal; Jersey City, New Jersey; February 26, 1910:

"Wedding Deferred; Commits Suicide. Prospective Bride-to-be, Fiance Gone, Takes Own Life in Grief. The postponement of the date set for her marriage to Anton Winblad, with whose parents she lived at 437 Wayne Street, caused Clara Minnie Olsen, 22 years old, to commit suicide by inhaling illuminating gas in her bedroom yesterday afternoon. The woman who is barely 22 years of age was discovered by Mrs. Selmine Winblad who detected the deathly fumes of gas coming from the bedroom. The girl was lying on the bed with one end of the gas tube fastened between her teeth and the other was connected to the gas jet over her head. Mrs. Winblad terrified at the sight of the body of the young girl ran out to the street and found Patrolman Johnson of the Seventh Precinct, whom she sent for a physician. When he examined the body the doctor said that the girl had been dead for some time. Six years ago at the death of her mother, when the suicide was left with a younger sister and brother an orphan, the Winblads took Minnie Olsen into their home. Her sister Julia, who is now 17 years of age, was sent to a home for orphans and her brother John became an apprentice in the navy. The girl was treated as a daughter by their friends and during the course of her stay at the home of the good people she fell in love with Anton, the only son of the Winblads, The couple were engaged to marry and the date was agreed upon, but Anton left the home of his parents and went to Cuba, where he is now. Since his departure from her side the young woman began to grieve for Anton and then, too, the news which she received through various sources that all was not well with her brother and sister, completely unnerved her and her suicide was the consequence. The funeral services will be conducted by I. L. P. Dietrichson, pastor of Trinity Scandinavian Lutheran Church at Monmouth and Colgate streets, who knew the girl as one of his own children. Miss Olsen Sunday School of the church." (Source: Jersey Journal of Jersey City, New Jersey on February 26, 1910)

Isle of Pines, Cuba and marriage[]

After the Spanish–American War the Platt Amendment left the fate of the Isle of Pines undecided and an American colony began to form there in the hopes that it would become part of the United States. His father, John Edward Winblad moved the family to a ranch near Santa Barbara, on the Isle of Pines in Cuba around 1909-1910. Anton met Eva Ariel Lattin (1892-1939) in Cuba and they married on Long Island on April 17, 1910. They had their first two children in Cuba, Norman Edward Winblad (1911-1980) and Anthony LeRoy Winblad (1912-1970) aka Roy Winblad. Many pictures survive of the family in Cuba. Anton's father didn't do well as a citrus farmer and both his father and mother died on a trip back to Norway in 1914. Anton was working as the postmaster at Santa Barbara, but he returned to the US in 1915 after his parent's death.

Children[]

Correspondences[]

  • Circa 1913-1914: This is a picture of the shower, bath and tank and all my helpers. It is twenty feet high, the room is 8' 6" by 6' 3" and top is 6 ft by 4 ft. I will make [a] tank that will hold about 350 gallons. I bought a camera that take[s] this size picture so will send you some now and then. Your loving son, Tony.
  • Circa 1913-1914: Dear Father & Mother. I am sending you [a] picture of Tony chasing chickens and ducks, Norman is pumping water for them. It is very quiet here and we are all looking [for] news about the war. But [I] guess you are having all kinds of trouble over there. Am sending you what papers I can get now for the people are coming back. Food has gone up double and sugar that grow[s] here is very scarce for they are sending it away. By the time you get this card I will be Postmaster of Santa Barbara, with Eva as assistant and it will be in Mr. Waha's store. Am sending Otto some more stamps. We are having [the] raining season now, it has been raining all week. Your loving son, Tony.
  • October 1914: Am sending you papers three times a week. That is some banana plants in the background, Dear Father and Mother, I wrote you about four weeks ago telling you about the map I sent three month ago, so if you don't get it please let me know for I will try to get you one more. Am sending Otto a baseball by Registered mail and some more stamps. How do you like this picture? Tony.

Return to United States[]

Anton appears on two ship's manifests arriving from Havana: May 19, 1915 where he is incorrectly listed as "Anthony J. Wimblad"; and again on July 06, 1915 arriving with Norman Winblad and Dewey Lattin. Anton's last child: Earl Vincent Winblad (1916-2004) was born in New York on October 09, 1916. Anton registered for the draft on September 16, 1918 when he was living at East 144th Street in the Bronx and was working as an "indexer" at New York Edison Company in the Bronx. He listed his birthday as "April 17, 1886" which conflicts with his birth certificate date of "April 05, 1886". He appears on the 1920 census still living at 163 East 144th Street in the Bronx and also appears in the city directory of 1925 at that address and is listed as a plumber. He is recorded in the 1930 United States Census also living in the Bronx. He worked as a building superintendent.

California[]

His wife Eva went to California in 1936 for a family wedding and enjoyed California so much both her and her husband moved there that year.

Death of wife[]

Eva died in 1939 in California. Her son, Norman Edward Winblad (1911-1980), came to visit as she was dying then moved to California.

Second marriage[]

In 1940 Anton married Marguerite Van Rensselaer Schuyler (1891-1972) in Los Angeles. She was a friend of Eva's from the Bronx, New York.

Occupation[]

Anton worked at the Anderson Die Casting and Engineering Corporation and later worked as a plumber at the Long Beach Naval Shipyard. During the War he was sent to Hawaii, as a civilan, to repair ships.

Desert Hot Springs, California[]

He moved to Desert Hot Springs, California and in 1959 was hospitalized:

"Anthony Winblad of Desert Hot Springs was taken seriously ill April 26 and was rushed to Kaiser Foundation Hospital in Fontana on the advice of Dr. Charles Starr. Mr. and Mrs. Vyrl Lambertson of West 2nd Street were visiting at the Winblad home on Desert View Drive at the time of Mr. Winblad's collapse and offered to drive the ailing man sand his wife to Fontana. He was received at the hospital within three hours of the onset of his illness, and was operated on the following morning. A second operation was performed May 1. No further report has been given on the patient's condition. Mrs. Winblad is remaining in Fontana." (Source: Desert Hot Springs Sentinel of Desert Hot Springs, California on May 14, 1959)

Alzheimer's[]

He started to show signs of Alzheimer's disease in 1973-1974.

Memories about Anton Winblad[]

  • Carol Eleanor Winblad (1946- ) said in January 1999: "My grandfather lived in Los Angeles and then moved to Desert Hot Springs, California. One New Year's Eve we were visiting and we went outside to yell 'happy new year' and granddad pulled us back inside the house because it was a retirement community and everyone was already asleep. I hated going there, because there were no kids. My parents would threaten to send me there when I was caught drinking. My granddad had Alzheimer's Disease, but it was diagnosed as 'hardening of the arteries' back then, and he was put in a home. One time I was staying at his house and he couldn't remember my name. He raised his cane up to block me from going to see why my baby was crying. My dad made the decision to put him in a home when he caught him threatening my child with his cane. He had taken the kids for a weekend and my granddad was standing over the crib with his cane raised as if to hit the child. Granddad died shortly after that. Occasionally he start remembering things and start telling rambling childhood memories."
  • Harold Lawrence McPheeters (1923- ) wrote on April 13, 2012: "I really did not know the Winblads at all well. I believe my Mom and Eva palled around together some in New York City before either was married and both were living there. Mom was living in the apartment of her Aunt Blanche Brush and her son from an earlier marriage. I have photos showing that Eva came to celebrate Christmas in the apartment in NYC where my folks lived when I was on the way to being born in March 1923. But after I was born, the folks moved out to the house I grew up in in Garden City, Long Island, and we saw very little of Eva and Tony and their sons, but they would occasionally stop by briefly while visiting with Aunt Julie Poole, or Grandma Kate or others on Long Island. I think I mentioned this before, but when I was about 6, my folks took a week vacation and my brother and I along went into New York to visit briefly with Uncle Dewey Lattin, Aunt Blanche, and then with the Winblads in their basement apartment where you could see the feet of passers-by going past the windows on the street. I was about 6, and the Winblad boys were all teenagers. I recall that we (Don and I) were left there in that apartment by ourselves while everyone else got dressed up and went off to some affair for the afternoon and evening. Everyone came home late, and then we went home to Garden City after breakfast. Since you sent me the unlabeled photos of the wedding of Ted and Bertha Lattin, I feel confident that the affair they went to that afternoon/evening was the wedding of Ted and Bertha, and that those photos were taken by my Dad who had been in the photo business with his Dad briefly before WW I."

Death[]

In 1975 he died of "cardiac arrest with diabetes mellitus and prostatic carcinoma" while in a nursing home.

Burial[]

He was buried with Marge, his second wife in Desert Memorial Park Cemetery, Cathedral City, California.

Timeline[]

  • 1886 Birth of Anton Winblad in New York City on April 5th
  • 1886 Living at 540 Canal Street, Manhattan, New York City
  • 1888 Blizzard leaves 22 inches of snow in New York City on March 11th to 12th
  • 1889 Living at 454 Washington Street, Manhattan, New York City
  • 1892 Living at 447 Washington Street, Manhattan, New York City
  • 1895 Living at 294 West Houston Street, Manhattan, New York City
  • 1895 Birth of Maria Elizabeth Winblad, his sister, in New York on February 16th
  • 1897 (circa) Move to New Jersey from New York
  • 1897 Living at 437 Wayne Street, Jersey City, New Jersey
  • 1897 Birth of John Edward Winblad II, his brother, in New Jersey
  • 1898 Spanish American War opens Cuba to US
  • 1899 Drop out of school after the 8th grade according to the 1940 United States Census
  • 1899 Living at 437 Wayne Street, Jersey City, New Jersey
  • 1899 Death of John Edward Winblad II in Jersey City on September 24th
  • 1902 Birth of Otto Winblad, his brother, in Jersey City, New Jersey on August 5th
  • 1905 Visit from the Reisers of Russia aboard the Ivernia on October 18th
  • 1907 Isle of Pines no longer a US protectorate
  • 1909 Move to Isle of Pines, Cuba
  • 1910 Anton in Cuba and leaves his fiancé at home
  • 1910 Suicide of Clara Minnie Olsen (1888-1910) on January 26, 1910
  • 1910 Marriage of Eva Ariel Lattin to Anton Julius Winblad, in Farmingdale, New York on April 17, 1910
  • 1910 United States Census with Anton in Cuba on April 23, 1910
  • 1910 Sale of 437 Wayne Street, Jersey City, New Jersey by John and Salmine
  • 1911 (circa) Working at Post Office on Isle of Pines, Cuba
  • 1911 Birth of Norman Edward Winblad (1911-1980), his first child, in Cuba on May 23rd
  • 1912 Birth of Anthony LeRoy Winblad, his second child, in Cuba on September 9th
  • 1914 Working as Postmaster in Santa Barbara, Isle of Pines, Cuba
  • 1914 Marriage of Maria Winblad, his sister to Arthur Freudenberg on February 28th
  • 1914 Death of John Winblad and Salmine Pedersen, his parents, in Farsund, Vest-Agder, Norway
  • 1915 Move from Isle of Pines, Cuba to Bronx, New York
  • 1915 Living in The Bronx, New York City, New York
  • 1916 Birth of Earl Winblad, his third child, in New York on October 9th
  • 1921 Move to California of Charles Haley Williams (1884-1960) and Myrtle Adelia Lattin (1884-1970)
  • 1924 Jarvis Lattin wedding anniversary party in Cuba with Earl Vincent Winblad and Eva Ariel Lattin
  • 1925 Isle of Pines reclaimed by Cuba
  • 1930 US Census with Anton living in Bronx
  • 1933 (circa) Eva Lattin visits California on the Panama Pacific Line
  • 1936 (circa) Move to California of Eva Lattin and Anton Julius Winblad
  • 1936 Living at 419 West 77th Street, Los Angeles, California
  • 1936 Working at Anderson Die Casting & Engineering Corporation, Los Angeles, California
  • 1936 Application for Social Security filed in California
  • 1939 Norman Edward Winblad (1911-1980) visits dying Eva Lattin and stays in California
  • 1939 Death of Eva Lattin in California on June 23rd
  • 1940 Marriage to Marguerite Van Rensselaer Schuyler (1891-1972) on January 11, 1940 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California
  • 1954 (circa) Retire
  • 1954 (circa) Move to Desert Hot Springs
  • 1961 75th birthday celebration with his sister and his brother from New Jersey
  • 1954 (circa) Living at 66442 Desert View Avenue, Desert Hot Springs, Riverside County, California
  • 1959 Hospitalization for unknown ailment
  • 1972 Death of Marguerite Van Rensselaer Schlayer, his second wife, on February 7th
  • 1975 Memory loss is apparent but diagnosed as hardening of the arteries
  • 1975 Living at 66442 Desert View Avenue, Desert Hot Springs, California
  • 1975 (circa) Move to nursing home
  • 1975 Death of Anton Winblad in Fontana, San Berdino County, California on March 27th at 11:20 am
  • 1975 Burial in Desert Memorial Park on March 31st

Portraits[]

Documents[]

Census[]

Ancestors[]

Anton Julius Winblad II (1886-1975)'s ancestors in three generations
Anton Julius Winblad II (1886-1975) Father:
John Edward Winblad I (1856-1914)
Paternal Grandfather:
Anton Julius Winblad I (1828-1901)
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Lars Magnus Wingblad (1794-?)
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Brita Christina Ökneberg (1793-?)
Paternal Grandmother:
Elsa Maria Elisabeth Näslund (1829-1907)
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Israel Israelsson Näslund III (1796-1858)
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Johanna Gustafva Ruuth (1800-1860)
Mother:
Salmine Sophia Severine Pedersen (1862-1914)
Maternal Grandfather:
Ole Mathias Pedersen (1822-1914) of Klungeland
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Peder Andreas Hansen (1790-1849) of Log
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Maren Sophia Olsdatter (1791-1868) of Gullestad
Maternal Grandmother:
Thea Johanne Tostensdatter (1825-1865) of Vetteland
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Torsten Christophersen (1786-aft1825) of Vetteland
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Johanne Jacobsdatter (1795-?) of Lindtjørn

External links[]

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