Laborer

A person who performed unskilled work for wages.

August Wedell

Occupation: 

August Wedell (1863-1919) was born in Husaby, Västra Götaland Län, Sweden  on August 18, 1863 and emigrated in 1887.  August's last name was originally Svensson, but was changed to Wedell when he arrived in the United States.  A family story recounts that the surname was changed because there were too many incoming Swedes with the name Svensson. 

August Wedell and his wife, Emma Svensdotter
Photograph courtesy of Michael Wedell
Wedell Marraige Certificate, 1891
Wedell-Svensdotter Marraige Certificate, 1891
Document image courtesy of Lisa Wedell Ueki
Emma, Gustave and August Wedell, cira 1899
Emma, Gustave and August Wedell, cira 1899
Photograph courtesy of Michael Wedell
Wedell family circa 1911 - Emma, Gustave & August
Wedell family circa 1911 - Emma, Gustave & August
Photograph courtesy of Michael Wedell
August Wedell's Saw and Toolbox
Toolbox handed down from August Wedell to his grandson, Robert Wedell. Note the carpenter's square projecting from the bottom of the box through a hole on the left side.
Photograph courtesy of Robert Wedell
Pry bars, drill and other tools of August Wedell
These tools and toolbox were handed down from August Wedell to his grandson Robert. They include pry bars, a drill and two soldering irons, one with a corncob handle, that would have been heated in a fire before use.
Photograph courtesy of Robert Wedell
August Wedell's stone working tools
Chisels and hammers suitable for stone work, belonging to August Wedell from his tool box
Photograph courtesy of Robert Wedell
Wedell Marble Christmas Tree Stand
Christmas tree stand, marble, 43 pounds, made by August Wedell, presumably out of scrap stone from the Capitol construction.
Photograph courtesy of Robert Wedell
Wedell monument, Union Cemetery, Maplewood, MN
Wedell monument, Union Cemetery, Maplewood, MN
Photograph courtesy of Lisa Wedell Ueki
S.S. Hekla, ship that brought Emma Svensdotter to New York
S.S. Hekla, ship that brought Emma Svensdotter to New York
Image courtesy of Lisa Wedell Ueki
Wedell home at 391 Banfil Street, St. Paul
Wedell home at 391 Banfil Street, St. Paul
Photograph courtesy of Robert Wedell

John Duncan

Occupation: 

1904-1905 Butler Bros. Payroll. John Duncan was born in Minnesota in 1889 and lived here with his parents. Though he was paid as a laborer, he gave his occupation as carpenter in the 1905 Census.

Otis Phippen

Occupation: 
1904-1905 Butler Bros. Payroll. Otis Phippen was born in Wisconsin in 1879 and moved to Minnesota in 1903. He is listed in the Payroll as a laborer, although he gave his occupation as "structural ironworker" in the 1905 Minnesota Census.
 

Joseph Monpas

Occupation: 

1905 Payroll and St. Paul City Directory. Joseph Monpas was born in St. Paul in 1881. He worked as a laborer for Butler Bros. on the Capitol though by June of 1905 he had got a job with the City Gas Co.

Joseph Wiltner Jr.

Occupation: 

March 1902 beam painting payroll. Joseph Wiltner Jr. worked building scaffolding for the painting of steel beams in 1902. He was born in New York in 1880, the son of Joseph Wiltner Sr. who worked on the Capitol for several years. He eventually moved to Wisconsin where he died in 1962.

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