Earl Vincent Winblad (1916-2004) Worker at US Naval Shipyards, Long Beach, California (b. October 09, 1916, Bronx, Bronx County, New York City, New York, USA - d. March 09, 2004, Nursing Home, 345 East Carson Street, Carson, Los Angeles County, California, 90745, USA) Social Security Number 564092885 and Military Service Number 19049634.
Ancestry:
Gideon Wright I of Plymouth Colony was the sixth, great-grandfather of Earl though his mother, Eva Lattin.
Birth:
Earl was the son of Anton Julius Winblad II (1886-1975) aka Anthony Winblad; and Eva Ariel Lattin (1892-1939). Earl was born after his parents had returned from living near Santa Barbara on the Isle of Pines in Cuba.
Siblings:
His siblings include: Norman Edward Winblad (1911-1980); and Anthony LeRoy Winblad (1912-1970) aka Roy Winblad. Both were born on the Isle of Pines in Cuba.
California:
Around 1935 Eva Lattin visited California on the Panama Pacific Line, possibly to attend a wedding of one of her sister's children. Her sister Myrtle Adelia Lattin had moved to California earlier. The Winblads moved to Los Angeles in 1936.
US Army:
Earl enlisted as a private in the US Army at Fort MacArthur in San Pedro, California in 1940.
Marriage:
On Valentines Day, February 14, 1950 in Carson, California, Earl married June Amanda Salisbury (1912-2003)
Children:
They didn't have any children.
Memoirs:
On March 03, 1999, Earl told the following story: "I went to Cuba [in 1924] to visit my maternal grandparents Jarvis Andrew Lattin and Mary Jane Puckett with my mother, Eva and her sister, Julia Lattin. We went down for their wedding anniversary. I remember that Jarvis was a drinker and when I was playing outside the house his dog would run around the yard and hit the porch swing. The noise of the swing creaking back and forth would wake up Jarvis. He put whiskey in the dog's water so he wouldn't make noise anymore. There was a porch that ran all the way around the house. My father told me that there were 4 brothers in Sweden that were siblings of John Edward Winblad. Anton told me he that his father was a sea captain and that his room was filled with stamps and coins from all over the world. I asked him how to prounounce our name in Swedish and he said "Vin-leed", which meant wine grass. I asked Otto Perry Winblad to teach me Swedish and he taught me to say "thank you" in Swedish and "skoal". Anton told me that the other siblings of John in Sweden were scholars."
Death of Spouse:
In 2003 his wife died and Earl went into a nursing home. She had taken care of everything in the household, and her death left him devastated. He wasn't able to care for himself with her gone. Earl had never even learned to drive a car.
Nursing Home:
Earl moved into a nuring home after his wife's death and he said the following on March 04, 2003: "June passed away and I am in a rest home now. They feed us three times a day. I have a private bathroom. I am the only one that likes to watch football. I only get channels 1 through 13, some people have cable. All we do is watch television, sleep and eat. We get meals at 8, 12, and 5 o'clock. I walk for half an hour each day. I still have skin cancer. Yesterday June would have been 91. Norman is at 1-562-863-4098. Carol is in the Middle East, Donald is in Reno, Nevada. My address is 345 East Carson Street, Room 212, Carson, CA 90745."
Death:
He died in the nursing home in Carson, Los Angeles County, California.
Obituary:
At his request there was no funeral notice for him of his wife, and no eulogy at the funeral.
Memoirs:
Earl said on March 03, 1999: "I went to the shipyards here in California after the war. My dad had me take the test to be an apprentice and I got a score of 55, but needed 65 to pass. They gave me 10 points for being a wounded veteran, all veterans get 5 points and a wounded one gets another 5. I was wounded in France in 1944. I volunteered to join the Army in California before the war. St. Bie in France was where I was wounded. I was hit by shrapnel in the rump. Now they say the best way to protect yourself is to hug a tree when the shrapnel is coming in. I went into a foxhole when an "88" was coming in. I was leaping up to get into the hole and was hit. They should have told us to crawl into the hole. I was the only family member in the war."
Memories of Earl Winblad:
June Amanda Salisbury (1912-2003) said in September 1998: "Earl started in New York working at Horn and Hardart. On his way to California he stopped in Utah. At one point he worked at a CCC camp. His first job in California was for a venetian blind maker, the Anderson company. Fred Andrew Williams, whose mother was Myrtle Adelia Lattin got him the job. Fred worked there as a salesman."
Relationship:
Earl Vincent Winblad (1916-2004) was the first cousin, once removed of Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ).