Flood Journal



Generation Two



2. Henry Allen2 Flood (74) (David, #4)14,15,16,17 was born on 3 Apr 1854 at Buxton, Maine, and raised on a farm.18,19,20 He married Lizzie May Brackett (75) (see #3), daughter of John Brackett (372) and Martha Elizabeth Harmon (373), before 1878 at Buxton, Maine.21,22,23 He died on 6 May 1942 at Spokane, WA, at age 88.24,25
He was usually known as Allen Henry Flood (74).26 In 1888 he went West from Maine to look for opportunity. He was a cable car conductor in San Francisco and then worked as a surveyor, laying out the city of Spokane, WA. A promoter named George Davis convinced him of the future of the Marshall area south of Spokane. He and his brother-in-law, Ed Hopkinson, organized a party of twenty-eight friends and relatives from Buxton to settle in Marshall in 1890 and they traveled across the country in a chartered rail car. Some in the party eventually returned to Maine, but Allen started a dairy herd with his sons. This grew into the Broadview Dairy and he prospered for many years. He retired to Pasadena, CA and then returned to Spokane.27 He founded the Broadview Dairy, Spokane, WA, 1893. The dairy grew to a large business and by the 1930's had modern panel trucks delivering milk to homes in Spokane. The dairy was purchased by the Carnation Co. in the 1920's.28 Just under six feet in height, Allen was an avid fisherman and he was known for a gruff demeanor.29
Children of Henry Allen2 Flood (74) and Lizzie May Brackett (75) (see #3) were as follows:
Allen Flood at the time of his marriage
Allen Flood, ca. 1910
Broadview Dairy farm, Marshall, Washington, ca. 1900
Broadview Dairy, Spokane, Washington, ca. 1910


3. Lizzie May2 Brackett (75) (John, #6)56,57,58,59,60 was born on 22 Feb 1857 at New Market, New Hampshire.61,62,63 She married Henry Allen Flood (74) (see #2), son of David Flood (97) and Eliza Ann Kimball (200), before 1878 at Buxton, Maine.64,65,66 She died on 9 Jan 1941 at Spokane, WA, at age 83.67 She was buried in Greenwood Cemetery.68
Lizzie Brackett Flood, ca. 1910

She was "a large, matronly lady of great compassion and all the grandchildren loved her. She retained a New England manner of speech that grew more pronounced as she grew older.".69





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Created with The Master Genealogist for Windows on 31 Mar 2008 at 10:02 am.