Noted living with parents [Henry and Laura C. Gautier] in 1900 Federal Census: Jackson County, Mississippi -- Roll T623/812, Image #290, Enumeration District #44, Beat #4, East of line dividing Ranges 7 & 8, Sheet #12A, House #214, Family #214, enumerated June 21, 1900, by Charles E. Pabt.
Noted living with parents [Henry and Laura Gautier] in 1910 Federal Census: Jackson County, Mississippi -- T624/744, Image #104, Enumeration District #64, Beat #4, East of Range line dividing ranges 7 and 8 west, Sheet #19A, House #332, Family #332, enumerated May 10, 1910, by Alfred E. Lewis.
Noted living with parents [Henry and Laura Gautier] in 1920 Federal Census: Jackson County, Mississippi -- Roll T625/879, Image #936, Enumeration District #69, Beat #4, Southwest, Sheet #4A, House#73, Family #74, enumerated January 6, 1920, by Ralph T. Vaughan.
Noted as a Painter at the ship yard in the 1920 Federal Census: Jackson County, Mississippi.
Newton Houston Gautier completed a WWI Civilian Draft Registration Card
(Ancestry.com -- 1999).
Completed a WWI Civilian Draft Registration Card
(USGENWEB -
abstracted by Raymond H. Banks).
Found:
Residence: 39553 Gautier, Jackson, MS
Born 2 May 1900
Died Jan 1976
Issued: RR (before 1951)
[Social Security Death
Index]
Found: PAGE 113
Then the boys came back. Donovan Gautier came back
wearing a bronze star. He had been at Bataan, forced on the infamous Death
March and was a Japanese prisoner for more than three years. There were
others
who returned: Dick Abbey, James Ira Grimsley, Walter Gully, Charles Ford,
Tom
Kell, Lonnie Watts, Wilbur Dees, Marby Penton, Robert Farnsworth, Duell
Hewlett, Tom Leatherbury, John Dupont, Johnny Green, Quinn and Newton
Gautier,
Frank Canty, Jr., Pete Cox, Calvin T. Bolding, Jr., and some sixty others.
But
Stova Firth didn't come back. Neither did Billy Canty or Joe Shepherd. These
and several other Pascagoulans had given their lives for their country.
[PASCAGOULA, SINGING RIVER CITY, Jay Higginbotham, Gill Press, Mobile,
August, 1967]