« Reply #12 on: Sunday 15 February 09 20:33 GMT (UK) »
I will have to look again about the Samuel in 1920 with all of those children.
The Samuel Truscott in Detroit on the 1920 census was 44, born England, immigrated in 1904 and was married to a woman named Jane who was 43, born England and immigrated in 1907. The children listed range in age from almost 3 to 23. One daughter is married and her husband and 2 young children are in the household. It appears that Samuel and Jane were married before emigrated as the eldest three children were born in England and have the immigration year as Jane. This Samuel definitely isn't the Samuel who arrived in 1920 but perhaps is another branch of the family.
As I said in my earlier post, it is unlikely that your Samuel was on the 1920 census since he arrived after the date of the census. I know that the US census was usually taken over a number of days however given that your Samuel arrived in New York on the 5th, it still would have taken a little time for Samuel to reach Detroit so if he were on the 1920 census, chances are he was enumerated somewhere other than Detroit. The chances are greater though that he isn't on it.
By the way, Kate and her daughter Elina Maud arrived in New York on 24 Nov 1920 aboard the Olympic.
Jacquie
Canada: Patterson, Brown, Haidenger/Heidinger, Meyer, Johnston(e), Gorsuch, Kitchin/Kitchen
United States: Patterson, Smith, Brown, Vance, Bower(s), Newberry, Best, Love, Gorsuch
England (Northumberland): Brown, Whitfield, Henderson
Scotland (Glasgow, Edinburgh, Fife, East Lothian): Johnston(e), Bell, Galloway, Campbell, Robertson, Williamson, Thomson, Crawford
Germans from Russia: Haidenger/Heidinger, Meyer, Meach, Lorenz