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Sepia Saturday Sepia Saturday 163 - Lorraine and the Snow Man
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Lorraine (Skibbe) Clark 1938, Chicago, Illinois
This is a picture of my mother at age 4 outside her family home in Chicago, Illinois. My mother spent her youth enjoying the snow including ice skating, skiing and playing in the snow. Perhaps that is why she lives where it doesn't snow.
The death certificates arrived yesterday. John Newton Poundstone's DC was signed by his wife Charlottie. Information provided includes length of stay in this place (Cerro Gordo, Illinois) 73 years; occupation: common laborer; DOB; DOD; burial date; cemetery - Cerro Gordo; funeral home - Freese Funeral Service of Cerro Gordo; and cause of death: carcinoma of the stomach, chronic myocarditis. Ora Pearl Poundstone's DC was signed by his son Herbert. Address noted of 801 N Morgan Street, Bement, Piatt, Illinois - length of residence thirty years. Occupation: drayman for the Bement Grain Company. SSN; DOB; DOD; burial date; cemetery - Bement Cemetery; funeral home - Roux Funeral Home in Bement; and cause of death carcinoma of the sigmoid (colon), chronic myocarditis. The brothers John Newton (85) and Ora Pearl (84) both died in their eighties with similar causes of death. Their father Richard Poundstone's information was provided by son Ora Pearl. Richard died
cir 1885 cir 1910 Dedicated in 1880, St. Mary’s hospital was fully supported by the residents of Tucson. Originally it had been planned as a school, however, the Bishop Salpointe decided to make the school a hospital as it neared its completion. The hospital opened with twelve beds, Dr. John C. Hardy, and four Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelot: Sister St. Martin Dunn, Sister Julia Ford, Sister Basil Morris, and Sister Mary John Noli. A second story was added to the hospital in 1882. The physician staff grew by six and the hospital had the capacity of fifty beds by 1900. The Arizona State Genealogical Society sells a book documenting admissions to the hospital 1909 to 1920.
52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Blogging Prompt by Amy Johnson Crow http://www.nostorytoosmall.com/ William Skibbe WWI William Adolph Emil Skibbe was born on the 3rd day of November, 1890 in Chicago, Illinois. [i] He was the first son born to Wilhelm Gustav Skibbe and his wife Julia Ann Panzer. I have found information to confirm that William had eight siblings - four sisters: Meta "May", Ella, and Ruth "Olga" and four brothers: George, Arthur, Edward, and Louis. Some researchers include a sister born in Germany by the name of Frieda that was born and died in Germany in 1887, I have not yet found proof that she existed. William and three of his siblings were born in Chicago, Cook, Illinois. The youngest five children were born in Indiana - two in Laporte and two in the town of North Judson. William was baptized at the St. Matthew Evangelical Church in Chicago on 6 December 1890. [ii] Witnesses to the baptism were Adolph Blank, Emil Buhnke,
Comments
Kathy M.
Good for her if she had the common sense to move to a milder climate.
:)~
HUGZ