1919 - 1979 (59 years)
-
Name |
Molyneux, Albert Henry [1] |
Born |
4 Sep 1919 |
Hanna, Carbon County, Wyoming, USA [2] |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
25 Feb 1979 |
San Mateo County, California, USA [2] |
Person ID |
I20355 |
Sackett |
Last Modified |
1 Mar 2020 |
-
Event Map |
|
| Born - 4 Sep 1919 - Hanna, Carbon County, Wyoming, USA |
|
| Died - 25 Feb 1979 - San Mateo County, California, USA |
|
|
Pin Legend |
|
-
Sources |
- [S1619] Newspapers.com (Reliability: 3), 29 Feb 2020.
The Emporia Gazette (Emporia, Kansas), 4 Mar 1968, Page 3
Fred Cramer Dead
Fred Cramer. Rt. 1, former Emporia merchant, died Saturday morning in his home after suffering an apparent heart attack. Mr. Cramer had lived in the Emporia area since 1947 and he and a son, Fred R. Cramer, had owned and operated the Urbanside Grocery Store on East Sixth Avenue from 1947 until 1960.
Funeral services will be at 10 in Roberts - Blue - Barnett Chapel. They will be conducted by the Rev. Ira Nicklin, pastor of the Hartford Methodist Church. Burial will be in Lincoln Cemetery in Lebo.
Mr. Cramer had been a resident of the Lebo community for several years before he moved to Emporia and he had lived since 1960 on a farm seven miles east of Emporia. The son of A. W. and Rosa Johnson Cramer, he was born Jan. 24th, 1896, on a farm near Allen, and he was married to Mary Edna Johnson on Dec. 25th, 1916, in Lebo. Mr. Cramer is survived by his wife, of the home; two sons, Fred R., of Emporia, and Howard A., Tulsa, Okla.; three daughters, Jean Molyneux, Belmont, Calif.; Joyce Colgiazier, 107 South Sylvan St., and Kathleen Parry, Ei Dorado: two brothers. Glen, of Osage City, and Clifford, of Emporia: one sister, Dora Wise, Olivet, 14 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Transcribed by Ted Smith
- [S113] California Death Index 1940-1997 (Family Search), (Family Search) (Reliability: 3), 10 Sep 2019.
Name: Albert Henry Molyneux
Social Security #: 520126529
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 4 Sep 1919
Birth Place: Wyoming
Death Date: 25 Feb 1979
Death Place: San Mateo
Researched by Ted Smith
|
|
|