Our American Family - Person Sheet
Our American Family - Person Sheet
NameOrville Earl JOHNSON 1
Birth Date5 Jul 1919
Birth PlaceClayton, Union County, New Mexico
Death Date12 Aug 1980 Age: 61
Death PlaceKansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas
OccupationWWII Soldier
FatherJohn Edward JOHNSON (1876-1963)
MotherDora Alice RALPH (1883-1922)
Spouses
Birth Date16 Jun 1915
Birth PlaceKansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas
Death Date12 Feb 1993 Age: 77
Death PlaceKansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas
Burial PlaceKansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas, Mount Calvary Cemetery
Family ID6651
Marr Date15 Jun 1943
Marr PlaceKansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas
ChildrenM. A. (1956-)
 _____ (?-)
Notes for Marguerite Laura (Spouse 1)
Marguerite L. Johnson, 77, of the Presbyterian Manor in Kansas City, Kansas, passed away February 12th at Providence-St. Margaret Health Center. Mrs. Johnson was a lifelong Kansas City resident and was a 1933 graduate of Bishop Ward High School. She was a secretary for Sears, Roebuck & Company for 22 years. retiring in 1955. Mrs. Johnson was a member of St. Peter's Catholic Cathedral. Her husband, Orville Earl Johnson, died in 1980. She was survived by a daughter, Deneen Michelle Keuchel, of Kansas City, Kansas; and seven grandchildren.

Friends called on Sunday afternoon at the Butler Chapel in Kansas City, Kansas, where the Rosary was recited at 3:00. Services were held on Monday morning at St. Peter's Catholic Cathedral in Kansas City, Kansas. Burial in Mount Calvary Cemetery in Kansas City, Kansas.

The Kansas City Star (MO) ~ Sunday, 14 Feb 1993
On Find A Grave.

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Last Modified 24 Apr 2022Created 10 Feb 2024 using Reunion on a Macintosh


Created 10 Feb 2024.
© Copyright 1993-2024 by John Johnson.

Created on a Macintosh computer using Reunion genealogy software.

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“I am bound to them though I cannot look into their eyes or hear their voices. I honor their history. I cherish their lives.
I will tell their story. I will remember them for I am the result of the very love, struggle, sacrifice and journey of thousands.”
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