She met Armand, and they married on February 23, 1936, and established a home in Lowell.
She became associated with the Hathaway Shirt Company, in Lowell, as a presser for 15 years, she retired in 1962.
The family moved to Tyngsboro to raise her family, and spend time with her children. She loved to spend time with her grandchildren; they were the love of her life, especially after the death of her loving husband Armand to whom she was married to for 63 years. She enjoyed to play Bingo.
She was a communicant of St. Mary Magdalene Church in Tyngsboro.
She is survived by two daughters, Edna G. Kerouac, of Pepperell, and Barbara A. Brooks of Texas; two sons, Armand R. Kerouac, Jr. of Florida, and Robert P. Kerouac of Manchester, NH; 14 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and nine great-great-grandchildren.
(Published in The Sun, Lowell, MA, March 8, 2008)
She met Armand, and they married on February 23, 1936, and established a home in Lowell.
She became associated with the Hathaway Shirt Company, in Lowell, as a presser for 15 years, she retired in 1962.
The family moved to Tyngsboro to raise her family, and spend time with her children. She loved to spend time with her grandchildren; they were the love of her life, especially after the death of her loving husband Armand to whom she was married to for 63 years. She enjoyed to play Bingo.
She was a communicant of St. Mary Magdalene Church in Tyngsboro.
She is survived by two daughters, Edna G. Kerouac, of Pepperell, and Barbara A. Brooks of Texas; two sons, Armand R. Kerouac, Jr. of Florida, and Robert P. Kerouac of Manchester, NH; 14 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and nine great-great-grandchildren.
(Published in The Sun, Lowell, MA, March 8, 2008)
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