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Henry Odin Larson

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Henry Odin Larson

Birth
McCook County, South Dakota, USA
Death
1 Feb 1946 (aged 53)
Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, USA
Burial
Woonsocket, Sanborn County, South Dakota, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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The Woonsocket News, Woonsocket S.D. Feb 13, 1946

Funeral Services Held Last Thursday For Henry Larson
Funeral Services were held at the Lutheran Church in Forestburg on Thursday afternoon, February 7th. Pallbearers were J. T. Fairfield, Leon Rudy, Tom Brattrude, Tom Fouberg, Lloyd Ellingson and Alfred Ellingson. Interment was made in Eventide cemetery at Woonsocket.
Following is his obituary as read at the services:
Henry Odin Larson was born March 9, 1892, near Montrose, in McCook County, South Dakota. His parents later moved to Colton and he spent several years in North Dakota and Canada. He passed away at the Eitel Hospital in Minneapolis on February 1 from a serious heart ailment, at the age of 53 years, 10 months and 22 days. He was a member of the Lutheran church of Forestburg.
On January 20, 1917, he was united in marriage to Julia Reisetter. In the spring of 1918 they moved to Forestburg, where they resided until his death.
To this union five children were born, Mrs. Millard Senska, of Forestburg, Mrs. James Thompson serving overseas with the Army Nurse Corps, Mrs. Leonard DeBoer, of Egan, Mrs Edward Stach, of Letcher, and one son Lewis of Forestburg. He is also survived by his wife, his aged father, of Colton; six sisters, Mrs. Iver Severson and Mrs. Oscar Severson, of Montrose, Mrs. Agnes Heihn, of Colton, Mrs.S.M. Walker, of Long Beach, Calif., Mrs. Frank Sherlock, of Stanton, N.D., and Mrs. Oscar Rue, of Fargo; two brothers, Lloyd, of Brookings, and Lee of Fort Worth, Texas; a month old grandson, Keith Senska; besides a host of other relatives and friends.
"There is a plan far greater than the plan you know;
There is a landscape broader than the one you see.
There is a haven where storm-tossed souls may go-
You call it death-we, immortality.

Farwell, dear voyager, the river winds and turns;
The cadence of your song wafts near to me,
And now you know the things that all men learn
There is no death-there's imortality
The Woonsocket News, Woonsocket S.D. Feb 13, 1946

Funeral Services Held Last Thursday For Henry Larson
Funeral Services were held at the Lutheran Church in Forestburg on Thursday afternoon, February 7th. Pallbearers were J. T. Fairfield, Leon Rudy, Tom Brattrude, Tom Fouberg, Lloyd Ellingson and Alfred Ellingson. Interment was made in Eventide cemetery at Woonsocket.
Following is his obituary as read at the services:
Henry Odin Larson was born March 9, 1892, near Montrose, in McCook County, South Dakota. His parents later moved to Colton and he spent several years in North Dakota and Canada. He passed away at the Eitel Hospital in Minneapolis on February 1 from a serious heart ailment, at the age of 53 years, 10 months and 22 days. He was a member of the Lutheran church of Forestburg.
On January 20, 1917, he was united in marriage to Julia Reisetter. In the spring of 1918 they moved to Forestburg, where they resided until his death.
To this union five children were born, Mrs. Millard Senska, of Forestburg, Mrs. James Thompson serving overseas with the Army Nurse Corps, Mrs. Leonard DeBoer, of Egan, Mrs Edward Stach, of Letcher, and one son Lewis of Forestburg. He is also survived by his wife, his aged father, of Colton; six sisters, Mrs. Iver Severson and Mrs. Oscar Severson, of Montrose, Mrs. Agnes Heihn, of Colton, Mrs.S.M. Walker, of Long Beach, Calif., Mrs. Frank Sherlock, of Stanton, N.D., and Mrs. Oscar Rue, of Fargo; two brothers, Lloyd, of Brookings, and Lee of Fort Worth, Texas; a month old grandson, Keith Senska; besides a host of other relatives and friends.
"There is a plan far greater than the plan you know;
There is a landscape broader than the one you see.
There is a haven where storm-tossed souls may go-
You call it death-we, immortality.

Farwell, dear voyager, the river winds and turns;
The cadence of your song wafts near to me,
And now you know the things that all men learn
There is no death-there's imortality


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