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Harold Frank Juneau

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Harold Frank Juneau

Birth
Wausau, Marathon County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
23 Jan 1994 (aged 81)
Cape Coral, Lee County, Florida, USA
Burial
Marshfield, Wood County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Plot
O_A_4_8
Memorial ID
View Source
Harold F. Juneau, 81, of 1609 Sawyer Drive died Jan. 23, 1994, at his winter residence in Cape Coral, Fla.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday at Christ Lutheran Church with the Revs. Mark A. Krueger and Steven P. Chellew officiating. Maldon Plank will be the organist.
Burial will be in Hillside Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Howard Kohl, Roger P. Beck, Roy W. Passow, Charles Luedtke, Richard Umhoefer and Edgar Grosskopf. Honorary pallbearers will be Andrew Felker, Ivo Umhoefer, Melvin S. Funk and Ralph Schumacher.
Visitation will be at Rembs Kundinger Chapel from 4-8 p.m. Thursday and again Friday until 9 a.m. and then at the church from 10 a.m. until service time Friday.
He was born Dec. 3, 1912, in Wausau, to the late Arthur E. and Elizabeth (Kohl) Juneau. He attended Wausau Senior High, graduating in 1931, and Wausau Business College. He married Anita P. Schumacher Sept 14, 1935, in Wausau.
After business college, Mr. Juneau worked as an accountant for Minnesota Mining, Division of 3M, in Wausau. In 1937, he, his father and his brother, Arthur K. Juneau, started Juneau Supply Co., a wholesale distributor of automotive and industrial supplies. He was president of Juneau Supply until the time of his retirement in 1972. He and his wife moved to Marshfield in 1976 to be closer to their son, Patrick J., and the medical care of Marshfield Clinic.
Mr. Juneau was a founding director of First National Bank of Wausau, which is now Firstar Bank. In 1962, he, his brother and two other investors constructed, owned and operated Rib Mountain Golf Course in Wausau. At the time of construction, it was the largest lighted night-time golf course in the Midwest Mr. Juneau was also an avid golfer until the time of his death.
He was a member of Christ Lutheran Church in Marshfield and was active in the Wausau business community as a member of the Kiwanis Club, Elks Club, Wausau Curling Club and the Wausau Country Club. Mr. Juneau was also a former director of numerous automotive supply firms.
He is survived by his wife; two sons; one brother, Arthur K. Juneau of Wausau; his grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.
Memorials may be directed to the Marshfield Medical Research and Education Foundation, Foundation, the Marshfield Area YMCA or Christ Lutheran Church.

Marshfield (Wisconsin) News-Herald, Wednesday, January 26, 1994
Harold F. Juneau, 81, of 1609 Sawyer Drive died Jan. 23, 1994, at his winter residence in Cape Coral, Fla.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday at Christ Lutheran Church with the Revs. Mark A. Krueger and Steven P. Chellew officiating. Maldon Plank will be the organist.
Burial will be in Hillside Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Howard Kohl, Roger P. Beck, Roy W. Passow, Charles Luedtke, Richard Umhoefer and Edgar Grosskopf. Honorary pallbearers will be Andrew Felker, Ivo Umhoefer, Melvin S. Funk and Ralph Schumacher.
Visitation will be at Rembs Kundinger Chapel from 4-8 p.m. Thursday and again Friday until 9 a.m. and then at the church from 10 a.m. until service time Friday.
He was born Dec. 3, 1912, in Wausau, to the late Arthur E. and Elizabeth (Kohl) Juneau. He attended Wausau Senior High, graduating in 1931, and Wausau Business College. He married Anita P. Schumacher Sept 14, 1935, in Wausau.
After business college, Mr. Juneau worked as an accountant for Minnesota Mining, Division of 3M, in Wausau. In 1937, he, his father and his brother, Arthur K. Juneau, started Juneau Supply Co., a wholesale distributor of automotive and industrial supplies. He was president of Juneau Supply until the time of his retirement in 1972. He and his wife moved to Marshfield in 1976 to be closer to their son, Patrick J., and the medical care of Marshfield Clinic.
Mr. Juneau was a founding director of First National Bank of Wausau, which is now Firstar Bank. In 1962, he, his brother and two other investors constructed, owned and operated Rib Mountain Golf Course in Wausau. At the time of construction, it was the largest lighted night-time golf course in the Midwest Mr. Juneau was also an avid golfer until the time of his death.
He was a member of Christ Lutheran Church in Marshfield and was active in the Wausau business community as a member of the Kiwanis Club, Elks Club, Wausau Curling Club and the Wausau Country Club. Mr. Juneau was also a former director of numerous automotive supply firms.
He is survived by his wife; two sons; one brother, Arthur K. Juneau of Wausau; his grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.
Memorials may be directed to the Marshfield Medical Research and Education Foundation, Foundation, the Marshfield Area YMCA or Christ Lutheran Church.

Marshfield (Wisconsin) News-Herald, Wednesday, January 26, 1994


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