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Charles Wilson Andrews Jr.

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Charles Wilson Andrews Jr. Veteran

Birth
Vona, Kit Carson County, Colorado, USA
Death
30 Aug 1965 (aged 43)
Independence Township, Macon County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Atlanta, Macon County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Occupation: Bull Dozer Operator

MO d/c 65-032559

MISS SAMMY SAGASER BRIDE OF C. W. ANDREWS
Miss Samm Sagaser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sagaser of Atlanta, became the bride recently of Charles W. Andrews, Jr., of Alamosa, Colo., in a double ring ceremony performed by the Rev. J. Glore Reneau, pastor of the Methodist Church in Raton, New Mexico.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Manth of Alamosa were the couple's only attendants. Mr. Manth is a cousin of the bride.
For her wedding attire the bride chose an afternoon dress of aqua with which she wore brown accessories. Mrs. Manth was attired in a two piece dress of aqua and black.
The bride if a graduate of the Atlanta High School with the Class of 1948. She went to Alamosa last fall to visit her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Manth and remained there after finding employment as a proof reader on the Alamosa Daily Courier.
Mr. Andrews attended the Alamosa High School. He served two and a half years in the United States Navy and saw action in the South Pacific during World War II.
He is now employed in the Gorum Tractor Company in Alamosa where they plan to make their home.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrews have been visiting relatives in Atlanta and left today for their home in Colorado.
Macon Chronicle-Herald, Macon, Missouri, 02 Feb 1949, Wed • Page 4, Column 3

Tractor Crushes Delivery Worker
JEFFERSON CITY (AP) — A 43-year-old Atlanta, Mo., man, Charles Andrews, was crushed to death beneath a tractor Monday near a farm in Macon County.
The highway patrol reported that Andrews was delivering the tractor to the Junior Ford farm about 4 miles west of Atlanta. Andrews and another Atlanta man Wesley Brewer, were hauling the tractor on a flatbed truck.
The truck, became mired in a mudhole as it turned off U.S. 63 on to Route J, the patrol said Andrews tried to back the tractor off the truck but the tractor slipped sideways, pinning him beneath it.
St. Joseph Gazette, St. Joseph, Missouri, 31 Aug 1965, Tue • Page 5, Column 4
Occupation: Bull Dozer Operator

MO d/c 65-032559

MISS SAMMY SAGASER BRIDE OF C. W. ANDREWS
Miss Samm Sagaser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sagaser of Atlanta, became the bride recently of Charles W. Andrews, Jr., of Alamosa, Colo., in a double ring ceremony performed by the Rev. J. Glore Reneau, pastor of the Methodist Church in Raton, New Mexico.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Manth of Alamosa were the couple's only attendants. Mr. Manth is a cousin of the bride.
For her wedding attire the bride chose an afternoon dress of aqua with which she wore brown accessories. Mrs. Manth was attired in a two piece dress of aqua and black.
The bride if a graduate of the Atlanta High School with the Class of 1948. She went to Alamosa last fall to visit her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Manth and remained there after finding employment as a proof reader on the Alamosa Daily Courier.
Mr. Andrews attended the Alamosa High School. He served two and a half years in the United States Navy and saw action in the South Pacific during World War II.
He is now employed in the Gorum Tractor Company in Alamosa where they plan to make their home.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrews have been visiting relatives in Atlanta and left today for their home in Colorado.
Macon Chronicle-Herald, Macon, Missouri, 02 Feb 1949, Wed • Page 4, Column 3

Tractor Crushes Delivery Worker
JEFFERSON CITY (AP) — A 43-year-old Atlanta, Mo., man, Charles Andrews, was crushed to death beneath a tractor Monday near a farm in Macon County.
The highway patrol reported that Andrews was delivering the tractor to the Junior Ford farm about 4 miles west of Atlanta. Andrews and another Atlanta man Wesley Brewer, were hauling the tractor on a flatbed truck.
The truck, became mired in a mudhole as it turned off U.S. 63 on to Route J, the patrol said Andrews tried to back the tractor off the truck but the tractor slipped sideways, pinning him beneath it.
St. Joseph Gazette, St. Joseph, Missouri, 31 Aug 1965, Tue • Page 5, Column 4


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