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Ross Ronald May

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Ross Ronald May

Birth
Cardston, Claresholm Census Division, Alberta, Canada
Death
16 Jul 1942 (aged 42)
Cardston, Claresholm Census Division, Alberta, Canada
Burial
Magrath, Claresholm Census Division, Alberta, Canada Add to Map
Plot
Block 6
Memorial ID
View Source

Born in: Cardston,Alberta Canada
Father: James May
Mother: Rhonda Ann Lang
Marriage: 01 Jan 1929
in Magrath,Alberta,Canada
To Thelma Gibb

Ross was the last of eleven children born to James and Rhoda May.

Educated in Cardston area schools, Ross was a bookkeeper at the Bank of Montreal at Cardston and then Calgary. Following that he used his "jovial and personable disposition" as a salesman for the T. Eaton Company of Lethbridge, and later the Great West Garment Company of Edmonton.

His interests included being an avid sportsman and photography. Ross was also musically inclined, playing the piano and saxaphone in Cardston and Calgary groups.

He passed away in the Cardston hospital from a lingering illness that required frequent blood transfusions.

Ross's wife Thelma kept her family (2 girls) going by working at the Magrath Woolen Mill, then re-upping her teaching certificate and returning to that profession.




Born in: Cardston,Alberta Canada
Father: James May
Mother: Rhonda Ann Lang
Marriage: 01 Jan 1929
in Magrath,Alberta,Canada
To Thelma Gibb

Ross was the last of eleven children born to James and Rhoda May.

Educated in Cardston area schools, Ross was a bookkeeper at the Bank of Montreal at Cardston and then Calgary. Following that he used his "jovial and personable disposition" as a salesman for the T. Eaton Company of Lethbridge, and later the Great West Garment Company of Edmonton.

His interests included being an avid sportsman and photography. Ross was also musically inclined, playing the piano and saxaphone in Cardston and Calgary groups.

He passed away in the Cardston hospital from a lingering illness that required frequent blood transfusions.

Ross's wife Thelma kept her family (2 girls) going by working at the Magrath Woolen Mill, then re-upping her teaching certificate and returning to that profession.





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