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Lucile Hunt <I>Hunt</I> Gibron

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Lucile Hunt Hunt Gibron

Birth
Washington County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
16 Jan 1987 (aged 79)
Forest Grove, Washington County, Oregon, USA
Burial
Forest Grove, Washington County, Oregon, USA GPS-Latitude: 45.5344762, Longitude: -123.1394543
Plot
Lot 52, Grave 4
Memorial ID
View Source
"Lucile", Rhoda Lucile Hunt was the oldest of 10 (I had been told). She left Oklahoma to hitch hike to Flagstaff, Az in search of attending Northern Arizona University, a 'teachers' college'. She taught at several different reservation schools in Arizona while she raised her song along with his White River Apache grandmother Stevens. Later, she worked at Picacho teaching and in the summers she was a waitress. She spilled soup in a handsome mans lap and he soon became her husband, George Gibron, my grandfather. In Michigan City Indiana, they had a daughter Patricia Gibron. In Michigan City he was a butcher and grocer, and his mother was a devoted syrian bread maker for the family church in Michigan City. After a year, they moved to Denver Colorado and lived over the top of a grocery store for a couple years. There was a fire and they had to move. Her sister Margie was with Bud who was working for the railroad in Arizona, so they moved to Tucson, Arizona to find work. Lucile worked for Sunnyside School District teaching elementary students. They bought a 5 acre parcel on Valencia Road (just west of Country Club) with an adobe house that had no bathroom nor kitchen in the house. Later, a bathroom was installed and a kitchen. The kitchen had a fire and was re-built larger. There was also a guest house, salt cedar trees, eucalyptus trees, fig trees, peach trees, an extra large garden, and beautiful rose bushes. In the back there was a big workshop for rock hounding and lapidary work with plenty of storage for the rocks and minerals they dug up. They both attended art classes by Maurice Grossman at the U of A and began making poured acrylic rock tables. Each of the 4 children inherited 1 rock table. They found, cut, and polished each rock in the tables. The kids raised a dairy cow, a steer, a horse, and chickens. The famous author Nelson C. Nye was a frequent guest at their residence. In the 1972 we lived with them for my 3rd and 4th grade year (I went to los Ranchitos Elem.) Later, they discovered their water source had been poisoned by the airport and they sold to a company and moved to Amado, Arizona. While I was in High School 1977-1979 we drove down to Amado to visit monthly. Then, Lucile and George moved to Oregon to enjoy the green trees 1980-1987 together. George met June Miller and spent 10 years with her in Oregon.
"Lucile", Rhoda Lucile Hunt was the oldest of 10 (I had been told). She left Oklahoma to hitch hike to Flagstaff, Az in search of attending Northern Arizona University, a 'teachers' college'. She taught at several different reservation schools in Arizona while she raised her song along with his White River Apache grandmother Stevens. Later, she worked at Picacho teaching and in the summers she was a waitress. She spilled soup in a handsome mans lap and he soon became her husband, George Gibron, my grandfather. In Michigan City Indiana, they had a daughter Patricia Gibron. In Michigan City he was a butcher and grocer, and his mother was a devoted syrian bread maker for the family church in Michigan City. After a year, they moved to Denver Colorado and lived over the top of a grocery store for a couple years. There was a fire and they had to move. Her sister Margie was with Bud who was working for the railroad in Arizona, so they moved to Tucson, Arizona to find work. Lucile worked for Sunnyside School District teaching elementary students. They bought a 5 acre parcel on Valencia Road (just west of Country Club) with an adobe house that had no bathroom nor kitchen in the house. Later, a bathroom was installed and a kitchen. The kitchen had a fire and was re-built larger. There was also a guest house, salt cedar trees, eucalyptus trees, fig trees, peach trees, an extra large garden, and beautiful rose bushes. In the back there was a big workshop for rock hounding and lapidary work with plenty of storage for the rocks and minerals they dug up. They both attended art classes by Maurice Grossman at the U of A and began making poured acrylic rock tables. Each of the 4 children inherited 1 rock table. They found, cut, and polished each rock in the tables. The kids raised a dairy cow, a steer, a horse, and chickens. The famous author Nelson C. Nye was a frequent guest at their residence. In the 1972 we lived with them for my 3rd and 4th grade year (I went to los Ranchitos Elem.) Later, they discovered their water source had been poisoned by the airport and they sold to a company and moved to Amado, Arizona. While I was in High School 1977-1979 we drove down to Amado to visit monthly. Then, Lucile and George moved to Oregon to enjoy the green trees 1980-1987 together. George met June Miller and spent 10 years with her in Oregon.

Gravesite Details

w/o George Gibron - Death Date In Book Is 12/19/1986



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  • Created by: Tracy Turner
  • Added: Dec 10, 2007
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/23343988/lucile_hunt-gibron: accessed ), memorial page for Lucile Hunt Hunt Gibron (18 Jun 1907–16 Jan 1987), Find a Grave Memorial ID 23343988, citing Mountain View Memorial Gardens, Forest Grove, Washington County, Oregon, USA; Maintained by Tracy Turner (contributor 46815350).