Advertisement

George Wilson Miller

Advertisement

George Wilson Miller

Birth
Roseburg, Douglas County, Oregon, USA
Death
7 Aug 1936 (aged 55)
Sprague, Lincoln County, Washington, USA
Burial
Sprague, Lincoln County, Washington, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Obituary
George W. Miller, 55, died here last night after an illness of less than a week and started by a severe boil on his nose. Complications caused his death.
Born at Roseburg, Oregon, he came here by covered wagon in 1891. He married Eva Taylor of Sprague at Spokane in 1910. He farmed successfully five years, then entered the hardware business. He sold out 12 years later and went to Eugene, Oregon, for about a year, returned to Sprague and the last seven years was janitor of the public school here.
He leaves his widow, at home; four children, Mrs. Edith McMullen, Babb, Montana; Allan, Spokane; Don, a Cheney State Normal School student and Ervin, at home; four brothers and two sisters. He was a Royal Arch Mason.
Funeral arrangements await word for a daughter, now in Glacier Park, 50 miles from a telephone. The address of a brother, Charles A., a Portland, Oregon, printer, also is wanted.

The Semi-Weekly Spokesman-Review, August 10, 1936
Contributor: Shelli Steedman (46805729) • [email protected]
Obituary
George W. Miller, 55, died here last night after an illness of less than a week and started by a severe boil on his nose. Complications caused his death.
Born at Roseburg, Oregon, he came here by covered wagon in 1891. He married Eva Taylor of Sprague at Spokane in 1910. He farmed successfully five years, then entered the hardware business. He sold out 12 years later and went to Eugene, Oregon, for about a year, returned to Sprague and the last seven years was janitor of the public school here.
He leaves his widow, at home; four children, Mrs. Edith McMullen, Babb, Montana; Allan, Spokane; Don, a Cheney State Normal School student and Ervin, at home; four brothers and two sisters. He was a Royal Arch Mason.
Funeral arrangements await word for a daughter, now in Glacier Park, 50 miles from a telephone. The address of a brother, Charles A., a Portland, Oregon, printer, also is wanted.

The Semi-Weekly Spokesman-Review, August 10, 1936
Contributor: Shelli Steedman (46805729) • [email protected]


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement