Levi Alpaugh had worked as a foreman at the sand mixing house at the plant of Taylor-Wharton Iron & Steel Company. He had been in ill health and committed suicide at the age of about 75 years.
He lived with his daughter, Miss Mabel Alpaugh at the back of the post office building in High Bridge. His wife had died about twenty years previously. He also had two other daughters, Mrs. Luther Apgar of High Bridge, and Mrs. Charles Blanchard of Dover.
He was a member of the Reformed Church, the local lodge of Red Men and the Taylor-Wharton Beneficial Association.
His obituary was published in the Hunterdon County Democrat on July 4, 1935.
Levi Alpaugh had worked as a foreman at the sand mixing house at the plant of Taylor-Wharton Iron & Steel Company. He had been in ill health and committed suicide at the age of about 75 years.
He lived with his daughter, Miss Mabel Alpaugh at the back of the post office building in High Bridge. His wife had died about twenty years previously. He also had two other daughters, Mrs. Luther Apgar of High Bridge, and Mrs. Charles Blanchard of Dover.
He was a member of the Reformed Church, the local lodge of Red Men and the Taylor-Wharton Beneficial Association.
His obituary was published in the Hunterdon County Democrat on July 4, 1935.
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