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Susanna S. Bauman

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Susanna S. Bauman

Birth
May City, Osceola County, Iowa, USA
Death
4 May 1926 (aged 22)
Ephrata, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Plot
Row 18 G14
Memorial ID
View Source
Bauman. - Susanna, eldest daughter of Ananias and Mary Bauman, was born near May City, Iowa, April 23, 1904; died at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Stauffer, near Ephrata, Pa., May 4, 1926; aged 22 y. 11 d. When she was 9 years old her parents moved to Stanton, Mich., where she grew to womanhood. Last November she with two younger sisters went to Pennsylvania to visit and spend the winter and had planned to come home May 1, when only a few days before she took sick with typhoid fever, having contracted the disease at a place she worked a week to help out the sick. She gave her life that others might live, but both sick patients died also. She is survived by her parents, 2 brothers, and 3 sisters (Noah, Lydia, Esther, Amos, and Anna). She always had a smile and a cheering word for everybody. She was buried at the Pike Mennonite Church near New Holland, Pa. Services at the house by Jacob Stauffer and at the Church by John A. Weaver and Elam Martin. Text, Jas. 4:14, 15. She died in the bloom of life.
"A precious one from us is gone,
A voice we loved is stilled;
A place is vacant in our home
Which never can be filled."
Gospel Herald - Vol. XIX, No. 9 - May 27, 1926
Bauman. - Susanna, eldest daughter of Ananias and Mary Bauman, was born near May City, Iowa, April 23, 1904; died at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Stauffer, near Ephrata, Pa., May 4, 1926; aged 22 y. 11 d. When she was 9 years old her parents moved to Stanton, Mich., where she grew to womanhood. Last November she with two younger sisters went to Pennsylvania to visit and spend the winter and had planned to come home May 1, when only a few days before she took sick with typhoid fever, having contracted the disease at a place she worked a week to help out the sick. She gave her life that others might live, but both sick patients died also. She is survived by her parents, 2 brothers, and 3 sisters (Noah, Lydia, Esther, Amos, and Anna). She always had a smile and a cheering word for everybody. She was buried at the Pike Mennonite Church near New Holland, Pa. Services at the house by Jacob Stauffer and at the Church by John A. Weaver and Elam Martin. Text, Jas. 4:14, 15. She died in the bloom of life.
"A precious one from us is gone,
A voice we loved is stilled;
A place is vacant in our home
Which never can be filled."
Gospel Herald - Vol. XIX, No. 9 - May 27, 1926


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