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Joseph A. Hiner

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Joseph A. Hiner

Birth
Tazewell County, Illinois, USA
Death
11 Nov 1930 (aged 74)
Jefferson Township, Shelby County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Clarence, Shelby County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Plot
BUNN Block 1 Row 3 Lot 36s
Memorial ID
View Source
Married 1887-04-06
(Posted by Lewis Wetzel)
------------------------------------
(Following posted by Pam Witherow)
Occupation: Farmer

MO d/c 38253-c

Funeral Services Today
The funeral services for J. A. Hiner, who died at his home south of Clarence early Tuesday morning will be held at the home at 2 o'clock this afternoon (Wednesday) and will be conducted by Rev. C. H. Bundy.
The Clarence Independent-Courier, Clarence, Missouri, November 5, 1930
(Contributed by Shelby County Historical Society & Museum)

Funeral Services Held Wednesday
J. A. Hirner Was One of Community's Best Known Farmers.

Funeral services for J. A. Hirner, who died at his home south of Clarence Tuesday Nov. 11th, were held at the home last Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock, and was conducted by Rev. C. H. Bundy of Clarence. Burial was in the Maplewood cemetery.
Joseph Anthony Hirner was born near Hopedale, Ill., Nov. 3rd, 1856. He was the second child in the family of six children of George and Cynthia Ann Hirner. His boyhood days were spent in Hopedale, moving at the age of 20 to Stanford, Ill.
While here he was united in marriage to Adelia Belle Cruseberry on April 6, 1887. To this union two children were born, Ora Kirk, and Stella Ann, both of Clarence.
Until the year 1904 he remained in the vicinity of Stanford, Ill., following farming as an occupation.
In March 1904 the family moved to Clarence, Mo., on a farm one mile south of town where he resided until death.
He is survived by his wife and two children, O. K. Hirner and Mrs. Mont McDonald, three grandchildren, Frances, Louis and Gwendolyn Hirner, as well as two brothers, Lemuel E. Hirner, of Stanford, Ill.,, G. E. Hirner, of Ames, Iowa, and one sister, Mrs. John Taylor, of Warsaw, Ill., also a number of nieces and nephews.
Deceased followed an active life on the farm ad was also active in farm organization work until physical infirmities compelled him to relinquish it nearly three years before his death.
Clarence Independent-Courier, Clarence, Missouri, November 12, 1930
(Contributed by Shelby County Historical Society & Museum)
Married 1887-04-06
(Posted by Lewis Wetzel)
------------------------------------
(Following posted by Pam Witherow)
Occupation: Farmer

MO d/c 38253-c

Funeral Services Today
The funeral services for J. A. Hiner, who died at his home south of Clarence early Tuesday morning will be held at the home at 2 o'clock this afternoon (Wednesday) and will be conducted by Rev. C. H. Bundy.
The Clarence Independent-Courier, Clarence, Missouri, November 5, 1930
(Contributed by Shelby County Historical Society & Museum)

Funeral Services Held Wednesday
J. A. Hirner Was One of Community's Best Known Farmers.

Funeral services for J. A. Hirner, who died at his home south of Clarence Tuesday Nov. 11th, were held at the home last Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock, and was conducted by Rev. C. H. Bundy of Clarence. Burial was in the Maplewood cemetery.
Joseph Anthony Hirner was born near Hopedale, Ill., Nov. 3rd, 1856. He was the second child in the family of six children of George and Cynthia Ann Hirner. His boyhood days were spent in Hopedale, moving at the age of 20 to Stanford, Ill.
While here he was united in marriage to Adelia Belle Cruseberry on April 6, 1887. To this union two children were born, Ora Kirk, and Stella Ann, both of Clarence.
Until the year 1904 he remained in the vicinity of Stanford, Ill., following farming as an occupation.
In March 1904 the family moved to Clarence, Mo., on a farm one mile south of town where he resided until death.
He is survived by his wife and two children, O. K. Hirner and Mrs. Mont McDonald, three grandchildren, Frances, Louis and Gwendolyn Hirner, as well as two brothers, Lemuel E. Hirner, of Stanford, Ill.,, G. E. Hirner, of Ames, Iowa, and one sister, Mrs. John Taylor, of Warsaw, Ill., also a number of nieces and nephews.
Deceased followed an active life on the farm ad was also active in farm organization work until physical infirmities compelled him to relinquish it nearly three years before his death.
Clarence Independent-Courier, Clarence, Missouri, November 12, 1930
(Contributed by Shelby County Historical Society & Museum)


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