Advertisement

Myrtle Blanche <I>Johnson</I> Brown

Advertisement

Myrtle Blanche Johnson Brown

Birth
Fort Apache, Navajo County, Arizona, USA
Death
25 Jun 1970 (aged 60)
Pinetop-Lakeside, Navajo County, Arizona, USA
Burial
Show Low, Navajo County, Arizona, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Blanche Brown was born, September 25, 1909, in Fort Apache, Navajo County, Arizona. The government furnished good doctors and hospitals for the Indian people and that is the reason many of the white people would take advantage of the services. Blanche was a very pretty woman who was a good housekeeper, great cook and took the best of care of her family. She and her husband, Jesse Brown, had six children, two of which died in infancy. Blanche loved to play the piano for dances and weekends would find her and her oldest daughter, Nola, who also learned the piano, at some place in the White Mountains playing. Blanche saw to it that the children went to church and were well versed in their religion. As Blanche got older, she developed a heart condition. She died in her sleep in her Lakeside, Arizona home, June 25, 1970. She was surely missed by her family and all who knew her.
Blanche Brown was born, September 25, 1909, in Fort Apache, Navajo County, Arizona. The government furnished good doctors and hospitals for the Indian people and that is the reason many of the white people would take advantage of the services. Blanche was a very pretty woman who was a good housekeeper, great cook and took the best of care of her family. She and her husband, Jesse Brown, had six children, two of which died in infancy. Blanche loved to play the piano for dances and weekends would find her and her oldest daughter, Nola, who also learned the piano, at some place in the White Mountains playing. Blanche saw to it that the children went to church and were well versed in their religion. As Blanche got older, she developed a heart condition. She died in her sleep in her Lakeside, Arizona home, June 25, 1970. She was surely missed by her family and all who knew her.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement