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Charles Clifford “Andy” Anderson Sr.

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Charles Clifford “Andy” Anderson Sr.

Birth
Hawkinsville, Pulaski County, Georgia, USA
Death
21 Jan 1993 (aged 89)
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA
Burial
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.49069, Longitude: -86.84292
Plot
block 19
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Council Robert and Sarah Elizabeth (Watson) Anderson. Born in or near Hawkinsville, in Pulaski Co., GA. Said to have left home over a dispute with his father at age 14 (1917/18), but still listed with his parents in 1920 census. Whenever he left, he moved in with his uncle and namesake Charles Clifford Anderson, a pharmacist in Huntsville, AL. In 1929, he moved to Birmingham, AL, and can be found there in the 1930 census as a boarder in the Thomas Breed household. He married Evelyn Chrystobel Powell on April 30, 1936 in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Birmingham and had two children and three grandchildren. He was in a management training program for Avondale Mills in the 1930s, worked for a munitions plant in Childersburg during World War II and served as an engineer for an industrial laundry and later at the Bayliss Machine Shop, where he retired in 1977. He had a college education of some sort, possibly in Birmingham. His old textbooks have dates from the early 1940s.
Son of Council Robert and Sarah Elizabeth (Watson) Anderson. Born in or near Hawkinsville, in Pulaski Co., GA. Said to have left home over a dispute with his father at age 14 (1917/18), but still listed with his parents in 1920 census. Whenever he left, he moved in with his uncle and namesake Charles Clifford Anderson, a pharmacist in Huntsville, AL. In 1929, he moved to Birmingham, AL, and can be found there in the 1930 census as a boarder in the Thomas Breed household. He married Evelyn Chrystobel Powell on April 30, 1936 in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Birmingham and had two children and three grandchildren. He was in a management training program for Avondale Mills in the 1930s, worked for a munitions plant in Childersburg during World War II and served as an engineer for an industrial laundry and later at the Bayliss Machine Shop, where he retired in 1977. He had a college education of some sort, possibly in Birmingham. His old textbooks have dates from the early 1940s.


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