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Stucky, Freni Waltner (1867-1932): Difference between revisions

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New page: ''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 20 Jan 1932 p. 3 Birth date: Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries
 
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''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 20 Jan 1932 p. 3   
''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 1932 Jan 20 p. 3   
 
Birth date: 1867 Mar 20
 
text of obituary:
 
<center>'''Freni Stucky'''</center>
 
Freni (Waltner) Stucky, youngest child of William and Marie Waltner, was born march 20 1867, in Kotosufka, Russia.  At the age of five years she lost her mother, thus being deprived of the comforting care of motherhood.
 
In 1874, she, with her father, brothers and sisters, immigrated to the United Stats and located in McPherson County, Kansas, in the vicinity of Moundridge.  Here she attended school as a young girl, and also experienced the privation and hardships of pioneer life most forcefully, for she lost her father through death in the first years of her sojourn in this new pioneer country.  Being thus orphaned, it was her lot to maker her home with others.


Birth date:


[[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]]
[[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]]

Revision as of 20:27, 17 January 2013

Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 1932 Jan 20 p. 3

Birth date: 1867 Mar 20

text of obituary:

Freni Stucky

Freni (Waltner) Stucky, youngest child of William and Marie Waltner, was born march 20 1867, in Kotosufka, Russia. At the age of five years she lost her mother, thus being deprived of the comforting care of motherhood.

In 1874, she, with her father, brothers and sisters, immigrated to the United Stats and located in McPherson County, Kansas, in the vicinity of Moundridge. Here she attended school as a young girl, and also experienced the privation and hardships of pioneer life most forcefully, for she lost her father through death in the first years of her sojourn in this new pioneer country. Being thus orphaned, it was her lot to maker her home with others.