He is survived by loving wife, Celeste Lana Stump-Felici, daughter Sheri and spouse Enrico Deburcheo, daughter Jami Nicholas, son Tim and spouse Jenny Porterfield, son Sammy Felici, son Mike and spouse Luchrisa Hatalovsky, daughter Nicole and spouse Willis Lay, brother Steve and spouse Jackie Stump, grandson Shane Smith and partner Lauren Sweat, grandchildren; Chris Marsh, Rowyn Porterfield, Aiwin Porterfield, Madison Cox, Candace Lay, and great-grandson Jace
Fryer is survived by her parents, Ernest Fryer and Christy Blom-Fryer, as well as by her younger brother Dominik Fryer. Services will be helped on Friday at 2 pm at the Miller Funeral home on 507 South Main
James Butler Bonham was a American soldier that battle of the Alamo during the Texas Revolution. He was the second cousin of William B. Travis was a messenger to the battle of the Alamo.His younger brother, Milledge Luke Bonham, was a Brigidier general in the Confederate states Army in the American Civil War, and served as Govenor of south Carolina from 1862 to
Tammy is survived by her mother, Marian Kobialka of New Castle, her husband Freeman "JR" Freshcorn of New Castle, her sons John (Amber) Kobialka of New Castle, James (Melissa) Reid III from New Castle, her brothers William
Sam is survived by his wife Helen Poynter Byrd; five children: Daryl and wife Beverly Byrd of Hiseville, Debbie and husband Greg Wilkerson of Lanesville, Indiana, Shonnie Thixton of Louisville, Lisa Mosier of Knob Lick and Jo and husband Jim Alexander of Knob Lick; five grandchildren: Jodi, Jamie, Sarah, Holly and Randi. Seven great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews also survive. Besides his parents he was preceded in death by
When that happened Mark soon went to Michigan, married and had 5 children including one named Peter. Mark died in a accident crossing a river with a piece of wood and got stabbed, he was 73.
In 1874, Randall Fish died of a heart attack. Unable to care for her children Randall Fish 's wife,Ellen Fish, placed five year old
The reading on Clarfield went more in depth about the religions and values of each religion. It had more scenarios and situations. There wasn’t a central theme like there was in the other discussion. The Clearfield reading went more in-depth of the different beliefs and how each one played a role in the situation. The Jewish religion strongly believes in the importance of human life. Beneficence and nonmaleficence are still major goals in this religion. Catholicism believes that a human life is created in God’s image. This was added information from this reading. They also believe in respecting psychological and spiritual needs. In the Islamic religion they have duties toward their creator. They too also see Judaism in their beliefs. They believe
Patrick Floyd Jarvis “PAT” Garrett was killed in a shooting, and passed away on February 29, 1908 at age 57 in Las Cruces New Mexico. He left behind two spouses Juanita Gutierrez. Garrett and Apolinaria Gutierrez, Garrett left behind 9 children. IDA Garrett, Elizabeth, Garrett, Dudley Poe Garrett, Anna Garrett, Montgomery, Patrick Garrett, Pauline Garrett, Oscar L. Garrett, and Jarvis P. Garrett along with his parents John Lumpkin Garrett and his mother Elizabeth Ann Jarvis his youngest kids were cared for by the oldest daughter and her husband.
Butterfield was stuck in Australia as the senior U.S. military officer and representative of the Commander in Chief Pacific. He was rewarded this position for serving many years in Vietnam as well as being the liaison in the Office of the Secretary of Defense to the Johnson White House. Originally he was only promised two years in Australia, but mysteriously they wanted to extend his stay for two more years. On November 20, 1968, Butterfield at the time in New Guinea, picked up the newspaper and saw the main story. Richard Nixon had won the presidency and his top aide was H.R. “Bob” Haldeman. Butterfield and Haldeman had known each other as students at the University of California at Los Angeles. The next day Butterfield decided to write a
> He is survived by his fiancée Tracy Barnard; father Dale (Kay); children Ben (Amy), Chandra, Nick, Tony (Lizz), Alex, and step-son Brian (Mary); his grandchildren who brought him great joy: Tyler, Lila, Becca, Brian John, Kara, and Rutledge; and his siblings: Ken (Daisy), Julie (Russ), Steve, Rob, Troy, David, Corey, Lily, Tabitha, Tracey, Justin, and Chris. He is preceded in death
“We come together in grief,” Tobias said, but through the course of the service and his message shared how Stanley Gault was now in a heavenly home prepared for him by Jesus. And, he was now reunited with his wife, Flo, who died April 16, 2013.
In any case, Ted Baumritter died in 1994 just five weeks after his wife Florence. Cathy’s mother Aline “Bunny” Fink and Aunt Shamita “Sookie” Jacobs (Rick Jacobs’ mother), were Ted and Florence’s only children, and Cathy was one of only four grandchildren-so there were relatively few heirs.
History may be examined and interpreted in many different ways. This is because there is little evidence that had survived to go by in which historians have to use to study the past. Evidence, written and made by the historical people themselves, include but are not limited to written documents, such as books and letters, and material culture, as in art and architecture. Now, because the original authors or artists are not alive to tell the story, historians have to examine the evidence left behind to make an educated judgment on what had really happened in the past. This judgment or argument is always incomplete and up for revision as more evidence is found as time passes by. Although many conclusions can be generated from one piece of evidence, arguments can be biased, leading to different, possibly incorrect, views of history. In his essay, “The Whig Interpretation of History,” Herbert Butterfield elaborates on the matter that many historians tend to write on the behalf on a Protestant or Whig point of view when researching about history. The argument he has provided in his essay states that the “whig interpretation of history” relates to the act of “abstracting [ideas and events] from their historical context and judging them apart from their context – estimating them and organizing the historical story by a system of direct reference to the present” (Butterfield 30). To Butterfield, studying the past in the eyes of the present is one of the biggest errors a historian
According to Julian Spalding, a previous director of leading UK museums and an art critic, Stonehenge may actually be the foundation for a huge platform where worshippers went to watch or perform religious ceremonies instead of a place where the worshipping was done on the ground.
Dr. Simons was married to a computer scientist name Barbara Simons; that marriage ended in a divorce. He remarried Marilyn Hawrys, together they had five children; two of teir children died in separate accidents when they were young