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Orville Marsh Boulton

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Orville Marsh Boulton

Birth
Carrington, Foster County, North Dakota, USA
Death
4 Dec 1961 (aged 74)
Pico Rivera, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Glendora, Los Angeles County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
Space D, Lot 95, Section C
Memorial ID
View Source
Orville Marsh Boulton (74), a resident of Pico Rivera, California, died Monday, December 4, 1961. He was born in Carrington, North Dakota on August 15, 1887. His parents were Joseph Bowers Boulton (1852-1919) and Carrie Berry Marsh (1866-1945). He had three brothers and five sisters.

He attended the Southern Minnesota Normal College Debating Section Convention held March 8-9, 1909, in Austin, Minnesota. The college trained teachers and was also a business school that operated from 1897 to 1925.

On April 26, 1910, he lived in Kern, California with both parents, three brothers, and five sisters.

On the evening of October 19, 1916, he married Fern Maria Stanton (1896-1989) at the First Christian Church in Ontario, California. Rev. H. C. Kendrick of the Ontario Church, assisted by Rev. J. W. Utter of Corona, officiated, using an impressive ring ceremony.

They had one daughter (1918-2013) and four sons (1921-2000, 1925-2013, 1926-2020, and 1928-2015). All four sons served in the military.

His family described him as a hard worker, willing to do whatever jobs he could find allowing him to provide financially for his family.

From 1910 through 1950 in California, the Federal Census recorded the following occupation information for Orville: farmer, salesman at a retail meat market, campground manager at the Bagdad Auto Camp, and he sold fruit and vegetables at a retail store.

He was a wonderful Christian example; a kind, gentle, and caring man who loved to worship God and loved his family.

Orville was survived by his wife, his daughter, his four sons, six grandsons, and three granddaughters. A funeral was held at Oakdale Memorial Park in Glendora, California.

This biography is based on personal knowledge, Ancestry.com sources, two newspaper articles published in the Austin Daily Herald (March 8 and 9, 1909), one newspaper article published in the San Bernardino News on October 21, 1916, page 8, and several Newspapers.com articles.

Last updated March 21, 2023
Orville Marsh Boulton (74), a resident of Pico Rivera, California, died Monday, December 4, 1961. He was born in Carrington, North Dakota on August 15, 1887. His parents were Joseph Bowers Boulton (1852-1919) and Carrie Berry Marsh (1866-1945). He had three brothers and five sisters.

He attended the Southern Minnesota Normal College Debating Section Convention held March 8-9, 1909, in Austin, Minnesota. The college trained teachers and was also a business school that operated from 1897 to 1925.

On April 26, 1910, he lived in Kern, California with both parents, three brothers, and five sisters.

On the evening of October 19, 1916, he married Fern Maria Stanton (1896-1989) at the First Christian Church in Ontario, California. Rev. H. C. Kendrick of the Ontario Church, assisted by Rev. J. W. Utter of Corona, officiated, using an impressive ring ceremony.

They had one daughter (1918-2013) and four sons (1921-2000, 1925-2013, 1926-2020, and 1928-2015). All four sons served in the military.

His family described him as a hard worker, willing to do whatever jobs he could find allowing him to provide financially for his family.

From 1910 through 1950 in California, the Federal Census recorded the following occupation information for Orville: farmer, salesman at a retail meat market, campground manager at the Bagdad Auto Camp, and he sold fruit and vegetables at a retail store.

He was a wonderful Christian example; a kind, gentle, and caring man who loved to worship God and loved his family.

Orville was survived by his wife, his daughter, his four sons, six grandsons, and three granddaughters. A funeral was held at Oakdale Memorial Park in Glendora, California.

This biography is based on personal knowledge, Ancestry.com sources, two newspaper articles published in the Austin Daily Herald (March 8 and 9, 1909), one newspaper article published in the San Bernardino News on October 21, 1916, page 8, and several Newspapers.com articles.

Last updated March 21, 2023


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