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Winfield Bruner

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Winfield Bruner

Birth
Wagoner County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
5 Nov 1899 (aged 2)
Wagoner County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Coweta, Wagoner County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Plot
6, SEE Tyner's Plat Map in OPAWTR
Memorial ID
View Source
Corresponds to the map as recorded in the canvass and survey from the American Indian Institute; "Our People And Where They Rest," (OPAWTR) James W. Tyner, and Alice Tyner Timmons, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK. 1970 (Library of Congress No. QE99-C5-T97) Volume 3, p. 86. [University that received taxpayer dollars for the program/product; thus presumed to be in the public domain] This is the second cemetery so named in Wagoner County, Oklahoma, and the legal description of the location is different.
In the above-mentioned canvass and survey, this is the marker that was shown as being next to the Bruner infant who was born and died in 1904. Note that there is a memorial here for an "Unknown" Bruner, (also described in its plot section as being next to the 1904 Infant Bruner) which features a photograph of a monument base of a memorial, but having no stone. It appears to me that this is the missing top that goes to that memorial base, it is actually for Winfield Bruner. On the other side is a memorial for Felix Haynie, another infant.

Their information (including any diagrams or maps) is given here as a historical reference and is presented "as is." Their book, like many such cemetery listing compilations, may contain errors. As with any genealogical information, this is merely a "source" and should be considered as such. It falls upon the end-user to verify the accuracy. See their map for use as a quick locator tool for graves here. The set of books are available at many Oklahoma libraries. Once freely available for online viewing, the OPAWTR volumes can now be accessed only at a LDS Family History Library, a partner library, or a Family History Center. (LDS)
Aug. 2021 update: I am informed that the set is now available on the Family Search website, but you have to be a member, and be signed in, to access it under "Books."
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Corresponds to the map as recorded in the canvass and survey from the American Indian Institute; "Our People And Where They Rest," (OPAWTR) James W. Tyner, and Alice Tyner Timmons, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK. 1970 (Library of Congress No. QE99-C5-T97) Volume 3, p. 86. [University that received taxpayer dollars for the program/product; thus presumed to be in the public domain] This is the second cemetery so named in Wagoner County, Oklahoma, and the legal description of the location is different.
In the above-mentioned canvass and survey, this is the marker that was shown as being next to the Bruner infant who was born and died in 1904. Note that there is a memorial here for an "Unknown" Bruner, (also described in its plot section as being next to the 1904 Infant Bruner) which features a photograph of a monument base of a memorial, but having no stone. It appears to me that this is the missing top that goes to that memorial base, it is actually for Winfield Bruner. On the other side is a memorial for Felix Haynie, another infant.

Their information (including any diagrams or maps) is given here as a historical reference and is presented "as is." Their book, like many such cemetery listing compilations, may contain errors. As with any genealogical information, this is merely a "source" and should be considered as such. It falls upon the end-user to verify the accuracy. See their map for use as a quick locator tool for graves here. The set of books are available at many Oklahoma libraries. Once freely available for online viewing, the OPAWTR volumes can now be accessed only at a LDS Family History Library, a partner library, or a Family History Center. (LDS)
Aug. 2021 update: I am informed that the set is now available on the Family Search website, but you have to be a member, and be signed in, to access it under "Books."
~

Gravesite Details

Broken off from its original base, with a missing segment, and not in the position in which it was observed in the American Indian Institute canvass and survey, circa 1969-70.



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