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Charles F. Beaman

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Charles F. Beaman

Birth
Independence, Buchanan County, Iowa, USA
Death
Jul 1921 (aged 72)
Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Oregon, Ogle County, Illinois, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Charles T. Beaman of 693 Fatbush Ave., traveling salesman, designer and expert in sheet metal work, died recently after an illness of three weeks of a nervous breakdown at Omaha, Neb., while on a business trip for the Adriance Machine Works, Inc., of this boro. His funeral was held yesterday from the chapel at 882 Flatbush Ave., with interment in Evergreens Cemetery. Mr. Beaman was born in Independence, Ia., in 1849. He was self-educated, and in early life was in the show business, and later had prosperous connections is the moving picture business. He was for 32 years a salesman and expert in metal work for the E. W. Bliss Company, and later, until his death, was with the Adriance Company. He was the first man to introduce sheet metal material in Mexico, and at one time had special privileges from the Mexican Government. He was regarded as one of the best known experts in his line in the United States. He was a member of Sandalphon Lodge No. 836, F.& A.M; the Scottish Rite bodies of Brooklyn and the Kismet Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. He married Laura Keeler of Washington, D.C., and she survives him, with a son, Dr. Carroll J. Beaman of Cleveland, O., and a daughter.
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York), Wednesday, July 13, 1921
Contributor: JOHN MAJCHROWSKI (49807962)
Charles T. Beaman of 693 Fatbush Ave., traveling salesman, designer and expert in sheet metal work, died recently after an illness of three weeks of a nervous breakdown at Omaha, Neb., while on a business trip for the Adriance Machine Works, Inc., of this boro. His funeral was held yesterday from the chapel at 882 Flatbush Ave., with interment in Evergreens Cemetery. Mr. Beaman was born in Independence, Ia., in 1849. He was self-educated, and in early life was in the show business, and later had prosperous connections is the moving picture business. He was for 32 years a salesman and expert in metal work for the E. W. Bliss Company, and later, until his death, was with the Adriance Company. He was the first man to introduce sheet metal material in Mexico, and at one time had special privileges from the Mexican Government. He was regarded as one of the best known experts in his line in the United States. He was a member of Sandalphon Lodge No. 836, F.& A.M; the Scottish Rite bodies of Brooklyn and the Kismet Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. He married Laura Keeler of Washington, D.C., and she survives him, with a son, Dr. Carroll J. Beaman of Cleveland, O., and a daughter.
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York), Wednesday, July 13, 1921
Contributor: JOHN MAJCHROWSKI (49807962)


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