Manley continued living and working on the family farm, going into logging when he got older. His mother died in 1916 when he was 35. Sometime after World War I he was married to May E. Johnson and they moved to Faulkner County, Arkansas were he was farming through the 1940 census record. His father, Erik, died there in 1935. They were still living and farming in Faulkner County in 1942, according to his World War II draft card.
Manley died of a cerebral hemorrhage from a ruptured blood vessel in Louisville, Kentucky in 1943. His death certificate says that he was working in a rubber plant there at the time. It also says that his body was transferred over to the Louisville Memorial Gardens two days later.
Manley continued living and working on the family farm, going into logging when he got older. His mother died in 1916 when he was 35. Sometime after World War I he was married to May E. Johnson and they moved to Faulkner County, Arkansas were he was farming through the 1940 census record. His father, Erik, died there in 1935. They were still living and farming in Faulkner County in 1942, according to his World War II draft card.
Manley died of a cerebral hemorrhage from a ruptured blood vessel in Louisville, Kentucky in 1943. His death certificate says that he was working in a rubber plant there at the time. It also says that his body was transferred over to the Louisville Memorial Gardens two days later.
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