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Lyman Edwin Amsberry

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Lyman Edwin Amsberry

Birth
Marion County, Iowa, USA
Death
21 Sep 1939 (aged 66)
Broken Bow, Custer County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Ansley, Custer County, Nebraska, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.30667, Longitude: -99.3868332
Plot
Section 1 Lot 46 Grave 7
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Lewis Norton Amsberry and Jane Ann Coffman of West Virginia.

Husband of Mary Luelle Wayne of Boscobel, Grant County, Wisconsin; married on 18 December 1892 in Broken Bow, Custer County, Nebraska.

"Lyman Amsberry, 67, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norton Amsberry, was born in Marion County, Iowa and came to Custer County with his mother and brothers, W.Z., Norton and Green Amsberry, in the spring of 1879. After residing in this locality for a number of years, he moved with his family to Thomas County, where during the years of activity he was engaged in ranching and farming.
He was known as an active and industrious man during his years in this locality, and carried on in a successful way in the community in which he lived in Thomas County. His death followed a surgical operation at the Carothers Hospital in Broken Bow Thursday evening.
Funeral services in charge of Rev. Mr. Hill, pastor of the Mason City Baptist Church, were held in Ansley Saturday afternoon and internment in the Ansley Cemetery.
Mr. Amsberry is survived by three daughters and two sons, by his brother, W.Z. Amsberry of Mason City and Charles Amsberry of Broken Bow, and one sister, Mrs. Henry Zimmerman of Ansley and a number of other relatives and many friends."
Son of Lewis Norton Amsberry and Jane Ann Coffman of West Virginia.

Husband of Mary Luelle Wayne of Boscobel, Grant County, Wisconsin; married on 18 December 1892 in Broken Bow, Custer County, Nebraska.

"Lyman Amsberry, 67, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norton Amsberry, was born in Marion County, Iowa and came to Custer County with his mother and brothers, W.Z., Norton and Green Amsberry, in the spring of 1879. After residing in this locality for a number of years, he moved with his family to Thomas County, where during the years of activity he was engaged in ranching and farming.
He was known as an active and industrious man during his years in this locality, and carried on in a successful way in the community in which he lived in Thomas County. His death followed a surgical operation at the Carothers Hospital in Broken Bow Thursday evening.
Funeral services in charge of Rev. Mr. Hill, pastor of the Mason City Baptist Church, were held in Ansley Saturday afternoon and internment in the Ansley Cemetery.
Mr. Amsberry is survived by three daughters and two sons, by his brother, W.Z. Amsberry of Mason City and Charles Amsberry of Broken Bow, and one sister, Mrs. Henry Zimmerman of Ansley and a number of other relatives and many friends."


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