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Gwendolyn “Gwen” <I>Anderson</I> Vandriver

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Gwendolyn “Gwen” Anderson Vandriver

Birth
Whitewater, Walworth County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
25 Sep 2015 (aged 92)
California, USA
Burial
Cremated, Ashes scattered Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Gwendolyn “Gwen” Anderson Vandiver, 92, of La Quinta, CA, was called home on Friday, Sept. 25, 2015. She was born Aug. 20, 1923, to Harriett E. Shuman Anderson and Randolph L. Anderson in the Town of Whitewater, Walworth Co., WI. Gwen graduated from Whitewater High School in 1941, attended Milwaukee Business College, and found a job in Washington D.C. In 1942, she moved to Richland, WA, and worked on what is now known as the Manhattan Project at Hanford, WA. Little did Gwen know at the time what she was working on until the Atomic Bomb was dropped on Japan. Gwen was proud to be involved in the War effort, a true American Patriot. Gwen married Jasper C. Vandiver and they eventually returned to the Town of Whitewater, to continue to raise their family, where Gwen worked in the office of Vander Veen Farms and also served as Town Clerk from 1982-1983. She retired to California, and enjoyed hiking in the foot hills of the Santa Rosa Mountains, her woods and painting landscapes. Gwen was preceded in death by her parents; son, Jerry M.; husband; and brother, Berwyn W.

Gwen’s son said the family eventually plans to have her ashes returned to Whitewater, where they will be spread on the farm where she raised her family.
Gwendolyn “Gwen” Anderson Vandiver, 92, of La Quinta, CA, was called home on Friday, Sept. 25, 2015. She was born Aug. 20, 1923, to Harriett E. Shuman Anderson and Randolph L. Anderson in the Town of Whitewater, Walworth Co., WI. Gwen graduated from Whitewater High School in 1941, attended Milwaukee Business College, and found a job in Washington D.C. In 1942, she moved to Richland, WA, and worked on what is now known as the Manhattan Project at Hanford, WA. Little did Gwen know at the time what she was working on until the Atomic Bomb was dropped on Japan. Gwen was proud to be involved in the War effort, a true American Patriot. Gwen married Jasper C. Vandiver and they eventually returned to the Town of Whitewater, to continue to raise their family, where Gwen worked in the office of Vander Veen Farms and also served as Town Clerk from 1982-1983. She retired to California, and enjoyed hiking in the foot hills of the Santa Rosa Mountains, her woods and painting landscapes. Gwen was preceded in death by her parents; son, Jerry M.; husband; and brother, Berwyn W.

Gwen’s son said the family eventually plans to have her ashes returned to Whitewater, where they will be spread on the farm where she raised her family.


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