Advertisement

Veda Middleton <I>Baker</I> Johnson

Advertisement

Veda Middleton Baker Johnson

Birth
Crockett, Houston County, Texas, USA
Death
19 May 2006 (aged 81)
Lufkin, Angelina County, Texas, USA
Burial
Angelina County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 31.3165083, Longitude: -94.8486333
Memorial ID
View Source
Veda was the daughter of the late Della Middleton Baker and Eurel Hollis Baker, Sr.

She married Thomas (Tommy) Johnson on June 18, 1945. Mother to Joy Lynn and Tommy Wayne Johnson. She is survived by several grandchildren and great grandchildren. Also survived by sister, Doris Bertone and husband Dominic and brother, Eurel Baker Jr. and wife Dorothy. She was preceded in death by her sister and brother-in-law, Virgie Helena Baker Sizemore and James Raburn Sizemore.

Member of Wallace Chapel Baptist Church and resident of Lufkin for many years after Tommy retired from Armco Steel in Houston.

Her father, Eurel H. Baker, was sheriff of Crockett, Texas for many years while she was growing up. She and her sisters like to tell the story that they lived at the county jail, because their family living quarters was upstairs over the jail.

She was a friend to many and always had the coffe pot on, ready for a good visit with whoever visited her.
Veda was the daughter of the late Della Middleton Baker and Eurel Hollis Baker, Sr.

She married Thomas (Tommy) Johnson on June 18, 1945. Mother to Joy Lynn and Tommy Wayne Johnson. She is survived by several grandchildren and great grandchildren. Also survived by sister, Doris Bertone and husband Dominic and brother, Eurel Baker Jr. and wife Dorothy. She was preceded in death by her sister and brother-in-law, Virgie Helena Baker Sizemore and James Raburn Sizemore.

Member of Wallace Chapel Baptist Church and resident of Lufkin for many years after Tommy retired from Armco Steel in Houston.

Her father, Eurel H. Baker, was sheriff of Crockett, Texas for many years while she was growing up. She and her sisters like to tell the story that they lived at the county jail, because their family living quarters was upstairs over the jail.

She was a friend to many and always had the coffe pot on, ready for a good visit with whoever visited her.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement