Advertisement

Joseph Strobl

Advertisement

Joseph Strobl

Birth
Red Cloud, Webster County, Nebraska, USA
Death
25 Aug 1947 (aged 68)
Fairfield, Clay County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Red Cloud, Webster County, Nebraska, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 23 - Block 7 - Lot 126
Memorial ID
View Source
(Newspaper Obituary)

Last Rites Held for Joseph Strobl

Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon for Joseph Strobl, life time resident of Webster county, by Rev. William Wilson at the Amack & Son Funeral Home. Interment was made in the Red Cloud cemetery. "Ivory Palaces" and "Abide with Me" were sung by Mr. and Mrs. Glen Mountford, with Mrs. Eda Baker playing the piano accompaniment. The pallbearers were relatives of the deceased: Fred, Jack, Paul, Vencil, Rudolph and George Strobl.

Joseph Strobl was born in Red Cloud and lived all his life in and around this place. He was 68 years, 11 months and 2 days old when he died. He had been in poor health for a long time and had but recently returned home from an extended stay in the Mary Lanning hospital.

He never married. A kind man, he did many things to help others, in a quiet, unassuming way. Not many of the members of his family are left, his brother, Frank Strobl, being the only living brother, but he is survived by nieces, nephews and other relatives.
(Newspaper Obituary)

Last Rites Held for Joseph Strobl

Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon for Joseph Strobl, life time resident of Webster county, by Rev. William Wilson at the Amack & Son Funeral Home. Interment was made in the Red Cloud cemetery. "Ivory Palaces" and "Abide with Me" were sung by Mr. and Mrs. Glen Mountford, with Mrs. Eda Baker playing the piano accompaniment. The pallbearers were relatives of the deceased: Fred, Jack, Paul, Vencil, Rudolph and George Strobl.

Joseph Strobl was born in Red Cloud and lived all his life in and around this place. He was 68 years, 11 months and 2 days old when he died. He had been in poor health for a long time and had but recently returned home from an extended stay in the Mary Lanning hospital.

He never married. A kind man, he did many things to help others, in a quiet, unassuming way. Not many of the members of his family are left, his brother, Frank Strobl, being the only living brother, but he is survived by nieces, nephews and other relatives.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement