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Margaret Marie Hunt

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Margaret Marie Hunt

Birth
Marble City, Sequoyah County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
18 May 1935 (aged 6)
Page, Le Flore County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Page, Le Flore County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Margaret Marie Hunt was the fourth child of John Anderson Hunt and Grace Estelle Yearwood Hunt. She was born April 23, 1929 at Marble City in Sequoyah County, Oklahoma, where her father had gone to drill for oil. Following an unsuccessful oil venture, the family moved to Page in LeFlore County, Oklahoma, to farm and raise cattle.
Margaret died young from a dental infection that resulted in general blood poisoning. Because of the awful days of the Great Depression, adequate medical care was not readily available; the family's transportation was limited to horse and wagon, and the nearest doctor was 18 miles distant.
In May 1935 Margaret's funeral was held at the local Baptist church, and she was buried in the Page Cemetery, which was near the family's home.
Margaret's grave was marked by a field stone near a tree and near a gate in the fence. Unfortunately, because of tree removal and changes in fencing, the location of her grave site can no longer be determined.
Margaret Marie Hunt was the fourth child of John Anderson Hunt and Grace Estelle Yearwood Hunt. She was born April 23, 1929 at Marble City in Sequoyah County, Oklahoma, where her father had gone to drill for oil. Following an unsuccessful oil venture, the family moved to Page in LeFlore County, Oklahoma, to farm and raise cattle.
Margaret died young from a dental infection that resulted in general blood poisoning. Because of the awful days of the Great Depression, adequate medical care was not readily available; the family's transportation was limited to horse and wagon, and the nearest doctor was 18 miles distant.
In May 1935 Margaret's funeral was held at the local Baptist church, and she was buried in the Page Cemetery, which was near the family's home.
Margaret's grave was marked by a field stone near a tree and near a gate in the fence. Unfortunately, because of tree removal and changes in fencing, the location of her grave site can no longer be determined.

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(There was no marker, only a field stone.)



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