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Charles Arthur “Charlie” Barnts

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Charles Arthur “Charlie” Barnts

Birth
Coleridge, Cedar County, Nebraska, USA
Death
12 Feb 1967 (aged 78)
Wymore, Gage County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Wymore, Gage County, Nebraska, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec NW 1/4, Lot 59, Space 4
Memorial ID
View Source
Charles Arthur Barnts was born to Levi Barnts and Martha Alice Witham in Coleridge, Cedar Co, Nebraska. His father, Levi, was a farmer and they moved around over the years. He had two sisters, Millie and Evelyn, eight brothers, Myron, William, Herbert, Lester, Howard, Guy and Ernest that lived to adulthood as well as an infant brother, Elmer that died at birth.

He married Hazel June Snook, daughter of William Gillen and Martha Alice Leland Snook at the Beatrice Methodist Church on February 4, 1914.

They had three daughters, Edna Mae Barnts Caffey Stewart, Mildred Barnts Chaplin and Margaret Elaine Barnts Keck and one son, Charles Gerald Barnts.

He had a talent for building things, did watch and clock repair and hand painted borders in homes. He and his wife, Hazel, enjoyed going to county fairs in the summers after retirement where they sold candy apples and taffy made the old fashioned way throwing the taffy up on a hook in their stand and pulling it.



Charles Arthur Barnts was born to Levi Barnts and Martha Alice Witham in Coleridge, Cedar Co, Nebraska. His father, Levi, was a farmer and they moved around over the years. He had two sisters, Millie and Evelyn, eight brothers, Myron, William, Herbert, Lester, Howard, Guy and Ernest that lived to adulthood as well as an infant brother, Elmer that died at birth.

He married Hazel June Snook, daughter of William Gillen and Martha Alice Leland Snook at the Beatrice Methodist Church on February 4, 1914.

They had three daughters, Edna Mae Barnts Caffey Stewart, Mildred Barnts Chaplin and Margaret Elaine Barnts Keck and one son, Charles Gerald Barnts.

He had a talent for building things, did watch and clock repair and hand painted borders in homes. He and his wife, Hazel, enjoyed going to county fairs in the summers after retirement where they sold candy apples and taffy made the old fashioned way throwing the taffy up on a hook in their stand and pulling it.





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