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Cora Antonnette <I>Vaughan</I> Camp

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Cora Antonnette Vaughan Camp

Birth
Southampton County, Virginia, USA
Death
2 Mar 1958 (aged 91)
Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina, USA
Burial
Franklin, Franklin City, Virginia, USA GPS-Latitude: 36.6827856, Longitude: -76.9301253
Plot
5
Memorial ID
View Source
Mrs. Cora A.V. Camp, 92, Franklin, Dies in S.C.

FRANKLIN, March 2. Mrs. Cora Antoinette Vaughan Camp, 92, widow of Robert Judson Camp, died Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James M. Hagood of Charleston, S.C. Her husband was one of the founders of Camp Manufacturing Company. She was a sister of the late Gen. C.C. Vaughan Jr. of the Virginia National Guard. Her father, the late Cecil Calvert Vaughan founded Vaughan and Company, a baking firm.

Mrs. Camp spent all of her life in Franklin until 1955 when she went to Charleston to live with her daughter. She was a lifelong member of High Street Methodist Church here and a charter member of the Franklin Book Club and the Franklin Music Study Club. She also was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the American Legion auxiliary.

Besides her daughter, she is survived by a son, Vaughan Camp of Miami, Fla.; five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. A funeral service will be held here at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the home of nephew, Cecil C. Vaughan III. Burial will be in Poplar Spring.

Published in The Times Dispatch (Richmond, VA) on March 3, 1958
Mrs. Cora A.V. Camp, 92, Franklin, Dies in S.C.

FRANKLIN, March 2. Mrs. Cora Antoinette Vaughan Camp, 92, widow of Robert Judson Camp, died Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James M. Hagood of Charleston, S.C. Her husband was one of the founders of Camp Manufacturing Company. She was a sister of the late Gen. C.C. Vaughan Jr. of the Virginia National Guard. Her father, the late Cecil Calvert Vaughan founded Vaughan and Company, a baking firm.

Mrs. Camp spent all of her life in Franklin until 1955 when she went to Charleston to live with her daughter. She was a lifelong member of High Street Methodist Church here and a charter member of the Franklin Book Club and the Franklin Music Study Club. She also was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the American Legion auxiliary.

Besides her daughter, she is survived by a son, Vaughan Camp of Miami, Fla.; five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. A funeral service will be held here at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the home of nephew, Cecil C. Vaughan III. Burial will be in Poplar Spring.

Published in The Times Dispatch (Richmond, VA) on March 3, 1958


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