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Howard N Coggburn

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Howard N Coggburn

Birth
Death
13 Jan 1965 (aged 61–62)
Burial
Ewing, Lewis County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
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Howard N. Coggburn, 61, of St. Louis, Missouri, passed away Wednesday.

Survivors include his wife, Ruth; three sisters, Mrs. Glen Hyde of St. Louis, Mrs. Harold Shaffer of Noble, and Mrs. Glen Zirkle of Olney.
Services held at the Ball Funeral Home, Ewing, Missouri, with burial there.

Published in Olney Daily Mail (IL) ~ January 14, 1965

Services for Howard N Coggburn of St Louis Held at Ewing Sunday.

Funeral service for Howard N Coggburn of St Louis were held at the Ewing Baptist church Sunday afternoon, January 17, at 1: with the Rev Waldo Burton of Quincy officiating. Rev Monroe Hopkins sang with Mrs Hazel Wallace at the piano. Burial was in the Ewing Masonic cemetery with John Lewis, Oren Doscher, Willis Doscher, Louis Tonkinson, Harlie Spratt and Homer Phillips as pallbearers.
Mr Coggburn, son of Frank and Mary Jane Drug Coggburn, was born in Richland County, Illinois, February 1 1903. He passed away Wednesday morning, January 13, in a St Louis Hospital. He had been ill for two weeks, but death was unexpected.
Early in life he accepted Christ as his Savior and united with the Ebenezer Methodist church at Olney Illinois. At the age of 20 he moved to St Louis, where he became a member of the Delmar Baptist Church, and remained a faithful attendant, being active in all phases of the church work, and served as deacon and trustee. He was a 32nd degree Mason, a member of the Welston Lodge 613 AF & AM, St Louis Consistory.
He was married to Ruth Ball on January 11, 1939. She survives.
Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs Glen (Stella) Hyde of St Louis, Mrs Harold (Mary) Schaffer, and Mrs Glen (Florence) Zirkle, both of Olney Illinois: two nephews, Glen Howard Schaffer of Noble, Illinois, and Wayne Howard Zirkle of Olney; one niece, Judy Leach of Denver, Colorado: mother-in-law, Mrs Anna K Ball of Ewing and a brother-in-law and wife, Mr and Mrs Jerry Ball of Ewing.
At the time of his death he was employed by the Transit casualty company.

Published in the Quincy Hearld Whig January 1965


Howard N. Coggburn, 61, of St. Louis, Missouri, passed away Wednesday.

Survivors include his wife, Ruth; three sisters, Mrs. Glen Hyde of St. Louis, Mrs. Harold Shaffer of Noble, and Mrs. Glen Zirkle of Olney.
Services held at the Ball Funeral Home, Ewing, Missouri, with burial there.

Published in Olney Daily Mail (IL) ~ January 14, 1965

Services for Howard N Coggburn of St Louis Held at Ewing Sunday.

Funeral service for Howard N Coggburn of St Louis were held at the Ewing Baptist church Sunday afternoon, January 17, at 1: with the Rev Waldo Burton of Quincy officiating. Rev Monroe Hopkins sang with Mrs Hazel Wallace at the piano. Burial was in the Ewing Masonic cemetery with John Lewis, Oren Doscher, Willis Doscher, Louis Tonkinson, Harlie Spratt and Homer Phillips as pallbearers.
Mr Coggburn, son of Frank and Mary Jane Drug Coggburn, was born in Richland County, Illinois, February 1 1903. He passed away Wednesday morning, January 13, in a St Louis Hospital. He had been ill for two weeks, but death was unexpected.
Early in life he accepted Christ as his Savior and united with the Ebenezer Methodist church at Olney Illinois. At the age of 20 he moved to St Louis, where he became a member of the Delmar Baptist Church, and remained a faithful attendant, being active in all phases of the church work, and served as deacon and trustee. He was a 32nd degree Mason, a member of the Welston Lodge 613 AF & AM, St Louis Consistory.
He was married to Ruth Ball on January 11, 1939. She survives.
Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs Glen (Stella) Hyde of St Louis, Mrs Harold (Mary) Schaffer, and Mrs Glen (Florence) Zirkle, both of Olney Illinois: two nephews, Glen Howard Schaffer of Noble, Illinois, and Wayne Howard Zirkle of Olney; one niece, Judy Leach of Denver, Colorado: mother-in-law, Mrs Anna K Ball of Ewing and a brother-in-law and wife, Mr and Mrs Jerry Ball of Ewing.
At the time of his death he was employed by the Transit casualty company.

Published in the Quincy Hearld Whig January 1965




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