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Charles Oscar Bingley

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Charles Oscar Bingley

Birth
Platte County, Missouri, USA
Death
25 Aug 1921 (aged 74)
Hardesty, Texas County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Hardesty, Texas County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
US Census, 1900, Erie, McDonald Co., MO

Charles Bingley, 53, birth date: Nov, 1847 in MO
Isadore I. Bingley, 40, wife, b. Jan., 1856 in Ill. married in 1876, married 24 yrs., 5 living children
Lillie R., daughter, b. June, 1876, 23, d. in Missouri
Oscar R., son, b. July 1878 in MO
Izilla, daughter, b. Jan., 1880 in MO
Elza, son, b. Nov, 1884 in MO
Osco, son, b. Aug, 1893, in MO.
__________________________
CHARLES OSCAR BINGLEY
Died on the home place near Hardesty on Wednesday, August 24. The deceased was born in Platt (sic. Platte) county, Missouri, on November 22, 1846. Was married July 19, 1875, to Isadore Idabell Kenton. Five children were the result of this union, all of whom are living. The funeral sermon was delivered out in the yard of the Bingley home under a large cottonwood tree planted by the deceased a number of years ago. He was one among the early day farmers to settle over in that laocality and was held in the highest esteem by his neighbors and the people of the surrounding country, and was generally regarded as a splendid citizen.
Published in the Guymon Herald, Guymon, Oklahoma, Thurs., Sept. 1, 1921, p. 1.
US Census, 1900, Erie, McDonald Co., MO

Charles Bingley, 53, birth date: Nov, 1847 in MO
Isadore I. Bingley, 40, wife, b. Jan., 1856 in Ill. married in 1876, married 24 yrs., 5 living children
Lillie R., daughter, b. June, 1876, 23, d. in Missouri
Oscar R., son, b. July 1878 in MO
Izilla, daughter, b. Jan., 1880 in MO
Elza, son, b. Nov, 1884 in MO
Osco, son, b. Aug, 1893, in MO.
__________________________
CHARLES OSCAR BINGLEY
Died on the home place near Hardesty on Wednesday, August 24. The deceased was born in Platt (sic. Platte) county, Missouri, on November 22, 1846. Was married July 19, 1875, to Isadore Idabell Kenton. Five children were the result of this union, all of whom are living. The funeral sermon was delivered out in the yard of the Bingley home under a large cottonwood tree planted by the deceased a number of years ago. He was one among the early day farmers to settle over in that laocality and was held in the highest esteem by his neighbors and the people of the surrounding country, and was generally regarded as a splendid citizen.
Published in the Guymon Herald, Guymon, Oklahoma, Thurs., Sept. 1, 1921, p. 1.


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