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Cedric Luverne Hall

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Cedric Luverne Hall

Birth
Hornick, Woodbury County, Iowa, USA
Death
Oct 1971 (aged 66)
Hornick, Woodbury County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Holly Springs, Woodbury County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Sioux City Journal
11 October 1971

Rites Set for Cedric Hall, Prominent Hornick Farmer

Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the United Methodist Church of Hornick for Cedric LuVerne Hall, 66, rural Hornick, prominent Woodbury County farmer, a leader in civic organizations as well as in farm related groups on a local, county and state basis.

The Rev. Paul Textor will officiate. Burial will be in the Willow Cemetery at Holly Springs under the direction of the W. Harry Christy Funeral Home in Morningside.

Mr. Hall died Saturday afternoon of an apparent heart attack suffered as he was working at his farm.

Mr. Hall was president and vice president of the Producers Commission Co. of Sioux City at the time of his death. He was a member of the American Livestock and Meat Board.

He was past president of the Woodbury County Farm Bureau, past director of the Iowa Farm Bureau, past director of the Woodbury County Farm Bureau, and past director of the Woodbury County Soil Conservation District.

He was a member of St Luke's Medical Center Board of Directors, president of the Farm Bureau Farm Service Co. of Le Mars, Iowa, a member of the Sioux City Kiwanis Club and the United Methodist Church of Hornick,

He was a former director of the Woodbury Farm Supply Co., and the Woodbury-Plymouth Mutual Insurance Co., and was a member of Preston Lodge 218, AF&AM, of Prairie City, Iowa.

He was given the Iowa State university Alumna Achievement Award for community service in 1955.

Mr. Hall was born March 11, 1905, on a farm near Holly Springs, and lived most of his life in the Holly Springs-Hornick area. He married Ethel Marie Larson of Omaha in Des Moines on Dec. 31, 1939.

He was a graduate of Holly Springs High School and a 1927 graduate of Iowa State University, Ames, where he majored in agriculture and animal husbandry. He taught school from 1927 to 1930 at Prairie City before returning to farm at Hornick.

Survivors are the widow, a son, Donald, of Chicago: two daughters, Mrs. James (Barbara) Golding of Waukesha, Wis., and Mrs. Martin (Diana) Swain of Kimpton, England; a sister, Miss Gwendolyn Hall of Hornick, and three grandchildren.
Sioux City Journal
11 October 1971

Rites Set for Cedric Hall, Prominent Hornick Farmer

Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the United Methodist Church of Hornick for Cedric LuVerne Hall, 66, rural Hornick, prominent Woodbury County farmer, a leader in civic organizations as well as in farm related groups on a local, county and state basis.

The Rev. Paul Textor will officiate. Burial will be in the Willow Cemetery at Holly Springs under the direction of the W. Harry Christy Funeral Home in Morningside.

Mr. Hall died Saturday afternoon of an apparent heart attack suffered as he was working at his farm.

Mr. Hall was president and vice president of the Producers Commission Co. of Sioux City at the time of his death. He was a member of the American Livestock and Meat Board.

He was past president of the Woodbury County Farm Bureau, past director of the Iowa Farm Bureau, past director of the Woodbury County Farm Bureau, and past director of the Woodbury County Soil Conservation District.

He was a member of St Luke's Medical Center Board of Directors, president of the Farm Bureau Farm Service Co. of Le Mars, Iowa, a member of the Sioux City Kiwanis Club and the United Methodist Church of Hornick,

He was a former director of the Woodbury Farm Supply Co., and the Woodbury-Plymouth Mutual Insurance Co., and was a member of Preston Lodge 218, AF&AM, of Prairie City, Iowa.

He was given the Iowa State university Alumna Achievement Award for community service in 1955.

Mr. Hall was born March 11, 1905, on a farm near Holly Springs, and lived most of his life in the Holly Springs-Hornick area. He married Ethel Marie Larson of Omaha in Des Moines on Dec. 31, 1939.

He was a graduate of Holly Springs High School and a 1927 graduate of Iowa State University, Ames, where he majored in agriculture and animal husbandry. He taught school from 1927 to 1930 at Prairie City before returning to farm at Hornick.

Survivors are the widow, a son, Donald, of Chicago: two daughters, Mrs. James (Barbara) Golding of Waukesha, Wis., and Mrs. Martin (Diana) Swain of Kimpton, England; a sister, Miss Gwendolyn Hall of Hornick, and three grandchildren.


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