Advertisement

Advertisement

Glenn James Culver

Birth
Riverton, Franklin County, Nebraska, USA
Death
18 May 1971 (aged 78)
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Kansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
"Glenn J. Culver, 78, of 5865 Granada Lane, Fairway, died last night at St Mary's hospital. He was born in Nebraska and lived most of his life in Kansas City, Kansas and Johnson County. Mr. Culver retired in 1963 after 48 years as a conductor with the Union Pacific Railroad. Mr. Culver was a member of the Trinity United Methodist Church. He was a 50-year member of the Masonic and Scottish Rite Bodies in Lawrence, Kas., the Abdullah Shrine in Kansas City, Kansas, and the Order of the Eastern Star. He was an Army veteran of World War I and a member of the Order of Railroad Conductors union. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Marie Culver of the home." The Kansas City Star, May 19, 1971

"Funeral services for Glenn J. Culver, 78, of 5865 Granada, Fairway, will be at 2 o'clock Friday at the Gibson-Butler Chapel; burial in Chapel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call after 5 o'clock tonight at the chapel. The family suggests memorials to the Shrine's Crippled Children's Hospital." The Kansas City Times, May 20, 1971
"Glenn J. Culver, 78, of 5865 Granada Lane, Fairway, died last night at St Mary's hospital. He was born in Nebraska and lived most of his life in Kansas City, Kansas and Johnson County. Mr. Culver retired in 1963 after 48 years as a conductor with the Union Pacific Railroad. Mr. Culver was a member of the Trinity United Methodist Church. He was a 50-year member of the Masonic and Scottish Rite Bodies in Lawrence, Kas., the Abdullah Shrine in Kansas City, Kansas, and the Order of the Eastern Star. He was an Army veteran of World War I and a member of the Order of Railroad Conductors union. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Marie Culver of the home." The Kansas City Star, May 19, 1971

"Funeral services for Glenn J. Culver, 78, of 5865 Granada, Fairway, will be at 2 o'clock Friday at the Gibson-Butler Chapel; burial in Chapel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call after 5 o'clock tonight at the chapel. The family suggests memorials to the Shrine's Crippled Children's Hospital." The Kansas City Times, May 20, 1971


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement