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Charles Bright Moody

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Charles Bright Moody Veteran

Birth
Henry County, Kentucky, USA
Death
15 Nov 1992 (aged 74)
Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky, USA
Burial
Russellville, Logan County, Kentucky, USA GPS-Latitude: 36.8386256, Longitude: -86.8919992
Memorial ID
View Source
News-Democrat and Leader
Russellville, Kentucky
November 19, 1992

World War II Veteran

Mr. Charles Bright Moody


Mr. Charles Bright Moody, 74, West Seventh Street, Russellville, died Nov. 15, 1992 at Greenview Hospital in Bowling Green.

He was born April 3, 1918 in Henry County, the son of Stuart and Judith Bright Moody. He was a buyer for the American Tobacco Company, a farmer and a cattle breeder. He was an Army veteran of World War II, a member of the American Jersey Cattle Club and the Dairy Shrine Club. He was also a member of St. James Episcopal Church in Shelbyville.

Graveside services were at 2 p.m. Nov. 18 at Maple Grove Cemetery with Dr. Don Zuberer and Rev. Marvin Shelton officiating.

Pallbearers were John Barrow, Mark Barrow, Tommy Brown, Bradley Brown, Kevin Vance, George Richardson and James Welker.

Surviving are his wife, Sally Flowers Moody; three sons, Hunter Moody, Franklin, Charles Moody Jr., Shelbyville and Burnett Moody, Coal Valley, Ill.; four grandchildren, Michelle Moody, Michael Moody, Charles B. Moody III and Andrew Moody.

Memorial Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.

Transcribed by: GenealogyGirl

News-Democrat and Leader
Russellville, Kentucky
October 8, 1970

Flowers - Moody Vows Exchanged

Miss Sally Flowers of Russellville and Mr. Charles Bright Moody were married in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on Thursday, Sept. 24, at 7:30 p.m. in the Prayer and Meditation Chapel of the Lakeside Baptist Church on Sunset Avenue.

The officiating minister was the pastor, Dr. Gaylord L. Lehman, who was at Louisville Baptist Theological Seminary with John Wood, former pastor of First Baptist Church of Russellville.

Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Baker of Kenton were their attendants. Mr. Baker is a buyer for American Tobacco Company.

After the ceremony, a wedding dinner was held at Morris House in Rocky Mount. Guests were other tobacco buyers on the market there and Mrs. Bruce Lea, Sr., a resident of Rocky Mount.

Gifts were presented from friends and employes of the American Tobacco Company.

The table was decorated with red roses, silver candelabra with white tapers and garlands of ivy. The tiered wedding cake, topped with wedding bells, was decorated with green and gold tobacco leaves and miniature mementos of their lives, including a miniature Jersey cow and a miniature replica of the tobacco prizery at Carrollton.

The individual cake squares were also decorated with wedding bells and tobacco leaves.

Mrs. Bruce Lea entertained the wedding party and guests at a dinner at the Rocky Mount Country Club on Wednesday evening, October 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Moody spent the weekend at Smithfield, North Carolina where he was on the tobacco market for several years.

Miss Flowers is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Flowers.

Mr. Moody has been with the American Tobacco Company for many years and is a resident of Eminence. He and his mother, Mrs. Judith Moody, own and operate the Bright and Moody Pinecroft Farm at Eminence, where the family has bred and shown registered Jersey cattle for four generations. His father was the late Stewart Moody.

Mr. Moody is in North Carolina on the flue-cured tobacco market and they will remain there until November. They will be in Russellville until the burley tobacco market opens.

The couple met one another in 1941 when Mr. Moody was on the burley market at Carrollton and she was teaching in the Carrollton High School.

Transcribed by: GenealogyGirl
News-Democrat and Leader
Russellville, Kentucky
November 19, 1992

World War II Veteran

Mr. Charles Bright Moody


Mr. Charles Bright Moody, 74, West Seventh Street, Russellville, died Nov. 15, 1992 at Greenview Hospital in Bowling Green.

He was born April 3, 1918 in Henry County, the son of Stuart and Judith Bright Moody. He was a buyer for the American Tobacco Company, a farmer and a cattle breeder. He was an Army veteran of World War II, a member of the American Jersey Cattle Club and the Dairy Shrine Club. He was also a member of St. James Episcopal Church in Shelbyville.

Graveside services were at 2 p.m. Nov. 18 at Maple Grove Cemetery with Dr. Don Zuberer and Rev. Marvin Shelton officiating.

Pallbearers were John Barrow, Mark Barrow, Tommy Brown, Bradley Brown, Kevin Vance, George Richardson and James Welker.

Surviving are his wife, Sally Flowers Moody; three sons, Hunter Moody, Franklin, Charles Moody Jr., Shelbyville and Burnett Moody, Coal Valley, Ill.; four grandchildren, Michelle Moody, Michael Moody, Charles B. Moody III and Andrew Moody.

Memorial Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.

Transcribed by: GenealogyGirl

News-Democrat and Leader
Russellville, Kentucky
October 8, 1970

Flowers - Moody Vows Exchanged

Miss Sally Flowers of Russellville and Mr. Charles Bright Moody were married in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on Thursday, Sept. 24, at 7:30 p.m. in the Prayer and Meditation Chapel of the Lakeside Baptist Church on Sunset Avenue.

The officiating minister was the pastor, Dr. Gaylord L. Lehman, who was at Louisville Baptist Theological Seminary with John Wood, former pastor of First Baptist Church of Russellville.

Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Baker of Kenton were their attendants. Mr. Baker is a buyer for American Tobacco Company.

After the ceremony, a wedding dinner was held at Morris House in Rocky Mount. Guests were other tobacco buyers on the market there and Mrs. Bruce Lea, Sr., a resident of Rocky Mount.

Gifts were presented from friends and employes of the American Tobacco Company.

The table was decorated with red roses, silver candelabra with white tapers and garlands of ivy. The tiered wedding cake, topped with wedding bells, was decorated with green and gold tobacco leaves and miniature mementos of their lives, including a miniature Jersey cow and a miniature replica of the tobacco prizery at Carrollton.

The individual cake squares were also decorated with wedding bells and tobacco leaves.

Mrs. Bruce Lea entertained the wedding party and guests at a dinner at the Rocky Mount Country Club on Wednesday evening, October 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Moody spent the weekend at Smithfield, North Carolina where he was on the tobacco market for several years.

Miss Flowers is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Flowers.

Mr. Moody has been with the American Tobacco Company for many years and is a resident of Eminence. He and his mother, Mrs. Judith Moody, own and operate the Bright and Moody Pinecroft Farm at Eminence, where the family has bred and shown registered Jersey cattle for four generations. His father was the late Stewart Moody.

Mr. Moody is in North Carolina on the flue-cured tobacco market and they will remain there until November. They will be in Russellville until the burley tobacco market opens.

The couple met one another in 1941 when Mr. Moody was on the burley market at Carrollton and she was teaching in the Carrollton High School.

Transcribed by: GenealogyGirl

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