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Dwight David Carter

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Dwight David Carter

Birth
Lawton, Comanche County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
7 Jan 2021 (aged 62)
Sand Springs, Osage County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Bixby, Tulsa County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Services have been scheduled for 2:00 P.M. Thursday, January 14, 2021 in the Leonard-Marker Funeral Home Chapel officiated by Celebrant Mark Powell. Interment will follow in the Bixby Cemetery.

David Carter was born in Lawton, Oklahoma on September 20th, 1958 to Thelbert and Charlene Carter. He passed from this life on January 7th, 2021 at his home in Sand Springs, Oklahoma.
He was preceded in death by his son Joshua, his father Thelbert, his grandparents Charlie and Isa Pauli, his niece Amber Brummett, and other family members.
He is survived by his wife Tammy, his children Amrey and Jennifer, his mother Charlene, brothers and sisters-in-law, nieces, nephews, aunts and cousins.
David loved to:
Fish - and always had to make sure that he had his can of Skoal, you know, in case he was to get stung by a wasp or bee. He was interested in guns and like to attend the gun shows with friends.
watch his favorite tv shows on the History channel.
watch his girls play soccer. He had been a coach to both Amrey and Jennifer. Many girls over the years knew and loved him as “Coach Dave”.
He enjoyed simply getting out for a drive in the country with his wife Tammy, who he had always referred to as “Boo”.
David was a gentle man with a huge personality and was a friend to everyone. He could always find someone to speak to and no matter where he lived there were always other men he would find and soon they would become “back fence buddies” that could talk for hours!
He would not leave the house unless he had a few pocketknives on him and you would always see him in his Levi’s, a t-shirt with a pocket, a hat, and his sunglasses tucked into the collar of his shirt.
He loved God and his family.
His quotes were the best, and at times frustrating when you knew he was right. Some of the best were, “That’s how the cow eats the cabbage”, “Can’t never did nothing”, and “Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it”.
He was ornery as could be and everyone who knew him for any amount of time had hilarious stories to share about some of the mischief he could get in to.
Services have been scheduled for 2:00 P.M. Thursday, January 14, 2021 in the Leonard-Marker Funeral Home Chapel officiated by Celebrant Mark Powell. Interment will follow in the Bixby Cemetery.

David Carter was born in Lawton, Oklahoma on September 20th, 1958 to Thelbert and Charlene Carter. He passed from this life on January 7th, 2021 at his home in Sand Springs, Oklahoma.
He was preceded in death by his son Joshua, his father Thelbert, his grandparents Charlie and Isa Pauli, his niece Amber Brummett, and other family members.
He is survived by his wife Tammy, his children Amrey and Jennifer, his mother Charlene, brothers and sisters-in-law, nieces, nephews, aunts and cousins.
David loved to:
Fish - and always had to make sure that he had his can of Skoal, you know, in case he was to get stung by a wasp or bee. He was interested in guns and like to attend the gun shows with friends.
watch his favorite tv shows on the History channel.
watch his girls play soccer. He had been a coach to both Amrey and Jennifer. Many girls over the years knew and loved him as “Coach Dave”.
He enjoyed simply getting out for a drive in the country with his wife Tammy, who he had always referred to as “Boo”.
David was a gentle man with a huge personality and was a friend to everyone. He could always find someone to speak to and no matter where he lived there were always other men he would find and soon they would become “back fence buddies” that could talk for hours!
He would not leave the house unless he had a few pocketknives on him and you would always see him in his Levi’s, a t-shirt with a pocket, a hat, and his sunglasses tucked into the collar of his shirt.
He loved God and his family.
His quotes were the best, and at times frustrating when you knew he was right. Some of the best were, “That’s how the cow eats the cabbage”, “Can’t never did nothing”, and “Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it”.
He was ornery as could be and everyone who knew him for any amount of time had hilarious stories to share about some of the mischief he could get in to.

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