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John F Carpenter

Birth
Russellville, Pope County, Arkansas, USA
Death
4 Feb 2001 (aged 100)
Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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John Floyd Carpenter, 100, a resident of Montgomery, AL, born march 11, 1900 to the late D.C. and Fannie Williamson Carpenter, Russellville, Pope County Arkansas, died Sunday, February 4, 2001 in Montgomery, AL. His wife of 72 years, Sammie Hooper Carpenter, predeceased him. Survivors include one son and daughter-in-law, John T. and Melanie G. Carpenter; one daughter and son in law, Nancy and Lloyd Woodman, all of Montgomery, AL; five grandchildren, John Christopher Carpenter, Savannah, GA; Kelley Carpenter Kuhn, Murfreesboro, TN; Lynn Carpenter Merriman, Tallahassee, FL; Sammie Woodman Nigh, Charlotte, NC; and Geoffrey Hooper Woodman, Miami, FL.

Mr Carpenter attended Arkansas Polytechnic College. In 1962, he retired with 30 years service from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service (Ozark National Forest). Prior to government service and the depression, he owned a meat market and later was employed on the U.S. Corps of Engineers construction crew building the Army-Navy Hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas. He was a member of the First United Methodist Church in Russellville, AR, for 83 years.
John Floyd Carpenter, 100, a resident of Montgomery, AL, born march 11, 1900 to the late D.C. and Fannie Williamson Carpenter, Russellville, Pope County Arkansas, died Sunday, February 4, 2001 in Montgomery, AL. His wife of 72 years, Sammie Hooper Carpenter, predeceased him. Survivors include one son and daughter-in-law, John T. and Melanie G. Carpenter; one daughter and son in law, Nancy and Lloyd Woodman, all of Montgomery, AL; five grandchildren, John Christopher Carpenter, Savannah, GA; Kelley Carpenter Kuhn, Murfreesboro, TN; Lynn Carpenter Merriman, Tallahassee, FL; Sammie Woodman Nigh, Charlotte, NC; and Geoffrey Hooper Woodman, Miami, FL.

Mr Carpenter attended Arkansas Polytechnic College. In 1962, he retired with 30 years service from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service (Ozark National Forest). Prior to government service and the depression, he owned a meat market and later was employed on the U.S. Corps of Engineers construction crew building the Army-Navy Hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas. He was a member of the First United Methodist Church in Russellville, AR, for 83 years.


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